Louisiana
Mud, sweat and cheers: Volunteers plant mangroves to protect Louisiana coast from erosion
Volunteers learn to plant black mangroves to shield Louisiana’s coast
Keith Rossin teaches volunteers how to plant black mangroves to protect Louisiana’s coast on Nov. 8.
Twenty-five volunteers slipped and sloshed through mud to plant trees Nov. 7 and 8 to shield Louisiana’s coast.
Restore or Retreat and Ducks Unlimited rallied volunteers to plant 12,000 black mangroves and 12,000 Vermillion smooth cordgrass plants along the edges of 34, 1,000-foot-long, man-made mud islands located between Fourchon and Grand Isle. The volunteers went out on four boats, armed with gloves, two augers and four dibble bars to finish the last nine islands and plant the last 6,000 trees.
“Your back does feel it by the end of the day,” Restore or Retreat’s Executive Director and Louisiana State Rep. Joseph Orgeron said as he demonstrated to volunteers how to use the auger. “Polly, why don’t you show them the dibble dance?”
Project Coordinator Polly Glover plunged the dibble bar into the soft mud and wiggled it to create an indention for the grass. The dibble bar had a flat, almost paddle-like shape on one end, with a T-shaped handle on the opposite end.
Earth, Wind, and Fire’s “Boogie Wonderland” played over a cellphone as volunteers swarmed the edges of the islands. Everywhere they touched went from black mud to patches of green. Curious dolphins and stone crabs popped up to investigate the commotion.
The small islands act as a barrier against storm surges, Orgeron said, by truncating the initial surge and slowing the progress of water. The roots of the plants will act as anchors, holding the land in place against erosion, and the trees also will help block the wind.
Volunteer Tina Dieudonne traveled from New Orleans to help with the planting.
“Because I believe conservation in the state must be done,” she said as she planted the grass. She said the lock and levee systems weren’t enough alone. “Even with the large steel walls, we still lose the land real fast.”
Louisiana
LDWF Announces $5.2 Million for Conservation Projects through the Louisiana Outdoors Forever Program
Today, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF) announced that the Louisiana Outdoor Forever (LOF) Project Selection Board voted to fund 5 conservation projects in Louisiana based on the review, evaluation, and scoring received from LOF’s Technical Advisory Board. The LOF program will allocate $921,350 and leverage $4.29 million for a total conservation investment of $5.21 million to these projects. The LOF program is administered by the LDWF and helps Louisiana become more competitive in securing grant opportunities.
Projects selected for funding:
Project Name
Project Location
Organization
Funding Amount Requested
Match Funds
Total Project Amount
Bayou L’Ours Phase V Terraces
Golden Meadow, Lafourche Parish, LA; 29°24’44.71″N, 90°8’52.90″W
Ducks Unlimited / Partner with Lafourche Parish
$213,500.00
$3,485,641.00
$3,699,141.00
Enhancing Wood Duck Habitat in Pearl River WMA through Duck Box Installation and Community Ed.
Pearl River Wildlife Management Area (WMA) below Indian Village Road on West and Middle Pearl River
Southern Quacker Wildlife Conservation (SQWC) / Partner with LDWF
$8,000.00
$6,000.00
$14,000.00
Enhancing Mottled Duck Breeding Habitat in Southwest Louisiana
Multiple parishes in Southwest Louisiana
Ducks Unlimited / Partner with LDWF
$100,000.00
$200,000.00
$300,000.00
Napoleonville Bayou Access and Emergency Boat Launch Project
Bayou Lafourche – right descending bank; Assumption Parish
Bayou Lafourche Fresh Water District
$500,000.00
$500,000.00
$1,000,000.00
Beechwood-Bayou Sara Tunica Hills Protection
Beechwood Tract and Sleepy Hollow Tract in West Feliciana Parish
The Nature Conservancy / partner with LDWF
$99,850.00
$99,850.00
$199,700.00
Total
$921,350.00
$4,291,491.00
$5,212,841.00
The Louisiana Outdoors Forever (LOF) Program was created during the 2022 legislative session with House Bill 762 to provide funding for outdoor conservation projects across the state.
You can also sign up for meeting and Louisiana Outdoors Forever press releases by visiting here and selecting an interest of “Conservation.”
Louisiana
Louisiana economic development on the rise?
ALEXANDRIA, La. (KALB) – Economic development is on the rise in Cenla and across the Pelican State, and leaders hope to capitalize on it.
Adam Knapp was the keynote speaker at a meeting for the Rotary Club of Alexandria this week. He leads the organization “Leaders for a Better Louisiana” as its CEO.
Knapp said the biggest concern they’ve seen is that some regions of the state do really well with development and some have had a tougher time of it.
What Knapp said he’s been impressed by is the state writing a brand new economic development strategy plan, which he said hasn’t been done in almost 20 years.
“They did that where they kind of quilted together a plan from Louisiana Central, a plan from Southwest Louisiana, from Northeast, Northwest Louisiana, and they said, ‘We need a statewide plan that is a combination of all the things all our metro areas need in order to drive successful economic development visions forward,’” he explained.
Knapp said it’s up to citizens and community leaders to ask for a focus on jobs from state leaders.
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Louisiana
Louisiana State Police seek help identifying pedestrian killed while walking along I-55
Louisiana State Police said Monday they are looking for any information that could help identify a pedestrian who was killed late last month while walking along Interstate 55 on the northshore.
The pedestrian, a Black man with dreadlocks thought to be between the ages of 18 and 25, was killed early on Oct. 27 when he was hit by two cars on I-55 in Hammond. The man had “T.B.T.” tattooed on his inner left arm and “Long Live LJ” on the inside of his right arm. He was about 5 feet 9 inches tall.
Anyone with information that could help identify the man is urged to contact Louisiana State Police at (985) 893-6250.
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