Louisiana
Political Chatter (06.04.24)
—BIG NEWS: FIRM SELECTED FOR DOTD OVERHAUL: As first reported in LaPolitics Weekly last month, the Louisiana Coalition to Fix Our Roads is leading a privately-funded assessment of DOTD, and the outfit of contractors will announce this morning it has hired the Boston Consulting Group to steer the ship. Gov. Jeff Landry asked for the assessment of the Department of Transportation and Development, and recommendations are expected before the end of the year . “For as long as anyone can remember, we have been talking about the issues that stop us from having a good transportation system in Louisiana,” said LCFOR President Erich Ponti. “Governor Landry is determined to stop the talking and start fixing Louisiana’s transportation infrastructure. LCFOR is answering his call and is excited to be working with BCG to get this done.” BCG is an international strategic management consulting firm with “specific expertise in reforming state departments of transportation.”
—IT’S OVER: Lawmakers gave final passage to most of the major spending bills on Sunday, a day early. Legislators voted for stipends for teachers and a cut to early childhood education, while diverting more than $700 million that would have been deposited in the Revenue Stabilization Fund for one-time expenses such as road improvements, water infrastructure and criminal justice needs spurred by legislation approved in the crime special session.
—NOT SO FAST: Despite high hopes during the session’s final weeks for an early finish, lawmakers didn’t sine die until minutes before the 6 p.m. deadline. HB 781, the judiciary funding bill, was approved in the final hour after amendments clarified that judges would get a pay stipend, rather than a permanent raise, and only after a judicial workload study has been completed.
—FINISHING TOUCHES: Lawmakers on Monday approved last-minute changes to HB 767 to ban out-of-state residents from seeking public records from the governor’s office. They also passed HB 952, which creates for one year a regulatory framework for hemp THC products; expect to hear more about that subject next year. HB 906, which raises the contribution limits for candidates and PACs, also was sent to the governor’s desk.
—CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS: Legislators on Monday again took up SB 181, which would have given the governor more control over the Civil Service Commission, but the result was the same and the measure failed to get the needed two-thirds vote in the House. HB 300, SB 119 and SB 177 all passed and will go to the voters. Those instruments will join HBs 48 and 49 on ballots this fall; you can read more about those measures in LaPolitics Weekly.
—NEXT STEPS: Gov. Jeff Landry’s efforts to reshape state government administration has emerged as an offseason topic to watch. Changes at the Department of Energy and Natural Resources, the Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, the Department of Transportation and Development and Louisiana Economic Development all are underway or at least being discussed, as LaPolitics has reported.
—MFP DIES IN SENATE: The instrument to create a new state funding formula for K-12 education never got a hearing in the Senate, which means the previous formula stays in effect.
—REGISTRATION NUMBERS: Democrats lost 1,783 registered voters during May, while Republicans gained 903 and 1,253 people registered without joining one of the two major parties, leaving the Democrats with a 110,892-voter plurality, pollster and consultant John Couvillon reports. The latest numbers were released Saturday. A recent LaPolitics analysis found that Republicans are likely to have a registration plurality in two to four years, based on current trends.
—LATEST PODCAST: Alfred “Butch” Speer, a member of the state Ethics Board and the former clerk of the House of Representatives, has survived constitutional conventions and more than one round of redistricting. He’s also forgotten more about regular sessions than most of us will ever learn, which made him a perfect guest for the LaPolitics Report podcast. (Spotify/Apple) Recorded in February 2015, this episode features a terrific overview of how Speer landed one of the Legislature’s most high-profile gigs. Also in this episode are a set of practical tips for mastering the House process. Plus, this episode kicks off with a job description for “Being Louisiana Governor,” delivered by late Gov. Edwin Edwards.
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Louisiana
Governor’s Office of Strategic Community Initiatives | Office of Governor Jeff Landry
Driving Louisiana Forward Program
Commerical Driver’s License (CDL) Training
In partnership with the Louisiana Workforce Commission and South Louisiana Community College, this program aims to provide African American males with financial assistance to obtain Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) training, strengthening the resilience and contributions of this key demographic and improving equitable access to workforce opportunities. This initiative aims to reduce high unemployment rates within this community but also focuses on ensuring participants come from rural and economically disadvantaged areas.
Earn your CDL Class A license with this comprehensive classroom and behind-the-wheel program to drive tractor[1]trailers, dump trucks, tow trucks, delivery trucks, tanker trucks, and flatbed trucks.
Louisiana
Landry asks Louisiana’s Washington delegation to redraw federal judicial districts
BATON ROUGE, La. (WAFB) – Gov. Jeff Landry is asking Louisiana’s congressional leaders to amend the state’s federal judicial districts, citing caseload growth and public safety concerns.
Landry sent letters to Speaker Mike Johnson, Sen. John Kennedy, Congressman Cleo Fields, and Congresswoman Julia Letlow requesting the change.
The request
Louisiana is currently divided into three federal judicial districts: Eastern, Middle, and Western. Landry is asking that West Feliciana Parish be moved from the Middle District to the Western District.
In the letters, Landry cited significant growth in the Middle District and an increased caseload for its judges. He said a major driver of the Middle District docket is Louisiana State Penitentiary.
Public safety argument
Landry said moving West Feliciana Parish into the Western District would improve judicial efficiency and better address public safety needs in East Baton Rouge Parish and the state.
He said East Baton Rouge Parish continues to battle violent crime. According to the Baton Rouge Police Department, recent numbers show violent crime in the parish has decreased.
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Louisiana
Louisiana medical marijuana leader touts industry growth, safety: ‘We’ve done it right.’
After over five years of legal cannabis sales in the state, Good Day Farm Louisiana President John Davis maintains that Louisiana’s medical marijuana market is the best in the South.
At a Rotary Club meeting Wednesday, Davis touted the industry’s safety, oversight and stability, factors he says are why Louisiana is ahead of other states that have legalized marijuana sales.
“The program has matured,” Davis said at the meeting. “It’s scaled, and most importantly, compared to all these other states that got out ahead of us, here we’re safe, we’re consistent, we’re regulated, we have oversight, and we have economic stability, which is not seen in other states.”
The Louisiana Department of Health regulates the industry from cultivation to retail in what Davis describes as a “very narrow playing field.”
Good Day Farm is one of two licensed cannabis growers that cultivate products for the 10 licensed retailers in the state. The company originally partnered with the LSU Agricultural Center to operate growing facilities in Ruston and Baton Rouge. They also operate dispensaries, including a 10,000-square-foot retail location in Lake Charles, the largest dispensary in the South.
Good Day Farm Louisiana distributes approved medical marijuana products to licensed dispensaries in Louisiana. Ilera Holistic Healthcare holds the other cannabis growing license in the state.
The medical marijuana patient base has boomed over the past two years. From the first quarter of 2024 to the last quarter of 2025, the number of patients has more than doubled, according to data Davis presented at the meeting. Nearly 150,000 people in Louisiana are part of the state’s medical marijuana program — that’s 3.2% of the state’s population.
With increased access to the product, a wide variety of products and an expanding consumer base, prices have fallen. Average prices across all products, which include cannabis flower, tinctures, vape devices and edibles, is about $47, Davis said, and overall medical marijuana prices have dropped about 21% from mid-2024 to January this year.
Stigma surrounding marijuana has fallen, too, he said, crediting the state’s growers and retailers acting as “good stewards” for the industry’s stability.
“The legislature sees how we’re behaving,” he said in an interview following the meeting. “The regulators see how we’re operating, and we’ve done a very good job staying in our swim lane and complying with the rules.”
Product safety is top of mind, too — 98.5% of Good Day Farm products have passed the state department of health’s tests to ensure the potency of the products matches the potency printed on the labels, he said.
Davis touted Louisiana’s strong regulation of the medical marijuana market amid other state’s challenge to manage the growing industry. In Oklahoma, a study commissioned by the state’s marijuana authority found that the marijuana supply is at least 32 times greater than demand in the state. Washington and Oregon have also struggled with marijuana surpluses.
“We’re a strong state,” Davis said. “We’ve done it right.”
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