Louisiana
The Louisiana Menhaden Industry: An Economic Engine for Coastal Communities

For more than a century, Louisiana’s commercial menhaden fishery has been a pillar of the state’s coastal economy, providing stable jobs, sustaining businesses, and fueling essential industries worldwide. From the Gulf waters to global markets, menhaden fishing supports communities and industries that rely on its valuable marine ingredients – fish meal and fish oil – for aquaculture, pet food, and human nutrition.
Leading the industry, Omega Protein and its fishing partner Ocean Harvesters, along with Daybrook Fisheries and its fishing partner Westbank Fishing, operate one of the largest and most productive fisheries in America. Their work transforms Gulf menhaden into high-value products that drive innovation and sustainability across multiple industries.
A Vital Industry for Louisiana
The menhaden industry is more than just fishing – it’s an economic engine that sustains livelihoods and strengthens coastal communities. The industry:
- Generates $419 million in annual economic output
- Supports over 2,000 direct and indirect jobs
- Contributes $25 million in state and local tax revenue
- Provides wages exceeding $50,000 per year, plus benefits
These well-paying jobs, particularly in rural areas, sustain Louisiana’s working coast through multiple generations. In a state where commercial fishing is deeply woven into our culture, the menhaden industry ensures that economic opportunity remains a reality for coastal families.
Regional Economic Impact
Together, Omega Protein and Ocean Harvesters generate well over $100 million in economic activity annually, benefiting Vermilion Parish and surrounding areas. With a workforce of more than 260 direct and skilled employees, these companies provide stable, high-wage jobs, offering more than $21 million in annual payroll and benefits – making them among the largest and highest-paying employers in the region.
Likewise, Westbank Fishing, a Louisiana-based, U.S.-owned company, plays a vital role in Plaquemines Parish, with all its catch processed locally at Daybrook Fisheries in Empire, LA. Together, these operations support over 400 employees, making it the largest employer in southern Plaquemines Parish. In 2023, total employee compensation, including wages, bonuses, and benefits, reached $36.5 million, underscoring the industry’s critical economic role in the region.
Statewide, the Louisiana menhaden industry procures goods valued at over $62.4 million from businesses in 32 parishes. Beyond its core operations in Plaquemines ($11.4 million) and Vermilion ($7.4 million) parishes, significant industry-related expenditures flow into: Jefferson Parish ($6.4 million), Terrebonne Parish ($6 million), Lafayette Parish ($5.9 million), Orleans Parish ($3.7 million), East Baton Rouge Parish ($3.5 million) and Lafourche Parish ($3.2 million), among others.
Additional parishes benefiting from over $1 million in industry-driven spending include St. Mary, St. Martin, Calcasieu, Iberia, St. Tammany and St. John the Baptist. Many others receive between $500,000 to $1 million, reinforcing how the menhaden industry fuels local economies far beyond coastal fishing communities.

This widespread economic footprint in Louisiana underscores the industry’s vital role in creating jobs, supporting small businesses, and sustaining Louisiana’s working coast statewide.
Commitment to Sustainability and Innovation
When the Louisiana menhaden industry thrives, so do our coastal communities. We are committed to both economic growth and responsible stewardship of our unique coastal environment. Our work supports:
- A science-driven approach to fisheries management, ensuring responsible harvest levels and minimal environmental impact
- Long-term job stability for generations of fishing families
- Innovation in marine ingredient production to improve nutrition worldwide
Louisiana’s menhaden industry has long-balanced economic prosperity with responsible stewardship of our marine resources. Through science-based management and ongoing innovation, we remain committed to sustainable fishing practices that protect our waters, support our communities, and drive economic growth. As we look to the future, this industry will continue to provide stable jobs, strengthen local businesses, and deliver essential products that power global nutrition—ensuring that Louisiana’s working coast thrives for generations to come.

Louisiana
Timeline of nuclear plant shutdown raises questions about Louisiana blackout

Elected officials homed in Tuesday on the timeline of events that led to an abrupt order of forced blackouts on Sunday in Louisiana, prompting Entergy and Cleco to cut the lights to 100,000 residents in the New Orleans area amid hot, late-spring temperatures.
Regulators had previously pinned the outages, in part, on the unexpected shutdown of River Bend, a nuclear plant north of Baton Rouge. But Entergy and federal officials said Tuesday that River Bend was shut down because of a leak on May 21. That left the grid operator, the Midcontinent Independent System Operator, or MISO, with several days to plan for the lower supply of electricity.
The timing has raised more questions about why Louisiana was forced into a “load shed” event that caused widespread outages well before peak summer demand for electricity.
Officials are asking Entergy and MISO officials to answer questions publicly about what happened next Tuesday at a City Council meeting and at a Public Service Commission hearing next month, in a bid to figure out how the looming power deficit was not caught earlier. Entergy is also expected to face questions about its long-standing lack of transmission in south Louisiana that has created “load pockets” where it’s difficult to import power.
The River Bend nuclear plant shut down May 21 after operators noticed a leak, which they identified two days later as the result of a faulty valve in the reactor’s cooling system, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Entergy fixed the valve over the weekend before bringing the plant back online Monday.
The plant did not unexpectedly trip offline over the weekend, as has been previously reported, said Victor Dricks, spokesperson for the NRC.
But the Mid-Continent System Operator, a nonprofit that operates the electric grid across a wide swath of the U.S., did not give Entergy or Cleco advance warning that power demand was set to outstrip supply. A New Orleans City Council member said Tuesday that Entergy reported getting only three minutes notice Sunday before being forced to “shed load,” or proactively turn off the lights for tens of thousands of people to avoid catastrophic damage to the electric grid.
If regulators and Entergy had known about the looming power deficit, regulators and advocates say they could have taken steps to prevent forced blackouts. Some industrial plants have contracts that require them to ramp down power during such emergencies, allowing the utility to free up 280 megawatts of capacity in the Entergy system as of 2023. Other customers also could have been required to conserve energy.
Two days after the outages, it remains unclear how other factors might have been at play. Higher than forecast temperatures could have contributed, but Logan Burke, head of the Alliance for Affordable Energy, noted that Entergy and Cleco were required to shed 600 megawatts of power, a huge amount that makes it unlikely bad weather forecasts can totally explain it.
“The question is, what else do we not know about?” Burke said, noting it’s unknown whether non-nuclear power plants or transmission lines were out of service during the event.
“I can imagine MISO missing 100 megawatts,” Burke added. “600 is just hard to fathom where that’s coming from.”
MISO said that “unplanned” outages of generators and transmission structures contributed to the power losses. But neither MISO, nor Entergy and Cleco, have provided more information about which generators and transmission lines were down.
A MISO communication shared with The Times-Picayune shows the grid operator was aware of a “planned outage,” then another unit went down, though the communication does not specify which units. Entergy had a separate nuclear plant, Waterford, that was down for scheduled maintenance, which is normal in the spring.
“Operating conditions over the weekend required us to take our absolute last resort action to maintain reliability in our South Region — a temporary, controlled load shed,” MISO spokesperson Brandon Morris said Tuesday. “We will conduct a thorough assessment of the event and provide additional information once complete.”
Entergy had taken its Waterford plant down for scheduled maintenance well ahead of the event so it could fix it up ahead of peak summer demand, spokesperson Brandon Scardigli. He said Entergy had been monitoring warmer than usual temperatures, but its own models did not show the need for load shedding. He said MISO uses a different model with a broader view of system conditions.
And while River Bend was offline, he said Entergy made that outage known to MISO for its modeling several days before.
“While the River Bend generating unit was offline during the event, it had been out for several days before the event, and its outage was accounted for in the generation that Entergy Louisiana and Entergy New Orleans made available to MISO and in MISO’s own modeling,” Scardigli said.
‘Forecasting was off’
Federal energy regulators began encouraging the creation of grid operators like MISO decades ago as a way to make sure the market for wholesale electricity was fair and reliable. MISO was formed as a nonprofit in the late 90s and has grown to operate the grid — and wholesale electric markets — across a wide swath of middle America.
In 2013, under pressure from the U.S. Department of Justice amid its investigation into alleged anticompetitive practices, Entergy joined MISO, creating a new region called MISO South.
Employees in a cavernous facility in Carmel, Indiana, MISO’s headquarters, sit in front of a huge array of screens showing information about the electric grid in its territory. They plan for which power plants dispatch power onto the grid to make sure electricity flows smoothly and at the right levels.
Another grid operator, the Southwest Power Pool, was doing similar work last month when operators identified “instability” on the grid and ordered SWEPCO to shed power, causing blackouts for 30,000 people in the Shreveport area.
Public Service Commissioner Eric Skrmetta, a Republican who is one of five statewide utility regulators in Louisiana, has long opposed Entergy’s participation in MISO, arguing the utility could get a better deal elsewhere.
Skrmetta said he believes there was enough power and transmission in the region when MISO ordered the load shed over the weekend. He said MISO should have known ahead of time that River Bend was down.
“They plan it a day ahead, two days ahead,” Skrmetta said. “There’s absolutely no reason for MISO to call this unless MISO made a mistake.”
Commissioner Davante Lewis, a Democrat representing New Orleans, said he was initially told a plant unexpectedly went offline, leading him to believe River Bend tripping offline was the source of the problem. After NRC’s confirmation that River Bend went down much earlier, Lewis said a “misforecast” along with generators and transmission lines being out appears to be the root of the problem.
Lewis said he remains concerned about how Entergy’s inability to import power using long-range transmission might have played a part.
“The forecasting was off somewhere,” he said.
Councilmember JP Morrell, chair of the City Council’s utility committee, said he expects to get answers from MISO and Entergy during their meeting next week.
Morrell said he’s particularly concerned about the lack of advanced warning from MISO that demand was outstripping supply, as well as who decided which parts of Entergy’s territory would have the lights turned off.
“If we knew as early as Wednesday of last week that generation was gonna be a problem, it would have given regulators the ability to … curb demand to avoid the brownout,” Morrell said.
He added that while Louisiana is not yet in summer peak electricity demand, lots of power companies do their maintenance this time of year, which can cause supply issues.
Long-standing issues
Entergy has long had issues with some of its nuclear plants, including Grand Gulf, the source of years of litigation over alleged mismanagement. A report by the Union of Concerned Scientists published Tuesday found River Bend was the most problematic nuclear plant in the U.S., when measuring regulatory violations.
Entergy told the NRC, which oversees nuclear plants, that it noticed an unidentified leak in River Bend’s cooling system last week. Nuclear plants have a series of pipes circulating water to cool down the reactor. Entergy identified a faulty valve in one of those systems, and the leak reached a threshold — two gallons per minute over a 24-hour period — that required operators to shut the plant down and fix it.
Entergy welded the valve over the weekend and brought the plant back online Monday. As of Tuesday morning, it was operating at 80% capacity, Dricks said.
Energy advocates in recent days pointed to a long-standing lack of transmission as a potential part of the problem, too. Transmission lines can carry power long distances, but a lack of Entergy lines in south Louisiana creates what experts call “load pockets,” where it’s difficult to import electricity.
Over the weekend, prices for electricity soared in south Louisiana, according to MISO data, while prices in nearby states were low, underscoring Entergy’s lack of ability to import electricity from elsewhere.
Regulators have scrutinized Entergy’s lack of transmission lines in the past. Staff of the Public Service Commission noted that Entergy failed to explore new transmission options in its most recent long-range planning process. Staff said in a 2023 report that utilities in other states evaluate transmission lines as a way to bring more capacity into an area, but Entergy doesn’t unless it’s tied to a specific power plant.
Lewis said Tuesday that Entergy’s lack of transmission remains a problem.
“This is partly why I voted against Entergy’s (plans),” he said. “They completely ignored transmission build up.”
Louisiana
Three more inmates who escaped from New Orleans' main jail are captured

Three inmates accused of escaping from New Orleans’ main lockup in one of Louisiana’s biggest jailbreaks ever have been apprehended, leaving two at large, officials said Monday.
Jermaine Donald, 42, who was jailed on charges of second-degree murder and other crimes before he escaped, was taken into custody in Texas with another inmate accused of fleeing the Orleans Justice Center on May 16, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in a statement.
That inmate, Leo Tate, 31, had been in custody on burglary and firearms charges, Murrill said.
The Texas Department of Public Safety arrested the two men in Walker County, north of Houston, the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s Office said in a statement.
Separately, Lenton Vanburen, 26, who was jailed on firearms and parole violation charges, was taken into custody in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the city’s police department said in a statement.
The three inmates will face additional charges, Murrill said in a statement. It was not immediately clear whether they have lawyers to speak on their behalf.
Deputy U.S. Marshal Brian Fair attributed the capture of Donald and Tate to a dayslong, multi-agency effort that tracked the pair to the Houston metro area. He said the U.S. Marshals Office for the Southern District of Texas responded after being forwarded a “collateral lead.”
The suspects were taken into custody during a traffic stop, he said.
Fair described the remaining two inmates who have not been captured as “extremely dangerous” and said they could be anywhere.
“Both of them and other of the people on the run have had a support network in the New Orleans area, but they could be outside of the New Orleans area,” he said. “It’s going to take a lot more work to figure out where they are exactly.”
One of the men, Derrick Groves, was convicted of second-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder last October.
Several people, including a jail maintenance worker, have been accused of assisting in the escape.
Sterling Williams, who was charged with principle to simple escape and malfeasance in office, cut off the water to a cell’s toilet so inmates could remove it without flooding the area, Murrill alleged in a news release last week.
According to an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant, Williams told authorities that one of the inmates who escaped threatened to “shank” him if he did not help.
That inmate, identified in the document as Antoine Massey, has not been apprehended.
Williams’ lawyer disputed the affidavit, saying his client was unaware of the inmates’ escape plan. Williams turned off the water, the attorney told the Associated Press, to help fix a clogged toilet.
After the men removed the toilet, the affidavit alleges, the inmates sawed through steel bars and escaped through a hole in the wall before they scaled a barbed-wire fence using blankets.
A photo released by authorities showed the phrases “To Easy Lol” and “We Innocent” written above the toilet.
Louisiana
Louisiana family rallies around boy who lost parents in separate crashes hours apart

A Louisiana family is grieving but seeking to rally behind a four-year-old boy whose mother was recently killed in a car crash – and whose father then died in a separate vehicle wreck while trying to get to her.
Gabriel, the son of Alexus Lee and John “JR” Collins, “understands what happened”, his paternal grandmother, Sandra Collins, told the Louisiana news station WAFB. “And he’s just having a little problem comprehending that we can’t talk to [his parents]. We can’t see them, but he understands that they are asleep and are with God.”
Gabriel’s struggle to comprehend has been shared widely beyond his state after news circulated that his mother lost control of her sports utility vehicle on 16 May, flipped and was killed after crashing into a culvert alongside a road in Zachary, which is just north of Louisiana’s capital, Baton Rouge. Investigators called Collins to inform him of Lee’s crash – and, while driving to the scene of the wreck, he hit a tree, was ejected and was killed in the town of Clinton, about 20 miles (32km) from Zachary, as WAFB reported. Neither was wearing a seatbelt.
News of the engaged couple’s deaths – hours apart and just months away from the wedding they planned to have in February 2026 – shocked those who knew them.
Lee had recently graduated from Southern University in Baton Rouge and taught at a science, technology, engineering and mathematics school, and Collins worked as a truck driver. They had bought a new home.
The couple’s survivors then received an “overwhelming outpouring of love, prayers and messages from friends, loved ones and even strangers, many [who] have asked how they can help”, said a message posted on the website of a GoFundMe campaign established by Lee’s sister, Dominque. The message – signed by Dominque Lee – said the aim of the campaign was to support the future of Gabriel, her orphaned nephew, and ensure “that the legacy of his parents lives on through the opportunities we now can provide for him”.
“I’m heartbroken … that we recently lost … two incredible souls who were building a life together, full of love, dreams and devotion to their little boy,” said the message, which mentioned either establishing a trust fund for Gabriel or saving for his college education. “While this loss is unimaginable, our commitment to Gabriel is unwavering.”
On Facebook, Dominque Lee said she was preparing to have her third child before the deaths of Gabriel’s parents – but now she was going to be a mother of four, she wrote.
“Rest [assured] knowing that y’all’s son is in good hands,” Lee said in a post that paid tribute to her sister and the man who was going to be her brother-in-law. “I always told you how I admire the mother you [are] – I’ll fill those shoes with honor and compassion.”
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