New data show Louisiana losing college grads to Texas, other states

Published: June 06, 2023

By: Josh Archote, LSU Manship School News Service

From 2005 to 2020, Louisiana’s largest population centers lost a net 317,000 residents, many of whom were young and college-educated, new migration data shows. Credit: Illustration by Maddie Fitzmorris of The Reveille at LSU

Lucy Bui would have liked to stay close to her family and find a job in Louisiana after graduating from LSU with an architecture degree in 2022. But the professional opportunities were not in Louisiana, she said.

She quickly accepted an offer with a firm in Dallas.

“I would never grow as a professional if I stayed in Baton Rouge,” said Bui, who grew up there. “Staying home in Louisiana wouldn’t have fulfilled my ambition and desires of becoming a well-rounded person.”

The quality of life in Dallas is higher than anything Bui could find in Louisiana, she said. The city is diverse, has a significant number of events and amenities, and has many young professionals around the same age from across the country.

Bui said New Orleans has a taste of all of that, but too little to keep young people in the state.

Read more at Verite News

“Don’t Say Gay” bill, pronoun ban and gender-affirming care limits pass Senate

Published: June 06, 2023

By: Jenna Bridges, LSU Manship School News Service

Photo by: Allison Allsop/LSU Manship School News
Rep. Michael “Gabe” Firment proposed banning healthcare professionals from administering hormone therapy or performing surgery as gender-affirming care for anyone under 18.

BATON ROUGE, La. — House bills limiting gender-affirming care, pronoun use in schools and classroom discussion of gender and sexuality passed the Senate Monday.

The bills are part of a national Republican push to restrict transgender activity by minors.

Rep. Michael “Gabe” Firment, R-Pollock, authored House Bill 648, a bill that would prohibit healthcare professionals from administering hormone therapy or performing surgery as gender-affirming care for anyone under 18.

The bill had been temporarily shot down by Republican Sen. Fred Mills’ tie-breaking vote in the Senate Health and Welfare Committee May 24.

Firment’s bill passed the Senate today, 29-10, after it advanced through the Senate Judiciary Committee. It now goes back to the House for concurrence in Senate amendments.

House Bill 81 and House Bill 466 both passed the Senate, too.

Read more at KATC

La. House committee approves raising expenditure cap

Published: June 05, 2023

By: Allison Allsop – LSU Manship School News Service

House Speaker Clay Schexnayder (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

BATON ROUGE, La. — The House Appropriations Committee on Monday approved a compromise plan to raise an expenditure cap and let the state to spend an additional $250 million in the current fiscal year and $1.4 billion above the projected cap next year.

The plan, approved 21-3, came after House Speaker Clay Schexnayder, R- Gonzalez, supported a Senate resolution to exceed the caps by $500 million this year and $1.8 billion next year.

Rep. Jack McFarland, R-Jonesboro, the leader of a conservative caucus that had opposed any increase in the caps, countered with an amendment to lower those totals, and that is the plan the committee approved.

Both the House and the Senate must take up the measure before the legislative session ends Thursday. Any plan to exceed the spending cap requires a two-thirds vote in each house.

Read more at KTBS

A second Senate committee advanced a bill Friday that would ban gender-affirming care for minors

Published: June 02, 2023

By: Jenna Bridges, LSU Manship School News Service

BATON ROUGE—A second Senate committee advanced a bill Friday that would ban gender-affirming care for minors after the Republican chairman of another committee had blocked the measure.

Rep. Michael “Gabe” Firment, R-Pollock, presented the legislation, House Bill 648, that failed in the Senate Health and Welfare Committee on May 24 in a 5-4 vote.

Sen. Fred Mills, a Republican and the chairman of that committee, was the tie-breaking vote that crossed party lines to block the bill then. National Republican activists attacked Mills after his vote.

The Senate later voted 26-12 to recommit the bill to the Senate Judiciary A Committee. The committee moved to adopt an amendment that would change the date that the law would become effective to Jan. 1, 2024, from July 1, 2023.

Read more at Bossier Press-Tribune

LSU to fold on its controversial sports-betting deal with Caesar’s

Published: June 02, 2023

By: Allison Allsop, LSU Manship School News Service

Clouds pass over Tiger Stadium on Monday, March 20, 2023, on LSU’s campus in Baton Rouge, La. (Matthew Perschall for Louisiana Illuminator)

LSU is ending its controversial, seven-figure agreement allowing Caesars Entertainment to advertise sports betting across the campus, according to university officials and a sports marketing company involved in the deal.

The agreement, struck in 2021, was supposed to last several more years, said Lauren Capone of Playfly Sports, a marketing company that helped arrange the deal.

Capone said talk of ending the deal began when a bill was filed in the Louisiana Legislature in March that would prohibit colleges and universities in the state from creating advertising agreements with gaming entities. The bill, by Sen. Gary Smith, D-Norco, passed the House on Tuesday.

Another factor was that the American Gaming Association, an industry group, updated its responsible marketing code in March to prohibit gaming companies from having partnerships with universities to promote sports betting.

Since then, several schools, including Michigan State and the University of Maryland, have said they were ending similar advertising agreements with gaming companies.

Read more at Louisiana Illuminator

Senate panel advances Louisiana’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill and pronoun ban

Published: June 02, 2023

By: Jenna Bridges, LSU Manship School News Service

Photo by: Allison Allsop/LSU Manship School News
Rep. Raymond Crews sponsored a bill that would prohibit teachers from using a student’s preferred name or pronoun without parental approval.

BATON ROUGE, La. —The Senate Education Committee advanced bills Thursday that would ban discussion of gender and sexual orientation in schools and prohibit teachers from using a student’s preferred name or pronoun without their parent’s written permission if it differs from their biological sex.

The bill to restrict gender discussion was modeled after a Florida law that critics refer to as the “Don’t Say Gay” law. The Louisiana version, House Bill 466, was sponsored by Rep. Dodie Horton, R-Haughton.

The other bill, House Bill 81, would require parents to submit a form in order for public school teachers and employees to use a name that is not on the student’s birth certificate or to use pronouns that are not in accordance with the student’s sex. Rep. Raymond J. Crews, R-Bossier City presented that bill.

Crews’ bill passed 3-1. Three Republicans– Sen. Mark Abraham, R-Lake Charles; and Sen. Robert Mills, R-Minden; and Sen. Beth Mizell, R-Franklinton—voted for the bill. The committee’s chairman, Sen. Cleo Fields, D-Baton Rouge, opposed it.

Read more at KATC

Louisiana moves forward with legislation to relax vaccine requirements for K-12 students

Published: June 01, 2023

By: Allison Allsop, LSU Manship School News Service

The Senate Education Committee unanimously advanced two bills Thursday that would relax vaccine requirements for K-12 students.

Rep. Kathy Edmonston, R-Gonzales, wrote both bills. Colleges and universities are no longer included in the bills after amendments by the committee.

House Bill 182 would prohibit Covid-19 vaccinations as a condition of enrollment or continued enrollment in any public or private K-12 schools.

House Bill 399 would require schools to provide exemption information for any type of vaccine.

Read more at the Shreveport Times

77% of Louisiana residents support legal abortions after rape, survey finds

Published: June 01, 2023

By: Eliza Stanley, LSU Manship School News Service

Photo by Astrid Riecken/Getty Images

Seventy-seven percent of Louisiana residents say a woman should be able to obtain a legal abortion if she became pregnant after being raped, according to an LSU survey released Thursday.

That finding is at odds with Louisiana’s near-total ban on abortions. Earlier this month, a state House committee rejected a bill that would have added exceptions for cases of rape and incest to Louisiana’s abortion ban, one of the strictest in the country. Lawmakers shot down the bill in a 10-5 vote.

The final installment of the Louisiana Survey, conducted by LSU’s Reilly Center for Media and Public Affairs, shows a continuing shift in Louisiana residents’ attitudes toward abortion in recent years.

Fifty-two percent of the people interviewed lean toward abortion being legalized. Eighty-five percent say that a woman should be able to obtain an abortion if her life is seriously threatened due to pregnancy, and two-thirds say abortion should be legal if there is a strong chance of the child having a lethal birth defect.

Read more at Louisiana Illuminator

New book documents Huey P. Long’s intense relationship with LSU

Published: June 01, 2023

By: Claire Sullivan, LSU Manship School News Service

In a new book, LSU professor Robert Mann dives into former Gov. Huey Long’s relationship with the state’s flagship university

BATON ROUGE, La. (LSU Manship School News Service) — He paced the Tiger Stadium sidelines, gave rousing locker room speeches and traveled with the football team. But this unofficial coach could not leave Louisiana without temporarily giving up his gubernatorial powers.

In a new book, “Kingfish U: Huey Long and LSU,” LSU professor Robert “Bob” Mann documents the intense relationship between former Gov. and U.S. Sen. Huey P. Long and the university he helped build into its modern form.

An unofficial football coach, Long also acted as the university’s de facto co-president and a member of the LSU Board of Supervisors. Though he never attended LSU, and was once its opponent, Long set the university on a new path to national recognition.

Long helped expand the campus and bolster enrollment, increasing state funding for the university and opening its doors to students from more economic backgrounds. (Though, at the time, still only those who were white.)

Read more at KLFY

Bill to collect data on school diversity programs rejected

Published: June 01, 2023

By: Claire Sullivan, LSU Manship School News Service

Photo by: Allison Allsop/LSU Manship School News Service
Rep. Valarie Hodges proposed a bill to collect information on diversity programs and race-related teaching.

BATON ROUGE, La. —The House Education Committee rejected a resolution Wednesday that would have asked public schools, including universities, to provide information on programs and activities related to critical race theory, diversity, equity and inclusion, and social-emotional learning.

The resolution was deferred on a 6-5 vote. Two Republicans—Reps. Vincent “Vinney” St. Blanc III, of Franklin, and Barbara Reich Freiberg, of Baton Rouge—joined four Democrats in rejecting the proposal.

A major contention point, highlighted by public education officials at all levels, was the resolution’s lack of definitions for the various subjects. The vote also represented a relatively rare instance in which Louisiana Republicans blocked a push on a cultural issue targeted by national party activists.

Rep. Ken Brass, D-Vacherie, asked the sponsor of the bill, Rep. Valarie Hodges, R-Denham Springs, to define critical race theory. She dodged the question, saying, “different people interpret it different ways.”

Read more at KATC