Gas tax increase proposed to fix Louisiana highways, bridges

By Christian Boutwell

Rep. Steve Carter, R-Baton Rouge, filed, as promised, House Bill 632 on Tuesday (April 18), which would increase Louisiana’s gas tax 17 cents per gallon and would raise an estimated additional $510 million annually for the state’s highways and bridges.

“Across Louisiana, our infrastructure is crumbling,” Carter said off the floor. “The citizens of this state are sick of being stuck in traffic, and they want bold solutions that improve safety, quality of life and economic productivity, which this bill provides.”

Read the story in NOLA.com/The Times-Picayune

As promised, bill to raise gas tax filed

By Christian Boutwell

BATON ROUGE — Rep. Steve Carter filed, as promised, House Bill 632 Tuesday, which would increase Louisiana’s gas tax by 17 cents per gallon and would raise an estimated additional $510 million annually for the state’s highways and bridges.

“Across Louisiana, our infrastructure is crumbling,” Carter, R-Baton Rouge, said off the floor. “The citizens of this state are sick of being stuck in traffic, and they want bold solutions that improve safety, quality of life and economic productivity, which this bill provides.”

Read the story in USA Today

Raise $500,000 cap on Louisiana medical malpractice damages? Not so fast, legislators say

By Rose Velazquez

BATON ROUGE — A pair of bills to increase the $500,000 cap on economic damages in Louisiana medical malpractice cases prompted the House Civil Law and Procedure Committee on Thursday (April 13) to seek an “all-encompassing look” at the state’s laws governing malpractice. That puts both measures on hold for the Legislature’s 2017 regular session.

Read the story at NOLA.com/The Times-Picayune

Survey: Majority of La. residents support prohibiting gender, sexual orientation discrimination in the workplace

By Rose Velazquez

BATON ROUGE — The majority of Louisianans support measures that would prohibit workplace discrimination based on gender or sexual orientation, but remain almost evenly divided on whether businesses should be allowed to refuse wedding or other services to same-sex couples on religious grounds.

Those are the findings of the sixth and final report of The Louisiana Survey 2017 released Thursday by LSU’s Reilly Center for Media and Public Affairs.

Read the story in The Advertiser

Legislature shows its lighter side

XGR Legislative Lollipops 2
A group of senators introduce the winner of a beauty contest, standing in the Senate wings Wednesday, as they present and commend her and the pageant to their colleagues in the chamber. Photo by Caitie Burkes.

BATON ROUGE – The hour-long Senate session one morning walked and talked more like a school awards ceremony than a body that owns the sole franchise for enacting, amending and killing laws for the residents Louisiana.

Louisiana isn’t burning and its Legislature isn’t actually fiddling, but it might seem that way at times to casual visitors to the Capitol.

For example, of the 31 agenda items, 19 were sweet-as-a-lollipop resolutions recognizing a who’s who of various senators’ constituents. And that doesn’t count the proclamations, announcements, commendations, condolences, recognitions and verbal glad-handing that preceded or followed the more serious concurrent resolutions.

Read the story in houmatoday.com/The Courier

Will Legislature pass criminal justice bills?

By Sam Karlin

BATON ROUGE — Proponents of criminal justice reform are confident the Louisiana Legislature will pass a series of bills this spring that the governor maintains would reduce the state’s prison population by 13 percent and save taxpayers $305 million over the next 10 years.

Even with the state’s District Attorneys Association issuing a lengthy and sharp rebuttal to most of the ideas, and an atmosphere of divisiveness in the Capitol, several lawmakers believe this could be the year the state sheds its title as prison capital of the U.S., which in turn makes it the prison capital of the world.

Read the story in The Town Talk

LSU Parade Ground may be renamed

By Carrie Grace Henderson

BATON ROUGE — Before his famous “March to the Sea,” his scorched earth warfare during the Civil War or his outright refusal to run for president, William Tecumseh Sherman was the first superintendent of the Louisiana State Seminary of Learning and Military Academy – the 1860 genesis of what is now Louisiana State University.

Sherman despised the original name, though he dearly loved the school.

LSU bears no formal monument or memorial to its first leader. In fact, to some in the Deep South, his name is an insult to their ancestors.

But national political commentator and LSU alum James Carville and Jonathan Earle, Dean of the LSU’s Honors College, hope to enshrine his legacy at the university by starting a campaign to rename the Parade Ground in his honor.

Read the story in The Ouachita Citizen