HOUSE PANEL DECLARES FOR THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — Louisiana students may have one more thing to recite in their morning homerooms if House Bill 1035, which gets a full hearing before the House of Representatives next week, passes into law.

The chamber’s Education Committee voted 6-2 to approve a bill that requires fourth through sixth grade students to memorize and recite a 56-word passage from the Declaration of Independence.

Rep. Valarie Hodges, R-Denham Springs, said she brought the bill because her daughter could not tell her what the Declaration, adopted on July 4, 1775, announcing to King George III the 13 colonies were breaking away from England, said even after studying it in school.

Read the story in The Eunice News

‘Disrespectful’ joke on strippers’ age bill sparks outrage

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — It was expected to be a simple vote on a bill to raise standards and crack down on human trafficking in strip clubs.

Rep. Walt Leger, D-New Orleans, who was handling Senate Bill 468 in the House, was wrapping up his arguments about the importance of preventing young women from being taken, exploited or sexually compromised.

Then the jokes started flying.

Read the story in The Advertiser

Bill aiming to lure in out-of-state students heads to Senate

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — Higher education leaders are preparing to woo out-of-state students with lower tuition to help “subsidize” in-state students and their universities and better compete with peer schools.

House Bill 989, which passed the Senate Education Committee Wednesday without objection, would allow higher education boards to lower tuition and fees for out-of-state students in an “economics of scale” effort to boost enrollment. It moves to the full Senate for debate.

Current law requires tuition and fees for non-residents to be at least equal to the average of other southern schools.

Read the story in The Advertiser

Senate votes to strengthen police protections

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — The Senate voted unanimously Tuesday to remove the firearm requirement for a charge of aggravated assault of a police officer.  In a separate action, it also made attacks against police, firefighters and EMT personnel hate crimes.

House bill 582, by Rep. Katrina Jackson, D-Monroe, would allow a district attorney to charge someone with the more serious aggravated assault count if the officer was attacked with, for example, a knife or machete. The bill now goes to the governor.

Read the story in The Advertiser

House Committee approves bill to raise fines on texting while driving

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Baton Rouge Sen. Yvonne Colomb, at far end of table, Louisiana State Police Lt. Robert Burns, middle, and private citizen Brad Ourso, testify Monday in front of the House Transportation Committee over a bill to raise fines for driving while texting. Photo by Jack Richards.

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — The House Transportation Committee unanimously approved a bill to raise the fines and penalties on those adults who text and drive up to 286 percent for first offense.  For minors, the fine increases up to 150 percent.

Read the story in The Town Talk

 

Budget cuts would affect programs at LSU’s Shreveport, New Orleans hospitals

By Justin DiCharia

BATON ROUGE – Following a move to transfer funding from the state’s TOPS college scholarship program to safety-net hospitals last Thursday, the LSU Medical School at Shreveport still will be $35.6 million in the red, the chancellor warned Sunday, forcing the school to make cuts to all the medical programs.

During a weekend Senate Finance Committee hearing, LSU Health Sciences Center Interim Chancellor G.E. Ghali testified the cuts to funding could potentially effect the school’s accreditation and residency programs.

Read the story in The Shreveport Times

ANALYSIS: Amid budget crunch, La. lawmakers target tax breaks; But it won’t be a quick or easy financial fix

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Senate President John Alario (left) and Revenue Estimating Conference Chair James Richardson discuss revenue projections Thursday. Photo by Samuel Carter Karlin.

By Samuel Carter Karlin

BATON ROUGE — As legislators deal with a $600 million shortfall for the fiscal year that starts July 1, many are looking toward a special session in June to raise revenue for state government services.

Some lawmakers are targeting tax breaks, and Gov. John Bel Edwards has indicated support for eliminating some of them.

But most exemptions, exclusions, rebates, credits and deductions wouldn’t save the state money for at least a year if the Legislature scrapped them.

Read the story in HoumaToday.com/The Courier