Tuition-raising power may go to universities

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Rep. Barry Ivey, R-Baton Rouge, wants to take the handcuffs off higher education’s ability to raise tuition without legislative approval. Photo by Samuel Carter Karlin

Rep. Barry Ivey, R-Baton Rouge, wants to take the handcuffs off higher education’s ability to raise tuition without legislative approval.

By Samuel Carter Karlin

BATON ROUGE — Louisiana students and families could pay more for colleges and universities in the future if the ability to raise tuition transfers from the Legislature to school governing boards as proposed in two bills before the Legislature.

These proposed measures would take the schools off their traditional legislative leash.

Read the story in The News Star

Bill would place new restrictions on day cares without licenses

By Noah Bryant Ballard

BATON ROUGE — A Winnsboro lawmaker is teaming with the Louisiana Department of Education to place new restrictions on child care providers operating without a license.

Rep. Steve Pylant, R-Winnsboro, brought House Bill 197 before the House Committee on Administration of Criminal Justice Wednesday that would to provide criminal penalties for unlawful operation of day care centers, specifically those caring for six or more children.

Read the story in The Daily World

Bill to create debt-reducing fund advances

By D.B. Narveson

BATON ROUGE — A bill creating a fund to help pay down state retirement and bond debts and refill the rainy day fund was passed through the House Appropriations Committee.

Rep. Beryl Amedee, R-Houma, who has already created a GoFundMe crowd-sourcing campaign to help pay for Louisiana’s deficit, said her bill would create a fund into which Louisianans, and anyone else who feels charitable, could donate money into pay down about $20 million in those two areas.

Read the story in The Advertiser

Legislators want to make Louisiana’s transportation greener

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Secretary of the Department of Environmental Quality Chuck Brown gives the Senate Committee on Environmental Quality his goal to put compressed natural gas stations across Louisiana. Photo by D.B. Narveson.

By D.B. Narveson

BATON ROUGE — Secretary of the Department of Environmental Quality Chuck Brown wants to make the use of compressed natural gas the go-to fuel for fleets of trucks and buses across the state.

Read the story in The Shreveport Times

Millions of dollars to be cut from state hospitals

By Jack Richards

BATON ROUGE — The Department of Health and Hospitals is preparing to cut tens of millions of dollars from hospitals around the state, potentially shuttering hospitals in Houma, Monroe, Alexandria, Lake Charles and Bogalusa, according to the agency’s undersecretary, Jeff Reynolds.

The final decision, he told the House Appropriations subcommittee on Health and Human Services, will come soon from Commissioner of Administration Jay Dardenne, but Reynolds outlined worst-case scenarios where cuts to public-private partner hospitals could force them to terminate their contracts, leaving people without healthcare in their area — at least on a temporary basis.

Read the story in The Town Talk

North La. medical clinics may close under proposed cuts

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Rep. John Schroder, R-Covington, debating a bill on the House floor Tuesday. Photo by D.B. Narveson

By Justin DiCharia

BATON ROUGE — Medical clinics in Monroe, Alexandria, Shreveport and rural areas in northern Louisiana may have to shutter their doors under the current proposed $39 million cut to the center’s budget, LSU Health Sciences Center-Shreveport Interim Chancellor G.E. Ghali told Manship School News Service Tuesday.

Read the story in The News-Star

 

LSMSA executive director warns against legislative reductions to EXCEL program

By Justin DiCharia

BATON ROUGE — Louisiana School for Math, Science and the Arts Executive (LSMSA) Director Patrick Widhalm warned Monday that legislative reductions to the Natchitoches school’s funding would be a death knell for its EXCEL program that admits teens from the state’s underperforming schools into the competitive program.

Read the story in The Town Talk