Saturday, May 3, 2008

Cazayoux wins LA-6; Scalise wins LA-1

Cazayoux (D) pulled out ahead vs. Jenkins (R) in a very close race in LA-6, winning by less than 3,000 (<3%) votes. The seat was formerly held by Richard Baker (R).

Scalise (R) won by over 75% in LA-1. The seat was formerly held by Bobby Jindal (R).

Election results


Regular updates coming soon!

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Tuition bill expanded in House, Jindal's bill approved by Senate

In addition to tuition, the House version of the bill that Jindal has been touting will now also include tax breaks for uniforms. At least this will also apply to public school parents, so it does make some sense if you assume that the tax breaks should be made in the first place. (After all, I would argue that public school parents are more in need of some kind of break than those of private school students, since they will tend to be less wealthy than the private school parents, even accounting for the difference caused by tuition.)

The arrogance of this bill is well expressed here:

The tax relief is warranted because the state’s inadequate public schools limit parents’ choices for their children’s education, Rep. Hunter Greene told the House Committee on Ways and Means.

“The (public) schools, at least in my area, haven’t been performing up to par,” said Greene, R-Baton Rouge.
In other words, the public schools aren't working, so let's fund them less and provide incentives for not using them, and therefore not being invested in them as a community. That makes sense. It stinks of the "logic" of NCLB, which rewarded only schools that were doing well or improving, without a way to actually help badly performing schools improve. And I have little sympathy for parents who think their children are too smart for public schools--if that is truly the case, then enroll them in the Gifted & Talented program; as a part of special education, its precise purpose is to ensure that sufficient education is provided for every student.

Furthermore:
[Rep. Harold Ritchie] suggested adding a deduction for uniforms and instructional supplies that parents purchase in the public school system.

Greene resisted the change, pointing out that private school parents incur those expenses as well.
So I suppose the parents who can afford private school deserve breaks, but those who can't, don't.

Read More...

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Some interesting stories

The old legislature has apparently left us overcommitted with projects, and it will be up to the new legislature and Jindal's administration what takes priority.


Meanwhile, Jindal opposes teacher unions' proposals in favor of a voucher system:

The Republican governor's proposals include several that unions have repeatedly opposed over the years, including a "school choice" program, merit pay, and a tax credit of up to $5,000 per student for parents who send children to private schools or teach them at home.
Some may frame this opposition in terms of teachers' desire for more money--pay raises are in the proposal--but I think what is (or should be) really at issue here is vouchers. They're a step backwards, as far as I'm concerned.


While Jindal may tout the success of his ethics reform, one might question the relevance of the $50 meal limit. If these people (lobbyists) are to be believed, tabs didn't often reach $50 anyway. In fact, this law may encourage more spending.


Jindal's upcoming special session is supposed to include a proposal of $300 million for coastal restoration and hurricane protection. I hope a lot of that is for coastal restoration. Not that I'm against hurricane protection by any means, but hurricane protection won't do any good without the wetlands, and I feel like this has been a neglected point in post-Katrina discussions. As for the transportation money that is to be proposed in the session, some think that Jindal might send much of it to the northern part of the state to placate them in their complaints about coastal spending. This would be smart.

Monday, March 3, 2008

No new posts for a while

Well this blog has been dead for the past few weeks, and unfortunately it's going to stay that way for about two more months. This is my last semester at LSU, and I've gotten very busy with that. I've barely been able to keep up with any news/blogs, so naturally I haven't had time to write anything myself.

There have certainly been things going on (and not just the intensely interesting Democratic presidential nomination race). Gov. Jindal has run an ethics reform session that he has announced as successful, but which onlookers have criticized as not going nearly far enough. I would link a post or two from Forgotston, but it's hard to pick one--all of his most recent posts focus on the ethics reform session, and in great detail, so I recommend those.

Jindal has also proposed a new budget. I haven't read about this yet, but I'll get to it.

In the meantime, check out the blogs in the sidebar, they're really good. I especially recommend Suspect Device. I might post something, but I can't really commit to anything until my semester is over. Though I haven't really gotten this blog off the ground yet, it feels good to have gotten it started.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Disenfranchisement of Dems in the primaries?

According to Barack Obama's campaign blog, some Democrats reported on election day that they were unable to vote in the Louisiana primary because their party affiliation had been switched, even though they hadn't changed it themselves. This in spite of strong primary turnouts. Interestingly, neither local media nor Hillary Clinton's blog mentioned this, that I can find--this doesn't mean I'm discounting it, though.

I'm already dreading disenfranchisement and voting machine problems in the general election.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Rival cities: BR and NOLA

The BR Business Report has published an interesting article about the rivalry between BR and New Orleans, especially since Katrina:

In the two-and-a-half years since Hurricane Katrina forever altered the geographic, demographic and economic landscape of southeast Louisiana, New Orleans and Baton Rouge have become paradoxically closer yet farther apart than ever as squabbles over population, recovery dollars and where the state’s locus of power lies strain what was already a competitive relationship.

[...]

It’s silly, in a way, this petty squabble, but it has serious implications for the future of the state because it will color the very heated battles that will ensue when legislative and congressional districts are redrawn at the end of the decade. It will also affect how federal aid dollars are spent. Above all, it will hamper economic development efforts in a region that needs to be working together now more than ever.

“This is arguably one of the most important discussions to be having right now in this state,” Shreveport demographer and political analyst Elliott Stonecipher says. “This kind of regional rivalry is not a luxury Louisiana can afford.”

What bothers me most about the article--or rather, the content of the article, not the article itself per se--is BR's supposed readiness to take advantage of Katrina:
When Katrina hit, many saw the opportunity for which they had long been waiting. New Orleans was perceived as dead, or, maybe, presumed dead before anyone bothered to check for a pulse. Finally, Baton Rouge could make a legitimate claim as the true power center in Louisiana.

“People in Baton Rouge have been waiting on baited [sic] breath for any opportunity to shift the locus of power away from New Orleans,” Stonecipher says. “The moment the storm hit they saw their chance.”

Read More...

Friday, February 8, 2008

LSU's "primary" yields interesting results

Obama wins SG mock primary election
The voters constituted "over 7 percent" of the student body, unrestricted by party (unlike the actual primaries).
With that in mind:
Democratic side:
Obama: 76.7%
Clinton: 21.8%
Gravel: <2%

Republican side:
McCain: 37%
Huckabee: 22.4%
Paul: 21.6%
Romney: 19%

While Obama won the election with 33.5 percent of the total student vote, party affiliation results turned up a surprising twist. Of the participating student body, there were 45.7 percent declared Republicans, 26.7 percent designated Democrats, and 15.1 percent Independents. Less than 2 percent claimed they were "Other" and 11 percent had no party affiliation.

It seems that I've seen more support for Clinton and Paul on campus, in the form of bumper stickers (Clinton) and signs, banners, chalk writings, etc. (Paul) than for any other candidates.
Yet these two trailed behind--Clinton by a very surprising amount (to me, anyway) and Paul by a surprising amount considering that there were two, not one, candidates ahead of him and considering also the ubiquity of expressions of support for him. "Silent majority" indeed.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Feb 9 elections -- Pinnacle

Well Fat/Super Tuesday has come and gone, with Clinton pulling a slight lead (under very troubling circumstances), and McCain confirmed as the definitive front-runner on the Republican side. Of course, Louisiana didn't participate, being that Mardi Gras was falling on the same day, so we go to vote on Feb. 9th instead. On the ballot in East Baton Rouge Parish are the primaries (and some state party officials), but also the controversial proposal for a relocation of the Pinnacle Casino in Lake Charles. (A .doc file of the proposal as it will appear on the ballot is here.)

There is noise being made on both sides of the issue, but it's hard, from my perspective, to judge how much of this is backed by either Pinnacle or its competitors, and how much of it is actually citizens. I'm inclined to believe that citizens do make a large part of the opposition, though. Unsurprisingly, the companies are in an ugly fight. I look at the arguments and choose a side myself after the jump.

Gambling is not economic development. We have opposed the new proposal, not to disparage the applicant or to restrict competition in gambling, but because Louisiana has looked to gambling as a false idol, as a way to promote economic growth.

Other than in the regions of Lake Charles and Shreveport, where Texas gamblers do bring in new money, gambling is another way to cut up the local entertainment dollar.

Even the Baton Rouge Business Report (who I would expect to support Pinnacle wholeheartedly), despite JR Ball's editorial (same as linked above), seems ambivalent, which should really send up a red flag.

Read More...

Friday, January 25, 2008

More of the same with Jindal?

Bloggers have been expressing their suspicions that Jindal's administration is not truly interested in ethics reform or "transparency."

Well, the bottom's fallen out. Beyond odd details and idiosyncrasies, Jindal now faces ethics charges for receiving over $100,000 in in-kind contributions (mailing expenses) from the state GOP, without reporting it. Jindal's campaign people say it was a mistake: the GOP didn't issue an invoice (so there was no knowing what the amount spent was), and there was miscommunication among the Jindal staffers. In fact, the issue only came to light because it was reported by NO resident Chris Stow-Serge.

I'm not saying this was a deliberate omission, but it looks really bad. If there is not a case of deception here, there is at least one of ineptitude on the part of Jindal's staff. It doesn't help that a citizen not involved with the campaign had to report it. It's my feeling that this was a genuine oversight--truly, $100,000 in a $12-million campaign is a drop in the bucket, and it's not that bad of a thing to cover up anyway. Certainly not risking your campaign of "ethics" over. I'm not saying that Jindal and/or his crew don't commit other improprieties, but it doesn't make sense that they would take this particular (unnecessary) risk for such small return. In any case, it will probably be a big blow to his credibility. As the writer of Library Chronicles points out in one of the links above, it's made worse by being exactly what Jindal is supposed to be against, like conservative congressmen who get elected on "family values" and are caught in sex scandals.

Perhaps a more unsettling question is whether this kind of oversight/carelessness is the character of Louisiana politics. Maybe it's not always corruption but often ineptitude, irresponsibility, apathy. If that is the case, I think we have a harder fight ahead of ourselves to clean up our act. That sort of problem, in my opinion, is more insidious and difficult to remedy--more of an institutional problem--than deliberate wrongdoing by particular individuals.

Monday, January 21, 2008

AP article on oil canals

The AP has just written a piece on the effect oil canals have had on the wetlands. I'm glad to have come across this, because 1) many people don't know about their impact, or even--especially on a national level--about the wetlands in general; and 2) it frames the wetlands in terms of their importance as protection against hurricanes, which, while only one of the arguments for their existence, may help in their preservation. I hope this story gets a lot of circulation since it's AP.

But the industry's legacy is getting new attention. Some contrast record petroleum profits with staggering cost estimates - up to $60 billion - to save New Orleans and restore the delta. In 2006, major U.S. oil companies, some of which moved offices from New Orleans to Houston, earned about $162 billion.

Meanwhile, locals increasingly ask why oil shouldn't be made to clean up its profitable mess the same as mining operations had to do in Appalachia.

Yeah, let's get some press here.

Read More...

Ron Paul support

Today Ron Paul came here to speak; I didn't go, but it prompts me to talk about the support he enjoys on the LSU campus, where political awareness/activism usually doesn't ramp up until just before the general election.

This seeming support is strange to me, since his central platform is devolving what are currently federal responsibilities to the states, and we are a state that just elected a governor based on his claims that he'll clean up a corrupt and inefficient government. In other words, a lot of good it will do for us to do things on our own when we obviously have little or no confidence in ourselves to do it right. And, assuming Jindal is willing and able to set things straight with our state government, it will take time.

Read More...

Saturday, January 19, 2008

LSU Chancellor O'Keefe resigning

Sean O'Keefe has announced his resignation, to take place officially on February 1st. This came as a surprise to many a few weeks ago. He's been relatively mum about it, implying only that he doesn't have "the full confidence of the Board and the president." In an interview with 2theadvocate, he had a very diplomatic and even positive attitude about it, saying he has always been ready to resign should the board want him to. But:

O'Keefe: So this is a very good time, I think, to move forward, given a new president, a new opportunity, I think, to look at leadership for the University. It elected to move forward in that regard, and I am perfectly willing to do so.

Q: What do you think they're looking for that you didn't bring to the table?

O'Keefe: I have no idea.

He goes on to talk about the things he's done at LSU, including Forever LSU and the Flagship Agenda. He dodged a question about whether it was for political reasons: "This isn't about me, it's about LSU."

The most feasible explanation to me is that, as suggested to me by a friend, he was initially hired only for his ability to bring in money--not for experience in education administration--and that this ability was thanks to his ties with the Bush administration. Now that the Bush regime is in decline, members of the board see that he has outstayed his political usefulness. Whatever the case, the board doesn't want to discuss it.

Response has been varied. A group of boosters took out a full-page ad in the Advocate claiming that they'll stop donations if O'Keefe leaves (this seems like bluffing to me--stop supporting their tigers?). The Faculty Senate reportedly has "mixed feelings." And the Mustache Advocacy Network is/was "fighting" for him.

Updates

I've starting adding links on the right, especially for some Louisiana blogs (thanks Rosalind!). Obviously I'm far from done with that, but it's a start. Also, I added "Read more..." funcionality; thanks to Ramani of Hackosphere for that. Tweaked the colors so that visited links are no longer hard-to-read gray. If anyone has suggestions for the layout, feel free to let me know. Does the body need to be wider? (It looks narrow to me, but I'm using a widescreen monitor with fairly high resolution.) Does it need more colors?

Thursday, January 17, 2008

More BR loop meetings

The Advocate* reports that community meetings will continue on the loop--which comes as no surprise--to be held in late February and early March in the parishes around here. These types of meetings have gone on for several months, in a process of presenting information to the public and receiving feedback in order to eliminate choices from the possible routes. Most recently, the routes in the area of Port Vincent and French Settlement have been eliminated to preserve those areas, which are claimed by Ascension Parish to be historically important. (Personally, I don't know enough about these areas yet to agree or disagree... anyone care to shed some light on that?)

Everyone in Baton Rouge has heard of the loop. For those who live elsewhere, it's a highway project that will split off from I-10 and I-12 east of BR, traveling west, to circumvent the city to the south and north respectively, cross the Mississippi (at new bridges), then join back up with I-10. The goal is that traffic on the interstate that doesn't need to pass through BR will take one of the bypasses so that area residents will have to deal with less congestion.

5-parish area with interior and exterior limits of project.

Read More...

NOAA administrator to speak at LSU



On Tuesday, Jan. 22 at 3:00 PM, Conrad Lautenbacher, Undersecretary of commerce of NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) is going to speak at LSU about "building coastal resiliency" in Louisiana. The term "coastal resiliency" makes me think of barrier islands in particular, but it's not clear what exactly he'll be discussing. Anyway, I think it's worth going, because the loss of the wetlands is Louisiana's single biggest issue (more on that later). The talk will take place in the Dalton J. Woods auditorium of the Energy Coast and Environment Building off the Nicholson Extension. It's free and open to the public.

Hello

Hello, and welcome to this new blog, whose focus will be news, politics, culture, social issues, etc. in Lousiana with a bias towards Baton Rouge--not because it's more important than other parts of the state (which it isn't), but because it's where I am. Part of my agenda, though, will be to learn more about other areas.

I'm writing this blog for several reasons. First, I want there to be more dialog about local issues and goings-on. I feel that in our consumption of mass media (and consequent adoption of U.S. cultural, political, and social homogeneity), we tend to focus on national events to the detriment of local ones. This seems especially true of politics. I want this blog to be a place to discuss and/or debate these things, to get more local discourse going. Hopefully I'll meet some great folks, too.

Second, this will be a place for me to collect my thoughts as I learn. I have only recently developed state pride (more on that later) and therefore a genuine, deep concern for what goes on here. I'm not writing as an expert but as someone who's learning as they go. My real hope for this blog is that commenters more knowledgeable than myself contribute, and expand my understanding.

Third, I hope the blog will motivate me to stay abreast of what's going on, and keep exploring the many interesting facets, present and past, of this state. In the past I've tried to follow the (national) news but ended up distracted by other things (school work in particular) or just feeling apathetic. Also, while news outlets usually don't provide context well (only particulars of specific events), I'm hoping that this way I'll be able to fit things into a larger picture.

Finally, I feel motivated by a streak of activism. I'll say up-front that I'm a liberal, but I'm not here to play partisan politics--call it regional politics, I guess. By having discussions and perhaps even alerting readers to things they didn't know, we (by which I mean me and whoever comments) might fuel some small amount of local awareness and even political will (a lofty goal, I know). Despite all of our differences, we have to stick up for our state, ourselves, and each other, because no one else will.


As for format, I plan to follow and comment on news stories, write reviews of relevant books/films/etc., feature ongoing issues (e.g. the wetlands), and perhaps post my own general thoughts, observations, and questions for discussion. At worst, this will be a collection of notes as I learn and follow events; at best it will be a forum for discussion that fuels thought for everyone involved. Finally, I want to express my desire to understand different perspectives rather than condemn them--so I certainly welcome everyone, in- or out-of-state, whatever their viewpoints are. Welcome!