MELINDA DESLATTE,Associated Press
BATON ROUGE (AP) — Louisiana’s free college tuition program called TOPS carries a hefty price tag in a state budget that has been throttled with cuts.
It is expected to cost $218 million next year and is on track to grow to an estimated $340 million within five years.
Lawmakers repeatedly say they’re worried the state can’t afford the program’s expected price escalation. Higher education leaders say the program is unsustainable on its current path. And several study panels have suggested TOPS must be tweaked to survive.
Yet, the legislative session wrapped up this month with the sole attempt to rein in TOPS snuffed out with one debate, as lawmakers were leery to make changes to a subsidy that is widely popular and strongly supported by middle-class voters.
“Right now, just letting it go on and on and on is going to definitely be the golden egg that hatches and eats all that’s left out there,” Commissioner of Higher Education Jim Purcell told senators at one point.
It’s a difficult debate, where opponents suggest that changes to TOPS — formally the Taylor Opportunity Program for Students — could keep students from going to college, in a state where degrees beyond a high school diploma are in need.
Gov. Bobby Jindal says the program has encouraged more students to attend college and to stay in Louisiana. He has opposed attempts to cap the scholarship awards.
But the cost of TOPS grows each time colleges raise tuition rates, and colleges have been doing that more regularly as Jindal and lawmakers have stripped hundreds of millions of dollars from higher education since 2008.
In a sad twist, the state has continued to drop its spending on colleges even though the governor and lawmakers have been certain to pay for the TOPS program. They may be protecting the rights of Louisiana teenagers to go to college with free tuition, but they could also be shrinking the value of the degree students will get.
And lawmakers have listed the price tag of TOPS as one of the reasons they are reluctant to relinquish their tuition-setting authority for colleges, because they worry that if the campuses keep raising tuition, TOPS will balloon even larger.
Louisiana has paid nearly $1.6 billion on the TOPS program from the 1998-99 budget year through 2011-12, according to a recent review by the Louisiana Legislative Auditor’s Office.
The state is spending $192 million on TOPS in the fiscal year that ends June 30, and the budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year contains nearly $218 million for the program, according to the state Office for Student Financial Assistance.
The program provides scholarships to Louisiana high school students who complete a certain curriculum and who meet grade point average and college entrance test score requirements: at least a 2.5 GPA and a 20 on the ACT.
The basic TOPS award covers tuition at any state public university, regardless of a student’s need or ability to pay. Higher achieving students can earn extra awards under the program.
TOPS is one of the most generous free college tuition programs in the country.
States with similar scholarship programs have set caps and created fixed amounts that will be paid for students, rather than let the programs’ price tags rise with tuition increases. Some states limit the tuition coverage to students based on income levels, while others require tougher academic hurdles to get the aid.
House Speaker Chuck Kleckley, R-Lake Charles, suggested before the legislative session that lawmakers needed to find a way to control the costs of TOPS. After he got pushback, Kleckley stopped talking about program changes.
Sen. Dan “Blade” Morrish, R-Jennings, sought to place limits on TOPS awards. He said he worried that without cost controls, TOPS might become too expensive for the state to maintain.
“I want the TOPS program in this state to continue to be fiscally strong and to continue to have that for our grandchildren in the future,” he said.
Several senators expressed concern about the sustainability of TOPS. Then, the Senate Education Committee deferred Morrish’s bill without objection.
Melinda Deslatte covers the Louisiana Capitol for The Associated Press.
Port Allen’s budget
faces uncertain future
PORT ALLEN — It’s doubtful Mayor Demetric Slaughter’s $9.7 million proposed spending plan for the 2013-14 fiscal year will gain the approval it needs from the Port Allen City Council by July 1.
A majority of the city’s five council members said last week they wouldn’t support the plan because the mayor did not follow proper protocol when she presented it to them on Wednesday.
They also stressed that they are outraged at her budget proposal slashing the salaries of two of the city’s top officials, one of them by as much as $40,000 a year.
Councilman Garry Hubble, chairman of the council’s Personnel and Finance Committee, said the mayor failed to offer the council any explanation justifying the proposed salary cuts.
Teen killed in ATV-pickup crash
EUNICE — State police are investigating a fatal crash involving a Honda four-wheeler and a pickup in Evangeline Parish.
The accident happened early Sunday morning on La. 757 near Eunice.
Troopers say 15-year-old Matthew Neal of Basile was driving an ATV southbound when he was struck from behind by a pickup driven by 21-year-old Jonathan Tucker of Eunice.
Trooper Stephen Hammons said ATV was not equipped with lights.
Hammons says neither Neal nor his 16-year-old passenger was wearing helmets and both were ejected. The 16-year-old was transported to a hospital with moderate injuries.
Hearing starts
today in 1995 police killing
NEW ORLEANS — A death row inmate is asking for a new trial on charges that he helped a New Orleans policewoman rob and kill three people at a restaurant where she worked off-duty.
The reports that the hearing for Rogers LaCaze opens today and could last more than a week.
He was convicted of helping Antoinette Frank rob Kim Anh Restaurant and kill her patrol partner and two of the owners’ children in 1995.
They were tried separately.
Federal charges filed alleged bank fraud scheme
BATON ROUGE — Two Baton Rouge businessmen are charged with bank fraud in what federal prosecutors say involved more than $368,000 in loans they obtained for construction of a fitness center that did not open.
Court records show Matthew Scott Bernard is charged two counts of bank fraud and two counts of false statements to banks. Ronald Joseph Olah Jr. is accused in the same indictment of two counts of bank fraud and two counts of wire fraud.
The indictment was made public June 7.
Olah was released on bail but while Bernard was ordered detained until trial.
School Board president arrested in hit and run
GREENSBURG — State police have arrested the president of the Livingston Parish School Board after a 21-year-old Mississippi man was killed in a hit-and-run in St. Helena Parish.
Trooper First Class Melissa Matey says the accident occurred shortly before 5 a.m. Saturday when William Iasigi, of Liberty, Miss., was driving south on La. 43 South.
Matey says Iasigi stopped his pickup in the middle of the road and got out and he was struck by another pickup driven by 65-year-old Malcolm Sibley of Walker.
Troopers booked Sibley into St. Helena Parish Jail on a count of felony hit-and-run at 9:40 a.m. Sunday. Jail officials say Sibley posted bail and was released.
It was unclear if Sibley has an attorney.
Ascension Parish solicits input on sewer plan
GONZALES — Ascension Parish officials hope to give information out and get some in return during a pair of public meetings this week regarding a proposed parish-wide sewer project.
The first meeting will be from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Lamar-Dixon Expo Center gymnasium in Gonzales. A second meeting will be held at the same time Tuesday at Dutchtown High School in Geismar.
Benny Johnson, chairman of the Ascension Parish Council’s Utilities Committee, said parish officials have been gathering information on a potential parish-wide sewer project for the past 18 months.
This week’s public meetings will allow officials to share that information with parish residents, as well as to get input about what the residents would like to see happen.
Sessions focus
on Civil War in Lafourche
LOCKPORT — The Lockport Public Library is planning a series of discussions focusing on the Civil War in Lafourche Parish.
Nicholls State University professor Steve Michot will speak about guerilla warfare in Lafourche at 2 p.m. Wednesday.
A discussion of Civil War stories from around the Acadian parishes by Morris Raphael will be held at 2 p.m. Friday.
A film on the Civil War will be screened at 2 p.m Saturday.
La. Guard’s top
enlisted adviser fired
BATON ROUGE — The Louisiana National Guard’s highest officer has fired his top enlisted adviser for alleged sexual harassment.
Another guard member made a complaint against Sgt. Maj. Tommy Caillier, 53, more than a week ago. Maj. Gen. Glenn Curtis, adjutant general of the Louisiana National Guard, asked the National Guard Bureau in Washington to investigate, Lt. Col. Michael Kazmierzak, a guard spokesman, said Sunday.
“As of now, that investigative team’s conclusion is that sexual harassment and abuse of power has occurred,” Kazmierzak said. He said investigators are looking into an allegation of sexual assault.
No telephone listing was available for Caillier.
Kazmierzak said Caillier has asked for representation by the regional trial defense counsel, who did not immediately respond to a message left Sunday on his office answering machine.
Caillier was Curtis’s top adviser on all matters affecting enlisted soldiers and airmen in the Louisiana National Guard.
Curtis removed Caillier from active duty and named Command Sgt. Maj. James Mays to replace him, Kazmierzak said.
Kazmierzak said he did not know whether Caillier was accused of a single alleged act or multiple alleged acts, or whether his accuser is a man or a woman. Such details may be released if charges are brought, he said.
“The Louisiana National Guard understands very well that sexual assault is a crime and his been a persistent problem in the military that violates everything we stand for,” he said.
Coast Guard searches 2nd day for missing diver
GRAND ISLE — The Coast Guard is searching for a diver missing 55 miles off Grand Isle.
Petty Officer Carlos Vega says the search began Saturday afternoon for 56-year-old Tim Raines, whose home town Vega does not know.
He says the boat “Early Life Crisis” was moored to an offshore rig and Raines reportedly was spearfishing nearby when an undertow washed him about 40 feet behind the boat. Raines reportedly went under while swimming toward the boat.
Vega says the crews of a helicopter and an airplane continued the search on Sunday.
He says the dive boat’s manager is from Port Allen.
From The Associated Press.
MORGAN CITY, La. -- Despite the possible loss of a major employer which could affect hundreds of workers and with the exception of an unmet pressing need for housing, economic development director Frank Fink is bullish on the economic future of St. Mary Parish.
Fink forecasts a diverse and robust growth in employment and industry throughout the parish in both the short and long term.
“The entire parish is poised to grow as we move into the future with oil and gas being the driving force behind the growth,” Fink said as he sat behind a desk scattered with development proposals and research papers.
While employment in the parish will remain largely dependent on the oil and gas industry, the parish is aggressively attempting to expand its economic structure, Fink said.
“You have to take care of the guys that got you here,” Fink said of the oil and gas industry. “But we have plans and are working on developments that will help us diversify.”
Fink attempted to put an optimistic tone to the rumors of the closing of McDermott International, one of the parish’s major employers. He acknowledged that the company has “been reducing workforce somewhat” but said the company “hasn’t made a firm decision.”
He said that there are about 500 workers left on the yard and the company has a “big shipment out this summer,” so remains hopeful for the short term, if not the long term. Some of the workers are contract workers and not employees of the company.
In any case, the situation at other major industrial companies looks secure and stable. Fink noted that local employers such as Conrad Industries, Oceaneering International, Cameron Ironworks and other “big players” are consistently recruiting more workers.
In addition to light and heavy industrial jobs throughout the parish, Fink foresees job growth in other sectors, especially in Morgan City and Franklin.
“Morgan City’s future looks bright for medical expansion. There are several things that are currently in the expansion stage on that front,” Fink said. He also pointed out that in recent years the city has added what he calls some “formal type restaurants and a number of other quality restaurants.”
Franklin, too, looks poised for a burst in medical-related jobs, according to Fink.
The old hospital building used by Franklin Foundation Hospital was recently sold to MRP-St. Mary. The building and campus, which includes about 4.2 acres, had been vacant since 2007. The building will be refurbished and converted into an assisted living facility according to Fink.
According to MRP-St. Mary LLC representative Scott Gottsche, improvements on the building should begin in the next six months.
Nearly six years ago the hospital replaced the building with a 22-bed critical access hospital, according to the St. Mary Parish Chamber of Commerce. The $18 million, 65,000 square foot facility had its grand opening in 2007.
Amelia is growing on the eastern side of the parish and will see continued growth Fink predicted. A 12,500 square-foot shopping center is almost complete.
A weak link in economic development for the parish remains the shortage of housing, according to Fink’s assessment. In addition to a need for permanent housing, there is a need for hotels and apartments.
Part of that need has been addressed with the construction of nine hotels in the parish in the past five years. Fink expects construction to begin within a year for a 60- to 100-unit hotel in Amelia.
Fink said of apartment development, “We need a developer that has the interest of the parish in his heart,” and the ability to provide or locate financing to make an offer to a landowner that will be accepted. There was one developer that appeared to ready to make such a development not long ago but the deal to purchase the land fell through, he said.
Fink is optimistic that Patterson Mayor Rodney Grogan can bring some housing developments into Patterson and said that Baldwin has about 40 to 50 acres which are under discussion for 170 units of apartments and single family rentals.
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Dumesnil claimed two second place spots...
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Dumesnil claimed two second place spots...
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MELVIN EUGENE SIMONEAUX III
Oct. 8, 1980 ~ June 13, 2013
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VERA LEE CORMIER
Feb. 6, 1926 ~ June 15, 2013
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1609 Old Jeanerette Rd Suite C, New Iberia, LA 70563
phone: 337-364-0130
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