Alexandria council continues to struggle with utility billing, disconnects

By JIM BUTLER

Hundreds, if not thousands, of Alexandria‘s 24,759 electric customers did not get bills for several months in 2022.

And many of them failed to make any advance payments or otherwise prepare for the ultimate accounting once the city corrected its shortcomings.

The city tried a special grant program to assist customers, but many remain in a bind as the City Council’s Utility Committee searches for solutions.

One citizen speaking at Tuesday’s committee went so far as to label non-payment disconnects an abuse of power.

Actually a consistent, enforced collections and cutoff policy is part of the covenants of the system’s bonded debt.

According to the city’s most recent audit, that debt will require total payments of $213 million over the next 20 years.
The most recent refinancing occurred in 2020.

The bonds payments are made from utility system revenue. And bond covenants contain little latitude when it comes to collection and none when it comes to the city’s debt service payment dates and amounts.

What can the city do?

Last year it enacted RESTOR, which provided grants based on household size and income to assist with past-due accounts.

While it did not pay entire balances in most cases, it did make partial inroads. Customers were then put on monthly payment plans for remaining past-due amounts. And current usage monthly bill continued.

It appears many thought the payment plan would be the entirety of their monthly bill from that point on. Not so, and the delinquency rate rose again.

This summer’s extreme heat made matters worse. And upcoming heating season bills offer little chance for catching up by many of the 17,238 occupied households in the city.

Median income for those households is $43,760, according to Census records, but the half below the median line includes all of the 27 percent of households identified as at or below the official  poverty line.

A rate reduction in these times of rising costs seems unlikely. And tiered billing – base rates varying with location, age/type of structure, etc. – doesn’t seem feasible.

The committee – Gary Johnson, chairman, Reddex Washington Jr. and Jim Villard – will continue its search for solutions.


Young LSU corners square up to Kirklin mantra for inspiration 

PENN CITES TRAIT: LSU junior linebacker Greg Penn III, shown in action earlier this season, says the inexperienced core of cornerbacks set to play against Alabama need to play with the same “Fighting Tigers” trait shown in the bowl game two seasons ago by Jontre Kirklin, a receiver pressed into duty as the starting quarterback. (Photo by GUS STARK, LSU Athletics)

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE — LSU starting junior linebacker Greg Penn III knows what it feels like when the odds aren’t on his side.

Two seasons ago, he was a wide-eyed freshman on a 4-4 Tigers team led by a lame-duck head coach. That LSU team headed to Alabama as a 28-point underdog to play the defending national champion and No. 3 ranked 7-1 Crimson Tide.

“It was a crazy game,” said Penn, who’ll play in his third Tigers-Tide tiff Saturday night at 6:45 in Tuscaloosa. “A lot of people didn’t think we had a shot.”

The Tigers did have a shot but lost 20-14 in a battle that could have scuttled Alabama’s chances of returning to the national title game.

It was a game LSU could have possibly taken to overtime, but already-fired head coach Ed Orgeron took a fourth-and-goal gamble from the Alabama 7 with 6:46 left, which failed. He could’ve let placekicker Cade York kick a 24-yard field goal to cut the score to 20-17.

If that had happened, York, who made 15 of 19 field goals 50 yards and beyond in his three-year LSU career, would have had a chance to tie the game with a 47-yard goal as time expired. Instead, LSU’s only choice was for quarterback Max Johnson to launch a pass into the end zone intended for Brian Thomas Jr. that was batted away incomplete.

A couple of months after that game, LSU had just 39 scholarship players, an interim head coach and no quarterback available when it lost to Kansas State 42-20 in the Texas Bowl.

With Johnson already having decided to enter the transfer portal and backup Garrett Nussmeier deciding to not play to preserve his freshman redshirt season, the Tigers were forced to play wide receiver Jontre Kirklin, a former high school QB, as the starting QB.

In Tuesday’s LSU players media availability, Penn recalled Kirklin’s postgame comments of throwing two TD passes in the game’s final four minutes, including an 81-yard scoring strike to Chris Hilton Jr. as time expired.

“Shoot, we’re Fighting Tigers.” Kirklin said. “We’re not going to back down from nobody. If we’ve got 11, we’re going to go play.”

Penn is using those words this weekend as a team mantra when the 14th-ranked Tigers (6-2 overall, 4-1 SEC West), handicapped by having to rely on a trio of little-used true freshmen cornerbacks and a sophomore, face the No. 8 Tide (7-1, 5-0 SEC West).

“We just gotta go out there and fight like Tigers,” Penn said. “You’ve got to love it. It is what it is.”

This week, upperclassmen have offered loads of encouragement to true freshmen corners Ashton Stamps, Jeremiah Hughes and Jason Toviano, and sophomore Laterrance Welch.

That collective college game experience of the foursome is 41 games with 1 start, 23 tackles, a ½ tackle for loss and 2 pass breakups.

“Those young guys are doing a great job (in practice), Penn said. “We’re trying to make their job as easy as possible. They’re doing a good job communicating out there. We just want them to go out there and play fast and play with confidence.”

Here’s a brief look at each cornerback:


  • Ashton Stamps, 6-0, 188, Fr., New Orleans Archbishop Rummel:Was rated only a 3-star prospect. Had 65 tackles and 9 pass breakups last season as a high school senior, despite being targeted 10 times. Added 10 pounds of muscle in summer workouts. He impressed coaches and teammates with his intelligence. Had an outstanding preseason camp with the Tigers, breaking up passes and collecting interceptions. “Ashton is going to be a very good player,” Hilton said in the preseason. “We saw a (practice) play on film in which he rerouted the receiver, then dropped back and then made the pick. That’s something you don’t see every day from a freshman.” Stamps has played in six games, including a start against Ole Miss when he re-aggravated a groin injury. He sat out the Auburn and Army games and returned to practice this week.

  • Jason Toviano, 6-1, 201, Fr., Arlington (Texas) Martin High:Was rated a 4-star prospect by Rivals, which also tagged him as the fourth-best high school cornerback in the nation last season when he had 38 tackles, 2 interceptions and 2 forced fumbles. Has played sparingly in all 8 LSU games, mostly as a reserve safety. Has 6 tackles.

  • Jeremiah Hughes, 6-0, 187, Fr., Las Vegas (Nevada) Bishop Gorman:From the same high school as current LSU senior basketball forward Mwani Wilkerson, he’s a 3-star prospect who was moved from wide receiver to defensive back as a junior. Was rated as one of the top five high school players in Nevada last season. Has played in all 8 LSU games this year as a backup corner. Has 3 tackles.

  • Laterrance Welch, 6-1, 193, So., Lafayette Acadiana High:Was rated in 2021 as a high school senior as a four-star cornerback by ESPN, 247Sports and Rivals. Ranked No. 12 nationally at his position by ESPN. Played in 13 games as an LSU freshman last season, mostly on special teams. Has played in six LSU games this season with 6 tackles, a ½ TFL and 1 PBU.

“These guys are inexperienced,” LSU head coach Brian Kelly.  “But they are really good players and they’ll get out there and compete for LSU.”


Week 10 parish high school football standings

 Peabody junior receiver/cornerback TJ Hullaby and the Warhorses host Franklin Parish this week with a chance to get a first-round bye in the state Division III Select playoffs. (Journal photo by BRET H. MCCORMICK)





 

District   2-5A Dist. All
Ruston 4-0 9-0
West Monroe 4-0 8-1
Alexandria 2-2 5-4
West Ouachita 1-3 6-3
Ouachita 1-3 2-7
Pineville 0-4 2-7
 
District 2-4A Dist. All
Neville 4-0 8-1
Tioga 2-1 7-2
Franklin Parish 1-2 6-3
Peabody 1-2 6-3
Grant 0-3 3-6
 
District 2-3A Dist. All
Jena 4-0 9-0
Bunkie 3-1 8-1
Buckeye 2-2 5-4
Marksville 2-2 5-4
Caldwell Parish 1-3 4-5
Bolton 0-4 0-9
 
District 4-2A Dist. All
Menard 4-0 6-3
Avoyelles 2-1 2-7
Oakdale 1-2 6-3
Rosepine 1-2 3-6
Pickering 0-3 0-9
 
District 3-1A Dist. All
Logansport 3-0 8-1
St. Mary’s 2-1 6-2
Montgomery 2-1 5-4
LaSalle 1-3 4-5
Northwood-Lena 0-3 1-8

Power ratings bring intrigue, speculation into playoff races

Tioga running back Kenny Ponthier and the Indians have a chance at a first-round bye in the playoffs if they beat Grant on Thursday and get some help from a couple of other teams, notably Barbe and Zachary. (Journal photo by BRET H. MCCORMICK)

Opinion by BRET H. MCCORMICK, Journal Sports

I cannot stand math.

Loathe it, actually. It was my least favorite subject in school. There’s a reason I became a journalist and then an English teacher. 

When my students ask for my help with any math assignment, I cringe. Don’t get me wrong. I do my best to help them, but it usually ends with me having a headache. 

Still, as much as I try to avoid math, I find myself staring at my calculator and poring over power-point equations as we near the end of the prep football regular season. 

We will find out which 208 teams make the playoffs when the LHSAA releases the eight Select and Non-Select brackets on Sunday. But why wait? Let’s take a deep dive into where our local Rapides Parish schools stand here in Week 10. 

Before we look at each team, let me give you a little primer on how LHSAA power ratings are calculated. 

Teams get 10 points for each of their wins during the season and one point for each of their opponents’ wins (unless they play nine games; in that case it will be 1.11 points per win). They can gain additional “bonus” points for playing up in division – two points for each division. 

After all of those points are calculated, the total is divided by the number of games played by each team. For most teams, that is 10 games. For some, though, it may be nine. 

Rapides Parish has eight football-playing schools – Alexandria Senior High, Pineville and Tioga in Division I; Bolton, Buckeye and Peabody in Division II; Menard in Division III and Northwood-Lena in Division IV. 

Let’s start by eliminating the two schools who are out of playoff contention, Bolton and Northwood-Lena. The Bears are 0-9 on the season, while Northwood is 1-8. Both sit at No. 28 in the power ratings and aren’t getting in even if they pull off upset wins this week. 

That leaves us with six teams remaining. Now for the math. 

In Division I, Tioga currently sits at No. 9 as the Indians battle for one of the eight first-round byes. ASH is 13th, likely locked into a home playoff game, while Pineville sits at No. 23, squarely on the bubble for one of the final playoff slots. 

Tioga’s power rating of 12.72 sits slightly ahead of John Curtis and behind Acadiana and Catholic-Baton Rouge. Full disclosure: I thought Tioga’s thrilling 33-32 overtime win over Peabody would lock up a first-round bye for the Indians. Then I checked the power ratings the next day and saw they fell from No. 8 to No. 9, so that shows you what I know. 

Tioga needs to take care of business against Grant and it likely gets to a power rating of 12.9 – 13.0 if Marksville can upset Bunkie in the Catskin game. But will that be enough? 

The Indians can’t catch Acadiana without an unlikely upset by Barbe, but they could potentially leap Catholic should the Bears fall to unbeaten Zachary. That would put Tioga at No. 8, right? Not so fast. 

John Curtis faces Edna Karr, the top team in both the Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class 5A poll and the Division I Select power ratings. J.T. Curtis has a chance to break the all-time coaching wins record in U.S. high school football, so the Patriots have plenty of motivation to pull off the upset. A Curtis win would leapfrog Tioga in the power ratings. 

Tioga will be rooting for Barbe, Zachary and Karr to all win, which should be enough to give the Indians a first-round bye.  

ASH controls its own destiny. Beat West Ouachita and the Trojans are safely the No. 13 seed with a home playoff game. Lose, though, and they will need some help to remain in the top 16. 

Now let’s look at the odds that Pineville makes the playoffs. Option 1: Win and get in, likely at No. 22 or 23. Option 2: Lose and hope. A loss would drop the Rebels’ power rating from 8.64 to 7.90, giving Scotlandville, Lafayette, East Jefferson, Liberty and Higgins all the chance to win and jump them. 

Although none of those teams has more than three wins, odds are pretty high that Scotlandville, Lafayette and East Jefferson can win this week.  

In Division II, Peabody will host a home playoff game no matter the outcome of Friday’s game against Franklin Parish. The Warhorses could climb as high as No. 9 with a win or fall as low as No. 15 with a loss. Buckeye will be on the road in the first round, even if the Panthers upset unbeaten Jena. 

Menard’s fate is completely up in the air, especially since a win over Glen Oaks will only add 12 power points. The Eagles need some help from their non-district opponents, but their power rating is likely to drop either way, meaning they need a couple of the teams ahead of them to lose. 

Prediction: Tioga lands at No. 9, at home in the first round but without a bye. ASH holds steady at No. 13 and faces Byrd in the first round. Pineville ends up 25th on the outside looking in. Peabody beats Franklin Parish and ends up at No. 12 hosting No. 21 Buckeye. Menard drops to 18th and travels to Houma Christian. 

Now that I have a massive headache, I’m going to put my calculator away, enjoy some football these next two nights, then check in on the brackets Sunday to see just how wrong I am. 


More ‘bear’ facts to consider

The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Commission is expected to vote at its November meeting on whether our state will schedule a hunting season for black bears in 2024-25. 

 There are those, especially hunters and hunting camp and other property owners in parishes bordering the Mississippi River, who welcome the possibility of scheduling a hunting season for bears. They have grown tired of seeing hunting stands, feeders and camps damaged or destroyed by what they consider nuisance animals. They also point to the fact that bear numbers especially in that part of the state continue to grow.

 On the flip side, there are animal rights activists and others who hate the thought of our resident bears being hunted. What the Commission decides will dictate which of the two groups gets what they prefer.

 OK, let’s assume you are a proponent of bear hunting in Louisiana, your name gets drawn to enable you to hunt bears. What if you get one? What will you do with it? Process it yourself or take it to a taxidermist? I talked with a taxidermist friend about his thoughts on processing a bear.

“There’s a good bit more work involved. Most folks who bring in a bear want a half body mount, full body mount or a bearskin rug. This involves skinning out the feet, the toes and front legs. It takes more time because of the size. They make beautiful mounts; we have done several brought in from out of state,” he said.

Comments I read concerning preparing and eating bear meat differ as much as the pro-hunt/no hunt parties.

“Bear meat is nasty,” said one. “Bear meat is wonderful,” another counters. “Just treat it like pork. I have eaten every bear I’ve killed and turned it into roasts, breakfast sausage, Italian sausage and prepared on the smoker,” a fan of eating bear added.

Google has much to say about bear meat for food. “Bears are known to carry the disease trichinosis, like pork. To prevent getting it, killing the trichinosis in the meat is as simple as making sure the meat hits 160 degrees when cooking.”

Other comments I found on the Internet are interesting…“Stuff like chili, tamales, shredded bear, burgers, tacos and stew are going to make you love bear meat more and more.”

Another writes, “The best steaks come from the loin, aka, backstrap. You can cut several large roasts from the front and hind quarters and reserve the rest for stew meat and/or grind into burger.”

Here’s another thing to consider. Peterson Hunting magazine has this to add to the pro/con of eating bear meat. “It pays to consider their diet. Bears shot in the fall eat wild berries and in spring, they feed on grass; it’s like they’re grain fed. Perhaps only dumpster bears, scavenging on the soiled scraps of what we humans eat should be avoided.”

I would conclude that bears that have grown fat on corn when they rip into a corn feeder, should provide a better taste than the dumpster divers.

The jury is still out. Some folks like to eat bear meat; others wouldn’t touch it. If you are selected to hunt bear and you get one but you can’t relish the thought of eating one, here’s a comment I read from a guy who doesn’t plan to eat bear meat and who might have trouble getting along with folks.

“Give the meat to neighbors you don’t like.” 

Contact Glynn at glynnharris37@gmail.com


Hineston man faces $100,000 bail for domestic abuse battery

Rapides felony bookings are accusations, not convictions. 

October 31
Tamara Allen, 36, Alexandria — domestic abuse battery 2, $1,500 bail;
Russell Bailey, 66, Forest Hill — false imprisonment, aggravated assault, contempt two counts, $10,000 bail;
Tommy Scully, 48, Hineston — domestic abuse battery 1, contempt two counts, $100,500 bail;
Sir Taylor, 29, Alexandria — aggravated assault with firearm, stalking, no bond set. 


One Halloween drug booking nabs Colfax man

Rapides felony drug bookings are accusations, not convictions.

October 31
Donald Jones, 51, Colfax — possession fentanyl/carfentanyl, possession first 14, fugitive, probation violation, possession firearm by convicted felon two counts, $500 bail.


Italian Wedding Soup

Italian Wedding Soup is here to FINALLY and OFFICIALLY kick off Soup Season! (FYI Soup Season is alllllllmost as good as Ashley Season which is in February).

This Parmesan covers up the turkey meatballs I used for this (yes the storebought kind!). Throw in any kind of small pasta to make this extra hearty. I promise any kind will be good. And feel free to use regular beef meatballs instead of turkey.

Fun fact – the origin of the name of this soup is the wedding of the flavors together….not folks. And I can vouch for the goodness of the marrying of these flavors. Top notch! Enjoy!

Ingredients:
– Frozen meatballs
– 2 tablespoons olive oil
– 2 tablespoons butter
– 1 small onion, diced
– 2 sticks celery, diced
– 2 handfuls of baby carrots, diced
– 4 cloves garlic, minced
– 8 cups chicken broth
– ½ teaspoon Italian seasoning
– ½ cup uncooked orzo (or any type of small pasta)
– 1 (5 ounce) package fresh baby spinach
– Freshly grated Parmesan for serving

Directions
Heat a large soup pot with olive oil and butter. Add onion, celery and carrots. Saute until soft. Stir in garlic and cook 1 minute. Add in broth, Italian seasoning and meatballs. Increase the heat to high and bring to a boil. Once the soup is boiling add pasta. Reduce and simmer for 10 minutes stirring occasionally. Stir in the spinach, let it wilt and season with salt and pepper if needed. Serve with freshly grated Parmesan on top.

Ashley Madden is a wife, mother and published cookbook author from Minden, La.


Notice of Death – November 1, 2023

Stacy Lynn Nessmith
September 27, 1963 – October 29, 2023
Service: Friday, November 3, 2023, 10am at Peniel Baptist Church Cemetery.
 
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)

Citizens share frustrations over utility bills with Alexandria City Council

By Jim Smilie

Facing a growing number of attempts by residents to voice concerns over high utility bills and customer cutoffs at recent Alexandria City Council meetings, the Council’s Utility Committee offered citizens a chance to speak their minds before Tuesday night’s council meeting.

Public comments during formal council meetings are limited to those who sign up in advance and the comments must be “germane” issues directly related to the matter being voted on at the time. As a result, residents at previous council meetings trying to ask about utility cutoffs were cutoff from commenting and told their concerns were not germane to the agenda item. Committee meetings, however, are not as tightly controlled and allow much more opportunity for interaction between council members and the public.

District 2 City Councilman Gary Johnson chairs the Utility Committee, which also includes District 1 Councilman Reddex Washington and At-Large Councilman Jim Villard. Council President Lee Rubin was also on the dais for the meeting. Neither Mayor Jacques Roy nor Utility Director Michael Marcotte was in attendance for the meeting.

As he opened the meeting, Johnson said speakers representing community groups and organizations would be allowed 3-5 minutes to speak while individuals would be limited to 2-3 minutes. “This meeting is long overdue,” Johnson said, adding, “We won’t get everything resolved tonight,” but he felt citizens needed an opportunity to share their concerns with council members.

First to speak were the Rev. Clifford Person and William Butterfield representing Interfaith Ministries. Person explained Interfaith Ministries represents 16 congregations, many of which had representatives in attendance at the meeting. He said they have heard many complaints from citizens regarding utility cutoffs and high utility bills. He said the Alexandria Housing Authority has had to turn out numerous families due to utility bill issues.

Butterfield shared the Bible story of the Good Samaritan and said a solution needs to be found to help those in need. Noting the diversity of organizations represented, Butterfield said, “what we have in common is a love of central Louisiana.”

Person said the group is seeking the answers to four specific questions: How many residents have had their utilities cutoff in 2023, how many Alexandria residents have no utility service, what is the amount of past-due payments owed to the city, and how much money was budgeted to Project RESTOR, a program launched earlier this year by the city to assist Alexandria utility customers with high past-due balances.

Councilman Johnson took the questions and said he would work to get the answers for the group.

Following the scheduled comments by Interfaith Ministries, Johnson opened the floor to the audience. A variety of people took the opportunity to speak, ranging from ministers and group organizers to elected officials and regular citizens seeking to share their experiences.

Many quested how Project RESTOR works. Council President Lee Rubin explained that Project RESTOR had two parts – a one-time grant for some residents to help cover part of their past-due balance, and a payment plan to help residents pay off their outstanding utility balance while also paying for their current usage.

Several speakers said they had a line on their bill marked as a RESTOR payment when they had not signed up for the RESTOR program. Shicola Jones, Chair of Project Enough, was one of the speakers who said she has RESTOR charges on her monthly utility bill but she never applied for the program. “You (Council members) got bamboozled on RESTORE,” she said, adding that the city violated her rights by placing RESTOR charges on her bill without her consent. She also called utility disconnects “an abuse of power.”

The numerous complaints about Project RESTOR and the confusion over the program prompted District 3 Councilwoman Cynthia Perry to step to the microphone. “People want accountability,” she said. “I voted for RESTOR thinking it would help you. I apologize for voting for it because I see it is making people struggle.”

Several speakers said they had difficulty getting information about bills and Project RESTOR, and many specifically cited Utility Director Michael Marcotte. Lorenzo Davis, who ran for Mayor last year, complained, “the people in charge are not even here. Maybe Mike Marcotte ain’t the guy. People need to know what the policies are and what help is available.”

While most complained they got no response from Marcotte, one speaker said he did get a reply stating they were correcting a problem from the previous administration. “If there is a change in policy, it needs to be clearly communicated,” the speaker said. Regarding Project RESTOR, the speaker said the way the program was explained, “took a while for people with doctorate and master’s degrees to figure out.”

One elderly resident, who noted she is a widow on a limited income, said her most recent bill was the highest it has ever been, even higher than when she and her late husband were in the house. “Some nights I have to think, ‘will I eat a sandwich, or will I sit in the dark?’ Somebody, please make this make sense.”

Another resident said she took a letter to the city utility office showing she was approved for utility assistance and was told that she had to put down a deposit before they would move forward with the assistance. “I asked the representative how the bill got so high, and she finally told me the truth – she said she didn’t know,” the speaker said.

Medical concerns were another common issue mentioned, with residents noting they have C-Pap machines, oxygen units and other devices that require electrical power. One speaker said her power was actually disconnected while she was giving her child a breathing treatment. When she went to the utility department to complain, she said she was overwhelmed by how many other people were there crying and begging for help. She said one of the women she encountered had just gotten out of the hospital and came home to find she had been disconnected.

“Houses are catching on fire from people having to use candles because they don’t have light. Generators are being stolen. Meter readers are being threatened,” the speaker said. “RESTOR was supposed to help, but it’s hurting the city. We don’t need another Project RESTOR, we need a solution to Project Reconnect.”

Rapides Parish Police Juror Jay Scott, who said he has had utilities cut off twice, criticized the council members for not finding a solution. “The public asks you to fix it, you don’t fix it. Stop playing with the people,” he said.

Steven “Uncle Willie” Chark placed blame on Mayor Roy. “We need our Mayor to step up and do his job, or we need him to resign,” Chark said.

As he wrapped up the committee meeting, Johnson thanked people for coming and sharing their concerns. “We need to come together and resolve this,” he said.

In other action, the Community Affairs, Services and Events Committee heard from Sally Cowan, Executive Director of Cenla Community Action Committee, which offers utility assistance to low-income central Louisiana residents.

Cowan said our most vulnerable residents are being put at risk by the current utility bill situation and that we need a “sustainable and compassionate assistance solution.” She proposed the creation of a committee to find a solution.

She specifically suggested that a City Council member chair the committee. Other members she suggested to serve on the committee include City of Alexandria Utility Customer Service Supervisor Karolyn Surgent, a representative from CCAC, a local resident and a local business owner.

Cowan said the committee could address a variety of concerns including expanding assistance programs, creating new payment options, looking at renewable energy alternatives, and addressing weatherization needs.

Councilwoman Perry thanked Cowan for her suggestion and said it has her support. “I would like to help implement the plan, and I hope the other council members will get on board,” she said.

District 4 Councilwoman Lizzie Felter added, “I love that you mentioned helping strengthen bonds in the community. There are certain things a city can and can’t do, and there are things organizations can and can’t do, so it’s good to come together.”

With the lengthy committee meetings, the main council meeting was delayed from its normal 5 p.m. start to 5:35 p.m. When it started, most of the audience members had left and City Attorney Jonathan Goins was the lone representative from the administration. The council quickly moved through an agenda filled with routine matters and adjourned at 5:44 p.m.


Early voting nears, with four more amendments to consider

By JIM BUTLER

Four more proposed state constitutional amendments are on the November 18 general election ballot. Early voting begins Friday and closes November 10.

Also on the ballot in Rapides are three statewide runoffs, a tax renewal substitution for Renaissance and a Police Jury runoff.

Since the convention of 1973 called to steamline the state’s base governing document 316 proposed amendments to it have been put to voters, who approved 213, including four in last month’s primary.

The four on the November ballot:

1 — would alter rules for veto sessions of Legislature, permitting override attempts while in regular session;

2 — would remove six inactive special funds from constitution; five have no money in them;

3 — would allow police jury to give extra property tax exemption (up to $25,000) to first responders owning homes and living in parish;

4 — would tighten “emergency” rules for allowing Legislature to tap Revenue Stabilization Trust Fund.

A non-partisan review of the pro and cons of each proposed amendment is available at the Public Affairs Research Council web site.


Wildcat basketball officially tips season with loss at Southern

Photo Provided

BATON ROUGE — The Louisiana Christian University men’s basketball program spent its second straight night in the state capital while facing off against the pair of NCAA Division I schools in town, dropping its regular season opener at Southern University by a score of 94-60 on Tuesday evening.

The Wildcats were beaten Monday night in an exhibition game at LSU, then made their official season debut a few miles up the Mississippi River on the bluff at Southern.

Kylan Williams set career-highs in both points (12) and rebounds (6), his first time crossing the double-digit scoring plateau in a contest while his half-dozen boards was the most on the club to go along with making four of his five shots.

Drew Tebbe scored a high volume in a short span, dropping six free throws made, a personal-best, in only seven minutes.

Konnor DeJean was the third and final Wildcat student-athlete to raise his benchmark in a statistical category, going for a quartet of rebounds.

Freshman Omarion Layssard from Northwood-Lena led the offense at a team-leading 13 points on top of three rebounds and an even 50.0 field-goal percentage (5-for-10).

D’Marcus Fugett played the role of floor general on the night, fronting the squad with three assists and a pair of steals while Charles Jones put together a eight-point, two-steal showing.

LCU settles back into its level of competition (NAIA) in games that count from here on out, starting with a trip to see its old Red River rivals over in Marshall, Texas on Saturday at 4 p.m. against Wiley.


Week 10 parish football schedule

Tioga sophomores Cace Malone (15) and Kenny Ponthier (21) celebrate after one of Pontheir’s three rushing touchdowns in the Indians’ win over Peabody last week. (Journal photo by BRET H. MCCORMICK)

Thursday’s games

Tioga at Grant

Friday’s games

ASH at West Ouachita
Pineville at Ouachita
Franklin Parish at Peabody
Bolton at Caldwell Parish
Jena at Buckeye
St. Mary’s at Northwood-Lena
Glen Oaks at Menard


LSU’s McMahon, coming out of ‘dumpster fire,’ cool about exhibition win over LCU    

BATON ROUGE – Normally, an 88-point basketball victory by an NCAA Power 5 conference program over an NAIA school with an enrollment of around 1,100 is nothing to beat your chest about.

Which is why LSU second-year men’s head coach Matt McMahon’s tempered reaction Monday night of his team’s 132-44 un-Christian-like home exhibition game beatdown of little ’ol Louisiana Christian perfectly fit the occasion.

“Not really worried about the score, but I liked the look of our team, the athleticism and size and unselfishness,” said McMahon, who almost won by 90 without three of his best players.

He could have ended his post-game presser with those 20 words, walked out the door and everybody in the room would have understood that’s all he needed to say.

Because if you watched McMahon sit stoically smoldering in last season’s post-Will Wade era dumpster fire (as McMahon finally truthfully described it recently) that produced a 12-3 start before losing 16 of its last 18 games to finish 14-19 overall and 2-16 in the SEC, you understood that having a team that looks athletic and tall and can make outside shots is a Eurostep or two forward progress.

When LSU gave McMahon a 7-year contract nine days after it fired Wade in March 2022 for being an exceptionally indiscreet cheater in recruiting (though he averaged 21 wins per year in five seasons with an SEC regular season title and three NCAA tourney appearances), it was a subtle reminder the school understood the obstacles McMahon faced.

The NCAA sanctions from an investigation into Wade’s purchasing players had yet to be announced. It made it impossible to sign quality players – especially transfers – as soon as Wade’s 10 top players jumped ship (7 transferred, 3 entered the NBA draft) before McMahon was even hired away from mid-major power Murray State.

Maybe because McMahon was trying to look ahead and not backward, he refused last season to publicly acknowledge the massive challenges he faced.

Ask him any question and he answered politely while measuring each word he said. There was no crack in his poker-face façade.

It wasn’t until a week or so ago – maybe because he felt he and his staff finally had time to thoughtfully piece together a roster rather than the frenetic fallout of immediately having to replace just about an entire team upon his hiring – that McMahon spoke honestly about the deep mess he stepped into.

“Coach Wade did a good job here at LSU and won a lot of games during his time here,” he said. “When I got here, all of that was gone. No players, no foundation, no culture, no nothing. So, it was essentially a little bit of a dumpster fire.

“The other reality is there was a NCAA investigation hanging over the program that was a black cloud. It made it very challenging to start a program over from scratch.”

McMahon’s recruiting consisted of finding enough warm bodies to form a team.

No matter how hard he coached last season, McMahon couldn’t overcome a disjointed roster that didn’t do anything particularly well in games consistently for more than 5-minute stretches.

Once the NCAA announced its sanctions this past June – no postseason ban and a loss of one scholarship for each of the next two seasons – McMahon was finally armed with positive news for recruits.

He signed eight new players – six transfers and two freshmen – to replace the 11 players he lost (three 5th-year or graduating seniors, eight chose to transfer or quit).

“This year, we were able to be very intentional and selective in how we approach the portal,” McMahon said. “So, we wanted to identify players with proven track records of success coming from the top nine leagues in the country. We also wanted guys that came from winning programs – five of the six transfers we signed came from teams that won 21 or more games on their teams last year. We also wanted to address getting the best players in Louisiana (who signed and played with out-of-state schools) to come back through the portal and play at home.

“And then from a style of play standpoint, identifying size and athleticism for the frontcourt for this league. Also, having some versatile pieces that can guard multiple positions and also attack multiple positions offensively was important for us.”

Just from LSU’s exhibition – even against overwhelmed Louisiana Christian – it appears McMahon addressed much of what the Tigers lacked last season.

They are tall with five players 6-9 or more. They are athletic with four players 6-5 to 6-8 who can defend multiple positions and rain 3-pointers from the wings and corners. They have guards who understand when to shoot and when to find the open shooters.

LSU’s six transfer signees have started a collective 263 college games and four are Louisiana natives. Three are grad students and three are juniors.

“Having guys that have played basketball everywhere, not just in the SEC who have seen everything that you could imagine from every league and having been successful is going to help this year,” said Jordan Wright, a 6-6 Baton Rouge native who came home as a grad student after starting in 73 of the 123 games he played for Vanderbilt.

Even with some recruiting light at the end of the tunnel, LSU was picked at the league’s media day to finish 13th in the 14-team SEC.

If the NCAA clears guard Jalen Cook, the Tigers should have a shot of at least getting an NIT berth. Cook is a former Walker High star who spent his freshman season playing sparingly for Wade at LSU in 2020-21 before transferring to Tulane two years ago. With the Green Wave he averaged 19 points in 50 games.

It’s a baby step forward, but it’s what Wade accomplished in his first season at LSU before his frequent trips to the ATM.

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia@gmail.com


Jeanerette man accused of bringing drugs to jail, winds up there

Rapides felony drug bookings are accusations, not convictions.

October 30
Darius Johnson, 45, Alexandria — possession 28 grams or more, probation violation, $50,200 bail;

Tyrese Jones, 24, Jeanerette — possession, introduction/possession contraband penal facility, $10,000 bail;

Jason Trisler, 59, Deville — possession, $1,100 bail.


Notice of Death – October 31, 2023

Lisa Renee Knapp
September 21, 1968 – October 29, 2023
Service: Wednesday, November 1 , 2023, 10am at Hixson Brothers, Jena.
 
Debra Desselle McNeal
June 17, 1955 – October 29, 2023
Service: Wednesday, November 1, 2023, 11am at St. Genevieve Catholic Church.
 
Herbie Jo Fuqua
March 21, 1941 – October 28, 2023
Service: Wednesday, November 1, 2023, 1p at Hixson Brothers, Marksville.
 
Stacy Lynn Nessmith
September 27, 1963 – October 29, 2023
Service: Friday, November 3, 2023, 10am at Peniel Baptist Church Cemetery.
 
The Rapides Parish Journal publishes paid obituaries – unlimited words and a photo, as well as unlimited access – $95. Contact your funeral provider or RPJNewsla@gmail.com . Must be paid in advance of publication. (Notice of Death shown above are FREE of charge. You may email them to RPJNewsla@gmail.com)

More NSU players voice frustration with season’s sudden end

FRUSTRATED:  Northwestern State sophomore safety Cadillac Rhone (14) is among teammates upset that their season has been ended by university officials in the wake of teammate Ronnie Caldwell Jr.’s shooting death. (NSU photo)

JOURNAL STAFF

NATCHITOCHES – Two more key players on the Northwestern State football team said Monday they were shocked when university president Dr. Marcus Jones and athletics director Kevin Bostian cancelled the Demons’ last four games of the season last Thursday, and they want to resume playing.

Sophomore tight end Travon “Champ” Jones launched a petition four days ago, at the suggestion of a Student Government Association official, urging resumption of the season. Nearly 800 people had added their support on Monday, when by 10 p.m. the petition had collected a total of over 2,100 signatures.

Several other players were among those commenting on the petition, along with parents, and family members of other NSU students directly impacted as members of the Spirit of Northwestern marching band and other support groups such as cheerleaders and dance line members.

The Demon tight end, who had 20 receptions last year and added 15 in five games this season, estimated “I could easily say over 75 percent (of team members), easy … would like to continue to play” the rest of the season, beginning with Saturday’s cancelled homecoming game at Turpin Stadium.

“We want to play. It’s definitely not the players,” said Jones on the “Billy West Live” podcast distributed by the Natchitoches Parish Journal Monday afternoon.  (LISTEN BELOW)

In the introduction to the petition, Jones wrote, “the fight to finish out the season is because it’ll give the athletes an outlet for the troubled times we are facing. This is a life-changing decision we should have say in.” (LISTEN BELOW)

Cadillac Rhone, a sophomore safety who is third on the team with 23 tackles, told Alexandria’s KALB-TV “we should have been playing football, playing the sport that we came here to play.”

Rhone was described as a close friend of the late Ronnie Caldwell Jr., the junior safety who was shot to death Oct. 12 at the Quad Apartment Complex across La. 6 from the university campus.

“We sacrificed our time away from our family and loved ones and all the work that we put in, and we get to display that on the field … that’s all I could think about, just going out there and playing ball,” said Rhone. “I miss it already.”

NSU cancelled its Oct. 14 game at Nicholls, then resumed the season Oct. 19 with a hard-fought 37-20 home loss to Southeastern. The game was moved up two days so Northwestern players, coaches and team personnel could attend Caldwell’s funeral in Austin, Texas, where Demons’ coach Brad Laird was invited to speak by the victim’s family.

Five days later, President Jones announced that the rest of the NSU season was cancelled due to Caldwell’s death and cited “the mental health and well-being of its student-athletes as the primary reason.” It scrapped the Demons’ game 48 hours later at McNeese, which was celebrating its homecoming.

President Jones said in the Thursday announcement NSU officials “learned that the hurt on our team was too deep. Now it is in the best interest of our players, coaches and staff to pause and take this time to mourn, to heal, and to support Ronnie’s family.”

Jones and Bostian also announced Laird had resigned. A day later, Caldwell’s parents and two Houston attorneys announced plans to sue the university, Laird and the apartment complex, and any other parties they deem responsible for Caldwell’s death.

On Saturday, Northwestern quarterback Tyler Vander Waal made a social media post criticizing the decision, saying players were “kept in the dark about everything” and calling the cancellation “a cop out.” Over 300,000 people have viewed his post on X (formerly Twitter).

He termed the cancellation “unacceptable” Monday, and said he was soon returning home to California, regrettably ending his football career.

“Ronnie would want us to play,” Vander Waal told Shreveport’s KTAL-TV. “That’s why we played Southeastern … (to) honor Ronnie …. he wasn’t a quitter. That’s not what he would want us to do … to quit is not honoring Ronnie at all.”

Meanwhile, the Southland Conference Monday issued guidelines addressing the cancellations’ impact on league standings. NSU’s five games not played are deemed “no contests” and will not be reflected in opponents’ final records, but will be counted as wins for the opponents to determine the Southland standings. They will not count as losses for NSU, the league said.

The Petition:

https://www.change.org/p/we-want-to-finish-our-2023-season-out?fbclid=IwAR3nr3zVmf4FFu-hblx_rKQKhKwlUWmShGgzbo6iwQNWDMyR7s5cbUkPf20


LCU football turnaround painted by Drew

Don’t look now, but just like that LCU’s football team is touting that it has the best season winning percentage (.889) and most season wins (8) in the modern era for Louisiana Christian University, formerly known as Louisiana College. Parenthetical note: It’s still privately known as Louisiana College among many alumni, who weren’t consulted about the name change that happened out of the blue (and orange) almost two years ago.

School name changes can be bummers. NLU and USL alumni know all about that.

Nonetheless, it’s a marvel to think the little college “on the hill” in Pineville is enjoying such unprecedented football success, even if the Wildcats are doing so at the NAIA level, rather than the previous NCAA Division III level. The architect of this upsurge is 36-year-old Shreveport native, Andrew John Maddox, who answers to the name “Drew.”

A former Army cavalry scout who did two tours of duty in Iraq, Maddox inherited a football program in 2020 that had deteriorated significantly from the days when he played defensive tackle for the Wildcats under Dennis Dunn, his former Dixie Youth baseball coach in Shreveport. It had bottomed out in an even shorter time since he had risen through the assistant coaching ranks to be defensive coordinator under Justin Charles in 2017.

In the meantime, Maddox built a head coaching resume by resurrecting a high school football team at Class A Glenbrook High School in Minden over two seasons. Then he got the call to try to do the same at LCU. To make the challenge tougher, he took over on Feb. 6 in 2020 and had all of two meetings with his new team when Covid and the feds shut everything down for several months. The Cats played an abbreviated schedule in the spring of ’21, finishing 2-3 in the American Southwest Conference.

LCU then switched from NCAA Division III to NAIA, but the football team was a lone wolf in finding a conference in which to play because all the other sports teams at LCU went to the Red River Athletic Conference, where none of the schools play football. The closest NAIA football league LCU could find, said Maddox, was the Sooner Athletic Conference, which has eight other teams from Texas, Oklahoma and Arizona.

“That allowed us to get some scholarship money,” said Maddox, who doles out that money along with some academic scholarship funds to recruit players. In his first full season, the fall of ’21, his team finished 4-7 but lost four games by less than a touchdown. Last year, the Wildcats finished 7-4 for the first winning season since his senior year, 2014 (following military service), when the Wildcats went 6-4.

Now, they are 8-1, and their lone loss, by three points at Ottawa University of Arizona (OUAZ) two weeks ago, is one that haunts them because the Wildcats muffed a makeable field goal earlier in the game because of a fumble on the snap, and they fell 5 ½ inches short of a fourth-quarter first down that could likely have led to a tying field goal, forcing an overtime and decent prospects for a victory.

How did it get to this point, where a victory in two weeks at Texas Wesleyan – after an exhibition game this weekend against John Melvin — can clinch at least a share of the SAC title?

For one, Maddox made a bold and impressive hire last spring, bringing David Feaster to LCU to be the offensive coordinator. Feaster boasts an impressive 188-77 record as a high school head coach at every stop over two decades: Many, Minden, Leesville, Parkway and Glenbrook. This season, he has overseen an offense that leads all of NAIA teams in total yards (4,397), red zone scores (42), red zone touchdowns (35) and first downs (240).

“Work hard and believe in what you do,” said Maddox. “God’s been good to me. The players bought in. If players buy in, you can probably turn things around.

“I took a discipline approach,” he added. “If you don’t lift weights, you don’t practice. If you don’t practice, you don’t play. It’s built on hard work and trying to do the right thing. There are no short cuts to being good.”

Sal Palermo III, the fifth-year senior quarterback from the Denham Springs neighboring town of Watson, calls Maddox “a great leader, not just in football but in life as well. He’s a great Christian leader, he helps us be good men, and that translates to us being good football players.”

On a team blessed with several fourth- and fifth-year players, Palermo said Maddox “preached from day one that all our work will pay off. ‘If you work,’ he said, ‘things will change.’ We’re seeing that.”


Time did not heal wounds: Tigers DBs depleted going vs. ‘Bama

STEPPING IN:  Jordan Jefferson (99) has been productive splitting time on the LSU defensive line, and now will be the replacement starter for the injured Mehki Wingo. (Photo by GUS STARK, LSU Athletics)

By RON HIGGINS, Journal Sports

BATON ROUGE – No miracles happened in No. 13 LSU’s open date week to solve the Tigers’ problem of having no experienced cornerbacks available for Saturday’s SEC West showdown at No. 8 Alabama.

LSU head coach Brian Kelly confirmed here at his weekly in-season press conference that the Tigers’ trio of transfer corners – Zy Alexander (Southeastern), Denver Harris (Texas A&M) and Duce Chestnut (Syracuse) – remain out of action.

Alexander has a lower-body injury and Harris and Chestnut are apparently still in Kelly’s doghouse. However, Kelly has never used the word “suspension” when explaining their absences for the last several weeks.

In an injury tradeoff, starting offensive right tackle Emery Jones Jr. has been given the green light after sitting out the Army game on Oct. 21 with a sprained ankle. On the flip side, starting defensive tackle Mehki Wingo underwent surgery last week (he missed the Army game with a lower-body injury) and is out for the rest of the regular season.

Kelly’s depth alternatives to the missing three transfer cornerbacks are true freshmen Ashton Stamps, Javien Toviano and Jeremiah Hughes and sophomore Laterrance Welsh.

“They’re elite players coming out of high school,” Kelly said of LSU’s inexperienced underclassmen corners. “Now, you’re putting them in a position where they just have to be confident and trust what we’ve taught them and taking that trust and putting it from preparation to performance and, and playing emotionally at a level which allows them to do their job.

“Yes, they haven’t played a lot of SEC games, but they’re quite capable of going out there and playing at a high level. They know what they’re doing. They understand our techniques, and they know what’s expected of them. We’re in a position where we feel comfortable and confident that they can go out and get the job done. You have to have confidence in your players and their ability to do it.”

As far as Wingo’s replacement, Virginia senior transfer Jordan Jefferson has been a consistent force off the bench all season. He has 21 tackles (1 fewer than Wingo) and 4½ tackles for loss (1½ more than Wingo).

“Jordan Jefferson has played at a high level,” Kelly said. “He’s graded out probably as our best defensive tackle. He’s physical at the point of attack, uses his hands well, he’s getting great separation, his gap integrity has been outstanding.” 

KNOW YOUR ENEMY 

No. 13 LSU (6-2 overall, 4-1 in SEC West) at No. 8 Alabama (7-1, 5-0 SEC West), Bryant-Denny Stadium, Saturday, 6:45 p.m. (CBS) 

Last game for Alabama: Won at home 34-20 over Tennessee on Oct. 21. The Crimson Tide trailed 20-7 at halftime. Alabama scored on its first four drives of the second half and outscored the Vols 27-0 in the second half when the Tide outgained Tennessee 225 to 129 yards total offense. ’Bama QB Jalen Milroe completed 14 of 21 for 220 passing yards and 2 TDs, the fifth time in seven starts this season that he has thrown for at least 220 yards and at least 2 TDs. 

Series record and last meeting: Alabama leads the series 55-27-5. Last season in Baton Rouge, LSU won 32-31 in overtime. LSU QB Jayden Daniels ran for a 25-yard TD in OT and then threw the game-winning 2-point conversion pass to freshman tight end Mason Taylor. There were six second-half lead changes and a tying field goal by Alabama in the final 30 seconds. 

Alabama head coach: Nick Saban (291-70-1 in 28 seasons, 201-28 in 17 years at Alabama) 

THIS AND THAT: 

Early betting line: Alabama is favored by 3½ points 

Number of Louisiana natives on Alabama roster: 5Number of Alabama natives on LSU roster: 2 

Number of transfers on Alabama roster from 4-year schools: 7 players from 7 schools including 6 players from 6 Power 5 Conference schools 

ALABAMA PLAYERS TO WATCH  

QB Jalen Milroe (99 of 153 for 1,617 passing yards, 13 TDs, 5 interceptions and 142 rushing yards and 5 TDs on 77 carries), RB Jase McCllelan (569 rushing yards, 4 TDs on 122 carries), WR Jermaine Bond (23 catches for 508 yards, 5 TDs, SAM LB Dallas Tumer (34 tackles, 11½ TFL, 8 sacks, 10 QB hurries, 2 forced fumbles), JACK LB Chris Braswell (32 tackles, 9 TFL, 6½ sacks, 6 PBU), CB Terrrion Arnold (40 tackles, 5 TFL), PK/KO Will Reichard (15 for 15 FG, 25 of 25 extra points and 48 KO for 63.4 ypko, 30 touchbacks), P James Burnip (36 for 48.2 ypk, 6 touchbacks, 10 fair catches, 13 inside the 20, 15 50 yards or more), Kendrick Law (8 for 196), PR Kool-Aid McKinstry (11 for 58 yards) 

POP QUIZ

  1. How far is it from the SEC headquarters in Birmingham to Alabama’s Bryant-Denny Stadium?

    A. 98,736 yards in penalty flags thrown against Alabama opponents

    B. A 50-minute drive for Nick Saban

    C.58.4 miles

    D. All of the above

  1. Who are the only two opposing head coaches to beat Nick Saban in back-to-back seasons in his 17 years as Alabama’s head coach? 

    A. Terry Bowden and Bobby Bowden

    B. Frank Beamer and Shane Beamer

    C. Les Miles and Hugh Freeze

    D. Mack Brown and Watson Brown

  2. What is the hometown of legendary former Alabama quarterback Broadway “Joe” Namath? 

    A. Gopher Gulch, N.D.

    B. Beaver Falls, Pa.

    C. Weasel City, W. Va.

    D. Lizard Ridge, Tx. 

ANSWERS 1. D 2. C 3. B

Contact Ron at ronhigginsmedia.com