Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
12.1.17
Flawed LA Regents report needs serious adjusting
Well, it ended up as false advertisement, but with
modifications the draft
response of the Louisiana Board of Regents to a legislative study request
can make the state’s higher education system significantly more effective and
efficient.
Act 619 of
2016 set the state’s governance board for higher education on course to
review comprehensively delivery of post-secondary education. When commencing
this effort last fall, leaders
said they would produce a document with “bold” recommendations.
Instead, the finished product unveiled
this week comes off as mild as a church mouse, which undoubtedly will
disappoint the bill’s author, Republican state Sen. Sharon Hewitt. Months ago, she asked for
very specific items for the Legislature to tackle in the near future. She and
other legislators widely expected the effort to include guidance on
streamlining the governance system and establishing a lower number of senior institutions.
11.1.17
Loudmouth Landrieu needs to do his job on crime
It doesn’t have the flashiest name, nor can it
contribute much to crime reduction. But as long as governance of New Orleans
does not address seriously the causes and disincentives to committing crime in
the city, the revamped and renamed Louisiana Bureau of Investigation under the
jurisdiction of Republican Atty. Gen. Jeff Landry will prove
helpful in keeping down the Crescent City’s rampant lawlessness – despite its
political leadership.
Landry recently
has expanded activity of the unit, which has in the past served as an
investigative unit for his office, by sending it into New Orleans. There, in a
few months it has racked up relatively small numbers of arrests and prompted
complaints from the powers that be in the city, principally Democrat Mayor Mitch Landrieu and his police chief
Michael Harrison.
Harrison actually wrote a note to Landry alleging
that the state’s top justice official did not have the authority to conduct
policing activities in New Orleans because of its special act home rule
charter. Let’s hope Harrison knows law enforcement better than he knows his
state’s Constitution, for while Art. VI Sec. 5
gives such governments powers not inconsistent with law and the Constitution,
in Art. VI Sec. 6 it
places the only limitation on the state’s powers relevant to a charter, that no
law affect powers under the charter or functions and organization of government
related to that. Landry’s office or any state agency with law enforcement power
has the unfettered right to operate in New Orleans as it wishes.
10.1.17
Legislature must trump Edwards on deficit agenda
Even if Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards uses his authority
to force the Louisiana Legislature into special session, Republican legislative
leaders still can force him to dance to their tune that emphasizes efficient government
of appropriate size.
Next week the Revenue Estimating Conference will
meet, potentially to change its forecast of fiscal year 2017 revenues. When it
met late last year, mainly at the behest of House Speaker Taylor Barras,
it did
not alter the current forecast that already has come in around $300 million
fewer than budgeted.
However, trends may not have reversed sufficiently
so as not only to create a deficit on top of the one previously declared, but
also a significant one. So large, in fact, that Edwards
alleges nothing less than a special session can do to fix it, meaning broad
tax and/or fee increases on the table. And while Edwards complained about the
REC not declaring deficit conditions in December, which would have required a
special session after 30 days if administrative actions still left a deficit,
he did not issue a warning for executive branch agencies to clamp down on spending
like he did earlier last year.
9.1.17
Flawed study misinforms on LA Obamcare impact
As midnight approaches for the Affordable Care and
Patient Protection Act (“Obamacare”), its supporters
summon any failed argument they can to try to stave off its inevitable
demise. Thusly in Louisiana we hear a rehash of the widgets defense.
A report
alleges that repeal of the wealth redistribution aspects of it and Medicaid
expansion in Louisiana would cost $639.7 million loss in state and local taxes;
$39.1 billion loss in business output and a $21.5 billion hit to the gross
state product. Nationally, the presumed impact would mean a $2.6 billion loss
in jobs in 2019 and a $1.5 trillion drop in gross state products between 2019
and 2023, according to the report.
But like all analyses supposedly touting the
economics of Obamacare, it fails both in execution and conceptually. These
always look only at the effect of adding money into the health care sector, not
in the balancing of taking money out of the economy – with the latest
Congressional Budget Office numbers forecasting
at least $2 trillion removed by the federal government, some of which comes in
direct taxation of individuals specifically to finance the scheme, plus over
$600 billion more in fees and penalties over the 2016-25 period. That doesn’t
even count the rapidly
escalating cost of health insurance that shunts even more money from
citizens who otherwise could have spent it on other economic sectors or have
invested it – for 2017 an average annual increase of 25 percent for individual
policies nationally and in Louisiana 17 percent.
8.1.17
The Advocate column, Jan. 8, 2017
Evangeline Parish officials playing dumb about arrest scandal, much like the 'Three Wise Monkeys'
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_c917b838-d377-11e6-b5df-773e459f642d.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/acadiana/news/crime_police/article_6981deec-ceb5-11e6-bacf-63ebea1d8c26.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_wise_monkeys
https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/919436/download
http://www.lcle.la.gov/programs/postinservice.asp
http://jeffsadow.blogspot.com/2016/01/democrats-drawing-wrong-lessons-from.html
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_c917b838-d377-11e6-b5df-773e459f642d.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/acadiana/news/crime_police/article_6981deec-ceb5-11e6-bacf-63ebea1d8c26.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_wise_monkeys
https://www.justice.gov/opa/file/919436/download
http://www.lcle.la.gov/programs/postinservice.asp
http://jeffsadow.blogspot.com/2016/01/democrats-drawing-wrong-lessons-from.html