Finally, a park that entered
the state’s realm under suspicious circumstances will return to where it
came, eroding little its value to Louisiana’s recreational system while
relieving taxpayers of a large load.
Confirmation
came this month that Hodges Gardens State Park would close and transfer
back under control of the previous owners. A private citizen had developed the
area initially as a private home, and over time opened it to the public. Known
mostly for its horticultural offerings, under state control it would expand on
amenities that provided camping, oversight lodgings, boating and fishing, and
an amphitheater.
The foundation that had run it offered it to the
state around the time of the hurricane disasters of 2005. A number of aspects
should have discouraged the then-Gov. Kathleen
Blanco Administration from accepting it. Money would be tight for a couple
of years, yet the state would incur startup costs of over $1 million and
roughly the same in operating expenses each year. Much of the park had features
similar to several within a few dozen miles in a sparsely-populated area of the
state, but this one would cost much more to run in order to service the
botanical gardens, the one unique feature not only in comparison to the nearby
alternatives, but also statewide.
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).
30.8.17
Litmus test strikes again for LA Democrats
You would think Louisiana Democrats would embrace
Derrick Edwards as the perfect candidate for state treasurer. But the party’s
litmus test plus its aversion to looking impotent instead makes him an outcast.
At its most recent meeting, the party’s executive committee failed to endorse Edwards despite his qualifying as the only Democrat in the contest. Moreover, he ticks off two victim class boxes, racial minority and person with disability; Democrats generally allege that American society discriminates against minorities and the disabled, mandating increased government efforts to redistribute resources their way. And, Edwards seems competitive as he polls in the lead for the spot.
Historically, the party has abjured endorsing even those statewide candidates who show strength. In 2011, it refused to back the contestant who would garner the second-most votes in the governor’s race, Tara Hollis, claiming it did not want to coronate a candidate in a field with multiple Democrats running. But it also didn’t endorse Democrat Donald Hodge, the only opponent to Republican Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon, where Hodge would go on to capture around a third of the vote. And in 2015, in a governor’s race with multiple Democrats running, it did endorse current Gov. John Bel Edwards (no relation to Derrick) months earlier than typical.
At its most recent meeting, the party’s executive committee failed to endorse Edwards despite his qualifying as the only Democrat in the contest. Moreover, he ticks off two victim class boxes, racial minority and person with disability; Democrats generally allege that American society discriminates against minorities and the disabled, mandating increased government efforts to redistribute resources their way. And, Edwards seems competitive as he polls in the lead for the spot.
Historically, the party has abjured endorsing even those statewide candidates who show strength. In 2011, it refused to back the contestant who would garner the second-most votes in the governor’s race, Tara Hollis, claiming it did not want to coronate a candidate in a field with multiple Democrats running. But it also didn’t endorse Democrat Donald Hodge, the only opponent to Republican Insurance Commissioner Jim Donelon, where Hodge would go on to capture around a third of the vote. And in 2015, in a governor’s race with multiple Democrats running, it did endorse current Gov. John Bel Edwards (no relation to Derrick) months earlier than typical.
29.8.17
Shreveport chases team at taxpayers' expense
In the latest iteration of a northwest Louisiana’s
build-it-and-they-will-come fantasy, Shreveport has decided to go all in on
attracting a minor-league basketball team by spending up to $30 million in
taxpayer money. How this provides a net benefit to the taxpayer remains
unexplained.
Mayor Ollie Tyler cajoled a City Council majority to approve of the courtship with the New Orleans Pelicans of the National Basketball Association. Many league teams sponsor a second-division club in the newly-renamed G-League, and, after an initial pitch by Tyler, the team has narrowed its choices to Shreveport and Pensacola.
Landing the squad would provide quite a boost for a metropolitan area that has seen a long list of failed minor league professional franchises in recent years. The 1990s turned out as the golden era of area pro sports, when Shreveport boasted teams in second-division football and basketball and in third-division baseball and hockey, plus a second-tier golf tournament.
Mayor Ollie Tyler cajoled a City Council majority to approve of the courtship with the New Orleans Pelicans of the National Basketball Association. Many league teams sponsor a second-division club in the newly-renamed G-League, and, after an initial pitch by Tyler, the team has narrowed its choices to Shreveport and Pensacola.
Landing the squad would provide quite a boost for a metropolitan area that has seen a long list of failed minor league professional franchises in recent years. The 1990s turned out as the golden era of area pro sports, when Shreveport boasted teams in second-division football and basketball and in third-division baseball and hockey, plus a second-tier golf tournament.
28.8.17
Liberal Landrieu not enough so for hard left
Clear-headed, politically-knowledgeable Louisianans
surely are scratching their heads over a piece
in a national opinion journal that declares New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu insufficiently
liberal.
Appearing in the decreasingly center-left New Republic (which has had to head further left to recapture the luster lost through the Glass Affair, among other problems), the article by one Michael Stein – who has demonstrated far left chops in work for the extremist web site Truthout – complains Landrieu hews too close to the political middle. He calls Landrieu a “run-of-the-mill centrist Democrat, one who appeals to the left with illusory calls for progress even as he ingratiates himself with center-right supporters by straddling the ideological line.”
Really? A review of Landrieu’s issue preferences and actions as mayor reveals otherwise. Let’s check them off:
Appearing in the decreasingly center-left New Republic (which has had to head further left to recapture the luster lost through the Glass Affair, among other problems), the article by one Michael Stein – who has demonstrated far left chops in work for the extremist web site Truthout – complains Landrieu hews too close to the political middle. He calls Landrieu a “run-of-the-mill centrist Democrat, one who appeals to the left with illusory calls for progress even as he ingratiates himself with center-right supporters by straddling the ideological line.”
Really? A review of Landrieu’s issue preferences and actions as mayor reveals otherwise. Let’s check them off:
27.8.17
The Advocate column, Aug. 27, 2017
John Bel Edwards used veto to play politics, and Mother Nature caught up to him
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_46d11588-88fb-11e7-97d6-2778606bc84b.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/politics/article_ca1a2434-81cb-11e7-85d0-efa9ccb360a1.html
http://www.theadvocate.com/new_orleans/news/politics/article_b84a04d6-8685-11e7-99be-0374ef778dd8.html
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=1053007
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=1053032
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_46d11588-88fb-11e7-97d6-2778606bc84b.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/politics/article_ca1a2434-81cb-11e7-85d0-efa9ccb360a1.html
http://www.theadvocate.com/new_orleans/news/politics/article_b84a04d6-8685-11e7-99be-0374ef778dd8.html
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=1053007
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=1053032