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9.6.26

Taxpayer-funded weight loss bill deserves veto

Republican Gov. Jeff Landry, if he considers costs and outcomes, has good reason to veto SB 433.

The bill by Democrat state Sen. Gerald Boudreaux, after a few iterations, would have the state cover for Medicaid weight loss drugs for obesity, as prescribed. Louisiana Medicaid already covers it for clients where weight gain is a consequence of a chronic condition, which this expansion would not require. This has a five-year estimated cost of $72 million.

Here, the thinking is that obesity causes other maladies that eventually could fall under Medicaid treatment, hence needing state taxpayer support (although Louisiana typically has between 60-70 percent of costs covered by the federal government, so the bill has the Department of Health promulgate standards that would be consistent with federal regulations). By preventing obesity, the guess is that the use of semaglutide, the chemical in the drugs practically speaking that would have to be prescribed, would cost less than the eventual cost of treatment for other preventable conditions.

8.6.26

BC Council increases delivery of fiscal reform

Almost a year into their terms, the current Bossier City Council members that promised fiscal prudence and reform look set to deliver a heaping dosage of it in their meeting this week.

A couple of holdovers and four new members who took office last Jul. 1 came in with stated agendas of making more prudent spending decisions and better fiscal management than the predecessor majority. That has happened in bits and pieces, such as reducing free riding by large apartment complexes on water and sewerage fees and in refinancing bond deals. However, this week’s agenda features the broadest range of reform yet at the same time signals where more work can be done.

One item echoes previous efforts with the extension of a refinancing strategy for older bonds. An ordinance will extend the ability of the city to use a $15 million bond issuance in 2021 originally intended to pare down an issue connected to past public works projects (principally the Walter O. Bigby Carriageway, whose account has been spent in totality) to another active bond series. Essentially, the city will take advantage of differential interest due – the additional series had small payments early but these will increase substantially the closer it gets to its 2036 due date – between old and new issue to save roughly $850,000 annually.

4.6.26

Leftist media see Morris as threat, wield hatchet

Republican state Sen. Jay Morris has been getting a little too effective in countering the left’s agenda in Louisiana, drawing a transparent hatchet job from its far left media.

Morris has had a busy session authoring several high-profile bills that end up making it easier to remove wayward elected officials, reducing the size of overstaffed courts, and the just-signed law reapportioning the state’s congressional districts by replacing an unconstitutional map containing two majority-minority districts with a plan having just one. These have drawn the left’s ire, and so it wishes to discourage legislators from undertaking future reform efforts by trying to drag Morris through the mud.

The leftist Floodlight, Verite, and Louisiana Illuminator websites combined forces recently to publish a piece about the dealings of Morris and a long-standing business partner related to land near the Hyperion data center project. It breathlessly proclaims that Morris “used his political position to advance the project … [while] buying and selling the land around it over the past 15 months,” making him appear as a kind of grifter more commonly associated with political leftists concerning government.

3.6.26

Legislative review of alarmist plan welcome

Louisiana’s Climate Initiatives Task Force and its product the Louisiana Climate Action Plan officially died early last year. But a review of its legacy is most appropriate.

In 2020, Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwards, safely reelected, let his inner radical leftist surface in part by establishing the task force, which received orders to come up with a plan that mirrored the climate alarmism agenda. It duly did so by 2022, fatally flawed by the scientifically unsustainable assumptions behind it, that wanted to commit the state to a traumatic ratcheting down of carbon emissions.

Fortunately, for the most part the significant portions would require legislative or Public Service Commission acquiescence, and the climate realism majorities in both make that unlikely to happen. However, actions taken by the executive branch, for example, could adhere to minor aspects of the agenda at the expense of taxpayers.

2.6.26

Sausage judicial bill still worth signing

Exemplifying to the extreme the old aphorism that legislating is like making sausage, reforming the bloated Orleans Parish district court system ended up half-complete with a plethora of compromises made by reformers.

SB 217 by the busy Republican state Sen. Jay Morris intended to right-size courts in Orleans. Even as it has only a little over 8 percent of the state’s population, a study determined the district had too many judges compared to others in the state, and this directly affected taxpayers statewide as they footed the bill for this bloat.

But with the history of Orleans that built in favoritism in its treatment – most of this a product of many decades past when it represented a much higher proportion of the state’s residents (over 20 percent in 1900, for example, and with New Orleans having more than twice as many people as all other municipalities combined) and commercial activity – this would require substantial dismantling, and right off the bat a concession needed making. Originally, the bill intended only to reduce a couple of seats of civil district courts, rather than all.

1.6.26

Article misjudges salutary LA Medicaid changes

Naysayers resist this truth, but the facts point to Medicaid reductions in Louisiana as a consequence of beneficial policy for all concerned.

 A recent media piece, for some reason, decided to publicize that in 2025 Louisiana saw about 200,000 people drop off Medicaid rolls and wanted to figure out why. Unfortunately, the effort largely was ineffective, as it only cursorily investigated the question but principally because it accepted implicitly a canard.

The article accurately notes that this is part of a trend prior to Republican Pres. Donald Trump assuming office last Jan. 20, but neglects to provide crucial context. The Wuhan coronavirus pandemic provided the excuse for Washington Democrats essentially to suspend eligibility checks for those already enrolled, and nationwide rolls exploded in size including in Louisiana. Eventually, the unwinding of that started and that process mostly was completed in 2024, but with the state’s dragged out further by Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwardsstonewalling. As well, the noticeably better economic situation nationally under Trump also contributed to shrinking rolls, encouraging people to switch to other sources of insurance.

28.5.26

Pay issue should start project funding debate

Except for in the world of sports road cycling commentators proclaiming a stage or race “epic,” the most overused aphorism in the English language in the worlds of politics and business is asserting that the Chinese symbol for “crisis” and “opportunity” is one and the same (which is just as false as the multitude of epic showdowns). Has Louisiana reached that juncture over its historical emphasis of state control of local governments?

In the wake of the defeat of a constitutional amendment that would have constructed education pay raises to replace the piecemeal stipend system of the past three years, policy-makers have gone into full panic mode. This has mutated into talks of a permanent solution through a task force for fiscal year 2028, with pledges somehow to usher that in with another year of stipends.

Republican Gov. Jeff Landry has proposed that, indicating he favored a temporary rejiggering of the Minimum Foundation Program to shift $150 million from operating expenses (three-quarters of the money to compensate for the current stipends) to salaries to cover FY 2027. He also correctly noted that one alternative floated, taking the amount needed out of the Revenue Stabilization Trust Fund, was (quite clearly) unconstitutional.

27.5.26

Settlement can't repair Edwards coverup damage

Some measure of justice looks to be on the way to the family of black motorist Ronald Greene, but none yet for what Louisianans suffered under Democrat former Gov. John Bel Edwards’ in his quest for political power ahead of justice.

Only cursory media coverage accompanied an initial settlement agreement between the state and Greene’s estate of $4.85 million for civil rights violations. Greene, who was in an impaired state that could have contributed to his death, was pulled over by state and local law enforcement, beaten, and neglected, dying later likely in part due to his treatment by law enforcement.

Because of the uncertainty behind the contributions of various factors that caused his death, criminal cases couldn’t be made against any officers of the law, which in turn also hampered pursuit of charges against Louisiana State Police officials who slow-walked the investigation. The suit looks to provide the only accountability.

26.5.26

Divisive remarks urge invalid Monroe Council maps

If unconstitutional racial politics need deploying, go for it, said recently the head of Monroe’s City Council.

At its May 12 meeting, the Council voted on a measure held over previously that would reapportion its districts mid-cycle. The move stemmed from a vote last year to spend considerable taxpayer dollars on such a task, passed by the Council’s black Democrat majority. One motivation for this would be to come up with a map with four majority-minority districts out of the five in order to add another black Democrat via 2028 elections and create a veto-proof bloc.

Yet the ordinance that came forth months later merely shifted a handful of districts between the only majority-white district with its neighboring majority-black district. And by the time the Council brought the measure to a vote, the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled in Louisiana v. Callais that, absent demonstrated intentional racial discrimination in mapmaking, use of race in drawing maps was invalid.

25.5.26

Memorial Day, 2026

This column publishes every Sunday through Thursday around noon U.S. Central Time (maybe even after sundown on busy days, or maybe before noon if things work out, or even sometimes on the weekend if there's big news) except whenever a significant national holiday falls on the Monday through Friday associated with the otherwise-usual publication on the previous day (unless it is Thanksgiving Day, Independence Day, Christmas, or New Year's Day when it is the day on which the holiday is observed by the U.S. government). In my opinion, in addition to these are also Easter Sunday, Memorial Day and Veterans' Day.

With Monday, May 25 being Memorial Day, I invite you to explore this link.