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28.6.18

Conservative flood may ace them out of SOS

Will Louisiana’s conservative Republicans throw away the Secretary of State’s office?

Suddenly, the field for this special election in the fall seems flooded with these choices. This week, both former state Sen. A.G. Crowe and current state Rep. Rick Edmonds formally announced candidacies. Crowe compiled a solidly conservative voting record in his many years in the Legislature, and Edmonds has done likewise in his House service.

And another conservative Republican, state Rep. Paul Hollis, has indicated he will run. Of the three, he has the most experience in running statewide campaigns, having run for U.S. Senate in 2014 only to desist prior to the election.

The Press-Herald column, Jun. 27, 2018

Could immigration enforcement be a boon to our jails?
http://press-herald.com/could-immigration-enforcement-be-a-boon-to-our-jails/

Links:
https://www.ktbs.com/news/3investigates/i-c-e-detainees-give-bossier-sheriff-a-money-makeover/article_b1cfde9e-7592-11e8-bf83-3fd2128c213e.html
https://www.lla.la.gov/PublicReports.nsf/2141743BF016E0ED8625821A005F6F8A/$FILE/00017357.pdf
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-immigration-prisons-exclusive/exclusive-u-s-sending-1600-immigration-detainees-to-federal-prisons-idUSKCN1J32W1
http://thelensnola.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/parish-jail-numbers.xls

26.6.18

LA must intervene on pretrial diversion

Some tweaks made and guidance given to Louisiana’s pretrial diversion guidelines could guarantee the concept does what it’s supposed to do – increase public safety while ensuring accountability.

While the state requires diversion programs – which allow a defendant to skip judicial proceedings and accept some kind of punishment for an alleged crime – in a couple of instances, except for prohibiting some serious matters it leaves whether to have such a program and its scope in then hands of the individual authorities, essentially district attorneys or city prosecutors. Within these parameters, authorities basically do what they want, subject to a 1993 state attorney general’s opinion that declares these activities can’t enrich offices beyond the costs to run them.

This has allowed, particularly in the last few years, many judicial districts to begin authorizing diversion for a host of crimes, often dealing with traffic. This proves easy for DAs, as they exist as a separate government entity as opposed to municipalities’ legal departments that enforce ordinances. For a fee paid directly to the DA, those who draw citations have the DA drop the charges.

25.6.18

Bad LPSC decision reveals small silver lining

Out of the stupidity witnessed at the last meeting of Louisiana’s Public Service Commission, at least one spot of brilliance emerged.

The PSC approved an application by SWEPCO to foist costs of the Windcatcher project onto Louisiana ratepayers. The decision was expected as staff had worked out an agreement with the producer that includes northwest Louisiana’s Wal-Mart properties agreeing to purchase power from it, a cap on construction costs, qualification for 100 percent of the federal Production Tax Credits, and minimum annual production from the project – similar to a deal made for Arkansas’ regulators’ approval. Building the wind farm and transmitting power to customers with no new need established requires assent from these states plus Oklahoma and Texas.

The project has way too many question marks to merit acceptance. Data sew doubt the project will save ratepayers money over the long haul, especially as federal wind power production tax credits will expire by 2020, too many risks of inefficient production exist, SWEPCO’s has a history of cost overruns (plus onshore wind power typically costs per unit roughly triple that of fossil fuels when considering all factors such as reliability and subsidies), and the likelihood of lower margins on projected sales all should serve to scuttle the effort.

21.6.18

LA poised to endure sales tax reimposition

Get ready for a wild and wacky weekend at Louisiana’s Capitol.

Whether, and by how much and when, sales tax hikes will reinstitute in the state starting Jul. 1 the Legislature largely will decide over the next few days. Additionally, the budget finally accepted by Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards may find itself rearranged to some degree. And, a wild card courtesy of the U.S. Supreme Court entered the equation.

In one corner, Edwards and his legislative party wants passage of a half-cent increase in sales taxes to replace the one cent rolling off Jun. 30. This represents a small bit of compromise from their initial preference of raising income taxes permanently, with them already having secured a temporary increase of some and an expanded earned income tax credit also due to sunset.

In the other corner, most Republicans, mainly in the House of Representatives, have signaled they will back one of three measures: a one-third cent increase, a two-fifth cent increase, or a half cent that decreases over time, all for five years duration only. Any of these positions reside considerably from their initial reluctance to raise any taxes at all.

To strengthen their hands, House Republican leaders have sent out a supplemental appropriations bill that rejiggers what cuts from the present baseline would have to occur. By setting some priorities where presumably more important items receive funding for anything less than the half-cent, this makes getting anything less more palatable. Whether the Senate, more controlled by Edwards, will accede is another matter.

Mixing things up more, today the Supreme Court issued a ruling allowing states to collect sales taxes on remote purchases even from dealers without a physical connection in a state. This will give a shot in the arm to state coffers that bolsters the argument for less than a half cent or even no increase at all. Louisiana already put a mechanism in place to implement this quickly.

Unfortunately, politics may point to an increase, and, interestingly, towards the GOP option that at least begins the highest. Over the span of the envisioned five years, the half-cent-diminishing one actually in aggregate taxes calls for a lower percentage than five straight years at two-fifths, although it still comes out greater than the one-third option.

Given that the Legislative Black Caucus comprises almost a third of House membership and enough other Democrats would join it – never mind Republicans dead set against any tax increase – in opposing anything but the half-cent renewal, they can prevent the two-thirds majority needed to pass a tax hike. By contrast, the half-cent deal in the previous special session attracted a number of Republican votes but fell in total a half-dozen short from success. Watering it down through diminution could pick off enough of them while Black Caucus defections may not even occur – after all, that bargain would allow maximal revenue-raising through the end of Edwards’ term, which its members want.

So, Republican maneuverings have set things up for some trimming of government but not outright rejection of any tax hike. Even with the joker of a high court ruling that could moot any need for a tax increase – if not argue for a decrease – the next few days should see Louisianans continue to pay higher sales levies than they did three years ago.

19.6.18

Edwards may get what he wants on inmate total

Maybe Gov. John Bel Edwards should get what he asked for.

With the 2018 Third Extraordinary Session of the Louisiana Legislature commencing, the Democrat Edwards’ administration has launched a full-court press to ensure some kind of sales tax increase reoccurs as a result of it. Immediately after the end of the second edition, administration officials began circulating reports of various supposed calamities that would come from failure to reinstitute some kind of tax hike.

One such came from the Corrections Secretary Jimmy LeBlanc. He claimed that a $75 million reduction in budgetary authority would cause him to release 10,000 prisoners, specifically nonviolent ones not sex offenders housed in local jails, over the span of several months The state pays local authorities $24.39 daily to keep the overflow of state inmates for which Louisiana doesn’t have room in its own institutions.

18.6.18

Data erode Edwards' food stamps scare tactic

Call the bluff, in part if not totally, on food stamps.

With the 2018 Third Extraordinary Session of the Louisiana Legislature commencing, the Gov. John Bel Edwards Administration has launched a full-court press to ensure some kind of sales tax increase reoccurs as a result of it. Immediately after the send of the second edition, administration officials began circulating reports of various supposed calamities that would come from failure to reinstitute some kind of tax hike.

One came from the Department of Children and Family Services, whose Secretary Marketa Garner Walters proclaimed the budget without the increase signaled the end of the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program. She claimed the budget cut $34 million, which, given other priorities, meant the state would have to discontinue SNAP.