the weekly press week of june 11, 2015

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INDEX State News ..............................2 Religion ...................................4 Business...................................5 Classifieds................................5 STATE & LOCAL CLASSIFIED Buying or selling a service, looking for for a good job? Check out the classifeds . SU PART OF WATER PURIFICATION Southern University students and faculty are part of a research effort to develop low-cost materials help to help provide sustainable water purification in Ghana... See Page 3 BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE The Southern University College of Business is hosting its Second Annual “Advancing Leadership in Economic Development” (ALIED) conference on June 11 -13...See Page 5 RELIGION MEGAFEST ADDS MADEA TO LINE UP MegaFest, the nation’s largest in- spirational family festival, today announced Tyler Perry’s new stage play, “Madea on the Run,” will make a tour stop in Dallas during the five- day experience slated for August 19-23....See Page 4 There’s a lot of talk in East Baton Rouge Parish about how the middle class is leav- ing the area, looking for better and more affordable educational opportunities for their children in the suburbs of Ascension and Livingston Parish....See Page 5 PERCENTAGE OF POORER RESIDENTS IS HIGH RELIGION NEW: Lela Kelly informs you about gospel events happening in Baton Rouge...See Page 4 THEWEEKLYPRESS.COM Celebrating 40 Years Of Service To The Baton Rouge Community 225.775.2002 THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 PEOPLE’S PUBLICATION VOL. 40 • NO. 24 • FREE BATON ROUGE, LOUISIANA The last of the ‘Angola Three’ inmates , who spent decades in solitary confinement in connection with the death of a prison guard, was ordered to be released on Monday. The ruling would free 68-year- old Albert Woodfox after more than 40 years in solitary, which human rights experts have said constitutes torture. U.S. District Judge James Brady of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ordered the release of Woodfox and took the extraordinary step of barring Louisiana prosecutors from trying him for a third time. A spokesman for the Louisi- ana attorney general said the state would appeal Brady’s ruling to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals ‘to make sure this murderer stays in prison and remains fully accountable for his actions’. Woodfox was placed in sol- itary confinement in 1972 after being charged in the death of a Louisiana State Penitentiary guard Brent Miller in April of that year, according to NOLA.com. The prison farm where he held is commonly known as the Angola prison and is Louisiana’s only maximum-security prison. Woodfox and two other state prisoners became known as the Angola Three because of their long stretches in solitary confinement at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola. Other members of the Angola Three were prisoners Robert King and Herman Wallace. Woodfox and Wallace, who were both serving unrelated armed robbery sentences, had said they were singled out for harsh treat- ment, including isolation, because of their political activism . Woodfox and Wallace were former Black Panthers and helped establish a prison chapter of the Black Panther Party at the Angola prison in 1971, set up demonstra- tions and organized strikes for bet- ter conditions. Wallace, convicted with Woodfox of murder in the death of guard Brent Miller, died in October 2013 only days after a judge freed him and granted him a new trial. King was released in 2001 US Prisoner Released After Four Decades In Solitary Confinement The Angola prison where the three men were in solitary confinement for decades is Louisiana’s only maximum-security prison Albert Woodfox, 68, was ordered to be released from prison on Monday after spending 40 years in solitary confinement BY WILLIAM GRIMES Dolores Spikes, who be- came the first woman to head a university system in the United States when, in 1988, she was named president of the Southern University and A & M College System in Louisiana, and who fought court-ordered desegregation of the state’s colleges to protect Southern’s identity as a black institution, died on June 1 in Baton Rouge, La. She was 78. Edward Pratt, a university spokesman, said she had been suffering from a long illness, which he did not specify. In the early 1980s, the Department of Justice ordered Louisiana to revamp what the department described as a ra- cially segregated system of higher education . In 1989, it issued an order calling for the merger of the governing boards and operations of the state’s black and white university systems and the introduction of racial quotas to integrate student enrollment. Administrators at Louisi- ana’s historically black schools, which included Grambling State University, feared that the new system would lead to a dilution of their mission to serve black students and an ero- sion of state financial support . Southern’s total enrollment of about 14,000 made it the largest black university in the country. “I think what Southern is asking for is the same thing that the Justice Department is asking for — a desegregated system, but one that still al- lows for access and a chance for reasonable success for mi- nority students, poor students and disadvantaged students,” Ms. Spikes told The Associ- ated Press in 1989. “That’s part of the mission of Southern University; we’re asking that remain intact.” Ms. Spikes played the lead role in negotiating an agreement in 1994 that met the goals of desegregation by creating cooperative programs between the university’s Baton Rouge campus and Louisiana State University and between Dolores Spikes, Trailblazer as President of SU, Dies at 78 Dolores Spikes See SPIKES, on page 2 BATON ROUGE - Sav- ingForCollege.com, a national College Saving Plan com- parison website that publishes rankings each quarter, reported that Louisiana’s START Sav- ings Program ranked first for 10-year performance among all 529 plans in America. START was also ranked among the Top 10 State 529 plans for 1-year, 3-year and 5-year performance. “SavingForCollege.com created its rankings several years ago to help investors gauge how well their plans were perform- ing relative to their peers,” said SavingForCollege.com founder Joseph Hurley. The START Saving Pro- gram is an innovative college savings program that qualifies as a “529 Plan” under the In- ternal Revenue Code. START offers federal and state tax in- centives to anyone who wishes to financially assist a student in acquiring a college education. In addition to regular earn- ings on investments, accounts will receive a contribution from the state, called “Earnings En- hancements,” to match a per- centage of their annual deposits, ranging from 14 percent to two percent determined by the ac- count owner’s prior year fed- eral adjusted gross income as reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Louisiana’s START Saving Program Recognized As Best Performing 529 Program in America Over Past Ten Years Every time the Baton Rouge Metro Council discusses the issue of police body cameras, it seems another story of a potentially ra- cially-charged conflict between citizens and police is in the news, with a video at the center. This time, it’s the police response to a pool party with a crowd of teenag- ers in McKinney, Texas. But while council members in Baton Rouge said they want the city’s police officers to wear cameras, on Wednesday they voted against an ordinance that would have legally required the depart- ment to implement them for all officers by December of next year. The council voted 4-5 Wednesday (June 10) against an ordinance authored by coun- cil member C. Denise Marcelle that would require the cameras. Those who voted no said they were worried that they’d be forcing the police department to pay for the equipment without knowing how much it would cost or how it would be paid for. The department will continue moving forward with a pilot pro- gram that’s already underway to outfit 100 officers with the cam- No Body Cameras Required for Baton Rouge Police in Baton Rouge Baton Rouge police are implementing a pilot program that will provide 100 officers with body cameras, but the Metro Council voted not to legally require the whole department to wear the devices. See POLICE, on page 2 See RELEASED, on page 2 New East Baton Rouge superintendent Warren Drake has just begun his job with the district, and one of the first orders of business is setting up an administrative staff. So far, 19 Baton Rouge schools are getting new prin- cipals, as part of a yearly sum- mer shuffle of school admin- istrators. The schools that are get- ting new leaders include Scot- landville High, and the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, which had seen controversy as parents wanted an administrative change. Here’s a list of who’s been appointed where: Elementary schools: n Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts: Candice Hartley, previously assistant principal at Sher- wood Middle, has been named the new principal. n Buchanan Elementary: Charlotte Britten, previously assistant principal at the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, has been named the new principal. n Highland Elementary: Jamie Carruth, previously dean of students at Highland, is being promoted to principal. n Howell Park Elementary: Rochelle Washington, previ- ously assistant principal at Howell Park, is being pro- moted to principal. n LaSalle Elementary: Su- zanne Navo, previously as- sistant principal at LaSalle, is being promoted to principal. n Magnolia Woods El- ementary: Kim DiPalma, previously assistant principal at Melrose Elementary, has been named the new principal. n Melrose Elementary: Olga Pack, previously assis- tant principal at Melrose, is being promoted to principal. n Merrydale Elementary: Assistant Principal Tana Bou- dreaux is being promoted to principal. n Park Elementary: Emily LeBlanc, previously assistant principal at Park, is being pro- moted to principal. New Principals Named for Scotlandville High, BRCVPA, and 17 Other Baton Rouge Schools Many East Baton Rouge schools, including Scotlandville High and the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, will have new principals next school year. See SCHOOLS, on page 2

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On the cover: US Prisoner Released After Four Decades in Solitary Confinement

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INDEXState News ..............................2

Religion ...................................4

Business ...................................5

Classifieds ................................5

http://www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/btrbb-renaissance-baton-rouge-hotel/STATE & LOCAL

CLASSIFIED Buying or selling a service, looking for for a good job? Check out the classifeds .

SU PART OF WATER PURIFICATIONSouthern University students and faculty are part of a research effort to develop low-cost materials help to help provide sustainable water purification in Ghana...See Page 3

BUSINESS

DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCEThe Southern University College of Business is hosting its Second Annual “Advancing Leadership in Economic Development” (ALIED) conference on June 11 -13...See Page 5

RELIGION

MEGAFEST ADDS MADEA TO LINE UPMegaFest, the nation’s largest in-spirational family festival, today announced Tyler Perry’s new stage play, “Madea on the Run,” will make a tour stop in Dallas during the five-day experience slated for August 19-23....See Page 4

There’s a lot of talk in East Baton Rouge Parish about how the middle class is leav-ing the area, looking for better and more affordable educational opportunities for their children in the suburbs of Ascension and Livingston Parish....See Page 5

PERCENTAGE OF POORER RESIDENTS IS HIGH RELIGIONNEW: Lela Kelly informs you about gospel events happening in Baton Rouge...See Page 4

THEWEEKLYPRESS.COM Celebrating 40 Years Of Service To The Baton Rouge Community 225.775.2002

THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2015 PEOPLE’S PUBLICATION VOL. 40 • NO. 24 • FREE

B A T O N R O U G E , L O U I S I A N A

The last of the ‘Angola Three’ inmates , who spent decades in solitary confinement in connection with the death of a prison guard, was ordered to be released on Monday.

The ruling would free 68-year-old Albert Woodfox after more than 40 years in solitary, which human rights experts have said constitutes torture.

U.S. District Judge James Brady of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ordered the release of Woodfox and took the extraordinary step of barring Louisiana prosecutors from trying him for a third time.

A spokesman for the Louisi-ana attorney general said the state would appeal Brady’s ruling to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap-peals ‘to make sure this murderer stays in prison and remains fully accountable for his actions’.

Woodfox was placed in sol-itary confinement in 1972 after being charged in the death of a Louisiana State Penitentiary guard Brent Miller in April of that year,

according to NOLA.com. The prison farm where he

held is commonly known as the Angola prison and is Louisiana’s only maximum-security prison.

Woodfox and two other state

prisoners became known as the Angola Three because of their long stretches in solitary confinement at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola.

Other members of the Angola Three were prisoners Robert King and Herman Wallace.

Woodfox and Wallace, who were both serving unrelated armed robbery sentences, had said they were singled out for harsh treat-ment, including isolation, because of their political activism .

Woodfox and Wallace were former Black Panthers and helped establish a prison chapter of the Black Panther Party at the Angola prison in 1971, set up demonstra-tions and organized strikes for bet-ter conditions.

Wallace, convicted with Woodfox of murder in the death of guard Brent Miller, died in October 2013 only days after a judge freed him and granted him a new trial.

King was released in 2001

US Prisoner Released After Four Decades In Solitary Confinement

The Angola prison where the three men were in solitary confinement for decades is Louisiana’s only maximum-security prison

Albert Woodfox, 68, was ordered to be released from prison on Monday after spending 40 years in solitary confinement

By William Grimes

Dolores Spikes, who be-came the first woman to head a university system in the United States when, in 1988, she was named president of the Southern University and A & M College System in Louisiana, and who fought court-ordered desegregation of the state’s colleges to protect Southern’s identity as a black institution, died on June 1 in Baton Rouge, La. She was 78.

Edward Pratt, a university spokesman, said she had been suffering from a long illness, which he did not specify.

In the early 1980s, the Department of Justice ordered Louisiana to revamp what the department described as a ra-cially segregated system of higher education . In 1989, it issued an order calling for the merger of the governing boards and operations of the state’s black and white university systems and the introduction of racial quotas to integrate student enrollment.

Administrators at Louisi-ana’s historically black schools, which included Grambling State University, feared that the new system would lead to a dilution of their mission to serve black students and an ero-sion of state financial support . Southern’s total enrollment of about 14,000 made it the largest black university in the country.

“I think what Southern is asking for is the same thing that the Justice Department is asking for — a desegregated system, but one that still al-lows for access and a chance for reasonable success for mi-nority students, poor students and disadvantaged students,” Ms. Spikes told The Associ-ated Press in 1989. “That’s part of the mission of Southern University; we’re asking that remain intact.”

Ms. Spikes played the lead role in negotiating an agreement in 1994 that met the goals of desegregation by creating cooperative programs between the university’s Baton Rouge campus and Louisiana State University and between

Dolores Spikes,Trailblazer as President of SU, Dies at 78

Dolores Spikes

See SPIKES, on page 2

BATON ROUGE - Sav-ingForCollege.com, a national College Saving Plan com-parison website that publishes rankings each quarter, reported that Louisiana’s START Sav-ings Program ranked first for 10-year performance among all 529 plans in America. START was also ranked among the Top 10 State 529 plans for 1-year, 3-year and 5-year performance.

“SavingForCollege.com created its rankings several years ago to help investors gauge how well their plans were perform-ing relative to their peers,” said SavingForCollege.com founder Joseph Hurley.

The START Saving Pro-

gram is an innovative college savings program that qualifies as a “529 Plan” under the In-ternal Revenue Code. START offers federal and state tax in-centives to anyone who wishes to financially assist a student in acquiring a college education.

In addition to regular earn-ings on investments, accounts will receive a contribution from the state, called “Earnings En-hancements,” to match a per-centage of their annual deposits, ranging from 14 percent to two percent determined by the ac-count owner’s prior year fed-eral adjusted gross income as reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Louisiana’s START Saving Program Recognized As Best Performing 529 Program in America Over Past Ten Years

Every time the Baton Rouge Metro Council discusses the issue of police body cameras, it seems another story of a potentially ra-cially-charged conflict between citizens and police is in the news, with a video at the center. This time, it’s the police response to a pool party with a crowd of teenag-ers in McKinney, Texas.

But while council members in Baton Rouge said they want the city’s police officers to wear cameras, on Wednesday they voted against an ordinance that would have legally required the depart-ment to implement them for all officers by December of next year.

The council voted 4-5 Wednesday (June 10) against an ordinance authored by coun-cil member C. Denise Marcelle that would require the cameras. Those who voted no said they were worried that they’d be forcing the police department to pay for the equipment without knowing how

much it would cost or how it would be paid for.

The department will continue moving forward with a pilot pro-

gram that’s already underway to outfit 100 officers with the cam-

No Body Cameras Required for Baton Rouge Police in Baton Rouge

Baton Rouge police are implementing a pilot program that will provide 100 officers with body cameras, but the Metro Council voted not to legally require the whole department to wear the devices.

See POLICE, on page 2

See RELEASED, on page 2

New East Baton Rouge superintendent Warren Drake has just begun his job with the district, and one of the first orders of business is setting up an administrative staff.

So far, 19 Baton Rouge schools are getting new prin-cipals, as part of a yearly sum-mer shuffle of school admin-istrators.

The schools that are get-ting new leaders include Scot-landville High, and the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, which had seen controversy as parents wanted an administrative change.

Here’s a list of who’s been appointed where:

Elementary schools:

n Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts: Candice Hartley, previously assistant principal at Sher-wood Middle, has been named the new principal.

n Buchanan Elementary: Charlotte Britten, previously assistant principal at the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, has been named the new principal.n Highland Elementary:

Jamie Carruth, previously dean of students at Highland, is being promoted to principal.

n Howell Park Elementary: Rochelle Washington, previ-ously assistant principal at Howell Park, is being pro-moted to principal.

n LaSalle Elementary: Su-zanne Navo, previously as-sistant principal at LaSalle, is being promoted to principal.

n Magnolia Woods El-ementary: Kim DiPalma, previously assistant principal at Melrose Elementary, has been named the new principal.

n Melrose Elementary: Olga Pack, previously assis-tant principal at Melrose, is being promoted to principal.

n Merrydale Elementary: Assistant Principal Tana Bou-dreaux is being promoted to principal.

n Park Elementary: Emily LeBlanc, previously assistant principal at Park, is being pro-moted to principal.

New Principals Named for Scotlandville High, BRCVPA, and 17 Other Baton Rouge Schools

Many East Baton Rouge schools, including Scotlandville High and the Baton Rouge Center for Visual and Performing Arts, will have new principals next school year.

See SCHOOLS, on page 2

Page 2 • The Weekly Press • Thursday, June 11, 2015

READER INFORMATION

How to Reach UsGeneral Information 225-775-2002Fax . . . . . . . . . . . 225-775-4216 Email Address . . . brweeklypress@yahoo .com

The office is open 9:00 a .m . to 5:00 p .m . Monday - Friday and located at 1283 Rosenwald Road, Baton Rouge, Louisiana .Correction PolicyThe Baton Rouge Weekly Press strives to be fair and accurate . The newspaper corrects any significant errors of fact brought to the attention of the editor . If you think an error has been made, call 225-775-2002

The Weekly Press Newspaper is a published weekly in Baton Rouge and distributed every Thursday with a circulation of 7,500. Subscription rates are $65.00 per year for Louisiana residents; $72.00 for one year for out-of-state residents; half price for six months subscription: and $1.00 per single copy.

All money orders or checks should be made payable to The Weekly Press, P.O. Box 74485, Baton Rouge, La. 70874

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Phone: (225) 775-2002 Fax: (225) 775-4216

E-MAIL [email protected]@bellsouth.net

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Closed Saturday, Sunday and all Major Holidays

LOCAL & STATE

Call the McManus law office and get all you deserve

INJURED IN A CAR WRECK?

Charles C. McManusA T T O R N E Y A T L A W

8520 Scotland Ave, Suite C • Baton Rouge, La. 225-774-5771 charlesmcmanus@

mcmanuslawoffice.brcoxmail.comwww.charlesmcmanus.com

If this happens to

you call Attorney

McManus ILLUSTRATION SHOWING AN ACCIDENT

J U S T A THOUGHT: If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and be-come more, you are a leader. —John Quincy Adam

MY TRIBUTE TO DR. DELORES MAR-GARET RICHARD SPIKES (1926-2015).

If you were like me, when you heard the news of the demise of Dr. Spikes, you felt a grip of sadness. I was not ready to release my bed when this very sad news came by phone by one of my good friends. “Oh, no!” I said to my friend because it was not really something I wanted to hear. Dr. Spikes was not my president (Dr. Felton G. Clark was). At the time of my educational journey, she was a professor and university leader. But I had move back to my home state by the time she was presi-dent of Southern University and the Southern University System. She was stalwart about keeping Southern open and adamant about educating minority in the HBCUs.

As most alumna, I followed what was happening on campus by

local TV news media and via alumni publications. I remember seeing her wipe tears away when she was named to her position. (Perhaps she was thinking about and thanking her parents for such an honor.) It was most gratifying to read how such a distinguish woman was navigating the Southern University System with such poise

and grace. In the days of the 80’s women were still finding their path to the helm of leadership. She held on to the role with such tenacity and dignity that is was worth any one while to emulate. I heard about her when my spouse and I spoke about the department of mathematics at Southern. She was his professor of analytical geometry and would often talk about her thoroughness and patience. How about that in these days of rush and get it if you can by some educators?

How can one say goodbye to such a good leader as Dr. Spikes and such a warrior for educating the under serve? May she rest in peace.

Love, Marge

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its New Orleans campus and the University of New Orleans, as well as the creation of a new com-munity college in Baton Rouge.

“She was a great moving force in settling the desegrega-tion lawsuit while adamantly pro-tecting Southern,” Connie Koury, executive law counsel to Edwin W. Edwards, the governor at that time, told The Times-Picayune of New Orleans in 1996. “Spikes protected Southern the best way anyone could.”

Dolores Margaret Richard was born on Aug. 24, 1936, in Baton Rouge, where she attended parochial and public schools.

After earning a bachelor’s de-gree in mathematics at Southern University in 1957 and a mas-ter’s degree at the University of Illinois a year later, she returned to Louisiana. She taught high school science in Mossville, a mostly black community on the outskirts of Lake Charles, and married Hermon Spikes, who had been a fellow math student at Southern.

He died in 2008, and their only child, Rhonda, died in 2010. Ms. Spikes is survived by two sis-ters, Elizabeth Bellaire and Ann Fenelon, and two grandchildren.

In 1961, Ms. Spikes returned to Southern University as an as-sistant professor of mathematics. In 1971, she became the first black woman to earn a doctorate in mathematics from Louisiana State University. When she was named chancellor of Southern Univer-sity at New Orleans in 1987, she became the first woman to hold that post in a public university in Louisiana.

In 1987, she was appointed to the board of Harvard’s Institute of Educational Management. Presi-dent Bill Clinton named her to his board of advisers on historically black colleges and universities in 1994. She also served as the vice chairwoman of the Kellogg Com-mission on the Future of State and Land-Grant Universities.

Ms. Spikes left Southern University in 1996 and became president of another black insti-tution, the University of Mary-land, Eastern Shore, where she remained until 2001.

Dolores Spikes’ Memorial Service was Tuesday, June 9 at the F. G. Clark Activity Center on Southern University Baton Rouge Campus. The funeral service was held at Sacred Heart Catholic Church on Main Street in Baton Rouge on Wednesday, June 10th.

SpikeS from page 1

BATON ROUGE - The State of Louisiana is accepting public comments on a Partial Action Plan that allocates $4 million to Plaquemines Parish for the creation of a housing elevation program in response to Hurricane Isaac. This partial action plan also obligates the first $1 million of those funds so Plaquemines officials can begin program activities.

As a result of Hurricane Isaac, 46 percent of all home-owners in Plaquemines Parish reported damages, which were extensive and disproportionately affected a low- and moderate-income population. Given lim-ited resources and the identified housing needs, the state seeks to use these funds to elevate residential structures, with an emphasis on LMI households, to best address long-term resil-ience.

Partial Action Plan 5 allo-cates $4,039,600 of the parish’s total funding of $16,953,000 to create the new program that is necessary to address unmet hous-ing needs in the parish due to the 2012 storm. The Housing Elevation/HMGP Non-Federal Match Program will be a vol-untary elevation program that will work in conjunction with

homeowner elevation activities already taking place through the parish’s Hazard Mitigation Grant Program, which is funded by FEMA and applied to those homes located in flood-prone areas.

The program will be admin-istered by Plaquemines Parish officials, with the state Office of Community Development’s Disaster Recovery Unit and the Louisiana Housing Corporation providing oversight, guidance and technical assistance.

“ B y e l e v a t i n g t h e i r homes, these households in the most flood-prone areas of Plaquemines Parish will de-crease their risk of flooding in future storms,” said Pat Forbes, executive director of the Louisi-ana Office of Community Devel-opment. “This investment will allow homeowners to rebuild safer, stronger and smarter.”

Plaquemines Parish Presi-dent Amos Cormier, Jr. said, “Plaquemines Parish is grate-ful to the Office of Community Development for the opportunity to use these funds as the local match for home elevations. This will assist residents with eleva-tion of their homes, thus miti-gating the possibility of future flooding.”

The funds are part of the $64.4 million in Community Development Block Grant dol-lars that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop-ment allocated to Louisiana for recovery from Hurricane Isaac. The City of New Orleans, Jef-ferson Parish and St. Tammany Parish all received individual allocations from HUD. Of the $64.4 million, the state has al-located $32.7 million to St. John the Baptist Parish and $16.9 mil-lion to Plaquemines Parish for their Hurricane Isaac recovery efforts.

Citizens, community lead-ers and elected officials can ac-cess the plans and submit com-ments online by visiting http://www.doa.louisiana.gov/cdbg/DR/IC_ActionPlans.htm and opening, “Isaac Partial Action Plan 5”. A copy of the plan can be requested by calling (225) 219-9600.

The formal public comment period for Partial Action Plan 5 begins today, June 10, 2015 and runs until 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 23, 2015. After accepting public comments, the state will submit the plan to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop-ment for final federal approval.

State of Louisiana Accepting Public Comments on Funding for Isaac-Recovery Housing Program in Plaquemines Parish

eras, and depending on how that goes, could come back later with a plan to outfit more officers.

Marcelle has been pushing for the cameras for several months, and wanted to put the requirement into law to force the department to implement them soon. Three other council members agreed with her: The others who voted in support of requiring the cameras were Chauna Banks-Daniel, Ronnie Edwards and Tara Wicker.

Wicker spoke emotionally about why she believes the cam-eras will save lives, particularly of young African-American men.

“I personally am the mother of a 13-year-old son that will be driving in a couple of years, and I want my baby to be safe,” she said. She told council member John Delgado, “I don’t expect you to understand it, because you’re not a black man and you don’t have any black children.”

But other council mem-bers said they didn’t want to tie Police Chief Carl Dabadie’s hands, forcing him to spend an unknown amount of money on the cameras and possibly have to cut elsewhere in his budget. They said the city should wait to see how the pilot program goes.

The body cameras had already been debated at the council’s last meeting, and at the start of Wednesday’s meet-ing it appeared a compromise had been reached: Marcelle, the mayor’s staff, and council member Buddy Amoroso, who had previously been pushing for a non-binding resolution in favor of the cameras, all were in agreement. The compromise required the department to use the cameras, but removed any timeframe.

But then, Parish Attorney Lea Anne Batson told them that without including a timeframe, the ordinance would go into ef-fect immediately -- which may have been what Marcelle wanted, but wasn’t the others’ intention.

So Marcelle offered up Dec. 1, 2016 as the deadline.

But her colleagues were concerned about implementing it as a mandate. Cities elsewhere have found that the biggest cost of the cameras is not the cam-eras themselves. It’s the cost of storing and managing the video footage. Dabadie said the pilot program is a way to get a sense of how it would work for the whole department.

If the council voted to re-quire the cameras before seeing the results of the pilot, “What’s the point of doing the pilot pro-gram at all, then?” council mem-ber Trae Welch asked. Aren’t we putting a horse before a cart right now by doing it like this?”

With Wednesday’s vote, the pilot program will proceed, but it will be up to the police depart-ment or perhaps a future vote of the council to expand the use of the cameras.

“Everybody wants it, but I guess it’s always the devil’s in the details,” Amoroso said.

police from page 2

after his conviction in the death of a fellow inmate in 1973 was reversed.

Woodfox has been tried twice in the guard’s death, but both convictions were overturned.

Brady said the ‘exceptional circumstances’ of the case had led him to bar the state from seeking a third trial.

In his ruling, he cited doubt that the state could provide a ‘fair third trial’; the inmate’s age and

poor health; the unavailability of witnesses; ‘the prejudice done onto Mr. Woodfox by spending over forty-years in solitary con-finement,’ and ‘the very fact that Mr. Woodfox has already been tried twice’.

Tory Pegram of the Inter-national Coalition to Free the Angola 3, who is working with Woodfox’s lawyers on his release, said they are all ‘thrilled that jus-tice has come for our innocent

friend’. Woodfox is in solitary con-

finement at a prison in St Fran-cisville, Louisiana, and awaiting trial. His lawyers were headed there Monday to seek his release.

Pegram said Woodfox gets to exercise for one hour three times a week during his confinement at the West Feliciana Parish Deten-tion Center. He has a television to watch and a shower in his cell, she added.

Of Brady’s order for an un-

ReleaSed from page 1

See RELEASE on page 3

n Riveroaks Elementary: Erica Aguillard, previously assistant prin-cipal at LaBelle Aire Elementary, has been named the new principal.

n Sharon Hills Elementary: An-gela Sanders, previously assistant principal at Park Forest Elementary, has been named the new principal.

n Woodlawn Elementary: Janice Lindsey, previously assistant prin-cipal at Woodlawn Elementary, is being promoted to principal.

Middle schools:

n Broadmoor Middle: Daniel Edwards, previously assistant principal at McKinley High, has been named the new principal.

n Brookstown Middle: James Smith, previously assistant prin-cipal at Brookstown, is being pro-moted to principal.

n McKinley Middle: Sean Joffrion, previously principal at

Brookstown Middle, has been named the new principal.

High schools:

n McKinley High: Harry Wright, previously interim principal at Scotlandville High, is moving to assistant principal at McKinley High.

n Scotlandville High: Calvin Nicholas, previously an assistant principal at Baker High, has been named the new principal.

Alternative schools:

n Beechwood Alternative: Ron-nie Knox, previously principal at Greenville Alternative at Wyan-dotte, has been named the new principal.

n EBR Readiness Academy: Delores Watts, previously assis-tant principal at EBR Readiness Academy, is being promoted to principal.

SchoolS from page 1

Thursday, June 11, 2015 • The Weekly Press • Page 3

Saturday, June 13th 9:00am–12 noonExxonMobil YMCA 7717 Howell Blvd. Baton Rouge, LA 70807

Topics will include:• Establishing, Maintaining & Repairing Your Credit• Thinking Like a Lender• Saving for down payment & closing costs• Becoming a Homeowner• Available Financial Assistance

Please visit redriverbank.net or contact Johvanna Sampson at 225-241-3815 or [email protected] to register! Seminar is FREE and open to the public.

Southern University students and faculty are part of a research effort to develop low-cost materials help to help provide sustainable water purification in Ghana.

The students and faculty are in the African country of Ghana for the next 30 days conducting research and developing means of improving drinking water in Ghana.

The effort is part of an Inter-national Research Experiences for Students $250,000 award from the National Science Foundation to the SU’s Department of Mechanical Engineering and Office of Research and Strategic Initiatives.

Southern’s participating stu-dents, include: Shola Falodun, a senior Urban Forestry major from New Orleans; Kristen Hypolite, a senior mechanical engineering major from Lake Charles, La.; Lance Burton, a senior agricultural sciences major from Greensburg, La.; and Gabrielle Muhammad, a senior physics major from Baton Rouge.

Students from two other col-leges are part of the project. They include Jacquelyn Ford, a Xavier University of New Orleans senior Biology major from Palmdale, Calif., and Kimberly Cribbs, a University of Arkansas, senior chemical engineering major from Pea Ridge, Ark.

SU faculty members partici-pating, include, Principle Inves-tigator of the project Dr. Patrick Mensah, a professor of Mechanical Engineering; Dr. Fareed Dawan, a professor of Mechanical Engineer-ing; Dr. Samuel Ibekwe, profes-sor and Chair of the Department of Mechanical Engineering; and Bernice Ruth, an assistant in the Department of Mechanical Engi-neering.

The students will concentrate on determining how best to remove an excess of naturally occurring fluoride, which can cause health problems, in ground and well water in the Bongo Region of northern Ghana.

The SU group will be part of a

collaborative effort with the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) faculty and students at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ku-masi, Ghana.

According to an NSF press release, the project will attempt to develop a low-cost, but effective composite material for sustainable water purification to ensure an ef-fective, innovative and transforma-tive approach to the concerns of the Global Impact of Sustainable Water Supply and Purification (GRA-SWP).

The project is also expected to raise the awareness about related, global water issues and the need and advantages of studying simi-lar subject in a multidisciplinary and internationally collaborative environment.

For additional information, please contact Edward Pratt the Director of Media Relations

Southern University at (225) 771-4545 or (225) 771-3907.

Pictured from left, Kimberly Cribbs, Gabrielle Muhammad, Lance Burton, Bernice Ruth, Dr. Patrick Mensah, Dr. Fa-reed Dawan, Shola Falodun, Jacquelyn Ford and Kristen Hypolite. Photo by John Oubre, Office of Media Relations

SU Students, Faculty Part of Water Purification Effort in Ghana

Baton Rouge, Louisiana – The Board of Directors of the Scotland-ville High School Hornets Alumni Association is hosting a Town Hall Meeting, Thursday June 18, 2015, 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.; at the South-ern University Intramural Sports Complex. The board and organi-zation members will announce a major initiative that responds to the lack of arts and cultural activities for the children and young people in the Scotlandville community.

Formed in 1999 to support student success at the Scotland-ville Magnet High School, the organization successfully entered into an agreement with the East Baton Rouge City Council, to renovate a retired fire station on Rosenwald Avenue. Mr. Norman Hawkins, Commander of VFW Post 11169 and lifetime resident of Scotlandville, who is co-chair of the Scotlandville High School Hornets Alumni Association’s Arts Committee reports that “The City Council gave us a huge vote of con-fidence when they agreed to turn the old fire station over to us, and it is a responsibility we are not taking lightly. According to Mr. Hawkins, the committee considered several options for repurposing the facil-ity and was determined to make children the priority. After a period of assessment and consideration of

community needs, a special arts committee under the direction of Board President Paula Braxton, de-termined that children in the area need and deserve high quality arts classes and programs.

“Our children are highly cre-ative, but there are no places in our neighborhood where they can work with professional artists and find their own talents” says Mrs. Braxton.

According to reports obtained by the organization, over 4,000 stu-dents are enrolled in public, charter and private schools in the Scotland-ville area. Many of them have little or no access to art, music or dance programs, other than an occasional outreach program offered by arts organizations in the city. “Those programs are sporadic, with little possibility for our children to actu-ally have ongoing learning about the arts”, says Mr. Joe Jenkins, Chairman of the Louisiana Naval War Memorial Commission. “We want our young people to be cre-ative and competitive when they graduate from high school and the arts encourage them to stay in school, and helps them think about their future in positive ways”.

With full support from the board of directors, the organiza-tion is moving forward with their due diligence to determine what

resources they will need to take their time and build a plan that is solid enough to make dreams hap-pen in Scotlandville. “We have so many resources in our backyard, says President Braxton, Southern University, LSU and the Baton Rouge Arts Council, and we have a group of committed members ready to learn and execute”.

Margie Johnson Reese, a Baton Rouge native and board member of Americans for the Arts, a national arts service organiza-tion based in Washington, D.C, will facilitate the Town Hall meeting. Ms. Reese has been engaged by the board to help guide the develop-ment of the project.

Ms. Reese, who has devel-oped cultural facilities in Dallas and Los Angeles, says, “There’s only one reason this project won’t succeed, and that is, that we don’t make our children the priority”. This project will take the efforts of a lot of people. The arts are not just a casual way for kids to pass the time – the arts help young people see the connections between sci-ence, engineering and technology”, says Reese.

For more information about the Town Hall meeting or about the project, email Ms. Jeanette Harrison at [email protected].

Scotlandville High School Alumni Announce Arts Center Project

conditional release, Pegram said, ‘I call it the unicorn. It’s almost never done’.

Jasmine Heiss, a senior cam-paigner with Amnesty International USA, called Brady’s ruling ‘a mo-mentous step toward justice’.

Heiss said Woodfox has been ‘trapped in a legal process riddled

with flaws’.‘The only humane action that

the Louisiana authorities can take now is to ensure his immediate release.’

At the same time, though, state prosecutors were working to keep Woodfox in prison.

Aaron Sadler, a spokesman for

Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell, said the state was seek-ing an emergency stay of Brady’s ruling from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

‘With today’s order, the court would see fit to set free a twice-convicted murderer,’ Sadler said. ‘This order arbitrarily sets aside jury decisions and gives a free pass to a murderer based on faulty pro-cedural issues.’

ReleaSe from page 2

Call The Weekly Press 225.775.2002

Page 4 • The Weekly Press • Thursday, June 11, 2015

RELIGION

CHURCH DIRECTORYNot forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching. - Hebrews 10:25

NEW HOPE BAPTIST CHURCH5856 Greenwell Springs Road • Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70806

Telephone: (225) 926-0246 • Facsimille: (225) 925-8022Toll Free: 888-700-6174

Websites: www.newhopebr.com

Rev. Leo Cyrus Sr., Pastor

Order Of ServicesSunday Worship .....................................................11:00 A.M.Holy Communion ................................. 3rd Sunday 6:00 P.M.Sunday School .........................................................9:00 A.M.Bible Study ...............................................Thrusday 7:00 P.M.

Email your church event or religious organization news to The Weekly Press @

[email protected] or call 225-775-2002Let the community know whats happing at your place of worship. Email your church event or religious

organization news to The Weekly Press @ [email protected] or call 225-775-2002

WEDNESDAY 12:00

5013 WINDFALL COURTBATON ROUGE, LA. 70812FOR DIRECTIONS CALL 225-355-8194We are seeking Prayer WarrorsRemember Acts 16: 25-26

THE KINGDOM OF GOD CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES

11263 Florida Blvd.Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70815Telephone: 225-272-9755Fax: 225-272-9754Cell: 225-603-2711E-mail: [email protected] Dell Maxie, Pastor

“Spreading the message of the Kingdom of God while building on a foundation of love”

Sun. Worship 10 am • Tue. Bible Study 7pm • 2nd & 4th Sun. Broadcast 8am WXOK

VISIT US ONLINE @www.theweeklypress.com

Bishop Eugene Harris Sr. Pastor

NEW JERUSALEM FULL GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH4525 Point Clair Road * St. Gabriel, Louisiana 70776-0493

Telephone: (225) 642-8682

Church ScheduleSunday School ..................................................................... 7:00A,M.Sunday Worship ................................................................... 8:00A.M.Bible Study ............................................................. Tuesday 7:00.PM.Prayer Service ........................................................ Tuesday12:00A.M.Youth Training ........................................................... Tuesday 6:00P.M.Holy Communion ................................................ 2nd Sunday 8:00P.M.

“I can do all Things Through Christ which Strengthenth me.” Phil. 4:13.

ANTIOCH FULL GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH6538 Mickens Road • Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70811-4351

Telephone: (225) 357-9717

Church Schedule:Sunday School ..................................................................... 10:00AMSunday Worship ................................................................... 11:00AMBible Study .............................................................. Thursday 7:00PMPrayer Service .......................................................... Thursday 6:00PMYouth Training ........................................................... Thursday 6:00PMHoly Communion ................................................ 4th Sunday 11:00AM

“I can do all things through Christ which Strengthenth me.” Phil. 4:13

Bishop Eugene Harris Sr. Pastor

n The Camphor Memorial United Methodist Church will be hosting their Summer Bible Vacation School from June 15-19, 2015. The classes starts at 5:30pm until 8:30pm daily and all is in-vited from 2+ and up. Snacks will be served daily. For additional information, please contact Reverend Mary Ann Robinson at 504-875-6274.

n Dr. Excel Payne pastor of the Emmanuel Baton Church will hold their Semi-Annual Session from June 22-24, 2015 with Bible classes starting from 10am to noon and parent body at 1pm. This year the services will be at the Beech Grove Baptist Church that is located at 9455 Elm Grove Garden Drive and Elder Marshall Hall is the pastor.

BR Gospel Happening By Lela Kelly

CALL 225-775-2002 OR EMAIL YOUR CHURCH ANNOUMENTS TO

brweeklypress @yahoo.com

By Dr. James l. snyDer

I will admit throughout the years I have had my negative mo-ments and some negative rants. I know nobody can be 100% positive. I am 100% positive they cannot be 100% positive.

In the husband and wife rela-tionship, some call it marriage, there is both a positive and a negative. Some days it seems to be all nega-tive. Then there are those wonderful days when it seems to be all posi-tive. I really like those days.

Every relationship has its ups and downs; times when you get along and then there are times that you do not get along. However, I if you accent the positive in a relation-ship and sort of put the negative in

the back closet, things seem to go along much more smoothly.

I try to keep up with the stories on the news. It seems that you can-not get away from the news these days with all of this 24/7 exposure.

I think it might be great, al-though it will not last very long, to have a news program some time devoted just to “good news.” The way things are today, I do not know if there is any good news out there. All we hear is the bad. The worse the news, the more publicity it gets on the media.

Then there is politics. I think there could be something positive to say about politics, but at this mo-ment, nothing really comes to my mind. I will give this a lot of thought (actually not too much thought) and

just see if there is anything positive I can say about politics.

For every positive you might find in politics, there are at least a dozen negative votes that com-pletely swamp the positive. Of course, if you could get the negative and the positive together in poli-tics, it would be a rather shocking experience.

The thing that is wrong with politics is simply politicians.

To find a politician balanced is like looking for a needle in a hay-stack. The problem with looking for a needle in a haystack is that when you find the needle you are stuck with it.

Religion is also full of nega-tivity. I am tired of all the nega-tive comments that come out of the

mouth of people who are religious.I think religion, for the most

part, has more negatives than posi-tives. In fact, I think they know more about the negatives and have for-gotten completely about anything positive. But that is the nature of religion.

The problem with religion is the same problem with politics. If we just get rid of leaders in our country today who are all negative, we might have a chance of looking on a positive future.

The only positive I see today is in Christianity. Not the Christianity of religion; that’s a given that it is more negative than positive. But the Christianity that focuses on the person of Jesus Christ. I choose to be a follower of Jesus.

Can I get an Amen?Jesus had a positive message.

“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).

I know can we cannot be 100% positive, but I think we should focus a little more on the positive and really enjoy the rest God has for us.

Rev. James L. Snyder is pastor of the Family of God Fellowship, PO Box 831313, Ocala, FL 34483. He lives with his wife, Martha, in Silver Springs Shores. Call him at 1-866-552-2543 or e-mail [email protected] or website www.jamessnyderministries.com.

I’m Totally Tired With El Negativity

DALLAS, -- MegaFest, the nation’s largest inspirational fam-ily festival, today announced Tyler Perry’s new stage play, “Madea on the Run,” will make a tour stop in Dallas during the five-day experi-ence slated for August 19-23. The play will be in the arena at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center on Friday, August 21 at 7 p.m. Tickets go on sale today via Ticketmaster.

“Madea always makes us all laugh while teaching valuable lessons that we remember long afterwards,” Bishop T.D. Jakes said. “We are excited to welcome Tyler Perry back to MegaFest. Tyler is a friend and constant

supporter of ours. We are happy to extend this platform to his fan base knowing that MegaFest at-tendees will enjoy this hilarious play.”

“Madea on the Run,” which began touring in March, will be the first Tyler Perry play ever staged at MegaFest. The play’s plot follows Madea, played by Perry, as she goes on the lam from local authorities and is forced to hide with her friend, Aunt Bam, played by Cassi Davis. The play’s brand new score, written by Perry, promises audiences a night of laughter and inspiration.

MegaFest Adds Tyler Perry’s “Madea on the Run” Play to Line Up

See MEGAFEST, on page 5Tyler Perry as Madea

Thursday, June 11, 2015 • The Weekly Press • Page 5

BUSINESS

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SALES PERSONS The Weekly Press, Baton Rouges’ oldest muti-cultural com-munity newspaper is building a diverse sales team . We are seeking sales personnel to service the Baton Rouge, Baker and surrounding areas who are looking to earn an above average income . The right person must be a team player, professional, aggressive, creative, earnest, able to think outside of the box, have reliable insured transportation, committed to working and great communication skills . Contact Mr . Walter Dixon at (225) 775-2002 for appointment and interviews .

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ECI Applications Architect, Baton Rouge, LA . Defines, plans, designs, develops, improves, installs, integrates and maintains programming systems, complex programming applications and/or new programming languages, and operational systems ad-vanced techniques for large health insurance company . Per-forms Web, Client/Server Application programming, Business to Business Integration (B2B) and Enterprise application integra-tion (EAI) using different versions of BizTalk Server including 2006/2006R2/2009/2013/1012R2 and native, customized, and third-party adapters including FILE, FTP, SOAP, SQL, SFTP, SMTP, DB2, MQSC, MQSeries, WCF-SQL, WCF-BasicHttp, WCF-NetTcp, WCF-Custom and NULL, LoopBack . Designs, codes, tests, maintains, trouble shoots, documents, trains, and leads projects on new or existing EAI integrated information systems . Designs, develops, and maintains application and technical architectures across multiple systems, sub-systems, or platforms and implements solutions related to standards for HIPAA-mandated transactions and other Healthcare Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) transactions . Performs Installation and Configuration of BizTalk 2009/2013/2013R2 . Provides technical advice to management and frequently participates as technical advisor and consultant in management decisions . Requires: M .S . in Computer Science, Engineering, Mathematics or related technical field . Additional skills: BizTalk/ .Net/SQL Development; BizTalk development including Adapters, Pipelines, Maps, Or-chestrations, Business Rules Engine (BRE), Business Activity Monitoring (BAM); Team Foundation Server (TFS); .Net technolo-gies including ASP .Net, C# .Net and VB .Net and other technologies including XML, XSD, XSLT; SQL Development including database designs, scripts, triggers, stored procedures . Mail resume to: Sherry Strain, Employment Compliance Specialist, Louisiana Health Service & Indemnity Company d/b/a Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana, 5525 Reitz Avenue, Baton Rouge, LA 70809 . Reference: ECI Applications Architect . Louisiana Health Service & Indemnity Company d/b/a Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Louisiana is an EOE/M/F/V/D employer .

EDITORIAL INTERNS WANTED

The Weekly Press, Baton Rouges’ oldest muti-cultural community newspaper is looking for Student Interns only . We are seeking writers to cover the Baton Rouge, Baker and surrounding areas . The right person must be a team player, professional, aggressive, creative, earnest, able to think outside of the box, have reliable insured transportation, committed to working and great communication skills . Contact Mr . Walter Dixon at (225) 775-2002 for appointment and interviews .

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Tickets for “Madea on the Run” are available for purchase individually, sepa-rate from MegaFest ticketing packages. Additional MegaFest event and speaker updates will

be announced throughout the summer, and the public is en-couraged to check www.mega-fest.com for news on speakers, schedules and other exciting announcements.

MegaFeSt from page 4

BATON ROUGE – The Southern University College of Business hosted its Second Annual “Advancing Leadership in Economic Development” (ALIED) conference on June 11 -13. The conference featured more than 10 local and nationally recognized business leaders who shared their expertise on effec-tive leadership strategies and suc-cessful economic development programs.

Some of the featured speak-ers included James Joseph, for-mer ambassador to South Af-rica and former public policy professor at Duke University; Dr. Richard McCline with the Fanning Institute for Leadership Development at the University of Georgia; and Will Campbell with small business lending of Louisiana for Capital One.

Topics include regional eco-nomic growth and development opportunities, revitalizing rural and inner-city neighborhoods, leadership models that get results, and the role of political leaders in economic development.

It was targeted to small busi-ness owners, community devel-opment professionals, nonprofit

organizations, city and state leaders, and anyone else who was interested in learning more about leadership and business opportunities in our area.

“This conference encour-aged attendees to play a greater role in growing their businesses and organizations and to take ad-vantage of the many economic opportunities available in our city and state,” said Dr. Donald Andrews, dean of the College of Business and coordinator of the conference. ‘It also gave at-tendees the tools they needed to succeed and it’s was a great networking opportunity.”

The conference was hosted by the EDA University Center. It took place in the College of Business’ T.T. Allain Hall in Room 313 on Southern’s campus. Workshops ran from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. on June 12 and 8:30 a.m. until noon on June 13. The conference kicked off on June 11 with dinner and a keynote speaker.

For more information on speakers, go to subruniversity-center.org or call (225) 771-5640 or (225) 771- 6248.

Southern’s College of Business Hosting Leadership and Economic Development Conference

There’s a lot of talk in East Baton Rouge Parish about how the middle class is leaving the area, looking for better and more af-fordable educational opportunities for their children in the suburbs of Ascension and Livingston Parish.

A new report from Brookings provides an interesting look at that issue, though. If you look at it from a strict numbers perspective, the percentage of people in Baton Rouge in the “middle class” by its purest definition -- the middle fifth of national income distribution -- is actually about on par with the national average. What’s different in Baton Rouge, though, is we have a lot more poor people, and a lot fewer wealthy people. (It should

be noted, these are city of Baton Rouge figures, not the overall East Baton Rouge Parish).

Nationwide, the middle 20 percent of households earn between $41,110 and $65,952 annually. In Baton Rouge, about 18.9 percent of households fall into that cat-egory, which is fairly close to the nationwide 20 percent.

But while only 40 percent of households nationwide make below $41,109, a whopping 56.6 percent of households in Baton Rouge fit into that range, accord-ing to Brookings. Most of them in Baton Rouge -- about 33.6 percent -- are in the poorest category, mak-ing less than $21,433.

And while 40 percent of

households nationwide fall into the top earning categories and make above $65,953, in Baton Rouge it’s only 27.5 percent.

New Orleans numbers are very similar, though the middle class is smaller -- 33.1 percent of people fit into the national income range for the lowest 20 percent, 16.9 percent are in the middle 20 percent, and 15.1 percent are in the top 20 percent.

Of course, it all depends on your definition of middle class -- many people likely would call themselves middle class even if their household makes well above the national median of about $53,000.

Baton Rouge’s ‘Middle Class’ is on Par With Nation, but Percentage of Poorer Residents is High

Baton Rouge has a much higher percentage of poor residents, and a much lower percentage of wealthy residents, than the national average.

The people have spoken, and they want to give more money to the library system, Baton Rouge Metro Council members said at a meeting Wednesday as they voted to allow the library system to request a tax increase this fall.

The council voted 7-4 to put an 11.1-mill rate for the li-brary system on the ballot this fall, when it goes to voters for a tax renewal. The voters previ-ously approved the 11.1-mill rate, but it had since been rolled back to 10.78 mills due to in-creasing property values. So if the tax renewal passes this fall, property owners would see their tax bills go up by a few dollars.

Initially, there had been pressure from council members on the well-funded and well-liked library system to reduce its taxes, perhaps freeing up money for other crucial city services like a proposed mental health center. But a majority of council members on Wednesday (June 10) said they heard overwhelm-ingly from their constituents that they wanted to support the library system at 11.1 mills. Even Travis Woodard, one of two library board members who had initially voted against the higher rate, said he had changed his mind and asked the council to support it.

Library system officials say they need the extra funds to renovate more of their older facilities.

Baton Rouge Voters Will be Asked to Raise Library Taxes

Page 6 • The Weekly Press • Thursday, June 11, 2015