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Stormy days, flood risks, flood watches, Saints forecast, and a check on the tropics

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www.youtube.com – WDSU News – 2024-09-04 22:28:18

SUMMARY: WDSU reports an impact day due to flood potential ahead of Saints Sunday. A weather front is expected to bring lower humidity and comfortable temperatures, but heavy rain and thunderstorms are currently affecting areas like Houma, Thibodaux, and Raceland. Rainfall estimates indicate some areas may receive up to six inches, with over four inches recorded in Raceland. A flood watch is in effect until Friday, and the forecast suggests ongoing storm activity. As the week progresses, temperatures will remain below average, and the area’s humidity will remain high due to prevailing south winds from tropical systems.

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Meteorologist Devon Lucie tracks the heaviest rain that was out Wednesday evening then shows us when and where storms are likeliest over the next two days, who’d been added in to the Flood Watch, and how more rain will affect temperatures, and how much more rain will fall, then takes a look at the tropics and walks us through where a tropical wave will need to be monitored as it moves into the Gulf of Mexico.

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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Federal court invalidates Gulf oil drilling lease

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lailluminator.com – Wesley Muller – 2025-03-28 15:39:00

by Wesley Muller, Louisiana Illuminator
March 28, 2025

In a legal setback for fossil fuel advocates, a federal court has invalidated a large offshore oil and gas lease sale in the Gulf of Mexico, ruling Thursday in favor of environmental groups that sued to block the lease after it was scheduled for auction in 2023.  

U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta, an Obama appointee in the District of Columbia, found unlawful a 73-million acre offshore oil and gas lease sale, one of the largest in history, that the Interior Department held in March 2023. Oil and gas leases are contracts in which private companies rent tracts of federal land or water from the government usually for the purposes of drilling or extracting raw materials.

The court ruled in favor of groups that had sued the Interior Department, finding that the agency failed to adequately consider the potential harms of climate changing emissions from fossil fuel production arising out of the lease as well as the impact to the nearly-extinct Rice’s whale, which lives exclusively in the Gulf of Mexico. The most recent scientific survey in 2017-18 estimated that only about 50 of the endangered whales are still alive, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Gulf energy industry could face challenges with some of Trump’s promises

The judge ordered additional briefing from the parties regarding what remedies the court should impose.

The Interior Department, through the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management under the Biden administration, had previously canceled the lease sale nearly three years ago. However, U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, a centrist Democrat from West Virginia, inserted a provision into the Inflation Reduction Act that forced the Interior Department to resurrect the sales along with two others that were similarly canceled. Separate litigation remains ongoing to decide the fate of the two other sales, one in the Gulf of Mexico and the other in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR).

The next Gulf oil and gas lease is scheduled for auction in 2025, and two others are proposed to take place over the next five years. After leases are sold, it typically takes many years before platforms and other infrastructure are built and drilling begins. 

For various reasons, some companies purchase leases and don’t use them at all. Hundreds of oil and gas leases currently sit idle as fuel prices have been relatively stable for several years on the global energy market. The last oil and gas lease auction in ANWR this year drew no bids.

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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Bossier Sheriff’s Office received over 9,000 calls for assistance in six months | Louisiana

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Emilee Calametti | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-03-28 14:30:00

(The Center Square) — Reported call numbers from the Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Office show 9,017 calls for assistance and 11,781 unit-initiated actions from Oct. 1 to March 1 as reported crime shows a decline over the past year. 

As reported crime continues to drop for the Bossier Parish Sheriff’s Office compared to February last year, the office is receiving calls by the thousands, according to reported data. A call frequency breakdown shows over 9,000 calls for service or assistance. 

The office received five major crime calls and one mass casualty call within the last six months. Calls for crimes against persons were greater in volume at 905. 

According to reported crime data, rape offenses were up since this time last year, but many other offenses, including robbery, simple assault, burglary, and theft show a decrease.

There were no reported robbery cases as of February. Simple assault dropped from 60 to 49 compared to February of last year. Violent crime did trend upwards by 4% due to the increase in rape cases with 10 reported cases this year as of February. Aggravated assault cases on reported crime data show a 109% increase in cases since last year. 

The office received 1,227 property crime calls from Oct. 1 to March 1, however, reported crime shows a decrease in property crime cases by 44% compared to February of last year. There were 37 cases reported as of February and 66 the same time last year. Property crime includes burglary, purse snatching, shoplifting, theft, theft from auto, auto access theft and auto theft. 

Unit initiated actions sit at the highest call volume. Reported data shows there were 11,781 unit initiated actions from Oct 1 to March 1. These are calls from officers when they witness a crime, such as someone breaking into a car. 

Apart from crime and assistance calls, the office received 240 weather-related calls and 11,225 traffic-related calls. 

The reported call volume for Bossier Sheriff’s Office reports for Bossier Parish and does not include reported crime within the city limits of Bossier City, Benton, Haughton and Plain Dealing. 

Emilee Ruth Calametti serves as staff reporter for The Center Square covering the Northwestern Louisiana region. She holds her M.A. in English from Georgia State University and soon, an additional M.A. in Journalism from New York University. Emilee has bylines in DIG Magazine, Houstonia Magazine, Bookstr, inRegister, The Click News, and the Virginia Woolf Miscellany. She is a Louisiana native with over seven years of journalism experience.

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Lafayette officials want to end inventory tax, but it will cost them

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thecurrentla.com – Camden Doherty – 2025-03-27 16:39:00

SUMMARY: Louisiana’s inventory tax, a long-standing issue for lawmakers, faces potential removal through Gov. Jeff Landry’s Amendment 2 on the upcoming ballot. While some support its elimination for competitiveness, Lafayette Parish risks a $27 million funding shortfall from 2024 collections. The tax, affecting local businesses significantly, hasn’t been fully compensated by state incentives, particularly for larger parishes like Lafayette. Local officials express concerns about essential services, as the projected $15 million reimbursement does not adequately cover losses. Decisions on the tax’s future will lie with Lafayette’s sheriff, school system, and parish council, all needing to collaborate for effective change.

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