Saturday, December 19, 2009

NEW ORLEANS AND LOS ANGELES HEALTH CRISIS





Los Angeles, CA January 2010- Pressline Entertainment hosts the 1st Annual Laron Larrimore Health Awareness Fair & Community Walk in Los Angeles at Saint Andrews Park -8701 Saint Andrews Place. Los Angeles Ca, 90047 on Saturday January 9th 2010 from 8A.m. - 1pm.
Armed with a mission to promote Building a Healthy Lifestyle where you live, work and play. Derek Haskell and his team at Pressline Entertainment seek to educate, energize and encourage participants and onlookers alike to engage in healthier choices for their physical, emotional, mental and spiritual awareness. A day like this one will help to inform from a variety of choices for health and wellness in the community.
This Day includes : The Hip Hop Generation's Audacity of Hope Benefit Concert, a 5K Walk through the park, sample sessions with fitness trainers, free Health Screenings focused on high blood pressure, Dementia, Alzheimer and much much more. Over 300 participants are expected to attend and walk for better health.
Pressline Entertainmnet has made itself a key partner in the efforts to rebuild New Orleans; to address the deficit of L.A. Unified School District in reading, writing, and math by integrating these concerns through community involvement and resources that inform people of know-how and what-to do. Representatives from S.S.I. Social Security will determine are you receiving your full that effects all of our inner city which will enable you to live through this recession and forever.
This Community Walk and Free Health screening are an episode in the effort to serve people locally and remind the world that New Orleans/Katrina devastation is parallel to all of the devastation that effects all of our inner city community that still need intervention in the areas I expressed above, still needs everyone's helping hands nearly 5 years after the tragedy caused by Hurricane Katrina.
Currently traveling between New Orleans and Los Angeles to produce Pressline’s 2010 reality T.V. show “OPERATION N.O.” Pressline's Founder Derek Haskell stretches himself pretty thin. "It has to be done. New Orleans can only be rebuilt through the involvement of the City's people and the health of the people in this community improves when people know how and what to do", Derek explains.
Pressline Entertainment is a film and music production company that develops, consults and manages artists, who finically donate to organizations like Pressline to bring about world wide exposure to projects that uplift underserved communities.
Current Sponsors include: L.A. Sentinel Starbucks, AAA, and Mass Appeal Barber Shop.

Publicity Contact Derek Haskell
323-596-5177 or presslineent@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Pam Dashiell, a civic activist who deftly galvanized her Lower 9th Ward


Pam Dashiell, Lower 9th Ward activist, dies at age 61
By Katy Reckdahl, The Times-Picayune
December 02, 2009, 7:47PM

Pam Dashiell, a civic activist who deftly galvanized her Lower 9th Ward neighbors while pushing for structurally sound levees and environmentally friendly construction, died in her home on Tuesday. She is believed to have died of natural causes, but findings by the coroner's office are incomplete. She was 61.

pam_dashiell.JPGMichael DeMocker/The Times-Picayune archivePam Dashiell was photographed in December 2006 at a community congress on the Unified New Orleans Plan.

Movie star Brad Pitt, who began working closely with Ms. Dashiell not long after Katrina floodwaters receded, called her "a guiding force in the rebuilding efforts." He added, "She was there from the very beginning and through our years of working together she became a dear friend."

Ms. Dashiell didn't change, no matter if she was talking with Pitt, meeting with wealthy donors or walking down her street, said fellow activist Karen Gadbois. "Pam was always Pam. She just sailed through whatever she did as her own natural self," Gadbois said.

Longtime friend and Global Green director Beth Galante said one key to Ms. Dashiell's success was that she didn't make others feel inferior.

"Even after Katrina, Pam never pushed other people," Galante said. "She'd say, 'Everybody needs to do what they need to do. But this is what I'm going to do. I'm going to fight for my community. I'm going to fight for my home. Because it's worth it and it means the world to me.'"

Ms. Dashiell was born in Roxbury, Mass., but had lived in the Holy Cross section of the Lower 9th Ward for the past 20 years. After a severed Industrial Canal levee deluged her rental house with six feet of water, she stayed away for a few months but returned to live in the city full time just after Christmas 2005, moving back to Holy Cross about a year later.

Most recently, Dashiell worked as co-director of the Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development. She had served as president and board chair of the Holy Cross Neighborhood Association, was a founding member of Citizens Against Widening the Industrial Canal, had worked as a program coordinator for the Louisiana Bucket Brigade Holy Cross/Lower 9th Ward Initiative and served as an adviser for the Gulf Coast Fund. She also was a board member for other local organizations, including Smartgrowth Louisiana, the Alliance for Affordable Energy and the National Center for Community Health Research.

Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, who after Katrina helped to funnel preservation grants to Holy Cross and other historic New Orleans neighborhoods, issued a statement on Wednesday calling Ms. Dashiell "the embodiment of service and selflessness," someone whose work had "helped rebuild Holy Cross and the Lower Ninth Ward (and) ... strengthened our entire city."

While Ms. Dashiell faced the same struggles and heartbreak as other residents did after Katrina, she remained "eternally optimistic," Galante said. Indeed, in a 2008 interview, Ms. Dashiell said that "with the support of good people and the resilience of brave people, it seems like anything can be accomplished."

Ms. Dashiell is survived by a daughter, Alisa Leslie Dashiell-Sanchez of St. Louis, and a granddaughter.

A memorial tribute will be held Friday at 6 p.m. at All Souls Episcopal Church, 5500 St. Claude Avenue. A funeral will be held at All Souls on Saturday at 11 a.m., with visitation starting at 9 a.m. Rhodes Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

LOVE OF THE 9TH WARD PAM DASHIELL WILL MISS U


, Lower 9th Ward activist, dies at age 61
By Katy Reckdahl, The Times-Picayune
December 02, 2009, 7:47PM

Pam Dashiell, a civic activist who deftly galvanized her Lower 9th Ward neighbors while pushing for structurally sound levees and environmentally friendly construction, died in her home on Tuesday. She is believed to have died of natural causes, but findings by the coroner's office are incomplete. She was 61.

pam_dashiell.JPGMichael DeMocker/The Times-Picayune archivePam Dashiell was photographed in December 2006 at a community congress on the Unified New Orleans Plan.

Movie star Brad Pitt, who began working closely with Ms. Dashiell not long after Katrina floodwaters receded, called her "a guiding force in the rebuilding efforts." He added, "She was there from the very beginning and through our years of working together she became a dear friend."

Ms. Dashiell didn't change, no matter if she was talking with Pitt, meeting with wealthy donors or walking down her street, said fellow activist Karen Gadbois. "Pam was always Pam. She just sailed through whatever she did as her own natural self," Gadbois said.

Longtime friend and Global Green director Beth Galante said one key to Ms. Dashiell's success was that she didn't make others feel inferior.

"Even after Katrina, Pam never pushed other people," Galante said. "She'd say, 'Everybody needs to do what they need to do. But this is what I'm going to do. I'm going to fight for my community. I'm going to fight for my home. Because it's worth it and it means the world to me.'"

Ms. Dashiell was born in Roxbury, Mass., but had lived in the Holy Cross section of the Lower 9th Ward for the past 20 years. After a severed Industrial Canal levee deluged her rental house with six feet of water, she stayed away for a few months but returned to live in the city full time just after Christmas 2005, moving back to Holy Cross about a year later.

Most recently, Dashiell worked as co-director of the Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development. She had served as president and board chair of the Holy Cross Neighborhood Association, was a founding member of Citizens Against Widening the Industrial Canal, had worked as a program coordinator for the Louisiana Bucket Brigade Holy Cross/Lower 9th Ward Initiative and served as an adviser for the Gulf Coast Fund. She also was a board member for other local organizations, including Smartgrowth Louisiana, the Alliance for Affordable Energy and the National Center for Community Health Research.

Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, who after Katrina helped to funnel preservation grants to Holy Cross and other historic New Orleans neighborhoods, issued a statement on Wednesday calling Ms. Dashiell "the embodiment of service and selflessness," someone whose work had "helped rebuild Holy Cross and the Lower Ninth Ward (and) ... strengthened our entire city."

While Ms. Dashiell faced the same struggles and heartbreak as other residents did after Katrina, she remained "eternally optimistic," Galante said. Indeed, in a 2008 interview, Ms. Dashiell said that "with the support of good people and the resilience of brave people, it seems like anything can be accomplished."

Ms. Dashiell is survived by a daughter, Alisa Leslie Dashiell-Sanchez of St. Louis, and a granddaughter.

A memorial tribute will be held Friday at 6 p.m. at All Souls Episcopal Church, 5500 St. Claude Avenue. A funeral will be held at All Souls on Saturday at 11 a.m., with visitation starting at 9 a.m. Rhodes Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

New Orleans City Council rejects Mayor Nagin's revenue estimates, slashes city budget

New Orleans City Council rejects Mayor Nagin's revenue estimates, slashes city budget
By Bruce Eggler, The Times-Picayune
December 01, 2009, 3:30PM

new orleans city council.JPGChris Granger/The Times-PicayuneNew Orleans City Council, Dec. 2008Over the staunch objections of Mayor Ray Nagin's administration, a unanimous New Orleans City Council has approved deep cuts to the already trimmed-down 2010 operating budget proposed by Nagin, including slashing nearly $400,000 from the police department, nearly the same amount in sanitation spending and a whopping $10.5 million from the chief administrative officer's budget.

The reductions, which total $15.3 million, also include $1 million from the law department and $1 million from the mayor's budget.

Council members also have added $4.7 million of new spending in priority areas, including $2 million for public works, $500,000 for criminal courts and $400,000 for the district attorney. And they restored $4.6 million in cuts that Nagin had pegged to unpaid furloughs for most city employees; furloughs are no longer part of the 2010 budget.

The changes resulted from a decision by the council to cut the total general fund budget from $462 million proposed by Nagin to $455 million. Council members said they thought the administration's 2010 revenue projections were too optimistic.

The general fund is the portion of the city's $1 billion-plus annual budget that is raised through taxes and other self-generated revenue sources and that the city can spend as it pleases. The rest of the budget consists of federal and state grants over which the city has limited control.

Assistant Chief Administrative Officer Cary Grant protested the changes, which council members approved through amendments that will be tacked on to the final operating budget ordinance. A vote on the city's entire 2010 spending plan is expected today, the deadline set in the City Charter for the council to approve the coming-year's budget.

"I took a scalpel to this budget, and now you're taking a meat cleaver," Grant said. In preparing the general-fund budget, the city faced a $68 million shortfall, meaning it would have run up a deficit of that size if spending continued at the 2009 level.

In reducing the general fund bottom line, the council reduced by $350,000 the budget for the city's inspector general, which by law receives a set percentage of the general fund total.

Nagin has not appeared in the chamber to make a personal appeal.

Friday, November 13, 2009

William Jefferson sentenced to 13 years in prison....OPERATION N.O.


Former Rep. William Jefferson was sentenced today to 13 years in prison for his conviction on 11 counts of public corruption in a case in which he famously hid $90,000 in his freezer.

U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III delivered the sentence at a packed courtroom in the federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va. Prosecutors had asked for 27 to 33 years in prison, while Jefferson's lawyers said the prison term should be less than 10 years.

Ellis said that Jefferson, a New Orleans Democrat who served nine terms in Congress, must surrender at the federal correctional facility ultimately selected for his incarceration by the Bureau of Prisons.

Jefferson, 62, was convicted in the same courtroom Aug. 6 of corruption charges by a 12-member jury. The jury acquitted him of five charges.

Jefferson was given the chance to make a statement, but his attorney said he had advised his client to remain silent because the congressman is appealing his conviction.

Before he pronounced sentence, Ellis took statements from lead prosecutor Mark Lytle and Jefferson's lead attorney, Robert Trout.

Lytle said that Jefferson's greed, in demanding millions of dollars in payments and stock to family-owned businesses in return for his help winning potentially lucrative contracts in Western Africa, brought shame to Congress and a long sentence would send a strong message that public corruption won't be tolerated.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

NOLA Healthcare May Be Headed for Radical Change




The bulk of the New Orleans' area's uninsured population will receive free or subsidized health insurance under the plan proposed by the Louisiana Health Care Redesign Collaborative.

The blueprint will combine two proposals that the collaborative has considered: private health insurance for the poor and highly managed care for special needs patients, such as the mentally ill and elderly, said Dr. Floyd Buras, president of the Louisiana State Medical Society.

"Funding is the issue," Buras said. "It's going to be a problem that we will have to address, whether at the state level or with (Health and Human Services) Secretary Michael Leavitt."

The plan for Jefferson, Orleans, Plaquemines, and St. Bernard parishes will cost between $150 million to $200 million more than the state now spends in the region. Leavitt has said he wants a revenue-neutral plan, although the federal official has also said additional money could be made available.

Leavitt also wants a plan that will offer everyone portable healthcare coverage so that the money follows the patient. Under this scenario, patients can choose their doctors and hospitals, rather than being tied to one of the state's charity hospitals. Leavitt's deadline for the plan was Oct. 20.

The United States Department of Health and Human Services pays 70 percent of the healthcare costs for the poor and uninsured. Louisiana picks up the remainder of the tab.

Gov. Kathleen Blanco has complained that Leavitt is asking the state to provide everyone with health coverage with no guarantee of additional federal help.

Buras said if Leavitt is serious about making Louisiana the model for an innovative healthcare solution, he's going to have to help.

"If you want Louisiana to get away from a two-tiered system of healthcare, you're going to have to pony up some money, at least to get it off the ground," Buras said.

The New Orleans area has somewhere between 100,000 to 130,000 people without health insurance, according to the latest census figures.

The proposed plan would provide free insurance for the poorest non-elderly, non-childbearing adults and subsidies for the working poor, Buras said. The state would also work with employers to make sure that the people who are eligible for employer health plans get that coverage.

High-risk patients would fall under a healthcare program similar to the existing one, but highly managed, Buras said.

State Health and Hospitals Secretary Dr. Fred Cerise has recommended establishing "a medical home" for poor and uninsured patients. Patients would first consult a healthcare professional, such as a family doctor, who would either treat them or coordinate their care.

The medical home would link patients to specialists, emergency care and other services, Cerise has said. The concept is expected to lower costs because patients won't get all their care in emergency rooms.

The state medical society, which has proposed a private insurance model, and some other collaborative members, including Cerise, had butted heads over which concept to use.

But the Oct. 9 collaborative meeting appears to have resulted in a compromise proposal with which everyone can live, Buras said.

For instance, about half of the money needed for the program would come from the savings generated by the new healthcare system, Buras said. Fewer hospital stays and emergency room visits would cut the amount of Medicaid dollars needed.

This would free up Medicaid disproportionate share funds, money set aside for hospitals that treat large numbers of low income patients with special needs, which could be rolled into the insurance plan, Buras said.

Other savings could come from managing end-of-life issues, Buras said. At present, roughly 75 percent of the Medicaid funds are spent caring for 25 percent of the patients.

"A lot of dollars are spent keeping Grandma alive the last two days, when it's not really what Grandma wants," Buras said. "But no one's really sat down and talked about it in a holistic way."

However, a number of issues remain, Buras said.

The reimbursement rates for Medicaid, now set at 60 percent of Medicare, will have to be made equal to Medicare, according to Buras.

Providers in New Orleans have some special needs. Many of them were wiped out by Hurricane Katrina — Buras is one of them — and they have to rebuild their businesses while providing care.

"If you're going to get buy-in from general providers, you'll have to get reimbursements at least up to Medicare, he said.

Other hurdles must be cleared before the new plan can become a reality. In addition to Leavitt's approval and kicking in additional federal funding, state legislators must sign onto the proposal, Buras said.

This will require thinking about healthcare in a completely different way and understanding how healthcare and its funding model will change, Buras said. The reform package is complicated and will take time to absorb.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

4 years after Katrina: Lessons from the Gulf Coast


Four years ago, Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans. As the Gulf Coast struggled to keep its head above water, the rest of us were glued to the news - astounded at first by the awful destruction, and then by the inadequate response to so much human suffering. 



In those days, our TV sets became microscopes ─ magnifying in shockingly clarity the divide in our nation between those who could afford to escape and those who could not. The Gulf Coast continues to be a microcosm for a nation in search of economic recovery.

What can New Orleans tell us about how to rebuild, revitalize, and recover?

Root economic recovery in clean energy

In the quest to rebuild, New Orleans has become a leader in energy saving and clean energy, from solar-powered streetlights and hybrid city buses, to building energy-efficient homes for residents who were made homeless by Katrina.

Why choose clean energy? For one thing, clean energy means jobs for a devastated region. A $615 million investment in clean energy is projected to create over 6,000 jobs in New Orleans, according to a recent report from Green For All and the Natural Resources Defense Council. In fact, clean-energy investment creates roughly three times as many jobs as the same level of investment in fossil fuel technologies, and the jobs generated are more accessible to workers with relatively low levels of formal education.

With the challenge of rebuilding much of the city's infrastructure, New Orleans is finding that clean-energy projects make the most sense in the long term - by benefiting the environment, and the local economy.

Jobs must be good and accessible to local residents

The Gulf Coast recovery, however, has seen its share of challenges, particularly in ensuring that recovery plans create quality jobs for the community.

Many of the rebuilding jobs in the Gulf region are going to two groups: professionals from out-of-state and undocumented workers, mostly from Latin America. The first group is made up of mostly highly-educated, highly-paid professionals in fields like urban planning. The undocumented workers, meanwhile, face temporary, dangerous jobs with dismal pay and no benefits, and have no way to address these issues for fear of being turned over to the authorities.

This lack of standards is leading to low-road jobs that don't benefit workers or the local economy. Similarly, the professional jobs are drawing new people to the region, but doing little for the folks who lived in New Orleans before the storm hit.

The Louisiana Green Corps, in contrast to this trend, provides real opportunity and access to the job market for local residents, many of whom have few other options. The Corps teaches practical job skills in green construction, weatherization, and energy-saving techniques to local youth who have had trouble with the law. Another successful project, Make it Right, is building energy-efficient homes in the Lower 9th Ward, a working-class New Orleans neighborhood. Make it Right is not only providing homes for families that have been displaced by Hurricane Katrina. It is also providing jobs and much needed entrepreneurial opportunities.

The Louisiana Green Corps and Make it Right are now partnering with the City of New Orleans to create more jobs, homes, and local opportunity - using President Obama's Recovery Act. The partnership is jointly applying for Recovery funds to expand the number of workers it trains and energy-efficient homes it builds.

Lessons for Washington, DC

The challenges and successes Louisiana has faced offer important lessons to the nation, and particularly to our leaders in Washington.

The Senate is now crafting a crucial clean-energy bill that could create hundreds of thousands of American jobs. It is absolutely essential that the Senate legislation include investment in green-collar job training so that programs like the Louisiana Green Corps can prepare America's workforce for new jobs across the country. 

Equally important are standards to prevent a low-road economy that excludes local workers. The Green Construction Careers Demonstration Project is a key provision in the clean-energy bill that ensures that green construction jobs have quality standards and are accessible to local workers.

Both of these provisions were included in the clean-energy bill the House passed this summer. They must also be included in the Senate version. America's workers and middle-class depend on it.

The rebuilding in New Orleans is far from done. There are thousands of people who still need homes, jobs, and health care - thousands who need their communities back. But in the past four years we've learned a lot about the right and wrong ways to help the region rebuild and thrive.

It is time as a nation to put these lessons to use.


Green Energy
Extreme Weather
Poverty
Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins - Chief Executive Officer, Green For All (www.greenforall.org)

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Administration to Reveal Plans for Katrina Housing Transition

Administration to Reveal Plans for Katrina Housing Transition

By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 3, 2009

The Obama administration will announce plans today to virtually give away roughly 1,800 mobile homes to 3,400 families displaced by Hurricane Katrina who are living in government-provided housing along the Gulf Coast, officials said.

The administration also will make available $50 million in rental vouchers to income-eligible trailer occupants who move to targeted housing projects, and take over from Louisiana the job of helping residents find permanent homes, said a senior White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity before the formal announcement.

"We knew we needed to bring this program to a close," the official said. "We also want to ensure a humane and secure transition for all of them."

The sale option comes weeks after the trailer program formally ended May 1, and after Federal Emergency Management Agency officials said they could begin officially referring cases for eviction June 1.

FEMA typically provides disaster aid for 18 months. It extended assistance for 45 months since Katrina hit in August 2005.

About 1,150 families in FEMA housing live in units the agency classifies as mobile homes and park models, which will be offered for sale at $5 and $1, respectively. FEMA expects to free up an additional 600 to 700 units from its inventory to donate through state and local governments and nonprofit groups, the administration official said. Individuals who previously bought units will be offered refunds.


It is unclear what impact the changes will have. Many local jurisdictions refuse to alter zoning ordinances to allow small manufactured homes.

Thousands of existing vouchers from the Department of Housing and Urban Development that are becoming available in Louisiana are going unused. Some trailer occupants await promised grants to rebuild their homes or do not want to leave their home sites. Others do not want to move to HUD-subsidized housing or to pay more rent. Some occupants are so sick, elderly or dysfunctional that they require more help to find housing, officials said.

Spokesman Clark Stevens said FEMA is committed to working with families case by case, adding that 139,000 other households have cycled out of the trailer program. "No one will face evictions from a temporary unit while these new measures are implemented," he said in a written statement.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Security for Jindal's travels costs La. taxpayers


Security for Jindal's travels costs La. taxpayers
by Melinda Deslatte, The Associated Press Thursday April 16, 2009, 1:02 PM

SUSAN POAG/THE TIMES-PICAYUNE
Gov. Bobby Jindal speaking at an event last month in Westwego. BATON ROUGE -- As Gov. Bobby Jindal's profile in the Republican Party rises, so does the bill for Louisiana taxpayers.

Widely considered a GOP presidential contender, Jindal insists he's only interested in re-election as governor, but he has traveled to a dozen states to collect campaign dollars and stump for himself or other Republicans.

An Associated Press review shows that providing legally mandated security on such trips has cost the state treasury tens of thousands of dollars since Jindal took office in January 2008, money that has not been reimbursed by Jindal or his campaign.

T-P coverage

• Jindal in Boston today for fundraiser; makes appearance on Good Morning America

• Gov. Bobby Jindal again raising money out of state, event sponsored by Mitt Romney
The tally grew higher this week as Jindal traveled to New York and then to Boston for fundraisers. The Boston fundraiser, on Thursday, was sponsored by former GOP presidential contender Mitt Romney.
Jindal's office says his campaign fund or event host covered the cost of travel to Iowa, California, North Carolina, Arizona and other fundraising or political stops. But taxpayers paid for the state police bodyguards accompanying Jindal, even when the sole purpose of the trip was fundraising.

The state has paid at least $52,000 in trooper costs for Jindal's fundraising and political travel. That's more than half the state-paid trooper expenses on all Jindal out-of-state travel.

Taxpayers have shelled out at least $98,000 to cover trooper airfare, meals, car rentals and hotels for all Jindal travel outside Louisiana, including economic development bids, and meetings with members of Congress, the president or other governors.

At least 17 out-of-state trips weren't tied to state business, an AP review of state police travel records shows. Tax dollars also paid a $3,800 bill for trooper support when Jindal's wife, Supriya, hit the campaign trail with Cindy McCain last year to stump for Republican John McCain's presidential bid.

Louisiana law requires state police protection for the governor and his family. The statute doesn't limit the type of travel. It's unclear, however, whether the state could accept reimbursement from Jindal's campaign fund for campaign-related travel expenses. Neither Jindal nor the state police have sought ethics board guidance on the subject.

Jindal, who has championed tougher ethics standards, said he always touts Louisiana when he's on the road. The aggressive political travel, he said, is to ensure he has enough money for a 2011 re-election bid. He's raised more than $3 million since his inauguration.

"In 2007, I ran against two millionaires able to self-finance. They were able to write checks for several million dollars. That's not something I can do, so I want to make sure we've got the resources to get the message out," the governor said.

Records show that taxpayers picked up trooper travel expenses when Jindal chatted with Jay Leno on "The Tonight Show," visited John McCain's ranch in 2008 and spoke to a conservative group in Iowa, all trips not directly tied to state business.

Jindal also fits in fundraisers when he's on the road for state business.

Asked whether he was concerned that state dollars were paid for his fundraising trips, Jindal replied, "I leave all security determinations up to the state police. I certainly trust them to do their job."

Some Louisiana bloggers, radio talk shows and newspaper editorials have been critical of the governor's absences.

House Speaker Jim Tucker, R-Terrytown, said Louisiana benefits from Jindal's national prominence. He called Jindal a "salesman" for the state. But while few state officials have openly criticized the fundraising jaunts, some question Jindal's priorities.

"Gov. Jindal needs to take care of our house now and worry about the White House later," Rep. Rickey Hardy, D-Lafayette, said recently.

Jindal and his family have round-the-clock protection from state troopers, as did governors before him. Col. Mike Edmonson, state police superintendent appointed by Jindal, said his office makes security assignments based on Jindal's destination, not the trip's purpose.

"I'm statutorily mandated to protect him," said Edmonson.

The number of troopers traveling with Jindal varies by location. Edmonson said he asks state police at the governor's destination for help, to cut costs when Jindal travels out of state.

He said travel expenses for protecting Jindal in 2008 were less than for former Gov. Kathleen Blanco in 2007, when she made several overseas economic development trips. Blanco's trips, however, weren't tied to campaign fundraising.

Edmonson said he doesn't know if his agency could accept reimbursement from Jindal's campaign for travel costs tied to fundraising trips.

Kathleen Allen, lead lawyer for the state ethics board, said the board hasn't ruled on whether travel costs incurred by state police could be reimbursed from campaign funds and won't make a ruling unless someone requests it. To date, no one has.

Asked about using campaign cash to reimburse the state police, the governor repeated that he leaves security decisions to the troopers.

Pearson Cross, a political scientist at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, said Jindal's campaign travel could hurt him if Democrats field a serious challenger in 2011.

"I think it's really important that Jindal not be perceived as traveling too much and not paying attention to Louisiana," Cross said.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

new orleans crime plan......OPERATION N.O. PRESSLINE ENT.



City unveils a crime plan
Police chief calls on New Orleans residents
to take 'slay-cations'
By ChaCha Pitoulas
The Levee can't-beat-'em-kill-'em writer
New Orleans Police Chief Warren Riley today announced his first major strategy to dislodge New Orleans from its dubious ranking as the most violent city in America.

The burly-yet-soft-spoken chief proclaimed that the key to truly driving down the city’s nation-leading murder rate lies not in fighting crime in New Orleans, but focusing instead on creating more crime in other cities.

Accused of running a police department devoid of an actual crime strategy and criticized for juvenile explanations regarding what can be done to promote safety in the city, Riley hopes that starting crime waves in other places will cause New Orleans’ No. 1 crime ranking to look better without actually having to do anything here, which the chief said would be “really, really, really hard.”

The chief called upon every New Orleans resident to take part in his strategy, which he dubbed “community policing.”

Under Riley’s version of “community policing,” locals would simply turn their traditional vacations into what the chief called “slay-cations,”

“We want New Orleanians, as they travel this great country, to kill someone in another city, perhaps focusing on other high-crime cities such as Houston or Memphis, to push their murder ranks higher and make us look better,” a smiling Riley said.

Riley then offered a simpler explanation of his strategy to push other cities’ crime rates higher than the nation-leading rate in New Orleans. “When you and your buddy are trying to outrun a charging bear, it doesn’t matter whether you’re faster than the bear,” Riley explained. “What matters is that you’re faster than your buddy.”

The move marks a sharp reversal in policy for Riley, who has been a staunch critic of the crime rankings. In November, Riley simply dismissed New Orleans’ ranking as inaccurate and based on poor scientific methodology.

Riley also noted that New Orleans has been considered one of the most violent cities in America since the “riverboat gambling days” in the 1870s – long before he took office. The chief most recently has been busy assuring reporters that the city’s crime rate – while high – is confined largely to paddlewheels and the novels of Mark Twain.

Metropolitan Crime Commission President Rafael Goyeneche criticized Riley’s strategy, but admitted it was nice to see the chief try something.

If the strategy shows promise, the police chief said he might cease law enforcement operations in the city and deploy officers to other cities to help residents raise crime rate in those cities. He said he would have Louisiana National Guardsmen still deployed in New Orleans shifted to smaller, less populated cities to raise the crime rate in those areas.

“The best defense is a good offense,” Riley explained. “We are in this together. We can’t raise crime in other cities unless everyone pitches in.”

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

PRESSLINE ENTERTAINMENT. BRINGS GREEN TO WHITE HOUSE

Michelle Obama brings organic garden to the White House
Posted by Molly Reid, The Times-Picayune March 20, 2009 11:30AM
Categories: Green Living

Ron Edmonds / AP Photo

First lady Michelle Obama, accompanied by students from Washington's Bancroft Elementary School, takes part in groundbreaking of the White House Kitchen Garden, Friday, March 20, 2009, on the South Lawn of the White House.The Obama administration may be struggling to get back some of the green that bailed-out insurance giant AIG gave to its employees as bonuses, but starting Friday, it'll be growing some green right at the White House.

First Lady Michelle Obama is set to break ground Friday on an 1,100-square-foot organic vegetable garden -- the first true produce garden at the White House since Eleanor Roosevelt's victory garden, planted during World War II.

The garden will feature 55 varieties of vegetables, berries and herbs, chosen in part by the White House kitchen staff, the New York Times reports. The produce will go toward both family meals and state dinners, and with selections ranging from collard greens to tomatillos and exotic herbs, it's easy to imagine everyone at the White House getting a taste of something homegrown.

The garden marks a major first step in Michelle Obama's stated agenda of promoting healthy eating habits. For the full scoop on the White House garden, check out the New York Times report.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Pressline Entertainment " Operation N.O" Black Louisianians are more likely to be poor

By ASHLEY M. BAILEY
Advocate staff writer
Published: Mar 22, 2009

The Louisiana Legislative Black Caucus released a new study Saturday detailing the state of African Americans in Louisiana.

Based on the report’s key findings in areas of economics, education and health, the majority of blacks do not appear to be doing well at all.

The nearly 200-page report was presented at the State of Black Louisiana Conference on Southern University’s campus.

“When a third of this state is African American, it is important to know the state of black people,” said caucus Chairwoman and state Rep. Regina Barrow, D-Baton Rouge. “If African Americans aren’t doing well, the state of Louisiana is not doing well.”

According to the report, black people are three times more likely to experience poverty than their white counterparts. It also found that black people bring home only half the median income and per capita income of whites. “Disparities in income … play huge roles in accounting for large gaps in wealth building (between the two races),” an abridged version of the report states.

In the area of education, black children are much more likely to be classified as having a learning disability than white children.

Among older students, more black people than white people are obtaining degrees from two-year colleges, the report states. Black people, however, receive four-year degrees at half the rate of white people.

Barrow said she was especially alarmed to find that one in every 50 black students who want to go to college are not ready. She said they are often placed into remedial classes and serve as evidence of the poor educational system.

Wellness seems to be another area of concern for the black population, which faces higher cancer mortality rates than white people and which is four times more likely to contract the AIDS virus. “The prognosis for overall health of African Americans is grim,” the report says.

Despite their unsatisfactory health outlook, black people are twice as likely to be uninsured, according to the report.

“The root cause (of the disparities) is poverty,” Barrow said. “It’s probably something dating back before slavery.”

Poverty is often indicative of poor education, she said. Lack of education leads to low-paying jobs, often without access to health care, thus the cycle of poverty begins and continues.

Barrow said one way to break that cycle is through education.

“This, to me, marks an educational tool,” she said, pointing to the report. “When you don’t know, you don’t know how to do any better.”

Those in attendance at Saturday’s conference spent hours addressing the report’s findings and discussing policy changes to combat the somber figures.

Barrow said she and the members of the black caucus plan to publicize and distribute their findings and policy ideas among colleagues and state government officials.

The report is a joint effort by the black caucus and the Nelson Mandela School of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Southern University, Barrow said.

Authors of the report began compiling data using national and statewide Quality of Life Index reports shortly after Hurricane Gustav struck Louisiana on Sept. 1.

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Monday, March 23, 2009

PRESSLINE ENTERTAINMENT REBUILDS NEW ORLEANS


BATON ROUGE, La. -- Initial claims for unemployment insurance in Louisiana remained virtually unchanged last week.

The Louisiana Workforce Commission says that for the week ending March 14, there were 4,526 new claims, just seven fewer than the previous week.

The latest number is nearly double that of the comparable week of 2008 when the state received 2,337 initial unemployment claims.

Last week also showed an increase in continuing claims with 41,230, about 300 more from the previous week.
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