The Supreme Court rules Louisiana’s congressional map unconstitutional. The vote was six to three, and it fell right down ideological lines. The court ruled that the state relied too heavily on race in drawing its current congressional map, which includes a district that stretches diagonally from Shreveport to Baton Rouge. ULM political science professor Joshua Stockley says the court did not throw out the 1965 Voting Rights Act in its ruling; but it did leave a key question unanswered – how much is too much?
The current map will remain in place until a new map is drawn. The big questions are – when will the legislature draw that new map, and is there any chance that it will be in place for the November election? One thing that could complicate that is that early voting in the closed primary starts Saturday.
Construction officially gets underway this afternoon on the new I-10 Calcasieu River Bridge. Calcasieu Parish Police Jury President Brian Abshire says the new 2.3-billion-dollar bridge will be a vast improvement over the one that it will be replacing.
Cut 5 (06) “…still being debated.”
The state will collect tolls for 50 years; Abshire says that was the only option to gain the funding needed for the massive project, which will take seven years to complete.
Louisiana Tech and Conference USA reach an agreement that will allow the school to move to the Sun Belt July 1st. Even though the move will cost the university an estimated eight-million dollars, Matt Bellinson of the Ruston Leader believes it will be money well spent when all is said and done.