1:30 LRN Newscast June 9

Governor Edwards says Memorial Day weekend did not result in a significant increase in the transmission of COVID-19. Edwards has a few thoughts as to why…

Cut 2 (30) “…I’m Matt Doyle”  

Ochsner Baton Rouge recently celebrated 250 hours passing without a COVID-19 positive patient on a ventilator. A statement released from the hospital notes that while they are still treating a handful of cases at the medical facility in Baton Rouge the severity of cases is currently not at critical as the previous wave.

Alleged Capital Region serial killer Ryan Sharpe has his 2019 non-unanimous First Degree Murder charge voided. Sharpe’s conviction came before the US Supreme Court’s April decision that deemed all non-unanimous convictions unconstitutional. Sharpe’s Attorney Tommy Damico says because his client was convicted 11-1…

Cut 12 (12) “motion”

Caddo Parish Coroner Doctor Todd Thoma says a 44-year-old Tommie McGlothen Junior died of excited delirium while in the custody of the Shreveport Police Department on April sixth. Authorities say police officers used tasers, mace, and nightsticks to control McGlothen, who also fought with another citizen before law enforcement arrived. Thoma says McGlothen’s death could have possibly been prevented, but he was left in the back of a patrol vehicle for 48 minutes…

Cut 4 (10)_ “…medical care”

12:30 LRN Newscast June 9

It’s been two weeks since Memorial Day weekend and Governor John Bel Edwards says he is heartened to see the state did not experience a significant surge in COVID transmission because of the holiday. Edwards says they have a few theories as to why transmissions did not spike…

Cut 9 (11) “…to do.”

A third person has died from complications of a drowning incident on Grand Isle on Friday. 33-year-old Terrell Miller of Houma died in a hospital following his attempt to rescue his fiancé’s children, 9-year-old Dalvin Richardson and 8-year-old Davon Richardson. Grand Isle Police Chief Laine Landry says they are sending a clear message to beachgoers about being vigilant of rough seas and strong currents.

Cut 8 (11) “…public access points.”

The Caddo Parish coroner rules that a 44-year-old man died of natural causes while in the custody of the Shreveport Police Department, but his death could possibly have been prevented. Jeff Palermo has more…

Cut 1 (31) “…I’m Jeff Palermo”  

COVID-19 numbers released from the state today show an increase in cases by 562 and fatalities increased by 13. Hospitalizations are down by 14 to 568 and vent usage is down by 4 to 67.

11:30 AM Newscast

Caddo Parish Coroner Doctor Todd Thoma says a 44-year-old man died of natural causes while in the custody of the Shreveport Police Department on April sixth, but his death could have been preventable. Thoma says Tommie McGlothen Junior died from excited delirium.
Cut 3 (09)  “…stimulant use.”  
Authorities say police officers used tasers, mace, and nightsticks to control McGlothen.
A third person has died from complications of a drowning incident on Grand Isle on Friday. 33-year-old Terrell Miller of Houma died in a hospital following his attempt to rescue 9-year-old Dalvin Richardson and 8-year-old Davon Richardson. Grand Isle Police Chief Laine Landry says a day of celebration turned tragic in an instant.
Cut 6 (05) “…was Davon’s birthday.”
A 12-year-old female relative who was also rescued is expected to make a full recovery.

Governor Edwards says police reforms are needed, but he does not support the movement to redirect tax dollars away from law enforcement agencies and into social services like education…

Cut 2 (30) “…I’m Matt Doyle” 

New Orleans Police Department Superintendent Shaun Ferguson has apologized for his officers firing so-called rubber bullets at protesters on the Crescent City Connection last week. The chief says their special operations division was not authorized to use the anti-riot rounds and an investigation is underway.

10:30 AM Newscast

Governor Edwards says Louisiana should consider police reforms in next year’s legislative session. Cities and states across the country are taking up changes to policing policy in the wake of George Floyd protests. Edwards says he spoke with Baton Rouge Senator Cleo Fields about what could be done in Louisiana.
Cut 7 (11) “…scrutiny.”
Edwards says reforms to the way police interact with their community are needed, and overdue.

The UNO Transportation Institute wants residents to fill out a survey detailing what they would like to see from a hypothetical Baton Rouge to New Orleans passenger rail service. Research Associate Tara (tar-uh) Tolford says their survey asks commuters along the route in Gonzales, LaPlace, and Jefferson Parish how or if they would use the system.
Cut 13 (04) “…go” 
Rail service between the two locations is highly limited at the moment.

The pace of the special session will accelerate this week. Matt Doyle spoke with LaPolitics.com’s Jeremy Alford…

Cut 1 (30) “I’m Matt Doyle”

Black student leaders met with LSU officials concerning the university’s heavily criticized initial response to an incoming student using a racial slur on video. Initially, LSU’s response to the video made it appear there was no way of holding the potential student accountable, but during the meeting, interim President Thomas Galligan assured students a process is in place for students making blatantly racist remarks.

AM LRN Newscall

The pace of the special session will accelerate this week. Matt Doyle spoke with LaPolitics.com’s Jeremy Alford…

Cut 1 (30) “I’m Matt Doyle”

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Governor Edwards says police reforms are needed, but he does not support the movement to redirect tax dollars away from law enforcement agencies and into social services like education…

Cut 2 (30) “…I’m Matt Doyle” 

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An LSU study indicates 42 percent of residents know someone who has tested positive for COVID-19. Kevin Barnhart has the story.

Cut 3 (30)  “…I’m Kevin Barnhart.”  

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The second week of the special session will see lawmakers dig into the nuts and bolts of the budget and start the debate on economic relief bills for businesses. The special session started last Monday and LaPolitics.com publisher Jeremy Alford is surprised by the slow start despite the mountain of work ahead for legislators.

Cut 4 (10) “…filed.”

The House Appropriations Committee has already advanced the budget to the House floor for more debate, but the spending plan does not take into account potential tax breaks for businesses that will mean less revenue for the state. He says there’s also legislation that would change unemployment qualifications.

Cut 5 (07) “…as well”

Alford expects this to be the start of a bitter partisan brawl over the prospect of tax cuts even while the state faces revenue shortfalls. He pointed to comments from Baton Rouge Representative Ted James…

Cut 6 (05) “…proposals”

The special session is set to end June 30th.

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Governor Edwards says Louisiana should consider police reforms in next year’s legislative session.

Cities and states across the country are taking up changes to policing policy in the wake of George Floyd protests. Edwards says he spoke with Baton Rouge Senator Cleo Fields about what could be done in Louisiana…

Cut 7 (11) “…scrutiny.”

Edwards says reforms to the way police interact with their community are needed, and overdue. He pointed to what he says is a disturbing trend.

Cut 8 (10) “…unacceptable.”

Proposals to redirect tax dollars away from law enforcement and into education, mental health, and other social services are being considered in some areas. Edwards says he doesn’t agree with that “Defund the Police” movement.

Cut 9 (09) “…appropriate.”

The Minneapolis City Council recently passed a resolution, on a veto-proof majority, to disband the MPD following the death of George Floyd.

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A new LSU study polling 757 Louisiana residents indicates 42 percent of respondents know some who has tested positive for the COVID-19, with 23 percent knowing someone who has died from it. LSU Public Policy Lab director Michael Henderson says it’s a testament to just how widespread the impact of the virus in on society.

Cut 10 (06) “…people who have.”

Louisiana’s black population has seen a disparity in the way it is impacted by the virus, and Henderson says that it is echoed in the survey as those in the black community are more likely to know someone with the disease than the overall baseline.

Cut 11 (10 ) “…for white residents.”

Forty percent of black residents know someone who has died from complications of COVID-19, compared to 17 percent of white residents.

 

This is the second polling of the group, which was first polled in mid to late April and again from May 20 through June 1. 62 percent indicate they now wear face coverings when in public, compared to 48 percent in April.   But Henderson says people are slow to get back out of their homes as 71 percent say they are still staying at home, compared to 81 percent in April.

Cut 12 (07) “…across the state.”

A majority of residents are uncomfortable with activities outside of the home, with a feeling unease about air travel at 77 percent, attending large sports or entertainment events at 75 percent, and eating out at restaurants at 60 percent. However, most respondents feel comfortable about going to the grocery store at 67 percent, going to parks at 63 percent, and visiting friends at 58 percent.

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The UNO Transportation Institute wants residents to fill out a survey detailing what they would like to see from a hypothetical Baton Rouge to New Orleans passenger rail service.

Research Associate Tara (tar-uh) Tolford says their survey asks commuters along the route in Gonzales, LaPlace, and Jefferson Parish how or if they would use the system.

Cut 13 (04) “…go” 

Rail service between the two locations is highly limited at the moment.

A 2010 survey indicated 39,000 riders a month may use the proposed system in the short term were it to be built, but Tolford says those numbers could change should the proposed stop-offs be built.

Cut 14 (11) “…study”

That previous study indicated that up to 135,000 riders a month could use the system if the price and speed were adequate.

Tolford says they plan to use this data to further refine the BR to NOLA passenger rail concept. The data will be incorporated into a more comprehensive report in the future.

Cut 15 (10) “…forward”

The survey takes about 15 minutes and can be found on UNO TI’s Facebook page.

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LSU football begins offseason workouts today as the national champs can lift weights and perform conditioning drills on campus for the first time since spring practice was halted in March. LSU strength and conditioning coach Tommy Moffit says about 85-percent of the players stayed in great shape. He says over the next two weeks they’ll do three days a week of hard training and two days of functional training on specific muscle groups

Cut 16 (16)  groups differently” 

Moffitt says there will be different groups of players in the weight room until the middle of the afternoon. He says most of their student-athletes will also take summer online classes…

Cut 17  (25) “…player led practices” 

Moffitt says their sanitation and disinfectant equipment is the state of the art…

Cut 18  (30) “…this facility”   

 

cut 19 (25) “…enough talent”  

 

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cut 20 (22) “  ordinarillyl”  

Legislative Report/530 PM LRN News

Calls for policing policy changes are growing in the wake of nationwide George Floyd protests. In response, the Governor says he’s been in conversations with a few Senators, namely Baton Rouge’s Cleo Fields, about introducing potential reforms…

29

He says…

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Edwards called for legislation focusing on reforming the police and he says he opposes initiatives being taken up in other states to shift tax dollars away from law enforcement and towards education, mental health, job training, and other social services…

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The second week of the special session will see lawmakers dig into the nuts and bolts of the budget and start the debate on economic relief bills for businesses. The special session started last Monday and LaPolitics.com publisher Jeremy Alford is surprised by the slow start despite the mountain of work ahead for legislators.

Cut 4 (10) “…filed.”

The House Appropriations Committee has already advanced the budget to the House floor for more debate, but the spending plan does not take into account potential tax breaks for businesses that will mean less revenue for the state. He says there’s also legislation that would change unemployment qualifications.

Cut 5 (09) “…back”

Alford expects this to be the start of a bitter partisan brawl over the prospect of tax cuts as the state faces revenue shortfalls. The special session is set to end June 30th.

4:30 PM Newscast

The Louisiana Department of Health is reminding the public to catch up on the routine vaccinations that may have gone by the wayside due to the shelter in place order and closure of many medical offices.  State immunization director Dr. Frank Welch says skipping vaccines can have disastrous consequences in the future.

Cut 4 (09)_ “…something like that.”

State and federal data show a sharp drop in vaccine orders from January through April.

As protestors nationwide demand changes in policing policy, Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome says the city’s police union has been an obstruction to reform within the department. Broome says they need greater flexibility to identify and remove bad cops from the department, and the union makes that difficult to do.

Cut 7 (08) “…here”

The LSU football team will have to wait one more day before starting voluntary workouts. Senior associate athletic trainer Shelly Mullenix says they are not testing players daily for coronavirus, but they are screening for the disease. She says there are temperature checks when they enter the football operations building, plus coaches and players will answer a CDC questionnaire about their health

Cut 13 (10) “…orchestrated flow”  

The 2020 dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico is projected to be four times larger this year than what a task force established in 2001. LSU Marine Science Professor Nancy Rabalais estimates this year’s 77-hundred square mile dead zone is roughly the size of New Hampshire.Rabalais says despite recognizing the dead zone issue, the federal government has not been able to tackle the problem.

Cut 11 (08) “…overcome.”

330 PM LRN News

A number of cities are taking up policing policy changes in the wake of massive nationwide George Floyd protests. One of the proposed changes involves taking funding away from police departments and using the cash to fund social services like education. Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome says she doesn’t support that policy, and instead told Talk Louisiana she’s concerned about police unions and their efforts to protect bad apples in the force…

Cut 6 (12) “…cops”

The LSU football team will start voluntary summer workouts tomorrow. Senior associate athletic trainer Shelly Mullenix says when players arrived on campus last week they were given an antibody test…

Cut 12 (10) “and everything”

 

The dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico this year is expected to hit nearly 77-hundred square miles according to LSU Marine Science Professor Nancy Rabalais who says that’s nearly the size of New Hampshire…

Cut 9 (05) “…years.”

 

The dead zone stretches along the bottom of the continental shelf along Texas and Louisiana and forms due to fertilizer filtering downstream from the Midwest.

The Louisiana Department of Health is reminding the public to catch up on the routine vaccinations that went by the wayside due to coronavirus restrictions.  State immunization director Dr. Frank Welch says medical facilities are opened again, it’s time to get back on track.

Cut 3 (10)  “…get their vaccines.”  

 

2:30 PM Newscast

The Louisiana Department of Health is reminding the public to catch up on the routine vaccinations that may have gone by the wayside due to the shelter in place order and closure of many medical offices.  For those that may be uneasy about entering a doctor’s office, state immunization director Dr. Frank Welch says most facilities have changed up the experience with spread mitigation efforts.

Cut 5 (12)  “…and preventative healthcare.”

The 2020 dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico is projected to be four times larger this year than what a task force established in 2001. Fertilizer from Midwest agriculture washes down the Mississippi River, exiting at the mouth forming an area of low oxygen and high nitrogen. LSU Marine Science Professor Nancy Rabalais says the nitrogen loads have remained steady since 1980…

Cut 10 (09) “…Mexico.”

The LSU football team begins summer workouts tomorrow. Jeff Palermo has more on the national champs’ COVID-19 mitigation efforts…

Cut 2 (30) “…I’m Jeff Palermo”  

ULM is investigating racially insensitive social media posts that were allegedly made by two of their faculty members. According to the Monroe News Star assistant nursing professor, Mary Holmes referred to former President Barack Obama as a monkey and biology instructor Dennis Bell used a racial slur on his Facebook page. ULM says it condemns the stunningly bigoted and racist language in social media posts by select faculty members.

130 PM LRN News

The state is reporting nearly 34,000 of the 43,000 people who have tested positive for COVID-19 in Louisiana have recovered. Along with those figures the Department of Health also announced 6 new COVID deaths, bringing the total number of fatalities up to 2,831, along with 234 new positive cases.

After a sharp decline in vaccinations, state health officials urge residents to get back on track with preventative healthcare. 

Cut 1 (30) “…I’m Kevin Barnhart”  

Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome weighed in on the nationwide calls for policing policy changes this morning on Talk Louisiana, saying one major obstacle to reform efforts are the police unions. Broome says cops with traceable records of alarming behavior are often the ones victimizing their communities, and the unions can make it difficult to fire those bad apples…

Cut 8 (09) “…unequal.”

Broome has previously expressed frustration with the union’s resistance to implementing post-Alton Sterling police reforms.

The 2020 Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone is estimated to span 77-hundred miles this year, the seventh largest on record. LSU Marine Science Professor Nancy Rabalais says the problem has gotten worse in recent years due to heavy rains in the Midwest.

Cut 11 (08) “…overcome.”