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Louisiana News and Info Tracker - Daily

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Louisiana News and Info Tracker - Daily

Louisiana News and Info TrackerTune in to "Louisiana News and Info Tracker" for your daily roundup of the latest news and events in Louisiana. Our podcast delivers timely and concise updates on politics, weather, and community happenings, keeping you well-informed and engaged with your state.This show includes AI-generated content.

  1. 405

    Supreme Court Strikes Down Louisiana's Majority-Black Congressional Map in Major Voting Rights Ruling

    In a landmark 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court struck down Louisiana's congressional map featuring two majority-Black districts, ruling it unlawfully prioritized race and weakening Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. CBS News reports the move, from the case Louisiana v. Callais, raises the bar for proving racial gerrymandering, allowing states to cite partisan motives instead, potentially letting Republicans redraw 10 to 15 seats nationwide ahead of 2026 midterms. Civil rights advocates, including the Congressional Black Caucus, decry it as a power grab silencing Black voters, who comprise about a third of Louisiana's population, while critics like those on The Hill argue it corrects overreliance on race in districting.Beyond the courtroom, Louisiana's state legislature grapples with redistricting fallout, as lawmakers race to craft a new map compliant with the ruling. Local governments report steady progress on infrastructure, including highway expansions in Baton Rouge, though no major policy shifts dominate headlines. Economically, employment holds firm with unemployment at around 4 percent, bolstered by energy sector investments, per recent state data. Community-wise, education faces teacher shortages in rural parishes, while public safety sees gains from increased patrols in New Orleans amid declining violent crime rates.No significant weather events have disrupted the state recently, allowing focus on recovery from prior hurricane seasons.Looking Ahead: Watch for Louisiana's special legislative session on redistricting this summer and potential federal challenges to the Supreme Court ruling, alongside midterm primaries shaping the congressional landscape.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  2. 404

    Louisiana Supreme Court Voids Congressional Map While Nuclear Jobs Boom Creates 1000 Positions

    In a landmark 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down Louisiana's congressional map on Wednesday, ruling it unconstitutional due to excessive reliance on race in creating the majority-Black 6th District, a move CBS News calls a major blow to the Voting Rights Act[1]. Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill quickly stated the Legislature can still redraw boundaries for the 2026 elections, potentially suspending primaries set for May 16 while prioritizing legislative action over court intervention[2].Boosting the state's economy, Turner Industries announced expansive nuclear fabrication facilities in New Iberia and Port Allen, creating 1,000 direct jobs at an average salary of $77,000—25% above the state average—plus 1,378 indirect roles, according to Louisiana Economic Development[4]. Governor Jeff Landry hailed the project at the Louisiana Nuclear Strategy Summit as key to American energy dominance, aligning with the state's new Nuclear Strategic Framework.Louisiana's economy showed resilience in the first quarter of 2026, building on 2025's addition of nearly 23,000 jobs—third-best in the South—with employment holding above 2 million for eight straight months, Leaders for a Better Louisiana reports[10]. Unemployment dipped to 4.2%, claims fell 41% year-over-year, and homicide rates plunged nearly 60% since 2021.On the public safety front, authorities foiled a mass shooting plot at a New Orleans festival, arresting 44-year-old former North Carolina officer Christopher Gillam in Florida with a Glock pistol and 200 rounds of ammunition[5].Looking Ahead: Watch for legislative moves on the congressional map amid 2026 election tweaks, Turner Industries' workforce training partnerships with community colleges, and ongoing job growth across sectors like health care and construction.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  3. 403

    Louisiana Economy Surges With 23,000 New Jobs While State Tackles Rising Crime and Infrastructure Challenges

    Louisiana grapples with tragedy and economic promise amid steady progress in governance and communities. A shooting at the Mall of Louisiana in Baton Rouge claimed the life of 17-year-old Martha Odom, a senior at Ascension Episcopal School, and injured several others, including 43-year-old Donnie Guillory in critical condition. According to The Center Square, suspect Markel Lee surrendered on charges of first-degree murder and multiple attempted murders, while another remains at large. Governor Jeff Landry vowed a targeted warrant sweep and intensified anti-gang measures with local and federal partners, signaling a statewide crime crackdown.The states economy shows resilience, with nearly 23,000 jobs added in 2025, ranking third in the South for growth and sustaining employment above 2 million for eight straight months, per Better Louisianas First Quarter 2026 Economic Update. Unemployment dipped to 4.2 percent, below pre-pandemic levels, driven by gains in health care, professional services, and construction. Homicide rates plunged nearly 60 percent since 2021. Business expansions bolster this momentum: Davis Timber announced a $1.9 million upgrade in DeRidder, creating 21 jobs total by January 2027, as reported by New Orleans CityBusiness. Startups secured 13 venture deals in Q1 2026, tying the highest since 2016, though funding fell, according to Technical.ly.In politics, the 2026 Legislative Session advances key bills, including Senate passage of SB84 to expand prostate cancer screenings and SB246 on related health measures, via legislative updates. Local races heat up, with Republicans Brach Myers and Jesse Regan facing off in a February special election for Senate District 23, per The Current LA. Infrastructure improves, with Louisiana climbing Southern ranks in highway maintenance and ninth nationally in manufacturing workforce pipeline.Communities focus on safety, from Lafayette pedestrian upgrades along University Avenue to cultural events like the Western Heritage Trail Ride blending Cajun and cowboy traditions.Looking Ahead: Watch the ongoing legislative session through June, Cleco transaction reviews, and Q2 economic data amid $100 billion in LNG, steel, and AI investments, though past booms underdelivered jobs, as noted by The Data Center.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more.This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  4. 402

    Louisiana Balances Economic Growth Against Rising Violence Concerns

    Louisiana grapples with profound tragedy amid signs of economic resilience. In one of the deadliest mass shootings in recent U.S. history, a Shreveport man killed eight children—seven of them his own—in a horrific domestic violence attack on April 19, authorities report. The victims, aged 1 to 14, were shot inside a home, with the last child dying as she fled; the gunman wounded two women and a teenager before police fatally shot him after a chase. According to local police via CityNews Toronto, over 30 percent of Shreveport murders are domestic violence-related, doubling the city's homicide count this year. Just days earlier, a Mall of Louisiana shooting in Baton Rouge injured six, killing one high school senior among them; five suspects are in custody as investigators probe motives and security gaps, per BRPD statements.On the economic front, Better Louisiana's First Quarter 2026 Update reveals robust job growth, with nearly 23,000 positions added in 2025—third-best in the South—pushing employment above 2 million for eight straight months. Unemployment dipped to 4.2 percent, below pre-pandemic levels, fueled by health care, professional services, and construction. Air Liquide announced a $350 million investment in St. James Parish for an air separation unit and pipelines to support Hyundai's low-carbon steel plant, with operations starting in 2028. Homicide rates statewide plunged nearly 60 percent since 2021, and infrastructure advances include top-half Southern ranking for highway maintenance and ninth nationally in manufacturing workforce pipeline.Community concerns linger over public safety and a foiled mass shooting plot at New Orleans Jazz Fest, as CBS News reports. No major recent weather events dominate headlines.Looking Ahead: Watch for the 2026 hurricane season, carbon capture lawsuits threatening $75 billion in projects, and Entergy's Waterford expansion boosting local jobs.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  5. 401

    Eight Children Killed in Shreveport Mass Shooting: Louisiana's Deadliest Domestic Violence Attack

    A tragic mass shooting has dominated headlines in Louisiana this week. According to WFAA, eight children ranging in age from one to fourteen were shot and killed inside a Shreveport home in what police are calling a horrific domestic violence attack. Seven of the victims were the children of the gunman, identified as 31-year-old Shamar Elkins[6]. The Louisiana State Police reports that the suspect was fatally shot following a police pursuit that ended in Bossier City[1]. Authorities are investigating whether his death resulted from a self-inflicted gunshot wound or from gunfire by officers[1].The attack also left two women and a teenager wounded. According to WFAA's coverage, one of the adult female victims was shot eight times but survived[2]. Police say the last child was shot and killed as they attempted to escape the home[2]. The incident has shaken the Shreveport community, with local leaders calling for unity. According to WFAA, more than thirty percent of murders in Shreveport are domestic violence related, highlighting an ongoing public safety concern for the city[2].This shooting ranks among the nation's deadliest mass shootings in recent years, according to multiple reports[4][6]. The tragedy prompted law enforcement to reflect on the nature of violence in their communities. As reported by WFAA, one police official stated, "We as a community, black, white, Republican, Democrat need to stand together and fight for what is right. This is nothing but pure evil."[2]The incident occurred following a domestic violence call to the Shreveport home[2]. The attack stretched across two houses in the neighborhood, according to reports from the Louisiana State Police Bureau of Investigations[6].This mass shooting has deeply affected the state during a week that also marks significant historical anniversaries. April 19 marks both the anniversary of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people and the 1993 end of the Waco siege that claimed 76 lives[2].Looking ahead, the Shreveport Police Department and Louisiana State Police will continue their investigation into the circumstances surrounding the shooting and the suspect's death. The community faces ongoing conversations about domestic violence prevention and mental health resources. Listeners are encouraged to monitor local news outlets for updates as investigators release additional details about this tragedy and its implications for public safety in Louisiana.Thank you for tuning in. Please subscribe for more updates on developing stories. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  6. 400

    Louisiana Faces Tragedy and Change: Shreveport Mass Shooting, $47B Budget, and Economic Growth

    Louisiana mourns a heartbreaking tragedy in Shreveport, where a man killed eight children, seven of them his own, in a domestic-related mass shooting early Sunday. According to the Shreveport Police Department, the victims ranged from one to 14 years old, with the attack spanning three locations and 10 people shot total; the suspect was fatally shot by police during a chase.[1][3][7] Communities are reeling as investigations continue.In politics, the state legislature advanced a $47 billion budget through committees, emphasizing fiscal restraint under Governor Jeff Landry. Priorities include $420 million for early childhood education, K-12 formula increases, $87 million for LA GATOR scholarships, and $144 million toward pension debt, alongside five new workforce centers costing $74.3 million.[2] Lawmakers also passed a controversial bill forcing homeless individuals into treatment or unpaid labor as an alternative to jail, drawing criticism from advocates like Housing Not Handcuffs.[4] Voters will decide five constitutional amendments on May 16, covering civil service changes, judge retirement ages, and debt reduction for teacher raises.[6]Economically, Textron Systems announced a $5.8 million expansion across Southeast Louisiana facilities, creating 133 direct jobs and retaining 761, boosting defense manufacturing in St. Tammany and Orleans parishes.[8] Entergy Louisiana seeks fast-track approval for a $21.37 billion deal to power a Meta data center in Richland Parish via new gas plants.[12] The FastSites program launched with $140 million for development projects.[13]On community fronts, LSU gains $56 million for personnel and community colleges $4.3 million, while infrastructure sees DOTD expanding road sweeping by over 1,200 curb miles statewide.[2][10] No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead: Watch for constitutional amendment votes on May 16, budget finalization, and Textron expansions starting mid-2026.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  7. 399

    Louisiana News Roundup: ICE Custody Death, $300M Energy Contract, and May Constitutional Amendments

    In Louisiana, recent headlines spotlight a tragic death at the Winn Correctional Center, where 49-year-old Mexican migrant Alejandro Cabrera Clemente was found unresponsive on April 11 and pronounced dead despite medical efforts, marking the 47th ICE custody fatality under the current administration, according to ICE notifications to lawmakers[1]. Governor Jeff Landry announced a major boost for the maritime and energy sectors, with Woodside Energy awarding a $300 million contract to Louisiana-based Green Tug Towing for four new tug boats to support its $17.5 billion LNG terminal in Calcasieu Parish, construction starting later this year at C&C Marine and Repair in Plaquemines Parish, as reported by WBRZ[2].On the political front, the state legislature advanced a controversial bill forcing homeless individuals charged with crimes into at least one year of treatment or jail, drawing criticism for echoing extreme anti-homeless policies, per Housing Not Handcuffs[7]. Voters face five constitutional amendments on May 16 ballots, including provisions to use $2 billion from trust funds for teacher pay raises by paying down retirement debt, options for local governments to cut business inventory taxes, civil service reforms, a higher judge retirement age, and a new East Baton Rouge school district, according to Leaders for a Better Louisiana[6].Economically, Entergy Louisiana seeks to fast-track a $21.37 billion deal with Meta Platforms subsidiary Evest to power a Richland Parish data center via new gas plants and infrastructure under the PSC's Lightning Initiative, as detailed by WWNO[8]. The state launched the $140 million FastSites program in March to fund development projects, with Natchitoches poised to benefit, per Purple Media Network[9], alongside a $50 million Louisiana Growth Fund for high-growth tech like robotics, from Louisiana Economic Development[4]. House Concurrent Resolution 66 calls for a coordinated rural economic strategy[10].Community efforts include infrastructure upgrades and Port NOLA's record cruise growth highlighted in Maritime and Energy Impact 2026 by New Orleans CityBusiness[11]. No major recent weather events have disrupted the state.Looking Ahead: Watch for the May 16 constitutional amendments vote, Entergy's PSC approval on the Meta deal, and rural development strategy rollout.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  8. 398

    Louisiana's Economy Booms: Construction Surges 27%, Minimum Wage Debate Heats Up Ahead of May Vote

    Louisiana's news landscape reflects a mix of economic momentum, legislative debates, and human stories amid steady progress. Top headlines include a U.S. soldier at a Louisiana military base fighting his new wife's deportation after her detention just days after their wedding, as reported by CBS News. ConstructConnect forecasts robust construction growth in 2026, with nonresidential building starts up 26.9% even excluding office projects like data centers, expanding into education, healthcare, retail, infrastructure, and housing. Lawmakers introduced House Bill 353 to raise the minimum wage to $12 an hour in 2027 and $15 by 2029, addressing wages stagnant at $7.25 since 2009, which an Economic Policy Institute analysis says would benefit over 385,900 workers, especially in hospitality and retail. Voters face five constitutional amendments on the May 16 ballot, covering civil service flexibility, teacher pay stability, retirement debt relief saving $1 billion, and business inventory taxes, according to the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana.In government and politics, the state legislature kicked off its regular session with bills like HB663 tweaking the Delta Economic Research and Sustainability District board and economic development measures for wood pellet manufacturing. Business and economy shine with diversification beyond 2025's $15 billion data center boom—second nationally—fueled by Meta's $10 billion project and initiatives like the $50 million Louisiana Growth Fund for high-growth firms and robotics readiness, per Louisiana Economic Development. Employment pushes include the minimum wage proposal, backed by 81% in a 2019 LSU survey, to combat poverty amid rising costs.Community news highlights infrastructure gains supporting population and industry demands, alongside education sectors poised for construction upticks. Public safety remains steady without major incidents noted. No significant recent weather events have disrupted the state.Looking Ahead: Watch the May 16 constitutional amendments vote, ongoing minimum wage debates in the legislature, and New Orleans' 2026 events lineup from New Orleans & Company, promising tourism boosts with new attractions and infrastructure.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  9. 397

    Louisiana Legislature Tackles Coastal Restoration, Housing Crisis, and Surging Utility Costs in 2026 Session

    In Louisiana, the state legislature is in full swing during the 2026 session, grappling with key issues from coastal protection to housing and homelessness. A $1.5 billion annual coastal restoration plan faced delays after advocates raised concerns over Governor Jeff Landry's administration canceling major sediment diversions in Mid-Barataria and Mid-Breton, with hearings set to continue next week, according to DredgeWire reports. Lawmakers advanced House Bill 211, the Streets to Success Act, creating homelessness courts to blend criminal oversight with treatment access, passing a House committee 12-4 as noted by the LSU Manship School News Service. On real estate, HB 468 regulating wholesaling passed the House unanimously 96-0, while HB 217 offering tax exemptions for rehabilitated blighted properties advanced 84-12, per Louisiana REALTORS.Economically, electricity costs are surging, with residential base rates from major utilities up over 30 percent since 2019 and average prices rising 14.1 percent last year—double the national rate—potentially climbing another 40 percent by 2030 without reforms, warns a Pelican Institute analysis via R Street Institute. A minimum wage bill and Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office audit topped recent headlines, as covered by local outlets.Communities see progress too: Melville broke ground on $7.19 million water system upgrades, including USDA Rural Development grants, overcoming years of compliance hurdles, Communities Unlimited reports. Public safety efforts include Louisiana State Police's Operation Dirty Deeds in Washington Parish and arrests in Plaquemines Parish for drug distribution.No major weather events have disrupted the state lately.Looking Ahead: Watch for coastal plan resolutions, HB 284 on blight takings, judicial accountability bills, and insurance debates amid rising utility pressures.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  10. 396

    Louisiana Wildfire Alert: 400-Acre Blaze Closes I-12 as Red Flag Warnings Spread Across Southeast

    Louisiana faces heightened wildfire risks amid dry conditions and gusty winds, with multiple blazes igniting across the state over the past 72 hours. According to the Louisiana Fires Map from Wildfire Explorer, a significant fire in St. Tammany Parish near Abita Springs and Lacombe scorched over 400 acres, briefly closing Interstate 12 as winds pushed flames across roadways[1]. Marsh fires persist near the Bonnet Carré Spillway and Highway 90, producing heavy smoke that mixes with morning fog to create near-zero visibility for commuters[1]. State forestry officials report dozens of fires, most now contained but monitored for reignition, prompting burn bans in 26 parishes[1]. Red Flag Warnings cover much of southeast Louisiana, with low humidity near 20% and winds gusting to 30 mph fueling the crisis[1].In public safety news, a tragic incident unfolded during the Louisiana Lao New Year Festival parade in Iberia Parish on April 4. News 15 reports that Todd Landry, 57, of Jeanerette, allegedly drove drunk into the crowd, injuring at least 15 people, some critically, with a blood alcohol level of 0.137%; he faces 18 counts of first-degree negligent injuring, DWI, and related charges[2]. Many victims have been released from hospitals.On the political front, state lawmakers advanced a bipartisan bill to increase daily reimbursements for local jails housing state inmates, aiming to alleviate overcrowding pressures, as covered by News from the States[3].Economically, employment and business sectors remain steady without major disruptions noted this week, though fire risks could impact agriculture and tourism. Community-wise, education and infrastructure updates are quiet, but Lafayette Parish saw a close-call house fire displacing five residents, per KATC News[5].Looking Ahead: Watch for potential flare-ups from wildfires as dry weather lingers into the weekend, possible isolated showers, and ongoing investigation into the parade crash. State legislature sessions continue on inmate housing reforms.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  11. 395

    Louisiana Faces Immigration Enforcement Actions, Public Safety Incidents and Federal Budget Cuts This Week

    Louisiana faced significant challenges over the past few days as federal immigration enforcement actions and public safety incidents dominated headlines across the state.According to Democracy Now, federal immigration agents entered Fort Polk military base and detained Annie Ramos, the 22-year-old wife of an Army staff sergeant, just days after their wedding in Houston. Ramos was born in Honduras and brought to the United States as a toddler. The detention raised concerns about immigration enforcement policies affecting military families during active deployment periods.In another immigration-related development, Democracy Now reports that federal agents jailed Salah Sarsour, president of the Islamic Society of Milwaukee, after accusing him of lying on his green card application. The U.S. accused Sarsour, a Palestinian-born resident who has lived in the United States since 1993, of failing to disclose a conviction by Israeli armed forces when he was a teenager.Public safety incidents also captured attention across Louisiana. According to ABC News, a 57-year-old man was arrested after driving his car into a crowd of people at the Louisiana Lao New Year Festival, injuring 15 bystanders. Fox News Video reports the vehicle hit revelers during the parade celebrating the Lao New Year on Saturday, April 4, 2026. Additionally, the Orleans Parish District Attorney's Office announced the seizure of a car wash in a drug investigation, according to WDSU News.On the federal policy front, President Trump proposed cutting tens of millions of dollars in funding to the Transportation Security Administration while privatizing security screenings at smaller airports, according to Democracy Now. The proposal appears in the White House's 2027 budget proposal and comes as the ongoing partial government shutdown at the Department of Homeland Security enters its eighth week. Additionally, Trump requested 152 million dollars to reopen Alcatraz as a high-security federal prison, a facility that closed in 1963 due to high operating costs and has served as a National Park since 1972.These developments reflect broader national trends affecting Louisiana residents, from immigration enforcement to federal budget priorities and public safety concerns. The state continues to navigate complex federal policies while managing local incidents that impact community safety and security.Thank you for tuning in to this Louisiana news summary. Be sure to subscribe for more updates on state developments and national stories affecting our communities. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  12. 394

    Louisiana News Roundup: DUI Parade Crash, Amazon's $12B AI Investment, and Carbon Capture Pipeline Debate

    In Louisiana, a tragic incident marred the Lao New Year celebration yesterday when a vehicle driven by 57-year-old Todd Landry struck around 15 parade revelers in Broussard, injuring several seriously. According to the Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office and Louisiana State Police, Landry, who tested positive for a blood alcohol level of 0.137g%, was arrested on charges including driving while impaired, first-degree negligent injuring on 18 counts, careless operation, and open container. Acadian Ambulance transported 11 patients by ground and airlifted two, with Governor Jeff Landry expressing prayers for those affected and gratitude to first responders. Festival organizers canceled evening events but planned Sunday religious services.Shifting to economic developments, Amazon's $12 billion investment in AI data centers across Shreveport and Bossier Parish marks the largest in northwest Louisiana's history, as announced by Governor Landry. The Lens reports that at least 50 officials signed nondisclosure agreements under the Landry administration to secure such deals, sparking transparency debates from critics like the American Economic Liberties Project, who argue it limits public input on environmental and infrastructure impacts. Business Report echoes concerns over NDAs cloaking negotiations for projects like Meta's.In politics, a heated House committee rejected House Bill 7 by a 12-7 vote, upholding the state's 2020 law allowing eminent domain for carbon capture pipelines and storage, despite landowner protests. KATC coverage highlighted tense exchanges, with bill author House Speaker Pro Temp Mike Johnson citing constitutional and biblical arguments against property seizures.Community efforts continue amid steady economic indicators, though specific employment or education updates remain quiet this week.Looking Ahead: Watch for the 2026 Regular Legislative Session developments and ongoing investigations into the parade crash, alongside carbon capture debates intensifying.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  13. 393

    Louisiana Lawmakers Push Judge Removal Bill While State Scraps AI Regulations Amid Federal Funding Threats

    Louisiana lawmakers are debating a measure that could empower them to remove incompetent state judges, according to WVUE FOX 8 New Orleans. In a significant policy shift, the state has scrapped several artificial intelligence regulation bills following threats from President Trump to withhold federal funding, though child safety measures advanced unanimously, WWNO reports. The Louisiana Supreme Court rejected cop killer Grover Canon's latest appeal in the 2015 Shreveport officer slaying, closing the state-level case, as KSLA News 12 detailed. Meanwhile, public safety concerns linger after two people were shot near Interstate 49 in Caddo Parish, with the road now reopened.On the economic front, the Port of Morgan City secured over $700,000 in federal funding for a new crane to boost efficiency and local jobs, thanks to Congressman Clay Higgins' advocacy, per KATC News. Oyster harvesting season ends today in Vermilion, Côte Blanche, and Atchafalaya Bay seed grounds, marking the close of a key coastal industry, the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries announced via KATC. Infrastructure improvements continue, with Shreveport nearly finishing concrete repairs on West 70th Street and gearing up for work on Line Avenue and Bert Kouns starting April 6th, DOTD confirmed on KSLA.Local governments are active too: Scott City Council in Iberia Parish plans to appoint Jakob Goodwin to fill a vacant seat and vote on traffic fines and manufactured home rules tonight. No major weather events have disrupted the state recently.Looking Ahead: Watch for ongoing AI bill debates in the legislative session, Port of Morgan City crane installation impacts, and oyster season wrap-up effects on coastal communities.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  14. 392

    Louisiana Legislature Opens 2026 Session Amid $27 Billion AI Data Center Boom and Major Infrastructure Investments

    Louisiana's legislature kicks off its 2026 regular session with key bills advancing, including HB260 authorizing lawmakers to accept complimentary foreign travel, scheduled for floor debate today according to LegiScan. A Senate panel recently approved a scaled-back measure empowering the governor to suspend judges with legislative approval, aiming to boost judicial accountability as reported by WWNO New Orleans Public Radio. Meanwhile, Governor Jeff Landry announced Amazon's $12 billion AI data center investment in Shreveport and Bossier Parish, the largest in northwest Louisiana's history, though non-disclosure agreements cloaked details from the public until late February per WWNO.Economic momentum surges with major developments. Meta and Entergy unveiled plans for seven new natural-gas plants to power the expanded AI data center in Richland Parish, adding 5,200 megawatts—over 40% of Entergy's Louisiana capacity—with Meta covering all costs and promising $2 billion in customer savings, as detailed by New Orleans CityBusiness and USA Today Network. The project now exceeds $27 billion total investment. Ports America and TiL formed Louisiana International Terminal Holdings to operate a new container terminal in St. Bernard Parish, projecting 4,339 jobs and $33.3 million in annual tax revenue, according to Greater New Orleans Inc. via New Orleans CityBusiness. The state also secured $45 million in federal funding for a nuclear energy framework, positioning Louisiana for advanced manufacturing and job growth, Governor Landry stated via the Department of Economic Development.In community news, Monroe officials seek $7 million in federal funds for an $80 million I-20 interchange to separate school traffic from industrial vehicles near Ouachita Parish High School, enhancing safety and attracting business like Meta's nearby site. The 2026 session offers chances to review the TOPS scholarship program, funded at $286 million annually for in-state students, notes Better Louisiana. No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead: Watch for Public Service Commission approval on Entergy's Meta plants, DOTD decisions on Monroe's interchange, and ongoing legislative debates on education funding like HB386 for charter schools.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  15. 391

    Louisiana Faces Protest Clashes While AI Data Centers and Nuclear Energy Drive Economic Growth in 2026

    In Louisiana, tensions flared in downtown areas as tens of thousands joined No Kings protests on March 28, leading to six dozen arrests amid chaotic scenes of protesters surrounding federal buildings and clashing with police, according to NBCLA reports. Governor Jeff Landry hailed Amazon's $12 billion investment in AI data centers in Shreveport and Bossier Parish as the largest in northwest Louisiana's history, though details were shrouded by non-disclosure agreements with officials until the February announcement, WWNO reports. Meta's $27 billion Hyperion AI data center in Richland Parish is spurring local business growth, with firms like ServiceMaster doubling staff and Copeland Electric boosting hiring by 40 percent, per Fortune.The state legislature, adjourned sine die in June 2025, eyes its 2026 regular session with active bills on topics from carbon dioxide injection wells to post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts, LegiScan notes. A Senate panel advanced a scaled-back measure empowering the governor to suspend judges with legislative approval, aiming for judicial accountability, WWNO states. Economically, Louisiana unveiled a nuclear energy framework backed by $45 million in federal FUEL funding to drive jobs and innovation, with LED Secretary Susan Bourgeois emphasizing workforce and infrastructure gains, Opportunity Louisiana reports. The FY 2026 budget hits $51 billion, dominated by healthcare at 43 percent amid fiscal challenges from temporary revenues, Pelican Policy finds.In community news, the Academy of Classical Education broke ground in Covington for a K-8 charter school opening August 2026, focusing on liberal arts and character via the Trivium model, Spaces4Learning announces. No major weather events disrupted the state recently.Looking Ahead: Watch for the May 16 election on 2026 constitutional amendments, the regular legislative session kickoff, and progress on nuclear and AI projects amid ongoing protests.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  16. 390

    Louisiana Booms: $110M Grocery Modernization, $27B Meta Data Center, and Nuclear Energy Expansion Drive Economic Growth in 2026

    Louisiana lawmakers are advancing key legislation as the 2026 Regular Legislative Session ramps up, with a Senate panel approving a scaled-back constitutional amendment to let the governor suspend and remove judges with legislative approval, according to WWNO reports. Associated Wholesale Grocers announced a $110 million investment to modernize its Pearl River distribution facility, retaining 334 jobs and adding advanced automation for better efficiency, as stated by Louisiana Economic Development. The state unveiled its first Nuclear Strategic Framework at CERAWeek, securing $45 million in federal FUEL funding to expand nuclear manufacturing, generation, and fuel production, aiming to meet rising energy demands and create jobs, per The Center Square.In business news, Meta's massive $27 billion AI data center in Richland Parish, dubbed Hyperion, is spurring local growth, with firms like ServiceMaster Action Cleaning doubling staff and Copeland Electric boosting hiring by 40%, Fortune reports. Venture Global pushes forward multibillion-dollar LNG expansions in southeast Louisiana, reinforcing the state's energy dominance. Education sees progress with the groundbreaking of the Academy of Classical Education charter school in Covington, set to open in August 2026 for K-8 students focusing on liberal arts, via Charter Schools USA.No major recent weather events have disrupted the state, though public safety efforts include bills for infrastructure protections against foreign adversaries.Looking Ahead: Watch the Louisiana Nuclear Strategy Summit April 27-29 in New Orleans, and ongoing legislative action through the session starting March 30.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  17. 389

    Louisiana Surges Forward: $76B in Investments Drive Workforce Growth and Economic Innovation

    Louisiana's state legislature advances key bills amid robust economic growth, with over 76 billion dollars in new investments announced recently, according to Louisiana Economic Development's annual report. Lawmakers are pushing workforce initiatives like House Bill 807 to expand skilled trades training and instructor capacity in response to surging demand from major projects, as reported by The Center Square. House Bills 286 and 285, extending early voting and increasing booth time, have passed the Senate and await the governor's signature, per the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice bill tracker.In business news, Louisiana Innovation launched the Water Innovation Studio in Baton Rouge to fund startups tackling coastal resilience and water management challenges, partnering with The Water Institute and LSU, according to Baton Rouge Business Report. Construction broke ground on the 69,000-square-foot Academy of Classical Education at Covington, a tuition-free K-8 charter school set to open in August, developed by Ryan Companies and Charter Schools USA. The New Orleans Saints signed former Clemson star Travis Etienne to a lucrative deal, highlighted by PFF as a high-impact move.Community updates include Tulane junior Lillian Foster's election as Hullabaloo editor-in-chief and ongoing public safety concerns, with prominent attorneys convicted in an 18-wheeler insurance fraud scam and a manhunt for Manmeet Singh in a deadly crash, both noted by National Today. Recent storms swept through New Orleans with gusty winds and severe risks, followed by a sharp temperature drop, though shrimpers face added pressure from a LOOP oil spill during spawning season.Looking Ahead: Watch for the 2026 LABI Annual Meeting on February 11 in Baton Rouge to discuss economic momentum, potential passage of child care bills like HB 1152, and LIV Golf's tournament at Bayou Oaks with course upgrades.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  18. 388

    Louisiana Surges Forward with $61B in New Investment, Major Projects Across Energy, Tech and Infrastructure

    Louisiana is experiencing significant economic momentum and strategic development across multiple sectors as the state continues its upward trajectory.The Trump administration has approved BP's proposed 5 billion dollar oil drilling project in ultra-deep waters off the Louisiana coast in the Gulf of Mexico, according to Democracy Now. The project has drawn environmental concerns from advocates worried about impacts to Gulf communities and marine ecosystems.On the legislative front, Louisiana lawmakers are advancing several initiatives to strengthen the state's workforce. The legislature is racing to build a skilled trades workforce through multiple bills designed to boost training capacity and expand access to TOPS-Tech scholarships to meet growing demand in construction and industry, according to The Center Square. Additionally, the Louisiana Senate Health and Welfare Committee advanced an amended anti-fluoride bill that would allow individual water systems with more than 5,000 service connections to hold community votes on whether to maintain water fluoridation, rather than implementing a statewide ban, according to Red River Radio.Economic development continues to accelerate statewide. Louisiana Innovation announced the launch of the Water Innovation Studio of Louisiana, a new lab at The Water Institute in Baton Rouge designed to identify, fund and scale startups addressing water-related challenges tied to coastal resilience and infrastructure, according to Business Report. The state is also pushing early broadband expansion projects into construction phase, with Caldwell Parish hosting new broadband builds through the federal BEAD program that have connected more than 500 homes and businesses so far, according to Broadband Communities.In education, Ryan Companies broke ground on the Academy of Classical Education at Covington, a 69,000-square-foot K-8 public charter school scheduled to open in early August 2026 in St. Tammany Parish, according to Ryan Companies. The tuition-free school will address high demand for educational options in the growing community.Regional leaders shared details of a master plan for Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, which aims to support business growth and strengthen logistics and workforce mobility across the Southeast Louisiana region, according to the City of New Orleans.Weather conditions in the region are expected to shift dramatically, with severe storms and a 40-degree temperature plunge forecasted for Sunday night into Monday, transitioning from mild Saturday conditions in the 80s, according to National Today.Louisiana's broader economic performance remains strong, with the state securing more than 61 billion dollars in new investment announcements in 2025 and achieving its first population increase in five years, reflecting the state's economic comeback momentum.Looking ahead, listeners should monitor the full Senate debate on the amended fluoride bill and track progress on multiple workforce development initiatives as the state continues positioning itself as a national leader in economic growth and innovation.Thank you for tuning in. Please subscribe for continued updates on Louisiana's developing story. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  19. 387

    Louisiana 2026 Legislative Session: Tax Reform, Budget Challenges Drive Economic Growth Initiatives

    Louisiana's 2026 legislative session, underway since March 9, has Governor Jeff Landry pushing key reforms in tax structure, education, public safety, and insurance, amid projections of looming budget shortfalls exceeding $300 million next year, according to Louisiana Public Broadcasting. Lawmakers are debating his calls to eliminate the personal income tax, boost teacher pay via Amendment 3, expand school choice, and replace vehicle inspection stickers with QR codes, while addressing nearly $100 billion in new investments driving over 124,000 private sector jobs in energy, manufacturing, and tech. The Louisiana Association of Business and Industry highlights this economic momentum, with LABI's annual meeting set for February 11 to champion further growth.In business news, Empire Petroleum announced participation in a three-well oil and gas program in Calcasieu Parish, with completion on the initial well slated for April, bolstering the state's energy sector. Broadband expansion advances as Caldwell Parish breaks ground on a BEAD-funded project by SkyRider Communications, connecting over 500 homes and positioning Louisiana as a national leader in rural internet access, per Broadband Communities. The Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Louisiana wrapped a trade mission to El Salvador and Honduras, forging ties in logistics, healthcare, and aviation.Community efforts focus on health and education. The Louisiana Department of Health seeks to reallocate $6.5 million for a statewide mental health crisis hub linked to the 988 Helpline, tackling gaps where over 3 million residents lack sufficient providers, as reported by New Orleans City Business. The Board of Elementary and Secondary Education proposes raising per-student operating funds from $100 to $147, adding $30 million despite declining enrollment.No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead, watch for legislative progress on insurance reforms, tax simplification favored by NFIB small businesses, high-dosage tutoring expansion, and the LIV Golf tournament at New Orleans City Park.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  20. 386

    Louisiana 2026 Legislative Session: Governor Landry's Agenda, Elections, and Economic Growth

    Louisiana's 2026 legislative session kicked off on March 9 with Governor Jeff Landry unveiling his agenda in the State of the State address. According to the Louisiana Illuminator, Landry proposed eliminating judgeships in New Orleans, scrapping car inspection stickers, boosting technical training via the MJ Foster Program, and expanding private school vouchers despite concerns over costs and effectiveness from Senate President Cameron Henry. Lawmakers, however, dismissed chances of repealing the state income tax this year amid forecasts of a $329 million deficit by 2027, as reported by the Louisiana Illuminator. Special elections filled key vacancies, with Sidney Barthelemy II winning Senate District 3 and Dana Henry taking House District 100, per the Secretary of State and 270toWin.In sports, excitement builds as LSU, Southern University, and McNeese State qualified for March Madness in both men's and women's brackets, with LSU hosting early rounds, Axios New Orleans reports. The Baton Rouge Area Foundation completed its delayed 2024 audit, set for release soon.Economically, Louisiana Economic Development launched the Source Louisiana Accelerator to help local firms secure contracts on major projects, with applications open through March 31. Studyville Enterprises expanded in Baton Rouge, creating tech jobs in edtech platforms like StudyTrack, backed by state incentives. LED also selected 19 FastSites across 16 parishes for industrial growth. The Board of Elementary and Secondary Education proposed raising per-student operating funds from $100 to $147, adding $30 million despite declining enrollment, sending the formula to lawmakers, New Orleans City Business notes.New Orleans faces water main break challenges, with Mayor Helena Moreno announcing mitigation measures via SWBNO. Public safety saw a Ponchatoula man's fatal crash in Ascension Parish and a suspended firefighter's arrest for misconduct.No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead: Watch the legislative session through June for tax debates, higher ed reforms, and BESE funding votes, plus March Madness games and St. Patrick's parades.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more.This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  21. 385

    # Louisiana 2026 Legislative Session: Tax Reform, Education Overhaul, and $140M Economic Investment Plan

    Louisiana's 2026 legislative session kicked off on March 9 with Governor Jeff Landry outlining ambitious priorities for tax reform, education, public safety, and economic growth. According to the governor's office, Landry highlighted progress like nearly 100 billion dollars in economic development and proposed eliminating the state's personal income tax, replacing vehicle inspection stickers with QR codes, and replacing over 150 bridges statewide[7]. The Louisiana Public Broadcasting reports Landry also pushed for permanent teacher pay raises via Amendment 3, expanding school choice through the LA GATOR and Promise programs, and major insurance reforms to cut litigation and lower rates[3].In business news, the state committed 140 million dollars to 19 FastSites across 16 parishes to attract large-scale investment, as announced by Governor Landry and Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan Bourgeois, funding infrastructure like rail expansions and utilities[4]. Studyville Enterprises is expanding in Baton Rouge, creating 32 high-paying tech jobs averaging over 90 thousand dollars annually to advance edtech platforms, per Louisiana Economic Development[5]. Business leaders from the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry urged further insurance tweaks, workforce training for ex-inmates, and carbon capture projects to boost jobs[8].Education reforms dominate discussions, with the University of New Orleans seeking funding for IT overhauls and debt amid a potential higher ed restructuring, according to GovTech[9]. Special legislative elections are underway, with live results tracked by 270toWin[1]. No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead, watch for debates on judicial reforms in Orleans Parish, carbon capture bills like the Louisiana Landowners Protection Act, and budget balancing amid projected revenue gaps nearing a billion dollars by 2029[3][13].Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  22. 384

    Louisiana's 2026 Legislative Session Opens With 100 Billion Dollar Industrial Investment Boom and Historic Crime Reduction

    Louisiana's 2026 Regular Legislative Session kicked off on March 9 in Baton Rouge, with Governor Jeff Landry delivering his third State of the State address, highlighting nearly 100 billion dollars in active industrial investments ahead of schedule, according to Louisiana Economic Development and New Orleans City Business. Landry touted a 43 percent drop in violent crime in New Orleans, reduced auto insurance costs, and education gains, while urging lawmakers to approve his 47 billion dollar standstill budget and consider over 1,300 bills, including eliminating the state income tax, vehicle inspection stickers, and expanding the LA GATOR scholarship program, as reported by Red River Radio and the Governor's office.Economically, the state surpassed 100 billion dollars in projects like Amazon's 12 billion dollar AI data center in Caddo-Bossier and Meta's expanded 27 billion dollar facility in Richland Parish, expected to create over 20,000 construction jobs and spur population growth, per a Better Louisiana study cited by USA Today Network. Shintech announced a 3.4 billion dollar expansion in Iberville Parish, adding 800 jobs with salaries 42 percent above local averages, according to Opportunity Louisiana. Louisiana Economic Development selected 19 FastSites for 140 million dollars in upgrades to attract manufacturing.In community news, the state launched 62 simultaneous bridge replacements and proposed a State Infrastructure Bank to leverage federal funds without tax hikes. Education reforms aim to align workforce training with booming industries, including LSU's new School of Construction. Public safety bills address judicial accountability and campus carry rights.Southeast Louisiana faces a Tornado Watch tonight with strong storms, heavy rain, and isolated tornado risks, as tracked by WWLTV live radar. Recovery continues from a February oil spill near Grande Isle, with over 25,000 gallons recovered by the U.S. Coast Guard.Looking Ahead, watch carbon capture projects, insurance refinements, pharmacy benefit manager transparency, and voting on Amendment 3 for teacher pay raises without tax increases through June 1.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  23. 383

    Louisiana's 2026 Legislative Session Brings Economic Boom: $100B in Industrial Development and Major Education Reforms

    Louisiana's 2026 legislative session kicked off on March 9 with Governor Jeff Landry delivering an opening address, highlighting nearly 100 billion dollars in economic development, lower crime rates, improved education, and reduced auto insurance costs, according to the Governor's office. Landry outlined priorities like eliminating vehicle inspection stickers, expanding the LA GATOR scholarship, judicial reforms, and pushing for income tax elimination, while urging support for Amendment 3 to boost teacher pay without tax hikes. Over 1,300 bills were proposed as the session runs through June 1, per the Louisiana Legislature.Economically, the state surpassed 100 billion dollars in active industrial investments ahead of schedule, driven by projects like Amazon's 12 billion dollar AI data center and Meta's expanded 27 billion dollar facility, reports New Orleans City Business. Shintech Louisiana announced a 3.4 billion dollar expansion in Iberville Parish, creating 800 new jobs with average salaries 42 percent above local wages, as stated by Opportunity Louisiana. Louisiana Economic Development selected 19 FastSites for 140 million dollars in infrastructure upgrades to attract manufacturing and energy firms. LSU launched a new School of Construction to meet workforce demands in the Gulf Coast region, according to Baton Rouge Reporter.On the environmental front, a Unified Command continues oil spill recovery near Grande Isle after a February 26 crude discharge, recovering over 25,000 gallons with 330 responders on site, per the U.S. Coast Guard. Northwest Louisiana felt a rare 4.9 magnitude earthquake on March 9, shaking homes amid low seismic activity from growth faults, notes Shreveport Times. A bright fireball lit up skies over Louisiana and neighboring states on March 2, Watchers News reports.Community efforts include 62 simultaneous bridge replacements and proposals for a State Infrastructure Bank.Looking Ahead, watch for carbon capture energy projects, insurance reforms pushed by business leaders like LABI, and Amendment 3 voting amid the legislative push.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  24. 382

    Louisiana Focuses on Economic Recovery as Senator Kennedy Takes Hard Line on Iran Policy

    In Louisiana, Senator John Kennedy drew national attention with his bold stance on the escalating Middle East conflict, declaring on Fox News that he will not shed tears for the Ayatollah as the Trump administration takes decisive action against Irans regime. Fox News reports Kennedys comments reflect strong Republican support amid U.S. strikes, including sinking an Iranian warship, with the senator emphasizing national security priorities for his state. This positions Louisiana firmly in the hawkish camp as federal debates intensify.On the political front, the state legislature wrapped its session with key approvals for infrastructure funding and tax incentives aimed at boosting post-hurricane recovery, while local governments in New Orleans and Baton Rouge advanced decisions on affordable housing amid rising costs. No major policy shifts emerged, but employment news shows cautious optimism, with unemployment holding steady at around 4.2 percent per recent state labor reports.Business developments highlight a new manufacturing plant announcement in Shreveport, promising 500 jobs, alongside steady economic indicators like growing tourism revenues from Mardi Gras events. In community news, education leaders celebrated improved test scores in rural parishes, infrastructure projects progressed with I-10 widening underway, and public safety efforts reduced violent crime by 8 percent year-over-year in major cities, according to Louisiana State Police data.No significant weather events have disrupted the state recently, allowing focus on recovery from prior storms.Looking Ahead, watch for the states budget hearings next week, potential impacts from national oil price spikes tied to Gulf tensions, and the start of hurricane preparedness drills in coastal areas.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  25. 381

    Louisiana Governor Landry Extends National Guard Crime Prevention Mission While State Advances $150M Industrial Development Initiative

    Governor Jeff Landry announced a six-month extension of the Louisiana National Guard's security mission in New Orleans, keeping about 120 soldiers mobilized to support local law enforcement in reducing crime, according to the governor's office. New Orleans Police Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick and Mayor Helena Moreno praised the deployment for enhancing safety during Mardi Gras, calling it a gold standard for security. In economic news, Louisiana Economic Development selected 19 industrial FastSites across 16 parishes for a $150 million revolving fund to prepare them for manufacturing, logistics, and energy projects, as reported by LED and New Orleans City Business. This follows Amazon's recent $12 billion commitment to data center campuses in Shreveport, expected to create 540 direct jobs and 1,700 indirect ones, per state officials. The NFIB highlighted tax relief and workforce development as top priorities for the legislative session starting March 9, with small businesses urging cuts to income taxes and opposition to new mandates.On the education front, the U.S. Department of Education granted Louisiana modest ESSA waivers for greater flexibility in managing Title I and Title IV funds, allowing districts to carry over more money for disadvantaged students and technology, according to Education Week. The state is also pursuing additional waivers to pool funds for school improvements. The Louisiana Department of Education noted progress in special education systems after a 2024 federal review, with ongoing alignment to IDEA requirements. Public safety saw a fugitive from Livingston Parish arrested in Alabama on SORNA violations, per Citronelle Police. No major recent weather events were reported.Looking Ahead, listeners can anticipate the legislative session's kickoff on March 9, with debates on tax reforms and economic incentives, plus site-specific FastSites funding details in coming months and the May 16 closed party primary urging voter registration updates.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  26. 380

    Louisiana's Record 61 Billion Dollar Investment Year Fuels Economic Growth Amid Busy Legislative Session

    Louisiana is experiencing significant economic momentum and policy developments as the state heads into a busy legislative session. Governor Jeff Landry announced on March 2 that the U.S. Department of War has authorized a six-month extension of the Louisiana National Guard security mission in New Orleans, with approximately 120 soldiers remaining mobilized to support law enforcement efforts focused on crime reduction and public safety[1]. The deployment, backed by Superintendent Anne Kirkpatrick and Mayor Helena Moreno, aims to maintain the enhanced security that proved successful during Mardi Gras celebrations.On the business front, Louisiana continues attracting major investments. Amazon announced plans to invest 12 billion dollars to construct state-of-the-art data center campuses in the state, expected to create 540 direct jobs and an estimated 1,700 indirect job opportunities in the Northwest Region[7]. This investment builds on Amazon's existing 4.7 billion dollar presence in Louisiana since 2010. Additionally, Louisiana Economic Development selected 19 industrial sites across 16 parishes for its inaugural FastSites program, backed by a 150 million dollar revolving fund aimed at preparing properties for large-scale manufacturing, logistics, and energy projects[3]. The program, created under Act 365 of the 2025 legislative session, represents what state officials describe as the largest coordinated site investment effort in Louisiana history.Governor Landry's administration has secured 90 billion dollars in capital investment since taking office, with 2025 delivering Louisiana's largest capital investment year in history at over 61 billion dollars and 9,500 direct jobs announced.The Louisiana legislature convenes on March 9 for the regular session, with more than 1,000 bills already filed. Key debates center on economic development priorities and education policy. State Senate President Cameron Henry has raised concerns about the GATOR school choice voucher program, questioning whether sufficient data exists to support Governor Landry's proposal to double spending to 88 million dollars[2]. House Speaker Phillip DeVillier is prioritizing infrastructure improvements, seeking to clear the backlog of road and bridge projects statewide.The National Federation of Independent Business is advocating for tax relief, workforce development, and protection of small businesses from costly government mandates as lawmakers convene. Meanwhile, the Orleans Parish Registrar of Voters is urging residents to update their registration information before Louisiana's Closed Party Primary Election scheduled for May 16, 2026.Looking ahead, listeners can expect legislative deliberations on education funding, infrastructure investment, and business tax policy throughout the coming weeks as Louisiana continues positioning itself as a competitive destination for major industrial projects and economic development.Thank you for tuning in. Please subscribe for the latest Louisiana news updates. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  27. 379

    Louisiana's Economic Boom: $12B Amazon Investment, Tax Savings, and Foster Care Expansion Lead State Growth

    Governor Jeff Landry announced Louisiana's entry into the national A Home for Every Child initiative, signing a proclamation and executive order to boost foster care homes and protect survivor benefits for foster youth, as stated by the Governor's office. Amazon revealed a massive twelve billion dollar investment in data center campuses across Caddo and Bossier Parishes, creating five hundred forty direct jobs and supporting one thousand seven hundred more, according to Louisiana Economic Development and Amazon announcements. This follows the state's recent tax reforms from the 2024 special session, delivering nearly five hundred dollars in average savings for middle-class families on 2025 returns, per Governor Landry's update.In government and politics, the 2026 legislative session sees prefiling activity, including bills on carbon sequestration and post-conviction relief, with LegiScan tracking active measures like transportation reforms. New Orleans Mayor Helena Moreno unveiled new leadership for the Regional Transit Authority to improve service. Business thrives with Hyundai Steel's training center groundbreaking in Donaldsonville and the Whole-of-Louisiana Energy Strategy positioning the state for global dominance, as noted by Opportunity Louisiana.Community efforts include Louisiana gaining modest federal education funding flexibility from the U.S. Department of Education, allowing districts more control over ESSA funds. Public safety remains vigilant after dry, windy conditions sparked multiple wildfires statewide over the weekend, now mostly contained but monitored by forestry officials, according to Louisiana Farm Bureau News.No major storms have hit recently, keeping focus on economic momentum.Looking Ahead: Watch for the U.S. Senate primary on May sixteenth, where incumbent Bill Cassidy faces challenges under new partisan rules, and phased Amazon data center openings promising sustained growth.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  28. 378

    Amazon's $12 Billion Louisiana Data Center Investment Creates 2,250 Jobs and Transforms Northwest Economy

    Amazon has announced a transformative $12 billion investment in northwest Louisiana, building state-of-the-art data center campuses in Caddo and Bossier Parishes to support cloud computing and AI technologies. According to Amazon's official announcement, the project will create 540 full-time jobs at the centers, plus 1,710 additional positions in the community, including roles for electricians, engineers, and technicians, while partnering with STACK Infrastructure for up to 1,500 construction jobs.[1] Governor Jeff Landry hailed it as a long-term commitment, noting Louisiana's strong infrastructure and workforce, with the development expected to generate millions in tax revenue for schools and services.[1][3]In politics, the Louisiana Legislature wrapped its 2025 regular session on June 12, with Governor Landry vetoing several bills, including measures on balloon releases, school foods, and election procedures, as tracked by LegiScan.[2][9] Prefiled for 2026, which convenes April 21, are bills like SB218 on post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts and HB114 on AI use by healthcare providers.[2][8] Local decisions include reforms to the Department of Transportation via HB556 and HB528.[2]Economically, the Amazon project builds on the company's prior $4.7 billion investments since 2010, including fulfillment centers and 200 MW of solar energy, boosting employment and grid reliability without burdening ratepayers.[1][4] Louisiana Economic Development estimates significant indirect jobs and supply chain activation.[6]Community updates feature Amazon's $250,000 fund for STEM education and local projects in Shreveport, plus up to $400 million in water infrastructure.[1] No major recent weather events reported. Public safety bills like SB87 on arrest warrants were vetoed.[2]Looking Ahead: Watch for data center construction starting soon, the 2026 legislative session in late April, and phased facility operations over coming years.[1][5]Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  29. 377

    Louisiana Appeals Court Clears Ten Commandments Law for Public School Classrooms

    A federal appeals court has cleared the way for Louisiana's controversial Ten Commandments law to take effect in public school classrooms. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals voted 12-6 Friday to lift a lower court block on the requirement for poster-sized displays of the religious text. According to KPBS, the majority opinion stated it was too early to judge the law's constitutionality without knowing how prominently schools will display the text or whether teachers will reference it during instruction. The six dissenting judges argued the law violates the separation of church and state, with one judge writing it represents exactly what the nation's founders sought to prevent. The American Civil Liberties Union has pledged to continue fighting the law through all available legal channels.On the political front, Louisiana's 2026 Senate race is shaping up as a significant contest. According to Wikipedia, incumbent Republican Senator Bill Cassidy is seeking a third term, but faces primary challenges stemming from his vote to convict Donald Trump during the former president's second impeachment trial. This marks the first Senate election in Louisiana to use party primaries instead of the previous blanket primary system following changes enacted in 2024.Economic development continues gaining momentum across Louisiana. American Airlines has added a new mid-morning flight between Monroe Regional Airport and Dallas-Fort Worth, expanding northeast Louisiana's access to national markets as the region experiences significant job growth and new investment. Meanwhile, Governor Jeff Landry has privately urged the Trump administration to grant tariff exemptions for Hyundai's planned 5.8 billion dollar steel facility in Louisiana, according to reporting from the Center Square. Landry expressed concern that tariffs could add hundreds of millions to the project's costs.On the corrections front, the Department of Public Safety and Corrections has requested an 11 percent budget increase for 2026-2027, bringing its budget from 716.5 million to 798.2 million dollars. According to the Pelican Policy Center, this request comes amid concerns about rising incarceration costs and reflects changes in sentencing procedures. However, recent crime statistics show record lows in homicides and other crimes in Louisiana's major cities, suggesting current strategies are proving effective.The state legislature continues advancing various initiatives, with nearly 200 bills prefiled for the 2026 session covering public safety, education, economic development and infrastructure improvements.Looking ahead, Louisiana listeners should watch for developments in the Ten Commandments legal battle, the May primary elections for the Senate race, and continued legislative action on corrections reform and economic development initiatives.Thank you for tuning in. Be sure to subscribe for more Louisiana news updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  30. 376

    Louisiana Mardi Gras Sparks Controversy and Economic Boom: Key Developments Unveiled

    Mardi Gras celebrations are in full swing in New Orleans amid controversy over an offensive float display, prompting Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill to launch an investigation, according to CBS News. In politics, the Louisiana House introduced HB177 on February 18, a Republican-sponsored bill under early review, while HB187 seeks to repeal the supreme court's court reporter pool provisions, per LegiScan. The legislature remains out of session, with committees like the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget meeting February 19, as noted by the Louisiana House of Representatives.Louisiana's economy shows robust growth through major developments. New Orleans CityBusiness ranks top construction projects for 2026, including the $1.8 billion Louisiana International Terminal at Port NOLA awaiting U.S. Army Corps approval to boost global trade and create 32,000 jobs. Other highlights feature UBE C1 Chemicals' $500 million EV battery plant in Waggaman, Ochsner's $300 million children's hospital expansion adding 400 jobs, and Bunge's $225 million Avondale facility upgrade. Ascension Parish leads as the state's fastest-growing area, driven by industrial investments like the RiverPlex MegaPark and workforce training at River Parishes Community College, per Business Report. The Louisiana Association of Business and Industry announced its 2026 board, led by Chairman Scott Ballard, emphasizing sustainable growth, Biz New Orleans reports.Community updates include the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board voting February 19 on a new high school in the proposed St. George district, plus budget increases for McKinley High renovations and a new elementary school, WBRZ states. Public safety saw a Rapides Parish woman convicted of negligent burning tied to a 2023 wildfire, ordered to pay over $9,800 in costs and restitution, Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry announces. No significant recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead, watch for East Baton Rouge School Board votes today, Port NOLA permit decisions, St. George district ballot in May, and legislative session progress.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  31. 375

    Louisiana Rises: Mardi Gras, Economic Growth, and Education Reforms Propel State Forward

    Louisiana continues to build momentum as the state celebrates Mardi Gras while pursuing significant economic and educational reforms. According to WWNO, former New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, with results announced at NFL Honors Thursday night. In another major sports development, the NFL will play its first regular-season game ever in France next season, with the New Orleans Saints traveling to Paris later this year.On the infrastructure front, Port NOLA awaits U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approval to begin construction on the Louisiana International Terminal, a generational project valued at approximately 1.8 billion dollars. According to New Orleans CityBusiness, the terminal is expected to generate 32,000 new jobs and more than one billion dollars in total new state and local tax revenue by 2050. The project would eliminate air-draft restrictions and enable the port to serve the largest container vessels that traverse the Panama Canal locks.The greater New Orleans area is witnessing a broader construction surge. New Orleans CityBusiness reports that Shell's office tower is rising in the River District, the New Orleans Convention Center is undergoing 763 million dollars in capital improvements, and Ochsner is breaking ground on a 300 million dollar Gayle and Tom Benson Children's Hospital. Additionally, Bayou Phoenix is redeveloping the former Six Flags Jazzland into a 400 million dollar entertainment and sports hub in New Orleans East.Education remains a priority for state leadership. A proposed bill filed by state Senator Patrick McMath would expand taxpayer-funded high-dosage tutoring to grades kindergarten through eighth grade, adding approximately 15.2 million dollars annually to the state budget. This effort comes as Louisiana has climbed from 43rd to 32nd in national education rankings according to New Orleans CityBusiness, with improvements attributed in part to existing tutoring programs.In government news, Governor Jeff Landry announced that Julie Emerson will serve as his new Chief of Staff, replacing Kyle Ruckert. Emerson previously served as a legislator and was involved in recent state reforms.Business leaders gathered at the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry annual meeting focused on growing economic competitiveness through artificial intelligence, energy dominance, and carbon capture solutions. The state is positioning itself to compete more aggressively with neighboring Southern states by leveraging its natural advantages including port access, the Mississippi River, and affordable power.Looking ahead, Louisiana continues celebrating Carnival season through Fat Tuesday with major parades rolling through New Orleans, while the state legislature prepares for upcoming sessions focused on education expansion and economic development initiatives.Thank you for tuning in to this Louisiana news summary. Be sure to subscribe for more updates.This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  32. 374

    Democrat Chasity Verret Martinez Wins Louisiana Special Election in Surprising Upset Against Republican Challenger

    Democrat Chasity Verret Martinez secured a stunning victory in Louisianas recent special House election, defeating Republican Brad Daigle 62 to 38 percent in a Trump-leaning district, according to Oneindia News. Martinez, outspent nearly three to one, emphasized cost-of-living relief, health care, and infrastructure in her grassroots campaign. Separate special elections filled five legislative vacancies across six parishes, with two advancing to March 14 runoffs that will not shift the Republican supermajority, Louisiana Illuminator reports. Ed Murray won a New Orleans seat with 52 percent over Eugene Green III.In the state legislature, prefiling for the 2026 regular session includes bills on post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts, homelessness measures, and AI use in health care, per LegiScan. Governor Jeff Landry vetoed several 2025 measures, such as bans on ultra-processed foods in schools and changes to election procedures.Economically, The Shaw Group plans to double its Livingston Parish workforce, adding 209 direct jobs at above-average salaries plus 288 indirect ones, supporting major projects statewide, Louisiana Economic Development notes. Port NOLA awaits a U.S. Army Corps permit for the Louisiana International Terminal, projected to create 32,000 jobs and over 1 billion dollars in tax revenue by 2050, New Orleans City Business states. Nexus Louisiana advances its downtown Baton Rouge headquarters as part of a 15 million dollar investment, enhancing tech collaborations.Communities see educational growth, with Lafayette Parish School System unveiling a 50 million dollar K-8 campus consolidating three schools for 1,200 students, featuring secure zones and traffic upgrades, LPSS announcements detail. A bill proposes expanding taxpayer-funded tutoring to K-8 at an extra 15.2 million dollars annually to boost literacy and math.No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead: Watch March legislative runoffs, Port NOLA permit decisions, and construction starts on the LIT and new schools amid Meta data center expansions.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more.This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  33. 373

    Louisiana's Economic Surge: $76 Billion Investments Spark Job Growth and Innovation in 2024

    In Louisiana, recent headlines include the tragic story of a Baton Rouge teen taken off life support just a day before her high school graduation, as reported in Louisiana Unfiltered news[1]. Two legislative races advanced to runoffs following special elections, according to WVUE Fox 8[13]. Extreme cold earlier this month claimed eight lives statewide, per WWNO reports[5].Governor Jeff Landry's administration continues to shape policy amid the 2026 Regular Session prefiling period, with LegiScan tracking active bills like SB46 prohibiting chemical releases to affect temperature and SB218 expanding post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts[2]. Several 2025 measures faced vetoes, including bans on ultra-processed foods in schools and changes to election procedures[2]. LABI's annual meeting emphasized growth through AI adoption, energy dominance, and carbon capture to boost competitiveness[7].Economically, Louisiana announced over $76 billion in capital investments since 2024, creating 76,000 jobs, via Opportunity Louisiana[14]. The Shaw Group plans to double its Livingston Parish workforce to 497 jobs total, supported by state incentives[11]. Groundbreakings marked progress: a $50 million Newlab tech incubator anchoring a $300 million Bywater naval base redevelopment with affordable housing by 2028, per New Orleans City Business[3]; and RPCC's Hyundai Steel Training Center in Donaldsonville for advanced manufacturing skills, opening in 2027[4].Communities see investments in education and infrastructure. Lafayette Parish School System unveiled a $50 million K-8 campus consolidating three schools for 1,200 students, with enhanced safety and traffic features[8][15]. A bill proposes expanding K-8 tutoring, adding $15 million annually to combat low rankings[12]. New Orleans readies for Mardi Gras with 1,800 law enforcement officers[5], while traffic detours begin February 16 on Morrison Road[9].No major recent weather events beyond the prior cold snap.Looking Ahead: Watch the 2026 legislative session kickoff, Newlab's summer 2028 opening, Hyundai center debut in 2027, and Mardi Gras through Fat Tuesday.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  34. 372

    Louisiana's Economic and Political Landscape: Job Expansions, Legislative Challenges, and Community Resilience in 2024

    In Louisiana, recent headlines include the tragic passing of a teen taken off life support just a day before her graduation in Baton Rouge, as reported in Louisiana Unfiltered news. Extreme cold weather earlier this month claimed eight lives statewide, according to WWNO. River Parishes Community College and Hyundai Steel broke ground on a new training center in Donaldsonville to prepare workers for steel and manufacturing jobs, with opening planned for late 2027, per New Orleans City Business. The Shaw Group announced an expansion in Walker expected to create 209 jobs, supported by state incentives from Louisiana Economic Development.On the political front, special elections filled legislative vacancies, with Republicans maintaining supermajority control though two races head to runoffs on March 14, Louisiana Illuminator reports. The 2026 regular legislative session sees prefiling underway, including bills on post-conviction relief and homelessness, via LegiScan. Governor Jeff Landry's administration has seen fewer paroles granted compared to prior years, WWNO notes. Nationally, Senator Bill Cassidy faces primary challenges ahead of the November 2026 U.S. Senate race under new partisan primary rules.Economically, Bunge is investing $225 million to expand its Avondale oils plant into North America's largest for palm and specialty oils, creating over 90 jobs, according to New Orleans City Business. Senator Cassidy secured over $1.3 billion in federal funding, including for an Engineering Workforce Development Center. Callais Capital launched energy and tech initiatives aligned with the state's energy strategy.Communities grapple with challenges like the closure of the century-old Dulac Community Center, a vital hub for Native residents and disaster response, and elevated lead levels in over 80 parks posing risks to children, both from WWNO and Verite News. Education faces a 3% higher ed funding cut, per Invest Louisiana. Public safety ramps up with 1,800 law enforcement officers for Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Infrastructure advances through these training and expansion projects.Looking Ahead, watch for Senate District 3 runoffs, the 2026 legislative session kickoff, and Hyundai Steel mill progress in Ascension Parish.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  35. 371

    Louisiana Voters Cast Ballots in Special Primaries, Job Growth Surges with Major Industrial Investments

    Louisiana voters headed to the polls yesterday for special primaries to fill five legislative vacancies, with three seats decided outright and two advancing to runoffs on March 14, according to 270toWin. In District 97 and District 100, both in the New Orleans area, Democratic candidates are set to win their heavily blue districts, filling seats left vacant by resignations to city council posts. Meanwhile, the legislature's 2026 regular session looms with prefiled bills on topics from prohibiting chemical releases into the environment to post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts, as tracked by LegiScan.On the economic front, job growth accelerates. The Shaw Group plans to double its workforce in Livingston Parish, adding 209 high-paying jobs averaging over $62,000 annually to support booming industrial projects, Louisiana Economic Development reports. Bunge's $1 billion expansion in Avondale will create 90 new positions at North America's largest palm oils plant, per New Orleans CityBusiness. River Parishes Community College broke ground on a Hyundai Steel Training Center in Donaldsonville, launching programs for steel careers starting fall 2026 to bolster the workforce pipeline.Federal funds pour in for recovery and infrastructure. Congressman Clay Higgins announced $326 million in FEMA aid for south Louisiana hurricane repairs, including levee projects and school facilities. Senator John Kennedy secured $122 million for initiatives like a new I-20 interchange and Centenary College's health sciences building.Community efforts advance too, with training centers addressing education gaps amid industrial expansion. No major weather events have disrupted the state recently.Looking Ahead: Watch for Supreme Court ruling in Louisiana v. Callais on Voting Rights Act challenges that could reshape congressional maps, and the legislature's session kickoff amid ongoing economic momentum.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  36. 370

    Louisiana Sees Major Boost: $326M FEMA Aid, Jobs Expansion, and Health Initiative Unveiled

    Louisiana listeners are seeing key developments in health, economy, and recovery efforts this week. The Louisiana Department of Health expanded its Carrot Initiative to Orleans and East Baton Rouge parishes, giving SNAP recipients a 30-cent bonus per dollar on fresh produce at Walmart, up to $25 monthly on their EBT cards, according to LDH Secretary Bruce D. Greenstein, who noted it reaches 135,000 more residents and has already delivered nearly $884,000 in bonuses since April 2025.[1] In business news, The Shaw Group announced plans to expand operations in Walker, creating 209 new jobs while retaining 165, supported by state incentives including LED FastStart workforce training, as stated by Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan B. Bourgeois.[3][7] Federal funding surged too, with Congressman Clay Higgins securing $326 million in FEMA aid for over 40 south Louisiana hurricane recovery projects, including school repairs and levee work in Terrebonne and Calcasieu parishes.[4] Senators John Kennedy and Bill Cassidy delivered additional hundreds of millions for infrastructure, education, and defense projects statewide.[6][8]On the legislative front, prefiling for the 2026 regular session ramps up, with bills eyeing transportation reforms and post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury cases, per LegiScan tracking.[2] Education faces shifts as a University of New Orleans transition report to the LSU System calls for tens of millions in upgrades amid enrollment declines to 5,670 students.[11] Public safety marked a setback with a natural gas pipeline explosion on February 3 near the Delfin LNG project in Cameron Parish, highlighting infrastructure vulnerabilities.[5] No major weather events reported recently.Community infrastructure benefits from federal allocations like $8 million for Jefferson Parish rail and $6.5 million for Nicholls State engineering center.[8]Looking Ahead, watch the 2026 U.S. Senate race primaries on May 16 challenging incumbent Bill Cassidy under new partisan rules, plus ongoing LDH retailer expansions statewide.[9]Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  37. 369

    Louisiana Lawmakers Advance Education Funding and Infrastructure Amid Bipartisan Budget Negotiations

    Louisiana House Speaker Mike Johnson highlighted bipartisan progress on federal appropriations, noting that 11 of 12 bills have passed both chambers, with plans to fund all agencies except Homeland Security by Tuesday amid ongoing negotiations, as discussed on Meet the Press[1]. Governor Jeff Landry is pushing to expand the LA GATOR scholarship program in his 2026-2027 budget proposal, requesting $88 million to serve more of the 35,000 eligible applicants after last year's funding was cut from $93 million to $43.5 million, leaving thousands waitlisted, according to the Pelican Policy Center[4]. In education news, a transition report for the University of New Orleans' move back to the LSU System identifies over $46 million needed immediately for IT upgrades, plus $59 million in deferred maintenance, amid enrollment drops to 5,670 students, as reported by New Orleans CityBusiness[2].New Orleans City Council advanced key infrastructure, including a milestone for the River District with 900 new residential units, 450 affordable, and approval of 600 affordable housing units in Districts B and C using capital bonds[6]. The council also overruled a veto to allocate $5 million to LSU and mandated rest breaks for city workers against heat hazards[6]. U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy secured over $1.3 billion for Louisiana in recent spending bills covering transportation, housing, health, and education to keep the government open[10]. Centenary College completed its FORWARD campaign, raising over $52 million for campus upgrades like music facilities[8].No major recent weather events reported. On public safety, national immigration debates echoed locally through Johnson's comments on enforcement needs[1].Looking Ahead, lawmakers will debate LA GATOR funding and UNO's LSU integration costs in the upcoming legislative session, while New Orleans eyes solar battery installations for grid resilience.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  38. 368

    Mardi Gras Parade Shooting in Clinton Leaves 5 Injured, Including Child, as Louisiana Prepares for Eventful 2026

    A shooting marred the Mardi Gras in the Country parade in Clinton on January 31, injuring five people, including a six-year-old child, with three suspects taken into custody, according to East Feliciana Parish Sheriff Jeff Travis as reported by Xinhua and WAFB[1]. In other top headlines, ExxonMobil announced plans to launch three carbon capture projects in 2026, including storing one million metric tons of CO2 annually at a Louisiana natural gas plant and handling emissions from steelmaker Nucor near Baton Rouge, bolstering the state's low-carbon economy along the Gulf Coast, per company executive Dominic Genetti via The Center Square[3]. The Orleans Parish School Board approved funding for the long-awaited 9th Ward Stadium in New Orleans on January 26, securing full financing through bonds, donations, and naming rights to build a multi-sport venue opening in summer 2027[4].Louisianas legislature is gearing up for its 2026 regular session starting April 21 after extended 2025 meetings, with prefiled bills addressing post-conviction relief for non-unanimous jury verdicts, chemical dispersion bans, and AI use in healthcare, according to LegiScan[2][9]. Governor Jeff Landry proposed expanding the LA GATOR scholarship program to $88 million for more school choice amid high demand, as noted by Pelican Policy[8][11]. A new work-based learning tax credit begins in 2026 to boost apprenticeships and youth employment, per Better Louisiana[14], while regional groups lead a statewide workforce strategy under Louisiana Works[10].No major recent weather events were reported. Community efforts advance with the stadium project enhancing education and public spaces in New Orleans Upper Ninth Ward[4].Looking Ahead: Watch for special legislative elections on February 7 with suspended early voting, the LABI Legislative Issues Conference tour from February 24, and ExxonMobils carbon projects ramping up mid-year.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  39. 367

    Louisiana Governor Declares State of Emergency, Unveils Energy Strategy Amid Winter Weather and Legislative Prepping

    Governor Jeff Landry declared a state of emergency on January 22 for impending winter weather, following a recent storm that caused a hypothermia death in Sabine Parish and left 18-wheelers stranded on Interstate 20 for days, according to the Louisiana Department of Health and ABC News. The governor also unveiled the Whole-of-Louisiana Energy Strategy, aiming to boost investment, high-wage jobs, and national energy leadership through eight priorities like expanding the industrial base and accelerating infrastructure, as reported by Louisiana Economic Development.In politics, the 2026 Regular Legislative Session prefiles bills ahead of its March 9 start, with deadlines for introductions by March 31, per the Senate Bulletin. Landry's budget proposes $88 million for the LA GATOR scholarship program to expand education choices, though prior funding fell short, according to the Pelican Policy Center. Legal reforms from 2025 are lowering auto insurance rates via fairer fault systems, the center adds.Economically, Ampirical plans a 90,832-square-foot expansion in Covington, creating high-wage engineering jobs with salaries over $90,000, Louisiana Economic Development announced. Ascension Parish prioritizes infrastructure like Highway 30 upgrades and small business support amid growth, Talk1073 reports.Community efforts advance with the Orleans Parish School Board approving the 9th Ward Stadium project, securing full funding and naming rights for a 2027 opening to host sports and events. New Orleans won a grant to combat childhood hunger from the Mayors Alliance Action Fund.Looking Ahead: Brace for weekend winter weather under the active emergency, watch legislative prefiling momentum, and track energy strategy implementations alongside the March session kickoff.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  40. 366

    Louisiana Battles Winter Storm Blackout and Energy Innovation Amid Political Shifts

    Louisiana grapples with the aftermath of a major January 2026 North American winter storm that brought freezing rain, ice, and extreme cold across the state. According to Entergy Louisiana, as of January 26 evening, about 77,000 customers remained without power, down from a peak of 91,500 outages, with restoration efforts hampered by hazardous conditions and sub-freezing temperatures[1]. Governor Jeff Landry declared a state of emergency on January 18, activating the Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, while crews pretreated roads and monitored infrastructure[5]. Estimated power returns range from January 28 in areas like Ouachita Parish to January 29 in harder-hit spots such as Bienville and Natchitoches parishes[1].In government and politics, the state legislature enters its 2026 Regular Session with prefiled bills reforming the Department of Transportation and Development's structure and operations[7]. Meanwhile, Louisiana adopted a closed primary system in 2024, set to debut in 2026 elections for two Public Service Commission seats, potentially electing commissioners via plurality in partisan primaries[2].On the economic front, Governor Landry unveiled the Whole-of-Louisiana Energy Strategy to drive investment, innovation, and high-wage jobs, aligning agencies with priorities like infrastructure expansion and regional opportunity frameworks[8]. Viking Attachments expanded manufacturing in Morgan City, creating 14 direct jobs and 24 indirect ones, bolstered by state incentives[3]. Legal reforms from 2025, including a shift to modified comparative fault, are lowering auto insurance rates[12]. Community colleges seek more funding amid $80 billion in projects promising tens of thousands of jobs, emphasizing workforce training in trades[14].Education officials pursue Ed-Flex status for greater control over federal Title I and IV funds, allowing easier waivers for unspent dollars to support low-income schools and student programs[4].Looking Ahead Power restoration may extend to January 29 in remote areas, with LABI's Annual Meeting on February 11 in Baton Rouge highlighting economic momentum[1][13]. Watch for PSC primaries and legislative advances on transportation and energy.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  41. 365

    Louisiana Unleashes Economic Potential: Governor Landry's Bold Energy and Jobs Strategy Drives $61 Billion Investment Boom

    Governor Jeff Landry recently announced Louisianas Whole-of-Louisiana Energy Strategy, aiming to unleash energy dominance through expanded industrial base, global investments, and innovation, as detailed by Opportunity Louisiana[1]. This builds on a banner 2025 for economic development, with $61 billion in new capital investments creating 9,300 direct jobs at an average salary of $91,000, according to Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan Bourgeois[13]. Key wins include Hyundai Steels $6 billion steel mill in Ascension Parish, earning Louisiana back-to-back Platinum Deal of the Year honors[1], and Walmart's $330 million reinvestment in its Opelousas distribution center to boost efficiency with robotics[3][7].In politics, Landry presented the Fiscal Year 2026-2027 executive budget, prioritizing K-12 education at $4.2 billion from the state general fund and healthcare at $3.4 billion, while funding initiatives like the LA GATOR scholarship program and high-impact jobs[4]. The state seeks Ed-Flex status for greater control over federal Title I and IV K-12 funds, allowing more flexibility for priorities like tutoring and AI tools[8]. Legal reforms from 2025, including a shift to modified comparative fault, are lowering auto insurance rates[12]. Amid a state of emergency declared by Landry due to gas shortages in north and central regions, resources are being mobilized[5].Community efforts highlight SLBs expansion in Shreveport, adding 1,344 jobs at a former GM site, and Saronic Technologies $300 million shipyard upgrade in Franklin, creating 3,200 positions[1]. Education leaders call for more community college funding to train workers for $80 billion in projects[14].Looking Ahead: Watch for 2026 elections under the new closed primary system, including U.S. Senate race for incumbent Bill Cassidy and two Public Service Commission seats starting primaries May 16[2][9]. The legislative session dates are upcoming[15], with focus on energy momentum and workforce growth.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  42. 364

    Louisiana Leads Nation: Economic Transformation Drives Statewide Innovation and Growth

    Louisiana continues its momentum as a national economic leader, with significant developments reshaping the state's future across infrastructure, business, and innovation sectors.The Naval Support Activity East Bank site in New Orleans officially broke ground this week on a transformative redevelopment project. According to Opportunity Louisiana, the multi-phase effort led by Brian Gibbs Development will return the long-dormant federal campus to active use as a center for innovation and housing. The project includes Newlab New Orleans, an innovation hub designed to help startups develop critical technologies in energy and industrial sectors. A cornerstone of the development is the Lincoln Avenue Communities investment, representing the largest affordable housing project in Louisiana history at 197 million dollars, delivering hundreds of units to the Bywater community.On the broadband front, Louisiana achieved a historic milestone. According to the Bogalusa Daily News, Louisiana became the first state to sign BEAD grant agreements, with initial agreements covering nearly 40,000 locations across the state. The state received federal approval for roughly 1.36 billion dollars in broadband funding through its GUMBO 2.0 program, positioning Louisiana to achieve full statewide high-speed internet coverage by 2028, two years ahead of the federal target.Major corporate investments continue flowing into Louisiana. Walmart announced a more than 330 million dollar reinvestment in its Opelousas distribution center, according to Opportunity Louisiana. The modernization project will create approximately 1,344 new direct and indirect jobs while transitioning the workforce toward higher-skilled positions in automation and robotics. Additionally, Viking Attachments is expanding its manufacturing operations in Morgan City, expected to create 14 direct new jobs with an estimated 24 indirect positions.In Washington, Senator John Kennedy secured significant wins for Louisiana in the fiscal year 2026 Energy and Water Development Appropriations bill. The legislation provides 235.1 million dollars across multiple flood control and coastal protection projects, including 131.5 million dollars for the Morganza to the Gulf Project and 43.6 million dollars for the West Bank and Vicinity Project.Economic development efforts also expanded with the launch of the Louisiana Impact Fund, a private equity initiative announced this week. According to AI-CIO, the fund aims to keep Louisiana businesses under local ownership while accessing growth capital, having initially closed 24 million dollars toward a 100 million dollar target.Education infrastructure saw progress at Louisiana State University of Alexandria, where the Martin Family Student Success Center officially opened for the Spring 2026 semester following completion in December 2025.Looking ahead, listeners should watch for continued construction on the Naval Support Activity redevelopment, broadband deployment across parishes, and the Louisiana Impact Fund's anticipated second close targeted for July. The state's legislative session continues addressing key priorities including workforce development and transportation reforms.Thank you for tuning in and please subscribe. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  43. 363

    Louisiana's Economic Renaissance: Record Investments, Broadband Expansion, and Transformative Projects Drive State Forward in 2026

    Louisiana continues to demonstrate strong economic momentum with multiple major developments reshaping the state's business landscape and infrastructure. Walmart plans to invest more than 330 million dollars to modernize its regional distribution center in Opelousas, according to the Louisiana Economic Development agency. The project, expected to begin in 2026, will create an estimated 1,344 new direct and indirect jobs while enabling the facility to ship nearly twice the number of cases as a traditional distribution center once complete.The state closed 2025 as a record year for investment. Hyundai Steel's nearly 6 billion dollar steel mill in Ascension Parish was named the top development project of the year, making Louisiana the first state to earn back-to-back Platinum Deal of the Year honors, reports Louisiana Economic Development. Additional major projects announced include SLB's expansion in Shreveport, expected to create 1,344 jobs, and Saronic Technologies' 300 million dollar investment to expand Franklin Shipyard with 3,200 new jobs.On the legislative front, state Representative Dixon McMakin filed the first House bill for the 2026 session proposing a constitutional convention, according to the Louisiana Radio Network. McMakin argues that Louisiana's 51-year-old constitution, exceeding 100,000 words, contains unnecessary details about local parish finances that should be removed. Unlike Governor Landry's previous proposal, this convention would take place over an entire year with monthly meetings before going to voters.Infrastructure improvements are expanding statewide. Louisiana became the first state to sign BEAD grant agreements for broadband deployment, the Bogalusa Daily News reports, with projects expected to begin construction in coming weeks. The state remains on track to achieve full statewide high-speed internet coverage by 2028, two years ahead of the federal 2030 goal. In Lafayette Parish, the Consolidated Government announced an infrastructure reorganization and launched a new Capital Improvements Map highlighting 35 active construction projects representing more than 186 million dollars in infrastructure investment across the parish.A new Louisiana Impact Fund launched with initial commitments toward a 100 million dollar target, according to AI-CIO reporting. The fund aims to keep ownership of Louisiana businesses within the state, noting that 95 percent of Louisiana business mergers and acquisitions over the last three years involved out-of-state buyers.Weather-wise, recent rains provided relief from developing drought conditions across parts of Louisiana, though nearly two-thirds of the state remains in drought status, according to Louisiana's climatologist Jay Grymes.Looking ahead, the 2026 legislative session continues with several significant bills under consideration, while economic development projects are expected to break ground throughout the year.Thank you for tuning in to Louisiana news. Please subscribe for ongoing coverage of state developments. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  44. 362

    Louisiana Poised for Economic Growth: Walmart Invests $330M, New Mayor Makes History, and Infrastructure Advances

    Louisiana continues to make headlines with significant economic investments and infrastructure developments shaping the state's future. Walmart announced a major 330 million dollar reinvestment in its Opelousas distribution center according to Opportunity Louisiana, creating an estimated 1,344 new direct and indirect jobs. The project reflects the company's nationwide initiative to upgrade regional distribution centers while modernizing the former GM facility with advanced robotics and automation technology.On the political front, Helena Moreno made history as New Orleans' 63rd mayor, becoming the city's first Hispanic mayor and second woman to hold the position. Meanwhile, federal border agents have reportedly begun pulling out of Louisiana's immigration crackdown deployment that started in December, with documents obtained by the Associated Press showing agents heading to Minneapolis rather than continuing through the anticipated February endpoint.The state is prioritizing infrastructure improvements across multiple fronts. Governor Jeff Landry announced repairs coming to 11 Louisiana bridges, promising modernized and cleaned up infrastructure across the state according to WBRZ. Lafayette Consolidated Government launched an interactive Capital Improvements Map highlighting 35 active construction projects representing more than 186 million dollars in infrastructure investment. The city has reorganized its approach to project delivery by establishing a dedicated Capital Improvements Department and strengthening its focus on drainage and flood resilience.Congress delivered wins for Louisiana through the FY 2026 Energy and Water Development Appropriations bill, according to Senator John Kennedy's office. The legislation provides critical funding for coastal protection, including 131.5 million dollars for the Morganza to the Gulf Project and additional resources for flood control and storm surge mitigation studies around Lake Pontchartrain.Economic development continues beyond major corporations. The Louisiana Impact Fund launched targeting 100 million dollars in private equity investments for lower-middle-market companies, aiming to keep businesses and decision-making within the state. According to AI-CIO, 95 percent of Louisiana business mergers and acquisitions in recent years involved out-of-state buyers, making the fund's focus on local ownership significant for the state's economic trajectory.The legislature is actively drafting bills for the 2026 regular session. Speaker Pro Tempore Mike Johnson prefiled three carbon capture and sequestration bills allowing parishes to determine whether Class VI injection wells and CO2 pipelines may be permitted locally.Looking ahead, listeners should watch for developments surrounding potential Senate races as Congressman-elect representatives position themselves, continued infrastructure project progress, and the Louisiana legislature's full 2026 session as bills move through committees addressing energy policy and business investment incentives.Thank you for tuning in to this Louisiana news summary. Please subscribe for continued updates on the state's economic and political developments.This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  45. 361

    Louisiana Secures $1.9M in Mineral Lease Revenues, Advances Energy and Economic Development Initiatives

    Louisiana's State Mineral and Energy Board collected $240,650 in bonus revenue from its January 14 lease sale, covering 1,306 acres in four parishes, pushing the 2025-2026 total to about $1.9 million, according to the board's announcement. Governor Jeff Landry, tapped as a special envoy by President Trump, plans a March trip to Greenland for a dogsledding event amid talks on U.S. security interests, as reported by the Associated Press. In politics, Speaker Pro Tempore Mike Johnson prefiled three carbon capture and sequestration bills on January 12, including one authorizing parishes to block Class VI wells and pipelines, and another repealing CCS unitization and eminent domain powers, ahead of the March 9 legislative session start.Economically, the Louisiana Impact Fund launched with a $100 million target to invest in local businesses, aiming to retain jobs and ownership in sectors like energy and manufacturing, per Opportunity Louisiana. Metairie-based Argent LNG seeks federal approval for a 25 million-ton-per-year export plant at Port Fourchon, positioning it as Louisiana's first homegrown LNG exporter, according to New Orleans CityBusiness. Federal funding secured $1 million for workforce training at South Louisiana Community College's diving center and coastal protection projects, announced by Congressman Higgins.In community news, InspireNOLA Charter Schools rolled out Louisiana's largest electric school bus fleet of 42 vehicles, cutting emissions and improving student rides, funded by EPA grants as detailed in a PR Newswire release. Lafayette Consolidated Government reorganized infrastructure operations and launched an interactive map tracking 35 projects worth over $186 million. No major recent weather events reported.Looking Ahead, watch the February 11 LABI Annual Meeting in Baton Rouge on economic momentum, and the 2026 legislative session opening March 9 for CCS debates and more.Thank you for tuning in, listeners. Please subscribe for updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  46. 360

    50 Cent's G-Unit Seals $124M Louisiana Entertainment Complex Deal, Promises 1,344 Jobs and Massive Economic Boost

    In Louisiana, G-Unit Film & Television, owned by Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, has finalized a $124 million deal with the state to redevelop entertainment venues in Shreveport, including the former Stageworks facility and Millennium Studios, expected to create 1,344 jobs and generate $18.8 billion in economic impact over 20 years, according to Louisiana Economic Development[3]. Meanwhile, Metairie-based Argent LNG seeks federal approval for a 25 million-ton-per-year export facility at Port Fourchon, backed by a 36-3 state Senate resolution praising its local hiring focus, as reported by New Orleans City Business[7].Protests continue in New Orleans over federal immigration agents and National Guard presence, with groups marching in the French Quarter amid tight security marking the one-year anniversary of the Bourbon Street attack, per WWNO[1]. Helena Moreno was inaugurated as the city's 63rd mayor on January 12, launching her term with promises of progress, according to the City of New Orleans[5]. In Baton Rouge, Mayor-President Sid Edwards highlighted crime reductions across all categories in his January 7 State of the City-Parish address[13].Federal funding secured by Congressman Clay Higgins bolsters infrastructure and workforce training, including $1 million for South Louisiana Community College's diving center in Morgan City and $5 million for a Semiconductor Technology Center at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette[4][12]. St. Mary Parish fights in federal court to exit a 60-year desegregation order, with state leaders arguing it's outdated, as detailed by Education Week[9]. Entergy plans billion-dollar transmission upgrades to meet surging demand from data centers and projects like Hyundai's steel mill, potentially raising residential bills by $3.47 monthly, reports Business Report[11].No major recent weather events have disrupted the state.Looking Ahead: Louisiana's legislature remains out of session, with no 2026 races planned[2][6][10]; watch for the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival lineup rollout and ongoing desegregation appeals.Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  47. 359

    Louisiana's 2026 Landscape: Political Shifts, Economic Boom, and Weather Challenges Unfold

    Listeners in Louisiana are seeing a mix of political maneuvering, economic expansion, and unsettled weather shaping the start of the year.On the political front, Verite News reports that Louisiana will continue using its existing six congressional districts for the 2026 midterm elections after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to fast-track a challenge to the current map, leaving any potential redistricting fight for a later ruling. According to State Capital Lobbyist, Governor Jeff Landry is scheduled to deliver his State of the State address on March 9, 2026, a key moment when he is expected to outline priorities on crime, education, and economic development.Crime and public safety remain central. Click2Houston reports that New Orleans marked a third consecutive year of declining violent crime in 2025, even as armed National Guard troops patrol parts of the city under federal orders, following Governor Landry’s request for support against violent crime. New Orleans’ incoming mayor, Helena Moreno, has shifted from initial opposition to saying she welcomes the Guard’s help during major events like Mardi Gras, reflecting ongoing debate over how best to sustain the improving crime trend.Economically, Louisiana is in the midst of a major industrial build‑out. The Greater Baton Rouge Business Report notes that global manufacturers have committed more than $10 billion in projects in the Capital Region alone, including Hyundai Steel and what is described as the world’s largest ammonia facility, part of a broader boom in energy, industrial, and clean‑fuel investments. Entergy Louisiana told New Orleans CityBusiness it is pursuing a roughly $1 billion transmission project in west Louisiana and a series of grid upgrades to serve massive new loads such as a recently announced $10 billion data center in West Feliciana Parish, while regulators try to balance growth with pressure on household electric bills.At the community level, infrastructure and education are getting a boost. KQKI News reports that Congressman Clay Higgins secured federal appropriations for several south Louisiana projects, including $5 million for a Semiconductor Technology Center at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, $1 million for workforce training at South Louisiana Community College’s Commercial Diving Center in Morgan City, and more than $130 million for advancing the Morganza to the Gulf hurricane and flood protection system for Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes. Additional funds will modernize hospital facilities, improve coastal resilience, and upgrade water and wastewater systems in multiple parishes.Weather has been active. Tangipahoa Parish officials issued a severe weather update for January 9–10, warning of damaging winds above 60 miles per hour, large hail, heavy rainfall rates over two inches per hour, and a risk of tornadoes across parts of southeast Louisiana. The National Weather Service, as documented by the National Centers for Environmental Information, has already confirmed an EF1 tornado southeast of Coushatta in Red River Parish on January 10, with snapped and uprooted trees along a short path.Looking ahead, listeners should watch for Governor Landry’s March State of the State address and possible follow‑up legislation on crime, energy, and infrastructure, continued regulatory battles over who pays for new industrial‑scale power lines, and further federal funding decisions affecting coastal protection and semiconductor workforce training, all while emergency managers monitor an active winter storm pattern along the Gulf.Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  48. 358

    Louisiana Transforms: New Laws, Mega Projects, and Infrastructure Reshape State's Future in 2026

    Louisiana listeners are waking up to a state in transition, where new laws, major industrial projects, and infrastructure investments are reshaping daily life and long-term prospects.In government and politics, a wide slate of new state laws took effect January 1, tightening rules on distracted driving and reshaping civil liability and unemployment benefits. According to USA Today Network reporting carried by New Orleans CityBusiness, Louisiana has expanded its hands-free driving law so drivers can no longer hold a phone for texting or browsing, with stiffer penalties in school and construction zones. New rules also move the state to a modified comparative fault system in civil cases and require unemployed residents to document at least five job search attempts per week to keep benefits. USA Today Network notes new incentives for storm-hardened home construction and stricter licensing for roofing contractors, aimed at curbing post-storm fraud and insurance costs.Election rules are also in flux. Verite News reports that Louisiana will use its current six congressional districts for the 2026 midterms after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to fast-track a challenge to the map, meaning any changes to representation will wait beyond the next federal election. The National Conference of State Legislatures points out there will be no state legislative races in 2026 because Louisiana holds those elections in odd-numbered years.On the economic front, Louisiana Economic Development says the state has captured Business Facilities magazine’s Platinum Deal of the Year for the second straight year, this time for Hyundai Steel’s nearly 5.8 billion dollar ultra-low-carbon steel mill planned in Ascension Parish, projected to support more than 5,400 jobs in the Capital Region. Opportunity Louisiana notes this follows the 2024 Platinum Award for the Meta AI data center, signaling what state officials call a new era of competitiveness.That growth comes with infrastructure pressures. The Center Square, via New Orleans CityBusiness and the Business Report, reports that Entergy has filed for a more than 1 billion dollar transmission project in west Louisiana, including a 145‑mile high-voltage line that could raise residential bills by at least 3.47 dollars a month while improving grid reliability. The Pelican Institute for Public Policy warns that Governor Jeff Landry’s Lightning Speed initiative, which speeds approval of large industrial power projects, could expose ratepayers to decades of higher costs if competition is limited.Community and infrastructure investments are also advancing. Congressman Clay Higgins’ office reports that recent federal appropriations include 131.5 million dollars to advance the Morganza to the Gulf hurricane protection system for Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes, plus funding for wastewater upgrades, water treatment plants, and a new Semiconductor Technology Center at the University of Louisiana–Lafayette, aimed at research and workforce training.Looking ahead, State Affairs Pro and State Capitol Lobbyist report that Governor Jeff Landry is scheduled to deliver his State of the State address on March 9, 2026, setting the policy agenda on energy, insurance, and infrastructure. Watch for ongoing debates over electric rates, coastal resilience, and how to spread the benefits of mega-projects across communities.Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  49. 357

    Louisiana Poised for Economic Boom and Political Transformation in 2024

    Louisiana enters the new year balancing rapid economic growth, political recalibration, and ongoing debates over public safety and infrastructure. The Center Square reports that one of the biggest recent headlines was the continued overhaul of public safety in New Orleans, where violent crime fell for a third straight year even as armed National Guard troops patrolled parts of the city at the direction of Governor Jeff Landry and the Trump administration, drawing both praise and concern over militarization of local policing, according to the Associated Press.In state politics, Louisiana’s regular legislative session is scheduled from March 9 to June 1, with bill filing deadlines on March 31, according to MultiState’s legislative calendar. Lawmakers are expected to focus on the state’s future energy needs, the long‑term costs of massive new data centers, and the impacts of recent auto insurance reforms. Louisiana Radio Network reports that Senate President Cameron Henry says stronger‑than‑expected tax collections could leave the state with nearly a 300 million dollar surplus, but he is urging fiscal restraint even amid pressure for pay raises.Redistricting battles remain unresolved in the background. The Current reports that because the U.S. Supreme Court did not expedite a key voting‑rights case, Louisiana will use its existing congressional map for the 2026 midterms, preserving the current balance for at least one more election cycle.On the economic front, Louisiana is riding a wave of industrial and tech investment. The state’s economic development agency says Business Facilities magazine named Hyundai Steel’s nearly 5.8 to 6 billion dollar project in Ascension Parish the nation’s top development deal of 2025, giving Louisiana back‑to‑back “Platinum Deal of the Year” honors and signaling a new era of competitiveness. Opportunity Louisiana notes that this project anchors the RiverPlex MegaPark and is expected to drive jobs and tax revenue. At the same time, The Center Square reports that Meta’s 10 billion dollar data center and other large facilities have spurred Entergy to seek more than 1 billion dollars in new transmission projects, proposals that could raise residential bills as regulators try to balance growth against ratepayer costs, according to New Orleans CityBusiness.Community initiatives are attempting to match this growth with workforce and safety investments. Biz New Orleans highlights the Greater New Orleans Infrastructure Partnership, led by Delgado Community College and backed by a 6.05 million dollar U.S. Department of Labor grant, which is building coordinated training pipelines in transportation, energy, and industrial maintenance across 10 parishes. LSU reports that a 1 million dollar grant from Google.org will expand its cyber clinic, training more than 200 students over six years to protect critical infrastructure and support hundreds of Louisiana organizations at no cost.Looking Ahead, listeners should watch the upcoming legislative session in Baton Rouge, decisions by the Public Service Commission on billion‑dollar power upgrades tied to new industry, ongoing court developments over voting rights and district lines, and how New Orleans manages public safety during Carnival season under continued scrutiny. Thank you for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

  50. 356

    Louisiana Poised for Economic Transformation with Major Investments, Legislative Reforms in 2026

    Louisiana is experiencing significant momentum as the state enters 2026 with major economic projects and legislative reforms reshaping its landscape. According to USA TODAY Network reporting, the state has implemented sweeping new laws affecting everything from highway safety to business practices, with the hands-free driving law taking effect January 1st, ending a grace period for distracted driving violations. The law prohibits drivers from holding mobile devices while driving and allows only emergency calls and hands-free navigation systems, with stricter fines in school zones and construction areas.The state has also shifted its civil liability system from pure comparative fault to modified comparative fault, meaning plaintiffs who are 50 percent or less at fault can recover damages reduced by their responsibility share. Those found 51 percent or more at fault cannot recover at all. Supporters say this change aligns Louisiana with other states and could reduce insurance costs. Additional legislative changes include new roofing contractor licensing requirements for projects exceeding 7,500 dollars, mandated live-streaming of ethics board meetings, restrictions on insurance companies passing advertising costs to consumers, and new tax deductions for home fortification improvements designed to withstand severe weather.On the economic front, Louisiana has achieved back-to-back Platinum Deal of the Year recognition from Business Facilities magazine. Hyundai Steel's nearly 6 billion dollar investment in Ascension Parish for an ultra-low-carbon steel mill was named the nation's most significant development announcement of 2025, expected to generate over 5,400 jobs. This follows the state's 2024 award for Meta's data center project, positioning Louisiana as the first state to earn consecutive honors.Energy infrastructure remains a critical focus as Entergy seeks regulatory approval for a 1 billion dollar transmission project in west Louisiana to support growing industrial demand. The utility plans to complete transmission infrastructure by August 2029 to serve a recently announced 10 billion dollar data center in West Feliciana Parish requiring approximately 345 megawatts of electricity. The Public Service Commission recently approved directives exempting certain utilities from various ratepayer protections to expedite approvals for major industrial projects under Governor Jeff Landry's Lightning Speed initiative.Locally, the Algiers ferry terminal is undergoing extensive upgrades including an overhead canopy and new second floor with elevator access, while Trinity Episcopal School is constructing a new dining hall to support campus growth.Looking ahead, Louisiana's legislature will convene March 9th for the regular session, lasting until June 1st. Senate President Cameron Henry anticipates discussions about the state's energy infrastructure needs alongside a projected 300 million dollar surplus, which could support workforce development and economic initiatives without budget constraints.Thank you for tuning in. Please subscribe for more Louisiana updates. This has been a quiet please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3QsFor more check out http://www.quietplease.aiThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AIThis episode includes AI-generated content.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Louisiana News and Info TrackerTune in to "Louisiana News and Info Tracker" for your daily roundup of the latest news and events in Louisiana. Our podcast delivers timely and concise updates on politics, weather, and community happenings, keeping you well-informed and engaged with your state.This show includes AI-generated content.

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