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Federal judge blocks Head Start vaccine, mask mandate

A federal judge in Louisiana has blocked President Joe Biden administration’s vaccine and mask mandate at Head Start preschools, granting a preliminary injunction for the 24 states, including Louisiana, involved in the lawsuit.
The mandate was set to begin on Jan. 31. In his ruling, U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty said that the injunction will remain in effect until the case is settled.
“This issue will certainly be decided by a higher court than this one,” Doughty wrote. “This issue is important. The separation of powers has never been so thin.
“Because the Plaintiff States have satisfied all four elements required for a P.I. to issue, a P.I. (preliminary injunction) should issue against the Agency Defendants enjoining and restraining the Agency Defendants from implementing the Head Start Mandate.”
Defendants in the lawsuit included the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Administration for Children and Families, which were attempting to make toddlers wear masks and require staff and volunteers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Jan. 31.
“This latest attempt by the Biden administration to centrally plan the daily lives of Americans in the name of mitigating COVID-19 is perhaps the most absurd so far,” Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said. “The federal government simply has no legal authority to order two-year-olds to wear masks all day at preschool.”
Along with Louisiana, states involved in the suit where the mandate will now be blocked are: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia and Wyoming.
“This is another victory for the rule of law,” South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson said. “Yet another court has said no to this abuse of power and executive overreach. These mandates are garbage and we will continue to stand for the rule of law.”
The lawsuit claims a mandate related to Head Start is beyond the authority of the Executive Branch and is against the law, violating the Administrative Procedure Act’s (APA) Notice-and-Comment Requirement, the Congressional Review Act, the Nondelegation Doctrine, the Tenth Amendment, the Anti-Commandeering Doctrine, the Spending Clause and the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act of 1999.
“Once again the federal executive branch has overstepped its legal authority to make laws and once again a federal court has agreed ... that such overreach is unconstitutional and should be stopped,” said Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall. “In a rare New Year’s Day order, the Western District Court of Louisiana enjoined the Biden administration from enforcing its vaccine mandate for Head Start workers and its mask mandate for toddlers.
“The order affects 24 states ... which brought suit against the mandate. This victory will help ensure that numerous Head Start programs will continue to operate rather than have to fire teachers and cut back services to children. And this win will forestall the nonsensical and damaging practice of forcing masks on 2-year-olds.”

La. COVID cases reach new multi-day record after holidays

Louisiana health officials have reported the largest multi-day increase in coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, as the highly-infectious omicron variant continued to spread following holiday gatherings and as many of the state’s schoolchildren returned to classrooms.
On Monday, the Louisiana Department of Health said it had logged 24,433 new cases since Thursday, or an average of 6,108 per day over the four-day period. The only days with higher one-day totals since the start of the pandemic were on Wednesday and Thursday of last week.
The previous multi-day record was a three-day period during the Delta wave of the pandemic August 7 to 9, when there were a total of 12,227 cases, or about 4,075 per day.
Hospitalizations have quadrupled over the last month, with a total of 1,106 people hospitalized and 50 in need of a ventilator as of Monday.
The number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 remains well below the peak of the Delta wave this summer, and many of those patients are unvaccinated, health care workers said. Still, doctors and other health care workers are watching wearily as more patients arrive for treatment.
Children’s Hospital in New Orleans, which treats kids from across the Gulf South, had 14 children hospitalized with COVID-19 on Monday. Just a few weeks ago, it was typical for Children’s to have between zero and two COVID patients at any given time
Recent data from South Africa and other countries suggest that the Omicron variant may result in milder infections than the Delta variant and earlier versions of the virus. But the infectiousness of the newer variant, which in early studies appears to be potentially many times greater than Delta, could still cause high numbers of hospitalizations, he said.
Fewer than one in four Louisiana kids ages 5 to 17 are vaccinated for COVID-19. Children under 5 are not yet eligible for the vaccine.
Many families traveled or celebrated with larger groups over the holidays, and with children heading back to school this week, cases could continue to surge higher, Kline said.
“I think that will catalyze the epidemic and make matters worse,” said Kline of the holiday gatherings. “And then you put them all together in the classroom, with or without masks, and I just don’t see how this ends well.”
Like many other times during the pandemic, hospitals are short-staffed. Children’s Hospital has over 170 employees out – nearly 10% of the staff – because they’re in quarantine for COVID infections themselves.
At Our Lady of the Lake in Baton Rouge, the state’s largest standalone hospital, 105 patients were hospitalized with COVID Monday, said Dr. Katie Taylor, medical director of infectious diseases at the hospital.
Of those, she estimated about one-third are incidental cases — people who come into the hospital for another reason and happen to test positive. The remaining two-thirds of patients require admission for COVID-19. About half of those people are vaccinated and go home within 48 hours. The rest have a longer stay, said Taylor.
“We’re increasing at a more rapid rate than we did with Delta,” said Taylor. “Depending on how many people in total get COVID, we may reach the same number of total patients in the hospital.”
During Delta, hospitalizations were three times current levels at their peak, but Omicron is ripping through the population at a faster rate. Nearly 63,000 cases have been confirmed in Louisiana over the last three weeks. The Delta wave produced around 25,000 cases over three weeks during a comparable period in that wave of the virus.
About one in five people who took a test over the last week have been positive for the coronavirus, according to state data, which does not include at-home tests.
Taylor said that staff at Our Lady of the Lake have planned for a six-week surge due to Omicron. She said a smaller proportion of infected people will likely experience a serious illness than during Delta, but it’s already clear that omicron will infect far more people.
“If you look at the numbers for the surges, the first looks like a hill,” said Taylor. “And the next few surges look like little molehills and then Delta was a huge, mountainous spike. And that’s really the only one we have to compare to for the number of cases.”

A number of new La. laws went into effect Jan. 1

When the clock struck midnight and Louisiana rang in the new year, dozens of new laws took effect in the state, including a broad expansion of the state’s medical marijuana program, new polling place regulations, expanded access to maternal care in rural communities and limitations on how long prosecutors can hold people in pretrial detention without charging them for a crime.
Of the hundreds of new laws passed by the legislature this spring, only a couple dozen took effect Jan.1. Louisiana laws have an automatic start date of Aug. 1 after they are enacted unless otherwise specified.
Some of the highlights of those that took effect Saturday include:
Medical Marijuana
Starting Saturday, Louisiana medical marijuana dispensaries are allowed to distribute raw, smokable cannabis to patients with a doctor’s recommendation. Up to this point, only processed tinctures, oils, and edible gummies have been allowed.
Act 424 allows patients to purchase up to two-and-a-half ounces of the cannabis flower from dispensaries every two weeks.
Proponents of the change, including Rep. Tanner Magee, R-Houma, who sponsored the bill, said patients in the state overwhelmingly prefer the raw form of the drug, which is far cheaper than the processed products previously available.
Louisiana has rapidly expanded its medical marijuana program since legalizing the drug for therapeutic use in 2015. Lawmakers recently expanded the medical marijuana program to allow any doctor to grant patients access to the drug, instead of limiting the prescribing privilege to a small list of specialty providers.
Magee and others say the changes help Louisiana’s booming medical marijuana industry keep pace with neighboring states who were slower to legalize the practice but are in the process of standing up programs with a laxer regulatory framework.
Voting
Seven laws taking effect on Saturday pertain to voting. Most of the new laws are minor regulatory additions to the state’s election laws, unlike many of the voting restrictions passed in other states.
Act 12 and Act 16 impose new training requirements of parish elections supervisors and new registrars of voters.
Act 397 allows children up to the age of 18 to accompany their parents into the voting booth. Previously law only allowed pre-teens and younger children into the booth.
Act 364 expedites the process for removing deceased persons from the voter rolls and empowers the Secretary of State’s office to search obituaries for people who need to have their voter registration cancelled.
Act 13 deals with people conducting exit polling outside voting locations and prohibits them from being within 600 feet of the entrance to the polling place.
Act 22 extends the maximum amount of time a person may spend in the voting booth from three minutes to six and allows poll workers to provide even more time if there are lengthy constitutional amendments or propositions on the ballot.
Pre-trial Detention
Act 252 by Rep. Ted James, D-Baton Rouge, shortened the amount of time prosecutors can hold people in pre-trial detention before formally charging that person with a misdemeanor from 45 days to 30 days.
Louisiana is an extreme outlier for allowing prosecutors to hold people in jail for such lengthy periods without filing formal charges against them.
Around the country the typical deadline to file criminal charges is 72 hours. In Louisiana, prosecutors now have 30 days to file misdemeanor charges, 60 days to file most felony charges, and up to 120 days to charge someone with a capital offense like first-degree murder, second-degree murder or aggravated rape.
The original version of the legislation James proposed last spring would have reduced those amounts to five days for most felonies and misdemeanors and 30 days for capital offenses.
The legislation was watered down after the Louisiana Association of District Attorneys opposed the bill saying that was too tight a time frame for them to complete their preliminary investigations and file formal charges.
Maternal Care
Act 182 by Rep. Matthew Willard, D-New Orleans, sets up new regulations for midwives and doulas in hopes of expanding expecting mothers’ access to maternal care and childbirth services, especially in underserved communities where hospital birthing centers are few and far between.
The law requires health insurance providers to treat midwives like physicians and pay for their services as such.
The law also establishes a doula registry board and sets up a framework for doulas to apply to receive reimbursement from health insurance providers.

La. wins publication’s Silver Shovel award

Area Development magazine has recognized Louisiana for one of the nation’s best economic development performances in the past year by presenting the state with a 2021 Silver Shovel Award.
The 2021 Gold & Silver Shovel Awards honor states that create the most significant impact from 10 leading investment and job creation projects during 2020.

CenterPoint Energy offers tips to stay safe, warm

Though warmer weather is on the horizon for the next few days, Louisiana will be experiencing cold temperatures again this ...

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Acadian honors SW La. regional Medics of Year

Each year, Acadian Ambulance recognizes its exceptional medics for their tireless work ethic and dedication.
All finalists are known as outstanding paramedics and EMTs who display exemplary attitudes and provide excellent patient care, and are nominated by their peers.
The top winners are selected by a company-wide committee.
Acadian Ambulance honored the medics and celebrated its 50th anniversary in a virtual event in November. The keynote address was presented by Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards.
Paramedic Laina Vincent and EMT Chris Broussard represent the company’s Southwest Louisiana service area and were finalists for the top honors. The service area encompasses Calcasieu, Jeff Davis and Acadia parishes.
Vincent is a native of Kaplan. She has worked in ground operations in Southwest Louisiana and as a remote paramedic for SMS. She recently became a flight paramedic for Acadian Air Med.
Vincent has a remarkable work ethic and exemplary paramedic skills, and is respected by her peers for her positive attitude and leadership. Her meticulous attention to detail is evident in her great patient care.
She inspires others around her to want to do better, leads by example and challenges her colleagues to always do the right thing.
Broussard is a native of Sulphur. He has established himself as a courteous, compassionate and professional patient care provider. He has garnered the respect of the management team, his peers and our customers through his strong work ethic and positive attitude.
As a field training officer, Broussard often receives compliments from new employees on how thorough, patient and professional he treated them during the orientation/ride time process.
Broussard is a hard worker with a great attitude and is always willing to pitch in and help when asked.
Acadian Ambulance is one of the largest ambulance services in the nation, offering emergency and non-emergency transportation to areas in Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi and Tennessee.
They are employee-owned and accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Ambulance Services.

Rayne COVID infusion site temporarily on hold

RAYNE - Announcment has been made that the monoclonal infusion clinic for treating COVID-19 at the Rayne Civic Ballroom is ...

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Parents wonder if son’s friendship may be more

DEAR ABBY: My preteen son is friends with a boy I don’t quite approve of, but I understand that sometimes bad decisions lead to future wisdom. When I can, I allow the friend to come to our house to hang out with my son because this friend allegedly has a difficult home life.
During this last visit, I noticed them hanging out a little physically closer Ovwe ththan usual. They shared the same recliner to play video games, talked to each other using gamer tags and the like, and had what I assume were numerous inside jokes.
My husband and I would never belittle, degrade or denounce our children for being gay. We know we’re from a bygone era, and we do not assume our particular values are held by our children. We have discussed it and know how to approach it from our perspective if our son announces his orientation. I’m not even certain my perception of his closeness with his friend is accurate.
My husband is more worldly than I am, and he says this kind of behavior is not unusual in the EU. Neither of us wants to address this ahead of anything occurring. We will love our son regardless and support him throughout our lives. I don’t want to make him feel singled out by what may be usual pubescent behavior. My husband and I are in our 30s/40s. We live in an extremely rural area, and this is my son’s only real friend. Any insight would be appreciated. – WONDERING ON THE FARM

DEAR WONDERING: You may be jumping to conclusions unnecessarily. Sitting close to play video games and sharing inside jokes with a best friend are not necessarily signs of being gay. It is what best friends that age do.
Whatever your boy’s sexual orientation may be, you say you will love and support him regardless, so this shouldn’t be a problem. His sexual orientation will reveal itself in its own time.

DEAR ABBY: Please help me figure out whether I’ve made a major mistake. I’ve been dating this man, “Frank,” for six months. He has another woman in his life that he told me he’s only a caregiver for, but then I learned he has been taking her to the lake and out to dinner.
After that, I found out she used to be a prostitute and lived with him for a few weeks and that he has been offered sex by her. He went into a panic when she was in the hospital and he didn’t know where she was. He swears up and down that it’s me he loves, not her. Help, please. – COMPETING IN GEORGIA

DEAR COMPETING: Do some digging. Who is the source of the information you are being given? Is that person a reliable source, or could there be an ulterior motive? For a caregiver to “go into a panic” if his patient disappears would not be unusual.
And, while it’s possible that he is driving to the lake and going out to dinner in his role as a caregiver, if the person paying the tab is him, then it’s a date, and he hasn’t been truthful with you. I would be interested in what you find out. Please write back and let me know.

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