New tourism director shares vision
Jennings native Carter Prejean was recently named Jeff Davis Parish Director of Tourism. The Tourism Commission Board, with Visit Jeff Davis, announced their excitement welcoming Prejean as the new director.
Jennings native Carter Prejean was recently named Jeff Davis Parish Director of Tourism. The Tourism Commission Board, with Visit Jeff Davis, announced their excitement welcoming Prejean as the new director.
The Jennings City Council was asked to accept bids for chlorine gas and grey limestone on Tuesday but hit a snag with no bids received for one item and a late bid for the other.
HATHAWAY – Hathaway High School junior Gabi Henry was recently named the Louisiana District Optimist Club essay contest winner.
(The Center Square) — Louisiana legislators pondered more than a dozen bills attempting to address the state's insurance crisis.
(The Center Square) — Louisiana lawmakers have rejected two separate proposals that would have imposed new taxes on carbon capture and sequestration operators, stalling efforts to generate local revenue from the growing industry.
(The Center Square) — A bill that would allow drivers in Louisiana to apply darker tint to the front side windows of their vehicles is moving forward in the Legislature.
Due to a mix-up in shared information, it stated in the May 14 edition of Jennings Daily News that Hathaway High School seniors Andrew Nguyen and Gracee LaVergne received $250 from the American Legion Post 19 Award in the recent graduation story. The graduates were actually awarded $500 each from Post 19 Legionnaire Sam Doucet.
Eighteen-year-old Kameron Kratzer, a senior at Jennings High School, was set to graduate tonight but was seriously injured in an ATV accident on Saturday evening. The ATV Kratzer was riding flipped and landed on him. He was first taken to Ochsner American Legion Hospital in Jennings and then airlifted to Ochsner Lafayette General Medical Center for emergency surgery after his body became septic from internal injuries.
Louisiana is at a tipping point. With electricity bills soaring and demand for power generation and transmission expected to reach unprecedented levels in the coming years, our largest monopoly utility is seeking approval to spend billions on new infrastructure projects to replace aging fleets and meet escalating electricity needs. The Louisiana Public Service Commission (LPSC) now faces a defining choice: continue supporting a monopolistic system that allows big monopolies to finance projects on the backs of ratepayers or embrace Customer-Centered Options that enable private investment in power generation and allow investors – not consumers – to pay for much-needed energy infrastructure.
“The one who gets wisdom loves life; the one who cherishes understanding will soon prosper.”
PO Box 910 | 238 Market Street | Jennings, LA 70546 | 337.824.3011
PRINT ISSN 3069-4949
ONLINE ISSN 3069-4957