News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Drug-resistant fungus Candida auris reported in these 17 states, including Louisiana
SUMMARY: Candida auris, a drug-resistant fungus, is under close monitoring as its spread continues to rise. Identified in the U.S. less than a decade ago, cases have increased annually. In 2025, 1,052 cases have been reported, with Texas leading at 241 cases. The fungus, resistant to many antifungal drugs, poses an urgent threat, especially in healthcare settings. It primarily affects vulnerable patients with medical devices. Candida auris can survive on surfaces and spread, making it difficult to control. While infection rates are concerning, 30-60% of affected individuals, often with underlying health issues, may not survive.
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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Louisiana might pay out overlapping business incentives for a decade or more
by Greg LaRose, Louisiana Illuminator
May 11, 2025
Economic development officials in Louisiana want to place less emphasis on the number of new jobs major projects bring to the state and more on what they pay employees.
Their strategy calls for a new business incentive program to replace a popular existing one, but it could be a decade or longer before the state stops doling out both perks – potentially costing the public hundreds of millions of dollars annually.
Last month, the House Committee on Commerce approved House Bill 507, by Rep. Julie Emerson, R-Carencro, which would create the Louisiana High Impact Job Program. It hopes to entice companies that offer jobs with above-average pay in the parish where they intend to invest. In return, the state will award the business a grant that will cover a portion of that salary – the more the company pays new hires, the higher the grant.
Companies providing jobs that pay 125% of the parish average will receive a grant to cover 18% of each salary. The award goes up to 22% for salaries at 150% of the local level.
For what the bill deems “distressed areas,” employers would have to clear lower hurdles. Their businesses would receive an 8% grant for salaries at 110% the average.
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There are no limits in the bill on the number of new jobs a company can add to claim the benefit, though the bill gives state officials the right to update the program’s rules. There is a ceiling of $200,000 per year per job and $125 million in annual grant awards for the entire program.
Employers must offer health insurance coverage to qualify for a High Impact Jobs grant, and the new hires have to be full-time direct employees or work for a subsidiary named in the grant contract with the state.
The bill allows remote jobs to qualify for the incentive, though they must be Louisiana “residents” as defined under state tax law.
Money for the grants will come from state corporate income and franchise taxes, according to the bill, though lawmakers eliminated the franchise tax last year, effective Jan. 1, 2026.
Legislative calculations attached to Emerson’s proposal peg the High Impact Job Program’s average cost to the state at $69.4 million annually over the next five years.
Louisiana Economic Development Secretary Susan Bourgeois, who joined Emerson to present her bill to the committee, acknowledged the High Impact Job Program would overlap the incentive it’s intended to replace – the Quality Jobs program – for years to come. The Quality Jobs incentive gives companies a 6% rebate on their payroll expenses for 10 years. It also comes with either a state sales tax break on money the business spends on its job-creating project or a 1.5% rebate for facility expenses.
These project investment elements are not part of the High Impact incentive, which would be offered for a three-year period with an opportunity to renew for two more years. That would make it half the length of the 10-year Quality Jobs incentive.
“Quality Jobs was really more about the number of jobs, where this [High Impact] program is far more about the wages for the jobs,” Bourgeois said in an interview after the bill was approved.
The secretary told lawmakers the High Impact Job Program will also be open to small local businesses, as long as they create jobs with salaries above the parish average.
Emerson’s bill, which gives the program a 10-year lifespan, goes next to the House Appropriations Committee for its financial impact on the state to be considered.
Businesses can swap incentives, but not double-dip
As part of their tax and budget special session last fall, legislators agreed to let multiple business incentives lapse once their statutory life expires. That deadline is the end of next month for most of the programs eliminated. This was paired with a package of business tax reductions, including a lower, flat corporate income tax rate and the end of a state franchise tax that its detractors called an unwarranted fee to do business in Louisiana.
All told, lawmakers agreed to end eight business incentive programs last year, effective June 30, which will remove $180 million to $225 million in state obligations from the state budget, according to Bourgeois.
Jan Moller with Invest in Louisiana, a progressive fiscal policy watchdog group, told the Illuminator he expected the business-friendly legislature would eventually restore some of the incentives it targeted last year.
“I’m not surprised that it happened,” Moller said. “I’m surprised that it’s happening four months after the ink dried on that tax bill.”
Although Quality Jobs was among the incentive programs lawmakers eliminated, the state will continue to accept applications until its June 30 sunset date. Its actual payroll rebates aren’t issued until a qualifying company adds new jobs, and those hires can be made years after the incentive is approved. Only then does the 10-year clock on the incentive period start.
For projects such as the Meta data center in northeast Louisiana, which isn’t expected to start hiring for another five years, the state could still be making good on its Quality Jobs promises in 2040, Bourgeois confirmed.
Quality Jobs recipients will be given the option to switch over to the High Impact program, but they won’t be able to double up on incentives, the secretary said.
“If they have an existing [Quality Jobs] contract, then they can live out that contract,” Bourgeois said. “They can also choose to look at it and see if they would rather do it differently.”
Paperwork the Illuminator obtained through a public records request with Louisiana Economic Development shows 16 projects have applied for Quality Jobs rebates in 2025 as of the end of April. All told, they would create more than 1,500 direct jobs with a combined payroll of nearly $167 million once all new hires are made.
Ileana Ledet, LED’s chief economic competitiveness officer, told lawmakers the High Impact Job Program is modeled after similar incentive programs in Georgia, North Carolina and Texas that are considered successful.
“We’re looking at best practices and making our recommendations based on what other states are doing well in incentivizing those higher-wage jobs,” Ledet said.
Moving the wage needle
Moller questions whether the High Impact Jobs Program will live up to its name. By linking the incentive to what’s already a below-average parish salary, companies won’t be required to move the needle significantly on living wages in his opinion, he said.
“We are underwriting payroll of companies that we like, and they don’t even have to be particularly great jobs,” Moller said. “They just have to pay a little bit above average.”
The most recent figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show average weekly wages in Louisiana during the first quarter of 2024 were $1,195, ranking 39th in the nation. The rate was lower than the state average in 47 out of 64 parishes, with Catahoula at the bottom with an average weekly wage of $710.
The legislation gives Louisiana Economic Development the authority to carve out areas within a parish and declare them “distressed.” This is what’s planned for the Hyundai steel mill in Donaldsonville, Bourgeois said, where salaries significantly trail the Ascension Parish average. The typical weekly pay in Donaldsonville is $836, while the parish rate is $1,449, according to federal data.
Emma Wagner, LED’s communications director, said rules are still being hammered out to define what makes an area distressed. She expects they will include criteria such as the unemployment rate and whether the area qualifies for federal tax breaks targeting low-income communities.
Moller acknowledged his outlook for the High Impact Jobs Program is shaded by the efficacy of the Quality Jobs incentive, which the Legislative Auditor determined in a 2020 report was a net loss for the state. That review also determined only a third of Quality Jobs investment spending went to Louisiana companies, and that the majority of household income those jobs created would have likely happened without the rebate program.
“These kinds of subsidies end up becoming just lagniappe, but not the thing that brings a company into Louisiana,” Moller said.
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Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.
The post Louisiana might pay out overlapping business incentives for a decade or more appeared first on lailluminator.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
The content presents a detailed discussion of a new state business incentive program aimed at encouraging higher-wage jobs in Louisiana. It highlights legislative efforts led by a Republican lawmaker and includes perspectives emphasizing economic development, corporate tax incentives, and business-friendly policies such as reducing and restructuring tax burdens. Although it offers some critical viewpoints from progressive watchdogs and acknowledges concerns about the effectiveness of subsidies, the overall framing supports pro-business and market-driven strategies, marking it as center-right in political bias.
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Saints quarterback Derek Carr retiring
SUMMARY: New Orleans Saints quarterback Derek Carr announced his retirement from the NFL due to a severe right shoulder injury, including a labral tear and significant rotator cuff degeneration. After consulting with the Saints and his wife, Carr decided retirement was the best option, as surgery would have sidelined him for the entire 2025 season with no guarantee of full recovery. Carr joined the Saints in 2023 with a $150 million contract but faced multiple injuries over two years, missing several games in 2024. Over 27 games, he threw 40 touchdowns and 6,023 yards. The Saints will now rely on their young quarterbacks.
The post Saints quarterback Derek Carr retiring appeared first on wgno.com
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Alleged Medicaid fraudster bought Cadillac, had pool installed, Louisiana attorney general says
by Greg LaRose, Louisiana Illuminator
May 10, 2025
An Ascension Parish woman has been charged with three felonies for allegedly falsifying applications for Medicaid and food assistance. She reportedly collected more than $125,000 through the fraud scheme and used the money for luxury purchases, according to Attorney General Liz Murrill.
Priscilla Jackson, 40, of Prairieville was arrested Thursday and booked into East Baton Rouge Parish Jail. The Louisiana Bureau of Investigation started a probe in November 2022 after the agency was forwarded fraud allegations from the Louisiana Department of Health.
An internal LDH audit discovered Jackson had underreported her household income, didn’t disclose she was married and failed to include financial support she received from her husband on her applications for Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits from the state Department of Children and Family Services, the attorney general’s office said.
The money Jackson received from the fraudulent applications totaled more than $107,000 from the health department and $19,665 from DCFS, according to Murrill’s office.
Arrest records the attorney general referenced indicate Jackson’s household bought a Cadillac Escalade for more than $110,000 and paid for a $70,000 pool installation during the time she allegedly obtained the benefits through fraud. Jackson and her children did not qualify for Medicaid from 2018-25, the records also noted.
The felony charges against Jackson include one count each of unauthorized use of SNAP benefits, theft over $25,000 and government benefits fraud.
There was no response to messages sent to two phone numbers listed under Jackson’s address.
Jackson’s bond was set at $100,000. Information was not immediately available on whether she had posted bail.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.
The post Alleged Medicaid fraudster bought Cadillac, had pool installed, Louisiana attorney general says appeared first on lailluminator.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content focuses on the issue of Medicaid and food assistance fraud, highlighting an individual accused of falsifying applications to receive benefits improperly. The tone centers on accountability and the misuse of government aid, themes that are often emphasized in center-right or conservative viewpoints which stress the importance of preventing fraud and ensuring that welfare programs are not abused. The article does not delve into broader social or systemic critiques, keeping the narrative on the legal and financial consequences for the individual involved.
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