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Louisiana lawmakers might revise rejected constitutional amendment on taxes

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lailluminator.com – Julie O’Donoghue – 2025-04-01 07:16:00

by Julie O’Donoghue, Louisiana Illuminator
April 1, 2025

Louisiana legislators might put portions of a constitutional amendment overhauling state budget and tax policies back on the ballot, even after voters overwhelmingly rejected the wide-ranging proposal in Saturday’s election. 

On Monday, Rep. Julie Emerson, R-Carencro, said she was already working on drafts of new constitutional amendments that would make some of the same budget and tax changes in the failed Amendment 2 from Saturday. 

“I think you will definitely see some of this reborn in the session,” Emerson said in an interview, later adding, “I think it is just how we package it, and how many instruments we have with it,”

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The legislators’ annual lawmaking session starts April 14, and any proposed amendments to be considered need to be filed quickly. The deadline to request legislative staff to write up new amendment legislation is noon Tuesday.

“We are all scrambling to get constitutional amendments redrafted again,” Emerson said. 

Yet asking the public to reconsider portions of the budget and tax proposal might also be a gamble. Despite a heavy push from Gov. Jeff Landry and some state legislators to approve it, 65% of voters rejected Amendment 2

In its original form, the proposal would have made dozens of changes to Louisiana’s tax and spending policies, including capping the maximum potential state income tax rate at a lower level and placing new constraints on legislators’ ability to increase state spending.

It would also have made it more difficult for lawmakers to enact new tax breaks while giving them more state money to spend by diverting hundreds of millions of dollars from savings accounts to the state general fund, where the dollars can be used more freely. 

Also, public school teachers and school support staff were expected to see pay stipends of $2,000 and $1,000, respectively, they’ve received for the past two years become permanent if the amendment passed. Seniors 65 and over would have seen their standard state income tax deduction double in 2026. 

Lawmakers had overwhelmingly voted to put Amendment 2, sponsored by Emerson, on the ballot for voters. Out of 144 lawmakers in the Senate and House, only 11 voted against the measure during a special legislative session devoted to tax policy last November.

But neither Landry nor legislators embarked on campaigns to educate the public about the amendment. Efforts to get out the vote in support of the initiative until the beginning of March, about two weeks before early voting started. 

Voters balked at the length and complexity of the proposal, which had run 115 pages as a piece of legislation. Others didn’t feel comfortable voting on one amendment with so many changes that were unrelated to one another.

“It was too much. It was complicated and it didn’t give people options,” said Sen. Franklin Foil, R-Baton Rouge, who had helped Emerson write the Amendment 2 legislation. 

Emerson said items she would like to put before the voters again include the larger income tax deduction for seniors 65 and older as well as the rerouting of revenue from state savings accounts to its general fund. Had Amendment 2 passed, the Landry administration wanted to use the money to pay for further cuts to the state income tax rate in the upcoming session.

Lawmakers lowered income taxes for most Louisiana residents just a few months ago, when they adopted a 3% flat income tax in exchange for a higher sales tax. Landry and Republican lawmakers want to eventually eliminate the income tax altogether but need another steady source of state funding to do so.

Foil said he would also like to look at changes that could be made to local property taxes on business inventory. 

Amendment 2 would have triggered financial incentives for parish officials to phase out or lessen their inventory taxes. Conservative lawmakers have long wanted to get rid of the tax, which costs the state government money because it partially reimburses businesses for the expense through a state tax credit.

Changes to the inventory tax wouldn’t necessarily require a constitutional amendment and could be made through a regular statute that does not require voter approval, Foil said.

“That’s something we are having conversations about this week, what we might still be able to address,” Foil said. 

What remains unclear is what will happen with teacher compensation. 

The strategy for making the existing teacher and school support stipends a part of their permanent pay involved draining existing state education trust funds and using the money to pay down retirement system debt.

Even if another constitutional amendment including this strategy was proposed, it wouldn’t go before voters before lawmakers have to address teacher salaries for next year. 

That means that teachers and school staff risk seeing their pay cut for the academic year that starts July 1 unless Landry and legislators move money around to keep the extra $2,000 and $1,000 in place for them.

Rep. Jack McFarland, R-Jonesboro, said lawmakers will have to decide whether they want to cut other programs and services to keep teachers and school support staff pay whole. The stipends cost approximately $200 million annually.

“If [lawmakers’] priorities are the teachers’ stipends, then I’m going to have to know it,” said McFarland, who oversees the building of the budget as the House Appropriations Committee chairman. 

Emerson and other lawmakers did not say when they would put constitutional amendments on the ballot again. There are no major statewide elections scheduled for the rest of the year, and scheduling another would cost millions of dollars.

Another round of constitutional amendments concerning budget and taxes might face less organized opposition. At least part of the pushback to Amendment 2 was fueled by concern for Amendment 3, a measure to weaken juvenile justice protections.

Amendment 3, which failed on a 66-34 vote split, drew ire from national anti-incarceration groups, resulting in resources for an opposition campaign to Amendment 2 as well. If a similar hot-button measure isn’t on a future ballot, turnout to vote against tax and budget proposals might not be as high.

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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 lawmakers might revise rejected constitutional amendment on taxes appeared first on lailluminator.com

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Mandeville man facing multiple allegations involving drugs, cruelty to juveniles

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wgno.com – Raeven Poole – 2025-08-08 12:30:00

SUMMARY: On August 1, 21-year-old Lane Roberts was arrested at a Mandeville carwash by St. Tammany Parish deputies for possession of over two pounds of marijuana, more than 100 THC vapes and edibles, with his 6-year-old sibling present. A subsequent home search uncovered a large quantity of illegal drugs—including marijuana, THC concentrates, and edibles—$81,249 in suspected drug proceeds, drug paraphernalia, and a Glock 9mm pistol. Roberts faces multiple felony charges including attempted distribution of Schedule I substances, possession with intent to distribute various THC products, illegal carrying of a weapon, cruelty to juveniles, and possession of drug paraphernalia.

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A deep dive into school construction conflicts

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thecurrentla.com – Leslie Turk – 2025-08-08 09:37:00

SUMMARY: Since early 2025, The Current has investigated Lafayette Parish School System’s (LPSS) construction projects and potential conflicts of interest involving top officials and contractors. Audit findings revealed possible public bid law violations, prompting scrutiny of procurement and oversight. Key issues include LPSS hiring an unlicensed oilfield contractor linked to the system’s maintenance manager, a criminal forgery investigation involving LPSS employees, two construction department staff placed on leave, and allegations against maintenance manager John Young for misusing school vehicles and having ties to a vendor, Bosco Oilfield Services. The investigation highlights systemic governance and ethical concerns within LPSS construction operations.

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News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Meet Lucy, Chuck, Willie & Margaret — aka lovebugs.

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www.youtube.com – WWLTV – 2025-08-06 20:57:45

SUMMARY: Frank Davis humorously introduces lovebugs—named Lucy, Chuck, Willie, and Margaret—as pesky insects common twice yearly in his region, especially attracted to white surfaces. They swarm in spring and fall, covering cars with dead bugs, often leading to clogged radiators and damaged paint. Lovebugs don’t fly at night and are less likely to accumulate if you drive slowly. Each female lays about 350 eggs, and they remember and return to familiar spots yearly. Despite local myths about genetic engineering, they’re native and spreading. The best advice: regularly wash cars to quickly remove them and protect paint.

Meet Lucy, Chuck, Willie & Margaret — aka lovebugs.
Frank Davis warned us: drive fast, and your car might change colors

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