An assessment by the Louisiana public defender board obtained by the Guardian warns that by July of 2017, as many as 33 of the state’s 42 districts are likely to be so short of cash they will be forced to stop representing clients. Eleven of those distric
Louisiana is historically and viciously corrupt. Their prison system is not just about incarcerating offenders it's also about providing very profitable slave labor both to the state on its massive 31,000 acre prison farm and to private contractors who buy prison labor. The system is set up to incentivize incarceration for minor offenses and sometimes no offense at all.
#2 since 2005 the previous economic growth rate that wasn't all so stellar fell flat after Katrina. There's been zero real economic growth since 2005 and if you factor inflation into the mix then it's been about a 30% economic recession.
So an effectively shrinking tax base coupled with a prison system that depends on a set prison population. Something's going to break.
Solution: End the slave labor system and furlough or flat out release anyone who is in prison for a minor offense.
End the incentives to incarcerate people and there will be less of a load on the public defenders.
Eh Bart, some us have called Louisiana, French Napoleonic Code Style lol. I had enough of it from the USCG/USMC Katrina response. Jindal had no easy task of what he inherited from the Democrat dingbats in the Gov Office. There the one's the F$cked UP!! and didn't heed USCG req warnings and they also prevented deployment of Marines and Naval assets Forward before landfall. This isn't a first time for the State of LA under a Democrat Gov and sadly wont be a last. I agree with Bart.
Oh yeah,Louisiana was just ruled by a 2 term Republican governor and Republican House and Senate. But it's the democrats fault.
Out of Office, Jindal loomd over Louisiana budget crisis BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Bobby Jindal left the governor's office nearly two months ago, but his legacy permeates a special legislative session aimed at digging Louisiana out of deep financial troubles.
Louisiana's worst budget crisis in nearly 30 years is threatening public colleges with cuts that could shutter campuses mid-semester and putting health care services for the poor and disabled at risk of elimination.
State leaders blame the Republican former governor for creating — and hiding — many of those woes.
Jindal, burnishing his fiscal conservative credentials for his failed presidential campaign, refused to hike taxes or approve any action that even resembled a tax hike, including trimming expensive business tax credits, even amid an economic downturn. So, TV's bearded men of "Duck Dynasty" got millions in film tax credit subsidies, while tuition skyrocketed for college students at campuses struggling with deep state financing cuts.
Criticism of Jindal is bipartisan and widespread, with irritated lawmakers left sifting through the highly-unpopular choices of raising taxes or taking a hatchet to higher education and government services. They're considering enacting tax bills Jindal vetoed and stripping a fake tax credit created to protect Jindal's anti-tax record.
Legislators are hearing that cuts described by the Jindal administration as "efficiencies" actually went much deeper, striking at services. They've learned about borrowing practices that increased state debts and about threats to Louisiana's cash flow because it spent down reserves.
"We've been living in a fictional world for the last eight years," said Jay Dardenne, a Republican who served as lieutenant governor under Jindal and is now chief financial adviser to Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat who inherited the problems.
Edwards called the special session to try to stabilize Louisiana's budget. He also suggested he is revealing the true depth of the problems Jindal hid.
View galleryFILE - In this June 3, 2010 file photo, Louisiana Gov. … FILE - In this June 3, 2010 file photo, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal stands with an oiled Brown Pelic … "It's time for fiscal responsibility in this state. No more smoke and mirrors," Edwards said.
The state has to close an estimated $900 million shortfall in its $25 billion budget by June 30, a gap that shrank as Edwards and lawmakers slashed spending and tapped into patchwork financing. Next year's shortfall tops $2 billion.
Negotiations continue between Edwards and the majority Republican legislature over tax hikes to fill the gaps. But there's little disagreement about the problems' origins.
Guarding his anti-tax record, Jindal balanced the budget with short-term fixes: selling state property and raiding savings accounts. As the assets disappeared or promised savings didn't pan out, budget gaps appeared. The oil price slump worsened the problems.
"The previous administration focused more on spending money that didn't exist, which is why we're in the situation we're in now," said House Appropriations Chairman Cameron Henry, a Republican.
Jindal and his former chief political adviser did not return calls for comment. But before he exited office, Jindal defended his financial management, saying he chose to grow the private sector rather than the government. He wanted even deeper cuts but faced legislative resistance, he said.
"I think the approach we took was absolutely right," Jindal said in December. "We held the line on taxes. We were willing to cut government."
View galleryFILE -In this Saturday, July 18, 2015 file photo, Republican … FILE -In this Saturday, July 18, 2015 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Louisiana Gov. … Lawmakers went along at the time, rather than buck Jindal in a state with a powerful governor who can retaliate by eliminating local construction projects and strip items from the budget with a line-item veto. No lawmakers defend Jindal now that he's gone, and some who acquiesced to the budgeting tactics now acknowledge their own culpability.
"We may have offered some critiques and some criticisms, but we went along with it anyway," said Senate Finance Chairman Eric LaFleur, a Democrat.
The budget instability prompted one national credit rating agency to downgrade Louisiana last month. State officials worry more blows could follow.
"You can't spend more taxpayer money than you take in for seven years in a row and not expect a downgrade to your credit rating," said Treasurer John Kennedy, a Republican.
Other expenses are surfacing.
Costs skyrocketed for outside attorneys Jindal used to defend his policies rather than government lawyers. A recent audit said Jindal's borrowing maneuvers to generate quick cash will cost Louisiana as much as $231 million over decades. Outsourcing programs that helped cut state payroll — a point Jindal touted in his campaign — have created problems.
"Privatization does not save us money. In some cases, it costs us money," Henry said.
With Jindal gone, lawmakers have started chipping away at his policies. The first bill to gain House passage was aimed squarely at him.
The measure, awaiting Senate approval, would scrap a much-maligned tax credit Jindal pushed ahead of his White House bid to comply with a no-tax pledge he made to anti-tax activist Grover Norquist's organization.
The complex credit didn't raise money or cut taxes. It just gave Jindal cover to say he kept his pledge. Lawmakers grudgingly passed it rather than risk steep cuts to colleges.
During the debate, the repeal's sponsor, Republican Rep. Chris Broadwater, was facetiously asked if Norquist had approved the new measure.
Broadwater pulled out a puppet of Grover, the Muppet, and replied to laughs and applause: "Grover has made an appearance and is OK with the repeal."
He shoved it into a paper bag when the repeal passed.
The crisis is part of the wider financial malaise of Louisiana that sees the state struggling under a $1.6bn budget shortfall.
In Ontario we'd be dancing in the street if our deficit was that low. I guess Ontario can keep an eye on Louisiana so we know what the future holds for us.
The crisis is part of the wider financial malaise of Louisiana that sees the state struggling under a $1.6bn budget shortfall.
In Ontario we'd be dancing in the street if our deficit was that low. I guess Ontario can keep an eye on Louisiana so we know what the future holds for us.
Future? The lack of funding for Legal Aid has been well documented for years.
Jindal was too busy over the previous eight years with doing things like attending anti-Obama Birther rallies and exorcisms to waste any of his time on trivial minutiae like the day to day running the state.
Good summary article here about what an absolute turd of a governor that cretin Jindal really was. Basically the state has been completely shattered on every service it's obligated to provide and may never recover from this disaster. Makes the Klein austerity years here in Alberta look responsible and far-seeing in comparison.
#1 with a bullet:
Louisiana is historically and viciously corrupt. Their prison system is not just about incarcerating offenders it's also about providing very profitable slave labor both to the state on its massive 31,000 acre prison farm and to private contractors who buy prison labor. The system is set up to incentivize incarceration for minor offenses and sometimes no offense at all.
#2 since 2005 the previous economic growth rate that wasn't all so stellar fell flat after Katrina. There's been zero real economic growth since 2005 and if you factor inflation into the mix then it's been about a 30% economic recession.
So an effectively shrinking tax base coupled with a prison system that depends on a set prison population. Something's going to break.
Solution: End the slave labor system and furlough or flat out release anyone who is in prison for a minor offense.
End the incentives to incarcerate people and there will be less of a load on the public defenders.
Memo to self: Stay the hell out of Louisiana.
Solution: End the slave labor system and furlough or flat out release anyone who is in prison for a minor offense.
I dunno, people could always try not being criminals, for a change.
Oh, right, it's not their fault, they did du nuffin.
I dunno, people could always try not being criminals, for a change.
Oh, right, it's not their fault, they did du nuffin.
Sure, because they're obviously guilty even if they didn't have proper representation in court. You can tell by the color of their skin.
Solution: End the slave labor system and furlough or flat out release anyone who is in prison for a minor offense.
I dunno, people could always try not being criminals, for a change.
Oh, right, it's not their fault, they did du nuffin.
How many nuffins did the dindu do before the dindu said he dindu nuffin?
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Bobby Jindal left the governor's office nearly two months ago, but his legacy permeates a special legislative session aimed at digging Louisiana out of deep financial troubles.
Louisiana's worst budget crisis in nearly 30 years is threatening public colleges with cuts that could shutter campuses mid-semester and putting health care services for the poor and disabled at risk of elimination.
State leaders blame the Republican former governor for creating — and hiding — many of those woes.
Jindal, burnishing his fiscal conservative credentials for his failed presidential campaign, refused to hike taxes or approve any action that even resembled a tax hike, including trimming expensive business tax credits, even amid an economic downturn. So, TV's bearded men of "Duck Dynasty" got millions in film tax credit subsidies, while tuition skyrocketed for college students at campuses struggling with deep state financing cuts.
Criticism of Jindal is bipartisan and widespread, with irritated lawmakers left sifting through the highly-unpopular choices of raising taxes or taking a hatchet to higher education and government services. They're considering enacting tax bills Jindal vetoed and stripping a fake tax credit created to protect Jindal's anti-tax record.
Legislators are hearing that cuts described by the Jindal administration as "efficiencies" actually went much deeper, striking at services. They've learned about borrowing practices that increased state debts and about threats to Louisiana's cash flow because it spent down reserves.
"We've been living in a fictional world for the last eight years," said Jay Dardenne, a Republican who served as lieutenant governor under Jindal and is now chief financial adviser to Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat who inherited the problems.
Edwards called the special session to try to stabilize Louisiana's budget. He also suggested he is revealing the true depth of the problems Jindal hid.
View galleryFILE - In this June 3, 2010 file photo, Louisiana Gov. …
FILE - In this June 3, 2010 file photo, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal stands with an oiled Brown Pelic …
"It's time for fiscal responsibility in this state. No more smoke and mirrors," Edwards said.
The state has to close an estimated $900 million shortfall in its $25 billion budget by June 30, a gap that shrank as Edwards and lawmakers slashed spending and tapped into patchwork financing. Next year's shortfall tops $2 billion.
Negotiations continue between Edwards and the majority Republican legislature over tax hikes to fill the gaps. But there's little disagreement about the problems' origins.
Guarding his anti-tax record, Jindal balanced the budget with short-term fixes: selling state property and raiding savings accounts. As the assets disappeared or promised savings didn't pan out, budget gaps appeared. The oil price slump worsened the problems.
"The previous administration focused more on spending money that didn't exist, which is why we're in the situation we're in now," said House Appropriations Chairman Cameron Henry, a Republican.
Jindal and his former chief political adviser did not return calls for comment. But before he exited office, Jindal defended his financial management, saying he chose to grow the private sector rather than the government. He wanted even deeper cuts but faced legislative resistance, he said.
"I think the approach we took was absolutely right," Jindal said in December. "We held the line on taxes. We were willing to cut government."
View galleryFILE -In this Saturday, July 18, 2015 file photo, Republican …
FILE -In this Saturday, July 18, 2015 file photo, Republican presidential candidate, Louisiana Gov. …
Lawmakers went along at the time, rather than buck Jindal in a state with a powerful governor who can retaliate by eliminating local construction projects and strip items from the budget with a line-item veto. No lawmakers defend Jindal now that he's gone, and some who acquiesced to the budgeting tactics now acknowledge their own culpability.
"We may have offered some critiques and some criticisms, but we went along with it anyway," said Senate Finance Chairman Eric LaFleur, a Democrat.
The budget instability prompted one national credit rating agency to downgrade Louisiana last month. State officials worry more blows could follow.
"You can't spend more taxpayer money than you take in for seven years in a row and not expect a downgrade to your credit rating," said Treasurer John Kennedy, a Republican.
Other expenses are surfacing.
Costs skyrocketed for outside attorneys Jindal used to defend his policies rather than government lawyers. A recent audit said Jindal's borrowing maneuvers to generate quick cash will cost Louisiana as much as $231 million over decades. Outsourcing programs that helped cut state payroll — a point Jindal touted in his campaign — have created problems.
"Privatization does not save us money. In some cases, it costs us money," Henry said.
With Jindal gone, lawmakers have started chipping away at his policies. The first bill to gain House passage was aimed squarely at him.
The measure, awaiting Senate approval, would scrap a much-maligned tax credit Jindal pushed ahead of his White House bid to comply with a no-tax pledge he made to anti-tax activist Grover Norquist's organization.
The complex credit didn't raise money or cut taxes. It just gave Jindal cover to say he kept his pledge. Lawmakers grudgingly passed it rather than risk steep cuts to colleges.
During the debate, the repeal's sponsor, Republican Rep. Chris Broadwater, was facetiously asked if Norquist had approved the new measure.
Broadwater pulled out a puppet of Grover, the Muppet, and replied to laughs and applause: "Grover has made an appearance and is OK with the repeal."
He shoved it into a paper bag when the repeal passed.
http://news.yahoo.com/office-jindal-loo ... 42444.html
Edit: fixed missing article. CKA is not always easy from my phone.
Oh yeah,Louisiana was just ruled by a 2 term Republican governor and Republican House and Senate. But it's the democrats fault.
Just like everything is still Bush's fault !
In Ontario we'd be dancing in the street if our deficit was that low. I guess Ontario can keep an eye on Louisiana so we know what the future holds for us.
In Ontario we'd be dancing in the street if our deficit was that low. I guess Ontario can keep an eye on Louisiana so we know what the future holds for us.
Future? The lack of funding for Legal Aid has been well documented for years.
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2015/07 ... rkers.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/ ... -1.2711881
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/represent ... -1.3375609
Solution: End the slave labor system and furlough or flat out release anyone who is in prison for a minor offense.
I dunno, people could always try not being criminals, for a change.
Oh, right, it's not their fault, they did du nuffin.
Too many of the people in Louisiana's prison system are innocent, it really isn't their fault, and they really didn't do anything.
http://www.ip-no.org/
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2016/0 ... et-crisis/