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  • Committee questions community services

    The economic slowdown is forcing state health officials to pull back on increases in the number of people with developmental disabilities who receive community services. Lawmakers made it clear at a Friday meeting of the Joint Legislative Committee on the Budget that they are unhappy with any delays. Read more…
  • Legislators visit Angola

    Sarah Chacko/Advocate staff photo

    Angola inmate Sidney Deloch, who is serving a life sentence for rape, tells legislators that Louisiana’s strict sentencing laws do not take into account people who can be rehabilitated. Deloch has become a minister at Angola.

  • Lawmakers visit prison

    Sarah Chacko/Advocate staff photo

    Angola State Prison warden Burl Cain, left, explains to WBRZ-TV reporter Mike Steele, center, and state Rep. Mert Smiley Jr., right, why using bunk beds in dorms to cut costs will not work long term. Friday, Nov. 20, 2009 at Angola State Penetentiary.

    Angola’s warden Burl Cain told a group of state legislators Friday that he has cut $12 million from his budget by double-bunking inmates, replacing some guards with cameras, and cutting overtime for the 24-7 operation of the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola. Read more…
  • Contracts now online

    Louisiana Division of Administration/

    Billions of taxpayers’ dollars spent on state government contracts can now be viewed online thanks to Friday’s launch of new data online. LaTrac, the online Louisiana Transparency and Accountability Portal, that launched in November 2008, now has a state con-tracts component added. The online contracts feature may be accessed though the main LaTrac Web site at www.latrac.la.gov or directly at www.latrac.la.gov/contracts.

    How billions of state dollars are spent on current contracts can now be found online.

    The new information on existing state government services contracts is an addition to LaTrac, the Louisiana Transparency and Accountability Portal, that launched in November 2008.

    The online addition launch came the same week that members of the state’s Commission on Streamlining Government argued the state has far too many contracts and does not make them transparent.

    “We’re not hiding contracts,” said state Commissioner of Administration Angèle Davis. “We have always pushed for transparency.”

    The new online contracts feature allows users to search contracts by categories or to view all contracts and sort them according to government agency, contractor name, contract type or contract amount. Details of the contract can then be viewed by clicking on the row of a given contract.

    “Increased transparency, as you know, leads to increased accountability, which leads to a better use of taxpayers’ dollars,” said Davis, who is Gov. Bobby Jindal’s chief budget officer. “We know we have to reduce government spending … Every dollar for every expenditure should be evaluated.

    “There’s over 4.3 million citizen auditors out there,” Davis said Friday, referring to the state’s population.

    The Web site will be updated each month, she said. Last month, LaTrac had about 15,000 online hits.

    California, Georgia and Texas are the only other states to offer contract data online, according to the division.

    Streamlining commission member and state Treasurer John Kennedy sparked a new study of contracts by questioning some of the money the state Department of Education is spending on consultants.

    He accused the department of paying people to give speeches.

    Streamlining commission member Leonal Hardman then, earlier this week, accused state officials of hiding how much money they spend on contracts with private firms.

    While spending on state government contracts is listed at $4.7 billion per year, Davis said $1.6 billion of it actually is cooperative endeavors and interagency transfers. Much of the rest is spent on state employees’ medical and retirement benefits, she said.

    The state also is updating its “outdated and antiquated” contract procurement process, Davis said.

    She said the online contracts addition has been about six months in the making.

    The online database is the result of an executive order and a state law sponsored by Jindal. LaTrac allows people to track how state agencies are spending taxpayers’ dollars, from the contracts they sign to salaries of appointed state agency officials.

    The online contracts feature may be accessed though the main LaTrac Web site at www.latrac.la.gov or directly at www.latrac.la.gov/contracts.

     

     

  • Jindal to donate questioned money

    Gov. Bobby Jindal plans to donate to a charity campaign contributions he received from a Florida lawyer accused of running a Ponzi scheme, Jindal’s office said Thursday. Read more…
  • $100 million in health care bill for Louisiana

    WASHINGTON – The U.S. Senate health care bill released Wednesday contains at least $100 million to plug an upcoming financial loss in Louisiana Medicaid health insurance for the poor.

    U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu – whose vote is viewed as crucial to passage of the legislation —pushed for the money, which was provided in the bill offered by its author, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.
    Though the provision in the bill was estimated by the Congressional Budget Office at $100 million, state Department of Health and Hospitals Secretary Alan Levine said the state needs about $500 million.
    “I’m glad the language is in the bill as it is at least a recognition of our problem,” Levine said. “But we have more work to do. I appreciate Sen. Landrieu’s help and we are continuing to work with her.”
    Reid and Landrieu representatives were quick to say Thursday that the money was not tied to trying to gain Landrieu’s vote on the bill.
    Landrieu is one of four Democrats who has said she would not support a bill that contains a government-run insurance program. Reid needs all 60 Democratic senators to vote for the legislation in order for it to pass.
    With a big vote looming this weekend on whether the bill will be offered up for debate, Landrieu said she is “neutral” on a measure. Earlier in the week she said she was leaning “no” in her support.
    Landrieu, chairwoman of the U.S. Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee, has said she wants safeguards in the measure to protect small businesses.
    She said she is also concerned about the $849 billion cost of the bill. The $100 million doesn’t figure into the equation, said Landrieu spokesman Rob Sawicki.
    “If this bill doesn’t contain these things, this would not be enough to get her to support it,” he said.
    The money would be a one-time fix for the state, said Jim Manley, Reid’s spokesman. Manley also said that the funding was not offered to sway Landrieu’s vote.
    ABC News broke the story on the funding Thursday, finding a provision on page 432 of the 2,074-page Senate bill. The section increases Medicaid subsidies for “certain states recovering from a major disaster.” The section describes the states over two pages as states that “during the preceding 7 fiscal years” have been declared a major disaster area – Louisiana.
    The state has been struggling with the Medicaid funding issue, known as the Federal Medical Assistance Percentage or FMAP. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services formula is based on per-capita income over a three-year period.
    Because Louisiana saw income rise due to the rebuilding after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, state officials said that the FMAP formula was artificially high. The percentage of federal Medicaid assistance would drop from last October’s 72 percent to 64 percent next year. The state is currently at 81 percent due to an influx of national stimulus dollars.
    Republican U.S. Rep. Anh “Joseph” Cao of New Orleans recently filed legislation seeking relief from the federal funding formula. The bill is co-sponsored by four House delegation members including Republican U.S. Rep. Bill Cassidy of Baton Rouge.
     
  • Commission wants handle on contracts

    A member of a cost-cutting group accused state leaders Wednesday of hiding govern-ment contracts from the Com-mission on Streamlining Government. Read more…
  • Commission panel suggests public school money follow the student

    The state is paying twice for the education of students who go into the juvenile justice system, state officials said Wednesday. When a student is moved from a school and sent to a juvenile detention center, the state aid allocated to that student’s school district does not immediately change, Erwin said. And the juvenile justice system pays for the education it provides to that student at its facility with state general funds. Read more…
  • Public school enrollment projections

    PUBLIC SCHOOL ENROLLMENT forecast STATEWIDE:

     
    2010-11: 646,200
    2011-12: 645,800
    2012-13: 647,100
    2013-14: 649,100
    2014-15: 650,600
     
    Area School Districts:
     
    East Baton Rouge Parish
    2010-11: 42,500
    2014-15: 42,700
     
    Ascension
    2010-11: 19,100
    2014-15: 20,500
     
    Livingston
    2010-11: 24,200
    2014-15: 25,400
     
    West Baton Rouge
    2010-11: 3,510
    2014-15: 3,930
     
    Zachary
    2010-11: 5,050
    2014-15: 5,880
     
    Baker
    2010-11: 1,890
    2014-15: 1,930
     
    Central
    2010-11: 3,990
    2014-15: 4,740
     
    Source: Education Estimating Conference
     
  • Modest rebound in public school enrollment

    After years of steep declines enrollment in Louisiana public schools is expected to show modest growth in the next five years, officials said Wednesday. Big gainers are expected to include the Ascension, Livingston, Zachary and Central school districts, figures show. Read more…
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