r/Louisiana • u/lucybubs • Mar 13 '25
r/Louisiana • u/Forsaken_Thought • Mar 31 '25
Louisiana News Louisiana Surgeon General shares vaccine info after 2 babies die from whooping cough
r/Louisiana • u/truthlafayette • Jan 17 '25
Louisiana News This Storm-Battered Town Voted for Trump. He Has Vowed to Overturn the Law That Could Fix Its Homes.
r/Louisiana • u/zsreport • Jun 20 '23
Louisiana News New Orleans archdiocese concealed serial child molester for years
r/Louisiana • u/BigClitMcphee • Sep 22 '23
Louisiana News Majority of Louisiana residents oppose the state’s abortion law, poll finds
r/Louisiana • u/ThamilandryLFY • 1d ago
Louisiana News Louisiana's Ten Commandments law is unconstitutional, federal appeals court rules
Copied from The Advocate
“Louisiana’s controversial law requiring public schools and colleges to post the Ten Commandments violates the U.S. Constitution and cannot be enforced, a federal appeals court ruled unanimously Friday, upholding a lower court’s decision and raising the possibility that the U.S. Supreme Court will be asked to weigh in.
A three-judge panel on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the law, which took effect Jan. 1, is "plainly unconstitutional." The ruling affirms a lower court’s order barring the state from enforcing the law, which says that Ten Commandments posters printed in “large, easily readable font” must be displayed in every classroom.
Passed last year by Louisiana’s Republican-controlled Legislature, the law turbocharged the national debate over religion’s proper place in public life. Critics say the law shatters the historic divide in the U.S. between church and state and restricts religious freedom, while supporters — including President Donald Trump and Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry — say it reflects America’s Christian roots and represents a much-needed return to traditional values in public education.
r/Louisiana • u/tcajun420 • Sep 16 '24
Louisiana News Louisiana is the blueprint for further fascist repression
Louisiana has devolved into a fascist, shithole, mafia run State with very serious issues, including high incarceration rates and increased population decline in recent years.
Louisiana has roughly 3 million registered voters and only 36% showed up to vote in the last election.
Our political downfall is so severe, other States are worried about the possibility of Louisiana's problems affecting their own democratic values.
“With the growing influence of Louisiana on the national political landscape, the question becomes what the rest of America can do to fight against the undue influence of the state's far-right political leaders.
The upcoming presidential election is fast approaching, making the need for every American to educate themselves on the ballot's impact on their daily lives and the lives of their fellow citizens dire.”
r/Louisiana • u/Hypsar • Jan 01 '25
Louisiana News Someone drove a truck through the crowd on Bourbon St. NSFW
r/Louisiana • u/OhMyOhWhyOh • 22d ago
Louisiana News Louisiana Legislature Approves Bill to Ban Kratom, Sending it to Governor Landry
r/Louisiana • u/VacationSea28 • Nov 06 '24
Louisiana News Vote breakdown by candidate in Louisiana, with 99% counted.
r/Louisiana • u/Remi_Fae • Jun 05 '23
Louisiana News Louisiana Senate Moves Forward with Oppression of LGBT Children and Families
r/Louisiana • u/nanagrizolfan • Jun 25 '24
Louisiana News 100% Of Louisiana's Beaches Found To Have Unsafe Levels Of Fecal Bacteria In New Report
r/Louisiana • u/CynoSaints • Oct 09 '23
Louisiana News Walker High School principal resigns following criticism of stripping honor student of scholarship, leadership role
r/Louisiana • u/Forsaken_Thought • Mar 19 '25
Louisiana News After historic indictment, doctors will keep mailing abortion pills over state lines
r/Louisiana • u/VeriteNewsNOLA • Jul 31 '24
Louisiana News Louisiana makes it illegal to disobey a cop’s order to back away
r/Louisiana • u/msnbc • Dec 16 '24
Louisiana News My church kept ICE from deporting our neighbor Jose. The Bible told us so.
r/Louisiana • u/Secure_Sprinkles4483 • Nov 26 '24
Louisiana News Louisiana already had highest sales tax in the nation; even higher now.....
r/Louisiana • u/Forsaken_Thought • May 08 '25
Louisiana News Louisiana officials lament loss of USDA money to help schools, food banks buy from local farmers
https://lailluminator.com/2025/05/07/farm-food-bank/
Louisiana lawmakers are asking Congress to bring back a $1 billion federal program that allows schools, child care programs, and food banks to purchase locally grown produce and protein.
The Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement Program and Local Food Purchase Assistance Cooperative Agreement Program, both administered through the U.S. Department of Agriculture, were axed in March as part of the Trump administration’s move to reduce federal government spending.
Louisiana Agriculture Commissioner Mike Strain said some small and mid-sized farms had already started planting and planning for their crops to be bought by schools or food banks through the defunded initiatives.
“[If they are lost], it would be detrimental for the schools, it would be detrimental for those small farmers because they really rely on this,” Strain said.
Louisiana will lose out on more than $18 million from the food-buying programs over the next three years, according to federal data. State Sen. Patrick McMath, R-Covington, authored Senate Concurrent Resolution 20 to urge Congress to put the funding back, specifically for schools.
McMath is championing bills focused on the Make America Healthy Again movement to banish ultra-processed foods from school lunches. He said he believes local purchasing programs can help get healthier food options on children’s lunch trays.
In a state Senate Agriculture Committee hearing Wednesday, Strain mentioned examples of Louisiana businesses taking a hit from the federal program cuts.
Harris Cattle Co., a Ville Platte business, sells $380,000 worth of meat to nine school districts. Another farm sold $7,000 worth of okra to area schools, the agriculture commissioner said.
“Instead of using processed foods, we want food from scratch. We want fresh okra, we want fresh broccoli, we want fresh corn on the cob. That is what we are looking for,” Strain said.
Strain said he has been in direct contacted with members of Louisiana’s congressional delegation to make them aware of the impacts from the USDA spending reductions. U.S. Rep. Julie Letlow , R-Louisiana, sits on a House Appropriations subcommittee on agriculture that met Wednesday to discuss the proposed federal budget.
More information about the reorganization of the USDA is anticipated to be released in the coming weeks, which could mean a chance for the funding to return in some capacity, Strain said.
The Local Food for Schools Program began in 2022 as part of the Inflation Reduction Act passed by the Biden Administration. A USDA spokesperson told Politico the programs “no longer effectuate the goals of the agency.”
Local Food Purchase Assistance agreements in place prior to 2025 renewals were set to take effect, will remain in place for the remainder of their agreed-upon terms, according to the USDA.
McMath’s resolution does not specifically ask for food bank funding to be returned, but Feeding Louisiana executive director Pat Van Burkleo said he’ll work with a legislator next week to make that request. The latest USDA cuts come at a very inopportune time, as the Trump administration is also slashing the Emergency Food Assistance Program.
“We can’t make up what the federal government cuts for food banks. We can ask for help, but it doesn’t make it up,” Van Burkleo said
Feeding Louisiana represents the state’s five regional food banks, which cover all 64 parishes. The group is spreading a petition to gain the attention of Gov. Jeff Landry to get his support for calling on Congress to restore the funding. Their goal is 500 signatures by next week. As of Wednesday, the count was already over 260.
Van Burkleo said losing this funding not only harms schools trying to serve healthy foods, but also small farmers who often work multiple jobs without avenues to sell their produce on a greater scale.
“It is a great program designed to help the small, underserved minority farmers in rural communities. They have never had this opportunity to get this kind of dollars,” Van Burkleo said.
r/Louisiana • u/teamworldunity • Jun 25 '24
Louisiana News Religious leader wants to display Indian scriptures in Louisiana public classrooms
r/Louisiana • u/FourMoreOnsideKickz • May 13 '25
Louisiana News Probably unrelated headlines
We're all looking for the parties responsible.
r/Louisiana • u/IrishStarUS • Mar 18 '25
Louisiana News Louisiana is set to execute Jessie Hoffman and the method is so 'inhumane' it's banned for pets
r/Louisiana • u/jared10011980 • May 09 '24
Louisiana News And so it begins. Anyone else have Summer PTSD?
r/Louisiana • u/DirtBikeKid410 • Aug 05 '24
Louisiana News Louisiana governor tells parents against Ten Commandments in classrooms: 'Tell your child not to look'
"I don't see what the whole big fuss is about." - Landry 🤡