Support for Louisiana.

The state we're in

is provided by every day.

 

I go to work for Entergy.

I know

customers are counting on me.

So Entergy is investing

millions of dollars

to keep the lights on

 

and installing new technology

to prevent outages

before they happen.

Together, together, together.

We power life.

 

Additional support

provided by the Fred B

and Ruth B Zeigler Foundation

and the Zigler Art Museum,

located in Jennings City Hall.

The museum focuses on emerging

Louisiana artists

and is an historical

and cultural center

for Southwest Louisiana

and the Foundation

for Excellence in Louisiana

Public Broadcasting.

With support from viewers

like you.

 

Generally considering

how much money they had,

they spent it on

some really smart things.

A quick wrap up of this year's

session.

And other sessions on the books.

And what it means for the state.

Men are a little higher

risk for health issues

than women are.

 

Men are less likely to seek

medical help.

My mom likes it, and I like it

because it's about science

and math and me and my mom

 

both like science and math.

And it's finally summer

for kids in Louisiana.

 

Hi, everyone.

I'm Kara St.Cyr And I'm Andre

Moreau.

 

Mass shootings

are dominating the news

cycle these days.

 

So far

this year, as of June 5th,

 

246 such shootings in America.

 

That number from the Gun

Violence Archive.

It's a database that records

gun violence in the US.

You can find them on Twitter

at gun deaths.

On Capitol Hill,

some congressional members

have scramble

to enact tougher gun laws,

 

but they've been met

with opposition.

The House passed a gun

control bill

that would raise the age of gun

ownership to 21, ban

the sale of semi-automatics

and make tighter restrictions

on gun storage regulations.

The bill is expected

to fall apart

in the evenly divided Senate,

 

where some lawmakers

are negotiating lighter, more

 

lenient amendments.

The deal is still on the table.

The massacre in Uvalde,

Texas, has put actor

Matthew McConaughey

front and center.

Uvalde, population 15,000.

 

It's his hometown.

He took the podium

at the White House

news conference this week

urging for gun reform.

He spoke on behalf of parents

and children and rob

elementary school

where 19 children

and two teachers died.

 

A Miami day

wanted to be a marine biologist.

She was already in contact

with Corpus

Christi University of A&M

for future college enrollment.

Nine years old,

 

May Day

cared for the environment

so strongly that

when the city asked her mother

if they could release

some balloons

into the sky

in her memory,

her mom said, oh, no,

maybe they would want to litter

 

my they wore green,

 

high top converse with a heart.

 

She had hand drawn on the right

toe because they represented her

love of nature.

Camilla's got these shoes.

Can you show these shoes,

please?

Wear these everyday

green converse

with a heart on the right toe.

 

These are the same

green converse

on her feet

that turned out to be

the only clear evidence

that could identify

her after the shooting.

 

Have had that.

 

A very powerful plea

coming from McConaughey.

But in Louisiana,

the regular session of the state

legislature has ended

but the governor has called

for a special session

to begin next Wednesday,

June 15th.

Still unsettled Louisiana's

congressional map.

A federal judge

rejected the redistricting map

 

that lawmakers adopted earlier

this year. U.S.

District

Judge Shelley Dick ruled

the map was a violation

of the Voting Rights Act.

She also ruled that it must be

fixed by June 20th.

Now, June 20th

is the final day of this brief

special session.

Secretary of State Kyle

O'Dwyer says that deadline

doesn't

allow enough time

to rework the map.

Judge Dicks says

it's more than enough time

and the delay would only harm

voters who sued the state.

So what I can tell you

is that in the next day or so,

I will be issuing a call

for a special session

to do exactly

what the middle district of

Louisiana

has told us to do.

 

What is required

by Section

two of the Voting Rights Act,

but is required by basic

fairness and basic math

And that is to come in

and redraw the district.

 

And so I'll be doing that

in the next day or two, because

we don't have longer than that.

 

And now let's

look at some of the other news

making headlines

 

across the state.

Starbucks employees in Louisiana

are beginning

to unionize.

In New Orleans,

one of the chain's coffee

shops got enough votes

to join Workers United,

making them the first chain

in Louisiana to do so.

This comes on

the heels of a series

of wins for Starbucks employees

around the country.

Just last week, an

Alabama store voted 27

to one to join.

The push to organize

has been sparked

by years of employee complaints

about being overworked

and understaffed.

 

Starbucks says the company works

better when corporate workers

directly deal with employees.

 

A hazing

investigation is underway

in Lafayette.

The Pi Kappa

Alpha chapter at Yale

was suspended

after a hazing incident

involving sleep deprivation

and strength training exercises.

In March.

 

Eight men

involved were issued

misdemeanor summonses

by the campus police.

Seven of them were current

students and 2022.

One was no longer

attending the university.

To expand a pair,

sheriff's are facing charges

for reportedly committing fraud.

Both deputies, Michael

Arthur and Andre

Weber were charged with theft.

And malfeasance.

In a statement,

the sheriff's office wrote

that the two men

were getting payments

for security work and off

duty security work,

while one the clerk

at the sheriff's office

Lawmakers are starting

to announce their bids

for the state treasurer.

 

Representative Scott McKnight

in East Baton Rouge Parish

put in his bid to take over

after John Schroeder,

who's expected to run

for governor in 20, 23

elections, start October 14th

next year.

 

On Saturday, June 4th,

New Orleans

Habitat for Humanity held

its first ever Pride

billed LGBTQ

plus community members

and supporters gathered to help

build a home for a New Orleans

mother

and her twin ten year old sons.

The family will move

into the new three bedroom,

two bathroom

house in a few months.

 

And another

session is in the books.

That's what Governor John Bel

Edwards said this Monday.

After the 2022

legislative session

 

at 6 p.m.,

there were few controversial

topics put a spotlight

on Louisiana's lawmakers.

 

The governor says he is pleased

overall

with the way

the session concluded.

Tonight,

a recap of what happened.

 

An unprecedented number of mass

shootings and resurfacing

debates about abortion

rights colored

much of the news cycle.

This session with a microscope

on Louisiana's lawmakers,

each debating where

the state will stand.

Now, the session is on the books

and quite frankly,

I'm very happy

 

with the way

the session turned out.

But as the. Clock struck 6 p.m.

on Monday at the Capitol,

the session wrapped

without the usual confusion

and last minute

votes of previous sessions.

Governor

John Bel Edwards says this year

was a successful one.

You don't always get everything

that you want.

Sometimes you get some things

you don't want, but on balance,

very pleased with

what's happened.

When session

first began in March.

Lawmakers were given

a $39 billion budget

to work with.

They voted on a 1500 dollar

annual pay

raise for teachers,

plus a $750.01

for supporting staff.

Legislators

also put some money aside

for infrastructural

improvements.

300 million

was put toward a new Mississippi

River Bridge.

Both items

were included in the proposal

the governor announced

at the beginning of the session.

That he was especially pleased

with the money

put aside for early childhood

education.

 

We know that

we have too many kids

who by the second grade

are not reading at grade level

 

and they're not performing other

things at grade level either.

 

And we don't do a

very good job

of catching them up.

The truth is, no state

does a very good job

of catching them up.

But we have too many of our

kids, more than other states

 

who are behind so early

childhood is so important

 

to prevent those children

from being behind

in the first place.

And so this is what I mean

when I talk about

transformational change

for our state.

And if we will find the will

 

and muster

the discipline to make sure

that we maintain

these investments

for a generation

it will change our state

in ways that we can hardly

fathom today.

The budget vote

wrapped on May 19th,

freeing up time for lawmakers

to focus on other pressing

and even controversial issues.

The bill to arm teachers

with guns died in the Senate

in the final hours of session.

At one point,

the bill would have nixed

the permit requirement

for gun owners.

21 and older

But after news of the shooting

and you've already Texas

lawmakers rewrote the language

to arm teachers instead.

I do believe that

we need to look in things like

expanding background checks.

 

I don't

know that there should be

any commercial purchases

of firearms,

 

whether they happen

at a typical

retail establishment,

whether they're online,

whether they're at a gun show,

 

they ought to all

have to have a background check.

And then I think we have to

look at red

flag laws.

 

How do we take guns

from people

who have demonstrated that

they are a serious

risk of harm to themselves

and others?

 

And there are

some other states

who really do that

extremely well,

and that's

where we have to look.

But some controversial

legislation did pass.

 

If Roe

versus Wade is overturned, then

abortion will become illegal

in Louisiana.

The session lawmakers took it

a step further

by subjecting doctors

who perform abortions

to ten years in prison.

Governor

Edwards was not fully on board

with the legislation.

He'd hoped for more exceptions

for rape and incest.

 

I favor those exceptions.

And I do it.

It's it's not easy for people.

And I understand

that I've got a long

 

history

as a legislator,

as the governor,

being pro-life myself.

 

However, I believe that

 

the force of law

should not compel

 

a lady

 

or a girl

 

to carry rapist's baby to term.

 

Among other

polarizing topics, SB 44

 

The Women in Sports Bill,

which would stop trans girls

from playing

with biological girls

and youth sports.

 

The governor vetoed the bill

last year, prompting an override

veto session

that ended in failure.

But this time, both the House

and Senate passed it,

and the governor said

he would not veto it

a second time.

Louisiana

is now the eighth state

to implement such a law.

I've allowed that bill

to become law

without my signature,

not because

 

I thought the bill was good.

And you all know

my views on it haven't changed.

 

Once again, a brief

special session starts next

Wednesday, June 15th.

It will end on June 20th.

 

So let's delve

into what happened

at the state capitol.

And for that I've got

Melinda Taylor, research

director of PAS,

 

and Greg Hilburn of

USA Today Network.

We've got, of course, money.

The overriding issue, abortion

trends, gun rights, education.

 

And Melinda, you have written

a commentary already for PA,

so let's start with you.

Well, I mean, from

from our perspective,

the big issue of the session

was the budget.

I mean, the money,

they had so much money that came

in, they had $3.7 billion

in just short term.

Revenue from state surplus

from federal pandemic,

aid from money

that was recognized

after they had already adopted

the budget for this year.

So they just had a lot of money

and that drove policy

pretty much all session long.

They used it to put

record amounts of money

in higher education

and K-through-12 teacher

pay raises.

They spent

record amounts of money

on infrastructure projects.

They also,

unfortunately, wasted

some money in PA's

mind on pet projects

for legislative districts back

home.

Yeah, well, there are a lot

of pork projects like that.

There are more than $100 million

of that.

Hundred million.

Yeah.

So it's it's a lot that may be

a historic figure

in terms of how much

they directed that way.

But look, generally considering

how much money they had,

they spent it on

some really smart things.

They made investments

in paying down debt.

They made investments

in education

areas that everybody agrees

the state

should spend more money on.

They made investments in these

big megaprojects

that the state has not spent

any money on for years.

But that the state

has wanted to do for decades.

So so they did

some really smart things

and hopefully put the state

on a better

financial footing long term.

What did your

 

viewers

talk about more than

anything that you covered?

Well, hot button

issues, abortion.

 

And I think that's not only just

in Louisiana,

but nationally,

because as you know

of the leaked opinion

of the Supreme Court,

it appears that Roe

v Wade might be overturned.

So anti abortion rights bills

were at the top of mind

of my readers

and so were gun issues,

 

which is also on

everybody's mind

because of equality

and other buffalo and other

mass shootings everywhere.

As you know, Louisiana

has been a state

that you could

generally count on

for restrict abortion rights

 

laws, bills.

And that's

the will of the people.

I think they said through in a

in a 2020 amendment

to the Louisiana Constitution

and 62%

voted in favor

of an amendment

that said abortion

should not be a guaranteed right

if it was ever overturned

by the Supreme Court.

But the real controversy

is there some people who

are anti abortion rights

 

were upset that

 

they didn't include exceptions

for rape or incest.

And there was some

really heated debate

and compelling arguments on the

 

on the floor of the of the House

chamber and Senate chamber about

you know what 11

or 12 year old who

who might have been raped

and would have to carry a baby

to term.

And you know those hard

kind of issues in the end

they passed this bill

which is a trigger bill.

In other words,

if Roe v Wade is overturned,

then Louisiana

will automatically ban

abortions.

 

There was an original bill

in 2006

to do that

this kind of cleans it up,

 

finishes it off,

put a bow on it

and that's where we are.

OK, there's that trans.

Well transgender sports ban.

This was the second year that

Beth Marcell,

the senator from Frecklington,

a Republican senator

from Franklin

had brought this bill,

as you remember, last year.

Vetoed by the governor.

Was vetoed by the governor.

The bill bans

transgender athletes

from competing on girls

and women's sports teams.

Senator Mazie

brought the bill back again

this year.

It passed

with a bipartisan margin again.

 

This time, the governor

allowed it to become law

without his signature

while still objecting to it.

Education huge for part

 

of what people or money

making money

moneywise

spending gas, et cetera.

Those are all huge

for everybody.

Right? Right.

And education, they did some

they did a lot of things

this year.

But again,

a lot of it was driven

by money.

They gave

 

K-through-12 teachers

a 1500 dollar pay raise.

They gave support workers

a $750 pay raise.

That is less than what

the governor wanted.

He wanted $2,000

and $1,000 for those raises.

But the legislature

was concerned about the ongoing

financial impact

to the state on that.

But they also invested

$84 million

in new funding

for early childhood

education, which is a big area

of interest for PA

and for so many organizations,

because that is where

you can make

the most difference.

And the legislature

spent a lot of time

debating literacy issues.

Obviously, Mississippi has done

some great things in

terms of advancing

the reading skills of younger

readers,

and Louisiana is sadly trailing

Mississippi on that front.

And so legislators

have started

looking at more literacy,

 

literacy assessments

for children and new ways

to get books

in the hands of children

and to try and invest

in literacy initiatives

to help them

get long term education skills.

Let's just

touch overall on the climate.

What did you come away

with on that?

And you may write about that.

Certainly you feel it.

We all feel it.

The climate continues to be more

divisive, doesn't it.

At the Capitol?

It is.

It is more partizan

than it used to be.

And some of that is

because term limits

have cleared out

people who had long

term relationships,

who had been there for years

and years,

and the new people coming in

seem to model more

their more of their behavior

on the things that are done

in Congress.

And in Washington.

And also, I mean, younger

people

are coming into the Capitol

and they've grown up

in a more partizan environment

than perhaps

the people who came before them.

I think when you see a lot

of these culture war issues

that the legislature

has debated,

even if they don't end up

passing these things,

it does create friction

among the groups.

And that friction sort of bleeds

into everything else

that they're doing.

So, Greg,

what's that going to say

going forward?

Well,

I think you'll continue to see

 

an even greater divide now

here, of course, in Louisiana,

 

that divide

is smaller among

the minority because

Republicans now

control a near supermajority

in the legislature.

They do in the Senate and are,

 

I think, two short in the House.

So that divide

 

between those two groups is big,

but there's there's

really no way to fight back

much for the Democrats

right now.

All right, guys,

thank you

so much for your input in depth

and love

to hear the analysis thank you.

Thanks to you.

 

It seems like

men will do almost anything

before going to the doctor.

The Cleveland Clinic found

that men will prefer

cleaning the bathroom

or mowing the lawn.

Instead, but

if they're avoiding

these appointments,

they're missing

important checkups.

That's

why this men's health month

bendaroos general experts

are asking more men

to get screened

before it's too late.

 

A man

is more likely to complete

household chores

 

or go shopping with a loved one

than visit the doctor,

even if something is wrong.

According to the Cleveland

Clinic,

men are far less likely

to seek medical help than women.

Jacob Wood at Baton Rouge

General Hospital says

that's not far from the truth.

 

I think men tend to not

go to the doctor

for a couple of reasons.

One is it just

doesn't seem very macho

to go get checked out

and have somebody tell you

if there's something wrong

with you.

 

The other one is fear.

There's some fear of going

and finding out

what may be wrong,

and they just don't

want to peek under the hood.

And see if there's if there's

something wrong there.

So I think it's a combination

of both of those.

And for different people, it's

one more than the other.

In addition to that,

some men don't

want to change their lifestyle

The Cleveland Clinic found

that 36% of the men

surveyed didn't want to admit

they had unhealthy eating habits

or made bad health choices.

46% said

they were just embarrassed.

Woods

says these types of hiccups

make men more susceptible

to long term health risks,

like cancer or

high blood pressure.

Women are more likely

to have high blood pressure,

more likely

to have heart disease,

obviously more likely

to have prostate cancer,

which is one of the things that

we screen for. And

 

you know, across the

board,

men are a little higher risk

for health issues

than women are,

partly because women are better

at the screening and prevention

and partly just because

of the genetics of being male.

 

Men are also more

at risk for lung cancer,

liver cancer and Parkinson's.

Wood says

that these types of illnesses

can sometimes

develop under the radar,

so you might not be able

to detect them

until the symptoms are present,

which can be dangerous

or even fatal.

Men between 30 and 50

are in a combination situation

where they really need

to be going to the doctor

more than the ones

that are younger than that

 

and are less likely

to go to the doctor

than they need to be.

So as they get on past

50 into their sixties

and even older, they tend

to get a little more likely

to come in and be seen.

But that really needs to start

before that so

we can prevent those things

that they end up coming

and seeing us

for when they're 67

and things have started

falling apart

that we could have started

preventing

when they were 42.

Wood says that screenings

and general checkups

should become more common,

especially because the risks

associated with men's health

change all the time.

The screening recommendations

are always in the process

of being updated and changed.

And so just because you went

and saw your doctor,

you know, two or three years

ago, and we're told,

hey, everything's

good, does not mean that

you don't need to go back in

and have another checkup

because age recommendations

change things like colonoscopy

 

has changed from 50 down to 45.

 

And so people like me who. Are.

 

Between 45 and 50,

have all of a sudden

 

found

themselves to be in a situation

where they need a screening that

previously wasn't needed.

So going in and, and going over

those preventive care aspects

 

on a regular

basis helps you not fall

behind on the recommended

screening protocols.

All right.

 

Banners General

Hospital is hosting

a Men's Health

screening day on June 25th

on their main campus.

Be sure to stop by

for a checkup.

Andre.

I was scheduled

to clean my bathroom,

but I will make a change.

I think you need to change

that screen.

Definitely go get a screening.

That's

 

it is a kids

takeover around the studios

and grounds of LP.

Summer camp is underway.

Here's a look at some of the fun

and some of the learning.

 

If you are cooking something

 

and you're mixing

ingredients together.

 

You take them

out or

take them apart afterwards.

 

So what we do

every day is a different thing.

And we use a PBS character.

Two episodes

that we borrow the idea

from making a cardboard city.

 

The murals that they're doing

 

on the glass here actually came

from an episode of My Allergies

 

where I'm really drawing a dog.

 

What is an Angel Doll?

My teacher says

I should be an artist.

 

So that's what I'm going to be.

We went outside with the iPads.

The theme was Eleanor

wonders why,

and she's very curious

about things in nature.

And we took the iPads out.

They took pictures

and they're in the process

of making their own

little photojournalist

with the pictures that they.

Took a little photo book.

A little photobook.

So it's teaching them

and it's allowing them

during the summer to what.

 

Explore.

We have some children

that may go to underprivileged

schools where those

resources are not available

 

right now until COVID.

They have been doing

virtual learning,

 

so they were not able

to get out that much.

We use a lot of STEM projects,

so they're able to do

a lot of things

with the STEM project.

And most of all, it's

the creativity of what

they want to see.

This year,

they're creating a city.

I'm done with the cardboard

hospital.

I'm going to start

to make a card for

dentist's office and stuff.

So whoever needs clean teeth,

 

they can just go to the office.

I'm working

on a chocolate factory

because I am like Willy Wonka

and the Chocolate

Factory and Charlie

and the Chocolate Factory.

 

And it's really fun

because you can see

all kinds of stuff

because we're all

working on different things.

 

I know

 

it's what you cook,

somebody that cooks things.

 

We take every single activity

from PBS Learning Media.

We don't invent anything.

It's all ideas that are there.

So the teachers do

have access log in.

They can get the same ideas

that we do here at camp,

but they materials activities.

So really, it's

just for everybody.

My mom likes it and I like it

because it's about science

and math and me, I'm

mom both like science and math.

I want to be a scientist

and a doctor.

It's just another example of how

 

leave PBS is children's

education.

 

Exactly.

And we have fun

with the kids, and learning

is supposed to be fun.

And that's what we try to

 

establish here is a

learning great environment.

 

And today is the last day,

so we won't see them around here

anymore.

Very sad about it.

They were adorable this summer.

And everyone

That is our show for this week.

Remember, you can watch anything

LPI any time,

wherever you are

with our LPB PBS.

 

You can catch LPB News

and Public Affairs

shows as well as other Louisiana

programs

you've come to enjoy

over the years.

And please, like us on Facebook,

Twitter,

Tick-Tock and Instagram for.

Everyone here at Louisiana

Public Broadcasting, I'm Andre.

Moreau and I'm Kara St.Cyr.

See you next time.

That's the state we're in.

 

Support for Louisiana.

The state we're in

is provided by.

 

Every day

I go to work for Entergy.

I know

customers are counting on me.

So Entergy is investing

millions of dollars

to keep the lights on

and installing new technology

to prevent outages.

Before they happen.

Together, together, together.

We power life.

 

Additional support

provided by the Fred B and Ruth

B, Zigler Foundation

and the Zigler Art Museum

located in Jennings City Hall,

the museum focuses on emerging

Louisiana artists

and is an historical

and cultural center

for Southwest Louisiana,

and the foundation

for Excellence in Louisiana

Public Broadcasting.

With support

from viewers like you.