Election Season In North Central Louisiana

It’s election season in north central Louisiana and the candidates are gearing up for a vigorous campaign season as the countdown for the October 2, 2010 elections is underway!

In the upcoming days and weeks, The Fount is interviewing election candidates who wish to have a continuous online presence here on the internet, and we will publish their profiles for voters to make informed choices.

Each candidate will have an opportunity to express their goals, political views and argue their points as to why they deserve your VOTE.  Some candidates will also have brief video presentations linked to their profiles.

Each name, candidate # and position sought is linked to their Candidate Profile Post.  While all election candidates are welcome to submit a Candidate Profile here on The Fount, this listing is not comprehensive.

Active Candidate Profiles:

1.  Incumbent Council Member E.J. Ratcliff, #117 – Arcadia Town Council District 5

2.  Mr. Robert C. Wiley – Candidate For Mayor Of Grambling, LA

3. Mr. Charles Owens III – Candidate For Grambling City Council

Upcoming Candidate Profiles:

1.  Mr. Eugene Smith – Incumbent Arcadia Mayor

2.  Ms. Martha Andrus – Incumbent Grambling Mayor

3.  Mr. Leslie Thompson – Incumbent Jonesboro Mayor

Voter Ballot & Registration Info:

The time period to request a mail ballot from the Registrar (other than Military and Overseas) is 8/3/10 thru 9/28/10 and the deadline for the Registrar to receive the voted mail ballot (other than Military and Overseas) is October 1, 2010.

Last day to register to vote in ALL parishes throughout Louisiana is September 1, 2010 and the Early Voting session runs from September 18 through September 25, 2010.

The Fount encourages you: if you are not registered to vote REGISTER, and if you are registered to vote VOTE!

Posted in NEWS: Arcadia, LA, NEWS: Gibsland, LA, NEWS: Grambling, LA, NEWS: Jonesboro, LA, NEWS: Minden, LA, NEWS: Ruston, LA, NEWS: Simsboro, LA | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Holiday Weekend Sobriety Check Point Notice

Labor Day weekend brings increased law enforcement presence and protection in north central Louisiana… BE SAFE OUT THERE!!! –The Fount ♥♥♥

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE

COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE

Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent

News Release – September 3, 2010

Sobriety Checkpoint Scheduled for Saturday, September 4, 2010


Shreveport – As the Labor Day weekend approaches, Louisiana State Police Troop G would like to remind motorists to keep safety in mind and a high priority. Motorists are urged to wear their seatbelts, drive respectfully, and refrain from impaired and distracted driving.

On Saturday, September 4, 2010, Louisiana State Police Troop G will conduct a sobriety checkpoint in Caddo Parish between the hours of 8:00 p.m. and 4:00 a.m. Additional troopers and law enforcement officers will saturate the remaining Troop G area actively looking for drivers who are impaired, not wearing their seatbelts, driving aggressively, and driving while distracted.

The goal of this initiative is to prevent serious injury/fatal crashes, deter impaired driving, raise public awareness, and arrest impaired drivers before they harm themselves or someone else. We are asking motorists to make a mature decision. Please designate an unimpaired driver, wear seatbelts, and drive responsibly. Dial *LSP (*577) to report aggressive/impaired driving or call your local law enforcement agency.

Contact Information:

Tpr. Cordell Williams Louisiana State Police Public Affairs Unit Office:

(318) 741-7411 cordell.williams@dps.la.gov


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Charles Owens III Runs For Grambling Council

Mr. Charles Owens III is one of 17 candidates running to fill 5 Council seats on the Grambling City Council this upcoming election October 2, 2010.  He currently serves as the Director of Auxiliary Services for the Lincoln Parish School Board and is a life long resident of Grambling, LA who is married with 3 grown children.

Mr. Owens has worked for the Lincoln Parish School Board for 24 years and is a former Lincoln Parish Police Juror who served from 1984 through 2009.  He was responsible for providing parish-wide fire protection, connecting Grambling with a water loop with Ruston, for building and donating the clinic in Grambling, installing fire hydrants and upgrading the water system in the Mt. Olive district and obtaining a grant for installing 10 miles of gas pipeline to rural areas in the parish.

As a police juror, Mr. Owens also set up the bill collection office for the water system in Grambling next to the water tank on the north side of the interstate, and built a fire station in that area which made made lower insurance rates available to homeowners in that area.

His current duties as Director of Auxiliary Services include overseeing a staff of approximately 300 people including bus drivers, lunch room workers and maintenance people.  He is also a veteran from the Viet Nam era who specializes in facilities planning.

Mr. Owens’ qualifications include the ability to interpret blueprints, his understanding of infrastructure, utilities rate structure, and he knows where to get any technical engineering information that Grambling might need.

Mr. Owens vowed to help protect the citizens of Grambling and said as a newly elected Council Member, he would initiate an ordinance that puts a stop to the way each Grambling Council Member receives $350 extra pay (for a total of $1,750) every time a Special Called Meeting is held.  That ordinance would ensure that the Council gets paid a flat rate salary like all other major municipalities in northern Louisiana no matter how many Special Called Meetings are held.

The Fount asked Mr. Owens: “With all the trouble that the City of Grambling’s administration has been going through both in the media and internally, why are you running for a seat on the Grambling City Council?”  Mr. Owens had this to say:

“Given the wealth of brainpower in Grambling, there’s just no excuse to be in this condition.  Instead of coming together we’ve been drifting apart over the past few years and the current state of affairs is an embarrassment to our forefathers.  I’m not running against anybody, but I’m running for Grambling.  I’m not criticizing anybody, but we need to reunite Grambling through mutual respect, brotherly love and a spirit of cooperation.  Together, we can and we will do better and I want to do my part to restore dignity to City Hall.”

Candidate Profile #3

Copyright 2010 – The Fount

All Rights Reserved

Posted in CITY OF GRAMBLING | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Fungal Toxin Linked To Homosexuality

Jaw Dropping News: As reported  by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health in a PubMed study entitled “The effect of fungal toxins on the sexual behaviour of rabbits.” a fungal toxin called fusarium that is commonly found in highly consumed corn, peanut and cereal products has been linked as an organic cause to homosexual behavior in rabbits and even people.

The abstract dated back in 1987 reads:

Abstract

Feeding rabbits with mycelium from Fusarium roseum is shown to produce infertility, the disappearance of aggressivity, and homosexual behaviour in males, while the effect of the females is only infertility. This mycelium contains the mycotoxin zearalenon which has effects similar to those of the female hormone. This fungus willingly grows on common crops and is consumed both by people and animals-although normally in very low doses. It cannot be ruled out that an increased growth of fungus, due to artificial fertilization, which then can be demonstrated to be found in food and consumed, can be a factor which increases the incidence of homosexual behavior in people.

The above can be found here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2959888

This astonishing old news became astonishing new news courtesy of Doug Kaufmann’s TV show entitled “Know The Cause” in his News & Views segment, available on satellite/cable TV and at his website www.knowthecause.com

Mr. Kaufmann has been a clinical nutrition researcher for over 30 years. He has been a pioneer in exposing fungus as the cause of many common physical sicknesses including cancer, diabetes, arthritis, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, kidney disease, Alzheimer’s, heart disease, dandruff, and the list goes on.

Kaufmann advocates an anti-fungal regimen of diet, exercise as well as anti-fungal prescription meds and anti-fungal nutritional supplements to help with these conditions, and has many doctors backing him up on the fact that such information is not offered even in medical schools today.

Thousands have offered testimonials to their success by using Doug Kaufmann’s approach.  More information is available by emailing us here: contactthefount@gmail.com

Copyright 2010 –The Fount

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United States Is Now A Credit Risk

More government to protect us from ourselves

A note from Star Parker, Founder and President of CURE

With the new credit card laws, it will be harder to get cards, which will hurt low income families that liberals supposedly care so much about.

Putting more and more wolves in charge of guarding the henhouse might characterize the big problems we’ve now created for ourselves. Government is growing.

The private economy is shrinking. Those wielding political power see fewer and fewer problems they believe private citizens can solve on our own. Soon, each one of us will have our own personal guardian bureaucrat.

The real difference between us and the hens is that the hens are not paying for the wolves’ salaries and benefits.

This past week new rules governing our credit cards kicked in, following passage of the Credit Card Accountability and Responsibility Act, signed into law last year.

The point of the CARD Act is to protect us consumers from the scheming bankers from whom we get our credit cards.   As result of these new protections, consumers can be grateful that credit card interest rates are the only interest rates that are not now dropping.  According to the Wall Street Journal, the average card interest rate is now 1.6% higher than last year and the gap between credit card rates and the prime lending interest rate is the highest it’s been in 22 years.

More good news for consumers is that there is less credit available.

The average credit limit on new cards being issued is down 11% from last year. And, because the CARD Act implements new rules limiting the flexibility that banks have, for example, in changing rates on balances of overdue accounts or on exceeding credit limits, banks are simply finding new ways to raise revenue.

Over the last year median annual fees on cards increased 18% and median fees on cash advances increased 33%.

It’s hard for our politicians, who are busy spending our money and raising our taxes so we can pay them to protect us, to grasp that there is a private economy in our country with private businesses that earn their living serving consumers.  And that when regulators start telling them what to do, businesses must find alternative ways to provide their services and earn a living or shut down.

Equally hard for politicians to grasp is that if our private economy is left free, it’s competitive.  So if consumers are not getting a good deal, and there is a better deal to be had, a competitor will step in and offer it.

Nor can power loving politicians fathom that, except in the case of our new health care law, in which government will force private citizens to buy government defined health insurance, citizen consumers are free to do and buy what they like.

There are no penalties or interest payments for credit card holders who pay their bills on time.  So those allegedly getting protection by these new rules are those who choose not to.  Those who do pay on time now will pay higher fees to finance these new protections.  And, it will be harder to get cards, which will hurt low income families that liberals supposedly care so much about.

There’s even more good news in store for those who think freedom is the root cause of our financial problems.

Soon we will have the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection in place, as result of the Dodd-Frank financial regulation bill just signed into law.   The new bureau was set up in about 400 pages of the several thousand page bill, and, with a $500 million dollar budget and several thousand employees, will protect us in every other aspect of our financial lives.

It’s good that our politicians are getting our financial affairs in order for us.

Proof that we can rely on them is that our government debt is now almost 60% of our GDP and projected to reach 100% by 2020.

Standard & Poor’s has just indicated that the AAA rating of US government bonds may have to be reduced, showing that the United States is now a credit risk.

Center for Urban Renewal and Education
722 12th Street, NW Fourth Floor
Washington, DC 20005

telephone 202-479-2873 (CURE)
www.urbancure.org

urbancure.org

CURE is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

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Grambling Council Strikes It Rich Again & Again

Certain Grambling tax payers became infuriated after being given the impression that their Council Members would not be charging $1,750 for the Special Called Meeting held August 17, 2010 and later learning the Council was indeed paid for it.

During that meeting, a citizen Rev. Allen voiced objection as to how much money the Council was being paid to hold an unnecessary meeting that he felt was a political ploy.  In his opinion the matter of the Council’s complaint about Grambling Mayor Martha Andrus spending $7,760 on a municipal website could have been dealt with at the next Regular Meeting without costing the taxpayers an additional $1,750.

Grambling Council Member Roosevelt Bryant responded by saying: “Did anybody say we were charging for tonight?  Who told you that we was charging for tonight?” said Bryant and a small uproar erupted shortly thereafter.  A 2 minute video excerpt of these events is available by clicking here, and a DVD of the 50 minute long meeting is available to the public by contacting The Fount.

Despite Rev. Bryant’s comments, Council Members Edward Jones, Toby Bryan, Roy Jackson and Roosevelt Bryant himself were paid $350 each for attending that Special Called Meeting, and Council Member Alvin Bradley was paid $350 for just 9 minutes of attendance. The $350 checks each received on August 27, 2010 is in addition to their Regular Meeting pay.

According to Grambling ordinance, Special Meetings can be called for any reason by 3 Council Members or the Mayor, and each Council Member has a rare opportunity to be paid an extra $350 for each Special Meeting; unlike most all major municipalities in northern Louisiana which pay their aldermen a flat monthly salary no matter how many special council meetings are held. The Grambling Mayor does not get paid any additional monies for Special or Emergency Meetings.

At the time of this writing August 27, 2010 the Grambling Council held yet another Special Called Meeting regarding salary increases that were not reflected on paychecks issued that day.  The official Minutes of that meeting are still pending.

Due to a low tax base that is not supported by much industry like a large major city, Grambling home property owners are amongst the highest taxed in Louisiana, and they are seeking relief where ever possible.

There is a high concentration of senior citizens on fixed incomes in Grambling and, the issues of city official/employee pay raises by the Council and the extra money that the Council gets paid for holding multiple meetings during a given month have become hot political issues during this campaign season.  Voters go to the election polls October 2, 2010.

The only way to change  Grambling’s ordinance to where the Council gets paid a flat monthly salary no matter how many special or emergency council meetings are held like surrounding cities, is for the Grambling Council itself to change that law.

Many citizens of Grambling believe it’s not likely the current Council will seek to change that law anytime soon because if they truly looked out for the best interest of Grambling’s fixed income seniors, they certainly could have changed that law by now.  The Grambling Council held an unprecedented number of 18 Special Called Meetings in 2009 and was paid additional monies for each one.

It is for this reason that the Grambling Council’s total pay was close to the Councils of much larger tax-based cities like Monroe and Shreveport last year.  Our previous article entitled “Grambling Council Strikes It Rich” provides a side-by-side public record comparison of aldermen pay for 11 municipalities in northern Louisiana including Grambling between Monroe and Shreveport.

Copyright 2010 –The Fount

All Rights Reserved

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LA State Police Press Releases 082210 thru 082810

The following press releases from the LA State Troopers pertain to our area of North Central Louisiana.

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE
COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE


Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent

News Release

August 22, 2010

Impairment Suspected in Deadly Crash

A man is dead after losing control of his vehicle in Lincoln Parish.

The crash occurred on August 21, 2010 at about 6:08 pm.  Louisiana State Police Troop F Troopers investigated the crash and determined that a 1999 Ford truck was traveling south on Stable Rd when the driver failed to negotiate a slight curve.  The truck left the roadway and struck a tree before coming to rest.

The driver, identified as Geronimo Sanchez from Ruston, was not wearing a seat belt and was partially ejected from the truck in the crash.  Sanchez was pronounced dead at the scene by the Lincoln Parish Coroner’s Office.

Troopers suspect impairment was a factor in the crash and toxicology tests are pending.

In 2010, Louisiana State Police Troop F Troopers have investigated twenty-eight (28) fatal crashes resulting in thirty (30) deaths.

Contact Information,
Trooper First Class Mark Dennis
Louisiana State Police
Troop F Public Affairs
Office:  (318) 345-2810

Driver Jailed After Causing Two Vehicle Crash in Bienville Parish**UPDATE**

Norman Parkman, a 25-year-old Shreveport man who was arrested on August 12, 2010, for reckless operation following a two vehicle crash on Interstate 20 in Bienville Parish, has been booked on additional charges related to the crash.

Following the completion of the crash investigation, criminal warrants were obtained on Parkman through Bienville Parish for two (2) counts of negligent injury and two (2) counts of failure to wear a seat belt.

On August 21, 2010, Louisiana State Police G contacted Parkman at his Shreveport home where he was arrested and later booked at the Caddo Correctional Center as a fugitive from Bienville Parish. Thereafter, Parkman was transported to Bienville Parish Sheriff’s Office and booked on the warrants.

The operator of the 2003 Dodge Ram truck, 33-year-old Patrick Christian of Gladewater, Texas and Parkman’s passenger, 22-year-old Ruth Pearce of Arcadia have been discharged from the hospital and are recovering at their respective homes.

Bienville – On August 12, 2010, at 3:42 p.m., Louisiana State Police Troop G responded to a two vehicle crash on Interstate 20 at mile post 62 in Bienville Parish which seriously injured an Arcadia woman and landed a reckless driver from Shreveport in a Bienville Parish jail.

According to investigating troopers, a witness observed 25-year-old Norman Parkman and his passenger, 22-year-old Ruth Pearce, driving west on Interstate 20 in a 2008 white Chevrolet Silverado truck at a high rate of speed. While the witness was reporting Parkman’s aggressive driving behavior to the local 911 operator, Parkman’s vehicle impacted the rear of a white 2003 Dodge Ram truck, operated by 33-year-old Patrick Christian of Texas. As a result the of impact, the 2003 Dodge Ram truck veered off the right side of the roadway, traveled down a grassy embankment, overturned, and came to rest upright in a tree line. The 2008 Chevrolet Silverado veered off the right side of the roadway, traveled down the grassy embankment, and came to rest in the tree line in close proximity of the 2003 Dodge Ram truck. Both vehicles simultaneously became engulfed in flames. Assisting motorist and law enforcement personnel were able to safely remove all parties from their vehicles and extinguish the fires.

Parkman, whose restraint use is unknown, was transported to Minden Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries. Pearce was unrestrained at the time of the crash and was airlifted to LSUMC with serious injuries. Christian was properly restrained at the time of the crash and was not injured.

Upon Parkman’s release from Minden Medical Center, he was booked at the Bienville Parish Jail for reckless operation of a vehicle.

LOUISIANA           STATE              POLICE
COURTESY      LOYALTY       SERVICE


Colonel Michael D. Edmonson, Superintendent
News Release – August 23, 2010

Unrestrained Passenger Ejected in Rollover Crash

Dixie Inn – On August 22, 2010, at 6:35 p.m., Louisiana State Police Troop G responded to a single vehicle rollover crash on Interstate 20, at mile post 44 just east of US 371 in Webster Parish. The crash claimed the life of a 41-year-old woman from Huntsville, Alabama and injured the driver as well as one additional occupant.

According to investigating troopers, a 1996 Ford Explorer operated by 25-year-old Jenna A. Dow of Somerville, Alabama was traveling east on Interstate 20 at mile post 44 with passengers James A. Cooper, 79-year-old from Somerville, Alabama, Julio Alvarez (unknown age) of Huntsville, Alabama and 41-year-old Loure Hamrick of Huntsville, Alabama, when the left rear tire of the vehicle suffered tire failure. As a result, Dow lost control of the vehicle, traveled off the right side of the roadway and overturned ejecting Hamrick from the left rear seat of the vehicle.

Hamrick, who was unrestrained at the time of the crash, was airlifted to LSUMC where she was pronounced deceased. Dow and Cooper, who were both restrained at the time of the crash, were transported to Minden Medical Center with minor injuries.  Alvarez was properly restrained and was not injured from the crash.

Routine toxicology test results are pending and the crash remains under investigation. Tire failure is suspected to be a factor in the crash.

Troop G troopers have investigated 27 fatal crashes for the year of 2010, resulting in 30 fatalities.

Contact Information:
Tpr. Cordell Williams
Louisiana State Police
Public Affairs Unit
Office:  (318) 741-7411
Cell: (318) 617-0638
cordell.williams@dps.la.gov

Posted in NEWS: Minden, LA, NEWS: North Louisiana, NEWS: Ruston, LA | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

LSU AgCenter Living Well Expo

Living Well Expo

Tuesday, September 14 9a.m. -12p.m. Bossier Civic Center

FREE!!!

Snack Attack: Snacks can be a healthy part of a child’s life. Providing healthy snacks for children is one way to ensure energy and nutrient requirements are met. Get information and ideas on selecting nutritious snacks for your child.

Quick & Easy Dishes: Want to give your family quick, easy, nutritious dishes after a long, hard day? Enjoy learning how to plan ahead and make fun, fast meals your family will enjoy and that won’t eat up your budget.

Happy Meals: Why eat when you’re stressed, bored or lonely-and what you can do about it. Stop feeding your emotions! Discover foods that fight stress! Favorite stress fighting food samples will be available as well as recipe booklets!

Diet & Nutrition Myths: Are potatoes bad for you? Don’t eat after 7 o’clock? If you have ever been on a “diet” or change your eating habits you have most likely heard a nutrition myth or two. Come join us to separate the facts from the fiction.

In One Ear and In the Other: Parents will learn tips and techniques on how to use the art of communication with their preschoolers, school-agers, and teens…all of which will enhance listening skills, cooperation and lessen the day-to-day struggles that occur within the family.

Is My Child Ready for Kindergarten? Parents will be given the researched knowledge about what they can do to plant the seeds for school success in their children and develop a lifelong love of learning. (For parents of babies through 5-year-olds).

Positive Parenting & Encouragement: Ever wonder why children act the way they do? Learn the four reasons children misbehave, positive parenting tools, and how encouragement promotes good behavior.

Is My Child Safe on the Internet? Identity thieves, sexual predators and computer hackers are just some of the dangers lurking in cyberspace. Discover the basic rules for using the Internet safely to help protect you and your child.

Who Gets Grandma’s Yellow Pie Plate? Whether planning ahead or making decisions, now is the time to educate yourself so that you have the final say about what happens to your property after your death.

Track Your Spending: One of the first practical steps to building wealth is tracking expenses to develop a saving-spending plan. Do your spending habits reflect your personal financial goals?

Credit Cards: What You Need to Know– Credit card debt is rising faster among those 65 and older than any other consumer group. Be informed, not confused with the new credit card rules and find out what the credit card companies are required to tell you.

Growing Green Instead of Spending Green: Come learn how to grow vegetables for your family. It is a great way to save money, eat healthier, and have fun with your kids.

For more information, please contact Cathy Judd at (318) 251-5134 or visit www.lsuagcenter.com/lincoln .

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