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Archive for July, 2010

            Apparently oblivious to the state’s spiraling financial plight, 22 Louisiana legislators accounted for the expenditure of more than $47,000 in state funds attending legislative conferences in Kentucky, South Carolina and California—with each receiving $159 per day in per diem payments over and above travel, lodging, and registration fees.

            The travel comes at a time of shrinking state budgets and on the heels of state employee layoffs, program eliminations, and deep budget cuts to higher education and health care, coupled with runaway pork barrel spending during the recently completed regular legislative session.

Most of the expenses—registration fees, lodging, and travel—purportedly came from legislators’ $1,500 per month supplemental expense accounts which is part of the pay package for lawmakers. But with registration fees accounting for nearly half of that amount, the addition of travel and lodging expenses almost certainly pushed costs well beyond the $1,500 allocated per lawmaker.

Should all 22 legislators attend each day of the respective conferences, per diem payments would add another $16,854 to the cost paid by Louisiana taxpayers.

            State Rep. Joe Harrison (R-Napoleonville) and Baton Rouge Sen. Yvonne Dorsey, in fact, registered to attend two conferences with Dorsey scheduled for back-to-back conferences. She was signed up for the Southern Legislative Conference (SLC) in Charleston, S.C., scheduled for July 31-Aug. 4 and for the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) in San Diego Aug. 5-8.

            Harrison attended the National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL) in Louisville, Ky. July 25-28 and the ALEC conference in San Diego.        Besides Harrison, those attending the NCSL event in Louisville included Reps. Jonathan Perry (R-Abbeville) and Patricia Smith (D-Baton Rouge).

            Those attending the ALEC conference in San Diego besides Harrison and Dorsey included Reps. Robert Johnson (D-Marksville), Austin Badon (D-New Orleans), Bernard LeBas (D-Ville Platte), Tim Burns (R-Mandeville), Thomas Carmody (R-Shreveport), John LaBruzzo (R-Metairie), Kirk Talbot (R-River Ridge), Thomas Wilmont (R-Kenner), and Sen. Bob Kostelka (R-Monroe).

            Joining Dorsey in Charleston were Reps. Jim Fannin (D-Jonesboro), Jeff Arnold (D-New Orleans), Walker Hines (D-New Orleans), and Sens. Francis Thompson (D-Delhi), Butch Gautreaux (D-Morgan City), Gerald Long (R-Winnfield), Ed Murray (D-New Orleans), Buddy Shaw (R-Shreveport), and John Smith (D-Leesville).

            In Charleston, delegates, when not attending business meetings, attended a beach party and participated in a golf tournament at the Dunes West Golf & River Club sponsored by Reynolds American, the parent company of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.

            One has to wonder just how arrogant and fiscally irresponsible our elected officials in Baton Rouge must become before the state’s citizenry draws the proverbial line in the dust and cries out in unison: “ENOUGH ALREADY!”

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About Louisiana Rocks!

The first comprehensive study of Louisiana popular music, from R&B to rockabilly, from blues to Cajun/zydeco, Louisiana Rocks is the culmination of years of research. Inspired by a suggestion from the late John Fred, Tom Aswell explores the very roots of rock. His findings: despite claims to the contrary, rock & roll was born in New Orleans a full four years before Ike Turner’s 1951 recording of Rocket 88.

A Little History…

It was 1947 when Roy Brown, still stinging from the rejection of his song by Wynonie Harris, entered Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studio to record his own version of Good Rockin’ Tonight, a song Elvis Presley would cover in 1954. As soon as it became evident that Brown’s song was a hit, Harris had a sudden change of heart and rushed into the studio to record it himself and it was his version that was selected by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as One of 500 Songs that Shaped Rock & Roll.

Then, in 1949, two years before Rocket 88, two more songs were recorded by Louisiana artists that signaled a revolution in popular music was on the horizon. In the same J&M studio in New Orleans, Fats Domino recorded The Fat Man. That same year, Hank Williams, a member of the Louisiana Hayride who resided at the time in Bossier City, recorded Lovesick Blues. While not rock & roll, Lovesick Blues was a radical break from the traditional country music of the day and it cracked open the door to a genre called rockabilly that the likes of Elvis, Carl Perkins, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Gene Vincent would soon kick down, much to the delight of bored teenagers and to the chagrin of perplexed parents and concerned clergy.

With the merger of blues and country, the floodgates were thrown open and the country was suddenly made aware of artists like Smiley Lewis, Irma Thomas, Benny Spellman, Ernie K-Doe, Jim Reeves, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Jimmy Clanton, Dale & Grace, Johnny Rivers, Guitar Slim, Slim Harpo, Joe Tex, Joe Simon, Rod Bernard, Professor Longhair, Johnny Allan, T.K. Hulin, Tommy McLain, the Dixie Cups, Deacon John, Ray Charles, Big Joe Turner, Johnny Horton, Janis Joplin, Kris Kristofferson, Jimmy Buffett, LeRoux, Tab Benoit, Tabby Thomas, Chris Thomas King, Barbara Lynn, Van Broussard, the Fabulous Boogie Kings, Edgar and Johnny Winter, Huey Meaux, Dale Hawkins, Johnny Adams, and the inspiration for this book, John Fred.

The songwriter who wrote Hit the Road Jack for Ray Charles is from Louisiana as is the composer of both Abraham, Martin & John and Snoopy & the Red Baron. Larry Henley, who wrote Wind Beneath My Wings, previously worked in the oil fields of New Iberia and was a member of the Newbeats. The other two members of the Newbeats were from Bossier City. Merle Kilgore of Shreveport co-wrote with June Carter the Johnny Cash mega-hit Ring of Fire. King also wrote Wolverton Mountain, a huge hit for Shreveport’s Claude King.

Then there are the sidemen, or session artists, musicians who labored in obscurity but whose contributions to Louisiana music are priceless. Four guitar players (Duke Bardwell, Gerry McGee, Fred Carter, Jr., and James Burton), a pianist (Floyd Cramer), and a drummer (D.J. Fontana) all are from Louisiana and each either recorded with or toured with Elvis. Earl Palmer is one of the most recorded drummers in the history of popular music, playing on recordings of artists too numerous to mention. Jon Smith of the Fabulous Boogie Kings played sax on almost all of the Doobie Brothers’ recordings. Floyd Cramer had a gigantic hit of Last Date which made it all the way to number 2 on the Billboard charts. The song that kept out of the number 1 position was It’s Now or Never, a song by Elvis on which Cramer also played piano.


© 2009 Tom Aswell.  All Rights Reserved.

About The Author

Tom Aswell grew up in Ruston an avid baseball fan. Following his graduation from Ruston High School, he put off college to enlist in the U.S. Air Force. Upon his discharge, he started working at the Ruston Daily Leader as sports editor before enrolling at nearby Louisiana Tech University with an eye to becoming a baseball coach. Fate intervened, however, when Wiley Hilburn, only recently appointed head of Tech’s Journalism Department, convinced Aswell to give up his aspirations of coaching in favor of a writing career.

Following his graduation with a degree in journalism in 1970, Aswell worked for a number of papers, including the Shreveport Times and Journal, the Monroe News-Star, Morning World, the Baton Rouge State-Times, and three more stops at the Daily Leader. He won numerous awards for breaking news coverage, feature writing, and investigative reporting. In 1980, he opened his own news bureau in the State Capitol in Baton Rouge where he provided coverage of state government for about forty weekly and small daily newspapers throughout the state.

 
The following year Aswell approached Baton Rouge singer John Fred Gourrier (Judy in Disguise, Agnes English) with a unique proposition. Aswell suggested that the two work to produce a video of Louisiana rock & roll singers. Fred was enthusiastic about the project but it was 1981; the oil patch had just dried up and interest rates were off the charts so there were no investors to be found. Fred, in a moment of inspiration told Aswell, “You’re a writer so why don’t you write a book?” Aswell didn’t act on the suggestion until April 15, 2005. That was the day John Fred passed away in Tulane Medical Center in New Orleans. Aswell started writing Louisiana Rocks! The True Genesis of Rock & Roll the next day. The book is dedicated to John Fred’s memory.

In 1967, while attending Tech, Aswell met and fell in love with a Tech student from nearby Simsboro. He and the former Betty Gray were married in 1968. They and their chiweenie dog reside in Denham Springs—within 10 miles of their three lovely daughters, two special sons-in-law, and seven beautiful grandchildren. He continues to write when not spending time with family or attending LSU baseball games.

Email Tom Aswell

© 2009 Tom Aswell.  All Rights Reserved.

They’re all here, the winners, the losers, the inside stories. You’ll read:

What Ernie K-Doe did with his first royalty check from Mother-In-Law.

How Bill Haley “cleaned up” the lyrics to Big Joe Turner’s Shake Rattle & Roll but inadvertently left in the most risqué line.

About actor Robert Mitchum’s getting arrested in New Orleans for “mingling” at the Dew Drop Inn and about how Allen Toussaint nearly got arrested in Dallas for simply buying a new car.

How Dale & Grace got a number-1 hit even though the strings were laid down on the recording track in the wrong key.

How a future rock, R&B, jazz, blues, country, and pop legend produced and played piano on Guitar Slim’s classic The Things That I Used to Do.

How a $25 recording session in Shreveport’s KWKH studios produced one of the 500 Songs that Shaped Rock & Roll.

How a singer born in Pascagoula, Mississippi started out as a street performer in New Orleans and went on to become a one-man multi-million dollar entertainment conglomerate.

About where Kris Kristofferson was when he wrote the memorable line “Freedom is just another word for nothin’ left to lose” for Janis Joplin’s Me and Bobby McGee.

How Janis Joplin got her musical education in the honky tonks and road houses of southwest Louisiana.

How a Lake Charles hotel bellhop wrote and recorded an all-time classic hit with the instrumental backing of Cookie & the Cupcakes.

How a singer wore his full baseball uniform when he recorded his very first record and that record became the first debut record by any singer to hit number 1.

How an obscure Louisiana singer outsold Patsy Cline’s version of the same song and how that song became a certified WHH (whorehouse hit).

The first comprehensive study of Louisiana popular music, from R& to rockabilly, from blues to Cajun/zydeco, Louisiana Rocks is the culmination of years of research. Inspired by a suggestion from the late John Fred, Tom Aswell explores the very roots of rock.   Learn more…

 
Praise for Louisiana Rocks! 
“Could not put it down once I started reading. It brought back a lot of old memories. -Bob Robin, retired disc jockey, WTIX (New Orleans) and producer for record labels Stax, Tower, Bell, Warner Bros., Capitol, and ABC Paramount
“Tom Aswell has gotten it right! Louisiana’s contributions to rock and roll have been ignored far too long, but now the secret is out…Louisiana Rocks! is a must read for any serious student of rock and roll. -Mike Shepherd, director, Louisiana Music Hall of Fame
 
Special Thanks To:
  Pelican Publishing
  Louisiana Music Hall of Fame
About Louisiana Rocks!

The first comprehensive study of Louisiana popular music, from R&B to rockabilly, from blues to Cajun/zydeco, Louisiana Rocks is the culmination of years of research. Inspired by a suggestion from the late John Fred, Tom Aswell explores the very roots of rock. His findings: despite claims to the contrary, rock & roll was born in New Orleans a full four years before Ike Turner’s 1951 recording of Rocket 88.

A Little History…

It was 1947 when Roy Brown, still stinging from the rejection of his song by Wynonie Harris, entered Cosimo Matassa’s J&M Studio to record his own version of Good Rockin’ Tonight, a song Elvis Presley would cover in 1954. As soon as it became evident that Brown’s song was a hit, Harris had a sudden change of heart and rushed into the studio to record it himself and it was his version that was selected by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as One of 500 Songs that Shaped Rock & Roll.

Then, in 1949, two years before Rocket 88, two more songs were recorded by Louisiana artists that signaled a revolution in popular music was on the horizon. In the same J&M studio in New Orleans, Fats Domino recorded The Fat Man. That same year, Hank Williams, a member of the Louisiana Hayride who resided at the time in Bossier City, recorded Lovesick Blues. While not rock & roll, Lovesick Blues was a radical break from the traditional country music of the day and it cracked open the door to a genre called rockabilly that the likes of Elvis, Carl Perkins, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Gene Vincent would soon kick down, much to the delight of bored teenagers and to the chagrin of perplexed parents and concerned clergy.

With the merger of blues and country, the floodgates were thrown open and the country was suddenly made aware of artists like Smiley Lewis, Irma Thomas, Benny Spellman, Ernie K-Doe, Jim Reeves, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, Jimmy Clanton, Dale & Grace, Johnny Rivers, Guitar Slim, Slim Harpo, Joe Tex, Joe Simon, Rod Bernard, Professor Longhair, Johnny Allan, T.K. Hulin, Tommy McLain, the Dixie Cups, Deacon John, Ray Charles, Big Joe Turner, Johnny Horton, Janis Joplin, Kris Kristofferson, Jimmy Buffett, LeRoux, Tab Benoit, Tabby Thomas, Chris Thomas King, Barbara Lynn, Van Broussard, the Fabulous Boogie Kings, Edgar and Johnny Winter, Huey Meaux, Dale Hawkins, Johnny Adams, and the inspiration for this book, John Fred.

The songwriter who wrote Hit the Road Jack for Ray Charles is from Louisiana as is the composer of both Abraham, Martin & John and Snoopy & the Red Baron. Larry Henley, who wrote Wind Beneath My Wings, previously worked in the oil fields of New Iberia and was a member of the Newbeats. The other two members of the Newbeats were from Bossier City. Merle Kilgore of Shreveport co-wrote with June Carter the Johnny Cash mega-hit Ring of Fire. King also wrote Wolverton Mountain, a huge hit for Shreveport’s Claude King.

Then there are the sidemen, or session artists, musicians who labored in obscurity but whose contributions to Louisiana music are priceless. Four guitar players (Duke Bardwell, Gerry McGee, Fred Carter, Jr., and James Burton), a pianist (Floyd Cramer), and a drummer (D.J. Fontana) all are from Louisiana and each either recorded with or toured with Elvis. Earl Palmer is one of the most recorded drummers in the history of popular music, playing on recordings of artists too numerous to mention. Jon Smith of the Fabulous Boogie Kings played sax on almost all of the Doobie Brothers’ recordings. Floyd Cramer had a gigantic hit of Last Date which made it all the way to number 2 on the Billboard charts. The song that kept out of the number 1 position was It’s Now or Never, a song by Elvis on which Cramer also played piano.

About The Author

Tom Aswell grew up in Ruston an avid baseball fan. Following his graduation from Ruston High School, he put off college to enlist in the U.S. Air Force. Upon his discharge, he started working at the Ruston Daily Leader as sports editor before enrolling at nearby Louisiana Tech University with an eye to becoming a baseball coach. Fate intervened, however, when Wiley Hilburn, only recently appointed head of Tech’s Journalism Department, convinced Aswell to give up his aspirations of coaching in favor of a writing career.

Following his graduation with a degree in journalism in 1970, Aswell worked for a number of papers, including the Shreveport Times and Journal, the Monroe News-Star, Morning World, the Baton Rouge State-Times, and three more stops at the Daily Leader. He won numerous awards for breaking news coverage, feature writing, and investigative reporting. In 1980, he opened his own news bureau in the State Capitol in Baton Rouge where he provided coverage of state government for about forty weekly and small daily newspapers throughout the state.

 
The following year Aswell approached Baton Rouge singer John Fred Gourrier (Judy in Disguise, Agnes English) with a unique proposition. Aswell suggested that the two work to produce a video of Louisiana rock & roll singers. Fred was enthusiastic about the project but it was 1981; the oil patch had just dried up and interest rates were off the charts so there were no investors to be found. Fred, in a moment of inspiration told Aswell, “You’re a writer so why don’t you write a book?” Aswell didn’t act on the suggestion until April 15, 2005. That was the day John Fred passed away in Tulane Medical Center in New Orleans. Aswell started writing Louisiana Rocks! The True Genesis of Rock & Roll the next day. The book is dedicated to John Fred’s memory.

In 1967, while attending Tech, Aswell met and fell in love with a Tech student from nearby Simsboro. He and the former Betty Gray were married in 1968. They and their chiweenie dog reside in Denham Springs—within 10 miles of their three lovely daughters, two special sons-in-law, and seven beautiful grandchildren. He continues to write when not spending time with family or attending LSU baseball games.

Email Tom Aswell

 

© 2009 Tom Aswell.  All Rights Reserved.

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            Legislators have been working themselves into an emotional lather over the past several months in efforts to abolish what they mistakenly refer to as “automatic” 4 percent merit increases for state civil service employees. Lost in all the rhetoric, however, was another “automatic” increase that quietly kicked in last October 1—legislators’ per diem payments.

            With no debate and no vote, and even as the speechifying over state classified employee pay raises was ongoing, all 144 legislators’ daily allowance jumped $14 a day, from $145 to $159 for each day they meet in the Capitol. That’s because legislators several years ago passed a bill that ties their per diem rate to rates paid federal employees, making the legislators’ per diem increases truly automatic.  And that includes days they don’t even meet—37 days for each of the 144 House members and 39 Senate members—during this year’s 85-day session. That obscure law, however, could end if Rep. Jerome Richard (I-Thibodaux) has his way.

            With the administration anticipating a deficit of $319 million this year, House members showed no qualms about accepting the per diem payments for 12 Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, plus Memorial Day—days during which both chambers are empty. For House members, that’s $611,832 in per diem payments for days that members are gone and for the Senate, the tab comes to $229,437 for a total payment of $841,269 for all 144 legislators for 37 days in absentia—43 percent of the 85-day session. Factoring in lower per diem rates for prior years and shorter, 60-day sessions in odd-numbered years, that still comes to about $6.5 million in payments over the last 15 years for days during which only the laughter of children and the sounds of tourists reverberate in the otherwise empty Capitol rotunda.

            The classic quotation by Everett Dirksen, the late U.S. Senator from Illinois, somehow seems appropriate for the Louisiana Legislature today: “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.” And we’re not even talking about special sessions.

            Legislators bemoan the fact that they are paid only $16,800 per year. But $159 per diem for an 85-day session adds another $22,896. Each legislator also receives an un-vouchered $6,000 per year expense allowance, up to $1,500 per month in other vouchered expenses (that’s $63,696 for a part time job, which is more than the average state civil service employee makes in his or her full time job). Add to that perks that include a laptop computer for the Capitol, a desktop computer for his or her district office, high-speed internet service, up to three telephones for each legislator’s district office, and up to $3,000 per month for the salary of a legislative aide. Additionally, Legislators serving on or before Jan. 1, 1997, or who were already participating in a public retirement system at that time, also are eligible for retirement benefits of 3.5 percent of the member’s annual salary for each year of service. State civil service employees receive 2.5 percent of their annual salaries.

            Richard, who represents Lafourche Parish, introduced HB 1390 on Tuesday that would divorce legislators’ per diem from the federal rate by freezing the daily payments at $159 in light of the anticipated fiscal shortfall facing the state. As of Tuesday, his bill had not been received a committee referral.

            Civil service employees will have their salaries frozen, effective July 1 after lawmakers railed against what some perceived as automatic 4 percent merit increases for state classified employees. The term automatic, however, is somewhat misleading. Merit, or step, increases are given based on job performance. If an employee fails to attain certain goals, there is no merit increase. Moreover, once a classified employee maxes out on his or her step increases, there are no more increases available under civil service unless that employee receives a promotion or changes jobs. There have been no cost of living (COL) increases for state workers since 2007. The last COL prior to that was during the Edwards administration.

            That hasn’t stopped lawmakers like District 77 Rep. John M. Schroder, Sr. (R-Covington) who has led a vendetta-like campaign against state classified employees. He has authored no less than six separate bills dealing with state civil service, none of which would appear to be favorable to state workers. All six of his bills were referred to the House and Governmental Affairs Committee.

            HB 752 would grant the legislature sole authority to provide for pay increases for state employees and state elected officials. The bill would include employees of joint state and parochial agency or joint state and municipal agency, “regardless of the source of the funds used to pay for such employment.”

            HB 753 would abolish the State Civil Service Commission and the Department of State Civil Service, effective Jan. 9, 2012. Though Schroder is proposing the abolishment of civil service, his bill offers no alternative that would protect state government from returning to the spoils system of political patronage. Civil service currently protects employees from being required to campaign for or contribute to political candidates as a condition of keeping their jobs. Without civil service, some fear a return of the “deduct box” of the Huey Long era.

            HB 754 would prohibit pay increases to state employees when there is a budget deficit, subject to a fine of up to $500 or imprisonment for up to six month, or both.

            HB 755 would require the legislature to determine prior to each fiscal year if pay increases may be granted to state employees and if so, the manner and amount of the increase. This bill would be a radical departure from allowing supervisors and managers to evaluate employees’ work performance and to make decisions on merit increases. Schroder’s bill does not explain how the legislature would be qualified to evaluate job performance of 60,000 individual state employees.

            House bills 752, 753, 754, and 755 are all proposed constitutional amendments and would have to be voted on in the Nov. 2 statewide election.

            HB 757 would require that certain employee reports be sent to the Department of State Civil Service, the Speaker of the House and President of the Senate. The reports would include employees’ names, addresses, positions, dates and place of employment, hours of work, and salaries.

            Perhaps the most ominous bill, however, is HB 1296, which would require employees to use annual, compensatory, or unpaid leave for official holidays. Official state holidays include New Year’s Day, Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, Mardi Gras, Good Friday, Independence Day, Labor Day, Veterans’ Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, Inauguration Day once every four years in the city of Baton Rouge, and General Election Day every two years.

            Particularly galling to state employees are the 9 percent per diem increase for legislators and the $159 per diem paid lawmakers for three days per week that the House and Senate do not meet during the 85-day session while at the same time halting 4 percent merit increases and also considering a bill to take paid holidays away from workers.

            It was Schroder who initially raised the issue of “automatic” merit increases for state employees last year with House Speaker Jim Tucker quickly joining in the effort to thwart the increases. Many felt that Schroder and Tucker were simply doing Gov. Bobby Jindal’s bidding in attacking the civil service merit increases. The governor has mostly remained above the fray even while allowing six legislators sitting on his Commission on Streamlining Government to collect more than $17,000 in per diem payments during their consideration of ways to reduce government spending. Four private sector members of the commission received no payments though Barry Erwin, president of the Council for a Better Louisiana, did say, “We did get certificates to hang on the wall.”

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            Give State Rep. John Schroder (R-Abita Springs) credit: once he got the idea that picking on state employees was popular with the general public, he has stopped at nothing to offer up State Civil Service as a sacrifice at the Altar of Bobby Jindal.

            Schroder was successful at obtaining committee approval of HB-1478 (originally HB-1296) which would mandate that state employees not be paid for up to 11 legal holidays. Legislators, however, will not be required to forfeit their pay for 37 days of the regular 85-day legislative session during which they do not meet.

            In its original wording, HB-1296 stipulated that state employees would simply be required to take annual or accrued leave time for legal holidays. Somewhere along the way, however, someone must have realized that scenario presented no savings to the state since employees would receive pay whether they worked or took annual leave. Accordingly, the bill was amended to force employees to take legal holidays without pay.

            The bill, which was changed to HB-1478, was approved without objection by the House and Governmental Affairs Committee and now goes to the House floor for approval.

            Schroder was subjected to a flurry of emails from outraged state employees after his original bill calling for employees to take leave for holidays became public. He repeatedly refused to answer specific questions, saying things like, “(I’m) not sure what games you are playing, but I don’t have the time. You have no idea what’s going on and it’s clear you have an agenda slanted to the unproductive side. Keep spewing your anger across the state. In the end, I am working to solve problems and those willing to learn and listen can contribute right along as we work to make La. a better state.”

            On another occasion, when a writer asked why he did not address questions directed to him, Schroder responded simply, “God bless you.”

            One of those questions asked if Schroder had accepted a $14 increase in per diem payments (from $145 to $159) that went into effect on Oct. 1, 2009, a 9 percent increase at a time when Schroder was leading the efforts to abolish what he called “automatic” 4 percent merit increases for state workers. Merit increases for state employees are not automatic and in fact, once an employee receives all the step increases allowed for that pay grade, there are no more increases unless the employee takes another job or is promoted to a higher pay grade.

            Another question which Schroder refused to answer was whether or not he had accepted the $159 per diem for the 37 days (12 Fridays, 12 Saturdays, 12 Sundays, and Memorial Day) during which neither the House nor the Senate convenes. The per diem for those 37 days comes to $5,883 per legislator, or $847,152 for all 144 members. Memorial Day is one of the holidays for which state employees would receive no pay next year if HB-1478 becomes law.

            Schroder was also asked, but again refused to answer, if he was the primary author of HB-753, which would abolish the State Civil Service Commission and the Department of State Civil Service, effective Jan. 9, 2012. That bill, which calls for a constitutional amendment to be decided at the Nov. 2 statewide election, would dissolve the only avenue available to state employees to address grievances. State Civil Service prohibits state classified employees from contributing to or participating in political campaigns on behalf of any candidate. One of the reasons for the existence of civil service is for the protection of state employees. In the days of the old spoils system, employees were beholden to those elected officials and it spawned what is known as the “deduct box” more commonly associated with the administration of Huey Long.

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            Seventy-one years ago, LSU President James Monroe Smith revealed to then-Gov. Richard Leche that he had illegally invested—and lost—more than half a million dollars of university funds in the stock market. For that transgression, and others, Smith was carted off to federal prison.

            Thirty-three years ago Josh Bursh who, at the time was the odds-on favorite to succeed Ralph Jones as president of Grambling State University, was convicted of misappropriating $26,000 in GSU Foundation funds and spent two years in prison.

            More recently, a state audit revealed that GSU officials lost $1 million investing in the stock market. By investing $2.6 million of funds that legally could only be used for university facilities—physical plant—GSU violated two state laws, the audit report says.

            For the third consecutive year the university failed to compile an accurate annual fiscal report and overstated or understated cash flows by as much as $89 million. The audit also cited continuing problems with athletic department contracts and for movable property accountability.

            But the real revelation was when Tom Cole, director of financial audits for the Legislative Auditor’s Office, said, “None of this was serious enough for use to send for prosecution.” Perhaps not, but Daarel Burnette left his position as Vice President of Finance and Administration on July 21. There was no immediate word if he resigned voluntarily or under pressure, or was simply fired. Leon Sanders, who served as Burnette’s assistant, has been named as his interim replacement.

            GSU President Frank G. Pogue concurred with virtually all the audit’s findings, which, among other things, said the university failed to correct poor accounting practices, including being unable to account for movable property and for not signing game contracts with all athletic opponents, shortcomings also noted in prior year audits.

            Even as area media were saying that Pogue was unavailable for comment, the GSU president was releasing an “open letter to the campus community” that addressed news reports on the latest poor audit. While acknowledging that GSU “ is undergoing major financial challenges, however, not to the extent that we are negligent in being good stewards of the public’s trust.”

            Pogue said that while the audit was for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2009, “the stocks were purchased by the university between 2000 and 2004.” Pogue became GSU’s eighth president only last month. He had been serving as interim president since last December. Horace Judson, who left last October, was GSU president during the time period covered by the audit.

            “It is my belief that the corrective actions submitted in response to the legislative auditor’s findings are appropriate and that they ensure the fiscal operations at Grambling State University are consistent with the law,” Pogue said in his June 30 letter.

            “Our priority is to move Grambling State University forward and that includes ensuring that this university makes fiscally sound decisions in spending and investing public resources. We have established an inclusive strategic planning process to assist us with these efforts. We are committed to holding ourselves and this institution to a higher standard of moral and ethical accountability while ensuring that we are good stewards of the public’s trust.

            “It is the goal of this administration to maintain a spirit of transparency and open communication with the campus community, especially when faced with potentially damaging news,” he said.

            Cole said the improper stock investment, made with $2.6 million in plant funds that can legally be used only on university facilities, “was through an oversight and not properly monitoring their investments.” Pogue, in his letter, did not address the question why funds clearly earmarked for campus physical plant were used for stock market investment.

            “They are making efforts to improve the control structure at Grambling,” he said.

            Grambling has been “making efforts” to correct glaring audit deficiencies for more than 40 years, mostly to no avail. The legislative auditor’s office, on the heels of the Josh Bursh debacle, was so desperate to clean up the fiscal mess at the university that it installed one of its own auditors on the campus to oversee financial operations. That effort, however, failed as GSU continued to pile up negative audit reports year after year.

            Stay tuned for annual updates.

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