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Our “Bye-Bye Bobby Bash,” the inspiration of reader Earthmother, was a huge success on Sunday (Jan. 10), just about 24 hours before Jindal leaves office as one of the most reviled governors in Louisiana history.

Before getting down to our celebration, we observed a moment of silence in honor of the late C.B. Forgotston. Those of you who read LouisianaVoice regularly know that I quoted him often. He was an inspiration to me and he will be missed. He may not have been with us in body, but he was certainly with us in spirit.

In attendance were Jerel Giarrusso (Earthmother) and husband Ted Hansen, Stephen Winham and wife Betty, several of our loyal readers, and our mystery cartoonist. Also on hand was Murphy Painter who was persecuted and prosecuted by the Jindal administration. It was LouisianaVoice and LouisianaVoice alone that said long before his federal criminal trial that Painter was not only innocent, but a target of reprisals by Jindal for Painter’s refusal to knuckle under to a major Jindal campaign contributor (Saints owner Tom Benson). Not a single news outlet, other than LouisianaVoice, peeled back the layers to look beneath the façade of lies and fabricated charges against Painter, to examine the real reasons for the administration’s actions. Painter was not only acquitted of all charges but the state then had to reimburse some $300,000 in legal fees incurred by Painter who, instead of taking his licks and walking away as the Jindalites apparently thought he would do, stood and fought for his honor and integrity. In the end, he prevailed.

We handed out special party favors as a memento of the absurdity of Jindal’s tenure.

When we arrived at Superior Grill, there were 12 state police officers having a late lunch. I offered them our party favors but they refused, either out of loyalty to or fear of State Police Superintendent Mike Edmonson. One of the officers, an administrative type, dismissed my offer with a curt, “I’m good.”

Oh well, I offered.

I want to take this opportunity to offer a special word of deep appreciation to all who attended and to all my readers who were unable to attend. Without you, LouisianaVoice has no meaning. With your support, however, we managed to expose a lot of wrongdoing and even change a couple of things (the Edmonson amendment which attempted to sneak in a $50,000 increase in Edmonson’s retirement comes immediately to mind).

With your continued support, we will continue to keep watch over the incoming administration and especially over the legislature which is no less responsible for our present fiscal mess than Jindal because it was those 144 men and women who enabled him.

Below are a few photos taken at today’s event. Click on the photos to enlarge them.

Enjoy.

LEFTOVER SIGN FROM 2011 CAMPAIGN

She brought her 2011 campaign sign all the way from Ruston. (Sorry but I lost your name but I knew your father, Peewee Edwards well. He ran Village Plaza Cinema in Ruston and Mrs. Edwards ran Fran’s Book Nook for years.)

 

 

SOMEBODY BROUGHT A CAKE

Somebody (Earthmother) brought a cake.

 

 

A PRETTY DIVERSE GROUP

Part of our diverse group.

 

 

EARTHMOTHER'S PINATA

Jerel Giarrusso, aka Earthmother, made this inspirational piñata. Unfortunately, the proprietor of Superior Grill said his insurance policy would not allow us to actually break it, so we simply acted out our attacks for the camera.

 

 

JEREL GIARRUSSO, AKA EARTHMOTHER TAKES HER TURN

Earthmother got her pretend licks in.

 

 

NO ONE WAS MORE DESERVING AT POKING THE PINATA THAN MURPHY PAINTER

After what the Jindal administration did to him in its futile attempt at destroying his reputation and its unsuccessful prosecution of him, no one was more deserving of taking a whack at our Jindal piñata than Murphy Painter.

 

 

YOURS TRULY TAKES A WHACK AT EARTHMOTHER'S PINATA

Yours truly gets his turn.

 

http://transparentpiyjay.com/

(CLICK ON LINK TO ENLARGE)

Folks, apparently our mystery cartoonist feels his work is done. To borrow a term from the late C.B. Forgotston, as long as we have narrow-minded, ambitious “leges” with their own agendas, there will be a need for someone like our mystery cartoonist to poke pins in their overblown egos.

Please join me in encouraging him to remain on his unpaid job. It’s important. You may add your thoughts simply by commenting below.

This is our final reminder of the Bye-Bye Bobby Bash:

Don’t forget you may now pre-order a signed copy of my latest book, Bobby Jindal: His Destiny and Obsession. The publication date is now mid-February.

Also, we have an update on our Bye-Bye Bobby Bash, the gala that will celebrate the end of the Bobby Jindal eight-year reign of error.

The date of the event, originally scheduled for Jan. 9 (a Saturday), has been changed to Sunday, Jan. 10 because of a personal conflict.

The party will be held at popular Baton Rouge eatery/watering hole Superior Grill at 5435 (appropriately enough) Government Street from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. http://batonrouge.superiorgrill.com/

The only cost will be your drinks and/or food. We are charging nothing for this event. We wish only to have a gathering of people with one important agenda in common: witnessing the exodus of Bobby Jindal from the governor’s office.

Bobby’s got one foot out the door, but the effect of his carnage will linger for years. That’s why I wrote a book about him. We should never forget what he has done to this state. The book can also serve as an important guide to the political platforms of future candidates.

The book covers such Jindal disasters as the Office of Group Benefits, higher education, public education, health care, hospital privatization, and of course, his delusional quest for the Republican presidential nomination.

And don’t think for a moment we have forgotten Jindal’s supporting cast. Also examined are his staff members and a complicit, compliant legislature, the American Legislative Exchange Council, Grover Norquist, and the Koch brothers, among others.

If you order by clicking on the book cover’s image below right, your order will be placed through Cavalier House Books of Denham Springs, a locally-owned independent bookstore.

Remember, I encourage you to order through Cavalier House. Why Cavalier House?

Two reasons.

  • First, by placing your order this way, you support a local independent book store, a cause I strongly endorse.
  • Second, because I live only about two blocks from Cavalier House Books, proprietor John Cavalier will summon me to sign each copy before he ships them out.

 

If you opt to purchase through Amazon or a big chain store, you’re hurting local business owners—much like shopping at Walmart instead of patronizing locally-owned stores. Moreover, you won’t get signed copies through those outlets.

Unless otherwise instructed, each signed book will be personalized to the name of the person ordering it. If you wish your copy signed to someone else (if it is a gift, for instance), please email me at:

louisianavoice@cox.net

DO NOT ORDER YOUR BOOK FROM THIS EMAIL ADDRESS. Order through Cavalier by clicking on Jindal’s photo at right and email me separately on signing instructions.

 

“The petty thief is imprisoned but the big thief becomes a feudal lord.”

Zhuangzi

 

There it was, splashed across the Metro page of Tuesday’s Baton Rouge Advocate:

“OMV audit: More than $200,000 stolen”

The entire matter is heavily weighed down by irony but you’d never know it from reading the story.

It seems that a new audit of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections (DPS) has revealed that two employees of the Louisiana Office of Motor Vehicles (OMV) misappropriated more than $211,000 before being arrested.

The two, Heather Prather of Baker in East Baton Rouge Parish and Angelle Temple of Marksville in Avoyelles Parish were actually arrested in early 2015—nearly a year ago—and fired for felony theft, injuring public records and malfeasance in office.

 

“Steal a little and they throw you in jail. Steal a lot and then they make you king.”

Bob Dylan

 

“Upon investigation, OMV management determined that the OMV employees had diverted public funds for personal use and violated state laws,” according to the Legislative Auditor’s Office.

Apparently the two issued receipts to paying customers but then either altered, voided or simply did not post the transactions. There was no indication as to whether or not the two knew each other or if they conspired together or acted separately in misappropriating the funds.

And yes, $211,000 is a lot of money and nothing in this post should be interpreted as excusing the women’s actions.

But isn’t it odd that the media would give such prominence to this story while overlooking official misappropriation of public funds?

Take, for example, the lingering case of high ranking State Police official Jill Boudreaux and the unmet demand that she repay nearly $60,000 in money she received to which she was not entitled. That little matter is still unresolved after almost six years.

And then there is Bobby Jindal. He allowed the taxpayers of Louisiana to pick up the tab for the cost of more than $3 million for State Police security details. Those costs were incurred while he spent more than two-thirds of his final year in office campaigning out-of-state for the Republican presidential nomination. A reasonable person would assume his campaign would have paid for that protection since his travels had zero to do with his job as governor of Louisiana.

But few lately have accused Jindal of being reasonable. The cost of flights, taxis, auto rentals, lodging, laundry and meals cost Louisiana taxpayers more than $640,000 in addition to the salaries of state troopers assigned to his out-of-state security detail. None of that has been refunded by Jindal’s campaign.

 

“He who uses the office he owes to the voters wrongfully

and against them is a thief”

Jose Marti

Boudreaux, Undersecretary for DPS, which has management oversight responsibility for OMV, first said the office would consider a policy of no longer accepting cash as a safeguard against theft by employees.

Later, however, she and the Auditor’s Office agreed that OMV only needs a better system of controls over accepting cash. State Police public information officer Doug Cain said the goal of OMV was to continue to provide convenience to the customer while at the same time, assuring “due diligence to have accountability on the process.”

Due diligence appears to have been lacking in efforts to have Boudreaux repay the $59,000 she was paid as part of an early retirement incentive offered nearly six years ago.

In April of 2010, the Jindal administration, in an offer to implement across the board savings, made a one-time incentive package offer to various state agencies as a means to encourage state employees to take early retirement.

Handled properly, it appeared at the time—and still does appear—to have been an economical and compassionate way to nudge employees who wanted out but who could not afford to retire, into making the decision to walk away, thus reducing the number of state employees which in turn translated to long-term savings in salaries and benefits paid by the state.

On April 23 of that year, DPS Deputy Undersecretary Jill Boudreaux sent an email to all personnel informing them that the Department of Civil Service and the Louisiana State Police Commission had approved the retirement incentive as a “Layoff Avoidance Plan.”

In legal-speak, under the incentive eligible applicants would receive a payment of 50 percent of the savings realized by DPS for one year from the effective date of the employee’s retirement.

In simpler language, the incentive was simply 50 percent of the employee’s annual salary. If an employee making $50,000 per year, for example, was approved for the incentive, he or she would walk away with $25,000 in up-front payments, plus his or her regular retirement and the agency would save one-half of her salary from the date of retirement to the end of the fiscal year. The higher the salary, the higher the potential savings.

The program, offered to the first 20 DPS employees to sign up via an internet link on a specific date, was designed to save the state many times that amount over the long haul. If, for example, 20 employees, each making $50,000 a year, took advantage of the incentive, DPS theoretically would realize a savings of $1 million per year thereafter following the initial retirement year.

That formula, repeated in multiple agencies, could produce a savings of several million—not that much in terms of a $25 billion state budget, but a savings nonetheless.

The policy did come with one major caveat from the Department of Civil Service, however. Agencies were cautioned not to circumvent the program through the state’s obscure retire-rehire policy whereby several administrative personnel, the most notable being former Secretary of Higher Education Sally Clausen, have “retired,” only to be “rehired” a day or so later in order to reap a monetary windfall.

“We strongly recommend that agencies exercise caution in re-hiring an employee who has received a retirement incentive payment within the same budget unit until it can be clearly demonstrated that the projected savings have been realized,” the Civil Service communique said.

 

“A man with a briefcase can steal millions more than any man with a gun.”

Don Henley

 

Basically, to realize a savings under the early retirement incentive payout, an agency would have been required to wait at least a year before rehiring an employee who had retired under the program.

Boudreaux, by what many in DPS feel was more than mere happenstance, managed to be the first person to sign up on the date the internet link opened up for applications.

In Boudreaux’s case, her incentive payment was based on an annual salary of about $92,000 so her incentive payment was around $46,000. In addition, she was also entitled to payment of up to 300 hours of unused annual leave which came to another $13,000 or so for a total of about $59,000 in walk-around money.

Her retirement date was April 28 but the day before, on April 27, she double encumbered herself into the classified (Civil Service) Deputy Undersecretary position because another employee was promoted into her old position on April 26.

A double incumbency is when an employee is appointed to a position that is already occupied by an incumbent, in this case, Boudreaux’s successor. Double incumbencies are mostly used for smooth succession planning initiatives when the incumbent of a position (Boudreaux, in this case) is planning to retire, according to the Louisiana Department of Civil Service.

http://www.civilservice.louisiana.gov/files/HRHandbook/JobAid/5-Double%20Incumbency.pdf

Here’s the kicker: agencies are not required to report double incumbencies to the Civil Service Department if the separation or retirement will last for fewer than 30 days. And because State Civil Service is not required to fund double incumbencies, everything is conveniently kept in-house and away from public scrutiny.

On April 30, under the little-known retire-rehire policy, Boudreaux was rehired two days after her “retirement,” but this time at the higher paying position of Undersecretary, an unclassified, or appointive position.

What’s more, though she “retired” as Deputy Undersecretary on April 28, her “retirement” was inexplicably calculated based on the higher Undersecretary position’s salary, a position she did not assume until April 30—two days after her “retirement,” sources inside DPS told LouisianaVoice.

Following her maneuver, then-Commissioner of Administration Angelé Davis apparently saw through the ruse and reportedly ordered Boudreaux to repay her incentive payment as well as the payment for her 300 hours of annual leave, according to those same DPS sources.

It was about this time, however, that Davis left Gov. Bobby Jindal’s administration to take a position in the private sector. Paul Rainwater was named to succeed Davis on June 24, 2010, and the matter of Boudreaux’s payment quickly slipped through the cracks and was never repaid.

Granted, $59,000 is not a lot in the over scheme of things—especially with the state facing a budgetary shortfall of nearly $2 billion. But as the late Sen. Everette Dirksen said, “A million here and a million there and pretty soon you’re taking about real money.”

Well, no matter the amount, it’s real money.

Perhaps when Jay Dardenne takes over as the incoming Commissioner of Administration, he may wish to take another look at the manner in which Boudreaux took $59,000 in extra cash and then defied the directive by Davis to repay the money.

MIKE'S DREAMS

THE ANONYMOUS CARTOONIST STRIKES AGAIN!

(Click on image to enlarge)