Mountain View
The Current Media
Boulet, councils silent on Pride Month
More than halfway through June, Lafayette Consolidated Government has yet to formally recognize Pride Month. LGBTQ+ advocates publicly petitioned Mayor-President Monique Boulet and the City Council at this week’s council meeting and drew no response from council members or Boulet. Former M-P Josh Guillory faced annual criticism and pressure...
Lafayette libraries to issue restricted cards to all minors
All patrons under 18 will need parental permission to access materials outside of youth collections and to use computers at Lafayette libraries, according to the Acadiana Advocate, under a policy adopted this week. By default, minors will be issued restricted access library cards that prohibit them from checking out “adult”...
LCG hopes to avoid federal fines, more costs on major drainage projects
A trail of regulatory lapses has continued to bog signature projects spearheaded by the Guillory administration. The latest is the ongoing fallout of former Mayor-President Josh Guillory’s decision to forgo federal permitting for major drainage projects. An amicable settlement with federal regulators may be in sight for current Mayor-President...
KRVS to tape Lafayette artists for World Cafe
Lafayette’s KRVS Radio Acadie, the local NPR affiliate, is providing local musicians an opportunity for national exposure on the renowned radio program World Café. Six artists will record sets at Cypress Lake Studio on campus at UL this week, with World Cafe staff selecting acts for a monthly showcase distributed to over 200 U.S. public radio stations starting in September.
Vincent Pierre, Fiber Director Michael Soileau named to LEDA board
Mayor-President Monique B. Boulet has announced two new appointments to the Board of Commissioners for Lafayette Economic Development Authority. Michael D. Soileau, who was named LUS Fiber Director earlier this year, and Vincent Pierre, a former State Representative and a government affairs adviser in Boulet’s office will join the 12-member board.
Lourdes targets maternal health with major Lafayette expansion
Working as a pregnancy navigator for Our Lady of Lourdes Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Stephanie King is often the first point of contact for expectant mothers on their complicated journey toward childbirth. “I get a lot of phone calls, throughout the day, with patients saying: Hey, I found...
Wanted: Lafayette’s best people
Maybe someone who started a community garden or a free library? What about someone who mentors young people or organizes community clean-ups? Maybe someone who runs a really special small business or offers a service no one else provides?. We’re on a mission to tell the world about Lafayette’s best...
Council Preview: Boulet aims to shake up parish emergency preparedness
Here is a selection of items on the agendas for this week’s meetings of the City and Parish councils. To see the full agendas, check out the links below:. City Agenda (Public Comment Time!) Lafayette 101. Emergency Prep. State law requires every parish to have an office of homeland...
Lafayette seeks new police chief amid staffing challenges
Lafayette’s next police chief, whoever that may be, will take over a short-staffed department. Lafayette is currently in search of its eighth police chief since 2020, after Judith Estorge stepped down in May. Personnel disruptions and stagnant pay have hampered the Lafayette Police Department’s recruitment, former and current police officials say. And there is optimism that the job opening at chief is an opportunity to improve LPD and make it more attractive to men and women seeking careers in law enforcement.
Chubby Carrier, parade top expanded Lafayette Juneteenth
Telling the Juneteenth story, and moreover, clarifying its history, are foremost on the minds of local organizers as area communities prepare to celebrate the national holiday earmarking the June 19, 1865 date when Texan slaves received official news of their freedom. The news, an order that arrived in Galveston and...
LCG: Around 80% of May storm debris collected
Contract crews have cleared 22,000 cubic yards of storm debris, Lafayette Consolidated Government reported Thursday, roughly 80% of the debris leftover from May’s ferocious wind events. LCG has 17 contract trucks working on storm debris collection and expects to complete the current phase of pickup this weekend, with future...
Lafayette Parish owes the city $17M. It’s time to pay it back.
Lafayette Parish government owes the City of Lafayette $17 million for money spent digging pits on Homewood Drive, according to Lafayette Consolidated Government’s annual audit. The question is: Why hasn’t the parish paid the city back?. Believe it or not, Lafayette Parish has the money to do it....
Mouton Park detention pond paused for ‘reevaluation’
LCG paused construction of a detention pond at Mouton Park, a pocket park with a playground near Teurlings Catholic High School and the Larabee neighborhood. City Councilman Kenneth Boudreaux, who represents the district, pushed for the pause, which took effect June 4, the day after construction began. In a press release, the Boulet administration said the project will undergo a “comprehensive reevaluation.”
May storms cause $2 Million in damage to LCG
Lafayette Consolidated Government reported $2 million in damage to its facilities from the May storms that walloped Lafayette with hurricane force winds. Nets were ripped Lafayette’s Hebert municipal golf course, a tree fell through the roof of the planning department’s building on Willow Street and shingles blew off the Broadmoor area fire station.
Lafayette comics fight for accessibility
Don Schexnider rolls onto the stage of Cité des Arts’ main theater for his performance at the 2024 Coullion Fest standup comedy festival wearing a bright orange shirt and a wry smile. For him to perform, his comedy group required him to make an announcement, Schexnider tells the...
Changes to public notice law could spell end of Lafayette’s oldest news source
Changes to Louisiana’s decades-old public notice laws pushed by Lafayette Parish state Rep. Josh Carlson could redefine local news in parishes around the state and particularly in Lafayette. State law requires local governments to publish notices of their meetings, public bids and other activities in their parish’s “official journal”...
Seven apply for Lafayette library director
Seven people have applied to be the next director of the Lafayette Parish Library System, the Advocate reports. Former director Danny Gillane and current north regional branch manager Cara Chance have applied. Gillane is currently the system’s interim director; he assumed that role in April after resigning his post as director in 2023, but only after the library board fired him, illegally.
Chris Stafford: A door between universes
A grieving procession shuffled through the Delhomme Funeral Home after spending an hour in a line that stretched hundreds of yards from his casket. Mourners came in from places unknown, some in thin-lapelled jackets, pearl button snap shirts, austere Sunday blacks, hipster prairie dresses and pencil skirts. They were family, friends, fans, onlookers and dignitaries. Dozens, if not more, were bandmates.
LCG may restore park police
The Boulet administration may reinstate a dedicated police force to patrol Lafayette Consolidated Government three dozen parks, KATC reports. Mayor-President Josh Guillory disbanded the park police in 2020, as part of an effort to slash LCG’s budget and restructure the parks department. The small police detachment were among 37 parks employees that Guillory fired as the agency was reorganized into the department of Parks, Arts, Recreation and Tourism.
Lafayette police may target more panhandlers under new state law
Two years after Lafayette’s City Council repealed local rules against panhandling on public roads, a pending change to state law would reimpose those potentially unconstitutional restrictions — which the city’s new interim police chief says “will solve a lot of these problems here altogether.”. Lafayette’s City...
The Current Media
1K+
Posts
3M+
Views
The Current is a nonprofit, digital-first publication on a constant search for better ways to inform and inspire readers.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.