You know what they say. Mayors are like starting quarterbacks. If you have two, you really don't have any. Okay they don't actually say that about mayors. But it sort of does apply to the city's current situation as it relates to the legislative session.
Who is in charge? Is anybody?
"Bills are running really fast," said state Rep. Helena Moreno, a New
Orleans Democrat who will be leaving her seat to become an at-large
City Council member on May 7. "It's toward the end of a shortened
session where you'll see a lot more action. I think it leads to people
not being able to catch a bill. People really have to be on their toes
this session and keep monitoring what's happening."
Moreno said the Landrieu administration typically briefs lawmakers about
the administration's bill package, and provides them with a list of
legislation they're supporting. That didn't happen this year, so
legislators have been mostly on their own in filing bills that could
affect the city.
This article also says LaToya cancelled a Monday news conference where she was expecting to outline her priorities, assuming she has them. Also, ha ha, I had forgotten about this.
The mayor-elect had previously announced that state Rep. Neil Abramson
would be her point person in the Legislature, raising eyebrows among
elected officials who have sparred, sometimes bitterly, with Abramson.
As far as we can tell, Neil's big priority the past few years has been punting all the budget questions to a constitutional convention... as well as, probably, getting himself elected to the state senate, but that's not important right now. What is important is nobody seems to know who is advising Cantrell's transition team with regard to the legislative agenda. We're pretty sure
it isn't Derrick Shepherd.
Maybe it's the Business Council.
Cantrell has had a far longer transition than Landrieu because of a
one-time-only quirk in the election schedule that was approved by voters
in 2014.
The $194,000 is only a snapshot of her overall intake;
she plans to release at least one more financial report for her “Forward
Together New Orleans” transition fund before she takes office May 7.
The
transition’s single biggest donor from mid-December to mid-February was
the Business Council of New Orleans and the River Region, which gave
$50,000.
Update: Turns out she supports this one bill. Sort of.
New Orleans Mayor-elect LaToya Cantrell came to the House
Administration of Criminal Justice committee meeting where both pieces
of legislation were considered. Speaker Pro Tempore Walt Leger, D-New
Orleans, spoke in favor of the legislation at the committee hearing.
Cantrell said she backs the legislation, but wants to more review of
the details of the project that Harrah's has laid out. She refused to
say what portions of the casino's plan may need more scrutiny.
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