Speaker Johnson: Biden Administration Amnesty Focus Amid Border Crisis “Unconscionable”

For Immediate Release
December 28, 2023
Contact: Taylor Haulsee

BENTON, LA — Speaker Johnson today released the following statement in response to the Mexico-U.S. Joint Communique regarding yesterday’s meeting between Secretary of State Blinken, Secretary of Homeland Security Mayorkas and Mexican President López Obrador.

According to the Communique, the delegation “discussed the benefit of regularizing the situation of long-term undocumented Hispanic migrants and DACA recipients, who are a vital part of the U.S. economy and society.”

Speaker Johnson’s statement:

“At a time when America is experiencing the worst border crisis in our nation’s history, it is unconscionable to hear the Biden Administration’s announcement that Secretaries Mayorkas and Blinken discussed with the President of Mexico amnesty for illegal immigrants. The United States must focus on policies that deter — not attract — people attempting to come here illegally, and the smugglers who profit from the catastrophe at our border.

“This development further demonstrates the Administration has no real intention of solving the humanitarian disaster and immediate national security crisis their policies have created. President Biden needs to stop vacationing and take immediate steps to stop the flow of illegal immigration into our country. Our nation’s security and sovereignty depend upon it, and the American people demand it.”


Ponderings

I was in Lowes last week. The Christmas decorations were gone. They were replaced by the tub
section. In a move of marketing genius or customer surveys, Lowes is selling plastic storage bins. These
bins were stacked and prominently displayed. Lowes must know something; the storage bins are all over
the store! Lowes calls them totes. I don’t know about you, but I’m not going to tote them around. I’m
going to load them and pack them away.

That happens to Christmas too. We turn our homes into festive, color-coordinated gathering
places for family and friends. We upend our schedules, violate our eating plans, confuse the animals that
live with us, and plug too many things into the wall outlets. We do this celebrating the One born in a
dark manger stall. Yes, I do it too! Eventually, Christmas is loaded into boxes or totes and packed away.
New Years Day is always packing Christmas away day. All of it is in boxes or the famous Lowes
totes. It all fit nicely in the attic of the she-shed. There is an annual ritual when I’m stacking the totes in
their place. There is one tote that is marked, “NO.” It is filled with Christmas decorations. These
decorations are no longer put out. I have inquired about giving the contents to the children, donating
them to Rolling Hills, or filing them in the cylindrical cans that are emptied once a week. The answer is
always the same, “No, you can’t get rid of the NO box.” Do you suppose I would be blamed if that box
vanished in the middle of the year? The NO box is at least a decade old. I think I have stored that stuff
long enough. What about you? Are you storing stuff that you need to let go of? But, I digress.
It all goes back in the box. If you are playing Monopoly and win, or the Game of Life and finish, it
all goes back in the box. You could even extend that to yourself. You will end up in some kind of box.
Everything you acquire, it all goes back! Live your life not for things, but for people. The love and joy you
give and share lives after you. The love and joy you share are the jewels in that crown in eternity. Pour
your life into others, not into the things that will go back in boxes.

The Christmas packing process was efficient this year. It all fit in the boxes and totes. All of the
totes fit back in their place. The tree fit in the box and the box was closed.

There is one item that is purposely left out. It is a small manger. It is in my office on a bookshelf.
The empty manger reminds me of the empty tomb and the risen and reigning Christ. As the year
unfolds, I will need that reminder often.

Did you leave something out to remind you of His daily presence in your life?


EPA Grants Louisiana Office of Conservation State Authority over CO2 Injection and Sequestration

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 28, 2023
Contact: govpress@la.gov

BATON ROUGE, La. – Today, Gov. John Bel Edwards and Louisiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Commissioner of Conservation Monique M. Edwards announced the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has formally granted Louisiana state primacy in the permitting and regulation of wells and projects involving the underground sequestration of carbon dioxide (CO2). This is widely seen as one of the primary tools in delivering cleaner production and use of traditional fuels and industrial feedstock.

Gov. Edwards and Commissioner Edwards (no familial relation) expressed their appreciation to both U.S. EPA headquarters and EPA’s Region 6 office for their spirit of cooperation throughout the process and for their work in reviewing the thousands of comments given during the public comment period over the past several months.

Permitting of such wells and operations, known as Class VI permits, is generally directly regulated by the EPA, though the EPA can grant primary regulatory authority to individual states that develop a regulatory framework that matches or exceeds the EPA’s Class VI standards, as is now the case in Louisiana’s Office of Conservation.

Gov. Edwards said that Louisiana’s geology and existing base of industry and pipeline infrastructure position the state to be a major player as a hub for Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS) projects, enabling industry to shrink its carbon footprint in a global market that is ever more carbon sensitive.

“Finding alternative means of harnessing our traditional fuel sources at the same time we expand our options for alternative fuel sources to the point they are market-ready, available and affordable is probably the great challenge of our generation and some of the most important work we can do for future generations,” Gov. Edwards said. “While CO2 sequestration is not the only strategy available for carbon management, it is the most mature and market-ready tool available in the near term.”

CO2 sequestration involves use of injection wells to store CO2 deep below ground, under confining layers such as shales that prevent upward migration of what is injected. Regulations deal with issues such as thickness of the confining layers, potential for horizontal migration, appropriate well construction, monitoring requirements and financial security requirements, among other issues.

After the state Legislature made an adjustment to state law in 2019 to bring it in line with federal requirements, the Office of Conservation’s Injection and Mining Division (IMD) worked on preparing a package of CO2 sequestration regulations for about two years. That work included a painstaking review of all existing and proposed state regulations on CO2 sequestration in comparison to federal requirements.

The Office of Conservation made those state rules official in January 2021, a package of regulations that exceeds the EPA requirements in several areas, including: 

  • Louisiana will not grant waivers to injection depth requirements 
  • Louisiana prohibits sequestration of CO2 in salt caverns 
  • Louisiana will not issue area permits for multiple wells at once, requiring each individual well to be reviewed and permitted on its own 
  • Louisiana requires additional measures for monitoring systems and operating requirements 

“We certainly want Louisiana to be able to develop opportunities for economic growth in the emerging market for carbon management,” Commissioner Edwards said. “But we cannot and will not sacrifice our duty to ensure that operations are conducted in a way that is protective of public safety and the environment.”

Commissioner Edwards said her office will be reaching out to EPA Region 6 to discuss handover of the more than 20 Class VI applications for Louisiana that have already begun the permitting process with the EPA.

“We have seen unprecedented interest in carbon sequestration projects over the past couple of years, with companies reaching out to our office to express interest in what the regulatory landscape will be,” Commissioner Edwards said. “The applications already in with the EPA are just the start.”


Pop(-Tart) goes the Bowl Season!

Cool Old Dude and Tons of Fun guys like me went to bed at a slick 7:30 p.m. New Year’s Eve. Didn’t mean to stay up that late but had forgotten to start the grill and the dead chicken and sausages were later getting done than I had planned. 

Hate it when that happens. Especially on a holiday.

Some of us are old enough to remember when we were crazy enough to actually stay up to watch the ball drop in Times Square — “10, 9, 8… !” —  or when we would be out somewhere with other sickos (meaning other “normal young people”) waiting for midnight to ring in the New Year.

Festive and whatnot. Mainly awake.  

But I was another kind of sick this New Year’s. Something is “going around” and I hate it when that happens too because it usually gets around to me and you. Stuffy head. Ribs hurt. No energy.

On the bright side, New Year’s night I made it to 8 and to the end of Michigan’s win over Alabama. Old-school game, my opinion. Woke up in the middle of the night for bathroom duty — another elderly issue — and saw that Washington had beaten Texas in another thriller. 

“For entertainment purposes only,” the early line has No. 1 Michigan as a 4.5 favorite over No. 2 Washington in Monday night’s College Football Playoff National Championship game from NRG Stadium in Houston at 6:30 (I might can stay up!) on ESPN. I like Washington to cover.

So take Michigan. Because … 

As recently discussed, I can pick winners in games like Germany could pick winners in World Wars. Sleep was easy for me by the time Washington teed it up with Texas New Year’s Night because my hopes of winning the ESPN BowlFest Fantasy competition were as gone as the clouds in yesterday’s sky. An 8-0 start in mid-December was followed by a whirlwind of pitifulness, as predicted, that left me in the 50th percentile of pickers, which included real people but also included turtles, stumps, and some fish. I couldn’t spell ‘win’ if you spotted me the “w” and the “i.”

But this predicted ineptness did not keep me from enjoying, immensely, BowlFest. My favorite bowls, strictly because of names and present company excluded (we’re looking at you, Radiance Technologies Independence Bowl, always No. 1 in our hearts), were these:

The Tony the Tiger Bowl in El Paso, because I love Sun Bowl Stadium and because, well, Frosted Flakes. Notre Dame was ggggggreat and beat Oregon State, 40-8, for the record;

The Cheeze-It Citrus Bowl because Cheeze-Its should be its own food group, and more on that another time. Tennessee beat Iowa 100-2 or something like that. The Vols might still be scoring;

The Duke’s Mayo Bowl because this advertises a Carolina staple I grew up with. West Virginia out-condimented North Carolina in this year’s bowl in Charlotte. Of course, I foolishly had the Tarheels;

The Avocados From Mexico Cure Bowl in, oddly enough, Orlando, where every other bowl game is now played. For some reason, I felt healthier after watching it;

And my favorite of all the bowls, the Pop-Tarts Bowl (from, guess where?, Orlando!), even though Kansas State beat N.C. State, 28-19, and I had (naturally) the Wolfpack. Didn’t matter because:

One of the mascots was edible. True story. The winners ate a giant Pop-Tart after the game. To the winners go the spoils. In light of this development, would you rather play in the prestigious Cotton Bowl or the Pop-Tarts Bowl? That’s what I thought;

Speaking of giants, the non-edible mascot who ran around the sidelines of picturesque Camping World Stadium most of the game showed up by being popped out of a huge toaster on the field. Yes, this is next-level mascot stuff;

The mascot tried to catch a missed field goal with a net. We’re talking about a fruit scone with a net chasing a ball;

And finally, the winning players dumped a couple of coolers filled with Pop-Tarts onto the winning coach as he made his way to midfield to shake hands with the losing and thus non-Pop-Tarts-eating coach immediately after the game. The only other thing this bowl needed was some milk.

Contact Teddy at teddy@latech.edu


This & That…Wednesday, January 3, 2024


The Mansfield Main Library will host a Paint party on January 20, 2024 from 10am-12pm. Spots are limited to 20.

Sabine River Yellerdog Catfish Club will hold their 7th Annual Meeting February 10 at 12pm at Yellowdog Park. Contact Isreal 903.754.9359 or Isabell 903.263.4404 for more information.

3rd Annual Trey Burford Memorial Fishing Tournament will be held March 16
GUARANTEED: 1st Place: $10,000 2nd Place: $5,000 3rd Place: $2,500 BIG BASS: $2,500
All proceeds to benefit the Trey Burford Memorial Scholarship Fund for the High School Fishing League.
Contact- Peyton Burford: 318-510-4745 or Angie Burford: 318-584-0202 for donations, sponsorships, and any questions you may have.

 

Notice of Death – January 2, 2024

Paul K “Peck” Taylor
August 16, 1945 — December 31, 2023
Service: Wednesday, January 3 at 1pm at Mitchell Baptist Church – Converse

Gay Nell Booker May
October 11, 1948 — December 31, 2023
Service: Thursday, January 4 at 2pm at Rose Neath Funeral Homes – Mansfield

Robert Earl “Junebug” Jones Jr.
May 13, 1969 — December 26, 2023
Service: Friday, January 5 at 11am at New Hope Baptist Church – Mansfield