Monday, January 2, 2012

The New Ascension Parish Council

Parish redistricting was completed and accepted by the courts in August 2011. Multiple candidates qualified in many of the Parish Council races in September.

Members of Concerned Citizens actively participated in many of these races. All races were decided on October 22nd except the Council District 4 seat, which had a run-off on November 19th. Because four councilmen ran unopposed, there were only seven races. It is encouraging to have four new councilmembers. The following are the members of the Ascension Parish Council which were sworn in on January 2nd for a four year term:

Council District 1 Oliver Joseph
Council District 2 Kent Schexnaydre
Council District 3 Travis Turner (new member)
Council District 4 Dan "Doc" Satterlee (new member)
Council District 5 Dempsey Lambert
Council District 6 Randy Clouatre (ran unopposed)
Council District 7 Chris Loar (ran unopposed)
Council District 8 Terri Casso (new member)
Council District 9 Todd Lambert (ran unopposed)
Council District 10 Bryan Melancon (new member)
Council District 11 Benny Johnson (ran unopposed)

Concerned citizens will continue to follow the Council and are hopeful that they will strive to put the community first in all decisions.

The first scheduled meeting will be this coming Thursday, January 5th, at 6:00 p.m. in Donaldsonville.

All Members of the Planning & Zoning Commission Removed

The outgoing Ascension Parish Council acted out of the ordinary at their last meeting on December 1st by introducing an ordinance to remove all nine existing members of the Planning & Zoning Commission, to reduce the Commission to 5 members and to set their terms. The agenda did not list the person who proposed the ordinance, but sources inside the government have verified that Parish President Martinez was behind the removal and reduction of members. This move came after a decision by the Planning & Zoning Commission on October 13th calling for an investigation of the Martinez administration, the planning staff and at least one commissioner for actions which were possibly unethical or criminal in nature. That investigation though not mentioned by the local media is still ongoing.

Although a newspaper article stated the reason for the ordinance would be explained by the parish president, Mr. Martinez did not speak about the ordinance at the introduction or at its passage on December 19th. The final ordinance passed differed from the original proposal:

1. Commissioners were removed immediately instead of serving until new members were appointed.

2. The original reduction of nine (9) members to five (5) was increased to seven (7).

3. The terms proposed were three (3) with 2 yr. terms and two (2) with 4 year terms, thereafter all serving 4 year terms. The final version was three (3) with 1 year terms and four with 2 year terms, thereafter each member shall serve a 2 year term.