Louisiana legislative leaders steer millions of dollars in pet projects to their own parishes

Louisiana legislative leaders steer millions of dollars in pet projects to their own parishes

A state senator’s nonprofit organization has been allocated $1.5 million. The booster club for an East Baton Rouge high school is getting $1.1 million. Catholic churches in St. Martin Parish will receive a combined $170,000, and a Shreveport group devoted to roses will get $100,000.

These are just a few of the $105.2 million in personal pet projects lawmakers inserted into the annual budget plan sent to Gov. John Bel Edwards at the end of last week.

The money isn’t spread around the state evenly. Communities slated to receive the most pet project funding are home to lawmakers who have the most control over the budget process, according to a Louisiana Illuminator analysis.

Over 20% of this year’s pet project funding went to just three of Louisiana’s 64 parishes: East Baton Rouge ($13.6 million), Terrebonne ($8.5 million) and Lafayette ($7.5 million). They are respectively home to Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bodi White, R-Central, House Appropriations Committee Chairman Jerome Zeringue, R-Houma, and Senate President Page Cortez, R-Lafayette – the three lawmakers with the most control over the state finances.

Speaker Pro Tempore Tanner Magee, R-Houma, the second-highest ranking legislator in the House, also lives in Terrebonne. Pet projects are defined as budget requests lawmakers make for entities and programs that wouldn’t normally be part of the state’s spending plan and that don’t go through a public vetting process.

They encompass money for local government operations, roads, police departments, parks and schools that are supposed to be funded with local tax dollars. Money for private nonprofit and religious organizations is also included.

Legislators request pet project funding through a secretive process, so it’s not clear who asks for the money unless individual lawmakers admit to doing so publicly. The amount each legislator gets to spend on pet projects also varies from person to person, though Zerginue and Cortez declined to say how the funds are distributed.

“We don’t blindly put money into indiscriminate projects,” Zeringue said. “We try to be as equitable as possible, to evaluate the need and the priority.”

Yet the communities of lawmakers who run the budget process appear to have been given the most consideration.

White funnels major cash to Central

East Baton Rouge is the largest parish in Louisiana and might have been expected to receive the most pet project funding, but Terrebonne and Lafayette received millions more than larger parishes such as Jefferson ($6.9 million), Orleans ($5.6 million) and St. Tammany ($2.8 million).

The distribution of pet project funds also gets more parochial than the parish level as well. Within East Baton Rouge, White’s hometown of Central – with a population of 29,000 residents – received $2.2 million in pet projects. That’s a little bit more than the $2.19 million allocated to Caddo, Louisiana’s sixth highest populated parish with more than 243,000 residents.

Central’s pet projects include $1.1 million for the Central Athletic Foundation, an athletic booster club that supports Central High School; $500,000 for the Central Police Department; $500,000 for the Central Community School District autism park; $50,000 to the Central Chamber of Commerce for economic development; and $25,000 to the Central School District for the restoration of old monuments.

On top of that $2.2 million, another $1 million was allocated to the East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office for rapid DNA testing and the “Central area Fentanyl and Human Trafficking Task Force,” according to budget legislation.

In all, Central received a little more than $74 per resident in pet project funding, not counting the extra $1 million for the East Baton Rouge sheriff’s office. That’s more than three times the amount of pet project funding distributed per person statewide – a little over $22 per resident.

White defended the decision to give Central funding, saying Tuesday that communities all over Louisiana also received money. He also said the East Baton Rouge government doesn’t invest enough in the northern part of the parish, where Central is located.

“These are things that they needed. They don’t get help from EBR,” White said. “That part of the parish has been neglected forever.”

Private and public pet priorities

While most of the funding went to local governments and public entities, over 20% – at least $22 million – is slated for private organizations and clubs, some of which have close ties to legislators.

The Louisiana Leadership Institute, a Baton Rouge nonprofit organization that Democratic Sen. Cleo Fields started, has been given $1.5 million in pet project funding. The group helps “develop leadership skills in elementary, secondary and postsecondary education students,” according to its website. Fields has not responded to requests for comment on this story.

Rep. Mike Huval, R-Breaux Bridge, said he inserted $270,000 total into the state budget for three Catholic churches and two chapters of the Knights of Columbus, a fraternal Catholic organization, in St. Martin Parish with which he has personal connection.

Huval was baptized and served as an altar boy in St. Joseph Catholic Church in Parks, which is slated to receive $60,000, and he lives down the street from St. Bernard Catholic Church in Breaux Bridge, which has been allocated $50,000. Huval said St. Joseph plans to use the money to help build new educational classrooms and St. Bernard will use its funds to help with its ongoing renovation project. St. Francis of Assisi Church, also in Parks, will also get $60,000, though Huval didn’t explain how that money would be used.

The two Knights of Columbus councils, located in Parks and Breaux Bridge, will receive $50,000 each. Following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, Huval is a member of the council at St. Joseph in Parks. He said the money will be used to help with upkeep of the Knights’ local meeting halls in each community.

Firefighters and law enforcement groups were also a priority for pet project spending, even though some have the ability to levy and collect dedicated local taxes. In all, at least $17 million of the total pet project funding went to local sheriffs, police departments and fire stations.

The Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office is receiving $465,000 in equipment and guns solely for its narcotics division and SWAT team. This includes $80,000 for a Mesotech sonar system; $90,600 for new rifles; $24,000 for updates to existing rifles; $68,300 for night-vision goggles; $33,000 for 15 sets of body armor; $65,600 for flashlights, optic sights and mounting hardware for rifles; $60,000 for rifle plates, $38,000 for truck camper tops and $5,700 for a compressor for the SWAT team’s underwater tank.

This article originally appeared on Alexandria Town Talk: Louisiana legislative leaders steer millions of dollars in pet projects to their own parishes