08/09 – Hurricane! Lessons Learned: A Special Edition

LPB is partnering with Mississippi Public Broadcasting for an in-depth look at how procedures, policies and planning for hurricanes have changed in the last four years. In that time, three of the ten costliest hurricanes on record — Katrina, Rita and Gustav — struck Louisiana. Katrina made a second landfall in Mississippi, leaving behind unprecedented havoc and a harsh education in the discipline of disaster. What did these events teach us about coping with catastrophe? Airs Wednesday, August 26, 2009 at 7 PM.

This program is underwritten by a Local Service Initiative Grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

07/09 – Louisiana’s Dropout Problem (Encore Showing)

The dropout rate in some Louisiana high schools is above 40 percent. Nearly 16 thousand students dropped out of school in 2007. Their unemployment rate may be as high as 30 percent. The price for society: lost tax revenue higher welfare costs and higher risk of incarceration. What can Louisiana do to improve its high school graduation rate? Watch “Louisiana’s Dropout Problem” on Louisiana Public Square. July 22 at 7 pm. VIEW ONLINE!
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06/09 – Legislative Review 2009

The current Legislative session adjourns near the end of June. What cuts were ultimately made to cover Louisiana’s $1.3 billion shortfall and how will they affect you and the state? Watch “Legislative Review 2009” on Louisiana Public Square, Wednesday, June 24th at 7 pm.

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iPod 57:29, 186.1MB

Get the backgrounder:

iPod 5:56, 19.2 MB

or view streaming here.

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Click here to see survey results.

Click here for a replay of our live chat from 2:00pm on June 25th.

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Backgrounder:

The 2009 Legislative session began on Monday, April 27th and will adjourn on Thursday, June 25th. The focus of this session has been fiscal with most of the attention going to Governor Jindal’s proposed $26.7 billion Executive Budget. With the state facing a $1.3 billion revenue shortfall, the governor offset some of the income gap with federal stimulus money, but Higher Education and Healthcare still took big hits – $219 million and $413 million respectively.

While last year’s session may best be remembered as one where both chambers worked together on parallel paths, observers note that this session has been dominated by two distinctively different approaches to dealing with the governor’s budget. Read more.

Panel:

  • Kirby Goidel, Director of Public Policy Research at the Manship School
  • Rep. Kevin Pearson, (R), Slidell
  • Mark Ballard, The Advocate Capitol Editor

Chat Panel:

  • ULL Political Science Department Chair, Pearson Cross, Ph.D. (confirmed)
  • President and CEO of Council for a Better Louisiana, Barry Erwin (confirmed)

Links:

05/09 – The Power of Social Networking

Do you tweet, blog, or belong to a network? Millions of Americans already do and they are connecting, communicating and bringing change to the internet and society. Find out how new media is shaping our lives in Louisiana on “The Power of Social Networking”  on Louisiana Public Square.

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Get the program:

iPod 56:53, 180.1MB

Get the backgrounder:

iPod 6:53, 23.1MB

or view streaming here.

Click Here to take the online survey

Click above for the archive of our live chat from 2:00pm on May 28th.

Backgrounder:

Social media refer to on-line tools used by people to connect to others electronically. Connections are made through the world wide web using social network sites (SNS) specifically created for this purpose. Popular sites include MySpace, Facebook and Friendster, which are free. The sites are supported by advertising embedded on the pages next to user-generated content, which can include text, pictures and video.

Social networks can be thought of as public or semi-public forums. They allow people to maintain or create relationships and meet on-line for conversation and collaboration. These relationships can be with one person, a few, or many people.

Click here for the full backgrounder.

Panel:

  • Whitney Breaux, Blogger and Political Campaigner
  • Sheryl Abshire, Ph.D.; Technology Coordinator for the Calcasieu Parish School District
  • Andrew Schwarz, Ph.D.; Asst. Professor, LSU Dept. of Information Systems and Decision Sciences
  • Michael Xenos, Ph.D.; Asst. Professor, LSU Manship School of Mass Comm. and Political Science Department

Chat Panel:

  • Monica Ford, computer forensics examiner for the state Attorney General’s Office
  • Alexandyr Kent,  Shreveport Times Online Producer

Links:

  • http://pewinternet.org/ – Pew Internet & American Life Project which studies the social impact of the internet.
  • http://patchworknation.csmonitor.com/about/ – Hosted by the Christian Science Monitor , site highlights how 11 different communities and cultures within the US – including one in Louisiana – experience different realities – and shape the whole.
  • http://www.louisiana3feet.com/ – Louisiana cycling site featured in program that is incorporating online social networking to push for legislation in current session.
  • http://www.netsmartz.org – Online safety site hosted by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and Boys & Girls Clubs of America
  • http://www.staysafeonline.org – National Cyber Security Alliance.

04/09 – Legislative Preview 2009

With a $1.3 billion revenue shortfall in Louisiana’s general fund, the state could be facing drastic cuts in higher education and health services. But will federal stimulus money provide much-needed relief? Explore what’s in store in the upcoming regular session in the April edition of LPB’s award-winning public affairs show Louisiana Public Square. LPB President Beth Courtney and LSU Media Law Professor Craig Freeman are your hosts.

 The Louisiana Forestry Association underwrites Louisiana Public Square 

 

 Capital Beat (Daily Legislative Update): Click here.

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Go to Capitol Beat for Daily Video Updates on the Louisiana Legislature.

 

 

 

Session opens: Monday, April 27, 2009
Governor’s address at 1:00 PM

 

 

Watch more online: Legislative Coverage Site

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View the program: 

iPod   56:53, 180.1MB

or view streaming here

 

Click below for the archive of the LIVE CHAT from 2PM on Thursday, April 23.

  Click Here for Archive

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View current results here.

Backgrounder:

 When the Louisiana Legislature convenes on Monday, April 27th it will be facing quite a different picture than it did a year ago when oil was over $100 a barrel and the state was projecting state revenues of $9.7 billion. Due to lower oil prices and declining sales and corporate income tax collections, the state is facing a $1.3 billion revenue shortfall. Since 2009 is an odd-numbered year, the focus of this session will primarily be fiscal with most of the attention going to Governor Jindal’s proposed $26.7 billion budget for the fiscal year beginning on July 1, 2009 and ending on June 30, 2010. Proposed Cuts The two areas facing the largest cuts in the Governor’s proposed budget are Healthcare and Higher Education.

Get complete pdf!

 

  • ULL Political Science Dept. Chair and political commentator, Pearson Cross
  • Angèle Davis, Commissioner of Administration
  • Sen. Eric LaFleur (D), Ville Platte, Member of Finance and Joint Budget Committees
  • Rep. James W. “Jim” Tucker (R), Terrytown, Speaker of the House
  • Kirby Goidel, Director of the LSU Public Policy Research lab
  • Jas Sullivan, LSU Political Science Assistant Professor

03/09 – Louisiana’s Dropout Problem

The dropout rate in some Louisiana high schools is above 40 percent. Nearly 16 thousand students dropped out of school in 2007. Their unemployment rate may be as high as 30 percent. The price for society: lost tax revenue higher welfare costs and higher risk of incarceration. What can Louisiana do to improve its high school graduation rate? Watch “Louisiana’s Dropout Problem” on Louisiana Public Square. March 25 at 7 pm.

You can also continue the discussion about our state’s high school dropout problem during a live online chat, Thursday, March 26th from 2 – 3 p.m. Donna Nola-Ganey, Assistant Superintendent, Louisiana Department of Education; and Mr. Henry “Richey” Jackson, Director of the internationally recognized Bossier Truancy Center  will be answering your questions.

View the program:  iPod   58:51, 186.0 MB

View the backgrounder:  iPod   7:05 22.2 MB

View the chat archive: Click Here

 Click Here

Click here to take survey.

View current results here.

Backgrounder:

“The number one predictor of a child’s future success is whether he or she graduates from high school.”
Alma J. Powell, wife of Retired General Colin Powell and co-founder of America’s Promise Alliance

Nationwide, nearly one in three high school students drops out before graduating. In Louisiana, the statistics are even more disheartening. A 2008 study conducted by the Louisiana Department of Education of the 2006-07 school term found that only 65.9% of students who had entered the 9th grade four years earlier actually graduated. That means slightly more than a third – 34.1% -of the nearly 190,000 students that annually enroll in public high schools in Louisiana end up leaving prematurely.
  • Henry “Richey” Jackson, Director of the Bossier/Webster Parish Truancy Center
  • Louisiana Federation of Teachers President Steve Monaghan
  • Louisiana Department of Social Services Secretary Kristy Nichols
  • Louisiana’s State Superintendent of Education, Paul G. Pastorek
  • Henry “Richey” Jackson, Director of the Bossier/Webster Parish Truancy Center
  • Alison Neustrom, Assistant Secretary of the Louisiana Office of Family Support
  • Donna Nola-Ganey, Assistant Superintendent, Louisiana Department of Education

View a related clip:

Community Teams Tackling the Dropout Problem  

Windows MediaiPod   7:25, 30.4 MB

This video was produced for Louisiana’s Promise, and extension of America’s Promise Alliance – created by Colin and Alma Powell.  This video was shown at the Community Teams Tackling the Dropout Problem Summit that was held on October 28, 2008.  The trt is 7:30.  The video was designed to clarify the problem of dropouts in Louisiana and intended to stimulate discussion by the nearly 1,000 governmental, community and educational leaders who attended from every parish in the state.  It features remarks from Tim Barfield of the Executive Director of the Louisiana Workforce Commission, Robert Burgess – CEO of EATEL & Education’s Next Horizon Board Member, Judge Bob Downing – 1st Circuit Court of Appeals, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education Paul Pastorek, and GED students Sean Saunders, Rodnique Holmes, Hayley Deville & Samona Brown.

02/09 Economic Development

At the end of 2008, Louisiana found itself with an increase in its employment figures and an improving unemployment rate.  But how long can the state remain insulated from the national recession? What effect will falling energy prices have on the state’s economy? Which industries provide the best hope for future job growth? Louisiana Public Square goes on the road to Monroe to look at what’s working and what challenges lay ahead on “Economic Development 2009.”  Aired Wednesday, February 25th.

 

View the program: Windows MediaiPod   57:34, 252.2 MB

View the backgrounder: Windows MediaiPod   7:00, 29.3 MB

 

Panelists:

  • Monroe Mayor James E. “Jamie” Mayo
  • Louisiana Economic Development Secretary, Stephen Moret

  • Dave Norris, Jr., Director of the Louisiana Tech Enterprise Center

  • State Senator Francis Thompson (D) representing District 34 in Northeast Louisiana

Click here to take survey.

View current results here. 

Review the LIVE CHAT from 2Pm CT on Thursday, February 26, 2009.
 Click Here
 
Backgrounder:

When compared to the rest of the nation, Louisiana’s economy seems do be doing relatively well. Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the national economy has lost 3.6 million jobs. About one-half of this decline occurred in the past three months. But at the end of 2008, Louisiana was the only state in the nation to gain nonfarm jobs – 3,700 citizens were employed during November.
Other recent successes:
During 2008, Louisiana had a net gain of 8,500 jobs, a 0.4 percent increase from 2007. For the same 12 month period the U.S. experienced a 1.4 percent decrease in jobs while the South saw a decrease of 0.4 percent.
All regions of Louisiana have seen job growth over the last year:
  • Southeast +1.6%
  • Central +1.3%
  • Capital +1.2%
  • Bayou +1.2 %
  • Southwest +1.2%
  • Northeast +0.9%
  • Acadiana +0.9%
  • Northwest +0.8%
  • Get the complete backgrounder (.pdf) here.

    Louisiana Public Square in the Classroom

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    Underwritten by a Local Service Initiative Grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
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    01/09 – Guarded Condition: Healthcare in Louisiana

    With Louisiana’s national health ranking moving from 49th to 50th, some believe the condition of the state’s healthcare is moving from serious to critical. Is the remedy a new healthcare delivery system or just a revamping of the current one? And what role do patient education and our lifestyle choices play in keeping our health and health ratings so low? 

     
    Click Here for the replay of the LIVE CHAT (from January 29, 2009 at 2PM CT).


    Initial Airdate: January 28th at 7Pm. 
     

    View the backgrounder:Windows Media iPod 06:51, 27.9 MB
    View the program:
    Windows MediaiPod   57:34, 241.2 MB

    Panelists:

    •  Alan Levine, Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals Secretary
    • Senator Willie Mount (D) from Lake Charles who Chairs the Senate Health & Welfare Committee
    • Dr. Fred Cerise, Vice President for Health Care and Medical Education in the LSU System
    • David Hood, Senior Healthcare Policy Analyst for the Public Affairs Research Council

    More on our panelists here.

    Backgrounder:
    According to a PricewaterhouseCoopers study commissioned by the Louisiana Recovery Authority, state healthcare spending totals $19.4 billion for all private and public sources, among the highest in the nation. But our results are consistently far below other states. Louisiana is one state away from leading the nation in:
         – Infant mortality, with an average of 10 infant deaths per 1000 live births;
         - Cancer deaths, which kill 223 out of every 100,000 Louisianans; and
         – Premature death, where poor preventive care practices annually kill 11,000 of our citizens before their time.

    Get full backgrounder in pdf format
    here.
     

    Click Here to take survey

    Click Here to view survey responses

    Just a reminder,
    to view details of LA Health First proposal, visit the DHH  website: http://www.dhh.louisiana.gov/ and click on the Louisiana Health First link.
    To view an analysis by PAR visit their site: http://www.la-par.org/ and click on the Recent PAR Publications link.
    You can visit the United Health Foundation’s site which ranked Louisiana 50th in overall health by visiting this site. http://www.americashealthrankings.org/2008/pdfs/2008.pdf  The document also includes state by state breakdowns to see how we compare to our neighbors in the South.

    According the Louisiana Healthcare Review, about six percent of Louisiana physicians sent E-prescriptions to a pharmacy in 2007. But  that represented an almost 1,000 percent growth in E-prescribing. For more information about electronic medical records, go to: http://www.secure4health.org/