Coffee Guide: 9 coffee shops in Lewisville and Coppell – Community Impact Newspaper

Coffee fans looking for a caffeine fix can choose from several options available in Lewisville and Coppell. This noncomprehensive list includes shops that offer more than drip coffee.

1. 151 Coffee

A. 720 W. Main St., Lewisville

B. 131 S. Denton Tap Road, Coppell

682-325-2124

http://www.151coffee.com

Founded in 2017, this Dallas-Fort Worth-based coffee chain has eight locations in North Texas.

Popular drinks: banana bread latte, West Coast latte with caramel drizzle

Hours: 6 a.m.-8 p.m. daily

2. Ascension Coffee

3121 Olympus Blvd., Coppell

972-863-3000

http://www.ascension.coffee

This location is one of six Ascension Coffee shops in North Texas.

Popular drinks: horchata latte, lavender latte

Popular foods: chicken manchego pane aria sandwich, the original avocado toast

Hours: 6:30 a.m.-6 p.m. daily

3. Coral Reef Coffee Company

310 E. Round Grove Road, Ste. 300, Lewisville

214-513-9287

https://coralreefcoffeeco.com

This shop offers a rotating monthly menu of locally brewed coffee, teas and pastries.

Popular drinks: cinnamon bun latte (seasonal), white chocolate macadamia latte

Popular foods: cream cheese danish, lemon blueberry cake

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 6:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

4. George: Coffee + Provisions

462 Houston St., Coppell

469-464-3107

http://www.georgecoffeeandprovisions.com

This farmhouse-style shop located in Old Town Coppell offers house-roasted coffees.

Popular drinks: honey and vanilla latte

Popular foods: cinnamon cream scone, pumpkin muffin

Hours: Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-8 p.m., closed Sun.

5. The Human Bean

1001 W. Round Grove Road, Lewisville

469-630-0223

http://www.thehumanbean.com

The Lewisville location is one of two in North Texas.

Popular drinks: Mexiblanco latte (secret menu), Granita espresso

Popular foods: spicy jalapeno biscuit, almond croissants

Hours: 5:30 a.m.-7 p.m. daily

6. Liberation Coffee Co.

651 N. Denton Tap Road, Ste. 200, Coppell

972-427-1991

http://www.liberationcoffeecompany.com

This family-owned coffee shop offers locally roasted coffee.

Popular drinks: honey cinnamon latte, The Liberator, matcha latte

Popular foods: Belgian street waffles, chocolate chip cookies, bagel breakfast

Hours: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. daily

7. The Perc Coffeehouse

115 W. Main St., Lewisville

214-222-1404

http://www.perccoffeehouse.com

The Perc Coffeehouse is located in the heart of Old Town Lewisville. Popular drinks: vanilla latte, lavender latte

Popular foods: ham and cheese croissant

Hours: Mon.-Thu. 6:30 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 6:30 a.m.-10 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.

8. Scooters Coffee

1225 SH 121, Lewisville

214-222-1266

http://www.scooterscoffee.com

This drive-thru shop is for coffee lovers on the go. Smoothies and pastries are also available.

Popular drinks: creme brulee latte, Caramelicious cold brew

Popular foods: red velvet cake bites

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 5:30 a.m.-8 p.m.,

Sat. 6 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. 6 a.m.-7 p.m.

9. Fellowship Coffee and Tea

833 S. Denton Tap Road, Coppell

214-724-2752

http://www.fellowshipcoffeetea.com

The family-owned and -operated coffee shop opened Jan. 16.

Popular drinks: flavored latte, cappuccino, hot caramel macchiato

Popular foods: cinnamon scones, muffins

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 6 a.m.-3 p.m.,

Sat. 8 a.m.-3 p.m., closed Sun.

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Coffee Guide: 9 coffee shops in Lewisville and Coppell - Community Impact Newspaper

New Iberia, Breaux Bridge advance to quarterfinals – KATC News

Second Round (Games involving Acadiana Area teams only; Click each Division for full brackets)

Division I (Non-Select)16. East Ascension 351. New Iberia 36

10. Southside 497. Barbe 50

Division II (Non-Select)

16. Abbeville 541. Wosmon 82

12. Plaquemine 525. St. Martinville 46

13. Opelousas 414. Bossier 60

19. Beau Chene 443. Carroll 62

11. Loranger 466. Breaux Bridge 55

Division III (Non-Select)

24. Red River 648. Ville Platte 67

13. Caldwell Parish 47

Division IV (Non-Select)

24. Oak Grove 268. Elton 44

13. Ferriday 624. North Central 85

19. Jonesboro-Hodge3. Franklin

15. Lake Arthur 332. White Castle 54

Division V (Non-Select)

12. Stanley5. Lacassine 72

Division I (Select)

15. Edna Karr 432. St. Thomas More 51

Division II (Select)

13. Northside 4. Vandebilt Catholic

10. St. Michael the Archangel 557. Lafayette Christian 46

15. David Thibodaux 422. Peabody 76

Division III (Select)

10. Catholic - New Iberia 287. St. Charles 25

Division IV (Select)

12. Opelousas Catholic 565. Hamilton Christian 81

11. Ascension Catholic6. Central Catholic 59

10. Vermilion Catholic 387. Southern Lab 70

Division V (Select) {Quarterfinals}

5. Claiborne Christian4. JS Clark

7. Episcopal School of Acadiana2. Family Christian

First Round (Games involving Acadiana Area teams only; Click each Division for full brackets

Division I (Non-Select)1. New Iberia (Bye)

23. Destrehan 5210. Southside 81

Division II (Non-Select)

17. South Beauregard 7316. Abbeville 76

24. Rayne 519. Franklin Parish 56

28. DeRidder 455. St. Martinville 87

21. Crowley 4112. Plaquemine 65

20. A.J. Ellender 5113. Opelousas 55

19. Beau Chene 6714. Northwest 62

27. North Vermilion 326. Breaux Bridge 54

26. Erath 327. Brusly 80

23. Iota 4710. LaGrange 68

Division III (Non-Select)

25. St. James 638. Ville Platte 83

20. Loreauville 4113. Caldwell Parish 61

4. Patterson (Bye)

19. Mamou 5914. Rosepine 63

18. West St. Mary 4915. Amite 62

Division IV (Non-Select)

24. Oak Grove 639. Welsh 61

25. Mangham 408. Elton 48

4. North Central (Bye)

3. Franklin (Bye)

27. Jeanerette 336. Lakeview 71

18. Northeast 6215. Lake Arthur 78

Division V (Non-Select)

28. Monterey 495. Lacassine 73

Division I (Select)

24. Carencro 669. St. Augustine 73

23. Lafayette 3510. St. Paul's 51

2. St. Thomas More (Bye)

Division II (Select)

20. Booker T. Washington (Shreveport) 5813. Northside 61

22. Teurlings 5611. John F. Kennedy 72

7. Lafayette Christian (Bye)

18. De La Salle 4715. David Thibodaux 61

Division III (Select)

20. Notre Dame 2913. Ascension Episcopal 43

23. Thomas Jefferson 4010. Catholic - New Iberia 51

Division IV (Select)

17. Westminster Christian 50

21. Ouachita Christian 6612. Opelousas Catholic 82

22. Sacred Heart 5311. Ascension Catholic 65

6. Central Catholic (Bye)

23. Magnolia School of Excellence 4210. Vermilion Catholic 71

Division V (Select)

11. Cristo Rey (Baton Rouge) 284. JS Clark 66

10. Northside Christian 457. Episcopal School of Acadiana 51

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New Iberia, Breaux Bridge advance to quarterfinals - KATC News

DREAMS IN PERIL Offer Live Ascension On Midwest Tour Starting In May With PIG WEED – bravewords.com

Dreams In Peril are hitting the American Midwest with Pig Weed - seven states over nine dates each one promising a night filled with thunderous breakdowns, relatable lyrics, and contagious energy.

Dreams In Peril are preparing for the release of the band's sophomore album, Ascending, and will be bringing some new songs to the road as well as featuring the band's new lineup, introducing new members Dakota Otte on vocals and Lucas Munoz on the second guitar.

They describe their music and what fans can expect: All of our music is based on personal issues and the hope to overcome your own personal demons. That being said, our upcoming new music covers ascending to new heights, rather than being in a career or in life in general. The new singles also cover topics like cancer and struggling with mental health. Musically, we are dynamic, from utilizing reverb to epic change-ups in tempos and timing signatures.

Dreams In Perils music not only keeps the listener on their toes with the instrumentation, but they also channel a momentous amount of energy and passion into their live performance that will have the audience upfront and center the entire time.

No strangers to the stage, Dreams In Peril has played with big names such as Born of Osiris, Origin, and Between The Buried and Me. Fans will be greeted by decisive energy and passion that ushers in real themes of anger, sadness, life struggles and ultimately overcoming them all.

With a couple of new singles ready to go in the coming months, they are excited to get back on stage doing what they love. They are recommended listening for fans of The Acacia Strain, Veil Of Maya, and Oceano.

Tour dates:

May27 - The Graffiti Room - Bedford Park, IL28 - Maple Grove Tavern - Maple Heights, OH29 - Westside Bowl - Youngstown, OH30 - Sovereign - Brooklyn, NY31 - The Stoney Badger Tavern - Lynchburg, VA

June1 - The Recreation Center - Fredericksburgh, VA2 - Black Circle Brewing - Indianapolis, IN3 - Vivo - Overland Park - Kansas City, MO4 - Kendalls Bar - Oklahoma City, OK

(Photo - Casey Steinmiller, Steinmiller Productions)

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DREAMS IN PERIL Offer Live Ascension On Midwest Tour Starting In May With PIG WEED - bravewords.com

Around Ascension for April 13, 2022 | Ascension | theadvocate.com – The Advocate

Louisiana treasurer to speak at April Ascension GOP Roundtable

Louisiana State Treasurer John Schroder will be the featured speaker at the April Ascension GOP Roundtable, sponsored by Ascension Republican Women. The Roundtable starts at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, April 21, at the Clarion Inn, 1500 W. La. 30 in Gonzales.

Schroder was elected state treasurer in 2017 and was reelected in 2019.

The event is open to the public and guests are welcome. Cost for the lunch is $25. Advance payment can be made at paypal.Hme/ARW225. Reservations are requested. RSVP, (225) 921-5187 or email ARWrUS@aol.com

The River Road African American Museum is for volunteers to assist with tours, special events and educational programs.

All volunteers receive free admission to all museum events, professional development seminars, and an opportunity to meet people from around the world.

Volunteers should have a friendly personality, good verbal and written communication skills, and a love of local history.

If you have five to 10 hours a week and are interested in sharing history, call at (225) 474-5553 or email at melanie@aamuseum.org.

Learn about Medicare improvements at two talks on the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 at the Ascension Council on Aging senior center.

The council will be hosting MIPPA Education Events for senior citizens of Ascension Parish. MIPPA is the acronym for the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008.

Beryl Mitchell, Louisiana SenioRX coordinator with Capital Area Agency on Aging, will be the speaker.

The events are scheduled at both senior centers as follows:

Gonzales Senior Center: 11 a.m., Thursday, April 21.

Donaldsonville Senior Center: 11 a.m. Tuesday, April 26

For more information, call Leslie at Gonzales Senior Center, (225) 621-5750 or Amy at Donaldsonville Senior Center, (225) 473-3789.

The Kiwanis Club of Ascension is holding its first bowling tournament May 1 at Premier Lanes Entertainment Center in Gonzales.

Twice daily we'll send you the day's biggest headlines. Sign up today.

Five-member teams cost $25 per person to enter and all teams are asked to donate a gift basket for a raffle. Proceeds from the event will be used for the club's service fund.

To register, email Chris Harrell at ujeanh@eatel.net.

Save it or spend it? Introduce the concept of good money habits and smart spending decisions to your 3- to 5-year-old at Ascension Parish Librarys Mother Goose Money interactive activity April 16, at Galvez, or April 30 at Dutchtown. Together, you and your child will identify and sort coins to understand each has a value. Youll search the library looking for eggs with pretend money and talk about earning and spending as the kids cash in at our store to buy real prizes to take home. Kids will also get to decorate their own papier-mch bank, so you can continue the conversation about cash and coins at home.

Each activity begins at 10 a.m. Space is limited. To register to attend at Gonzales call (225) 647-3955. For Galvez, call (225) 622-3339, and for Dutchtown call (225) 673-8699.

Applications for the Miss Donaldsonville Scholarship Pageant are available at Donaldsonville City Hall and Donaldsonville Area Chamber of Commerce.

The June 17 pageant offers scholarship money for contestants in the Miss, Teen and Little Miss categories.

For information, call (2250 445-1383 or email lee@visitdonaldsonville.org.

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Around Ascension for April 13, 2022 | Ascension | theadvocate.com - The Advocate

Assessing COMP’s ascension with a decrease in net monthly borrowing – AMBCrypto News

The DeFi token Compound was on a massive rally on 12 April at the back of the Robinhoods listing. The altcoin, along with Solana, Shiba Inu, and Polygon, was added to the existing list of assets offered by the platform.

At one point during the day on 12 April, COMP shot up by 15.48% before slipping back down to trade a $125.52, having still risen by 7.04%. This was huge support for the altcoin, whose last few days have been beyond uneventful.

After registering a 72.38% rally during the March April bullish period, the token lost about 31.66% of the rise within ten days, thanks to the broader market bearish cues.

But this price fall for once can be chalked up to the expected cooldown after the rally, as the Relative Strength Index (RSI) breached into the overbought zone and has since recovered to the neutral zone.

But even before this happened, the DeFi protocols performance hadnt been above par exactly. The monthly borrowing noted on Compound has been heading in a southward direction since December, right after the bears attacked the crypto market.

As prices began falling, borrowers took a break since investors confidence in the crypto market started wavering. But since the Dapp was still liable to pay its lenders, the borrowing went down and eventually became negative. At its peak, over $1.9 billion went out of the protocol in January as borrowing remained put.

Compounds monthly payout has been exceeding the interest it accrues | Source: Dune AMBCrypto

However, the net borrowing is still negative, with over $327 million leaving the protocol.

On the whole, borrowers are suffering losses given COMPs recent price fall, which only rose by 56% around the March end-April rally before falling back to a mere 37 value on 12 April.

This sudden drop in borrowers numbers has been a big issue with the Anchor protocol as well. Anchor protocols pre dynamic earn rate of 20% APY ended up emptying the treasury which was then replenished with $450 million by the Luna Foundation Guard.

If the price goes up further, COMP could end up attracting more investors to its protocol.

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Assessing COMP's ascension with a decrease in net monthly borrowing - AMBCrypto News

The Vincent-Strus-Martin Ascension Spiraled into a Miami Heat Ascension Five Reasons Sports Network – Five Reasons Sports Network

When covering the Miami Heats scrimmage during training camp, there were two names that I walked away from that game with that were clearly playing at another level.

Gabe Vincent and Caleb Martin.

One guy fresh off a two-way contract, and the other brand new to it.

Martin came as a surprise for many, as this athletic kid, that recently played for Charlotte, was showcasing to be much more than just a simple athlete.

He showed that his jumper was becoming more consistent, and wasnt just some isolation player that some seemed to perceive him as coming in.

More than anything, he was a legitimate defensive piece that showed flashes of being a real rotation piece.

Then the month of January hit in the year 2022. His name was already getting more buzz after an electric performance against the Bucks mid-way through December, where his 28 points without Jimmy Butler or Bam Adebayo led to a much needed win over the defending champs.

But well, the calendar flip was pretty much a defensive tour.

He made DeAaron Foxs night uneven with a 5 of 12 night, but it was clear that they had something aside from the Adebayo and Tucker switches. Martin followed the Fox night up with the assignment of Steph Curry, which he bothered enough to shoot 3 of 17 from the field at home.

Yes, they ended up dropping both of those games, but something was brewing.

Shortly after that two-game stretch, he held Chris Paul to a 3 of 9 night, Trae Young to a 4 of 15 game, and Fred VanVleet went 6 of 16 from deep with only one 2 attempted.

The point guard tour was real, but it was the true understanding of what he could be on this team, combined with the overall improvements in his offensive game.

Rewinding back to Gabe Vincent, there werent a ton of expectations coming into the season. He was a situational piece when guys went down, leaving many saying that a back-up point guard may be a neccessity.

People were right, they did need a back-up 1. But that guy was Vincent himself.

When he first signed with Miami, he appeared to be an undersized shooter who would play mainly off the catch, which he showed flashes of. But last season, he had an uneven year shooting the ball from deep due to some mechanical shifts.

Yet while some focused on those numbers, he was rapidly excelling at the all around parts of his game.

He became the staple of Miamis 2-2-1 press that debuted last year next to Andre Iguodala, just due to the fact that his perimeter lateral quickness was for real, and he had a clear knack for the ball.

Coming into this season, he just bounced off that two-way contract, and the next step would be could he make minor improvements on the ball.

Well, the improvements werent minor.

He was pretty much thrown into the fire of point guard reps, and he proved that the off-season did a lot for his game. The pick and roll savviness was really something, the catch and shoot numbers jumped up from under 30% last season to 39% this year, and his mid-range/driving game had surged.

His mid-range pull-up stalled out at 29% last year, which spiked to 43% this season. That isnt gradual improvement. Thats turning the whole page.

Plus, speaking of big games mid-way through December, Vincent led Miami to back-to-back wins with a 26 point performance in Philly, then a 27 point night against the Magic. As the top guys kept dropping out of the lineup, these guys were ready to step up.

Not only are they great fillers, but theyre now potentially in a playoff rotation.

And when talking about certain guys stepping up, Vincents two-way companion Max Strus is the perfect example of that.

I wouldnt exactly say Strus scenario was completely aligned with the other two, since it was more about situation and opportunity for him. He constantly would get the same looks no matter if it was last year or this year, but the sample size being greater this time around allowed for a true evaluation period.

Among the top 50 players in 3 point attempts a game this season, which includes around 50 players, only one player shot a better percentage from deep than Strus, with the stipulation of playing at least half of the regular season games.

Desmond Bane edged him out, but Max Strus trailed him with a 41% shooting season from beyond the arc.

Its not easy to be that spark shooter who has to consistently perform as a guy with zero rhythm prior to entering, but he proved himself. Now he finds himself sitting in the starting lineup less than a week away from the start of the playoffs.

These 3 guys are extreme success stories for this Miami Heat developmental program, but theyre also examples of putting in the work, and performing at the highest level.

From fillers to playoff rotation.

It isnt everyday that you see that, but from the Heats perspective, they arent surprised when it happens.

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The Vincent-Strus-Martin Ascension Spiraled into a Miami Heat Ascension Five Reasons Sports Network - Five Reasons Sports Network

Integrated Delivery Network Market to Witness Huge Growth by 2029 -HCA Healthcare, CHI Health, Kaiser Permanente, CommonSpirit Health, Tenet…

New Jersey, United States,-The latest report published byMR Accuracy Reportsindicates that theIntegrated Delivery NetworkMarket is likely to accelerate strongly in the coming years. Analysts have studied market drivers, restraints, risks, and opportunities in the global market. The Integrated Delivery Network Market report shows the likely direction of the market in the coming years along with its estimates. An accurate study aims to understand the market price. By analyzing the competitive landscape, the authors of the report have made excellent efforts to help readers understand the key business tactics that major companies are using to maintain market sustainability.

Key Players Mentioned in the Integrated Delivery Network Market Research Report:HCA Healthcare, CHI Health, Kaiser Permanente, CommonSpirit Health, Tenet Healthcare Medical, United Healthgroup, Providence St Joseph Health, Trinity Health, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Ascension Health

Get Full PDF Sample Copy of Report:(Including Full TOC, List of Tables & Figures, Chart) @ https://www.mraccuracyreports.com/report-sample/327787

The report includes company profiles of almost all major players in the Integrated Delivery Network market. The Company Profiles section provides valuable analysis of strengths and weaknesses, business trends, recent advances, mergers and acquisitions, expansion plans, global presence, market presence, and portfolios of products from major market players. This information can be used by players and other market participants to maximize their profitability and streamline their business strategies. Our competitive analysis also provides vital information that will help new entrants identify barriers to entry and gauge the level of competitiveness in the Integrated Delivery Network market.

Integrated Delivery Network Market

Vertical Integration, Horizontal Integration.

Application as below

Acute Care Hospitals, Primary Care, Long-term Health, Specialty Clinics, Other

The global market for Integrated Delivery Network is segmented on the basis of product, type. All of these segments have been studied individually. The detailed investigation allows assessment of the factors influencing the Integrated Delivery Network Market. Experts have analyzed the nature of development, investments in research and development, changing consumption patterns, and growing number of applications. In addition, analysts have also evaluated the changing economics around the Integrated Delivery Network Market that are likely affect its course.

The regional analysis section of the report allows players to concentrate on high-growth regions and countries that could help them to expand their presence in the Integrated Delivery Network market. Apart from extending their footprint in the Integrated Delivery Network market, the regional analysis helps players to increase their sales while having a better understanding of customer behavior in specific regions and countries. The report provides CAGR, revenue, production, consumption, and other important statistics and figures related to the global as well as regional markets. It shows how different type, application, and regional segments are progressing in the Integrated Delivery Network market in terms of growth.

Integrated Delivery Network Market Report Scope

ESTIMATED YEAR 2022

BASE YEAR 2021

FORECAST YEAR 2029

HISTORICAL YEAR 2020

UNIT Value (USD Million/Billion)

The Integrated Delivery Network report provides information about the market area, which is further subdivided into sub-regions and countries/regions. In addition to the market share in each country and sub-region, this chapter of this report also contains information on profit opportunities. This chapter of the report mentions the market share and growth rate of each region, country and sub-region during the estimated period.

Please click here today to buy full report @https://www.mraccuracyreports.com/checkout/327787

Key questions answered in the report:

Note To provide a more accurate market forecast, all our reports will be updated prior to delivery considering the impact of COVID-19.

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Integrated Delivery Network Market to Witness Huge Growth by 2029 -HCA Healthcare, CHI Health, Kaiser Permanente, CommonSpirit Health, Tenet...

Battle over carbon capture as tool to fight climate change – St. Paul Pioneer Press

BY DREW COSTLEY

Polly Glover realized her son had asthma when he was nine months old. Now 26, he carries an inhaler in his pocket whenever hes out and about in Prairieville, Louisiana, part of Ascension Parish.

He probably needs to leave Ascension quite frankly, Glover says, but he hasnt because this is his home and this is our family and this is our community.

The parish is part of the 85-mile span between New Orleans and Baton Rouge officially called the Mississippi River Chemical Corridor, more commonly known as Cancer Alley. The regions air quality is some of the worst in the United States, and in several places along the corridor, cancer risks are much higher than levels considered acceptable by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Glover says the air is terrible where she lives, but theres also great biodiversity osprey, eagles, migratory birds, deer, rabbits, fish and alligators among the regions lakes, rivers and wetlands. The environmental advocate has been working for 30 years to preserve the place shes loved since childhood.

Thats why she is wary of anything that might make air quality worse or threaten wildlife and her biggest fear now is that a $4.5 billion plant designed to capture climate-changing carbon and make clean-burning hydrogen fuel will actually do more harm to the Lake Maurepas basin.

The blue hydrogen energy plant is slated to be built and operated by Air Products and Chemicals, a multinational petrochemical company. The company says the plant will capture airborne carbon emissions created during production and put them safely underground a process called carbon capture and storage.

Sometimes I think people think youre kind of bubbling this in at the bottom of the lake, said Simon Moore, vice president of investor relations, corporate relations and sustainability at Air Products. You know, this is a mile below the Earths surface, where the geological formation of the rock has this porous space, which simply absorbs the CO2.

Still, Glover is worried. Im not a scientist. Im a mom who cares, she said. We have got to be better stewards of the environment and while reducing carbon emissions is necessary, injecting them into the basin is not the answer.

There are several other carbon capture and storage projects proposed or in the works throughout the U.S., including in Louisiana, Texas, Minnesota, Michigan, Iowa and California. Companies behind them maintain they can successfully remove carbon from the air to reduce pollution, then safely transport and store the carbon underground or do both.

In some cases, oil and gas companies are banking on this new technology to either help build new profit centers, such as plants that make hydrogen, or extend the lifespan of their fossil fuel facilities.

Carbon capture and storage projects are gaining traction since Congress approved $3.5 billion for them last year. The Global CCS Institute, a think tank seeking to advance these projects globally, called it the single largest appropriation of money for CCS in the history of the technology.

In the latest report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the worlds top scientists said carbon capture and storage technology has to be part of the range of solutions to decarbonize and mitigate climate change. But they said solar and wind energy and electricity storage are improving faster than carbon capture and storage.

Opponents of carbon capture and storage maintain the technology is unproven and has been less effective than alternatives such as solar and wind at decarbonizing the energy sector.

Carbon capture is neither workable nor feasible, said Basav Sen, climate justice policy director for the Institute for Policy Studies, a progressive think tank based in Washington, D.C. Its merely an excuse for the fossil fuel industry to keep operating the way it does.

A study in late 2020 by researchers from the University of California, San Diego, found over 80% of 39 projects that have sought to commercialize carbon capture and storage ended in failure. The study cited lack of technological readiness as a top factor

But even if the technology was deployed successfully, several critics say the projects would pose threats to the public health of communities long plagued by air and water pollution.

First, they said any project that prolongs the lifespan of an existing industrial facility presents additional environmental harm by extending the amount of time it pollutes a community, which the IPCC report confirms.

Second, they noted that since carbon capture would require more energy to power the equipment, it would result in more air pollution because the technology can only catch a portion of the carbon emitted by a facility.

Howard Herzog, a senior research engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and pioneer of carbon capture and storage technology, disputed this in an interview with the Associated Press. But he acknowledged there is a risk in transporting and storing carbon.

In 2020, a pipeline carrying compressed carbon dioxide ruptured in the town of Satartia, Mississippi, which caused over 40 people to get hospital treatment and more than 300 to evacuate. The incident is cited by experts, advocates and residents who live near proposed carbon capture and storage projects to illustrate potential dangers of transporting carbon long distances.

Injecting carbon underground for storage could end up contaminating aquifers, according to Nikki Reisch, director of the climate and energy program for the Center for International Environmental Law.

Over 500 environmental organizations, including the law center, signed an open letter published in the Washington Post in July 2021, calling carbon capture and storage a false solution.

In response, the Carbon Capture Coalition, which advocates the technology, released its own letter in August with over 100 signatories. They pressed Congress to include investment in carbon capture and storage in any upcoming legislation.

Matt Fry, a state and regional policy manager with the Great Plains Institute, a Minneapolis-based climate and energy think tank, told AP the technology is essential to meeting mid-century climate goals.

The potential for a completely decarbonized, electrified world is a reality, Fry said. But were going to need to transition to get there. And its going to require carbon capture to address those emissions.

At the point of capture, Herzog said, the technology poses a very low threat to public health. Theres always a chance of some mishaps, he added, but on the overall scale of chemical plants, (the technology) is fairly benign.

Still, residents near proposed projects worry.

In Californias Central Valley agricultural region, Chevron, Microsoft and Schlumberger New Energy are collaborating to build a facility in the town of Mendota that will create energy by converting agricultural waste into carbon monoxide and hydrogen gas, then mixing it with oxygen to generate electricity with the promise of capturing 99% of the carbon from the process.

Chevron said it plans to inject the carbon underground into nearby deep geologic formations.

Thats concerning for Nayamin Martinez, who lives in the valley and is director of the Central California Environmental Justice Network. That worries us a lot, she said. What does that mean in terms of risk for contamination of drinking water?

Creighton Welch, a spokesperson for Chevron, said the process they plan to use is safe. CO2 capture, injection, and storage are not new technologies and have been conducted safely for decades, Welch said.

Back in Louisiana, Glover and other residents also fear carbon capture technology will affect the water. The carbon dioxide captured at the Air Products and Chemicals facility will be stored in sites such as under Lake Maurepas, an important wetland.

Kim Coates, who lives on the lakes northeast side, said its a buffer between the Gulf of Mexico and residents. But she said shes witnessed generations of destruction to that ecosystem through industrial development and, more recently, hurricanes and tropical storms.

Now Coates fears more of the same if carbon is stored under the lake. Weve seen the destruction over time with no one looking forward to what was going to happen in the future, she said.

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Battle over carbon capture as tool to fight climate change - St. Paul Pioneer Press

Ascension, Assumption and St. James guilty pleas 4/4 to 4/8 – L’Observateur – L’Observateur

During the week of April 4 April 8, 2022, the following defendants pled guilty to various charges and were sentenced in the 23rd Judicial District Court, parishes of Ascension, Assumption, and St. James.

Ascension Parish:

The above cases were prosecuted by Assistant District Attorneys Charles Chuck Long and Robin OBannon. Presiding over these matters was the Honorable Judge Tess Stromberg.

Assumption Parish:

Assumption Parish had no court news to report this week.

St. James Parish:

The above cases were prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Adam Koenig, and presiding over these matters was the Honorable Judge Cody Martin.

The above cases were prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Bruce Mohon, and presiding over these matters was the Honorable Judge Alvin Turner Jr.

Submitted by Public Information Officer Tyler Cavalier for 23rd Judicial District Attorney Ricky L. Babin.

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Ascension, Assumption and St. James guilty pleas 4/4 to 4/8 - L'Observateur - L'Observateur

AOL Knights of Columbus fish fry a great success – L’Observateur – L’Observateur

LAPLACE The Ascension of Our Lord Knights of Columbus fish fry has been a hallmark of the Lenten season in St. John the Baptist Parish for approximately 30 years.

The AOL Knights of Columbus Council 9623 served approximately 450 pounds of fried and grilled fish, 400 pounds of corn, and 200 pounds of potatoes each Friday from March 4 to April 8. Proceeds contributed to the Benjamin Piovan Scholarship fund, which will be awarded to two Ascension of Our Lord seventh graders who are continuing their education at St. Charles Catholic High School.

Grand Knight Mike Abbate said the annual scholarship, which covers tuition at St. Charles Catholic, is awarded based on a students patriotism and community involvement. Through a different program, Council 9623 also supports education through the Catholic Youth Leadership Award, presented to a boy and a girl each year.

While the fish fry is primarily used as a fundraiser for the Benjamin Piovan scholarship, proceeds can make an impact through various charities and disaster relief efforts.

This is one of our major fundraisers for the year, so its important we do really well. Whatever we have leftover goes toward other Knights of Columbus initiatives, including disaster relief, said Lloyd Schexnayder, a member of Council 9623. We have gone to Lake Charles, Port Arthur, Panama City, all over, providing meals after disasters. Were a nonprofit, so everything we collect goes back out.

Over the past several years, the Knights of Columbus have headed disaster relief efforts by cooking large pots of jambalaya and pastalaya for victims of natural disasters in neighboring states. The tables were turned in 2021 when it was Council 9623s own St. John Parish community crying out for help.

The AOL Knights of Columbus began collecting non-perishable food items and hygiene essentials at the start of the 2021 Atlantic Hurricane Season, months before Hurricane Ida was a thought in anyones mind. When the monster hurricane hit on August 29, 2021, Council 9623 was prepared to provide aid to the community with baby items, bottled water, toilet tissue, paper towels, canned goods, cleaning supplies and more.

On September 11, 2021, a cooking team showed up to distribute 800 meals to impacted residents. With the help of Ascension of Our Lord Church Parish Pastor Cyril Buyera, Council 9623 was able to open a Hurricane Ida Supply Center located under the AOL School overhang. Disaster supplies were distributed to the community on weekends and some weekdays, amounting to 28,000 pounds of supplies handed out from September 11 to December 22.

The AOL Knights of Columbus also handed out 6,200 meals in September, 7,600 meals in October, 5,400 meals in November and more than 2,200 meals in December. The success of the Hurricane Ida response would not have been possible without the help of many local people and organizations, as well as fellow Knights of Columbus councils who delivered truckloads of supplies.

Council 9623 historian James Poche recalls seeing cars lined for miles down the streets for hurricane supplies. The Ascension of Our Lord Catholic School campus became a beacon of hope, not only during the Knights of Columbus disaster relief program, but also during the fish fry program that served the community through the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

I love working with the Knights of Columbus, Poche said. Ive been retired for about six years. I love doing this because I have time to do it. It gets me out the house, and the fish fry is my favorite project all year long.

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AOL Knights of Columbus fish fry a great success - L'Observateur - L'Observateur

Area baseball, softball scores and reported linescores | High Schools | theadvocate.com – The Advocate

BASEBALL

Episcopal of Acadiana 20, Jeanerette 1

Rayne 9, Carencro 4

Eunice 5, Plaquemine 2

Teurlings 10, Vermilion Catholic 4

Avoyelles 16, Abbeville 6

Glenmora 13, Mamou 1

Sacred Heart 14, Ville Platte 4

Notre Dame 6, Lafayette Christian 5

Welsh 10, Lake Arthur 1

Port Barre 4, Welsh 3

Rosepine 11, St. Edmund 1

Crowley 13, Mamou 10

Centerville 15, Patterson 1

Catholic P.C. 9, Liberty 1

Crowley 13, Mamou 10

Ascension Christian 9, Livonia 0

Ascension Christian 7, Livonia 1

Opelousas 14, Peabody 9

North Vermilion 9, Ascension Episcopal 1

Plaquemine 100 000 1 - 2 5 2

Eunice 320 000 x - 5 4 1

WP - H Manuel (6.2 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 5 BB, 7 K), LP - G Williams (6 IP, 4 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 4 K). Top Hitters - EUN: H Darbonne 1-2, RBI; E Fruge 1-3, RBI; C Andrepont 1-2. PLAQ: Dennis 2-3, RBI; Landry 1-3; S Tullier 1-3.

Carencro 310 000 0 - 4 7 5

Rayne 005 103 x - 9 6 1

WP - Cope (7 IP, 7 H, 3 ER, 2 BB, 2 K), LP - James Heiken (5.1 IP, 5 H, 1 ER, 3 BB, 6 K). Top Hitters - RAY: Oliver 3-4, 2B, 3 RBIs; Cope 2-4, 2 RBIs; Judice 1-1; CAR: James Heiken 2-3, 2B; Ashton Healy 1-4, HR, 3 RBIs; Cameron Andrus 1-2.

NV 022 002 3 - 9 8 2

AES 000 000 1 - 1 6 3

WP- Tyson Leblanc (7 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 5 K, 4 BB, 1 HR) LP- Logan Overtone (3 IP, 2 H, 4 R, 3 ER, 6 K, 5 BB) Top Hitters- NV: Tyson Leblanc 2-2, 2 RBIs, 2B, HR; John Tochet 1-4, 1 RBI; AES: Carter Breaux 2-2, 2B; Blaise Blancher 1-3, 1 RBI, HR.

Beau Chene 11, Northside Christian 8

Bell City 9, Lacassine 1

Eunice 5, David Thibodaux 4

St. Thomas More 11, Archbishop Chapelle 4

Catholic-NI 19, Teurlings 16

Erath 16, Delcambre 6

Ascension Episcopal 17, Jeanerette 2

Buckeye 10, Loreauville 0

Notre Dame 19, Welsh 4

Opelousas Catholic 7, Academy of Our Lady 2

E.D. White 15, Vermilion Catholic 0

St. Mary 18, Vermilion Catholic 10

Chapelle 5, Opelousas Catholic 1

St. Edmund 5, Eunice 3

Grant 7, Sacred Heart 1

Opelousas Catholic 14, St. Marys 6

Loreauville 24, Simpson 4

E.D. White 9, Catholic N.I. 3

Notre Dame 9, Airline 5

David Thibodaux 14, Marksville 2

Teurlings 18, Ascension Catholic 17

Acadiana 4, Central B.R. 2

ND 021 032 1 - 9 13 4

AIR 101 210 0 - 5 7 1

WP- Corine Poncho (5 IP, 6 H, 5 R, 2 ER, 3 K, 3 BB, 1 HR) LP- Emily Rachal (7 IP, 13 H, 9 R, 8 ER, 3 K, 0 BB, 5 HR) Top Hitters- ND: Corine Poncho 3-4, 4 RBIs, 3 HR; Maci Bergeron 3-4, 3 RBIs, 2 HR; AIR: Natalie Sutton 2-4, 1 RBI, HR; Paris Endis 1-2, 2 RBIs, 2B.

Welsh 103 - 4 5 4

Notre Dame 7(10)2 - 19 15 0

WP - Maci Bergeron (3 IP, 5 H, 4 ER, 0 BB, 2 K), LP - Alexis Hayes (1.1 IP, 11 H, 10 ER, 2 BB, 1 K). Top Hitters - ND: Maci Bergeron 4-4, 2B, HR, 2 RBIs; Callie Maitre 3-3, 2B, 3 RBIs; Abigail Savoy 2-3, HR, 3 RBIs; WEL: Alexis Hayes 2-2, 2B; Caroline Cormier 1-2, 2 RBIs; Alli Manuel 1-1, 2B, RBI.

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Blinken links Taliban’s takeover in Afghanistan to ‘serious erosion of human rights’ – The Statesman

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday (local time) said that the Talibans takeover in Afghanistan has resulted in a serious erosion of human rights in the country.

Blinkens remarks came as the US state department released the 2021 Human Rights Report on Tuesday. In Afghanistan, the Talibans takeover precipitated a humanitarian crisis, and has resulted in serious erosion of human rights, from arbitrary detentions of women, protesters, and journalists, to reprisals against security forces for the former government, to growing restrictions on where women and girls can study or work, he said during the press briefing.

Notably, the Human Rights Watch (HRW) has also claimed that there has been a surge in human rights violations in Afghanistan, reported Tolonews.

Human Rights Watch works on the human rights situation in about 100 countries around the world and at the moment we see Afghanistan as a very urgent priority. The human rights situation in Afghanistan is deeply worrying, the media outlet quoted Heather Barr, associate director of the Womens Rights Division at HRW, as saying.

However, the Taliban have denied claims of human rights violations in the country and said that such violations have decreased since they came to power in Afghanistan.

The rights of all Afghans are ensured now. The Islamic Emirate is committed to ensuring the rights of all citizens under an Islamic structure, including men and women and any other aspect, the media outlet quoted Bilal Karimi, Taliban deputy spokesman, as saying.

The Talibans swift ascension to power in Afghanistan occurred in mid-August, triggering economic disarray and a dire humanitarian crisis.

Despite repeated calls from all around the world, the Taliban have failed to deliver its promises on the safety of the Afghan people and their assurance of an inclusive government.

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Blinken links Taliban's takeover in Afghanistan to 'serious erosion of human rights' - The Statesman

Bible Q&A: Did Jesus have to raise from the dead? – baptistmessenger.com

The resurrection of Jesus was not merely a sermon topic for Easter Sunday in the early church. It was the sermon topic for every sermon. The New Testament provides a clear picture of what early Christian preaching looked like.

In Acts alone we have eight Gospel sermons (Acts 2:14-29; 3:12-26; 4:8-12; 7:2-53; 10:34-43; 13:16-41; 14:15-17; 17:22-31). In each case, the resurrection is central. Whether Peter, Stephen, or Paul, the thesis statement did not change: You killed Him, but God raised Him from the dead.

Peters sermon at Pentecost in Acts 2:14-41 is the first sermon recorded after Jesus resurrection and ascension. As the sermon moves to its climactic statement that God had made Jesus both Lord and Messiah, Peters provided the basis for his claim:

Though He was delivered up according to Gods determined plan and foreknowledge, you used lawless people to nail Him to a cross and kill Him. God raised Him up, ending the pains of death, because it was not possible for Him to be held by death (Acts 2:23-24).

Notice the tension between Jesus being handed over to be killed as according to the predetermined plan and foreknowledge of God, and yet it was a horrible act for which those Jews responsible were called to repent. It was God who gave Him up, and yet He was killed by lawless men. But most importantly, it was not possible for Him to be held by death.

Peters proof from Scripture for this claim came from Psalm 16:8-11, especially verse 10, You will not abandon me in Hades or allow your holy one to see decay. At first glance, this psalm would seem to be a reference to Davids unshakable belief in the life-giving power of God and as a result that death could not separate him, David, from God.

Peter makes it clear, however, that it was not possible that David was talking about himself. David died, was buried and whatever remained of his long-ago decayed body was still buried (Acts 2:29). Thus, Psalm 16:10 couldnt be about David, rather, David spoke of the resurrection of the Jesus, the Messiah. In fact, the whole Psalm spoke of Jesus, declaring that the resurrection was the only possible outcome of Jesus death.

According to Psalm 16:8, the resurrection was the only possible outcome because of Gods continual presence with Jesus. God was with Jesus during His earthly ministry, and He would most certainly not abandon Him in death. The Father would never withdraw His presence from His beloved Son, whether in life or death. Yahweh was/is forever present with His Son and thus Jesus could not be shaken by death.

While Jesus does appear shaken in Gethsemane and on the cross (My God, My God, why have you forsaken me), it could not have been due to death. Furthermore, it is not imaginable that Jesus was shaken because of fear that the Father would turn His back on Him, an impossibility given the unity of the Trinity.

The only acceptable explanation is that Jesus was shaken by the reality of bearing the sin for all humanity. This One Who knew no sin was about to become sin (2 Cor. 5:21). This One Who was not cursed was about to become a curse for us (Gal. 3:13).

According to Psalm 16:9-10, because of Gods continuous presence, Jesus lived in hope. God would not abandon His Holy One to hades. Hades in the Bible is not hell but refers to the Old Testament idea of sheol, that is, the place or realm of the dead. Likewise, God would not allow the physical body of His Holy One to experience decomposition.

Peter declared in the first sermon recorded after the resurrection and ascension that, based on Psalm 16:8-11, it was impossible for Jesus to be held by death. He had to rise from the dead. The resurrection happened because it had to happen. It is the only logical effect, the only possible outcome, of Gods love for His Holy One.

Jesus Is Risen!

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Bible Q&A: Did Jesus have to raise from the dead? - baptistmessenger.com

City of Donaldsonville places three on All-State team – Donaldsonville Chief

Just recently, the Louisiana Sports Writers Association released its All-State basketball teams, and three players from the city of Donaldsonville made the cut.

Two Donaldsonville Tiger standouts made the Class 3A squad, and one Ascension Catholic boys player made the Class 1A team.

In 1A, senior Bulldog guard Demarco Harry was named to the LSWA All-State second team. Harry averaged 23 points per game this past season.

Harry helped the Bulldogs capture the District 7-1A championship in 2021-22, and they finished the regular season on an eight-game winning streak.

Ascension Catholic earned the No. 7 seed in the Division-IV playoffs. The Bulldogs went on to host a first-round playoff game.

In that contest, Ascension Catholic defeated No. 10 River Oaks, 73-63. That pushed them through to the state quarterfinals for the first time in three years.

Ascension Catholics season then ended with a loss to second-seeded Calvary Baptist, the eventual Division-IV state runner-up.

The Bulldogs finished the year with an overall record of 17-12.

In addition to being named second-team All-State, Harry was also named the District 7-1A MVP.

The LSWA named Calvary Baptists LaBree Williams as the Class 1A Outstanding Player. Williams averaged 24 points, 12 rebounds and 4.5 blocks per game in helping lead his team to a state runner-up finish.

Southern Labs Harold Boudreaux was named the Class 1A Coach of the Year. He led the Kittens to the Division-IV state championship.

On the LSWA Class 3A All-State squad, Donaldsonville senior forward Troy Cole was named to the second team. Cole averaged 17 points per game this past season.

He is a Blackburn College signee.

Also, Donaldsonville senior point guard Lawrence Forcell was named All-State honorable mention.

Forcell and Cole helped lead Donaldsonville to a 27-4 record during the regular season, which included an undefeated run in league play that resulted in a District 9-3A championship.

The Tigers also carried a 10-game winning streak into the playoffs. That helped them earn the No. 4 seeding in the Class 3A postseason.

Donaldsonville continued its impressive run in the playoffs.

In the opening round, the Tigers trounced No. 28 Mamou, 94-53. In round two, they rolled past 13th-seeded Frederick A. Douglas, 63-39.

And in the state quarterfinals, Donaldsonville pulled away from fifth-seeded Iowa, 62-50, to punch its ticket to LHSAA Boys Marsh Madness for the first time since 2014.

Unfortunately, the Tigers memorable run ended in the state semifinals. Donaldsonville was beaten, 70-45, by top seed and eventual state champion Madison Prep. It was the Chargers second straight 3A state championship victory.

Donaldsonville ended the season with an overall record of 30-5.

Madison Prep center Percy Daniels was named the Class 3A Outstanding Player. The Seton Hall signee averaged 18 points, 12 rebounds and nearly six blocks per game during the Chargers state title run.

The LSWA Class 3A Coach of the Year was Erroll Gauff of Archbishop Hannan, who led his team to the Division-II state title.

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City of Donaldsonville places three on All-State team - Donaldsonville Chief

CMU College of Medicine signs 25-year agreement with Ascension Michigan to train medical students at hospitals – Midland Daily News

Ascension Michigan has signed a 25-year agreement with Central Michigan University College of Medicine to help educate and train medical students at several Ascension Michigan hospitals, including Ascension St. John Hospital in Detroit, Ascension St. Marys Hospital in Saginaw and Ascension Genesys Hospital in Grand Blanc.

We are very proud to have solidified this agreement with CMU College of Medicine, stated Charles Husson, DO, chief medical officer, Ascension Michigan. This long-term agreement aligns with our strategic goals of clinical collaboration in the medical education space and most importantly, ensures quality training for future physicians.

"Our education and training will help prepare these medical students to provide comprehensive healthcare services to Michiganders across mid-Michigan including those who live in rural communities, as well as metropolitan and inner-city areas. These students are key to enhancing access to patient-centered, compassionate care in the future.

Third-year and fourth-year CMU medical students will have opportunities for clinical rotations at the three Ascension Michigan hospitals, which offer a continuum of acute and critical care services including emergency medicine, family medicine, general surgery, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatric medicine and surgery, and behavioral medicine.

The CMU College of Medicine was established to address the state and national physician shortage. Beginning with the inaugural class of 2017, approximately 500 doctors have graduated from the College of Medicine. Of the graduating class in 2021, more than 60% entered primary care residencies and nearly 50% remained in Michigan.

This agreement with Ascension Michigan hospitals streamlines and secures for the long-term our joint commitment to providing exceptional education for medical students, and outstanding comprehensive care for Michiganders, stated George E. Kikano, CMU vice president for health affairs and dean of the CMU College of Medicine. The need is great. Collaborations such as this one set the stage for a brighter and healthier future for us all.

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CMU College of Medicine signs 25-year agreement with Ascension Michigan to train medical students at hospitals - Midland Daily News

Guest column: Ascension Florida is requiring staff members to get the COVID vaccine – The Florida Times-Union

Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast Board of Directors| Guest Columnists

We are the Board of Directors of Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast, which includes Ascension St. Vincents in Jacksonville, Ascension Sacred Heart in Pensacola, Destin, Panama City and Port St. Joe, and Ascension Providence in Mobile, Ala.

We truly value and appreciate our associates and medical staff and we care about their safety, therefore, we wholeheartedly support Ascensions decision that all associates and medical staff members must be vaccinated against COVID-19. This decision is consistent with our Mission and with the actions of an ever-increasing number of major healthcare systems nationwide, which are also requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for all their employees.

The Mission of Ascension is to serve all persons, especially those who are poor and vulnerable. This Mission also compels us to deliver responsible, safe, high-quality and compassionate healthcare. Our associates share in this commitment to improving the health of those we serve.

In addition to all of the other safety and infection prevention practices weve deployed consistent with CDC and OSHA guidelines, Ascensions COVID-19 vaccine requirement helps us to protect our associates and patients, and to prevent the spread of the virus to others. In this way, we honor the imperative to love our neighbor. As the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops reminds us,Receiving the COVID-19 vaccine ought to be understood as an act of charity toward the other members of our community.... In this way, being vaccinated safely against COVID-19 should be considered an act of love of our neighbor and part of our moral responsibility for the common good.

We strongly encourage all members of our community to get vaccinated, in order to protectthemselves, their families, their friends, and their neighbors. COVID-19 continues to spreadrapidly in our communities. Over 96% of patients being treated in our hospitals for COVID-19are not vaccinated. Individuals who are vaccinated are much less likely to become seriously illwith COVID-19 and require hospitalization.

This has largely become a pandemic of the unvaccinated. By getting vaccinated, Ascension associates and all of our community members demonstrate solidarity with many businesses, governmental agencies, and institutions that have recognized that getting a vaccine is an important step towards ending this pandemic.

Protecting our associates and those we serve is a responsibility we do not take lightly. To demonstrate our commitment to this responsibility, all of our Board members have been fully vaccinated. With reverence, our Ascension St.Vincents, Ascension Sacred Heart and Ascension Providence leaders, associates, and medical staff members have our collective support.

We are the Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast Board of Directors:Holly Benson,Rob Bradley,Robert Emmanuel,John Falconetti,Tyrone Fenderson,Kevin Joseph, M.D., Sister Mary Ellen Lacy, DC,J. Collier Merrill,J. Mort OSullivan, III,John Roche,Beth Rouse,Sidney Simmons II, and Thomas VanOsdol

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Guest column: Ascension Florida is requiring staff members to get the COVID vaccine - The Florida Times-Union

Ascension St. Thomas stopping all non-urgent elective procedures – WSMV Nashville

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Ascension St. Thomas stopping all non-urgent elective procedures - WSMV Nashville

Curfews extend by a day in East Baton Rouge, Ascension as outages persist, 911 calls surge – The Advocate

With 140 traffic lights still out in East Baton Rouge, Mayor-President Sharon Weston Broome will extend the parishwide curfew through Friday to keep people off the roads.

Ascension Parish announced it would push its curfew through another day as well.

Ongoing outages have made driving more dangerous and increased 911 calls in the wake of Hurricane Ida have strained emergency responders, prompting many local governments to enact night-through-morning stay-home orders.

Just like on Wednesday night, the mandatory curfew in East Baton Rouge will run from midnight Thursday through dawn Friday. In Ascension, it will last from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m.

Broome said she hasn't decided whether to stretch the Baton Rouge curfew into the Labor Day weekend.

"The way we judge whether to do that is through talks with law enforcement, and their concerns over the number of traffic lights still out, and the increasing calls into 911," she said.

Entergy officials said Thursday the "vast majority" of customers in the greater Baton Rouge area will have power restored by the middle of next week.

The "vast majority" of customers in the greater Baton Rouge area will have power restored by Wednesday next week, the head of Entergy said Thu

Between Aug. 25 and Wednesday, Broome said calls to the city-parish's fire, police, emergency medical services and Sheriff's Office have doubled from 94, 361, 197 and 440 on Aug. 25, respectively, to 184, 507, 306 and 598.

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Broome didn't have a breakdown on the nature of those calls.

"Someone asked me the other day why the city-parish couldn't put stop signs out at all the places the traffic signals are out," she said. "The truth of the matter is: That's not realistic at this point in time with everything else our first responders are dealing with."

"People are supposed to be responding like it's a four-way stop anyway," she added.

With so many traffic lights not working thanks to power outages caused by Hurricane Ida, intersections across Louisiana are temporarily four-w

The mayor expressed optimism about things returning to some semblance of normalcy after Labor Day, which for Baton Rouge hinges mostly on power being restored.

She said the parish's two community shelters would remain open as long as needed. As of Thursday morning 267 people were taking refuge at the Raising Cane's River Center in downtown and another 155 were checked into the F.G. Clark Activity Center.

As for debris pickup, Broome said the city-parish has already begun. But contractors will be needed to shoulder the workload, given the sheer volume of downed trees and wreckage left in Ida's wake. They have estimated more than 400,000 cubic yards of debris will have to get hauled off in the coming weeks.

"We're looking at Tuesday to really launch our debris clean up," she said Thursday. "We'll constantly be reiterating the message not to dump debris down our storm drains and canals. I'm very concerned about folks doing that and bringing us back to square one."

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Curfews extend by a day in East Baton Rouge, Ascension as outages persist, 911 calls surge - The Advocate

Few spared from widespread damage in Ascension Parish – WBRZ

GONZALES - As Hurricane Ida, then a category three storm, barreled down on Ascension Parish Sunday, Richard Ruemker was fairly confident one of the oak trees in his yard would come crashing down.

"I kept waiting for a tree to come through the house, honestly," Ruemker said. "I was watching the bands come through, and one minute the trees would just be leaning a little bit, and then a big [gust] would come through and just lay them over."

Having one of those trees come crashing through the roof was Ruemker's wife, Rhonda's, biggest concern.

"I did a lot of praying that the roots would stay," Rhonda said.

Monday afternoon, Richard and Rhonda recounted the anxiety-ridden hours are they rode out the storm.

"35, 45 miles an hour winds at one point, and then all of a sudden you'd get a gust that'd come through that sounded like a freight train," Richard said.

When the couple finally emerged from inside Monday morning, they found out just how close they came to having their worst nightmare turn into a reality.

"Oh my gosh, it was just like unbelievable," Rhonda said. "Is that not amazing? It's amazing that it did not go through the roof."

One of their oaks was suspended inches from their roof, stopping just short of falling through, held up by other limbs.

The Ruemkers know just how lucky they are considering the extensive damage elsewhere in Ascension. At nearly every turn, trees were uprooted and tossed through yards, from St. Amant to Sorrento.

Knowing how those nearby fared far worse, Rhonda remains awestruck that her oaks are still in place.

After a scary night listening to winds roar and waiting anxiously in the dark, the couple says next time they plan to evacuate, knowing they might not be this lucky again. After a day of clearing debris, they credit their faith with keeping them safe.

"You hear the news, and they tell you it's severe, and it's coming, and you want to prepare for that, but you really don't know it until it's here on top of you," Rhonda said.

"Definitely a ride you don't want to take," Richard said.

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Few spared from widespread damage in Ascension Parish - WBRZ

Ascension father died in Hurricane Ida doing what he’d always done: taking care of his family – The Advocate

For those who knew him, it made sense that Dennis Duplessis would go out in Hurricane Ida's winds to prepare a generator so his wife, Hope, would have it running when she got back after the storm.

Duplessis was the kind of guy who made sure his family had what they needed no matter what. That's why he went out despite some warnings to stay inside that night, family members said.

Tragically, Ida's powerful winds brought a tree down just as Duplessis was getting out of a pickup truck, fatally striking him outside the house.

Duplessis, 60, is one of three people known to have been killed in Louisiana directly by Ida. Two others drowned in the New Orleans area. Others have since been injured in the storm's aftermath from the operation of home generators. Also, two were killed in Mississippi when a road collapsed.

The full death toll from the hurricane may not be known for days as search and rescue continues.

Earlier reports of Duplessis' death had him inside the home when the tree fell, but family members say he was outside it.

The tree one he worried would fall, but which he didn't have the money to get cut down smashed the truck he had just exited. Another man with him somehow emerged unscathed.

A cousin was with Duplessis in his last moments. They recited the "Lord's Prayer" together, Duplessis' youngest child, Chasity Fatherree, said.

"His last words was, 'Tell Hope I love her,'" Fatherree said in an interview Tuesday.

"He would have gave his last breath for her, and I guess he basically did trying to make sure she could come home where she was comfortable," said Fatherree, 32. "And he always said he wanted to go first because he wouldn't have been able to live without my mom."

Though Duplessis and his wife had long been separated, they remained close and lived on the same street a few houses from each other, in the kind of extended family compound still common in parts of Ascension.

Fatherree's mother has struggled with health troubles in recent years, drawing Duplessis' attention.

Duplessis married into one of Ascension's longstanding Babin families. He lived on a street named after a Babin and made his home on land originally homesteaded by a Babin north of Gonzales and off La. 621, his mother-in-law, Shirley Kirby, said.

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At the same time, the old name for the area where he lived is called Duplessis.

By Fatherree's own account, she and her dad had the kind of relationship fathers and daughters who are too much alike often share.

They butted heads. He taught her to be self-reliant. They worked together during past hurricanes keeping generators going for older relatives.

But he still insisted on taking care of things for her.

Duplessis seemed to know everyone in town. Fatherree recalls security officers at a skating rink telling her as a youth that they were friends of her dad's and would be watching out.

He even introduced her to her husband, Jeremy.

Duplessis worked as a car mechanic and later at Marchand's hardware store in Gonzales, where many grew to know him, Fatherree said.

In his later years, he also suffered from a variety of health ailments that limited his ability to work. But they didn't limit his dedication to his family, including his 12 grandchildren.

Fatherree said the sudden death of her father during the turmoil of Ida they were on generator power and housing family Tuesday has left her struggling to fully grasp with his loss.

Funeral plans have been delayed at least a week.

Fatherree says she keeps thinking she is going to go over to his home and he'll be there, pushing himself to do things despite his ailments.

"It does not seem real at all," she said.

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Ascension father died in Hurricane Ida doing what he'd always done: taking care of his family - The Advocate