

Too many constitutional amendments on state ballots?
State Rep. Jack McFarland said that given time, state education officials could find budget cuts that would provide money for teacher pay raises. (Photo by Cross Harris / LSU Manship School News Service) BATON ROUGE — Voter rejection of constitutional amendments, including one that would have freed up money for teacher pay raises, complicated this spring’s legislative session and raised questions about whether the public is being asked to vote on too many amendments that are


Governor orders redirecting more to teacher stipends
BATON ROUGE — Gov. Jeff Landry signed an executive order Tuesday to redirect $168 million from the administrative spending section of the public-school funding formula to pay for $2,000 teacher stipends for the 2026-27 academic year. The executive order, which also includes $1,000 stipends for public-school support staff, would have to be approved by two-thirds of the state Legislature in a mail-in ballot. The $168 million figure does not include stipends for administrators


New maps, trimmed N.O. courts and carbon top agenda
State Sen. Jay Morris, R-Monroe, was at the center of the biggest fights over congressional redistricting and cutbacks in the New Orleans court system. (Photo by Avery White / LSU Manship School News Service) BATON ROUGE — A push to redraw congressional maps and a fight to cut back the New Orleans court system produced the biggest fireworks in a legislative session that could end Monday with K-12 teachers still waiting to hear about possible salary stipends. Bids to strengt












