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Sheriff, Police Departments plan back to school supply drive

Donate to your local schools

The Acadia Parish Sheriff’s Office, along with police departments of the parish, will be hosting a back to school supply drive during the upcoming week.
Acadia Parish citizens are encouraged to come together and donate items that will be given to the youth around the parish.
The drive will begin on Wednesday, July 26, and will end on Thursday, August 3.
Items can be dropped off at any one of the following locations:
Acadia Parish Sheriff’s Office
Rayne Police Department
Iota Police Department
Church Point Police Department
Mermentau City Hall
Morse City Hall
All supplies will be accepted.
For questions, please contact Kim with the Acadia Parish Sheriff’s Office at 788-8793.

Events Aug. 11 mark anniversary of death of Charlene Richard

RICHARD - The annual Mass of Petition, this year marking the 58th anniversary of the death of Charlene Marie Richard, will be offered on Friday, Aug. 11, at 6 p.m. at St. Edward’s Catholic Church.
The Mass will be celebrated by the Most Reverend J. Douglas Deshotel, Bishop of the Diocese of Lafayette, at St. Edward Catholic Church in Richard.
This year’s celebration begins at 5:30 p.m. with the praying of the Rosary. Immediately following the Mass will be a reception in the church hall.
The annual celebration is sponsored by The Friends of Charlene Richard.
For more information, contact The Friends of Charlene Richard at P.O. Box 91623, Lafayette 70509.

Rayne Mustang All-Stars to Zone, Pony team at Regionals

A lone Rayne all-star team is still competing during the 2017 summer season.
The Mustang Americans All-Stars, better known as the Frog Sox, are presently taking part in the 2017 Zone National Tournament slated July 27-31, in Tampa, Florida.
The Frog Sox recently captured top honors during the Super Regional Tournament held in Erath to qualify for the Zone Nationals.
Team members are Kainon Suiter, Connor Hebert, Isaac Russell, Mark Frederick, Kade Savoy, Quincy Alexander, Huntson Hebert, Parker Faust, William Gaitreaux, Austin Judice, Josh Hebert, Lon Paul Moody, along with coaches Layne Suiter, Lon Moody and Randy Judice.
With a win at the Florida tournament, the Frog Sox will return to Acadiana where they will compete in the World Series in Youngsville.
Pony All-Stars
The Rayne Pony All-Stars completed their 2017 summer season as they participated in their Super Regional Tournament held last week in Youngsville.
Among the eight teams in attendance, the Rayne All-Stars placed a solid third.
The All-Stars qualifed for the Super Regionals by placing third in the sectional tournament held in Erath.
Team members are Will Arceneaux, Gavin Hayes, Chetwin Coleman, Landon Richard, Griffin Champagne, Grant Killer, Garrison Gautreaux, Makhai Thompson, Colin LaCombe, Baylon Leon, Kasen Richard, Anthony Granger, along with coaches Grant Menard and Chance Roy.

Acadiana Sportsmen plan Hunter Awareness Day

Youth invited to free 33rd annual event

The Acadiana Sportsmen’s League will host the 33rd Annual Hunter Awareness Day on Saturday, Sept. 23rd. The free event will be held at the police firing range located at the end of West Hutchinson Ave. in Crowley between the 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Children, 15 years and younger, can compete in a BB gun shooting contest in three age categories at 10:30 a.m. with prizes to be awarded by the La. Wild Turkey Federation, Acadiana Strutters Chapter. They will also help youngsters learn more about the wild turkey.
The Bayou State Bow Hunters Association will teach archery with 3-D targets.
A free skeet show will be held for all adults to shoot along with their children. All skeet, shells and guns will be provided at no charge. Persons can bring their own shotguns. ( All shotguns must remain in your vehicle until the contest begins.)
Learn safe hunting skills, safe shooting skills and respect for wildlife and the environment.
Ducks Unlimited will be in attendance with door prizes and Green Wing memberships.
The day will also feature free food and drinks with hundreds of dollars in prizes and shirts to be given away.
For more information, contact Ken Bordelon at 230-1712 or Dee DeRouen at 224-6711.

Colorado wedding unites couple

Katie Crader and John King were married July 1, 2017, in Keystone, Colorado.
The bride is the daughter of Gerald and Laura Crader of Houston, Texas.
The bridegroom is the son of Jane King and the late Charlie King of Essex, Iowa.
Maternal grandmother, Ms. Martha Hodge, and maternal grandfather, Mr. Robert King, were in attendance.
The bride, escorted by her father, wore an ivory gown of soft chantilly-style lace, gathered and wrapped over a sweetheart neckline. The dress was adorned by a beaded belt at the natural waist. She wore a garland headpiece made of fresh flowers similar to her bridal bouquet of white blooms.
Guests took the River Run Gondola to the Key Top Overlook where the ceremony was performed against the backdrop of the Rocky Mountains.
The wedding reception followed further up the summit at Alpenglow Stube.
Following a cocktail hour, guests enjoyed a sit down dinner and dancing.
The bride is a graduate of the University of Texas and the groom is a graduate of Iowa State University. Both are employed as chemical engineers with Chevron Phillips Chemical.
The newlyweds reside in Humble, Texas.
The couple will travel to Italy for their honeymoon in the fall.

Teen killed in crash in St. Landry Parish

ST. LANDRY PARISH - A Carencro teen was killed in a car crash Thursday night (July 21) in St. Landry Parish.
Louisiana State Police investigators said Jaydlon Mouton, 17, sustained fatal injuries in the two-vehicle crash and was pronounced dead on the scene by the St. Landry Parish Coroner’s Office.
Investigators determined a 17-year-old from Opelousas was operating a Ford truck on Jessie Richard Road and failed to stop at a stop sign at the intersection with La. Hwy. 356, according to Master Trooper Brooks Davis, spokesman for Louisiana State Police Troop I.
At the same time, a Chevrolet driven by another 17-year-old was traveling eastbound on La. 356. As the truck entered the intersection, it was struck on its passenger side by the Chevrolet, said David.
After impact, the Ford overturned and came to rest off of the roadway. The Chevrolet traveled off the roadway and came to rest in a ditch.
Mouton, a passenger in the Ford, was not wearing a seat belt, according to David.
The driver of the truck and two other juvenile passengers in the Ford were wearing seat belts and suffered minor to moderate injuries. They were transported to a local hospital for treatment. The driver of the Chevrolet was wearing a seat belt and did not sustain any injuries, added David.
Impairment is not suspected; however, a routine toxicology sample was taken from the driver of the truck and the results are pending. The driver of the Chevrolet voluntarily submitted to a chemical breath test and was not impaired, stated David.

Rayne woman charged after allegedly trying to run over man

A Rayne woman faces an attempted manslaughter charge after she allegedly tried to run over a Rayne man with her vehicle.
Rayne Chief of Police Carroll J. Stelly said officers were called to a residents on Chappuis Avenue Friday, July 21, in reference to a man being struck by a vehicle.
An ambulance was dispatched to the residence.
The investigation revealed that the subjects had been involved in a verbal altercation when the female, identified as Brittany Harmon, 29, entered her vehicle that had been parked in the driveway, put it in drive and accelerated, striking the victim.
Harmon, of 306 Reynolds Avenue, was charged with aggravated criminal damage to property and attempted manslaughter and was booked into the Rayne City Jail. She was later transferred to the parish jail in Crowley.

Auditor: No discrepancies between Rice Arena, police jury financial reports

CROWLEY - A review of revenues and expenses at the Acadia Rice Arena as they compare to records at the Acadia Parish Police Jury show no major discrepancies.
That, generally, is the message delivered to the ARA board of directors by Burton Kolder, CPA, of the firm of Kolder, Champagne, Slaven and Co., LLC.
But board members feel that they are being held hostage by the police jury, claiming that the police jury staff routinely “won’t give us (budget) details or show us how much money is in the Rice Arena account,” said Chairman Greg Richard.
Donna Bertrand, designated parish secretary-treasurer, however, disputes that claim.
“They have every piece of information they have ever asked for,” Bertrand said in a phone interview Friday morning following the ARA board meeting. “The problem is that the board is getting incorrect information from employees at the Rice Arena.”
Bertrand said the parish administrative staff does its best to cooperate fully with the board and did the same when asked by Kolder for records pertaining to the arena.
Kolder verified that during Thursday night’s meeting, saying that every record he sought from the police jury was made readily available.
Concerning requests from the ARA board, Bertrand said, “Sometimes their requests aren’t clear and I have to call Greg (Richard) and ask questions.
“That could make it seem to them like, ‘They don’t want to give us the information because she’s always questioning.’
“I would like to know what information is being held back,” Bertrand added.
The ARA board had hired Kolder’s firm to perform an audit of the past two years’ books after a change-up in board membership and leadership at the beginning of the year.
However, Kolder explained to the board — and to a standing-room-only crowd in the small office in which the board meets — Thursday night (July 20) that the state Legislative Auditor would not allow a full audit because the, as an arm of the police jury, the ARA records had just recently been audited as part of the parish.
“So, what we did was perform a management advisory service solely to assist in evaluating the safeguarding of assets — completeness and accuracy of financial recordkeeping and reporting — for the years ended December 31, 2016 and 2015,” Kolder explained.
Kolder and his partner and son, Brad Kolder, examined four areas of the budgetary system — revenue, disbursement, adherence to the tax renewal proposition (dated April 4, 2009) supporting the arena, and salaries and wages.
• Revenue: The auditors randomly selected 23 transactions during 2016 and 46 transactions during 2015.
“All receipts agreed with the amount deposited by the police jury and all payments were properly coded to the correct fund and general ledger account,” the elder Kolder said.
He added that, in some instances, there appeared to be “some timing differences” but attributed that to money being turned in to the police jury close to the end of one month and deposited at the beginning of the following month.
Overall for the year 2016, the CPAs found a difference of $1,433 between the Cash Receipts Log and the general ledger, but it reflected that the police jury actually deposited more money into the ARA account than it received from ARA receipts.
For 2015, there was a difference of $277 less deposited into the ARA account than was turned in to the jury.
“I believe that those numbers represent timing issues,” Burton Kolder said.
• Disbursements: Twenty-nine disbursements made during 2016 and 23 made during 2015 and “all payments made were for the proper amount and payable to the correct payee,” Brad Kolder said.
• Adherence to tax proposal: Using records obtained from the tax collection schedule from the Acadia Parish Sheriff for the 2016 tax year, the auditors determined that the ARA received taxes in accordance with the proposition.
“The Acadia Rice Arena received 51 percent of the taxes distributed to the Cooperative and Multi-Purpose Buildings for the 2016 tax year,” Burton Kolder said. “The tax renewal proposition states that at least 40 percent of the taxes received should be distributed to the Rice Arena.”
• Salaries and Wages: It was determined that salaries are being properly paid and recorded.
However, the Kolders recommended that payroll and timesheet procedures of the ARA should be reviewed.
“To ensure proper segregation of duties, employees of the Rice Arena should not approve their own timesheets,” Burton Kolder said. “Timesheets for all employees and periods should be approved by an employee or director who operates in a management procedure.
“Also, all overtime should be monitored so that no one employee is working excessive amounts of overtime,” he continued. All of the employees’ roles and responsibilities should be clearly established and modified, if needed.”
The overtime issue is one that has been addressed by the police jury more than once. In fact, at its July meeting, jurors were informed that the $25,000 budgeted for overtime at the ARA for 2017 had already been expended, just six months into the fiscal year.
An additional $20,000 was added to that line item to cover the remainder of the year.
“Communication appears to be the major problem,” Burton Kolder told the board. “Proper communication should be practiced between the police jury and the Rice Arena board.
“To ensure complete understanding and trust between the entities, communication from members of the both entities should be developed.”
Kolder also said, “Unrestricted access to all financial information and procedures/practices relevant to the Acadia Rice Arena should be given to them by the Acadia Parish Police Jury.
“Monthly or quarterly financial data should be thoroughly reviewed with the Rice Arena management.”
After accepting the report, the ARA board voted unanimously to have Kolder’s firm continue to monitor the arena’s finances and submit quarterly reports.
Burton Kolder estimated that such service would cost the board “between $1,200 and $1,600” quarterly.
The police jury had authorized $11,500 for the audit, but Kolder explained that, since a full audit was not performed, the final bill would come to “about $7,500 or $8,000.”
Board members plan to use the remainder of the $11,500 to cover the cost of the quarterly reports until a budget amendment can be approved.

Mary Anderson

Funeral services were held on Sunday July 23, , at 1 p.m. in the Gossen Funeral Home Chapel for Mary Anderson, 85, who died Friday July 21, 2017, at Rayne Guest Home in Rayne.
Interment was in the St. Joseph Mausoleum and Cemetery No. 2 in Rayne.
Pastor Gene Lee conducted the Funeral Services.
Survivors include one daughter, Shirley Doré and spouse Ernest; two sons, Dave Cormier and spouse Linda, and Ricky Cormier and companion Marcella Lejeune. She is also survived by seven grandchildren and 14 great-grand children; and two sisters Allien Prejean and spouse Joseph, and Evelyn Aucoin.
She was preceded in death by her parents, Dave Meche and Effie Marie Cormier Meche; her husbands, Sanders Campbell, Louis Allen Cormier and John Anderson; and her brothers, Elton and Roy Meche.
Mrs. Anderson enjoyed sewing and word-search puzzels.
Pallbearers were Lynn Leger, Chad Cormier, Evan Cormier, Chase Guidry, Rick Cormier II and Beau Daigle .
The family requested visitation be observed in Gossen Funeral Home in Rayne on Sunday July 23, from 8 a.m. until the funeral services.
Friends may view the obituary and guestbook online at www.gossenfuneralhome.net.
Arrangements were entrusted to Gossen Funeral Home, Inc. of Rayne, (337) 334-3141.

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Acadia Parish Today

Crowley Post-Signal
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