#LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_

2025-09-17

LCG set to finalize $1 million design contract for Northeast library

Lafayette Consolidated Government is preparing to take the first step in constructing the new Northeast Library at the former site of the Holy Rosary Institute.

The finalization of a $1 million contract with Dallas-based architectural firm 720design for the design and oversight of construction is up for a vote by the Professional Services Review Committee Thursday morning. The library is set to stand on five acres of Holy Rosary Institute land.

Once approved by the committee, the contract will then go to Mayor-President Monique Boulet for final approval, a process usually considered a formality. 

Published:August 196:43 pm Parish approves entering lease for NE library at Holy Rosary

After years of planning and political gridlock, the Lafayette Parish Council approved entering into a lease agreement to build the library.

The contract would mark the first significant expenditure from the $15 million allocated for the library by both LCG and the Lafayette Public Library System. 

Boulet’s staff has estimated roughly a year from the beginning of the design process to groundbreaking on the long-awaited library. Construction is expected to begin in spring 2026, with an opening date by late 2027.

On Tuesday, the first part of the larger revitalization of the historic site will kick off, with a ribbon cutting for the Head Start program to be housed on the historic campus.

2025-09-12

Lafayette sheriff in talks to open local immigration detention facility

Sheriff Mark Garber says the federal government would have to foot the bill to renovate and staff the annex.

thecurrentla.com/2025/lafayett

2025-09-04

Lafayette’s battling blight, but winning the war takes real commitment

A lot of good work going on right now to fight blight. But for that work to translate into social and economic improvements, deep collaboration is needed.

thecurrentla.com/2025/lafayett

2025-09-02

Lemoine Building purchase by LFT, Northside rezoning

LCG is set to approve the $6.2 million purchase of the Lemoine Building as LFT's new headquarters. A Northside neighborhood may get more flexible zoning.

thecurrentla.com/2025/lemoine-

2025-08-29

Lafayette Sheriff Mark Garber asks cash-strapped parish to up jail funding

Sheriff Mark Garber and his jail’s warden, Maj. Kenny Benoit, appealed to the Parish Council Thursday for more funding, after budget proposals by M-P Monique Boulet’s administration and the City Council looked to cut jail funding by roughly $1.4 million. 

In July, the city-parish attorney justified the removal of $375,000 in jail funding from the parish budget, citing state law regarding inmate costs, and the city subsequently cut $1 million from the sheriff’s capital expenses during the budget process. 

Garber and Benoit acknowledged that while LCG is following the letter of the law, the lack of an increase in required funding since the 1990s has put the sheriff in a tough position when it comes to maintaining the jail and taking care of inmates. 

Published:May 143:41 pm Sheriff revives lawsuit against LCG over jail funding

A lawsuit brought by Sheriff Mark Garber against former M-P Joel Robideaux, accusing LCG of withholding funding for the jail — which lay dormant for years — is making a comeback against the new administration of M-P Monique Boulet.

“[The jail] was insufficient at the time it was constructed, and now it’s over 40 years old,” Garber told the Parish Council. “That presents maintenance challenges, and that presents operation challenges.” 

Parish Councilman Bryan Tabor proposed three separate general amendments to address these needs. The first was to replace the $1 million cut by the City Council with the same amount from the parish’s courthouse complex balance, an account used to fund the jail in the past. 

The remaining two amendments add $1.03 million from the same fund to two correction’s department budget line items: jail overflow and a new line item for the cost of maintenance deputies. As the sheriff notes, making repairs with internal staff saves money over time. 

No Parish Council members objected to the amendments, and the budget amendments will now go to a final vote on Thursday, Sept. 11.

2025-08-20

COLUMN: How Boulet’s City Hall renovation proposal fell short

The almost 70-year-old building has a long and growing list of deficiencies. But seemingly no one knew just how grand an effort Boulet was envisioning.

thecurrentla.com/2025/column-h

2025-08-07

COLUMN: “Evil” — and proud of it

Last week I shared the privilege with Leslie Turk of being called “evil” by former Mayor-President Josh Guillory on his radio show. That’s not a bad thing.

thecurrentla.com/2025/column-e

2025-07-30

LCG plans to take out $6.5 million in bonds to buy the Lemoine Building

Lafayette Consolidated Government has plans to purchase the Lemoine Building Downtown to permanently house the headquarters of LFT Fiber, Lafayette’s municipal fiber internet provider. 

Earlier this month, Lafayette’s city council voted to approve a resolution that allocated $6.5 million in new revenue bonds to purchase the building. 

A proposal for the city to buy the building as the new location for the Lafayette City Court looked to be near finalized in 2023, but was canceled by M-P Monique Boulet’s administration when she took office in 2024. The building at that time was listed by Lemoine CEO Leonard “Lenny” Lemoine at $6.2 million, with renovations including the addition of a courtroom expected to cost an additional $9.6 million. 

The city council at the time only approved $9.5 million, falling short of the total anticipated project cost of $15.8 million. 

Renovations of this magnitude would not be needed to house LFT Fiber, which has already been renting two floors for its headquarters since February 2025. 

The Lafayette Assessor put the building, located at 214 Jefferson Street, at a market value of less than $3.7 million in 2024.

In response to The Current, LCG clarified that the $6.5 million is not the final sale price, which is still under negotiation. The final ordinance to approve the sale will be up for a city council vote on August 19.

True market values can be as high as double those listed by the assessor, especially high-priced buildings that do not have many comparable sales.  

The move will take the building, one of the highest valued in Downtown, off the property tax rolls, resulting in a loss of $65,000 a year between city and parish millages.

This is a developing story.

2025-06-06

Lafayette’s music scene needs a new hustle

Local venues are losing audiences, musicians are losing gigs — and everyone is losing money, a census of the local music scene showed.

thecurrentla.com/2025/lafayett

Two men sing with conviction, one holding a brass instrument in one hand with the other hand placed on his chest, a tuba player and crowd in the backgroundOverhead view of a band playing on a festival stage in front of a large crowd at night.
2023-10-17

Council Preview: Vote on property tax veto and $1M for golf carts

Lafayette’s Parish Council will vote Tuesday on overriding Mayor-President Josh Guillory’s veto of a small property tax bump.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/council-preview-vote-on-property-tax-veto-and-1m-for-golf-carts/

#budget #Budgets #golfCarts #juvenileDetention #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #parishJail #propertyTaxes #Taxes #vetoes

Looking under LCG's hood
2023-10-16

Could (Jan) Swifties decide Lafayette’s next mayor-president?

With more than a quarter of Saturday’s voters now looking for a new candidate to support in the Nov. 18 mayor-president runoff, the race is sure to intensify in the coming weeks.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/could-jan-swifties-decide-lafayettes-next-mayor-president/

#Election2023 #Elections #JanSwift #JoshGuillory #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #MoniqueBoulet #Voting

2023-10-14

Guillory, Boulet head to runoff. See who won Lafayette.

View a full map of how the race for mayor-president breaks down.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/live-election-results/

#Election2023 #Elections #Lafayette #LafayetteCityCouncil #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LafayetteMayorPresident #LafayetteParishCouncil #LiveElectionResults #LocalGovernment

Election Guide 2023 - Powered by Hub Citizen
2023-10-11

Can Lafayette capitalize on Downtown’s success?

Lafayette is losing young people, but Downtown is poised to be a crucial asset in the fight to keep them here.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/can-lafayette-capitalize-on-downtowns-success/

#DowntownDevelopment #DowntownLafayette #Economy #Housing #Jobs #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #OldFederalCourthouse #OneAcadiana #QualityOfLife #UL #youngTalent

2023-10-09

Reckoning with investigations as a candidate, M-P Josh Guillory denies they exist

Testifying in a lawsuit he filed, the M-P denied the existence of probes confirmed by investigators and in court proceedings.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/reckoning-with-investigations-as-a-candidate-m-p-josh-guillory-denies-they-exist/

#Courts #Election2023 #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment

2023-10-02

Council Preview: Tax revenue up, short-term rental ban back on agenda

Tax revenues are up for the City and Parish councils this year, and a vote is set for the city’s first short-term rental rules.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/council-preview-tax-revenue-up-short-term-rental-ban-back-on-agenda/

#Adjudication #budget #Budgets #HabitatForHumanity #JoshGuillory #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #localPolitics #ShortTermRentals #taxRevenue #Taxes

Illustration: Two figures peeking under a giant rug-sized Lafayette Consolidated Government logo
2023-09-27

LCG’s drainage projects leave a trail of environmental problems

Landowners who were paid to accept dirt from an LCG drainage project now have environmental problems and, potentially, big cleanup bills.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/lcgs-drainage-projects-leave-a-trail-of-environmental-problems/

#airQuality #BayouVermilionFloodControl #Drainage #Election2023 #Environment #Flooding #JoshGuillory #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_

Landowner looks at runoff from dirt pilesPolitical signs at corner of Hugh Wallis and Kaliste Saloom
2023-09-27

What did we get from millions spent on drainage? We don’t know

Lafayette has spent big money on drainage projects for years, but it’s not clear how much that work was worth.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/what-did-we-get-from-millions-spent-on-drainage-we-dont-know/

#BayouVermilionFloodControl #Drainage #Election2023 #Flooding #JoshGuillory #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #Water

Aerial of Homewood detention pond
2023-09-21

Fundraising, polls show runoff likely in mayor-president race

Lafayette looks to have a real race on its hands in this fall’s mayor-president election as challengers to incumbent Mayor-President Josh Guillory are showing early signs of success.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/fundraising-polls-show-runoff-likely-in-mayor-president-race/

#Election2023 #Elections #JanSwift #JoshGuillory #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #mayorPresident #MoniqueBoulet

2023-09-19

Lafayette’s flood risk is worse than it seems, and we’ve built right into it

For decades, Lafayette has grown into flood prone areas, but that has come with a hidden risk.

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/lafayettes-flood-risk-is-worse-than-it-seems-and-weve-built-right-into-it/

#Development #Drainage #Election2023 #floodRisk #Flooding #growth #Housing #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_

2023-09-18

Here is a selection of items on the agendas for this week’s meetings of the City and Parish councils. To see the full agendas, check out the links below:

Lafayette 101
Adjudications

Properties become adjudicated when their annual property tax bills aren’t paid, leaving LCG in charge of handling them until the owner pays off the tax bill or someone else goes through the lengthy process of obtaining title to the property to become its new owner. The slow process causes adjudicated properties to often sit neglected for years.

Parish CouncilFinal Adoption

Parish millages. Property taxes will likely drop this year as the two-year library millage boost approved by the Parish Council in 2021 is replaced by a new library millage rate passed by voters that same year. The council bumped the library’s 1.84-mill tax to 1.97 mills for the two-year period between the vote on the renewal and when it would take effect, which is this year. The change is worth more than $300,000 in lost annual revenue for the library and will save 97 cents a year in taxes on a $150,000 house with a homestead exemption. This year’s proposed parish millages are otherwise unchanged from last year. 

Introduction

No significant items.

City CouncilReports

City Court. After agreeing to Mayor-President Josh Guillory’s $9.5 million bid to move City Court two weeks ago, the council is looking for an update on plans to renovate the Lemoine Building at 214 Jefferson St. Downtown to house City Court functions. Judges Doug Saloom and Jules Edwards previously told the council they were on board with the move, provided they could work with an architect to make sure the Lemoine Building was a viable option. The council was particularly concerned with quickly getting feedback from the judges once they had time to more fully develop renovation plans. 

Final Adoption

City millages. No change is planned for property tax rates in the city of Lafayette this year. LCG’s expectations suggest the city will collect $30.8 million in property taxes, up from $30.5 million last year.

Streetscapes. Guillory’s administration is proposing a shakeup of the city’s federal ARPA funds to shift $2.6 million in federal funds from the Jefferson Street Renewal project into the 12th Street Corridor Streetscape project and take $2.6 million local tax dollars from that project for the Congress Street Streetscaping plan. The change comes as LCG is nearing the federal deadline to allocate and spend its ARPA funds, and the admin says the 12th Street Corridor project is the better option to meet that timeline. Replacement funds for the Jefferson Street Renewal were not included in the proposal.

Introduction

No significant items.

Joint ItemsFinal Adoption

Alcohol sales. The city and parish councils will vote Tuesday on a plan that would allow beer sales for on-premises consumption to start at 7 a.m. on Sundays. Current rules prohibit alcohol sales before 11 a.m. on Sundays, but the proposed change would allow beverages of 6% ABV or less to be sold for on-premises consumption as early as 7 a.m., leaving out most wines. The proposal also would not change the 11 a.m. start time on Sundays for alcohol sales made for off-premises consumption.

Introduction

Habitat homes. Both councils will give preliminary consideration Tuesday to a plan to donate 14 adjudicated properties to Lafayette’s Habitat for Humanity as part of an ongoing effort to clear the parish’s backlog of more than 1,200 adjudications. Habitat has a track record of success with bringing the adjudicated properties back into commerce by building new homes on the often vacant, neglected lots that have concentrated blight largely on Lafayette’s Northside. Lafayette is also exploring an effort to revive adjudicated properties by putting neighborhood groups in charge with a pilot program in partnership with the McComb-Veazey Coterie.

PropertyAddressApprovalAction100 Block Ambassador Caffery ParkwayCity CouncilDe-annexation from City of Lafayette [Final]100 Poydras Street RezoningCity CouncilRezoning from Residential Mixed (RM-1) to Commercial Mixed (CM-1) [Final]116 Sage Glenn LaneCity CouncilAnnexation and assignment of Residential Single-Family (RS-1) zoning [Final]400 Block Ridge Road (Parcel A)City CouncilAnnexation and assignment of Mixed-Use Neighborhood (MN-2) zoning [Final]4517 W Congress StreetCity CouncilRezoning from Residential Mixed (RM-1) to Commercial Mixed (CM-1) with a conditional use permit for a convenience store with gas sales [Final]3100 Block Louisiana Ave.City CouncilConditional use permit for vehicle service operation in Commercial Heavy (CH) zoning [Final]300 Pershing Ave. & 228 Marne StreetCity CouncilRezoning from Residential Single-Family (RS-1) to Mixed-Use Neighborhood (MN-1) [Final]3014 Kaliste Saloom RoadCity CouncilConditional use permit for convenience store with gas sales in Commercial Mixed (CM-1) [Final]Multiple adjudicated propertiesJoint councilsDonation of 14 adjudicated properties to non-profit Lafayette Habitat for Humanity [Intro]Planned council actions related to property, such as rezonings, annexations and disposition of adjudicated properties

#Adjudication #alcoholSales #Budgets #HabitatForHumanity #JoshGuillory #Lafayette #LafayetteConsolidatedGovernmentLCG_ #LocalGovernment #millages #propertyTaxes

https://thecurrentla.com/2023/council-preview-moving-city-court-and-more-adjudicated-lots-for-habitat/

Looking under LCG's hood

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