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State employees' civil service protections in doubt as constitutional amendment advances

State employees' civil service protections in doubt as constitutional amendment advances

Yahoo10-06-2025
Louisiana lawmakers may life restrictions on gifts for elected officials and government employees. (Photo by Greg LaRose/Louisiana Illuminator)
A proposed constitutional amendment to dismantle a 73-year-old civil service system created to stop politically-influenced job placements in Louisiana government was narrowly approved Monday in the state House of Representatives.
Senate Bill 8, sponsored by Sen. Jay Morris. R-West Monroe, cleared the chamber in a 70-28 vote, reaching the very minimum two-thirds support required to put constitutional amendments on the statewide ballot. The measure will return to the Senate for a final vote on some House amendments and. If approved, it will go before voters in the Nov. 3, 2026, election.
Confusion over the bill that many hoped would be cleared up only deepened Monday, specifically on whether the proposal would apply only to future state employee hires or if it could be used to remove existing state employees.
Morris' bill would change the Louisiana Constitution to give state lawmakers power that currently rests with the Civil Service Commission, a seven-member independent review panel that oversees the hiring, promotion and firing of 28,000 'classified' state workers. The commission, working with state agencies on staffing goals, has the power to create and eliminate job positions and decide which jobs should have a protected classified status and which should not.
Classified employees enjoy some degree of protection against politically-motivated or otherwise unfair terminations and disciplinary practices because they have the right to appeal such decisions to the Civil Service Commission, which has the final say on staffing matters for most state agencies.
In a previous interview and during committee hearings on the bill, Morris said his bill would allow the legislature to designate classified state employees as unclassified, meaning they could be fired at will. But several changes to the legislation's text and its proposed ballot language have raised questions about whether current state employees will be at risk of losing their jobs.
Presenting the bill on the House floor Monday, Rep. Beau Beaullieu, R-New Iberia, repeatedly assured his colleagues the proposal would apply only to future hires. He based his assurances on the argument that the amendment allows only for job positions to become unclassified, not employees. If the Legislature were to unclassify a job position, any state employees currently holding those positions would not be affected, he said.
Beaullieu's argument didn't land with several lawmakers opposed to the measure. Rep. Matt Willard, D-New Orleans, reading from the text of the proposal, asked why the ballot language specifically indicates the amendment applies to 'officers, positions and employees' – a phrase that appears twice in the bill.
Caught off-guard by Willard's question, Beaullieu couldn't explain the discrepancy, referring questions to Morris, the bill's author.
In a later interview, Morris would not offer any assurances as to whether existing classified employees would get to keep their protections.
'Obviously, only employees can be unclassified,' Morris said. 'Positions are employees. You can't unclassify them if somebody's not working.'
Morris also refused to say if his intention is for the amendment to apply only to future hires.
'It's not gonna apply to anybody unless we pass a law,' he said.
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The Republican donor ready to fight Newsom on redistricting
The Republican donor ready to fight Newsom on redistricting

Politico

time2 hours ago

  • Politico

The Republican donor ready to fight Newsom on redistricting

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Planned Parenthood Medicaid funding restored, as Dems seek BBB rollback
Planned Parenthood Medicaid funding restored, as Dems seek BBB rollback

The Hill

time2 hours ago

  • The Hill

Planned Parenthood Medicaid funding restored, as Dems seek BBB rollback

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Renaming the Kennedy Center for Donald and Melania Trump would violate the law that created it
Renaming the Kennedy Center for Donald and Melania Trump would violate the law that created it

NBC News

time2 hours ago

  • NBC News

Renaming the Kennedy Center for Donald and Melania Trump would violate the law that created it

WASHINGTON — House Republican proposals to name the Kennedy Center after President Donald Trump and its opera house after first lady Melania Trump would violate the law by which the Kennedy Center was created, four sources familiar with the issue told NBC News. Republicans last week passed an amendment through committee that would rename the opera house after Melania Trump, saying it was a way to recognize the first lady's support and commitment to the arts. The measure, sponsored by GOP Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho, is now part of key legislation funding the Interior Department, but would still need to pass through the full House and the Senate to become law. The next day, Rep. Bob Onder, R-Mo., introduced the 'Make Entertainment Great Again Act' to rename the whole center 'Donald J. Trump Center for Performing Arts.' The House has not yet taken any action on it. But three former board members for the Kennedy Center told NBC News that the law creating the center prohibited any of the facilities from being named, other than the Eisenhower Theater, after the president whose administration first authorized its construction in 1958. The project stalled and was revived under President John F. Kennedy, whose family led an effort to get the center built and named in his honor following his assassination. Two months later, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the legislation making it a living memorial to Kennedy. According to U.S. code, 'After December 2, 1983, no additional memorials or plaques in the nature of memorials shall be designated or installed in the public areas of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.' Republicans would have to pass legislation to change that. 'Legally, they can't just slap her name on it without congressional action,' said a spokesperson for Rep. Chellie Pingree of Maine, the lead Democrat on the Interior Appropriations subcommittee. 'If Republicans can't pass their budget — which they usually can't — the Melania Trump renaming provision dies,' the spokesperson continued. 'The only real wildcard is whether Trump or his allies ignore the law entirely and try to do it unilaterally. But that would have no legal basis — and would almost certainly trigger a court fight.' A spokesperson for Simpson said the White House and the first lady's office were not aware of his amendment before he offered it, nor was Trump-appointed Kennedy Center president Ric Grenell. The first lady's office did call Simpson's office to say thank you afterward, the spokesperson said. The White House declined to comment. Simpson sponsored the amendment because "he understands that the First Lady has always been a very avid supporter of the arts as well. She's had a long-standing commitment to the arts. ... It really did come from his heart.' As for the amendment potentially dying in the appropriations process, the Simpson spokesperson said they believe it could 'definitely' make it through in a short-term funding bill, known as a "continuing resolution," later in the year. The first lady is the honorary chair of the center, following tradition. But in a striking departure from their practice during the first Trump term, when they did not attend events there, reacting to widespread criticism of his policies by prominent artists, this year President Trump has shown a great interest in the arts. He has named himself the Kennedy Center chairman and fired the previous bipartisan Board of Trustees, along with its veteran president, Deborah Rutter, and its chairman, David M. Rubenstein. Rubenstein had donated $111 million dollars and was the center's biggest individual donor, the center said. Trump replaced Rutter with Grenell, his White House special envoy and former Ambassador to Germany. In a post on social media, Trump wrote that Grenell 'shares my Vision for a GOLDEN AGE of American Arts and Culture' and would ensure there was no more 'ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA.' In particular, Trump objected to one drag show, which he found offensive, among the 2,200 events the Kennedy Center typically produces in a year. He also told reporters on Air Force One in February, 'We don't need woke at the Kennedy Center.' In addition to firing 18 of the 36 board members that had been appointed by President Joe Biden for six-year terms, the Trump administration has ordered different programming. Notably, there are also now four large portraits of the first and second couples in the center's Hall of Nations, the main entryway to the facility. Until this year, the public spaces included only a bronze bust of President John F. Kennedy. Trump's recently enacted domestic spending bill also included more than $250 million to renovate the facility, more than six times the previous $43 million federal subsidy that was earmarked for operations and maintenance, not programming. The center also removed all references to diversity, equity and inclusion from its website. The Opera House, with more than 2,300 seats, is the center's second largest theater and the venue for the institution's signature annual concert for cultural honorees, the Kennedy Center Honors — a formal event and major fundraiser launched in 1978 and attended by all the former first couples, except the Trumps, and taped each December for rebroadcast by CBS. The gala star-studded weekend in the nation's capital every holiday season has, in the past, always included a Sunday afternoon awards ceremony hosted by the president and first lady at the White House and a celebratory Saturday night dinner at the State Department hosted by the secretary of state. During his first term, the Trumps did not host the Sunday ceremony nor attend the concert after some of the honorees said they would not attend the White House event in opposition to some of the Trump policies and his controversial comments about the white nationalist march in Charlottesville, Virginia, that year. Past honorees have included a broad spectrum of actors, musicians and other performers. President Trump and Melania Trump attended a performance of 'Les Miserables' in the opera house in June and some members of the audience booed their arrival. Vice President JD Vance and his wife Usha were also booed when attending a concert by the National Symphony. President Kennedy's grandson, Jack Schlossberg, posted strong criticism of the opera house renaming proposal last week. Caroline Kennedy's son wrote, 'JFK believed the arts made our country great and could be our most effective weapon in the fight for civil rights and against authoritarian governments around the world,' adding, 'The Trump administration stands for freedom of oppression, not expression.'

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