The move comes two weeks after Gov. Jeff Landry opened a state-run homeless shelter that some local leaders criticized.
Gov. Jeff Landry announced two enhanced security zones will be in effect around Bourbon Street and the Caesars Superdome throughout Super Bowl weekend.
The governor’s order does not apply to the Superdome, where the NFL and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security are handling security precautions for the Super Bowl. Landry said state and city law enforcement officers will be working within their perimeters, however.
A congressional delegation will visit New Orleans on Friday to review security for the Super Bowl — an unusual step that underscores heightened tension around the Feb. 9 event, Axios has learned. Why it matters: The city is taking extraordinary security measures for the Super Bowl in the wake of the deadly New Year's Day terrorist attack on Bourbon Street.
The Ernest N. Morial New Orleans Exhibition Hall Authority (the Authority) approved a headquarters hotel development agreement
Jeff Landry and other state officials said Monday ... to the Pearl" rivers and "extend from the coast to Alexandria" with Baton Rouge, Lafayette, New Orleans and Lake Charles in harm's way as snow begins to fall early Tuesday morning and continues for ...
The residents of New Orleans are ready for a superintendent who will lead the school district in the right direction.
Gov. Jeff Landry extended state office closures through Thursday as southern Louisiana from Lafayette to Baton Rouge to New Orleans was covered with a blanket of historic snowfall Tuesday that ...
Special to the American Press Gov. Jeff Landry has issued an executive order amending the State of Emergency issued on Jan 1. This executive order ensures that all necessary precautions will be taken to prioritize the safety of all residents,
The federal oversight agreement that hangs over the New Orleans Police Department is viewed acrimoniously by police officers, the city council and the state’s leaders. “We cannot continue to go down the same broken path,
Executives from some of the nation's largest tech companies will be given the VIP treatment from Gov. Jeff Landry during the Super Bowl weekend, as he tries to attract business investment to New Orleans and Louisiana.