On March 11, 2026, the Committee on Local Municipal Affairs moved several items out of committee by favorable report, including bills affecting planning commissions, local adjudication processes, subdivision procedures and municipal transparency.
Senator Sine presented Senate Bill 148, which would allow municipalities to adopt ordinances providing modest per diem payments to planning and zoning commissioners; the bill does not mandate compensation but gives local governments flexibility. A letter of support from Councilman Stuart Weatherford of Lake Charles was made part of the record.
Senator Kathy Stewart introduced Senate Bill 334, described as cleanup legislation to extend adjudication language so local governments may enact local adjudicatory "trash court" processes; Senator Bass moved the bill favorably.
Chair introduced Senate Bill 172 to remove a 150,000 population threshold so planning and zoning commissions in all municipalities may waive certain requirements and public hearings for small subdivisions; supporters from the Louisiana Realtors, the Police Jury Association and the Rapids Area Planning Commission were placed on the record.
Senator Alain presented Senate Bill 41 to extend the statutory period to publish municipal minutes from 20 days to 45 days to accommodate smaller municipalities. David McHugh of the Louisiana Press Association urged the sponsor and committee to work with stakeholders to avoid publishing draft minutes late and then needing to edit them later; McHugh noted the state is moving to a digital-first public-notice model that could affect the process. Senator Alain committed to work with stakeholders to refine the language before floor action.
All items were reported favorably by the committee with no recorded opposition at the committee meeting.