A millage rate created under the very corrupt former New Orleans sheriff Marlin Gusman in 2015 was set to expire yesterday. Most people literally knew nothing about it, and the message being spread online was definitely that it was just going to waste more money and lead to more corruption.
Sheriff Hutson was a former police monitor and while she hasn't been as successful as most people would have hoped in implementing change, she has certainly been an improvement. Current sheriff Hutson vs. Former Sheriff Gusman
Hutson also went to federal court last Wednesday because the LA AG with the help of our corrupt Governor sued to try and force New Orleans to drop their sanctuary city policy. Very odd (convenient?) timing, last Monday night, the president released EOs that seemed to directly relate to Hutson's case before a federal judge
Between pressure from the Governor and the Presidential EOs, I was sure that the judge would cave out of fear and force Hutson to just adopt Louisiana state (which lets be real, this is just federal policy being given a different name) policy. Surprisingly, the judge said the argument for AG intervention was insufficient and ruled for mediation between Hutson and the state's lawyer that the state AG would not attend. I haven't found any reporting about how that went, but I truly do appreciate the fact that Hutson didn't back down and just cave to authoritarian overreach.
Anyway, that's over, breathe a slight sigh of relief, flashforward to Friday and people are talking about a vote in New Orleans that I knew nothing about.
Basically, Hutson was asking people to vote yes to continue the current millage rate that is expiring. It was originally set in 2015. She says she needs the money to avoid layoffs and pay for things like mental health care, medical care, and reentry into society programs for incarcerated individuals.
Without the millage she would need to rely on the city for the budget. The few people who knew about the vote, were all saying to vote No. Even the local left/progressive magazine that keeps people informed about voter issues, was saying that they recommended a vote of No/vote against continuing the millage.
I read up on their reasoning, which was that they felt increasing taxes was not a good long term solution to improving prison conditions. Maybe having fewer prisoners would solve the problem.
I mean, yeah... but that seems very unlikely to happen anytime soon. It just seems like not having this money would hurt the people that are incarcerated. Not to mention, given all the interference by state government into the city, (and some very clear reminders of the limits of city authority once it has already been allowed to happen,) it seemed that this would be creating the perfect opportunity for the state to take over or even another excuse to end up with more government privatization.
Further, a vote for yes would NOT increase taxes. The way they framed their takeaway reason to vote No was kind of confusing, and did not make that super clear. If I hadn't read beyond that one paragraph, I wouldn't have been aware of that fact.
I sent the information to my husband bc he's usually the guy everybody goes to when voter issues are intentionally confusing or hard to understand, but he was having a really rough day and dealing with his own "flood the zone" BS. He also had no idea about the vote and just said he would vote however I thought would be best.
I kept asking around on Reddit, and while nobody could really address the concerns/questions I was asking, I did keep receiving the same response. Just vote no, I can't tell you why you shouldn't be worried about those things, but trust me it's not a big deal. A long history of New Orleans corruption is why you shouldn't vote yes.
I did some more research, and found a well supported argument to vote Yes backed up by some very convincing evidence.
I also learned, that while most people in the city were unaware of the vote on Saturday, there was actually a bizarre disinformation campaign to make people who were aware, believe it would raise taxes. Signs were posted around the city falsely claiming that voting yes would increase taxes, but this is not true, and nobody knows who was behind the signs.
It definitely seemed to go against popular opinion, but I decided to vote yes to continue the current rate bc the risk of losing those services and positions didn't seem to be outweighed by a relatively small reduction in the current property tax.
Told my husband what I knew, and he agreed. I assumed that there was no chance a vote of yes would actually pass, but I felt that morally it would be wrong to sit this one out. We went to vote and the poll worker informed me that turnout was abysmal (not surprisingly).
So, even though we all know it doesn't help anything to just post on the internet, I gave it one more chance and tried to convince people in my city to go vote.
Someone else in another district of the city did the same, and it seems like at least a few people who wouldn't have otherwise known to vote yesterday went out and did their civic duty because of it.
When the vote was called, I literally thought it was a joke at first, but it's true. Despite the disinformation campaign, lack of voter information, and the zone being flooded nonstop by waves and waves of crazy information all coming down on New Orleans/Louisiana/The U.S./The world all at once, Yes won by literally 2 votes.
TLDR: Always know what you're voting for, vote for what you believe is right, and never let anyone convince you that your vote or your voice don't matter

Also called a "mill rate" it's a tax on a property on per-$1000 basis (per mille) of assessed value.
If you own a house assessed at $150,000, and you have a mill rate of 20, you pay 20x150 per year, that's $3,000.
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/millrate.asp