Larry Bagley


Lawrence A. Bagley Jr., known as Larry Bagley, is a Republican member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for District 7, which encompasses Caddo, DeSoto, and Sabine parishes in northwestern Louisiana. In January 2016, he succeeded outgoing Republican Representative Richard Burford, an unsuccessful candidate against the Conservative Democrat John Milkovich for the District 38 seat in the Louisiana State Senate in the general election held on November 21, 2015.

Background

Bagley is the oldest of four children of Lawrence, Sr., and Sally Bagley. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in elementary education from Baptist Christian College in Shreveport, a Master of Education from Stephen F. Austin University in Nacogdoches, Texas, and thirty additional hours of graduate study from Northwestern State University in Natchitoches. Bagley resides in Logansport in DeSoto Parish. A retired educator, he is a former president of both the DeSoto Parish Teachers Association and the Louisiana Association of Basketball Coaches. He taught and coached basketball at Northwood High School.
Bagley is the father of five children and has two foster sons. He is active in the United Methodist Church. He owns a family business, Bagley Farms in Longstreet, also in DeSoto Parish. Involved in the petroleum, natural gas, and timber industries, he owns and operates Bagley Allstate Insurance Company in DeSoto Parish.

Political life

Bagley formerly served for two terms on the Logansport City Council.
In the primary election held on October 24, 2015, Bagley with 5,531 votes defeated two other Republicans, Robert S. "Steve" Casey, who received 2,775 votes, and Perry D. McDaniel, who polled 2,170 votes.
As a legislator, Bagley stresses his support for educational excellence and improvements in the state teacher retirement program, fighting narcotics and crime, and expanded road and highway improvements. In 2016, Bagley joined a House bipartisan majority to enact a one-cent increase in the state sales tax.

Attempt to end automobile inspection stickers

In April 2017, Representative Bagley proposed legislation which would halt most automobile inspection stickers required annually since 1961 on all vehicles in Louisiana. Bagley's bill would limit inspections to student transportation and commercial vehicles and would not impact the parishes of Ascension, East Baton Rouge, Iberville, Livingston, and West Baton Rouge, which are required under the Clean Air Act of 1963 to conduct specialized inspections for vehicle emissions, Displayed on windshields, the stickers are considered proof that the inspections was conducted.
On May 15, 2017, the House Transportation Committee, citing skepticism for Bagley's legislation by the Louisiana State Police, tabled the bill. Bagley claimed that the legislation would end what he called a $6 million per year industry in fraudulent stickers. Representative Terry Landry, a former state police superintendent from Lafayette Parish, said that he thought ending inspections would be "sacrificing safety. I just fundamentally disagree with your bill."
As the issue played out, lobbyists representing those who perform the inspections also lined up against Bagley's proposal. These businesses make nearly half of their overall income from the inspections. Bagley favored adding the inspection fee to one's motor vehicle registration. However, the Louisiana Constituiton of 1974 places a cap on the amount of that fee. Hence the proposed change would require a constitutional amendment to adjust the vehicle registration fee structure. Bagley vowed, assuming that he is reelected in 2019, to bring back the matter in the 2021 economic session of the legislature. Bagley said that he wants to hire 150 new state troopers with money that the state spends on the inspections.
Louisiana hence remains one of thirteen states with motor vehicle inspection laws.