The mayors responded from Covington, Mandeville, Abita Springs, Madisonville and Folsom. Here is the article from Folsom.
This photos shows the Folsom Town Officials in 1973,
Mayor Vera Faye Forbes at desk signing a document.
Published on December 30, 1976
Mayor Vera Faye Forbes of Folsom recently looked at the future of her town in St. Tammany Parish and predicted what was in store for it in the next 100 years.
By the year 2076, the American Tricentennial, Mayor Forbes felt that Folsom would still be in the center of a rural farming area, with advances in agriculture providing better hybrid seeds, healthier crops and no weeds or pests.
"Farming equipment will probably be automated enough so that the farmer won't have to go out in his fields and harvest his crops," she said.
The population of Folsom itself will not be over 20 per cent more than it is now, she said, and transportation will probably be powered by solar energy.
"I don't think the corporate limits of Folsom will be much larger than they are now," Mayor Forbes commented, "but the entire town will probably be a business district rather than residential."
By 2076, the main highway La. 25 will be a four lane thoroughfare, she feels, and there will be a lot of apartment complexes in Folsom. However, she does not think there will be any buildings over two stories high.
The people living in Folsom 100 years from now will be mostly retired, she said, and there will not be as many commuters residing there as one may think. She also did not foresee any kind of industry coming to the Folsom area over the next 100 years.
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