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A Delta State professor walks into a bar. The bartender asks,’Can I get you funding?’

CLEVELAND — Under beer bottle chandeliers and a Last Supper-style mural of the Blues masters, faculty and staff prepared for the fifth and final night of “Department Trivia” at Hey Joe’s, a dive-y bar just down Sunflower Road from Delta State University. 

The competition, one of several community events at Hey Joe’s, is exactly how it sounds. Every last Wednesday, from January to May, faculty (and some non-university regulars) vie on behalf of their department. At stake are two prizes: The “Stanley Cup,” a perforated metal sculpture named for its creator, Michael Stanley, a former art professor at Delta State, and a big green check for $1,000 in funding. 

Justin Huerta, the owner of Hey Joe’s, started the competition in 2009 with his friend and fellow Delta State grad Kirkham Povall. It was the Great Recession, and Huerta thought his regulars, who were largely faculty, would appreciate the money as the state made deep cuts to higher education. 

For his part, Povall said he just “wanted to hang out.” He volunteered to host when no one else wanted to.

“I’m just a guy who had time to do it,” he said during a break between questions Wednesday night.

“That’s like a lot of things in Cleveland,” interjected Don Allan Mitchell, an English professor at Delta State. “You get roped into it. And then it becomes your life.” 

Mitchell had arrived at Hey Joe’s a little after 7 p.m. wearing a Delta State shirt and baseball cap, both okra green. He was going to meet a professor in the history department, but they had stayed home to process the shooting in Uvalde, Texas.

At Delta State, Mitchell said school shootings remind faculty of Ethan Schmidt, a professor who was shot and killed on campus in 2015. He floated around before joining a team named “The Department of Irrelevant Studies” that had five members, including Jess Szot, a math teacher at Cleveland Central High School.

Trivia got started shortly after 8 p.m. The stakes could have been higher. All five teams knew the Athletic Department was going to win, as it had for the last two times. Teams accumulate points over the semester, and the Athletic Department, with 142 points heading into Wednesday’s round, had far outpaced its competitors. (Trailing in second: The Alumni Department with 104 points.) 

“It’s a war of attrition,” Mitchell said. 

The standings heading into the final match of Department Trivia on Wed., May 25. Credit: Molly Minta/Mississippi Today

The English department has won four times before, Mitchell said, and they’ve used the prize money for a scholarship in memory of Schmidt. In 2019, most of Mitchell’s teammates stopped playing regularly after catching another team checking their phone during a question. They could no longer ignore the “rampant cheating.” 

“We left in a huff,” he said. 

The Athletic Department had never won prior to 2019, so the origin of the team’s sudden rise and continued dominance has inspired speculation. Were they the ones Mitchell caught cheating? Or was it simply that the Athletic Department was the only team to show up every week?

“For $1,000, we could buy some new equipment, we’d make a lot of use of it,” said Campbell Saia, who plays for the Communications and Marketing Department. “But some departments don’t need it, like the Athletic Department.” 

To level the playing field, the hosts — Rachel “Rowdy” Carson and Ben Yarbrough — started asking fewer sports-related questions. On Wednesday, the categories were “words that start with L,” “name the cartoon character by its parents” and miscellaneous. 

The fourth and final round is always music, but that night it had a twist. Yarbrough introduced the “Esteemed Reverend” Josh Armstrong, a music professor at Delta State who had prepared renditions of 10 songs, from Nena to Justin Bieber, on a MIDI controller.  

In prior years, Armstrong (who is not actually a reverend) might’ve recorded the backing track with the help of the student steel drum band. He wasn’t able to put that together this year, though, due to “low enrollment” at Delta State. 

“Same thing happened with our jazz band,” he said. 

After Yarbrough scored the final round, a three-way tie emerged. The Department of Irrelevant Studies sent Szot, whose mom was in an 80s band. Armstrong played just two seconds of “Material Girl” before Szot’s hand shot up. She won the team a free pitcher of beer for the night, but the Athletic Department had won the tournament. 

“This should come as a surprise to no one, but the winner of the Stanley Cup is the Athletic Department,” Yarbrough said into a fuzzy red microphone.  

There were scattered claps and a single, half-hearted “woo.” 

At the bar, Ryan Tyler, a member of the Athletic Department’s team, discussed his team’s winning steak, which he said is due to their size and diversity. The team plans to engrave the team’s name on the wooden base of the Stanley Cup, he said. They’re also considering displaying the cup in the trophy case on campus.

“I don’t know why we’d have to cheat,” Tyler said. “Like I said, we have the most diverse group of people.” 

As participants paid their tabs, Huerta, sitting near a row of arcade games, talked about the ethos behind Hey Joe’s. Born and raised in Cleveland, he’s sensitive to stereotypes about Mississippi. Hey Joe’s is his way of doing something about the realities of life here.

“I’m not gonna change Mississippi, I’m not gonna change the United States of America — my world is Cleveland, so I’m trying my best to change my world,” he said. 

As for the rumors of cheating? “We’ve never caught anybody,” he said, pausing to take a sip of his beer. “But we did have a shirt that said, ‘no cell phones.’”

The post A Delta State professor walks into a bar. The bartender asks,’Can I get you funding?’ appeared first on Mississippi Today.

Entergy unveils largest renewable power plant in Mississippi

Entergy Mississippi announced Thursday the completion of the Sunflower Solar Station project, which is now the largest renewable energy plant in Mississippi.

The Sunflower County facility, which sits on 1,000 acres in Ruleville, is slated to come online by mid-July. The plant has a 100-megawatt capacity, about twice as much as any active renewable facility in the state.

The new solar project also represents a 50% increase in Mississippi’s overall renewable energy capacity among its power companies. Prior to the Sunflower plant’s completion, the state as a whole had about 220 megawatts of renewable capacity from eight different facilities, according to data from the Public Service Commission.

The Sunflower Solar Station in Ruleville, Miss., which sells power to Entergy. Credit: Entergy Mississippi

The project is the first part of Entergy Mississippi’s recently announced initiative to replace some of its natural gas plants with renewable sources. The company’s aim is to reach 1,100 megawatts of renewable capacity, or 30% of the power it produces, by 2027. Entergy is the biggest power provider in the state with 461,000 customers.

That initiative is a significant commitment in the state’s clean energy transition, which Mississippi has left largely to utilities and market forces to decide rather than policy around emissions, as Mississippi Today reported in February. Just about 2% of the state’s generated electricity comes from renewables, compared to 20% for the United States as a whole.

The now low cost of producing solar power, as well as companies looking to incorporate renewables into their operation, are key drivers in Mississippi’s transition.

“There’s one evolution in economic development that we’re seeing, and it’s a demand for renewable energy,” Laura Hipp, Deputy Director of the Mississippi Development Authority, said at the announcement Thursday. “Almost half of the requests that come in for new projects, they’re looking for part or all electricity from renewable sources. Whether they’re headquartered here or out of state, they’re asking about renewable energy.”

READ MORE: The market, not climate concerns, is driving Mississippi’s slow push for renewable energy

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Kim Benton to replace Carey Wright as interim state superintendent

Kim Benton, interim state superintendent of education. Credit: Mississippi Department of Education

On Thursday, the Mississippi State Board of Education announced Kim Benton as the interim state superintendent following the retirement of State Superintendent Carey Wright on June 30. 

Benton currently serves as the interim chief academic officer, a position she previously held for six years before retiring from the agency in 2018. She has worked in public education in Mississippi for 40 years as a teacher’s assistant, teacher, principal, and executive director of special populations and federal programs in the Meridian Public School District. 

“Dr. Benton has worked alongside Dr. Wright during most of her tenure and has been instrumental in helping to lead the state’s successful education reform efforts,” said Rosemary Aultman, chair of the State Board of Education. “The Board is confident Dr. Benton will continue the progress we have made in public education over the past decade as we begin the search for a permanent state superintendent.”

The Board also announced the formation of the superintendent search subcommittee, which will be responsible for reviewing proposals from consulting firms to lead the search for the new superintendent. The formal call for proposals will be issued on June 1, and a consulting firm will be selected by July 1 and begin interviewing candidates in the fall.

The post Kim Benton to replace Carey Wright as interim state superintendent appeared first on Mississippi Today.

Third graders score close to pre-pandemic levels in state reading test

Mississippi third-graders scored similarly to 2019 levels on the “third grade reading gate,” showing relatively little pandemic learning loss. 

The Mississippi Department of Education released the initial results of the Mississippi Academic Assessment Program (MAAP) Third Grade Reading Summative Assessment on Thursday. In total, 73.9% of students passed the exam on the first try compared to 74.5% in 2019.

The Mississippi Legislature created the Literacy-Based Promotion Act in 2013, which requires all third-graders to pass a reading test before moving up to the fourth grade. Students must score a 3 or higher on the test to be promoted, which indicates they are competent in skills such as identifying main ideas, paraphrasing texts, understanding figurative language, determining the author’s point of view as well as their own, and use root words, prefixes and suffixes to change word meanings. 

These test results are the first that students will be held accountable for since the start of the pandemic. In 2021, students still tested as a benchmark even though passing was not required to advance; only 65.4% of students scored at the passing level. 

Kim Benton, interim chief academic officer, attributed the return to pre-pandemic passing levels (when compared to the 2021 scores) to the hard work of teachers, leaders, families, and students.

“I think they were very intentional in determining their priorities, finding out exactly where children were strong and where the opportunities to bridge gaps were — and then just plugging in,” Benton said. 

Benton highlighted during the State Board of Education meeting on Thursday that schools with high initial pass rates attributed it to maximizing in person instruction and maintaining a full schedule of instructional days, strengthening communication with families, and utilizing the support materials provided by MDE. 

“As a parent, looking at those numbers, I think it gives parents a great comfort that the learning loss everybody has been worried about from COVID is not as bad as everybody expected,” said Matt Miller, board member of the State Board of Education.  

Just over 8,000 students who did not pass on their first attempt had the opportunity to retest May 9-13 and have another chance June 20-July 8. In 2019, when 9,000 students did not pass the first attempt, approximately 4,000 more students had passed by the final retest and 4,000 more were promoted with good cause exemptions, such as disabilities or passing an alternative assessment. 

For students that did not pass on the first two attempts, districts will be utilizing pandemic relief funds to run summer reading camps, create individualized reading plans for students, utilizing the PAPER tutoring program, and strengthening community partnerships that support students learning to read. 

“The hard work of teachers, students and parents to overcome academic setbacks caused by the pandemic is paying off,” said State Superintendent of Education Carey Wright.

The post Third graders score close to pre-pandemic levels in state reading test appeared first on Mississippi Today.

Empower to host Unleash Mississippi with state leaders, national policy experts

Empower Mississippi will host the second annual Unleash Mississippi to provide a solutions-centered discussion among state leaders and policy experts on the biggest challenges in Mississippi.

The event will be held on June 2 at the Civil Rights Museum beginning at 1 p.m.

It will include discussions with Gov. Tate Reeves, Speaker Philip Gunn, Sen. Briggs Hospon and expert panels on education, justice, and work.

Attendance is free. You can register here.

The schedule of the program:

Welcome
Grant Callen – Founder & CEO, Empower Mississippi

Making Mississippi Job-Ready:
A Discussion with Governor Tate Reeves

Preparing Our Students for Tomorrow:
How to Foster Innovation in the Classroom
Dr. Lee Childress – Superintendent, Corinth Public School District
Scott Waller – President & CEO, Mississippi Economic Council
Dr. Donna Akers – Founder and Head of School, Ivy Greene Academy
Elyse Marcellino – Director of Embark, Empower Mississippi

Protecting Public Safety:
A Smart Approach to Criminal Justice
Alesha Judkins – State Director, FWD.us
Scott Peyton – State Director, Right On Crime
Bryan Bailey – Rankin County Sheriff
Forest Thigpen – Senior Advisor, Empower Mississippi

The Path to Prosperity:
Overcoming Poverty
Randy Hicks – President & CEO, Georgia Center for Opportunity
Diann Payne – Jackson County Civic Action Committee
Russ Latino – President, Empower Mississippi

Celebrating 2022 Legislative Wins
with Speaker Philip Gunn and Senator Briggs Hopson

Rise Awards

Call to Action
Russ Latino – President, Empower Mississippi

State Auditor Issues Civil Demand on Former DHS Deputy Director

JACKSON, Miss. – Today the Office of State Auditor Shad White served a civil demand for $3,648,557.60 on former Deputy Director of the Mississippi Department of Human Services (DHS) Jacob Black. The demand requires Black to repay misspent Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (commonly called “welfare”) money.

Black was served with this demand based on audit findings from the Office of the State Auditor and new findings released in April 2022 by an independent CPA firm reviewing DHS spending. The audits found Black assisted a vendor, NCC Ventures, in violating procurement procedures. NCC Ventures has already been issued a demand by the Auditor for work that was not completed and has been sued by the State of Mississippi.

Black’s demand is also based on his role assisting the flow of welfare money to the Mississippi Community Education Center—a non-profit owned by Nancy and Zach New—and the Autism Center of North Mississippi. Nancy and Zach New have already been charged and pleaded guilty to state and federal charges in the largest public fraud scheme in Mississippi’s history.

The new findings from last month’s independent review can be found in a report published on the Auditor’s website.

“My team will continue the work we started over two years ago on this case, and continue working with all our state and federal partners, to make sure this case is fully investigated, top to bottom,” said Auditor White.

Because of an ongoing gag order, the Office of the State Auditor will have no additional comment at this time.

The post State Auditor Issues Civil Demand on Former DHS Deputy Director appeared first on Mississippi Office of the State Auditor News.

Palazzo blamed Biden for the formula shortage. Then he missed two votes to address it.

Madison Rux didn’t have much hope that Congressman Steven Palazzo could help her, so she wasn’t terribly surprised when he didn’t.

For weeks, the Petal mother had been scouring Facebook groups and driving from store to store, trying to find formula for her now 7-month-old son.

When she saw a friend explain on Facebook that contacting Palazzo’s office had resulted in a free expedited shipment of formula, she decided to give it a try. But her expectations were low. 

“In the back of my mind I was like, ‘What is he gonna do?’” Rux said. “With all these mothers that are struggling to find formula, what is he gonna do about it?”

On May 10, Palazzo posted on Facebook that people having trouble finding baby formula should contact his office “so we can assist you as best we can.” It did not include contact information.

“Ensuring each new life is well fed and taken care of is crucial during this national shortage,” he wrote. The post was shared about 3,000 times. 

Another Palazzo post on May 18 touted “the successes we’ve had so far” in helping people who had reached out to his office for help finding formula, including two testimonies from people thanking his office for their help and adding a phone number to call. 

But for Rux and other parents, calling the congressman’s office was another fruitless detour on what has become a constant quest to find the formula she needs to keep her baby alive. It also highlighted the limited efficacy of Palazzo’s pledge to help constituents, even as he missed two votes on the issue last week and continues to criticize the administration of President Joe Biden over the formula shortage. 

Rather than providing formula, caseworkers have been sending callers links to online store locators — which many desperate parents are already using — and sharing contact information for formula manufacturers.

On Monday, Palazzo’s office told Mississippi Today that they had put 103 people in touch with formula makers, and confirmed that four of them had actually received formula. It’s possible that others also got formula but didn’t tell the office. 

Rux called the office on Friday and said she needed an Enfamil formula manufactured by Reckitt — as a recipient of federal WIC (the Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children) benefits in Mississippi, she can only buy Enfamil products unless her baby’s pediatrician says he needs something different. Palazzo’s caseworker took down her information and she got an email on May 20. 

“It was a paragraph from Reckitt that they were just forwarding,” Rux said. “They had their header on it to make it look professional, I guess. ‘Here’s a link to check the stores. Have a good day.’ I was like, oh, thanks. Thanks, that’s helpful.” 

It appears that most people who use WIC to purchase their baby’s formula were out of luck if they contacted the congressman. Palazzo’s office said the four confirmed recipients had requested a brand made by Abbott Laboratories, which produces Similac. Anyone who requested a Reckitt brand, like Rux, got a link to a store locator. 

As of 2021, about 72,000 Mississippians were enrolled in WIC. A household of three must make about $41,000 or less annually to qualify. 

“Thank you for the information, unfortunately everyone within a 50 mile radius (is out) of formula right now,” Rux replied to the email she got from Palazzo. “I’ve been calling all the stores and everyone is currently out of the Gentlease formula, even on the Enfamil website and we’re down to two cans which will last almost a week. Because we’re on WIC we can’t afford to order the $50 container online. Is there anything else that we could do? Thank you so much for your help!”

She got a call back from a staffer who suggested she continue calling stores and asking around — which is also what she has heard from the WIC office when she asks for help. Her son has a pediatrician appointment on Friday and Rux hopes he’ll have advice or even formula to share. 

At least a handful of Mississippians found that Palazzo’s office did help them get formula. 

Lacee Ard, the friend whose Facebook post inspired Rux to try calling Palazzo, contacted them on May 18, seeking help getting the Abbott-manufactured formula brand her three-month-old son needs. She got an email back that same day, saying they had forwarded her information to Abbott and that the company would call her directly. The next day, she got a call from someone at Abbott. The company sent her a free case of formula that she estimates will last her for weeks. It arrived at her Jones County home on Monday. 

Ard posted on Facebook Live to talk about the experience, in the hopes that other Mississippi parents might be able to get help. The formula shortage ought to be considered a national emergency, she said.

“All these babies, they’ve gotta eat,” she said. “It’s a terrifying time for mothers in general. To see someone in that position made that post and made himself available to talk or send an email and express his concerns — I was just so thankful to see that (Palazzo) had done that because I haven’t seen anyone else do that.”

Palazzo and other Republicans have blamed President Joe Biden for the shortage. The congressman missed two votes last week on legislation aiming to address the issue. He was attending his daughter’s high school graduation, his office told Mississippi Today.

According to the nonprofit news outlet ProPublica, Palazzo has missed 4.3% of votes during this congressional term, making him the 41st-most-absent member of Congress. Rep. Michael Guest has missed about 10% of votes and is the ninth-most-absent. Rep. Bennie Thompson and Rep. Trent Kelly rarely miss votes, according to ProPublica.

Palazzo also joined other congressional Republicans in filing a 2020 lawsuit against Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi to stop proxy voting — the process by which members have other congressmen cast votes for them when they are absent. Since then, he has voted by proxy at least 66 times. Guest and Kelly have voted by proxy only once each in the same time frame.

One bill, to provide $28 million in funding to the Food and Drug Administration, passed in a mainly party-line vote with little Republican support. Press secretary Megan Quinn said Palazzo would have opposed that bill, like the other members of the Mississippi Republican delegation, “because it is not a permanent nor fiscally sound solution.” 

The only member of the Mississippi congressional delegation to vote for the legislation was Thompson, a Democrat. In a statement, Thompson said he believed both bills would help get formula onto shelves.

The other bill, H.R. 7791, which would make it easier for the federal WIC program to buy formula from overseas, passed overwhelmingly with support from all voting members of Mississippi’s congressional delegation. Palazzo’s office said he would have also supported that bill.

Just four companies control about 90% of the infant formula market in the United States, thanks in part to regulations that limit imports. 

In mid-February, the Abbott factory in Michigan — the largest formula factory in the country — shut down production after its formula was linked to two infant deaths and the FDA found serious food safety violations at the plant. Months later, the plant is still closed, but Abbott plans to reopen it on June 4. Abbott has said it could take two months to get formula into stores after resuming production. 

With the formula market controlled by just a handful of companies operating a small number of plants, the Abbott outage and other supply chain issues have created a major shortage. According to one estimate, more than 40% of all baby formula was out of stock as of mid-May.

Across the state and country, parents and especially mothers have been trading tips and offering spare cans of formula in Facebook groups. Taylor Shahin, a mom of two in Ocean Springs, is breastfeeding her 9-month-old but remembers struggling to find formula for her toddler during the pandemic. She’s been trying to help other Coast moms find cans.

When she saw Palazzo’s post, she hoped it could make a difference. But she heard from other moms that they just received a 1-800 number to call a formula manufacturer. On Friday, she called Palazzo’s office to ask why he didn’t vote on the legislation. She said she was told he had a “family emergency.”

“I said, ‘Well, he chose to run for office and now Mississippi is also his family and I think that potentially hungry babies should take precedence,’” she said in an interview with Mississippi Today. “You make a Facebook post basically bribing desperate moms to think that you’re helping them get formula, when you’re just having your office give them 1-800 numbers and you can’t even show up to vote on a bill.”

Rux said she was glad that some people had benefited from Palazzo’s Facebook post. But for her, it had offered only a flash of false hope. 

On Sunday night, she opened her last can of formula. On Tuesday morning, she drove 90 minutes round-trip to meet up with a woman in Laurel who had wound up with an extra can to share. That supply would last about a week. Meanwhile, Rux planned to keep calling every store in an 80-mile radius.

“I’m really hoping that in that week, week and a half, some store will get something somewhere,” Rux said. 

The post Palazzo blamed Biden for the formula shortage. Then he missed two votes to address it. appeared first on Mississippi Today.

Ethics complaints against Rep. Steven Palazzo likely to ‘evaporate’ in Congress

A year-and-a-half long probe by the House Ethics Committee into alleged misspending of campaign and congressional money and misuse of his office by Rep. Steven Palazzo isn’t likely to yield results, said an attorney for the group that filed the initial complaint against the congressman.

Kedric Payne, vice president of the Campaign Legal Center watchdog group, said the House Ethics Committee has failed to create an investigative subcommittee on the Palazzo case and has instead classified it as a review. This, he said, makes it likely the complaint will “just sort of evaporate” when the 117th Congress ends on Jan. 3, with the committee neither clearing Palazzo nor taking any action against him.

“The chances are very low that this will be further investigated because the committee often just ends these (reviews) when the current congress officially ends,” Payne said. “… It is a very sad situation with congressional ethics that there’s not serious enforcement. It’s a problem that comes from self policing — these members have to hold themselves accountable, and that is inevitably going to lead to a lack of enforcement … but the Office of Congressional Ethics report (on Palazzo) is out there, and it at least gives voters information they need.”

A spokesman for Palazzo said the allegations were politically motivated and that Palazzo hopes the committee does follow through and clear his name.

“We have always wanted to get this in front of the actual Ethics Committee,” said Palazzo campaign spokesman Justin Brasell. “All of this from the beginning was political, created by Congressman Palazzo’s political opponents … We’ve long been ready to get this behind us and we fully believe it will be resolved in Congressman Palazzo’s favor.”

READ MORE: Rep. Steven Palazzo ethics investigation: Is the congressman’s campaign account a slush fund?

Palazzo, who has held the District 4 U.S. House seat since 2011, is up for reelection this year and faces a crowded field of challengers in the June 7 Republican primary. The alleged ethics violations have been a cloud over Palazzo after a challenger in his 2019 primary saw what he believed were irregularities in Palazzo’s campaign finance records and hired a private investigator. He then turned his findings over to the Campaign Legal Center, which filed a complaint with the Office of Congressional Ethics.

The OCE report, made public early last year, claimed that Palazzo misspent campaign and congressional funds and said it found evidence he used his office to help his brother and used staff for personal errands and services. After its investigation, the OCE handed the matter off to the House Ethics Committee, which announced in mid-December of 2020 that it was looking into the allegations.

READ MORE: Ethics report: ‘Substantial’ evidence of Rep. Palazzo wrongdoing

The allegations in the OCE report included that Palazzo used campaign funds to pay himself and his erstwhile wife nearly $200,000 through companies they own, including thousands to cover the mortgage, maintenance and upgrades to a riverfront home Palazzo owned and wanted to sell. But Palazzo said that the payments were legally made for the campaign’s rent of the home for a campaign office.

The OCE report said it found “substantial” evidence that Palazzo improperly used his office to help his brother, Kyle Palazzo. The report said Kyle was prohibited from re-enlisting in the Navy and that Palazzo used his office and resources to contact the assistant secretary of the Navy to help his brother. The OCE also questioned the campaign paying Kyle Palazzo as a “political coordinator” and letting the brother use the campaign’s credit card for food, gas, hotel rooms and other goods and services.

Brasell said Palazzo’s office only offered Kyle assistance that it would any constituent, and that his paid work for the campaign was aboveboard.

The OCE report also claimed Palazzo had used congressional staffers for personal errands and campaign work. It said former staffers it interviewed said Palazzo’s office failed to separate official work from campaign and personal activities, including shopping for his kids. In 2011, during his first term in office, Palazzo had also faced allegations that he and his wife used congressional staffers for babysitting, chauffeuring kids around and moving.

A Mississippi Today report in 2020 also questioned thousands of dollars in Palazzo campaign spending on swanky restaurants, sporting events, resort hotels, golfing and gifts. Federal law and House rules prohibit using campaign money for personal expenses. The Palazzo campaign at the time said it had found a few mistaken, non-permissible purchases and the Palazzo had repaid the campaign.

Brasell said this week that Palazzo has reimbursed his campaign $10,821. He said it is common for campaigns to make such mistakes, and said Palazzo has hired a new accounting firm to handle his campaign finances.

The Campaign Legal Center has said that Palazzo, who makes $174,000 a year as a congressman, appeared to use his campaign account as a “personal slush fund.”

Since its announcement in 2020, House Ethics has said little about the Palazzo case, beyond a posted statement last year that it was treating it as a review, not forming an investigative subcommittee. A spokesman for the committee this week said there were no further updates.

READ MORE: Wiggins again misused state campaign funds for congressional race, complaint alleges

The post Ethics complaints against Rep. Steven Palazzo likely to ‘evaporate’ in Congress appeared first on Mississippi Today.

Pascagoula leaders say FEMA rules are killing housing market: ‘It’s literally making people homeless’

PASCAGOULA — Josh Church is usually just the messenger, but that doesn’t make him any more popular among city homeowners.

Church is a building official. And in post-Katrina Pascagoula that has meant years of informing homeowners federal rules meant to protect them won’t allow them to spend the needed funds to repair their homes or keep them up to code. 

The city cannot grant the needed building permits if a home or building’s repairs cost more than 50% of what the property is worth. But property values in Pascagoula have plummeted, city officials say, meaning that “50% rule” doesn’t stretch far. Many homes in Pascagoula, built in the 1940s and 50s are now valued below $100,000.

“It’s literally making people homeless,” Church told Mississippi Today. 

Pascagoula has a growing number of deteriorating homes that wind up condemned, according to city leaders. So on Tuesday, Pascagoula’s mayor, economic development director and other city stakeholders launched a coalition demanding congress change the rules set by the Federal Emergency Management Agency they say have devastated Pascagoula’s housing market. 

“We have to get some relief,” Pascagoula Mayor Jay Willis said during the Tuesday press conference. “They’re slowly killing neighborhoods in Pascagoula.” 

A home on Frederic Street sits abandoned and rotting. The number of derelict homes in Pascagoula are on the rise, according to city officials. They blame FEMA regulations that dictate property owners cannot spend more than 50% a home’s value on repairs. Credit: Sara DiNatale, Mississippi Today

In 2009, in response to Hurricane Katrina, FEMA put 90% of Pascagoula into expanded flood zones. Pascagoula leaders say before that shift only about 20% of the city was in flood zones. As a result, in the last 17 years the bulk of Pascagoula home values have dropped dramatically. 

“It’s not easy to tell someone that has lived in their house for 30 years that after a small fire, it’s going to cost 60% of their house value for repairs, so we can’t let them fix it,” Church said.

The FEMA rules are intended to protect people from investing in properties that are likely to flood again. City leaders say that in Pascagoula, homes aren’t in a high-degree of danger.

“These neighborhoods have only flooded one time in history and that was during Katrina,” Willis said. 

The coalition has support from state leaders – Sens. Roger Wicker and Cindy Hyde-Smith and Rep. Steven Palazzo – and some of Mississippi’s largest businesses. 

Alan Sudduth, a corporate affairs manager for Chevron, took to the podium Tuesday to give the company’s support but also to point out his workers cannot find homes in Pascagoula. The same sentiments have been echoed by Mississippi Power. It’s common for Ingalls shipbuilders to live out-of-state. 

“Prior to Katrina, we had a healthy percentage of employees who lived in Pascagoula,” Sudduth said. “Since the application of these rules, it’s been a sharp decline.” 

Church said realtors are fielding calls regularly from people who want to live in Pascagoula, which has invested recently in building up its downtown. 

“But we don’t have many for sale because we cannot fix them,” Church said. 

The “50% rule” covers a 10-year span. In the case of a $100,000-valued home, the city cannot permit more than $50,000 in repairs over a decade – that includes everything from roofs, electrical issues to plumbing.

The coalition calls its campaign “S.O.S Pascagoula” with the slogan: “Don’t leave our neighborhoods behind.” 

The post Pascagoula leaders say FEMA rules are killing housing market: ‘It’s literally making people homeless’ appeared first on Mississippi Today.

State Board of Health names Dr. Daniel P. Edney as new State Health Officer

Edney was named deputy state health officer in March after the Department announced that current State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs would be retiring at the end of June. Prior to that appointment, Edney served as chief medical officer and has worked closely with Dobbs on the agency’s COVID-19 response.

The Mississippi State Board of Health announced Wednesday morning that Dr. Daniel P. Edney will be the new State Health Officer of the Mississippi State Department of Health. He will step into the new role on Aug. 1.

“Following in the footsteps of Dr. Dobbs, I, too, hope to serve as a catalyst for change – especially with infant and maternal mortality, the opioids battle plaguing the country right now, and moving the needle in preventive health and health equity issues,” Edney said in a press release. 

Dr. Daniel Edney

Edney, a native of Greenville, has practiced medicine in Vicksburg since 1991. He is a former president of the Mississippi State Medical Association and currently serves as a board member on the Mississippi State Board of Medical Licensure. He has also served as a fellow and laureate for the Mississippi Chapter of the American College of Physicians and a fellow of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

Edney is a board-certified General Internist with subspecialty board certification in Addiction Medicine. He has a private practice at Medical Associates of Vicksburg and has served as the medical director for several local nursing homes and hospice services, as well as the addiction medicine physician for several mental health facilities.

In the announcement, Dobbs praised Edney as a major asset to the health department, especially during the COVID pandemic.

“Among his various contributions, Dr. Edney worked with various organizations and partnerships to explain COVID and answer questions,” Dobbs said. “He has also worked with providers to sign them up to give COVID vaccine, and he fielded questions from providers about allergies and other complications related to the administration of the vaccine.”

WATCH: Mississippi Stories: Dan Edney

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