Home Blog Page 2

John Horhn takes office as Jackson mayor

John Horhn finally became mayor of Jackson Tuesday, after his fourth run for the office, more than $300,000 in campaign donations and too many church visits to count.

Horhn is the 54th mayor of Jackson. His inauguration marks a shift in leadership from a young progressive visionary to a seasoned moderate who promises to restore basic services, tackle blight and bring back economic development. 

Horhn, 70, took the oath of office at 11 a.m. at the downtown Jackson Convention Complex following a prayer service led by eight religious leaders of different denominations. Council members, including the newly elected Kevin Parkinson of Ward 7 and Lashia Brown-Thomas of Ward 6, were also sworn into office. 

The day concludes with an evening gala featuring performances from blues musicians Willie Clayton and Bobby Rush. 

A longtime state senator representing parts of northwest Jackson and southern Madison County, Horhn has pledged to reorganize a dysfunctional City Hall, create a comprehensive plan, and work with developers to bring more business to Jackson. 

The challenges are great: Jackson is the fastest shrinking capital city in the country, and many residents have lost faith in the city’s leadership to respond when they call with problems, much less fix systemic issues such as blight, economic divestment or Jackson’s relationship to the state government. 

But Horhn will have the support of a coalition of city leaders representing real estate, restaurants, unions, city contractors and nonprofits. With their backing, Horhn rode to election, winning 3 to 1 in the Democratic primary runoff over outgoing Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba and facing no serious opposition in the general election. 

Check back for updates to this developing story.  

12:34 PM
Anna Wolfe

“But because of our combined love for Jackson,” Mayor John Horhn said in his inaugural address, referencing his wife, Lydia Gail Horhn. “We decided that we’re gonna do this.”

Horhn said he’s putting together a team he’s asking to do three things:

  • Move: “And by that I mean, let’s get some things done. Let’s not push paper on one side of the desk to the other.”
  • Think: “That we approach solving problems in our city in a logical and well-reasoned fashion. Thinking through problems is what we need more of, as opposed to passing the buck. And we have kicked the can down the road long enough.”
  • Pray: “If we don’t believe in something that is a higher power than ourselves, then we are in trouble.”
Jackson Mayor John Horhn delivers his inaugural address during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., on Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
12:15 PM
Anna Wolfe

In his inaugural address, Jackson’s new mayor John Horhn spoke directly to the state’s top leaders.

“You gentlemen lead the state,” Horhn said to Gov. Tate Reeves and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann. “And you’re doing everything you can, I believe, to lead it to greatness. And we in the city of Jackson, the capital city, look forward to working with both of you gentlemen.”

He said that he’s met with leaders in Washington, who told him, “We want to help Jackson, just tell us what you need.”

Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, left, and Gov. Tate Reeves stand for the National Anthem during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
12:02 PM
Anna Wolfe
Jackson citizens take an oath of office during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

After John Horhn took the oath of office, becoming Jackson’s 54th mayor, Hinds County Chancery Court Judge Crystal Wise Martin asked inauguration attendees to emulate the Mississippi Mass Choir – which minutes earlier delivered a powerful rendition of “We Praise You” – while taking the people’s oath of support for the mayor and city council.

“I want you to give a resounding ‘We will,’ just like you were listening to the Mississippi Mass Choir,” Martin said.

“Together, we will shape a Jackson that reflects the strength of pride and the promise of its people,” she said, followed by a pledge of service to Horhn and council members; the crowd returned.

After, the Mississippi Mass Choir sang “The Promise,” with the repeating refrain, “I’m ready.”

Hinds County Chancery Court Judge Crystal Wise Martin gives the oath of office to Jackson citizens during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
11:35 AM
Molly Minta

As Jacksonians filed into the downtown convention center Tuesday morning to watch Mayor John Horhn take the oath of office, a notable face was missing from the crowd.

A photo of Chokwe Lumumba’s law office July 1, 2025.

Former Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba said at a press conference Monday that he would not be able to attend the inauguration because he had to go to work. Before becoming mayor in 2017, Lumumba led a local law firm, Lumumba and Associates. 

A visit to the address listed for the firm at 440 N. Mill Street Tuesday morning showed a building that appears to have been deserted for some time. A large crack in the front door’s glass was covered with poster board and a pot of fake purple flowers. 

There were no cars in the parking lot. Multiple calls to Lumumba and a number listed on a piece of paper taped to the inside of the front door were not returned. A call to the number for the law office on Google yielded a busy signal.

11:18 AM
Anna Wolfe
Former Jackson Mayor Kane Ditto, who served the capital city from 1989-1997 speaks at the inauguration of new Mayor John Horhn and council members in Jackson, Mississippi on July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

“I’d like to take just a moment of personal privilege here to acknowledge my good friend Kenny Stokes. And the reason I’m doing this to him is because he was on the city council when I was mayor,” said former Jackson mayor Kane Ditto, garnering a laugh from the audience.

Councilman Kenny Stokes is the longest serving member of the current Jackson City Council. He and Ditto both took office in 1989, and Ditto served until 1997.

Kenneth Stokes, Ward 3 councilman, waves at the crowd during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
11:25 AM
Molly Minta

Gov. Tate Reeves, the Republican governor of Mississippi who served as a foil to Jackson’s Democratic leadership in recent years, pledged a “renewed commitment” to progress in the capital city, calling it vital to the future of the state in a speech during Mayor John Horhn’s inauguration Tuesday. 

“I want everyone to know the state stands ready to work with Mayor Horhn and the city of Jackson,” Reeves said. “We may not always agree on everything, and that’s OK, but what matters most is we keep our eye on the bigger picture.” 

Those shared goals include clean water, better schools, safer neighborhoods, good jobs and more opportunity for every Jacksonian, Reeves said, commending Horhn for stepping up to what he called “a big job.” 

“Our capital is more than a geographic center,” Reeves said. “It is a cultural hub, an economic driver and a symbol of who we are as a state. For Mississippi to reach our full potential, we need Jackson to succeed.” 

Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, left, and Gov. Tate Reeves smile during the 2025 mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

From his experience working with Horhn in the Legislature, Reeves, who served as lieutenant governor from 2012 to 2020, said he knows Horhn possesses a deep love for Jackson and a vision for its future. 

“He’s been a tireless advocate for the capital city in the state Senate, and I dare say no one can speak more authoritatively on that fact than someone who had to deal with his passion daily for years,” Reeves said, garnering chuckles from the crowd before adding, “someone such as myself.”

When former Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba was in office, some politicos in Jackson felt it would be impossible for Reeves, a conservative, to work with a mayor who had pledged to make the city the most radical in the country, an observation that Reeves seemed to reference toward the end of his speech.

“I believe in what’s possible if and when we work together,” he said. “Not as what many politicos and even some of our constituents may see as a mutually beneficial adversary, but as partners.”

But the inability to work together went beyond optics: In 2022, Reeves blamed the water crisis on what he deemed “the “absolute and total incompetence of this mayor and his administration.” 

After Reeves spoke, U.S. Congressman Bennie Thompson quipped the audience had just heard “all the good stuff” the state’s other leaders said they would do for Jackson. Then he addressed Horhn.

“Mayor, I know at some point you’ll go looking forward to collect,” he said.

11:03 AM
Anna Wolfe

U.S. Congressman Bennie Thompson spoke first at the inauguration of Jackson Mayor John Horhn. Thompson endorsed Horhn during the April Democratic primary runoff.

“This is what we do in a democracy,” said Thompson, who chaired the House Select Committee to investigate the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the nation’s Capitol. “We settle our differences at the ballot box. Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose. But we don’t tear the place up. … I’m pleased that we can stand as a community to commemorate this iconic event and bear witness to another beginning, a newly elected administration, a new vision, a new energy and a renewed commitment to build the city of Jackson.”

U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson speaks during the mayor and council inauguration at the Jackson Convention Complex in Jackson, Miss., Tuesday, July 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today
10:47 AM
Maya Miller

Jackson clergy said they felt hopeful after the inaugural prayer service held this morning for Mayor John Horhn. 

John Allen, associate pastor at Anderson United Methodist Church, said the prayer service reinvigorated the community’s faith in its elected officials.

“This kind of thing brings renewal,” he said. “It helps us to renew our faith, and also when we’re actually praying over the mayor and over the city, it kind of reinvigorates a renewal in our faith and the person that we’ve elected, but also in God in orchestrating all of that.”

Domini Henry, pastor at Central United Methodist Church, said that a leader’s faith in God helps build the community’s trust in them as a leader. 

“When we see them exemplifying faith, and when we see them trust Him, then it helps us put our trust in them and that leads to more positive things happening for the city, because the leadership has placed themselves in God’s hands for guidance,” Henry said. 

He said that though the prayer service was for one day, clergy should continue to come together and support the mayor in his journey as an elected official.

“This is just a mark of what we ought to continue to do,” Henry said. “This just shouldn’t be a one day thing. We should continue to circle around our mayor as clergy and as leaders to pray and uplift him and the city.”

10:05 AM
Molly Minta

Before John Horhn officially took office Tuesday morning, the city of Jackson’s website was already sporting a new look, complete with a new logo, a new slogan and a form inviting users to “follow us for update (sic) now!” 

The new home page includes photos of Jackson City Hall and Horhn sitting in front of the building’s historic marker. The website’s former logo, which showed a colorful rendering of the city’s skyline, has been replaced with one inspired by the city’s official flag and a new slogan, “the city with vision and results.” 

Under former mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba, some Jacksonians expressed frustration with the city’s website, which was migrated to a new platform toward the end of last year. While the website had a host of information – from city council agendas and meeting minutes to a weekly schedule – it was often hard to find through the search function. 

As of Tuesday, the city’s homepage is the only part of the website that appears to work. When a user tries to access the council meeting minutes, a message stating “this page either doesn’t exist, or it moved somewhere else” is returned. But Jacksonians can still access those pages via the Internet Archive. 

8:21 AM
Maya Miller

A banquet hall at the Jackson Convention Center in downtown Jackson transformed into a church sanctuary Tuesday morning as local clergy gathered to pray over incoming Mayor John Horhn.

“Prayer is warfare, and we came to do battle,” said Jerry Young, pastor of New Hope Baptist Church. “We came here to fight for the city of Jackson, Mississippi.”

Hundreds packed into the hall for Horhn’s inaugural prayer service. Ten leaders from churches and temples across the city came together to pray for the city of Jackson. They prayed for key issues in Jackson, such as equity and justice, the city council, and for healing.

Jackson’s performing arts venue Thalia Mara Hall is now open

After more than 10 months closed due to mold, asbestos and issues with the air conditioning system, Thalia Mara Hall has officially reopened. 

Outgoing Mayor Chokwe A. Lumumba announced the reopening of Thalia Mara Hall during his final press conference held Monday on the arts venue’s steps. 

“Today marks what we view as a full circle moment, rejoicing in the iconic space where community has come together for decades in the city of Jackson,” Lumumba said. “Thalia Mara has always been more than a venue. It has been a gathering place for people in the city of Jackson. From its first class ballet performances to gospel concerts, Thalia Mara Hall has been the backdrop for our city’s rich cultural history.” 

Thalia Mara Hall closed last August after mold was found in parts of the building. The issues compounded from there, with malfunctioning HVAC systems and asbestos remediation. On June 6, the Mississippi State Fire Marshal’s Office announced that Thalia Mara Hall had finally passed inspection. 

“We’re not only excited to have overcome many of the challenges that led to it being shuttered for a period of time,” Lumumba said. “We are hopeful for the future of this auditorium, that it may be able to provide a more up-to-date experience for residents, inviting shows that people are able to see across the world, bringing them here to Jackson. So this is an investment in the future.”

In total, Emad Al-Turk, a city contracted engineer and owner of Al-Turk Planning, estimates that $5 million in city and state funds went into bringing Thalia Mara Hall up to code. 

The venue still has work to be completed, including reinstalling the fire curtain. The beam in which the fire curtain will be anchored has asbestos in it, so it will have to be remediated. In addition, a second air-conditioning chiller needs to be installed to properly cool the building. Until it’s installed, which could take months, Thalia Mara Hall will be operating at a lower seating capacity of about 800. 

“Primarily because of the heat,” Al-Turk said. “The air conditioning would not be sufficient to actually accommodate the 2,000 people at full capacity, but starting in the fall, that should not be a problem.”

Al-Turk said the calendar is open for the city to begin booking events, though none have been scheduled for July. 

“We’re very proud,” he said. “This took a little bit longer than what we anticipated, but we had probably seven or eight different contractors we had to coordinate with and all of them did a superb job to get us where we are today.”

‘Hurdles waiting in the shadows’: Lumumba reflects on challenges and triumphs on final day as Jackson mayor

On his last day as mayor of Jackson, Chokwe Antar Lumumba recounted accomplishments, praised his executive team and said he has no plans to seek office again.

He spoke during a press conference outside of the city’s Thalia Mara Hall, which was recently cleared for reopening after nearly a year of remediation. The briefing, meant to give media members a peek inside the downtown theater, marked one of Lumumba’s final forays as mayor.

Longtime state Sen. John Horhn — who defeated Lumumba in the Democratic primary runoff — will be inaugurated as mayor Tuesday, but Lumumba won’t be present. Not for any contentious reason, the 42-year-old mayor noted, but because he returns to his private law practice Tuesday.

“I’ve got to work now, y’all,” Lumumba said. “I’ve got a job.”

Thalia Mara Hall’s presumptive comeback was a fitting end for Lumumba, who pledged to make Jackson the most radical city in America but instead spent much of his eight years in office parrying one emergency after another. The auditorium was built in 1968 and closed nearly 11 months ago after workers found mold caused by a faulty HVAC system – on top of broken elevators, fire safety concerns and vandalism.

“This job is a fast-pitched sport,” Lumumba said. “There’s an abundance of challenges that have to be addressed, and it seems like the moment that you’ve gotten over one hurdle, there’s another one that is waiting in the shadows.” 

Outside the theater Monday, Lumumba reflected on the high points of his leadership instead of the many crises — some seemingly self-inflicted — he faced as mayor. 

He presided over the city during the coronavirus pandemic and the rise in crime it brought, but also the one-two punch of the 2021 and 2022 water crises, exacerbated by the city’s mismanagement of its water plants, and the 18-day pause in trash pickup spurred by Lumumba’s contentious negotiations with the city council in 2023. 

Then in 2024, Lumumba was indicted alongside other city and county officials in a sweeping federal corruption probe targeting the proposed development of a hotel across from the city’s convention center, a project that has remained stalled in a 20-year saga of failed bids and political consternation. 

Slated for trial next year, Lumumba has repeatedly maintained his innocence. 

The city’s youngest mayor also brought some victories to Jackson, particularly in his first year in office. In 2017, he ended a furlough of city employees and worked with then-Gov. Phil Bryant to avoid a state takeover of Jackson Public Schools. In 2019, the city successfully sued German engineering firm Siemens and its local contractors for $89 million over botched work installing the city’s water-sewer billing infrastructure.

“I think that that was a pivotal moment to say that this city is going to hold people responsible for the work that they do,” Lumumba said. 

Lumumba had more time than any other mayor to usher in the 1% sales tax, which residents approved in 2014 to fund infrastructure improvements.

“We paved 144 streets,” he said. “There are residents that still are waiting on their roads to be repaved. And you don’t really feel it until it’s your street that gets repaved, but that is a significant undertaking.”

And under his administration, crime has fallen dramatically recently, with homicides cut by a third and shootings cut in half in the last year.

Lumumba was first elected in 2017 after defeating Tony Yarber, a business-friendly mayor who faced his own scandals as mayor. A criminal justice attorney, Lumumba said he never planned to seek office until the stunning death of his father, Chokwe Lumumba Sr., eight months into his first term as mayor in 2014.

“I can say without reservation, and unequivocally, we remember where we started. We are in a much better position than we started,” Lumumba said. 

Lumumba said he has sat down with Horhn in recent months, answered questions “as extensively as I could,” and promised to remain reachable to the new mayor.

‘Bold and uncomfortable’: House Speaker Jason White outlines 2026 legislative priorities

Mississippi House Speaker Jason White outlined on Monday a list of priorities he will aim to advance during the 2026 legislative session, a policy agenda whose viability will depend on negotiations with the state Senate and the impact of federal legislation moving through Congress.

In broad terms, these policies will focus on reshaping the state’s K-12 education system, addressing financial challenges facing Mississippi’s pension system for state workers, expanding voting rights and addressing infrastructure challenges facing the capital city of Jackson.

Days after White announced the formation of three new select committees to study key policy areas ahead of the 2026 session, White spoke Monday to the Mississippi State University Stennis Institute of Government and Capitol Press Corps.

White offered more specifics on the legislative strategy he plans to push next year after a 2025 legislative session shaped by Republican infighting, historic tax reforms and uncertainty at the federal level.

House will propose ‘school choice/education freedom’ package

The House will propose one sprawling education reform package containing many of the “school choice” provisions that died last session, White said.

This is a departure from the piecemeal strategy House Republicans undertook last session, where the chamber passed a series of standalone education bills. Many of the House’s bills either died in the Senate or, in the case of a proposal that would have allowed some Mississippi parents to use taxpayer money to pay for private schools, didn’t come up for a vote on the House floor.

The new approach is modeled after the sweeping tax reform package that the Legislature passed last session and the “Big Beautiful Bill” moving through the Republican-controlled Congress.

“I think it’s why you see even in our national Congress now considering that one huge bill because in the volatile political world that we live in, there are things in there that folks for whatever reason, because of a certain voter base or political ideology, they say they can’t go there, but there are enough good things (in the bill) that they’re able to get there,” White said.

The congressional measure, which was being debated Monday in the United States Senate, could itself alter public education funding in states around the country.

Next session, White said the House will introduce a “comprehensive” package containing all of its key priorities, which include lifting restrictions on public school transfers, closing and consolidating some schools, and allowing Mississippi children being home-schooled to play public school sports.

White also said he wants to focus on social factors, such as poverty, that may hinder academic performance.

“It’s going to be comprehensive, it’ll be bold and it’ll be uncomfortable,” White said. “It’ll be uncomfortable for me, it’ll be uncomfortable for people in my own caucus, and for people on the other side of the aisle. But it can absolutely alter the (education) landscape.”

White said he is a proponent of “universal school choice,” which often refers to policies that allow all households — regardless of income level — to use public education dollars to send their children to private schools or other institutions of their choice, rather than being assigned to public schools based on where they live.

But White acknowledged on Monday that there haven’t been enough votes in his chamber to advance such a measure, a political reality he traced back to the racial politics of education in Mississippi. Following the Civil Rights reforms of the 1960s, many private schools in Mississippi opened as bulwarks against racial integration.

White, who favors the term “education freedom” instead of the “school choice” moniker embraced by most conservative education groups, said the new Education Freedom Select Committee will examine education policies passed by many other Republican-controlled legislatures nationwide.

Finding a “dedicated revenue stream” for PERS

White said the House will try again to pass legislation with a “dedicated revenue stream” for the Public Employees’ Retirement System, or PERS, which currently faces an over $25 billion unfunded liability.

White said his House Republican Caucus still favors either diverting most of the state’s lottery proceeds to PERS or legalizing mobile sports betting and using the revenue to help make the pension system solvent. These proposals will be the subject of another House select committee.

The Senate has favored a “hybrid” retirement plan to shore up the system financially by cutting benefits for future employees.

Voter Rights

The House will again aim to implement early voting in Mississippi, which is one of only three states without no-excuse early voting or no-excuse absentee voting.

Senate leaders, on the last day of their regular 2025 session, decided not to send a bill to Gov. Tate Reeves that would have expanded pre-Election Day voting options. The governor has been vocally opposed to early voting in Mississippi and would likely have vetoed the measure.

A House Voters’ Rights Select Committee will examine paths forward for restoring suffrage for individuals convicted of crimes who have completed their sentences. The committee will also explore re-establishing a ballot initiative process, an effort that has failed for several years in a row after the previous initiative process was struck down by the state Supreme Court.

In the Senate, such a measure would have to go through the Accountability, Efficiency, Transparency committee, where last session it died under the leadership of Republican chairman Sen. David Parker.

Parker is not running for reelection, a development that bodes well for restoring the ballot initiative process, White said Monday, without naming Parker.

Jackson-related bills and local projects

The Capital and Metro Revitalization Select Committee, established in 2024, will continue to focus on local governance issues in the capital city of Jackson after helping pass five bills into law last session.

In 2026, White said, the House will focus on addressing infrastructure woes plaguing Jackson’s water and sewer systems. White said the state would not aim to “take over” the systems, a concern often voiced by Democrats, almost all of whom are Black, about the majority-white, Republican-controlled Legislature usurping local rule in Jackson.

Last session, a source of Republican infighting between the House and Senate concerned whether to pass a “Christmas Tree” bill, or a bill that appropriates hundreds of millions of dollars in local projects around the state. To the House’s chagrin, that never happened, and White said he remains “disappointed” in the Senate leadership over the disagreement.

“We should have funded local projects, and we didn’t because of politics and nothing else,” White said.

White said he heard the Senate might introduce a local projects bill in January next session, earlier than normal, but he remains concerned the chambers are far from reaching an agreement.

Ex-federal probation officer gets 10 years for child exploitation

A former federal probation officer who pleaded guilty will serve a decade in prison for receiving video and photos of child sexual exploitation, U.S. Attorney Clay Joyner announced Monday. 

Lonnie Everill, 46, of Water Valley, whose work focused on supervising and rehabilitating sexual offenders, was sentenced in federal court, months after receiving over 1,400 images sent and received over a four-month period.

An FBI investigation began after Everill sent chats with an undercover agent about arranging to travel to California and have sex with a child Everill believed was the agent’s niece, according to court records. 

They began to exchange chats after Everill joined a public group on the platform KIK that the agent was in – a group with about 100 members who were exchanging child sexual abuse material and talking about children. 

Investigators found images and videos of young children and toddlers not being sexually abused on Everill’s accounts. The material also included selfies of Everill and pictures of local minors not engaged in sexually explicit conduct. 

Joyner and Robert Eikhoff, special agent in charge of the FBI Jackson Field Office, called the crime a betrayal of trust for the victims, community and credibility of federal probation officers in the district. 

Everill had worked in several states including Mississippi, according to Joyner’s office. 

“No matter their badge or title, the FBI will always aggressively pursue those that prey on our children,” Eikhoff said in a statement. 

U.S. District Judge Dan Jordan sentenced Everill to 10 years in the Bureau of Prisons followed by 10 years of supervised release. Everill will be required to register as a sex offender, and the judge also ordered requirements meant to restrict Everill’s access to children and the internet. 

The judge also ordered him to pay $3,000 in restitution to the victims in the images he had, and an additional $10,000 assessment. 

Feds unfreeze $137 million in Mississippi education money

The federal government is restoring $137 million in education funds to Mississippi schools.

The U.S. Department of Education notified states last week that it would reinstate pandemic relief funds. The decision comes less than three months after the federal government revoked billions nationwide as part of Trump administration efforts to cut government spending. 

State education agencies and school districts originally had until March 2026 to spend the money, but the federal government claimed that because the pandemic was over, they had no use for the money. 

That March 2026 deadline has been reinstated following a series of injunctive orders. 

A coalition of Democratic-led states sued the federal government in April over the decision to withhold the money. Then, a federal judge granted plaintiff states injunctive orders in the case, which meant those states could continue spending their COVID-relief dollars while other states remained restricted.

But the education department decided that wasn’t fair, wrote Secretary Linda McMahon in a letter dated June 26, so the agency was restoring the money to all states, not just the ones involved in the lawsuit. 

“The original intent of the policy announced on March 28 was to treat all states consistently with regards to safeguarding and refocusing their remaining COVID-era grant funding on students,” she wrote. “The ongoing litigation has created basic fairness and uniformity problems.”

The Mississippi Department of Education notified school districts about the decision on Friday. 

In the meantime, schools and states have been requesting exemptions for individual projects, though many from across the country have been denied

Eleven Mississippi school districts had submitted requests to use the money to fund services such as tutoring and counseling, according to records requested by Mississippi Today, though those are now void because of the federal government’s decision. 

Starting immediately, school districts can submit new requests to the state education department to draw down their federal allocation.

Mississippi Today previously reported that about 70 school districts were relying on the federal funds to pay for a range of initiatives, including construction projects, mental health services and literacy programs. 

In 2023, almost half of Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds, pandemic relief money allocated to schools across the country, went to students’ academic, social, and emotional needs. A third went to operational and staff costs, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Education.

Though Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann previously said that legislative leaders might consider helping agencies that were impacted by federal funding cuts, House Speaker Jason White said Monday that he did not have an appetite for directing state funds to pandemic-era programs. 

Small school districts were already feeling the impact of the federal government’s decision to rescind the money. In May, Greenwood Leflore Consolidated School Board voted to terminate a contract on a school construction project funded with federal dollars. 

The litigation is ongoing, so the funding could again be rescinded.

Clarification: A previous version of this article misstated the status of school districts’ pandemic relief money.

State lifts extended Pearl River contact advisory

The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality announced on Friday it has lifted an extended water contact advisory for the Pearl River, which had stretched south from Byram almost as far as Monticello.

MDEQ put the warning in place on June 5 after third-party utility JXN Water notified the agency of a “catastrophic” sewer failure at the critical West Bank Interceptor.

“Recent samples of the Pearl River, within the area of the extended advisory, indicate the impact of the untreated sewage has subsided and sample results have returned to pre-incident levels,” the agency said in a press release.

A 2019 advisory for the river, which runs from Hanging Moss Creek in the northern tip of Hinds County to the Byram Swinging Bridge, is still active. It warns the public against swimming, wading, or fishing in the water because of “ongoing sanitary sewer overflows around the City of Jackson.”

JXN Water discovered the most recent failure on May 28. The malfunction led to the release of between 10 million to 20 million gallons of untreated sewage into the Pearl River each day, according to MDEQ. JXN Water stopped the overflow on June 6, nine days after discovering the issue.

The utility estimated it is spending $300,000 a month to redirect the wastewater through 4,000 feet of piping, and will need $7.5 million for long-term repairs. JXN Water said it is working with the Environmental Protection Agency to secure the funding.

Traffic lights, potholes and white people: What Jacksonians wanted to know about the city under outgoing Mayor Lumumba

Q: Why are there so many traffic lights out in the city?

A: Aging infrastructure, vehicle collisions and arsonists.

Q: Where do I go if I want to get a pothole fixed?

A: Call 311.

Q: Why do you hate white people?

A: I do not hate white people.

These are some of the questions folks had recently for outgoing Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba – and his answers.

In 2024, Lumumba began an initiative called “Ask Antar,” in which residents could submit inquiries and concerns through the city’s website.

The city received more than 180 questions. Mississippi Today requested and reviewed them all and found that in the last year, Jacksonians have had the most curiosity and frustration about accessing services and responsiveness from City Hall, housing and homelessness, and street conditions.

Lumumba, whose two-term administration ends Tuesday, responded to about a fourth of the questions, plus more submitted through social media, across 15 video segments on the city’s YouTube page. In many videos, the mayor explained processes – such as how environmental courts determine what to do about derelict structures or why Jackson Police Department is unable to address squatting unless it receives a report from the owner of a specific property.

Another theme among his answers was that the administration is not in control of all functions people had complaints about – like in the case of water rates now governed by private manager JXN Water, or street lights on interstates that are a state responsibility. He also said the administration did not have resources to address all problems – potholes, for example.

Mississippi Today went a step further, contacting people who submitted questions. Of the two dozen who responded to the news organization, most had no idea the mayor had answered their questions.

“Why is it you replied to my email, yet I never heard from the city of Jackson?” said one person, who had asked in December about the broken stop light at the intersection of Woodrow Wilson and State Street.

For those whose questions Lumumba answered, we directed each person to the corresponding video and asked them to rate their satisfaction with the answer on a scale of 1 to 5.

Mississippi Today requested an interview with Lumumba to discuss our findings, but city spokesperson Melissa Payne said he was unavailable. Lumumba lost reelection during the April Democratic primary and was working on transitioning out of office to make way for Mayor-elect John Horhn. Lumumba’s last question-and-answer segment was posted April 20, two days before he lost in the primary runoff.

Three residents made submissions to Ask Antar seeking space to hold dance classes in the city, and recent high school graduate Javion Shed asked about what the mayor is doing to combat youth violence and introduce positive activities for teens. 

“As a teen in Jackson, you’re always plagued with, what can I do on the weekends, where can I go to just relax, have a great time, and not worry about the fear of violence or the fear of someone I know getting killed?” Shed told Mississippi Today.

In response to Shed last October, Lumumba said the city was developing a curfew center, where teens who may otherwise end up at the youth detention facility could be taken instead to receive services. Shed ranked the response a “solid 4” out of 5. Amid turmoil in the city’s Office of Violence Prevention and Trauma Recovery, though, the center Lumumba described has yet to open.

Several residents raised concerns with a lack of communication and listening among the administration. Referencing a three-year fight between the mayor and city council over renewing the city’s garbage contract, which led to trash pickup interruptions in 2023, one resident wrote that the mayor’s “antics and over-complication of intent” created a “4-lane thoroughfare for justified criticism of the ability of African Americans to use critical thinking analysis, and compromise to would-be detractors.” 

Another wrote, “When you become Mayor, we become Mayor was part of your campaign slogan at one point … Why can’t you listen to the recommendations from us via our Council Person?”

Others said they were unable to reach city officials to answer questions or receive basic city services. There were inquiries about getting an electrical pole removed, about repairs to a water meter and about where to drop off old paint cans “now that the household hazardous waste dropoff is closed due to fire.”

“Why don’t the traffic office answer the phone??????” one resident wrote.

One woman who submitted a question about the federal corruption allegations against Lumumba, for which he’s pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to face trial next summer, admitted her intent was to troll the mayor.

But many more of the submissions conveyed the serious and dire conditions some Jacksonians are living in.

Last July, Carlyn Cornelius submitted concerns about the unhoused population near his mother’s house in west Jackson stealing trailers and cars, burning copper and dumping antifreeze. He told Mississippi Today that a year later, the problems remain.

In his submission, Corneluis said he’d called in reports of these activities to law enforcement, the fire department, Public Works, environmental authorities and the owner of the property, but received no help.

A few days later, another person submitted to Ask Antar, “I need a place to live. I am homeless.”

Mississippi Today editor wins top commentary award, staff take home 13 other Mississippi Press Association prizes

Mississippi Today Editor-in-Chief Adam Ganucheau won the J. Oliver Emmerich Award for Editorial Excellence, and several of the newsroom’s journalists won 13 other 2024 Mississippi Press Association prizes.

The honors, awarded annually by the state’s print news association, recognize the best journalism of Mississippi’s newspapers and digital newsrooms. The 2024 prizes were announced at a Saturday luncheon in Memphis at the Tri-State Press Convention, where Mississippi’s press association joined the Tennessee and Arkansas press associations for three days of programming.

A series of Ganucheau’s 2024 editorials on the debate to expand Medicaid in Mississippi were singled out by judges as “thoughtful, accurate, and passionate.”

“If you’re not motivated to vote for Medicaid expansion by the end of each of these submissions, you haven’t read them carefully,” the judges commented. “That’s what great opinion writing should do: Take a position and argue it persuasively. Here, we get the details, the reporting and insider knowledge that provide credence to the proffered opinion … The arguments here are so well laid out and convincing that it’s hard to imagine anyone would dissent.”

Several other Mississippi Today journalists took home 2024 Mississippi Press Association awards. Below is a complete list of the winners, the awards they won and the recognized work:

Mississippi Today’s 2024 Mississippi Press Association awards are displayed following the Tri-State Press Convention in Memphis, Tenn., on June 28, 2025. (Emily Wagster Pettus/Mississippi Today)

Anna Wolfe, first place in the general news story category for her in-depth reporting on the Jackson mayor and Hinds County district attorney’s federal indictments.

Rick Cleveland, first place in the sports column category for a series of powerful columns over the course of 2024. Read the winning series here: Column 1, Column 2, Column 3.

Cleveland, first place in the game story category for his coverage of Dot Burrow’s induction into the National High School Sports Hall of Fame.

Bobby Harrison, first place in the commentary category for a series of columns over the course of 2024. Read the winning series here: Column 1, Column 2, Column 3

In addition to the Emmerich award, Ganucheau won first place in the editorials category for a series of editorials about the debate over Medicaid expansion in the 2024 legislative session. Read the winning series here: Editorial 1, Editorial 2, Editorial 3.

Alex Rozier, first place in the headline category for his story headlined, “Curdled creek: Kosciusko residents sour over town’s milky lagoon.” 

Wolfe, second place in the spot news category for her breaking story about Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba’s federal indictment.

Isabelle Taft, second place in the in-depth/investigative category for her “Committed to Jail” series.

Molly Minta, second place in the business news category for her coverage of Mississippi community colleges’ struggle to fund buildings for state workforce programs.

Cleveland, second place in the sports feature category for an insightful piece on baseball player Hughie Critz.

Geoff Pender, second place in the commentary category for a series of columns over the course of 2024. Read the winning series here: Column 1, Column 2, Column 3

Pender and Taylor Vance, third place in the in-depth/investigative category for their “Trey Way” series about state Rep. Trey Lamar.

Sophia Paffenroth, third place in the best news package category for her investigation of the epidemic of antipsychotic drug use in Mississippi nursing homes.

Cindy Hyde-Smith hopes 2026 will be her first easy U.S. Senate campaign

The recent announcement that state Agriculture and Commerce Commissioner Andy Gipson plans to run for governor has fueled speculation about who will be running for what office in a wide open 2027 Mississippi election cycle.

Will all or any of the combination of Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, Auditor Shad White, Attorney General Lynn Fitch enter the gubernatorial donnybrook? Who will be the Democratic Party standard bearer, and will Democrats field competitive candidates for any of the other down-ticket statewide offices that could be vacant based on who is running for governor?

Perhaps, most importantly, will billionaire businessman Thomas Duff of Hattiesburg enter the gubernatorial race after showing numerous signals that he intends to?

But before the 2027 elections roll around there will be another consequential statewide race in Mississippi: for the U.S. Senate in 2026.

Incumbent Cindy Hyde-Smith will be running in her third U.S. Senate race, and she surely hopes it will be her first easy one. Her first race, a special election in 2018 after longtime Sen. Thad Cochran retired, was the closest non-party primary U.S. Senate race in modern Mississippi history. Hyde-Smith, running then as the interim appointment of former Gov. Phil Bryant, captured 53.6% of the vote compared to 46.4% for former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture and congressman Mike Espy in the special election held to fill out Cochran’s term.

Trent Lott’s first race for the U.S. Senate was almost as close in 1988, when he won 53.9% to 46.1% against 4th District U.S. Rep. Wayne Dowdy. And in a 2008 special election, Republican Roger Wicker, appointed by Gov. Haley Barbour to fill a vacancy left when Lott retired, garnered 55% to 45% by former Democratic Gov. Ronnie Musgrove.

But after those relatively close elections, both Lott in 1994 and Wicker in 2012 had easier second elections.

Lott captured 69% of the vote against former state Sen. Ken Harper of Vicksburg. Wicker, on the other hand, had a little tougher race against Albert Gore, winning 57% to 40.6%. Gore was little known and underfunded, but was in many ways an attractive candidate with a noteworthy resume. Interestingly, Gore, like Wicker, was a Pontotoc County native.

In Hyde-Smith’s second race, she again faced Espy in a rare Mississippi campaign when the Democrat raised more money than the Republican. It is practically unheard of in the South — and assuredly in Mississippi — for a Democrat to raise more campaign funds than an incumbent Republican senator. Espy did.

Still, Hyde-Smith, who remains Mississippi’s only woman elected to a federal office, won 54.1% to 44.1%, but the campaign was far from easy for her.

The trend for decades has been that once a U.S. Senate seat is won in Mississippi, the incumbent holds the post for a long time with minimal opposition.

Hyde-Smith is still looking for that minimal opposition race. Will 2026 be when Hyde-Smith finally has an easy path to victory like other incumbent Mississippi senators normally have in their reelection efforts?

Perhaps hoping to ensure that easier path, President Donald Trump already has endorsed Hyde-Smith for her 2026 campaign.

But Trump also endorsed her in 2018 and 2020. Those endorsements did not result in easy campaigns for Hyde-Smith. In both of those campaigns, Hyde-Smith underperformed Trump’s Mississippi results.

Democrats Ty Pinkins and Albert Littell, both of whom have military backgrounds, already have announced their candidacy for 2026. Speculation is that District Attorney Scott Colom of Columbus also will challenge Hyde-Smith. And on the Republican side, author Sarah Adlakha, a Gulf Coast resident who works in health care, also has announced her campaign.

Whether other candidates emerge remains to be seen. And whether Hyde-Smith can experience a less stressful 2026 also remains to be seen.

So far the campaigns have not been as easy for her as for other incumbent U.S. senators from Mississippi.