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Bill that would help cover costs for learning skilled trades lands bipartisan support

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

To address Mississippi’s workforce shortage, some lawmakers are considering a bill that would create a program to help eligible students better afford an associate degree or professional credential in in-demand industries at the state’s community colleges. 

Senate Bill 2522 would create the UPSKILL Mississippi Grant Program, a state-funded initiative that would provide last-dollar scholarships, which would cover the remaining balance owed after all other financial aid and scholarships are applied. UPSKILL would also provide a $500 annual stipend for books, transportation, child care and other materials. The Mississippi Office of Student Financial Aid would oversee the program. 

So far, there is bipartisan support for the effort, which passed the Senate on Feb. 9 and awaits consideration in two House committees before a March 3 deadline — Universities and Colleges; and Accountability, Efficiency and Transparency.

The proposal focuses on helping working adults or non-traditional students, a population with few resources or support outside of federal financial aid, said Sen. Nicole Boyd, a Republican from Oxford and chair of the Senate Universities and Colleges Committee.

“We have so many working Mississippians and adults that don’t have a certificate or some compilation of skills or a college degree to help them,” said Boyd, who authored the bill. “And with this specific population of individuals, those last dollars are critical.” 

UPSKILL would benefit adults interested in “high-demand, high priority” careers such as plumbing, HVAC technicians and construction, said Courtney Taylor, executive director of Accelerate MS, the state’s workforce development agency. Accelerate MS would be responsible for identifying a list of eligible training programs.

“We really need to have a mechanism that encourages more individuals to go into a job,” Taylor said. “So officials have been working behind the scenes to understand how this potential opportunity could work with federal and state resources to ensure we’re helping people get into these jobs we have available right now.” 

Sen. Nicole Boyd, a Republican from Oxford, is the author of Senate Bill 2522, which would establish the UPSKILL Mississippi Grant Program.

Since December, Mississippi lawmakers and higher education officials have been discussing ways to encourage more residents to earn a degree or credential to boost the state’s workforce and, eventually, the economy. About 12% of Mississippi residents have some college experience but no degree. 

If SB 2522 becomes law, the pilot UPSKILL program would roll out at a few community colleges in spring 2027. 

Lawmakers modeled the proposed bill after similar initiatives in states across the country, Boyd said. 

Tennessee established the Tennessee Reconnect grant in 2018, a last-dollar tuition scholarship program for adults returning to community or technical college.The program helped increase college enrollment by 45.1% compared to the previous year among adults who returned to college through the program, and upped credential completion 15.2%, according to 2025 data from the Tennessee Higher Education Commission. 

In 2021, Michigan established a similar program that significantly increased adult community college enrollment by 38%, or roughly 620 students, in its  first year, according to researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. 

States’ recent efforts to invest in tuition-free college signify a growing push to provide residents a free path to higher education or training, said Brad Hershbien, senior economist and deputy director of research at the W.E Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.

“Ultimately, this work requires time, effort and patience,” Hershbien said.

For Mississippi lawmakers and education officials, a pilot program may not be a sufficient way to gauge UPSKILL’s initial impact if it is created. Lawmakers and higher education officials should be aware of limits to collecting data for a pilot program, said Michelle Miller-Adams, a senior researcher at the Upjohn Institute. 

SB 2522 calls for students to enroll into specific programs of study to be eligible for the last-dollar scholarship. Those restrictions could make it difficult to track data if a student switches careers or course of study — challenges that could also pose an administrative burden for college officials who are tracking the data, Miller-Adams said.

“It requires a lot of thought and planning and understanding where the barriers and difficulties are, and making sure that you’re working to resolve them,” Miller-Adams said. “That means involving the logistics of a lot of the parties. In our years of research, we’ve learned the simpler the program, the better.”

Ice storm, lack of liquor and budget time in dysfunction junction: Legislative recap

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

We saw another busy week as the 2026 Mississippi legislative session crossed its (hopefully) midway point. Some highlights:

Budget work starts early. Can House, Senate agree?

Lawmakers have begun to focus on setting a more than $7-billion state budget. This is a couple of weeks earlier than usual, with the House passing most of its 50 or so bills that make up half the budget, and the Senate doing likewise with its half. Now they have to reach agreements on the numbers. Most folks at the Capitol are anxiously watching this process, and wondering if it will crash and burn like it did last year. Fighting between House and Senate Republican leaders on most major issues over the last few years has created a dysfunction junction. Last year fighting over tax cuts and increases produced an epic standoff, with lawmakers ending their regular session without setting a budget. Gov. Tate Reeves called them back into a special session to set a budget, but many other initiatives, including a local projects, or “Christmas tree” bill to distribute hundreds of millions of dollars to local governments, died. Many lawmakers, local government leaders and lobbyists fear a repeat.

Lawmakers ponder ice storm aid

Lawmakers from areas hardest hit by the deadly Winter Storm Fern gathered last week for a briefing and to discuss federal and state aid. Mississippi Emergency Management officials advised they are still working on damage assessments, which will be required to apply for more federal assistance. Lawmakers said many residents are calling for federal individual assistance to help repair their homes, but officials said a decision on such a federal declaration could still be weeks away. Lawmakers are considering financial aid to help local governments pay their share of cleanup and recover, and even the potential for state aid to homeowners. One lawmaker called for an “after-action review” of the state’s response to the storm, which has received some criticism.

ABC problems create alcohol crisis

The House State Affairs Committee held a hearing last week on what has become a wine and liquor crisis in Mississippi. Problems at the state Alcoholic Beverage Control warehouse have resulted in empty shelves at package stores, restaurants and bars across the state, and officials told lawmakers resolving the issue will take weeks at the least. Some business owners say they are worried about staying afloat as orders are not delivered or only partially delivered. Some say ABC is still billing for orders it’s not fulfilling, creating even more problems for business owners. The problem has revived the long-running discussion of privatizing wine and liquor sales and distribution in Mississippi.

“Welcome to your Capitol, we’re burning through a few billion dollars real quick.” House Speaker Jason White, addressing spectators in the House gallery on Thursday as his chamber passed over 50 bills to fund state agencies, part of a more than $7 billion state budget.

Lawmakers want SOS to give prompt election results

The House recently passed a measure that would require Secretary of State Michael Watson’s office to create a website to track election results after polls close on Election Day.

No House member voted against the measure, and it heads to the Senate for consideration. Watson’s office has said it supports the measure.

Other than the media, no government entity provides real-time updates for statewide election results after polls close. If the measure passes, election results would still only be certified after they are approved by local election officials. – Taylor Vance

Speaker believes Senate supports online gambling

House Speaker Jason White believes that a House proposal to legalize mobile sports betting and pump $600 million into the state’s pension system would have the votes to pass if it came up for a vote. But White told Mississippi Today he wasn’t sure Senate leaders would allow a vote on the measure.

“We think it makes common sense and business to do it because (mobile sports betting) is already happening illegally, it’s better to regulate it and capture that tax revenue while looking for a dedicated stream of revenue to address the PERS (public pension) deficit,” White said. “I hope they will finally see it that way.”

Senate Gaming Chairman David Blount, a Democrat from Jackson, did not bring up a bill to legalize mobile sports betting in his committee and argued it didn’t make financial sense given the rise of prediction markets. The Senate has also sent a bill to the House to put $500 million of the state’s current surplus into PERS, in addition to putting in $50 million a year over the next decade. – Michael Goldberg

Bills would aid career-tech training in schools

The House and Senate are considering two similar bills that would allow school districts to purchase equipment for industry certification programs using career and technical education grants from the Department of Education.

Certified programs have included construction, business, welding and early childhood education. House Bill 1204 has been referred to the Senate Education and Senate Economic and Workforce Development Committees. Senate Bill 2288 has been referred to the House Workforce Development Committee.

The bills are part of a broader push this legislative session to fund career and technical education at all levels of education. – Katherine Lin

90.8%

Mississippi’s graduation rate for the 2024-2025 school year, up from 89.2% the year before. The state’s dropout rate has fallen to 7% from 8.5%. Both metrics have been trending in positive directions in recent years, which state Superintendent Lance Evans said reflects “the hard work of teachers, administrators, parents, and, of course, students” and continued support of the Legislature with funding.

House tax credit bill would send more public dollars to private schools

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Trey Lamar, a Republican from Senatobia, has introduced a bill that would increase the tax credits available to the state’s private schools through the “Children’s Promise Act.” Read the story.

Legislators working to keep local opioid settlement money from being misspent

House Public Health and Human Services Chairman Sam Creekmore, a Republican from New Albany, and Sen. Nicole Boyd, a Republican from Oxford, have both sponsored bills that would change the state’s opioid settlement laws. Read the story.

Secretary of State Michael Watson says Mississippi needs campaign finance reform

Secretary of State Michael Watson discusses his push for lawmakers to enact campaign finance reform, including transparency and searchability of reports for the public. Watson says he knows such legislation is a tough sell with lawmakers. Listen to the podcast.

UMMC keeps clinics closed and cancels elective procedures Monday and Tuesday amid recovery from cyberattack

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

Clinics within the University of Mississippi Medical Center network will remain closed and elective procedures will be canceled Monday and Tuesday as authorities work to recover the health system’s IT infrastructure following last week’s cyberattack. 

People can still receive emergency department services in UMMC hospitals and at community hospitals in Jackson, Grenada, Madison County and Holmes County, according to a statement from the hospital. 

“I know this intrusion into our system has negatively impacted some of our patients, but please know that we are using every resource at our disposal to resolve this issue in a safe and effective manner,” Dr. LouAnn Woodward, vice chancellor for the medical center, said in a statement Sunday. 

Federal agencies, including the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, have been assisting Mississippi’s largest public hospital since Thursday when a cyberattack compromised the health care system’s IT network, forcing the shutdown of computer systems that hold patients’ electronic health records. Those records are used to book appointments and to manage patients’ medical histories, test results and billing information. 

This shutdown also disrupted county public health departments, which also rely on the same computer systems. 

Roughly 10,000 people work for UMMC, making the health care provider one of the state’s largest employers. Its facilities include seven hospitals and 35 clinics statewide, and UMMC’s annual budget amounts to about $2 billion. 

The state’s only Level 1 trauma center is operated by UMMC, and it continues to serve patients through manual procedures, or using paper records to track patient care, Woodward said. Staff also have used this paper-based system to document inpatient operations and patient orders, Woodward said in a social media message posted late Friday. Woodward confirmed that the cyberattack occurred through ransomware but said, “we have stopped the bleeding.” 

The attack’s full extent remains unknown, Woodward said.

With school choice, what about the students left behind?

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

What is missing in the current school choice debate raging at the Mississippi Capitol is an answer to this question: What happens to those students left behind?

School choice proponents, led by Republican House Speaker Jason White, speak about wanting to provide an option for students they describe as being trapped in poor-performing or failing school districts – and these proposals include sending public funds to private schools.

Education advocate Angela Bass, the executive director of Mississippi First, wrote in an article for Mississippi Today Ideas that her organization opposes vouchers or sending public funds to private schools, but supports expanding public charter schools. She wrote of how her own parents moved from a low-performing to high-performing district when she entered high school to increase her chances of receiving a quality education. Bass said charter schools would be an option for students whose parents could not move out of low-performing districts.

But what about the students who do not get into a charter school? Again, what happens to those left behind?

Public schools are mandated to educate all students and turn no one away.

House Speaker Jason White speaks during the Stennis Capitol Press Forum at Hal & Mal’s in Jackson on Monday, Feb. 16, 2026. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

Private schools can turn away students. While charter schools are defined as public schools and theoretically adhere to the same admissions policies as traditional public schools, parents must take certain actions to enroll their children in a charter school.

It is reasonable to assume that the parents who go to that trouble are most likely more involved in their children’s education. And in most cases, the children of the more involved parents are going to perform better in school – whether it is a charter school, private school or, yes, public school.

Perhaps there are parents who, because of their work schedule or their limitations resulting from their own poor education background, are less likely to be involved in their children’s education. Maybe, the parents are dependent on the school bus to get their children to the public school where they live and know they do not have the means or time to transport their children to another school – charter, private or even another public school – that does not offer transportation for the students trying to leave the failing school. Or maybe the family – even with a voucher – cannot afford the tuition and other expenses associated with a private school.

Sadly, perhaps the parent just does not care about their children obtaining a good education.

Regardless of the reason, those children who are left behind in the poor-performing public school still deserve a good education.

Can we all agree on that?

Yet, with school choice, funds are diverted from the public schools that are mandated to educate those students who are left behind.

In the 2000s, when Republican Gov. Haley Barbour balked at full funding of the formula for public schools, he and legislators agreed to form a commission to study the issue.

Many, perhaps even Barbour, speculated the commission would find the formula was providing too much money to local school districts. What the commission found is that the formula was allocating far too little money to educate low-income students.

Despite the efforts of many, the Legislature for years never found the political will to give to the local school districts the money the commission recommended was needed to provide an adequate education to the at-risk or low-income students. 

The dirty little secret that most politicians do not want to talk about is that, in many cases, the worst-performing school districts are also the districts with the most poverty. They need more money than they are getting from the state.

In recent years, there has been a commitment to provide additional funding for low-income students. Speaker White, and others, helped lead that effort.

Is it enough money? Perhaps. Time will tell.

Perhaps another commission should be formed to offer recommendations on what is needed for students in those low-performing districts to ensure that no child is left behind.

To his credit, White seems sincerely concerned about students he describes as trapped in the poor-performing school districts. He said opponents of school choice have not offered an alternative for those who want to escape the failing districts. But what about those left behind?

The only answer is to improve the public schools for all students.

Scott Colom raised most money, but Cindy Hyde-Smith has most cash before March primary

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

Scott Colom, a Democratic district attorney seeking his party’s nomination for U.S. Senate, raised the most campaign money of Mississippi’s federal candidates by the end of last year, raising over $420,000 in the last reporting cycle. 

But incumbent Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith still far outpaces him and other federal candidates with cash on hand, reporting more than $2.4 million at her disposal. 

Colom is the district attorney for Noxubee, Clay, Lowndes and Oktibbeha counties and has not appeared on a statewide ballot before. To become the first Democrat since the 1980s to win a U.S. Senate race in Mississippi, he would likely need a significant amount of cash to build name recognition and run campaign ads. 

Colom, in a statement to Mississippi Today, said his campaign team is building the strongest grassroots campaign Mississippi has ever seen and “this is just the beginning.” 

“People in all 82 counties are joining our movement because they’re tired of having a senator who doesn’t show up and doesn’t fight for us,” Colom said.

Hyde-Smith has the power of incumbency, existing campaign infrastructure and the endorsement of President Donald Trump. But national Democrats believe the junior U.S. senator is vulnerable and have said they’re willing to pour money into the state to try to flip a Senate seat blue in Mississippi. 

Nathan Calvert, communications director for the Hyde-Smith campaign, said in a statement that the senator enjoys broad support across the state and continues to break previous fundraising records. 

“We recently held a six-figure event at Mar-a-Lago with many Mississippians in attendance,” Calvert said. “Now we’re planning a huge event in Jackson this spring with Senator Kennedy from Louisiana.”

Both Colom and Hyde-Smith are competing in party primaries on March 10. On the Democratic side, Colom is competing against Albert Littell and Priscilla Till. Hyde-Smith is competing against Sarah Adlakha in the GOP primary. 

The party nominees will compete against Ty Pinkins, an independent candidate, in the general election. Pinkins raised $9,061 last quarter and has  $2,979 in cash on hand, according to campaign reports. 

Here are the latest campaign finance reports from Mississippi’s congressional candidates: 

U.S. Senate

  • Sarah Adlakha, Republican
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $6,371
    • Cash on hand: $35,663
  • Scott Colom, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $420,327
    • Cash on hand: $698,749
  • Cindy Hyde-Smith, Republican incumbent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $357,995
    • Cash on hand: $2,493,547
  • Albert R. Littell, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found 
    • Cash on hand: No report found 
  • Ty Pinkins, independent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $9,061
    • Cash on hand:  $2,979
  • Priscilla W. Till, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $2,583
    • Cash on hand:  $2,874

U.S. House of Representatives – District 1

  • Kelvin Buck, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $5,690
    • Cash on hand: $13,514
  • Cliff Johnson, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $258,863
    • Cash on hand: $151,158   
  • Trent Kelly, Republican incumbent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $106,991 
    • Cash on hand: $682,524

U.S. House of Representatives – District 2

  • Ron Eller, Republican
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $2,535
    • Cash on hand: $41,968
  • Bennie G. Thompson, Democratic incumbent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $117,138
    • Cash on hand:  $1,659,853
  • Evan Littleton Turnage, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $65,464
    • Cash on hand:  $53,877
  • Pertis Herman Williams III, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found 
    • Cash on hand:  No report found 
  • Kevin Wilson, Republican
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $5,676
    • Cash on hand: $15,997

U.S. House of Representatives – District 3

  • Michael A. Chiaradio, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $50,068
    • Cash on hand: $20,802
  • Michael Guest, Republican incumbent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $90,544
    • Cash on hand: $816,968

U.S. House of Representatives – District 4:

  • Paul James Blackman, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found 
    • Cash on hand: No report found 
  • Mike Ezell, Republican incumbent
    • Money raised 4th quarter: $221,650
    • Cash on hand: $422,447
  • D. Ryan Grover, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found
    • Cash on hand: No report found 
  • Jeffrey Hulum III, Democrat
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found
    • Cash on hand: No report found
  • Sawyer Walters, Republican
    • Money raised 4th quarter: No report found
    • Cash on hand: No report found 

Patients face canceled surgeries and delayed care amid UMMC cyberattack

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Tara Wilson learned Friday that her double mastectomy, scheduled for Monday, had been canceled again, this time due to a Thursday cyberattack that targeted the University of Mississippi Medical Center, forcing hospital staff to close clinics and cancel elective procedures statewide. 

Her initial breast cancer surgery was planned nine days ago, and the Monticello resident has been taking unpaid leave from her job at Dollar General since then. Wilson’s surgery requires a long recovery time because she has Von Willebrand disease, a bleeding disorder that makes it difficult for blood to clot, and the extended leave is causing her family financial hardship. 

Due to UMMC’s ongoing cyberattack, Wilson has not yet been able to contact the medical center to reschedule the surgery for the third time. 

“It just seems like everything is conspiring against us and not allowing us to prosper,” Wilson told Mississippi Today. “It’s a very hard season.” 

Tara Wilson’s double mastectomy was canceled due to the cyberattack on University of Mississippi Medical Center. Credit: Courtesy of Tara Wilson

Patients across Mississippi are missing health care appointments and surgeries after a cyberattack led to UMMC shutting down its computer systems, including its electronic health records. This shutdown also affected county public health departments that run on the same record-sharing system. 

The medical center does not yet know the extent of the infiltration or how long it will take before returning to normal operations, it said in a statement Friday. Specialized FBI teams and federal authorities are assisting, along with three national vendors with expertise in cyber forensics, recovery and security. By Friday afternoon, UMMC phone systems and email services continued to be out of service or unreliable, according to a statement from the hospital system.

UMMC’s Wi-Fi remained down Friday afternoon, according to an email sent to UMMC staff and obtained by Mississippi Today. 

Hospitals and emergency departments within the UMMC system are operating through downtime protocols, or procedures that kick in during IT system failures. The medical center is again receiving transfers of patients needing a higher-level of care from other hospitals, according to a statement posted to social media Friday.

Peggy Sellars of Rolling Fork was with her husband, who was recovering from an emergency lower back surgery, at the medical center’s Jackson hospital Thursday when she said she began to notice the impact of the attack on hospital operations. She described a scene of chaos Thursday morning, but said operations had stabilized by the afternoon. 

Her husband was in pain Thursday morning after his pain medication was delayed for three hours. Sellars missed breakfast Thursday because the cafeteria could only accept cash and ATMs were not working that morning. She said she was able to eat lunch after one cashier began accepting credit cards later in the day. 

Her husband, George Sellars, injured his back while clearing limbs out of their yard to make it easier for lineworkers to repair power lines after the winter ice storm hit Mississippi in late January. The couple went without electricity for 16 days. 

It’s just been one thing after another, she said — from the months-long flood in 2019 to the devastating 2023 tornado, and then January’s ice storm

“It just keeps coming,” Sellars said. She said she is appreciative of everything UMMC has done to mitigate the impact of the attack.  

UMMC is working to create a way for patients to get in touch about routine medical or medication needs, and reaching out to patients receiving time-sensitive treatments, like chemotherapy, to set up appointments, officials said. 

Dr. Alan Jones, vice chancellor for health affairs at UMMC, said Thursday that the university was working to set up a phone line for patients to get more information about rescheduled or upcoming appointments, in addition to creating an operational plan for providing other medical services. The medical center has not yet publicized this phone number.

“We were able to conduct several emergent surgeries yesterday and will do more today,” said the Friday email to UMMC staff. 

UMMC facilities include seven hospitals and 35 clinics statewide. The dialysis clinic at the Jackson Medical Mall remains operational and open for scheduled appointments.

The academic medical center’s IT systems are down, including the electronic medical record system, which stores patient medical history, billing, test results, appointment booking and chart documentation. As a precaution, the medical center shut down all of its network systems and will conduct risk assessments before bringing systems back online. 

The cyberattack occurred Thursday morning and the medical system has been in contact with the attackers, Woodward said Thursday during a press conference. She declined to answer questions about what the attackers have said or asked for, but said the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency were aware of the hack. 

University of Mississippi Medial Center Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs Dr. Alan Jones, right, speaks at a press conference in Jackson shortly after cyber-attackers disrupted the hospital’s computer systems on Feb. 19, 2026. Credit: Allen Siegler / Mississippi Today

Woodward said Thursday that UMMC was trying to determine what would happen to patients’ personal information stored in the hospital’s computer systems, but the hospital had taken down the systems to prevent potential privacy breaches. 

More than 10,000 employees work across UMMC, making the institution one of the state’s largest employers, according to the university. Over 3,000 students are enrolled in the medical center, which has an annual budget of roughly $2 billion. 

Woodward said in an email to staff and students Thursday obtained by Mississippi Today that payroll would be unaffected by the cybersecurity attack, and employees should continue to report to work.

“We anticipate that this will be a multi-day event and are working with federal authorities and national experts on our response,” Woodward said in the email. 

UMMC runs the state’s only Level 1 trauma center, programs that are best equipped to respond to severe medical emergencies. Woodward said the hospital is continuing to serve Level 1 patients using manual procedures.

More than 60 miles south in Monticello, Wilson said she is frustrated that her double mastectomy will be delayed again, though she does not blame UMMC for the cancellation. The pain of having to wait longer for the surgery is amplified by the worry her four children feel for her.

“They know that this is very serious,” she said. 

The anger Wilson feels is offset only by the fact that her grandchild is scheduled to be born on Monday — an occasion she thought she would miss due to her mastectomy and subsequent recovery. 

“I’ll be there, and I’ll be able to hold her.”

Goal is ‘better alignment, not bigger government’ for Mississippi tourism

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

Editor’s note: This essay is part of Mississippi Today Ideas, a platform for thoughtful Mississippians to share fact-based ideas about our state’s past, present and future. You can read more about the section here.


Mississippi’s tourism industry generates $18.1 billion in total economic impact, supports more than 136,000 jobs and delivers more than $1.1 billion annually to the state’s general fund. It is Mississippi’s fourth-largest industry and one of our strongest economic engines.

These dollars fund priorities Mississippians care deeply about, including  education, health care and infrastructure, providing a massive revenue stream that offsets the cost of public services for every resident without raising taxes. Tourism has proven its value, delivered its return and is ready to be aligned for greater long-term growth.

That is exactly why elevating Visit Mississippi to a cabinet-level agency makes sense. Senate Bill 2016, the Mississippi Tourism Reorganization Act, does not expand bureaucracy or significantly increase government spending. Rather, it restructures the existing tourism function, aligning it as a stand-alone, cabinet-level agency, allowing one of Mississippi’s most productive industries to operate more efficiently, strategically and competitively.

Tourism banner on the Square in Canton. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

Neighboring states like Alabama, Tennessee and Arkansas have already elevated tourism leadership to cabinet-level  positions. They understand that tourism is not just about visitors, but it is also a primary driver of competitiveness, workforce attraction and community vitality. In a competitive marketplace, Mississippi cannot afford to under position one of its most reliable economic engines.

Tourism is also one of our most effective tools for addressing a challenge that keeps many leaders up at night: brain  drain. People do not choose where to live based solely on job openings. They choose places that offer quality of life, cultural vibrancy, outdoor recreation and a sense of belonging. Tourism development strengthens all of those  elements. A revitalized downtown, a festival, a trail system or a thriving food scene improves life for residents first, while also attracting visitors and investment.

That is why tourism is often called the front door to economic development. No company relocates, no entrepreneur invests and no family moves without first experiencing a place.Tourism shapes that first impression, and that impression shapes long-term growth and Mississippi’s brand image.

Yet despite this outsized return, tourism currently operates several layers removed from executive leadership, housed within the Mississippi Development Authority, our state’s economic development agency. MDA has done important work and seen historic wins in industrial recruitment under Gov. Tate Reeves’ leadership, and that success should be preserved and celebrated while allowing tourism to move toward a more specialized model.

Tourism plays a complementary role to economic development and has distinct goals, timelines and performance measures that differ from traditional economic development efforts. Tourism strategy is most effective when guided by tourism professionals who are accountable for results and able to move at the speed of the market, focusing on consumer sentiment and constantly evolving travel trends.

Instead of forcing tourism decisions through multiple layers of administrative oversight, the passage of SB 2016 will reduce bureaucracy, accelerate decision-making and improve coordination at the highest levels of state government. This is not expansion. It is alignment.

Mississippi has already seen what happens when tourism is treated as a strategic investment rather than a discretionary expense. After the Legislature implemented a performance-based, dedicated tourism funding model in 2019 and invested federal dollars designed to help destinations recover from the pandemic, Mississippi emerged as a national leader in tourism recovery. That investment produced historic and measurable returns in visitor spending, sales tax revenue and job creation, even during uncertain economic times, proving that when we prioritize this industry, it delivers.

As remaining federal pandemic recovery dollars dry up at the end of 2026, Mississippi faces a potential funding cliff after several years of record-breaking visitor impacts. To remain the consistent, multi-billion-dollar producer the state has come to depend on, we must ensure Visit Mississippi has the structure and authority necessary to compete efficiently in an increasingly competitive global landscape.

Elevating Visit Mississippi to a cabinet-level agency ensures tourism is fully integrated into statewide strategy alongside workforce development, site selection and infrastructure planning. It allows MDA to remain focused on its core mission while enabling tourism leadership to do the same.

Most importantly, SB 2016 respects taxpayers. This bill does not raise taxes, does not duplicate services and does not create a new bureaucracy. It strengthens oversight, improves accountability and positions one of Mississippi’s most reliable revenue-generating industries to deliver even greater returns.

Mississippi has long been known as the Hospitality State. Our people, culture and sense of place are unmatched. Elevating tourism leadership simply ensures our state government structure reflects the actual market value of an industry that already delivers billions in economic impact and helps fund the services Mississippians depend on. 

Supporting SB 2016 is not about growing government. It is about recognizing performance, prioritizing results and ensuring Mississippi’s fourth-largest industry is positioned to compete, grow, thrive and win in the years ahead.  


Danielle Morgan is a lifelong Mississippian and has led the Mississippi Tourism Association’s advocacy,  education and promotion efforts as executive director since 2021. She is a Yazoo City native and  currently resides in Carrollton with her husband, Brent, and precocious rescue dogs, Howard Street Howard and Weller. 

Challenging work hours, transportation, and child care continue to be workforce barriers in the Delta

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Tamika Green, a 41-year-old Army veteran, worked with the Cleveland Post Office for nearly 10 years. When she became a mother, the hours became a challenge. She loved her job, but the long hours were not sustainable with her new lifestyle. She knew she needed a different career path. 

Green’s mother, who assists Green with child care, stumbled upon a Facebook post describing training programs at Mississippi Delta Community College, and Green knew it was the right next step for her. “I took their carpentry classes, electrical class, and plumbing,” Green said. 

Since leaving the post office, Green is pursuing her dream of owning a community pool in addition to working at a bank. She is converting the former Cleveland Recreation Center into Blue Heaven Pool for community use. “I didn’t take those courses lightly,” she said. “I’ve saved a lot of money because I can fix things myself rather than having to hire somebody.” Green’s experience reflects a broader challenge facing many working parents in the Mississippi Delta.

Foundation for the Mid South recognized common workforce challenges and awarded $550,000 in grant funding to 11 organizations working to solve these barriers to employment, including childcare, transportation, and access to training.  Grant recipients include organizations such as 180 Career Center, The Bean Path, Delta Compass, Dream Innovations, Inc., Deep South Today, Holmes County Consolidated School District, Humphreys County School District, Jackson Municipal Airport Authority, Metro Booming Training Academy, Reuben V. Anderson Center for Justice, and Sipp Culture. This story is part of a sponsored series supported by the Foundation for the Mid South’s Moving Mississippians Forward Through Employment initiative. 

Celestial Gordon-Griffin, program director of the Harvesting Hope program at the Reuben V. Anderson Center for Justice, is determined to help women overcome systemic and daily challenges to make generational changes. The program helps single mothers, many of whom have been incarcerated, with job training, financial literacy, soft skills, and career development through farming. “You’re learning how to farm, what to farm, what to plant, what time of the year to plant,” she said. “You’re learning how to market the harvest of what your hands have planted. And that’s important because we’re showing them how they can take a simple and humble thing such as farming and make it into a career that’s going to ultimately change their lives and their children’s lives and their children’s children’s lives.” 

The program provides a child care stipend for participants and works with farmers who empathize with the mothers’ needs. “A lot of our farmers have been willing to work around their schedules,” Gordon-Griffin noted.

Although demand was much higher, the program started with 10 women who will receive the credential of Certified Sustainable Agricultural Practitioner.  Julian Miller, cofounder and director emeritus of the Reuben V. Anderson Center for Justice, said the goal is to scale over time to help more individuals. 

Iris Stacker, chief executive officer of Delta Health System, acknowledges the challenges people face in their personal lives from an employer perspective. “At this time, transportation and childcare remain significant barriers for many of our employees, and we continue to struggle in this area as a rural healthcare system. Limited public transportation options, long commute distances, and a shortage of affordable, reliable child care make it difficult for some employees to consistently report to work or take on additional shifts.”

Mitzi Woods, workforce director for South Delta Planning and Development District, agrees. “Transportation and child care will always be a problem, and there are never enough solutions for that,” she said. While recent federal cuts and exhausted funds have enhanced the child care crisis, Woods noted the best way to obtain child care assistance is through the state’s Department of Human Services. 

Working parents often face a substantial financial burden with child care. The Mississippi Department of Human Services reports that child care tuition represents as much as 13% of a dual-income family’s budget, a number that is often doubled for single-income families. MDHS helps with access to affordable child care through payment assistance, after-school programs, and help finding child care that fits individual needs. 

To apply for the Child Care Payment Program, eligible families must first find a child care provider, complete the online application, and submit supporting documents, including proof of age and income. If approved, families will receive vouchers to apply toward child care expenses. Assistance may not cover the full cost, and some families may need to pay the remaining balance. Families must meet eligibility requirements, including income limits and work requirements. For assistance navigating the Child Care Payment Program, call 800-877-7882.

Once individuals have child care, those who don’t have reliable transportation still face the hurdle of getting to work. Delta Rides Regional Transportation Group helps bridge the transportation gap. Its network of non-profit organizations provides safe and affordable transportation through bus routes and curb-to-curb vans. Doris Green, Delta Rides regional mobility manager, said there is a mileage-based fee scale for most rides. If an individual is not equipped to pay for a ride, free assistance is available on a case-by-case basis. 

The Delta Rides Regional Group services the following counties: Bolivar, Carroll, Coahoma, De Soto, Grenada, Issaquena, Holmes, Humphreys, Leflore, Montgomery, Panola, Sunflower, Tunica, Sharkey, Tate, Tallahatchie, Warren, Washington, Yalobusha, and Yazoo. To discuss fare costs or to schedule transportation, call Green at 662-846-6161.

Dr. Pam Chatman, better known as the Boss Lady, created Boss Lady Economic Planning & Development Workforce Transportation based on her assessment of transportation challenges. “For years, transportation has been a barrier in the South,” Chatman said. “Companies are looking for people who really want to go to work. They feel transportation could help them.”  

She started Boss Lady Economic Planning & Development Workforce Transportation as a rural transportation partnership between FedEx and Delta Bus Lines to connect workers in Clarksdale, Mississippi to the major FedEx hub in Memphis, Tennessee. The organization received funding from The Foundation for the Mid South and has now helped thousands of families in the Mississippi Delta with workforce transportation. She hopes to partner with more businesses to connect them with workers. “More industries need to look at adding transportation as they are opening new businesses throughout the Delta,” Chatman said. “Transportation needs a conversation at the table.” 

How to Get Help with Employment

  1. Start by visiting a WIN Job Center. Located throughout Mississippi, the job centers offer employment experts who assist with job placement, skill training, career counseling, resume reviews, and more. Staff will work with individual job seekers to determine their needs and refer them to the proper partner agencies and resources. All services are free, and no appointments are needed.
  2. Review pathway opportunities through MSPathfinder. People can search occupations by region and ecosystem to understand which jobs are most relevant to their area. Each job page includes a job description, average salary, and links to specific training programs to help people find pathways close to home. While some of the jobs require degrees, most do not. 
  3. Apply for relevant training. Training options vary depending on the program. WIN Job Centers and MSPathfinder will both guide people to appropriate training for their desired career path. Training and certification programs are often offered through local community colleges.
  4. Attend a workforce expo. On March 5, Mississippi Today will host a free workforce expo at Jackson Medical Mall in Jackson, bringing together employers, training providers, and resource organizations in one place. The event is designed to connect job seekers directly with opportunities and information. For workers navigating child care gaps, long commutes, and shifting job markets, access to the right support at the right time can make the difference between staying stuck and moving forward.

Department of Mental Health asks for more oversight for others and less for itself

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The audio version of this story is AI generated and is not human reviewed. It may contain errors or inaccuracies.

When Department of Mental Health Executive Director Wendy Bailey discussed a Mississippi bill to require audits for community mental health centers in January in the Senate Accountability, Efficiency, Transparency committee, she told lawmakers the performance audits would help them learn more about the health needs of the state.

“Issues that are revealed through a performance audit can also help you see what areas of the state there’re gaps in services, and there may need to be more funding or additional things looked at,” she told the Senate committee on Jan. 28. “It really should be a positive thing, not a punitive thing.”

Left out of Bailey’s testimony was that the bill, which passed its first chamber Feb. 12, would simultaneously eliminate a key process designed to ensure Mississippi provides the public with mental health service information and oversight into how Bailey’s agency operates. 

In addition to tasking Bailey’s department with creating performance standards by which to measure community mental health centers at least once every two years, the bill axes an independent mental health state oversight office. Created by the Legislature in 2020, the office operates from the Department of Finance and Administration and is tasked with comprehensively reviewing Missisisppi’s mental health system.

Bill Rosamond has served as coordinator since the office was created. In that role, he publishes reports four times a year about gaps in mental health access and the state of Mississippi’s community mental centers. Current state law gives the coordinator the power to examine and make recommendations on how to improve access to Mississippi mental health, substance misuse and intellectual and developmental disabilities services. 

“It allows investigation into essentially every area of mental health services in our state,” Rosamond said of the legislation that created his position to Families As Allies Executive Director Joy Hogge in a 2020 interview. He did not respond to emails from Mississippi Today asking for his thoughts on this proposed law. 

Hogge, an advocate who has worked with people seeking mental health services for over three decades, said she was initially concerned about Rosamond in that interview. She said she had worried about his past working relationships with the state’s mental health department and how that could impact his oversight of that agency. 

When the federal Department of Justice sued Mississippi in 2016 and accused the state’s mental health system of violating the Americans with Disabilities Act, Rosamond worked at the Mississippi Office of the Attorney General and helped defend the state. 

James Shelson, lead attorney representing the state, carries documents as he and his colleagues exit the federal courthouse in Jackson, following a hearing on updates about the status of the lawsuit over mental health services in Mississippi, Monday, July 12, 2021. The U.S. Justice Department accused the state of failing to provide adequate services in the community for adults with mental illness. Credit: AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

But Hogge told Mississippi Today that since Rosamond took office, she and other advocates who pay attention to Mississippi’s mental health system have found his reports and monitoring valuable for revealing unmet needs in the state. Recent reports have focused on the lack of public intensive treatment options that don’t involve overnight hospitalization, problems with people accused of crimes being psychologically evaluated for their ability to stand trial and why chancery clerks were reporting inconsistent data as to how many people were jailed while awaiting mental health treatment.

She also didn’t know of any other office tasked with monitoring the Department of Mental Health.

“Every entity needs something outside of itself to hold it accountable,” Hogge said. 

Sen. Nicole Boyd, a Republican from Oxford and the bill’s sponsor, told Mississippi Today the Legislature created the mental health accessibility office because of the 2016 federal lawsuit, and the state in 2023 successfully argued the Department of Justice couldn’t enforce this part of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Because of that, there is no longer a need for the office, Boyd said.

A court transcript from shortly after the Legislature created Rosamond’s office indicates that U.S. District Court Judge Carlton Reeves, who oversaw the case, thought the position would impact the case, but neither he nor the parties asked for it to be created. At one point, he expressed concern that the person who fills the position could “blow up everything” he and the lawyers had worked for.

When former House Public Health and Human Services Chair Sam Mims, a Republican from McComb, spoke about the bill that created Rosamond’s office on the House floor in 2020, he did not bring up the federal lawsuit. 

Instead, he used similar language to how Bailey described this year’s bill; some of Mississippi’s community mental health centers are struggling, and the mental health accessibility coordinator could help the Department of Mental Health better work with the centers. 

“We really believe this is going to help our constituents and really provide the mental health services that our citizens have been needing,” Mims said.

Nearly six years later, Boyd said she and other state lawmakers get similar information to the quarterly reports Rosamond’s office writes from the Department of Mental Health, and it didn’t need to spend taxpayer money for duplicative services. When asked who the independent entity would be monitoring the Department of Mental Health, she said the Legislature would do that. 

“We don’t need to be paying another half-million dollars to another entity,” Boyd said. “We don’t do that for any other agency.”

Sen. Nicole Boyd, center, listens at a legislative hearing at the Capitol in Jackson on Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

Other Mississippi agencies, like the Department of Child Protection Services, have independent monitoring because of court appointments for ongoing cases.

Boyd also said that Bailey and the State Board of Mental Health have for years asked for a bill to more formally monitor the community mental health centers. The centers operate independently, but the Department of Mental Health sets standards and allocates funding for them. In budget hearings earlier in the session, the department asked for an additional $4.2 million for the centers for the upcoming fiscal year.

In addition to mandating audits of community mental health centers, the bill would oust some executive staff of centers that don’t meet performance standards six months after a failed audit. Those roles would temporarily be replaced with contractors chosen by the Department of Mental Health. 

When discussing the bill on the Senate floor, Boyd compared it to the state’s ability to take over school districts when issues arise.

“My community mental health center is very in support of this legislation,” Boyd said to the other senators. “Many community mental health centers are in support of this legislation.” 

Melody Madaris, executive director of the community mental health center in Boyd’s district, said she didn’t want to speak directly about the legislation. She said she supports transparency and accountability of mental health services, and she believes organizations like hers already cooperate with strong oversight from organizations like the Department of Mental Health.

Emily Presley, a Narcan trainer with Communicare, gives training during the Northeast Mississippi Addiction Summit in Tupelo, Miss., Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2024. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

The state agency conducts regular site visits to all of its certified providers, including community mental health centers, and requires them to implement quality assurance measures.

“I feel like we have multiple layers of oversight,” she said.

When Mississippi Today reached out to the mental health department about the bill, department spokesperson Adam Moore did not address concerns about the elimination of Rosamond’s office. In an email, he said the agency continues to be committed to transparency even after the state overturned the federal government’s 2016 lawsuit, and it publishes data about programs and services it funds. 

Phaedre Cole, president of the Mississippi Association of Community Mental Health Centers, speaks to lawmakers about federal healthcare funding cuts during the Democratic caucus meeting at the State Capitol in Jackson, Miss., on Tuesday, April 1, 2025. Credit: Eric Shelton/Mississippi Today

For the part of the bill that calls for additional community mental health center audits, Moore said the proposed language would formalize the department’s oversight of these health services. He pointed out that multiple centers have had to consolidate in recent years

“This process could have possibly prevented some of the issues that have been seen in the centers over the past several years,” he said. 

Phaedre Cole, president of the Mississippi Association of Community Mental Health Centers and executive director of the center that serves most of the Delta, disagreed with Moore that these types of audits could have saved other organizations from collapsing. In an email, she said it was because of the financial hardships that come with serving Mississippians regardless of their ability to pay for care — hardships that have been furthered by recent funding cuts

She echoed Madaris that the state mental health department has broad regulatory power already, and state law tasks local governments with overseeing most community mental health center responsibilities. This bill, she said, does not address the underlying financial reasons why public community mental health services may not reach all Mississippians. 

“If CMHCs are going to continue fulfilling our role as the state’s safety net provider, funding resources will need to match that obligation,” she said. 

The bill is now referred to the House Accountability, Efficiency, Transparency Committee.