Seeking love, compassion, respect, and racial harmony for all people.
The Committee for King was formed in 1986. Its purpose is to fulfill the dreams of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Since the Committee for King started, it has made significant contributions to Tupelo and the North Mississippi area. Each year, the Committee for King and the City of Tupelo, in a cooperative effort, along with other organizations, host a 4-day, community-wide celebration in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
As a result of these events, CFK offers scholarships to deserving high school seniors, provides educational and cultural enrichment to our community, as well as bringing citizens of all races together to appreciate our likeness and understand our differences. As a result of these four days of events, the average overall attendance is about 2500 people, which makes it the largest MLK celebration in Mississippi.1
Good morning Tupelo! Today is Thursday, January 9, 2020. It is the 9th day of the year. There are 357 days left in the year (don’t forget this is Leap Year!) and 69 days left of winter! Valentine’s Day is in 36 days, and Spring starts in 70 days.
If you’d like to become a sponsor of our daily Rundown, please contact joshua.ballard@ourtupelo.com or call 662-260-1498
HAPPENING TODAY
Today in Tupelo, here are the things going on around town:
Miranda Lambert’s Little Red Wagon Tour is partnering with the Tupelo-Lee Humane Society to help them get what they need to take care of all those sweet animals! From now until January 10, 2020, you can bring donations to Steele’s Dive to be entered into a drawing for two free tickets. There will be two drawings held on January 10 for the January 16th concert, meaning that there will be two lucky winners who will receive a free pair of tickets EACH.
We have a free family four-pack of tickets to see the Harlem Globetrotters at the Bancorpsouth Arena on January 13 to give away to our followers here at OurTupelo! As a bonus, these four tickets also come with Magic Passes! We’ll be running this promotion though January 11, and announcing the winner at noon-ish on that day. Make sure to check out the pinned post on our Facebook page for details on how to win!
Storyplay at the Lee County Library in Tupelo is today at 9:30am. Storyplay is a storytime program featuring songs, rhymes, activities, and books more suitable for the baby to toddler set. Play will be highlighted and embraced during this program and modifications will be presented to accommodate different abilities and age groups.
Be sure and hit up the Lyric Theatre at 2 p.m. for the unveiling of the Elvis monument as part of the driving tour of Tupelo.
The Columbus Arts Council invites you to their Worlds Collide exhibit as the amazing pottery of Stephen Phillips meets the action figure photography of Erik Studdard! This main gallery exhibit will be a display of super hero might and super villain force! You’ll also not want to miss checking out the art from the Columbus Air Force Base Youth Group in Artist Alley. A reception for the artists will be held from 5:30-7pm and is free and open to the public.
Local Mobile will be at Midtown Point on Industrial Road 11 – 1:30 p.m.
Jo’s Cafe will be at Midtown Point on Industrial Road 11 – 1:30 p.m.
If we missed listing an event you know of, let us know!
Want us to know about something coming up? Just tag our Facebook page, or you can even mark us co-host on an event you are having on your Facebook event listing. You can also send us a message on our Facebook page, or shoot us an email at submit@ourtupelo.com and we will help you share it.
Be sure to check out our extended calendar of events as well, for upcoming happenings in the area!
Have a great day and get out there and enjoy Our Tupelo!
* We update all listings periodically as new information becomes available.
On January 7, new and familiar faces will convene at the Mississippi Capitol for the start of the 2020 legislative session.
As a whole, the incoming lawmakers comprise a Legislature still whiter and maler than the Mississippi they represent.
Although the Legislature’s makeup does not mirror the state itself, the November 2019 statewide elections ushered in new representation for many districts. Now, those legislators serving in the 2020-2024 term comprise a slightly more African American and female group of lawmakers than the previous term.
Census data breaks down the demographics of Mississippi’s roughly 2.9 million person population. The state is 52 percent female (compared to 16 percent in the Legislature), 58 percent white (in the Legislature, that total is roughly 68 percent), and 38 percent black (31 percent in the Legislature).
In the House, men replaced three seats previously held by women — in districts 14, 70, and 95 — but the chamber also gained seven new female representatives. Five of those women replaced men, and two replaced women who previously held the seat. Most of these changes were within their respective parties, except for Shanda Yates from District 64 and Hester Jackson McCray from District 40, who each flipped seats formerly held by Republicans. McCray will be the first African American to represent DeSoto County in the Legislature in the modern era, and the third African American to represent a majority-white legislative district since Reconstruction.
In the Senate, Democrats saw a 21 percentage point increase in black membership. This is not because more African Americans were voted into the Senate. White Republicans actually flipped four seats previously held by white Democrats in districts 5 (J.P. Wilemon), 8 (Russell Jolly), 37 (Bob Dearing), and 48 (Deborah Dawkins), so the number of white Democrats decreased. As a whole, the Senate saw a slight increase it its percentage of female members because three Republican women — Kathy Chism, Nicole Akins Boyd, and Melanie Sojourner — each won districts previously held by men, and Democrat Sarita Simmons took over her father Willie Simmons’ seat in district 13.
*Editor’s note: After this story published, Rep. Kevin Horan and Rep. Michael Ted Evans switched from the Democrat to Independent party. The information in this story has been updated to reflect that.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Address: Gypsy Roadside Mobile Cafe is a mobile food truck whose location varies! You may call in orders at (662) 820-9940.
Gypsy Roadside Mobile Cafe specializes in serving quality and unique food daily. Each day, two very passionate chefs cook, prepare, set-up and serve you to ensure quality products each visit. We want to take your taste buds on a “truckin” journey, so to speak, just like how our food truck journeys the city.
What I ordered: The Bohemian Burger!
This is a classic cheeseburger that starts with a 6 ounce beef patty with your choice of cheddar or Gouda cheese and crisp veggies to top off this mouthwatering handheld masterpiece!
You can find The Gypsy Roadside Mobile Cafe’s location daily by checking out their Facebook page or by checking our local listings of food truck locations in the Our Tupelo Rundown!
The House took steps Wednesday to correct a bureaucratic error to ensure there is enough money available to give all Mississippi teachers their $1,500 pay raise that was signed into law last year.
In the 2019 legislative session, lawmakers passed a $1,500 pay raise for public school teachers and assistant teachers and set aside $58 million to cover the expense. Before the bill was passed, the Legislature asked the Mississippi Department of Education for a count of teachers to be included in the raise and how much that would cost. Department officials used an incorrect code in an information system used to track teachers, and as a result only included state-funded teaching positions.
Because some teachers are paid with federal funds instead of state funds, some special education, career technical education, gifted classes and teacher assistants were accidentally omitted from the count. The error was discovered when local superintendents discovered there were not enough funds for them to give raises to all of their teachers. In all, nearly 10,000 teachers were omitted from the raise.
Lawmakers took the first step to correct this Wednesday, when the House appropriations committee passed House Bill 1 — the first bill considered by lawmakers in the House or Senate during the 2020 legislative session.
The bill authorizes $18.4 million from the state’s general fund to ensure there is enough to pay for the raises of all 40,991 certified teachers and assistant teachers. The bill now moves on to the full House for consideration.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
The Mississippi Department of Corrections is moving state inmates to a privately operated prison in Tallahatchie County following recent outbursts of deadly violence in multiple Mississippi prisons.
Sources in the law enforcement community confirmed the transfers to the Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility to Mississippi Today.
The number of prisoners who have been moved and when the transfers began are unclear.
Officials with the corrections department and Gov. Phil Bryant’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday morning.
Nashville-based CoreCivic currently owns and operates the prison, located in the town of Tutwiler. A spokeswoman for CoreCivic referred questions about the matter to the state department of corrections.
(Editor’s note: Mississippi Today board member and donor Charles Overby has served on the CoreCivic board of directors since December 2001.)
CoreCivic, formerly known as Corrections Corporation of America, has owned the facility since 2000. The company is one of the country’s two largest correctional firms and the company has prospered in recent years as President Donald Trump has promised a tough-on-crime agenda, including immigration and immigrant detention.
The facility began housing federal immigration detainees in the summer of 2018.
In 2013, CoreCivic (then CCA) lost its contract with the state of Mississippi to operate the 1,000-bed Wilkinson County Correctional Facility. The contract was awarded to Utah-based private operator MTC instead, then the only prison contractor for state-owned facilities.
CoreCivic has donated to the campaigns of both Bryant and his incoming successor Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves in recent elections. In 2015, company donated $1,000 to each campaign. Last year, CoreCivic contributed $1,000 to Reeves’s gubernatorial campaign; the company did not contribute to the campaign of Reeves’s Democratic opponent, Jim Hood, per records from the National Institute on Money in Politics.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Good morning Tupelo! Today is Wednesday, January 8, 2020. It is the 8th day of the year. There are 358 days left in the year (don’t forget this is Leap Year!) and 70 days left of winter! Valentine’s Day is in 37 days, and Spring starts in 71 days.
If you’d like to become a sponsor of our daily Rundown, please contact joshua.ballard@ourtupelo.com or call 662-260-1498
HAPPENING TODAY
Today in Tupelo, here are the things going on around town:
Miranda Lambert’s Little Red Wagon Tour is partnering with the Tupelo-Lee Humane Society to help them get what they need to take care of all those sweet animals! From now until January 10, 2020, you can bring donations to Steele’s Dive to be entered into a drawing for two free tickets. There will be two drawings held on January 10 for the January 16th concert, meaning that there will be two lucky winners who will receive a free pair of tickets EACH.
We have a free family four-pack of tickets to see the Harlem Globetrotters at the Bancorpsouth Arena on January 13 to give away to our followers here at OurTupelo! As a bonus, these four tickets also come with Magic Passes! We’ll be running this promotion though January 11, and announcing the winner at noon-ish on that day. Make sure to check out the pinned post on our Facebook page for details on how to win!
Join Chick-Fil-A for Breakfast and BINGO every Wednesday. Tell your parents or grandparents about it! Kids are also welcomed guests! All first time bingo guests may receive a free coffee!
There will be a short program to celebrate the 85th birthday of the King of Rock and Roll at the Elvis Presley Birthplace at 1 p.m.. Cupcakes and drinks will be served. All tickets are free, and the event will be livestreamed on Facebook Live.
If we missed listing an event you know of, let us know!
Want us to know about something coming up? Just tag our Facebook page, or you can even mark us co-host on an event you are having on your Facebook event listing. You can also send us a message on our Facebook page, or shoot us an email at submit@ourtupelo.com and we will help you share it.
Be sure to check out our extended calendar of events as well, for upcoming happenings in the area!
Have a great day and get out there and enjoy Our Tupelo!
* We update all listings periodically as new information becomes available.
Good morning Tupelo! Today is Tuesday, January 7, 2020. It is the 7th day of the year. There are 359 days left in the year (don’t forget this is Leap Year!) and 71 days left of winter! Valentine’s Day is in 38 days, and Spring starts in 72 days.
If you’d like to become a sponsor of our daily Rundown, please contact joshua.ballard@ourtupelo.com or call 662-260-1498
HAPPENING TODAY
Today in Tupelo, here are the things going on around town:
Miranda Lambert’s Little Red Wagon Tour is partnering with the Tupelo-Lee Humane Society to help them get what they need to take care of all those sweet animals! From now until January 10, 2020, you can bring donations to Steele’s Dive to be entered into a drawing for two free tickets. There will be two drawings held on January 10 for the January 16th concert, meaning that there will be two lucky winners who will receive a free pair of tickets EACH.
We have a free family four-pack of tickets to see the Harlem Globetrotters at the Bancorpsouth Arena on January 13 to give away to our followers here at OurTupelo! As a bonus, these four tickets also come with Magic Passes! We’ll be running this promotion though January 11, and announcing the winner at noon-ish on that day. Make sure to check out the pinned post on our Facebook page for details on how to win!
Old Venice Pizza Co in Tupelo will be hosting Tuesday Night Trivia tonight at 6pm.
In Fulton, check out STEM Story Time at the Itawamba County Pratt Memorial Library in Fulton, every Tuesday at 4:00 p.m..
MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT
Steele’s Dive will have Matt Nolan tonight from 7 until 10 p.m.
If we missed listing an event you know of, let us know!
Want us to know about something coming up? Just tag our Facebook page, or you can even mark us co-host on an event you are having on your Facebook event listing. You can also send us a message on our Facebook page, or shoot us an email at submit@ourtupelo.com and we will help you share it.
Be sure to check out our extended calendar of events as well, for upcoming happenings in the area!
Have a great day and get out there and enjoy Our Tupelo!
* We update all listings periodically as new information becomes available.
by Kayleigh Skinner & Adam Ganucheau, Mississippi Today, January 6, 2020
Mississippi Department of Corrections Commissioner Pelicia Hall and other department officials sat across the table from lawmakers at the Capitol less than one year ago and issued a bleak warning: Without additional funding, the department couldn’t adequately staff the state’s prisons and guarantee the safety of more 19,000 inmates or prison workers.
“I’m almost at capacity in my facilities. That’s not a good place for us to be in in the state of Mississippi,” Hall told lawmakers in a Jan. 16, 2019 House appropriations subcommittee hearing for her department.
Hall continued: “We expect that our correctional staff and all the people working for corrections are supposed to be able to deliver services for 19,197 people incarcerated… they’re supposed to deliver (services) with honor and integrity and courage. And we’ve not taken care of them. We expect them to perform like eagles with people who society has said they’ve given up on them… they expect the department of corrections to be able to correct everything that has fallen by the wayside.”
The direct plea to lawmakers was one of several that corrections officials and criminal justice advocates made over a period of several years. Almost every time, lawmakers ignored those pleas.
The new year began with crisis in Mississippi correctional institutions. To date, at least five prisoners have been killed in what the state has called disturbances at three facilities. Local sheriffs’ offices sent more than 100 officers to Mississippi State Penitentiary in Sunflower County to combat an outbreak of violence.
Family members of inmates at Parchman haven’t heard from their loved ones in several days as graphic videos of conditions inside the prison circulate social media. The department of corrections issued a statewide lockdown of all its prisons to reduce injuries and fatalities.
In the same January 2019 hearing, Manisa Ragsdale, a lieutenant with the corrections department, told the committee that employees’ working conditions were outright dangerous.
“One of the main concerns that I see happening every day is low staffing,” Ragsdale said. “If we were to have a major incident to happen, there is no one there to respond to the incidents.”
Ragsdale continued: “People are having to come in early just so they can have adequate staff to run the shift for one day. It’s kind of dangerous. If you have something to happen you don’t have anyone to respond. If I’m in a major crisis, who is going to come and see about me?”
The department of corrections has remained tight-lipped the past several days, though prison officials now say the facilities are under control. Social media videos and photos, purportedly posted by inmates, have alluded to lack of staff response during such incidents as fires and prisoner-on-prisoner violence.
To address these shortages, Hall, the commissioner, asked lawmakers for $22.3 million to repair Unit 29 at Parchman – the maximum security unit at Mississippi State Penitentiary where at least three men were killed and dozens more were injured this month. In his most recent budget recommendation, Gov. Phil Bryant called for $6 million for the first phase of that building project.
This spring, lawmakers ultimately approved a total budget of $36 million for Parchman, 2.6 percent less than the prison received the previous year — and $22.8 million short of the total sum Hall requested.
The Legislature did not grant the prison department’s request for the money to repair Unit 29.
Today, the department still needs $22.3 million to renovate Unit 29 alone, MDOC communications director Grace Fisher said in August 2019. She did not have a figure for the prison’s total renovation.
That same month Mississippi Today outlined the findings of a state inspection of the prison which found Unit 29 had the most health violations and the prison itself had more than 400 cells with flooding, leaks, lack of lights, power and water and other health issues like black mold and raw sewage.
An analysis shows lawmakers cut the department’s budget three times in the past eight years. In years the department received funding increases, the upticks were marginal and considerably less than what the department requested.
Corrections budgets were cut in fiscal years 2017, 2016 and 2012 compared to previous years.
The past two years, the department received increases of 2 percent and 1 percent, respectively, but those increases were about $40 million less than the department requested each year.
Lawmakers did dole out 3 percent raises in 2019 for some state employees, including corrections officers. About 900 officers, whose previous salaries ranged from $24,903 per year for trainees to $32,205 for sergeants, were granted the full 3 percent raise.
But even after Hall asked lawmakers to provide the pay increase for corrections officers, the raise did little to move the needle.
“I shudder to think if I had to run a household” on the salary officers make, Hall said in 2018.
In January 2019, Hall said she was losing employees to Mississippi factories such as Continental Tire and Nissan because they offered better wages and working conditions.
“We’re losing our workforce,” Hall said. “I’m sitting here as the commissioner saying that, and I don’t like to say it but that’s the situation that we have.”
Civil rights organizations have made their case to lawmakers that understaffing is just one problem that has led to the department’s woes. One solution they’ve pitched to lawmakers is legal reform about what constitutes prison time in the state.
“Mississippi politicians talk about how tough they are when it comes to fighting crime, but we need to ask whether they are being smart,” Cliff Johnson, director of the MacArthur Justice Center at the University of Mississippi School of Law, said in July 2019. “You can’t throw people in prison for years on end for every offense under the sun and then act shocked when the prison population swells to 20,000 and you can’t afford the astronomical price tag that goes along with having one of the highest incarceration rates in the world.”
Johnson continued: “It seems to me that the only way Mississippi can afford the cost of prisons that actually keep people safe is to reduce the number of people we lock up and to impose shorter sentences for many crimes. There is a way to do that thoughtfully and safely.”
Still, lawmakers and other state leaders have talked about their commitment to the corrections department.
On Sunday, after days of violence within the statewide prison system, outgoing Gov. Bryant stressed Mississippi’s need to “invest in its prison system and the men and women who work there.” However, during his eight years in office, Bryant implemented several annual and mid-year agency cuts to balance the state’s budget. All of those mid-year cuts affected the corrections department, though Bryant exempted the Mississippi Highway Patrol once, citing safety concerns.
Gov.-elect Tate Reeves, who will be inaugurated on Jan. 14, echoed that sentiment, tweeting that he was briefed by the department on the recent violence and “grateful to those working to restore order and safety.”
“There is much work to be done in our correctional system,” Reeves said.
As the 2020 legislative session gavels in this week, the department of corrections does not have a permanent leader. Hall announced in late December that she would resign her post in mid-January for a job in the private sector. Reeves, the incoming governor, has not yet announced who he will appoint as her replacement.
“We’ve always fought for you, we’ve always fought for the department of corrections,” Rep. Angela Cockerham, I-Magnolia, told Hall in the January 2019 meeting. “Don’t ever think that you don’t have support because you do.”
Michelle Liu contributed to this report.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Good morning Tupelo! Today is Monday, January 6, 2020. It is the 6th day of the year. There are 360 days left in the year (don’t forget this is Leap Year!) and 72 days left of winter! Valentine’s Day is in 39 days, and Spring starts in 73 days.
If you’d like to become a sponsor of our daily Rundown, please contact joshua.ballard@ourtupelo.com or call 662-260-1498
HAPPENING TODAY
Today in Tupelo, here are the things going on around town:
The Bancorpsouth Arena will be open for Public Ice Skating today from 1:00 p.m. this afternoon until 6:00 p.m. tonight. Ice Rink Admission price is $12 per person and this includes skate rental.
Miranda Lambert’s Little Red Wagon Tour is partnering with the Tupelo-Lee Humane Society to help them get what they need to take care of all those sweet animals! From now until January 10, 2020, you can bring donations to Steele’s Dive to be entered into a drawing for two free tickets. There will be two drawings held on January 10 for the January 16th concert, meaning that there will be two lucky winners who will receive a free pair of tickets EACH.
We have a free family four-pack of tickets to see the Harlem Globetrotters at the Bancorpsouth Arena on January 13 to give away to our followers here at OurTupelo! As a bonus, these four tickets also come with Magic Passes! We’ll be running this promotion though January 11, and announcing the winner at noon-ish on that day. Make sure to check out the pinned post on our Facebook page for details on how to win!
Tupelo-Lee Humane Society invites you to Kitten Yoga! Kitten Yoga is held every Monday evening from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.. Classes are $10 per person and will be taught by professional yoga instructors in an environment filled with kitten happiness!
FOOD TRUCKS
Tupelo’s Food Trucks can be found today at the following locations:
Local Mobile will be at Ballard Park on West Main Street from 11:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
If we missed listing an event you know of, let us know!
Want us to know about something coming up? Just tag our Facebook page, or you can even mark us co-host on an event you are having on your Facebook event listing. You can also send us a message on our Facebook page, or shoot us an email at submit@ourtupelo.com and we will help you share it.
Be sure to check out our extended calendar of events as well, for upcoming happenings in the area!
Have a great day and get out there and enjoy Our Tupelo!
* We update all listings periodically as new information becomes available.