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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1866

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JULY 30, 1866

Credit: Harper's Weekly, Library of

Black , many of them of the , were killed in New Orleans when they paraded outside the Constitutional Convention in favor of their right to vote. According to the official , a total of 38 people were killed and 146 wounded. Other estimates put the numbers even higher.

“The whites stomped, kicked, and clubbed the black marchers mercilessly,” wrote Ulysses S. Grant’s biographer, Ron Chernow. “Policemen smashed the … windows and fired into it indiscriminately until the floor grew slick with blood. They emptied their revolvers on the convention delegates, who desperately sought to escape. Some leaped from windows and were shot dead when they landed. Those lying wounded on the ground were stabbed repeatedly, their skulls bashed in with brickbats. The sadism was so wanton that men who kneeled and prayed for mercy were killed instantly, while dead bodies were stabbed and mutilated.”

This massacre and similar violence helped fuel the Reconstruction Act, breaking the South into military districts in 1866. Martial was imposed on New Orleans, and were from office for the roles they played in the massacre. The violence also helped fuel the passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.

No one was ever tried or convicted in the massacre.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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https://www.biloxinewsevents.com/?p=272091

Mississippi Today

Medicaid advisory committee, required to meet four times a year, hasn’t convened since 2023

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mississippitoday.org – Gwen Dilworth – 2024-10-18 09:30:00

It has been over 10 months since a committee tasked with advising the Mississippi Division of Medicaid last met, despite being required by to meet quarterly.

The agency postponed the committee’s meeting for Friday and did not set a new date. Medicaid spokesperson Matt Westerfield said the meeting was canceled because of the “transition in executive leadership” after Executive Director Drew Snyder announced his resignation earlier this month.

The Medical Care Advisory Committee is a federally mandated public body that offers expertise and opinions to the Division of Medicaid about health and medical care services. It is made up of , managed care organization representatives and other Medicaid stakeholders.

The advisory group has not met yet this year because new member appointments – made by the governor, lieutenant governor and house speaker – were not finalized until August, said Medicaid spokesperson Matt Westerfield.

The committee’s recommendations have played a crucial role in crafting state Medicaid policy in the past. In 2023, the advisory group’s recommendation contributed to the Legislature’s passage of postpartum Medicaid coverage

The advisory group’s last meeting was Dec. 8, 2023. 

At that meeting, Snyder and a hospital CEO stalled a vote on pregnancy presumptive eligibility, which allows eligible low-income women to timely prenatal care, by suggesting that the committee wait to review further information about the policy at a special meeting in January. 

The special meeting never happened

Regardless, the Legislature passed a bill that allows low-income pregnant women to be presumed eligible for health care coverage while their Medicaid application is being processed in May 2023. 

No minutes were produced from the December meeting, said Westerfield. Mississippi’s public records law requires that minutes be kept for all meetings of a public body. 

The committee is composed of at least 11 members appointed by the governor, lieutenant governor and the Speaker of the House of Representatives. All members must be health care providers or consumers of health services, and each official must include a board-certified physician among their appointments. 

Mississippi Medicaid Executive Director Drew Snyder also made appointments to the committee in accordance with state law and new federal regulations released in April. 

Gov. Tate Reeves made his appointments in February, Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann in July, and Speaker of the House Jason White and Snyder in August. 

Hosemann’s spokesperson did not answer a question about the delay in appointments. White did not respond to a request for comment. 

Westerfield said the new federal requirements for the committee affected the timing of Snyder’s appointments. 

The federal policy, which went into effect July 9, heightens the role that beneficiaries play in shaping Medicaid programs and policy. 

The rule requires states to establish a Beneficiary Advisory Council composed solely of Medicaid members, their families and caregivers. Some of those members will serve on the Medical Care Advisory Committee, which will be renamed the Medicaid Advisory Committee, beginning next year.

Mississippi law requires the Medicaid Advisory Committee to provide a written to the Governor, Lt. Governor and Speaker of the House of Representatives before Nov. 30. 

The current members of the committee are as follows: 

  • Dr. Jason Dees (Molina Healthcare)
  • Dr. Wade Dowell (Indianola Family Medical Group)
  • Ellen Friloux (North Mississippi Medical Center)
  • Dr. Anita Henderson (Hattiesburg Clinic)
  • Joy Hogge (Families as Allies)
  • Bennet Hubbard (Advanced Healthcare Management)
  • Dr. Jim (Columbus Orthopaedics)
  • Dr. Billy Long (GI Associates, retired)
  • Dr. Charles O’Mara (, retired)
  • Lesa McGillivray (UnitedHealthcare Community and State)
  • Dr. Craig Moffett (Maben Medical Clinic)
  • Kent Nicaud (Memorial Health System Hospital at )
  • Richard Roberson (Mississippi Hospital Association)
  • Michael Todaro (Magnolia Health Plan)
  • Dr. Marty Tucker ( of Mississippi Medical Center)

The committee also has eight non- members, including legislators.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1926

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-10-18 07:00:00

Oct. 18, 1926

Chuck Berry circa 1958 Credit: Wikipedia

Chuck Berry, sometimes called “The Father of Rock & Roll,” was born in St. Louis. 

He traded factory work for music, and his big break came in 1955 when he met Muddy Waters, who suggested he contact Leonard Chess of Chess . Berry wound up recording “Maybellene,” which reached #1 on Billboard’s Rhythm and Blues Chart and sold more than 1 million copies. He went on to record “Johnny B. Goode,” “Roll Over Beethoven!” and “Rock and Roll Music,” which influenced the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Beach and countless others. 

Bob Dylan called Berry “the Shakespeare of rock ‘n’ roll,” and John Lennon declared, “If you tried to give rock and roll another name, you might call it ‘Chuck Berry.’” 

In 1986, Berry became the first inductee into the Rock & Rock Hall of Fame, Rolling Stone magazine ranked him #5 among the “100 Greatest Artists of All Time,” and in 2000, the Kennedy Center honored him. Before the Voyager departed earth for deep , NASA included recordings of music from around the world, Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and “Johnny B. Goode.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

State-funded project to improve Jackson cul-de-sac near lawmaker’s home moves forward

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mississippitoday.org – Taylor Vance – 2024-10-17 16:55:00

A -funded to upgrade an already well-paved north cul-de-sac that runs by a Mississippi lawmaker’s house will go forward, a group of officials who oversee the project said on Thursday. 

Rebekah Staples, the director of the Capitol Complex Improvement District’s Project Advisory Committee, said at the group’s latest meeting that the project to repave the road near the legislator’s home and four other projects the allocated money for will proceed “as quickly as possible,” though some of the details are still being worked out. 

“I respect the Legislature and the governor passing the ,” Staples said. “We’re here to follow the law.” 

A investigation revealed that House Ways and Means Chairman Trey Lamar, a Republican from Senatobia, helped steer $400,000 in state taxpayer funds to repave Simwood Place in Jackson, where he owns a house.

Simwood Place, located in the affluent LoHo neighborhood of northeast Jackson, is roughly one-tenth of a mile long, with only 14 single-family homes.

State lawmakers and the local Jackson Council member who represents the area previously told Mississippi Today they did not ask state to allocate money for the Simwood Place project. Lamar has declined to answer specific questions about the Simwood project but said any “innuendo of wrongdoing is baseless.” 

A spending bill passed by the Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Tate Reeves routed projects through the CCID committee. The advisory committee is housed in the Department of Finance and Administration.

DFA is the primary agency responsible for state government financial and administrative operations, including employee payroll, employee insurance and maintaining state buildings. However, the Legislature has also tasked the agency with overseeing some operations of the CCID.

Jackson City Councilwoman Virgi Lindsay is a member of the CCID committee and said she wants the five projects earmarked by the Legislature to proceed, but she does not want the committee to neglect the other projects they are currently overseeing.  

The CCID is funded through a 9% sales tax diversion and recommends to DFA and other state leaders which projects to fund. Efforts to expand the CCID and establish a separate court system within it have drawn outcry from several Jackson citizens and officials who view it as a state takeover of the more affluent areas of Jackson and claim the state otherwise gives the city few resources.

READ MORE: ‘Trey Way’: Millions in taxpayer funds flow to powerful lawmaker’s country club and Jackson neighborhoods

Liz Welch, the director of DFA, said at the meeting that the projects the committee has prioritized and the projects the Legislature has appropriated money for will run concurrently with one another. 

“We will not let these projects languish,” Welch said. “That’s not what we do. We’re going to come up with an internal , and of course, we will discuss it with the advisory committee. But we’re going to do both.” 

It’s unclear exactly when DFA and the CCID committee will solicit bids for the project, but Staples and Welch said they hope to a substantive update to the rest of the committee by its next meeting on January 16.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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