Mississippi Today
College baseball is underway, as Southern Miss’ Colby Allen haunts Mississippi State
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HATTIESBURG — Colby Allen grew up 30 minutes from Starkville in Louisville. He played high school baseball at Starkville Academy, a couple miles from Dudy Noble Field. He was a strong-armed catcher, a good one — but not good enough to be recruited by by Mississippi State.
Allen attended a talent showcase three hours south at Southern Miss and impressed the coaches there with that strong right arm. “Hmmmm,” Chris Ostrander, then the USM pitching coach, surmised, “I believe I can work with this.”
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Three years later, that decision to recruit and sign Allen seems one of the best of many, many wise ones now-head coach Ostrander has made. On Tuesday night, Allen threw the first four hitless innings of the Golden Eagles’ 3-0 victory over nationally ranked Mississippi State.
Allen, who begins his junior season as USM’s bullpen closer but could just as easily be the Friday night starter, was in postseason form, spotting his 91 mph fastball and using an evil slider to get most of his five strikeouts.
This was nothing new. Last season when Southern Miss won 43 games and its conference championship, Allen won 10, lost two and also contributed seven saves. He struck out 82 and walked only 18 in 65 innings. In an elimination game against Indiana in an NCAA Regional at eventual national champion Tennessee, he shut the Hoosiers down, allowing only four hits and one run and striking out eight over seven innings in a 15-3 Eagle victory.
That’s why Allen begins this season as a preseason All American. He doesn’t blow you away. He’s usually 91-92 mph on the radar gun, but he mixes pitches well, hits a lot of corners and rarely gives away bases with walks. He earned a save in USM’s season-opening victory over Lafayette and earned the victory Tuesday night. The season is not yet a week old, and he already has saved one victory and won another. That’s what Ostrander had in mind when he decided Allen would begin the season in the bullpen. That way, Ostrander believes, Allen can affect two, maybe even three victories, instead of just one per week.
We’ll see how it plays out. Allen, for one, doesn’t care.
“I don’t put a lot of stock in starting or relieving,” he said. “I just want to help my team win. I know I am going to get my innings. I don’t care what role I am in. We’re a band of brothers here. We’re just trying to come out No. 1.”
The Golden Eagles, 5-0, are off to a splendid start, although you wouldn’t know it from most of the various college baseball polls. They begin the season unranked, as usual. You would think that a program that has averaged 44 victories a season over the last eight full seasons and won two NCAA Regionals during that period would merit more respect. No, in Hattiesburg — Baseburg, they call it here — they have to earn it. History tells us they probably will.
History tells us also that some of the best college baseball in the country will be played in Mississippi this spring. Ole Miss won a national championship in 2022, State in 2021. Southern Miss has hosted Super Regionals two of the past three years.
All are off to good starts. Ole Miss won two of three games, all against nationally ranked teams, in the Shriners Children’s Showdown over the weekend and defeated Arkansas State Tuesday night. The return of left-handed pitching ace Hunter Elliot has Ole Miss fans excited and should. State, now 3-1, appears to have a better lineup, top to bottom, than last year’s team that won 40 games and made a regional final at Charlottesville.
A crowd of 5,741 packed Pete Taylor Park on a pleasantly cool Tuesday night to watch two in-state rivals go at it. State and USM have decided to play a home-and-home series this season instead of playing a single game at Trustmark Park in Pearl. The Eagles will return the favor March 4 at the Dude.
You’ll rarely see better mid-week pitching in college baseball than what transpired Tuesday night. Both teams managed a not-so-grand total of four hits each. State opened with highly touted freshman left-hander Charlie Foster, who will win a slew of games in Starkville before he’s done. Foster had some command issues and little help from the guys behind him, allowing all three USM runs — just one earned — over the first two innings. State’s bullpen was excellent, as was the Golden Eagles’ pitching throughout.
The game’s hitting star was Southern Miss centerfielder Joey Urban, a junior transfer, who was was All-Big East at Butler and slammed a home run, a double and a single in three plate appearances. Second baseman Nick Monistere provided the fielding heroics with a couple of diving stops, one to his right and another to his left, that would have made any Major Leaguer proud.
It is a measure of USM’s depth that Urban didn’t start the team’s first three games, sitting behind former Madison Central star Jake Cook.
Said Ostrander, “We’ve got three or four guys who would start for a lot of teams that aren’t starting for us. It’s a good problem to have, and it’s a long season. We’ll need them all to contribute.”
Again, history tells us, they most likely will.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Senate advances its tax overhaul. Debate centers on who the proposal would help
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The Senate Finance Committee voted Thursday to advance legislation to reduce the state income tax and the sales tax on groceries while raising the gasoline tax.
Republican senators voted to advance the measure, which they say will boost economic activity in Mississippi. Democrats on the committee argued cutting the income tax while raising the gas tax would benefit corporations and harm the working poor.
The Senate plan amounts to a net tax cut of $326 million, a more modest sum than the $1.1 billion net cut passed by the House. The Senate would reduce the state’s flat 4% income tax to 2.99% over four years, a provision that’s likely to become a point of contention with the House, which has pushed for eventual full elimination of the income tax.
If Mississippi were to adopt the House plan, it would join nine other states that don’t have a state income tax. The Senate proposal to maintain the income tax but lower it to 2.99% would make Mississippi’s income tax the nation’s third-lowest, according to Senate Finance Chairman Josh Harkins, a Republican.
Harkins, the Senate plan’s lead author, said the legislation would help Mississippi draw corporate investment and attract new residents migrating from higher-tax states.
“While it may not be only tax policy, it’s tax policy coupled with regulation and things that induce people to move into the state,” he said. “But it’s part of the equation, and I think that’s the effort that we’re all trying to get here.”
The Senate proposal would also reduce the state’s 7% sales tax on grocery items, the highest in the nation, to 5% starting July 2026.
The Senate would raise the state’s 18.4-cents-a-gallon gasoline excise by three cents each year over the next three years, eventually resulting in a 27.4 cents per gallon gas tax at completion. This is an effort to help the Mississippi Department of Transportation with a long-running shortfall of highway maintenance money.
Democratic Sen. Hob Bryan said the Republican majority’s “obsession” with abolishing or lowering the income tax was being driven by out-of-state corporations and anti-tax activists such as Grover Norquist, who famously said his goal was to shrink government to the size “where we can drown it in the bathtub.”
READ MORE: Speaker White frustrated by ‘crickets’ from Senate on tax plan
“The people who are driving this, the ones who actually know what they’re doing, I’m not talking about the useful idiots,” Bryan said. “They care nothing about roads. They care nothing about water. They care nothing about sewer. They care nothing about public safety. They care nothing about public schools. What they care about is simply reducing government to the size that it could be drowned in a bathtub, as an end in and of itself.”
The debate over tax policy is unfolding as Mississippi has made a push to lure technology companies to the state with generous tax incentives. Republican Sen. Daniel Sparks said the Senate plan would strengthen the state’s effort to create jobs and attract new residents.
“No, I don’t think if you go to zero income tax people are lined up at the state line ready to spring into Mississippi. I’ll concede that point to you,” Sparks said. “But good tax policy brings business, which brings jobs, which brings opportunity.”
Bryan said most people don’t choose where to live based on tax policy. He said the Senate and House tax overhauls would lead to the defunding of public services and shower benefits on corporations instead of workers.
“The tax structure in Mississippi is geared toward making life worse and worse for (the working poor) and shifting more and more of the tax burden to them,” Bryan said.
The Senate announced its plan after the House passed a plan last month that eliminates the income tax over a decade, cuts the state grocery tax and raises sales taxes and gasoline taxes.
In a bid to increase economic development, Republican Gov. Tate Reeves has made the full elimination of the state income tax his central legislative priority this session.
It remains unclear if Reeves would sign a tax cut package into law that does not fully eliminate the income tax.
The Senate bill now goes to the floor for a vote before the full chamber.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Editorial: Someone needs to read the First Amendment to Judge Crystal Wise Martin
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Note: This editorial is part of Mississippi Today Ideas, a new 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.
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
In the United States of America, we are free to criticize government, from city hall to the White House.
This somewhat peculiar freedom enshrined in the First Amendment is the bedrock of our republic, and many have argued it’s the wellhead from which all our other freedoms flow. The British Crown’s use of “sedition” laws to put down dissent is a key reason we rose up and threw that yoke, and have a First Amendment, and a country.
Someone needs to remind Hinds County Chancellor Crystal Wise Martin of this fundamental of American democracy. And of a few points of law.
Martin has issued a ruling that appears so unconstitutional, so anathema to accepted jurisprudence and so un-American that she’s drawing attention and criticism nationwide and abroad.
Without even granting the newspaper a hearing, Martin issued a temporary restraining order against the Clarksdale Press Register after city officials sued. She ordered the newspaper to take down a Feb. 8 editorial “Secrecy, Deception Erode Public Trust” from its online site and make it inaccessible to readers.
Without. A. Hearing.
The editorial criticized city of Clarksdale officials for not providing the paper notice of a meeting, and it questioned city leaders’ motives in asking the state Legislature to allow creation of a local tax on alcohol, marijuana and tobacco.
Will they add tea?
City leaders did not like the editorial and sued, claiming it was libelous and hindered their efforts to lobby lawmakers for the tax.
Prior restraint of speech before adjudication that it is not protected has long been held unconstitutional, dating back early in U.S. law.
And besides the inherent wrongness of a Soviet-style censorship order without granting due process to the newspaper, it has also been long and widely held in U.S. law that a government cannot sue for defamation or libel.
As was noted in the case of the City of Chicago v. Tribune Co. in the early 1920s, “no court of last resort in this country has ever held, or even suggested, that prosecutions for libel on government have any place in the American system of jurisprudence.”
But even more astounding, even if the city of Clarksdale did have the right to sue for libel, the city clerk admitted in court filings that she failed to notify the newspaper as required of the meeting.
As longtime Mississippi editor, columnist and attorney Charlie Mitchell said, there are so many things wrong with this ruling, it’s hard to know where to start.
Our nation’s founders despised and feared tyrannical government that brooks no redress from those governed or from a free press. And the people and the free press have the right to criticize government be it at Clarksdale City Hall or in Washington, D.C.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Hinds County judge orders Clarksdale newspaper to remove editorial, alarming press advocates
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A Mississippi judge ordered a newspaper to remove an editorial criticizing the mayor of Clarksdale and city leaders after the officials sued the news outlet, leading press advocates to criticize the order as one of the most egregious First Amendment violations in recent years.
Without a hearing for the newspaper, Hinds County Chancellor Crystal Wise Martin issued a temporary restraining order against the Clarksdale Press Register on Tuesday after the news outlet wrote a Feb. 8 editorial titled “Secrecy, Deception Erode Public Trust.”
The column criticized the city for not sending the newspaper a notice about a meeting city commissioners held over a proposed effort to ask the state Legislature for permission to enact a local tax on alcohol, marijuana and tobacco.
As of Thursday morning, the news outlet had removed the editorial from its website, but Wyatt Emmerich, the newspaper’s owner, told Mississippi Today that he intended to fight the judge’s order in court, which he called “absolutely astounding.”
“There wasn’t a hearing over this or anything,” Emmerich said. “We haven’t even been served with process.”
Clarksdale Mayor Chuck Espy, a Democrat, and the Board of Commissioners filed the petition in Hinds County, calling the editorial “libelous’ and saying the editorial would bring “immediate and irreparable injury” to the city.
“(The editorial’s) statements could be reasonably understood as declaring or implying that the ‘deceptive’ reason he was not given notice of the meeting is provable through someone in the community willing to reveal promises made by the Board members in exchange for votes or in the process of time,” the city’s petition reads.
The litigation stems from a special-called meeting the board conducted. State law requires public bodies to post a notice of a special meeting in a public place and on the city’s website, if they have one, at least one hour before the meeting.
The state’s Open Meetings Act also requires public bodies to email a notice of the meeting to media outlets and citizens who have asked to be placed on the city’s email distribution list.
The Clarksdale city clerk, Laketha Covington, filed an affidavit saying she did post the meeting notice at City Hall. However, she admitted she forgot to send out an email notice about the special meeting but that it was a simple mistake and not intentional.
Charlie Mitchell is the former executive editor of the Vicksburg Post and is an attorney. He is an assistant professor at the University of Mississippi’s School of Journalism and New Media, where he has taught media law for years. He told Mississippi Today there were so many issues with the judge’s order that he didn’t even “know where to start.”
The municipality is suing the media outlet over defamation, which is typically used when individuals or businesses believe their reputation has been harmed. But government bodies, according to Mitchell, are “defamation-proof and always have been.”
“The First Amendment allows restraint of expression, including by the media, only extremely rarely and only when there is clear evidence of immediate and irreparable risk to the public — such as blocking publication that would identify confidential informants,” Mitchell said.
For decades, state and federal courts have held that news outlets criticizing government actions through editorials are protected speech. But there have been attempts to silence local news outlets in recent years.
In 2023, a Kansas police department raided a newspaper’s office and its owner’s home after alleging the outlet potentially committed identity theft over its report on a local business owner’s driving record.
Layne Bruce, the executive director of the Mississippi Press Association, wrote in a statement that the organization’s leadership stands with the newspaper and is strongly opposed to the judge’s order.
“The Press Association feels this is an egregious overreach and that it clearly runs counter to First Amendment rights,” Bruce said
The judge scheduled a full hearing on the litigation for 9:30 a.m. on February 27.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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