Mississippi Today
For PGA Tour champion Kevin Yu, father knew best and he called it
When Kevin Yu, a 26-year-old Taiwanese golf pro, first entered the gates of the Country Club of Jackson for the Sanderson Farms Championship last week, his dad, Tommy, was driving.
“My dad pulled into the first empty parking spot he saw,” Kevin Yu said. “I told him we couldn’t park there because there was a sign that said the spot was reserved for past champions.”
With no hesitation, Tommy Yu began backing the rental car out and replied to his son, “That’s OK, then we will park in this spot next year.”
Now then, here is the rest of that story: Kevin Yu, whose real name is Yu Chun-an, can park anywhere he wants to park at next year’s Sanderson Farms Championship at CCJ. He earned that privilege by shooting a final round 67, then winning a one-hole playoff with Beau Hossler to claim the first prize of $1,368,000 and his first PGA TOUR victory. The victory also means a two-year tour exemption and entry into The Masters, the Players Championship and the PGA Championship.
Yu did it the hard way. He came from two shots behind in the final round and birdied the difficult, 500-yard par-4 18th hole twice – first to force the tie with Hossler and then to claim the playoff victory. That’s right: He birdied perhaps the most difficult hole on the course twice, back-to-back, with the championship on the line.
“It is a dream come true for me, something I have dreamed about since I was like five years old,” Yu said. “This is the dream of all golfers, to win on the PGA Tour. To do it with my parents (Tommy and Eileen) here is really special.”
Kevin Yu’s dad is a golf pro in Taiwan and introduced his son to the sport at an early age and began teaching him at age 5. He taught him well. Kevin won his first tournament at age 7, beat his father for the first time at age 9 and began competing internationally at age 13.
He earned a golf scholarship to Arizona State, where he is the second-most accomplished golfer in that school’s rich golf history behind somebody named Jon Rahm. This is Yu’s third year on the PGA Tour and third time to play in Mississippi’s only PGA Tour Tournament. He finished tied for 19th in 2022 and missed the 36-hole cut last year. He said he loves everything about the tournament.
“I like the whole environment here,” Yu said. “I like the course layout. I think it suits me. The greens are so pure and they are fast and I like that, too. The atmosphere is easy-going, the course is great.”
Yu came here last week, thinking he was about to play in the last-ever Sanderson Farms Championship because of an announcement weeks ago that the Laurel-based poultry company was ending its sponsorship after a 12-year run.
Said Yu, “I was really sad, because I do love this place and this tournament.”
Then came Friday’s out-of-the-blue news that Sanderson Farms was extending its sponsorship for one more year. “I was so happy to hear that news,” Yu said. “Now I can come back and defend my title.”
And with preferred parking, he might have added.
Yu becomes the third Taiwanese player to win on golf’s most lucrative tour, following first T.C. Chen (1987 Los Angeles Open) and C. T. Pan (2019 Heritage Classic).
“I think this means a lot for all Taiwanese,” Yu said. “I feel like I can be an example. We don’t have a lot of golf courses in Taiwan and the conditions are just OK, not perfect. So I just show them that we can do it by working really hard and dreaming big.”
Yu shot three rounds of 66 and then Sunday’s 67. He did it all in a easy-going manner, smiling and chatting often with course volunteers with his playing partner Bud Cauley in the next-to-last group.
“I was really calm all week even to the last few holes today,” Yu said. He indicated his parents might have had something to do with that.
Tommy and Eileen Yu flew to Jackson from Taiwan last week, and Yu is mighty glad they did.
“I really don’t think I could this without my parents,” he said.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Bill to provide prenatal care to low-income women still inaccessible as 2025 legislative session looms
Nearly five months after a new law to make prenatal care more accessible to low-income women was supposed to go into effect, its fate remains unclear.
The state is still in negotiations with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services – the federal agency responsible for approving the state plan – according to Matt Westerfield, spokesperson for the Mississippi Division of Medicaid. CMS is supposed to take no more than 90 days to approve or reject a plan, but that 90-day clock has been suspended indefinitely since issues have been raised with legislation Mississippi lawmakers wrote last session.
Presumptive eligibility for pregnant women allows temporary and immediate Medicaid coverage for low-income expectant mothers while they wait for their official Medicaid application to be approved – a process that can take months.
Strict Medicaid eligibility requirements in Mississippi mean that a majority of low-income women are only eligible for Medicaid once they become pregnant. If a woman applies when she finds out she’s pregnant, that means a lengthy application process could cut well into her pregnancy and delay her seeking prenatal care, which is proven to lead to poor outcomes such as preterm birth – in which Mississippi leads the nation.
Nicole Boyd, R-Oxford, who leads the Senate Study Group for Women, Children and Families, has been checking in weekly with Medicaid about the status of the policy. In a committee hearing Monday, Boyd followed up twice with newly appointed Medicaid Executive Director Cindy Bradshaw at the beginning and end of the meeting to try to gain clarity on the status of the policy.
Boyd asked Bradshaw whether the 2024 legislation could be salvaged or whether lawmakers would need to redo legislation to enact the policy in 2025. Bradshaw said both that she hopes the state and federal agencies can come to an agreement, and also that she’d feel better with new legislation.
“Well, I think we can come to a reasonable place that we will be able to get it,” Bradshaw said. “Am I 100% comfortable with that? No. I would prefer that we have legislation to shore up the concessions that we’ve had to make.”
It’s not clear what concessions the Mississippi Division of Medicaid has had to make, but it’s likely that CMS is requiring Medicaid to take out a proof of income and proof of requirement lawmakers included in the original bill.
Federal guidelines state that while the agency may require proof of citizenship or residency, it should not “require verification of the conditions for presumptive eligibility.”
CMS will not comment on ongoing negotiations with individual states.
If 2024 legislation can’t be salvaged, lawmakers would have two options for rewriting the law next session. They could take out the requirements with which CMS has an issue, or they could take their chances hoping a Trump administration would grant a waiver allowing them to keep requirements at odds with federal guidelines – something lawmakers will likely bank on with a Medicaid expansion bill next session, as well.
Insisting on the proof of pregnancy requirement doesn’t serve much of a purpose, since it wouldn’t be possible for a woman to fake a pregnancy and receive prenatal care, such as ultrasounds. As for the proof of income requirement, it can be cumbersome on low-income women already facing socioeconomic hurdles, explained Tricia Brooks, a research professor at the Center for Children and Families at Georgetown University and the lead author on the KFF Annual Survey on Medicaid and CHIP Eligibility, Enrollment and Renewal Policies.
“I remember when I first got pregnant, I thought I had the flu because I was nauseous for days on end,” Brooks said. “If I go to the doctor and find out that lo and behold maybe I am pregnant, and you want me to get enrolled, but now you’re asking me for paystubs … So now I have to come back in or somehow communicate or transmit proof of income to the provider. That just gives everybody pause of, ‘Oh my god, is this even worth it?’”
In the meantime, the Division of Medicaid is continuing to accept providers who wish to participate in the program and conduct eligibility determination trainings, according to Westerfield. Until CMS approves the state plan, none of the providers that have been approved will be able to provide care under the policy to eligible women.
Below is a list of the 13 providers that have been approved to participate as of Oct. 18:
- Physicians & Surgeons Clinic – Amory
- Mississippi Department of Health, Dr. Renia Dotson – County Health Department (Family Planning Clinic)
- Family Health Center – Laurel
- Delta Health Center Inc (Dr. H. Jack Geiger Medical Center) – Mound Bayou
- G.A. Carmichael Family Health Center Providers – Belzoni, Canton, Yazoo City
- Coastal Family Health Center Inc. – Biloxi
- Delta Health System – Greenville
- Delta Medical Group – Women’s Specialty Clinic – Greenville
- Southeast MS Rural Health Initiative Inc. – Women’s Health Center – Hattiesburg
- University of Mississippi Medical Center – Jackson
- Jackson Hinds Comprehensive Health Center – Jackson
- Central MS Health Service – Jackson
- Northwest MS Regional Medical Center – Clarksdale
An expectant mother would need to fall under the following income levels to qualify for presumptive eligibility:
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Jackson hosts the National Folk Festival Kickoff
The National Folk Festival kicked off in downtown Jackson on Saturday. The festival is the longest running arts event comprised of a free, outdoor, three-day celebration of music, art and dance.
The National Council for the Traditional Arts chose Jackson out of 42 cities from across the country to host the three-year event.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1919
Nov. 19, 1919
Police officer and World War I hero James Wormley Jones was appointed as the first Black special agent for what was later named the FBI.
Jones served as a captain in the 368th Infantry Regiment, 92nd Division, in command of Company F. One history book described his company’s fight on the Metz front in France: “When the awful bombardment died away, just as the gray streaks of early dawn pierced the night’s blackness, which was made grayer by a thick heavy fog, the Captain ordered a charge ‘over the top’ with fixed bayonets; through the treacherous fog and into no-man-knew-what or seemed to care. The first wave, or detachment, went over with a cheer — a triumphant cheer — and the second wave followed their comrades with a dash. It may, perhaps, be best to let these boys and officers tell with their own lips of the terrific, murderous shell, shrapnel, gas, and machine-gun fire which baptized them, only to make them the more hardened and intrepid warriors; of how they contended every inch; fought with marvelous valor, never for an instant faltering.
“Trench after trench of the enemy was entered and conquered; dugout after dugout was successfully grenaded and made safe for the boys to follow; wires were cut and communicating trenches explored; machine-gun nests were raided and silenced, and still the boys fought their way on. Of course, as a natural sequence to such a daring raid, there were casualties, but the Black soldiers, heroes as they were, never flinched at death, and the wounded were too proud of their achievements even to murmur because of the pain they endured. Captain Jones and his men took over a mile of land and trenches which for four years had been held by the Germans.”
Newspapers noted the successful raid, and Jones earned a promotion. When he returned from the war, he resumed his work for the Metropolitan Police in Washington, D.C., before the FBI hired him, utilizing his undercover work and expertise in explosives to fight domestic terrorism.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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