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Is Gov. Reeves trying to take credit for broadband expansion even as he blasts ‘Biden, Bennie and Brandon?’

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Gov. Tate Reeves hands out a free laptop to a student last week as Comcast celebrated a project that connected 1,700 homes to broadband internet service in the Bolton-Edwards area.

Gov. Tate Reeves grinned and high-fived a young student as he handed him a new laptop as the news cameras clicked and rolled last week at Bolton-Edwards Elementary/Middle School.

Reeves issued a statement: “This broadband expansion and tremendously generous laptop donation by Comcast are a fantastic boost to the community in Bolton and Edwards. The investment will help provide critical broadband access and support educational opportunities for Mississippi families.” He shared grip-and-grin photos of himself giving out laptops and posing with school officials and posted platitudes on social media.

It was a perfect photo op as Republican Reeves runs for reelection — hopping on a wave of goodwill as Mississippi spends well over $1 billion to run high-speed internet access into the rural hinterlands.

But Reeves for several years has mostly just been along for the ride on broadband internet expansion. And this photo op came as his campaign’s statewide television ads blast “Biden, Bennie and Brandon” — three people arguably most responsible for rural Mississippi’s coming entrée into the internet age — as spendthrifts.

The broadband largess is from President Biden’s $1 trillion infrastructure plan, of which U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson helped Mississippi get $1.2 billion for broadband. Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, Reeves’ Democratic gubernatorial opponent in November, has for years championed broadband expansion in Mississippi long before it was on most others’ radar, and he helped pass transformational state law.

This wasn’t lost on Democratic Rep. Thompson, who was in attendance at the event in his hometown last week but wasn’t included in Reeves’ social media photos.

“For (Reeves) to criticize President Biden in terms of his being out of touch with his approach to addressing problems, then come to the Bolton-Edwards school and praise broadband expansion is at best disingenuous on his part,” Thompson told Mississippi Today. “… This is typical fashion for the governor to show up like he did in Bolton. That’s not leadership when you have not shown any support for the program.

“He’s a politician running for reelection, and I’m sure anywhere more than 10 people are assembled he’ll show up,” Thompson said. “But the record speaks for itself, and he runs ads criticizing politicians who are bringing this money to the state.”

READ MORE: Mississippi broadband internet expansion ‘pedal to the metal’ as federal money flows

Candidate Presley was likewise critical of Reeves’ efforts to campaign on broadband expansion.

“He was completely missing in action when we were working on broadband,” Presley said.

Presley, after years of work including crisscrossing the state with town hall meetings, successfully lobbied the GOP-majority state Legislature to pass a bill in 2019 to allow electrical cooperatives to supply broadband internet to rural Mississippi and help the state access federal money. He worked closely with Republican House Speaker Philip Gunn, who authored the bill. But Presley said then-Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, who was overseeing the Senate, was not initially on board.

“The fear was it was going to die in the Senate because of Reeves and intense lobbying by the cable industry,” Presley said. He said the first time he went to meet with a top Reeves lieutenant on the broadband expansion bill, a cable lobbyist was there.

“We had to rally the troops and start putting pressure on senators,” Presley said. “… As with everything else when he was lieutenant governor, we were worried that whoever wrote him the last campaign check would be who he sided with.”

READ MORE: How the heck did Democrat Brandon Presley get bill to sail through GOP-run Legislature?

As he runs for reelection, Reeves has made other recent comments about how “we’re connecting Mississippians with the technology of the future by expanding broadband” and “attracting the jobs of tomorrow by improving our state’s connectivity today.”

Since he became governor in 2020, Reeves has not blocked any broadband expansion legislation and spending. But he hasn’t shown much support, either.

The Legislature passed four major bills in 2020 to speed up broadband expansion and allocate $315 million in federal funds. Reeves didn’t veto the bills, but let them become law without his signature — typically a protest move by governors to show they don’t support a measure even though they are unwilling to kill it with a veto.

“The appropriation bill for $75 million for co-ops and companies for broadband, he didn’t even sign, in the middle of a pandemic,” Presley said. “He needs to shut his mouth how he’s been for broadband. While mommas and daddies are having to sit outside McDonald’s to get internet service, he’s laid up in the Governor’s Mansion too lazy to even sign a bill … Now he’d have you believe that, like Al Gore, he invented the internet.”

Thompson said: “I wonder what he’ll say when the transportation money starts to kick in from this bill. I guess he’ll be going to the groundbreakings as he’s running commercials against the people who are bringing this money to the state.”

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

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1946

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-12-23 07:00:00

Dec. 23, 1946

Chuck Cooper Credit: Wikipedia

University of Tennessee refused to play a basketball game with Duquesne University, because they had a Black player, Chuck Cooper. Despite their refusal, the all-American player and U.S. Navy veteran went on to become the first Black player to participate in a college basketball game south of the Mason-Dixon line. Cooper became the first Black player ever drafted in the NBA — drafted by the Boston Celtics. He went on to be admitted to the Basketball Hall of Fame.

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

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Mississippi Today

Podcast: Ray Higgins: PERS needs both extra cash and benefit changes for future employees

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mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2024-12-23 06:30:00

Mississippi Today’s Bobby Harrison talks with Ray Higgins, executive director of the Mississippi Public Employees Retirement System, about proposed changes in pension benefits for future employees and what is needed to protect the system for current employees and retirees. Higgins also stresses the importance of the massive system to the Mississippi economy.

READ MORE: As lawmakers look to cut taxes, Mississippi mayors and county leaders outline infrastructure needs

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

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Mississippi Today

‘Bringing mental health into the spaces where moms already are’: UMMC program takes off

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2024-12-23 06:00:00

A program aimed at increasing access to mental health services for mothers has taken off at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. 

The program, called CHAMP4Moms, is an extension of an existing program called CHAMP – which stands for Child Access to Mental Health and Psychiatry. The goal is to make it easier for moms to reach mental health resources during a phase when some may need it the most and have the least time. 

CHAMP4Moms offers a direct phone line that health providers can call if they are caring for a pregnant woman or new mother they believe may have unaddressed mental health issues. On the line, health providers can speak directly to a reproductive psychiatrist who can guide them on how to screen, diagnose and treat mothers. That means that moms don’t have to go out of their way to find a psychiatrist, and health care providers who don’t have extensive training in psychiatry can still help these women. 

“Basically, we’re trying to bring mental health into the spaces where moms already are,” explained Calandrea Taylor, the program manager. “Because of the low workforce that we have in the state, it’s a lot to try to fill the state with mental health providers. But what we do is bring the mental health practice to you and where mothers are. And we’re hoping that that reduces stigma.”

Launched in 2023, the program has had a slow lift off, Taylor said. But the phone line is up and running, as the team continues to make additions to the program – including a website with resources that Taylor expects will go live next year. 

To fill the role of medical director, UMMC brought in a California-based reproductive psychiatrist, Dr. Emily Dossett. Dossett, who grew up in Mississippi and still has family in the state, says it has been rewarding to come full circle and serve her home state – which suffers a dearth of mental health providers and has no reproductive psychiatrists

“I love it. It’s really satisfying to take the experience I’ve been able to pull together over the past 20 years practicing medicine and then apply it to a place I love,” Dossett said. “I feel like I understand the people I work with, I relate to them, I like hearing where they’re from and being able to picture it … That piece of it has really been very much a joy.”

As medical director, Dossett is able to educate maternal health providers on mental health issues. But she’s also an affiliate professor at UMMC, which she says allows her to train up the next generation of psychiatrists on the importance of maternal and reproductive psychiatry – an often-overlooked aspect in the field. 

If people think of reproductive mental health at all, they likely think of postpartum depression, Dossett said. But reproductive psychiatry is far more encompassing than just the postpartum time period – and includes many more conditions than just depression. 

“Most reproductive psychiatrists work with pregnant and postpartum people, but there’s also work to be done around people who have issues connected to their menstrual cycle or perimenopause,” she explained. “… There’s depression, certainly. But we actually see more anxiety, which comes in lots of different forms – it can be panic disorder, general anxiety, OCD.”

Tackling mental health in this population doesn’t just improve people’s quality of life. It can be lifesaving – and has the potential to mitigate some of the state’s worst health metrics.

Mental health disorders are the leading cause of pregnancy-related death, which is defined by the Centers for Disease Control as any death up to a year postpartum that is caused by or worsened by pregnancy. 

In Mississippi, 80% of pregnancy-related deaths between 2016 and 2020 were deemed preventable, according to the latest Mississippi Maternal Mortality Report.

Mississippi is not alone in this, Dossett said. Historically, mental health has not been taken seriously in the western world, for a number of reasons – including stigma and a somewhat arbitrary division between mind and body, Dossett explained.

“You see commercials on TV of happy pregnant ladies. You see magazines of celebrities and their baby bumps, and everybody is super happy. And so, if you don’t feel that way, there’s this tremendous amount of shame … But another part of it is medicine and the way that our health system is set up, it’s just classically divided between physical and mental health.”

Dossett encourages women to tell their doctor about any challenges they’re facing – even if they seem normal.

“There are a lot of people who have significant symptoms, but they think it’s normal,” Dossett said. “They don’t know that there’s a difference between the sort of normal adjustment that people have after having a baby – and it is a huge adjustment – and symptoms that get in the way of their ability to connect or bond with the baby, or their ability to eat or sleep, or take care of their other children or eventually go to work.”

She also encourages health care providers to develop a basic understanding of mental health issues and to ask patients questions about their mood, thoughts and feelings. 

CHAMP4Moms is a resource Dossett hopes providers will take advantage of – but she also hopes they will shape and inform the program in its inaugural year. 

“We’re available, we’re open for calls, we’re open for feedback and suggestions, we’re open for collaboration,” she said. “We want this to be something that can hopefully really move the needle on perinatal mental health and substance use in the state – and I think it can.”

Providers can call the CHAMP main line at 601-984-2080 for resources and referral options throughout the state. 

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

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