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Mississippi posts lowest gas prices going into Labor Day | Mississippi

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | – 2023-08-30 15:07:00

(The Center Square) — Mississippi remains the with the lowest average price of gas in the nation going into the Labor Day .

At $3.31 per gallon of regular unleaded gasoline, the price has increased 5 cents in a month and is only 1.67% less than the same time last year according to the American Automobile Association. 

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The national average is $3.83, according to AAA.

Claiborne County in southwest Mississippi had the highest prices in the Magnolia State at $3.72, while Jones County in the Pine Belt had the lowest at $3.17 per gallon.

The three-county Coast area had the least expensive gasoline among the state's four metro at $3.24 per gallon, followed by at $3.29, Hattiesburg at $3.31 and Southaven-Olive Branch (south of Memphis, Tenn.) at $3.34. 

According to the American Petroleum Institute, Mississippi has the second-lowest state taxes and fees on gasoline (18.79 cents per gallon), second only to Alaska (15.13 per gallon). 

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The next lowest averages by state were  ($3.39 per gallon of regular unleaded gasoline), Arkansas ($3.41), Alabama ($3.42) and ($3.42). Highest states are California ($5.29), Washington ($5.11), Hawaii ($4.78), Oregon ($4.77) and Alaska ($4.60).

Florida ($3.70), Georgia ($3.60), South Carolina ($3.48) and Tennessee ($3.45) have the highest prices in the Southeast.

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The Center Square

Gulf states could benefit from bills to provide offshore green energy revenues | Louisiana

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | – 2024-06-28 08:19:00

(The Center Square) — voters will cast ballots in November to determine whether the state will participate in a possible royalty system for offshore renewable energy production, but federal action is required before the money starts to flow. 

Over the past several years, bills have been submitted to allow the alternative energy revenues, such as wind leases, to be sent to the Gulf states of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and to fund coastal restoration and resilience projects.

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All of these bills would reform the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act by increasing the revenue-sharing distribution from offshore oil and gas activities from 37.5% to 50% and eliminating the existing state revenue-sharing cap of $375 million for Gulf Coast states.

It's of dire importance to Louisiana as the funds from the BP oil spill settlement, which is the primary source for coastal restoration projects, will out in 2031. The projects are designed to repair and rebuild the state's wetlands which shield from hurricane storm surges and provide important nurseries for marine

U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., filed a bill last year called the Reinvesting in Shoreline Economies & Ecosystems Act with U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I. Congressman Steve Scalise, R-La., has a bill called the Budgeting for Renewable Electrical Energy Zone Earnings that he has filed twice in the last two years. U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Texas, has also filed her version of the measure. 

The National Ocean Industries Association is the trade organization for the offshore industry and supports this type of legislation. President Erik Milito told the Center Square that if the bill becomes law, Louisiana could see $1.96 over the next 10 years if the RISEE Act or other similar legislation becomes law.

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“Well, it should, over time, you're gonna see more revenue flowing to the government from offshore wind power, and if states are able to share in that then it becomes fairly obvious to the local taxpayers and the local constituency that this much money is now coming into our state because of offshore wind,” Milito said. “You haven't needed that in the Northeast Atlantic, Pacific. Those state governments have taken independent action to promote offshore wind because they're more progressive when it to wanting to have you know, climate goals in place. When it comes to the oil and gas sector, you know, the Gulf Coast has been it really for the past several decades.

“And Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama have all been supportive because of the employment base and the investment base that you have along the coastline with hundreds if not thousands of companies contributing to the local economies.”

The bills have bipartisan support, as several environmental groups such as the Citizens Climate Lobby, the Coastal Conservation Association, the National Audubon Society, the National Wildlife Federation and the Environmental Defense Fund among others have weighed in support for the legislation. 

Voters will decide on Nov. 5 whether to add two amendments to the state constitution governing offshore energy royalty distribution. The two bills authored Rep. Joseph Orgeron, R-Cut Off, were signed into law by Gov. Jeff Landry on June 19. Right now, any offshore wind or other renewable revenues would be split between the state's General Fund (75%) and the remainder with the state's mineral fund

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House Bill 300 would place a constitutional amendment on the ballot to redirect federal revenues from “generated from Outer Continental Shelf alternative or renewable energy production sources, wind energy, solar energy, tidal energy, wave energy, geothermal energy, and other alternative or renewable energy production or sources.”

The companion bill, House Bill 305, that would codify the shift of federal royalties to the coastal protection fund from the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act program if the measure is passed by voters.

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Environmental groups urge Louisiana officials to oppose One Lake Project | Louisiana

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Jacob Mathews | – 2024-06-25 11:50:00

(The Center Square) — Louisiana officials heard from groups opposed to a taxpayer-funded flood control lake on the Pearl in , Mississippi on Tuesday.

The Lower Pearl River Basin Task Force in Louisiana held a hearing to hear about the potential environmental impacts on the , which a draft environmental impact statement says could cost up to $2.1 .   

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Andrew Whitehurst, a representative from Healthy Gulf, a program dedicated to preserving the Gulf's natural resources, argued the One Lake Project would adversely affect Pearl River and its habitats through Mississippi and Louisiana. 

According to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the river drains an area of 8,760 square miles consisting of all, or parts, of 23 counties in Mississippi and parts of three Louisiana parishes. The Corps is hosting a comment period on the project that will end on July 22. 

Along with three meetings in Mississippi, the Corps will host a meeting in Slidell on July 11 at 11 a.m. at the Slidell Municipal Auditorium. 

A draft environmental impact statement issued by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on June 7 indicated while that the agency wouldn't support the full One Lake project, it would support other flood control measures that could include a smaller lake. 

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The Rankin-Hinds Drainage District, an entity of the state of Mississippi created to prevent in the two counties, supports the project. District officials say the lake would not only prevent flooding in Jackson, but provide an urban waterfront that would increase revenues and provide recreational opportunities. 

However, Whitehurst says the dredging and damming required to create the lake would cause wetland and wildlife habitat destruction that would be extremely environmentally damaging. 

Whitehurst said the dredging near toxic waste sites might loosen some slurry and leachate down the river system. He also said the lives of multiple turtle and fish species whose habitat near the current would be endangered. 

A project to fix the flooding in the area has been in talks for years and the One Lake Project has been working its way through committees and boards since 2011, according to Pearl River Keeper's website, an organization devoted to preserving the Pearl River.

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Louisiana lawmakers, representing constituents that could face downstream effects from One Lake, were opposed to this project as recently as 2018. Whitehurst urged the task force to recommend a new statement from the against the project due to the urgency of its

“It's desired that this whole process wrap up with a record of decision on this EIS this fall. They're not waiting,” Whitehurst said. 

Whitehurst also suggested that there is not enough economic explanations made to justify the impact to businesses on the river. 

“It's something that they're worried about,” Whitehurst said of those businesses who rely on the river remaining in its original state. “There's not a cost or economic appendix released with this document. That's one of the first things we looked for.”

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Healthy Gulf says a combination of levee setbacks to widen a constricted floodplain, plus some improvements to existing levees along with floodplain buyouts could be employed to relieve flooding in Jackson without blocking the channel, destroying habitats or causing flow problems downstream. The Rankin-Hinds Drainage District has opposed this plan, saying it would be too expensive. 

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Mississippi employment reaches record high with nearly 1.2M with jobs | Mississippi

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Steve Wilson | – 2024-06-25 10:59:00

(The Center Square) – Federal data released on Tuesday shows a record nearly 1.2 million were participating in the workforce in May.

The Magnolia also had its least number of residents, 34,605, collecting unemployment as the state's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate remained at 2.8%, three tenths lower than May 2023, when the rate was 3.1%.

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“Our economy is firing on all cylinders, which is why we continue to make history,” Gov. Tate Reeves said in a release. “There are more in Mississippi than ever before, which is truly a victory worth celebrating. We'll continue fighting for good-paying, high-quality jobs that attract more residents to our great state.”

The state's labor force participation rate continues to lag behind the national average. 

In May, the state's labor force participation rate was 53.8%, one-tenth better than last month, but nearly 10% less than the national rate of 62.7%. That means nearly 1.36 million of the state's residents aren't part of the labor force. 

The labor force participation rate trails regionally, led by (64.3% in May), Georgia (61.6%), Tennessee (59.6%) and Florida (59.1%). 

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's participation rate was at 58.1% in May, followed by Alabama and Arkansas, each at 57.5%. 

According to the monthly release from the Mississippi Department of Employment Security, the county with the lowest unemployment rate was Union at 1.9%, followed by Lafayette County at 2%. The also said 35 of the state's 82 counties were at or below the state average of 2.8%. 

The highest unemployment rates for counties was Jefferson at 11.3%, followed by Claiborne at 7.2% and Humphreys at 7.1%. 

Among the state's three metropolitan , and Hattiesburg had unemployment rates of 2.5%, while the Coast was three-tenths behind at 2.8%.

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Initial unemployment claims were up from April, growing from 4,246 to 6,338. 

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