Mississippi Today
Nearly 100,000 Mississippians have been kicked off Medicaid coverage since June

The Mississippi Division of Medicaid dropped 7,448 people from its coverage in November.
The latest numbers cap six months of disenrollments. In total, nearly 100,000 Mississippians have lost Medicaid coverage since June, when state Medicaid divisions across the country started reviewing their rolls for the first time in three years in a process called “unwinding” after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Most of those people were not dropped because they were found to be ineligible — the majority of the people dropped from coverage have been due to paperwork issues, called “procedural” disenrollments.
Over half of those who have been dropped to date have been children.
Federal regulations that prevented Medicaid divisions from dropping beneficiaries during the pandemic ended this spring. Now, the state Medicaid agencies’ reviews have resulted in millions of people losing health coverage.
Mississippi’s Medicaid division dropped 29,460 people in June, 22,507 people in July, 16,659 people in August, 12,828 people in September and 8,674 people in October.
It also appears that the majority of the beneficiaries dropped in October were children — Mississippi Medicaid’s enrollment reports show that 6,776 children were disenrolled between October and November.
Since June, more than 61,000 kids in Mississippi have been dropped from Medicaid's rolls. Federal research shows that kids are most at risk of losing benefits during unwinding.
The November numbers also show that while the agency appears to be slowly improving its procedural disenrollment rate — the percentage of people kicked off coverage has crept down a few points each month — the majority are still due to paperwork issues.
Of the 7,448 people dropped in November, 67% were procedural. The state’s overall procedural disenrollment rate thus far hovers at 75%, close to the national average of 71%, according to KFF.
Experts following unwinding have taken issue with states' high procedural disenrollment rates because it could mean a great number of people being dropped are still eligible for Medicaid.
The Mississippi Division of Medicaid’s latest numbers also show that despite making a small dent in its sizable backlog of uncompleted reviews in October, the backlog increased again for November.
July saw 15,574 incomplete reviews, bringing the state’s total to 19,402. Then the total number of incomplete reviews went up to 29,788 in August and 45,989 in September, before slightly decreasing to 42,931 in October.
November data shows backlogs are up again to 47,272.
At least 12,573,000 Medicaid beneficiaries have been disenrolled nationally as of Dec. 13, according to KFF. The organization predicts up to 24 million people could lose coverage during unwinding.
As unwinding continues, Mississippi is poised to disenroll thousands more, all during a statewide health care crisis. One report puts nearly half of rural hospitals at risk of closure. Hospitals are financially strapped post-pandemic, largely due to high rates of uncompensated care, or money lost caring for patients who are uninsured.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Senate passes redistricting that puts DeSoto Republican, Tunica Democrat in same district, calls for 10 new elections
Senate passes redistricting that puts DeSoto Republican, Tunica Democrat in same district, calls for 10 new elections
Voters from 10 Senate districts will have to re-decide in November special elections who should represent them in Jackson, pending court approval, under a resolution the Senate approved on Wednesday.
The chamber passed the plan 33-16. Two Democrats joined with the GOP majority to support the plan, while three Republicans joined with the Democratic minority to oppose it.
Even though voters just elected members of the Legislature in 2023, the 10 races will be held again because a three-judge federal panel determined last year that the Legislature did not create enough Black-majority districts when it redrew its districts.
The panel ordered the state to redraw the districts and create a new majority-Black district in the DeSoto County area in the Forrest County area.
Senate Rules Committee Chairman Dean Kirby, a Republican from Pearl, told senators that the newly redrawn map complies with federal law and will allow Black voters in the two areas to elect a candidate of their choice.
“It’s not a partisan ordeal,” Kirby said. “We have a court order, and we’re going to comply.”
The map creates one new majority-Black district each in DeSoto County and Forrest County, with no incumbent senator in either district. To account for this, the plan also pits two pairs of incumbents against one another in newly redrawn districts.
The proposal puts Sen. Michael McLendon, a Republican from Hernando, who is white and Sen. Reginald Jackson, a Democrat from Marks, who is Black, in the same district. The redrawn District 1 contains a Black voting-age population of 52.4%.
McLendon spoke against the proposal, arguing the process for was not transparent and it was not fair to the city of Hernando, his home city.
“I don’t want to be pushed out of here,” McLendon said.
The plan also puts Sen. Chris Johnson and Sen. John Polk, two Republicans from the Hattiesburg area, in the District 44 seat. Polk announced on the Senate floor that he would not run in the special election, making Jonson the only incumbent running in the race.
- The full list of the Senate districts that were redrawn are:
- Senate District 1: Sen. Michael McLendon, R-Hernando, and Sen. Reginald Jackson, D-Marks
- Senate District 2: David Parker, R-Olive Branch
- Senate District 10: Neil Whaley, R-Potts Camp
- Senate District 11: New Senate district with no incumbent
- Senate District 19: Sen. Kevin Blackwell, R-Southaven
- Senate District 34: Sen. Juan Barnett, D-Heidelburg
- Senate District 41: Sen. Joey Fillingane, R-Sumrall
- Senate District 42: Sen. Robin Robinson, R-Laurel
- Senate District 44: Sen. John Polk, R-Hattiesburg, Sen. Chris Johnson, R-Hattiesburg
- Senate District 45: New district with no incumbent
McLendon and Sen. Derrick Simmons, a Democrat from Greenville, offered amendments that proposed revised maps, but both alternatives were rejected.
Simmons, the Senate’s Democratic leader, opposed the plan the Senate passed Thursday because he does not believe any incumbent senators should be paired in the same district.
The House earlier in the session approved a plan that redrew five districts in north Mississippi and made the House district in Chickasaw County a majority-Black district.
Sen. Kirby told reporters he believes the House and the Senate have a “gentleman’s agreement” to pass the other chambers’ plan, which has historically been the custom.
Under the legislation, the qualifying period for new elections would run from May 19 to May 30. The primary election will be held on August 5, with a potential primary runoff on September 2 and the general election on November 4.
Republican Gov. Tate Reeves has no direct say in legislative redistricting, so once the Legislature passes a redistricting plan, it will go back before the federal courts for approval.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Convicted killer whose parole sparked outrage dies in car crash

Mississippi let a double murderer go free. Twice.
Now he is dead, and an older couple is injured.
In May 2023, the Mississippi Parole Board released James Williams III — 18 years after he was convicted of fatally shooting his father, James Jr., and stepmother, Cindy Lassiter Mangum. Williams had previously tried to poison them to death.
His parole faced pushback from the victims’ family, community members and lawmakers.
At the time, Zeno Magnum, whose mother was killed by Williams, decried the Parole Board’s decision. “He murdered ‘em, threw ‘em in trash bags, put them in Rubbermaid trash cans and threw ‘em out like the trash,” he said. “We are concerned not only for our personal safety, but also for the safety of anyone who may come in contact with this psychopath.”
Parole Board Chairman Jeffrey Belk defended the Parole Board’s decision, saying they received no objection from the family or others at the time — a claim that Magnum’s family disputed.
Less than five months after his parole, he got drunk and wrecked his car on Oct. 20, 2023, the same day of the Brandon-Pearl high school football game, Magnum said. “There were people everywhere. He’s very fortunate he didn’t kill anybody.”
Williams’ parole was revoked, and he returned to prison.
A month later, the Parole Board found that by violating the law, he violated a condition of his parole. Three of four members voted to return him to prison for a year, according to court records, and Belk cast the lone “no” vote.
Hinds County Circuit Judge Debra Gibbs vacated the Parole Board’s decision to return Williams to prison for at least a year for violating parole.
“Mr. Williams has already served more than ninety (90) days in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections,” the judge wrote. “Therefore – unless he is held pursuant to some other sentence or order – he SHALL BE RELEASED IMMEDIATELY from the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections and returned to parole.”
The judge agreed with Williams’ argument that his DUI misdemeanor constituted a technical violation of his parole, meaning that 90 days was the maximum period he could be imprisoned for a first-time technical violation. The judge’s decision matched a recent attorney general’s office opinion on the subject.
When word came that Williams might go free again, Cindy Mangum’s sister, Barbara Rankin, said her family set up a Sept. 16, 2024, meeting with Parole Board members, she said. “They let him out a week before we were set to go.”
Around noon Saturday, Williams met his death near Sanctuary Drive. The 39-year-old was driving his 2009 Honda Civic north on Will Stutely Drive when he collided with a 2019 GMC Sierra that contained Curtis Jones, 73, and his 72-year-old wife, Ruth, who were traveling east, according to the Mississippi Highway Patrol.
Williams was pronounced dead on the scene. Paramedics transported the couple to St. Dominic’s Hospital in Jackson. Their injuries remain unknown, and the patrol continues to investigate to determine if Williams had been intoxicated.
“The ironic thing,” Zeno Magnum said, “is if he was still in prison, he would be alive.”
The whole ordeal has been “cloaked in secrecy,” he said. “My mom was killed, and it was like pulling teeth to get information on it. It was tough even for me as her son to get information.”
Williams’ death has brought him a wide range of emotions. On one hand, he doesn’t want to celebrate the loss of a human being, he said, but on the other hand, the death “does bring my family and I a great deal of closure.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Crooked Letter Sports Podcast
Podcast: Three Mississippi teams in the Top 25 D-1 Baseball poll

Southern Miss and Ole Miss got some welcomed news as both joined Mississippi State, giving the Magnolia State three teams in this week;s college baseball poll. Otherwise, the college basketball grind continues and the best high school basketball teams converge on Jackson for the annual MHSAA boys and girls state tournament.
Stream all episodes here.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
-
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed5 days ago
Jeff Landry’s budget includes cuts to Louisiana’s domestic violence shelter funding
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed6 days ago
Bills from NC lawmakers expand gun rights, limit cellphone use
-
News from the South - West Virginia News Feed3 days ago
‘What’s next?’: West Virginia native loses dream job during National Park Service terminations
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed6 days ago
ICE charges Texas bakery owners with harboring immigrants
-
Mississippi Today6 days ago
Forty years after health official scaled fence in Jackson to save malnourished personal care home residents, unchecked horrors remain
-
News from the South - Missouri News Feed7 days ago
Interstate 44 reopens following mass traffic
-
News from the South - Oklahoma News Feed6 days ago
Oklahoma City FAA workers axed in federal layoffs feel betrayed, concerned by rhetoric
-
Kaiser Health News7 days ago
An Ice Rink To Fight Opioid Crisis: Drug-Free Fun vs. Misuse of Settlement Cash