Mississippi Today
Report: Inflation has negated benefits of historic 2022 teacher pay raise

The 2022 historic teacher pay raise has been largely negated by the impact of inflation, according to a new report.
Mississippi First, an education policy organization, published on Tuesday the findings from a survey of Mississippi educators, the second year they’ve done the study. Many of the findings echoed the results from the previous year, despite the passage of the historic pay raise that increased teacher salaries by an average of about $5,000.
The report argues the pay raise was ineffective at improving teacher quality of life because of the unprecedented inflation occurring at the same time. While the 2022 raise brought up the average salary by 11%, consumer prices increased by 9% in the same time period.
The authors included two additional questions on this year’s survey asking about the impact of the pay raise and of inflation. A substantial 93% of teachers said inflation had impacted their financial well-being, while only 36% said the same about the pay raise.
When looking at the metrics they evaluated last year, the new report found little change.
“We’re seeing identical data in terms of attrition risk (likelihood of leaving the classroom), in terms of financial well-being and in terms of the connection between the two,” said Toren Ballard, one of the report’s authors.
Just over half of teachers reported being “somewhat” or “very” likely to leave the classroom in the first report for the 2021-2022 school year, a figure that has barely changed even with the addition of the pay raise in the new results.
Similarly, half of teachers reported struggling to afford one basic necessity in last year’s report, a number that held constant for the 2022-23 school year. The report defines basic necessities as food, transportation, housing, medical care, childcare, and student loan payments.
To address these issues, the report recommends a $5,000 across-the-board raise for the 2024 legislative session to keep pace ahead of inflation and improve the financial reality for teachers.
Ballard said after the 2022 raise, a lot of people assumed an attitude that the pay issue had been solved for teachers, but inflation has put it back on the table.
The report also recommends a few policies to help teachers most at risk of leaving the classroom: a stipend for teachers in critical shortage areas, expanding access to a loan repayment program, and lowering health insurance premiums for teachers with dependents on the plan.
These are all policy proposals that Mississippi First has brought forward before. Ballard said he feels optimistic about these more targeted policies getting passed, particularly since some of them already saw significant support in previous legislative sessions.
“A lot of people are still under this assumption that ‘teachers don’t do it for the money,’” he said. “But in a state where so many teachers are struggling to afford basic necessities – food, transportation, or healthcare – living that kind of life economically is really going to wear on your ability to show up and give your all to one of the most difficult jobs in America today.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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Mississippi Today
On this day in 1912

March 9, 1912

Charlotta Bass became one of the nation’s first Black female editor-owners. She renamed The California Owl newspaper The California Eagle, and turned it into a hard-hitting publication. She campaigned against the racist film “Birth of a Nation,” which depicted the Ku Klux Klan as heroes, and against the mistreatment of African Americans in World War I.
After the war ended, she fought racism and segregation in Los Angeles, getting companies to end discriminatory practices. She also denounced political brutality, running front-page stories that read, “Trigger-Happy Cop Freed After Slaying Youth.”
When she reported on a KKK plot against Black leaders, eight Klansmen showed up at her offices. She pulled a pistol out of her desk, and they beat a “hasty retreat,”
The New York Times reported. “Mrs. Bass,” her husband told her, “one of these days you are going to get me killed.” She replied, “Mr. Bass, it will be in a good cause.”
In the 1940s, she began her first foray into politics, running for the Los Angeles City Council. In 1951, she sold the Eagle and co-founded Sojourners for Truth and Justice, a Black women’s group. A year later, she became the first Black woman to run for vice president, running on the Progressive Party ticket. Her campaign slogan: “Win or Lose, We Win by Raising the Issues.”
When Kamala Harris became the first Black female vice presidential candidate for a major political party in 2020, Bass’ pioneering steps were recalled.
“Bass would not win,” The Times wrote. “But she would make history, and for a brief time her lifelong fight for equality would enter the national spotlight.”
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
On this day in 1977
On this day in 1977
March 8, 1977

Henry L. Marsh III became the first Black mayor of the former capital of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia.
Growing up in Virginia, he attended a one-room school that had seven grades and one teacher. Afterward, he went to Richmond, where he became vice president of the senior class at Maggie L. Walker High School and president of the student NAACP branch.
When Virginia lawmakers debated whether to adopt “massive resistance,” he testified against that plan and later won a scholarship for Howard University School of Law. He decided to become a lawyer to “help make positive change happen.” After graduating, he helped win thousands of workers their class-actions cases and helped others succeed in fighting segregation cases.
“We were constantly fighting against race prejudice,” he recalled. “For instance, in the case of Franklin v. Giles County, a local official fired all of the black public school teachers. We sued and got the (that) decision overruled.”
In 1966, he was elected to the Richmond City Council and later became the city’s first Black mayor for five years. He inherited a landlocked city that had lost 40% of its retail revenues in three years, comparing it to “taking a wounded man, tying his hands behind his back, planting his feet in concrete and throwing him in the water and saying, ‘OK, let’s see you survive.’”
In the end, he led the city from “acute racial polarization towards a more civil society.” He served as president of the National Black Caucus of Elected Officials and as a member of the board of directors of the National League of Cities.
As an education supporter, he formed the Support Committee for Excellence in the Public Schools. He also hosts the city’s Annual Juneteenth Celebration. The courthouse where he practiced now bears his name and so does an elementary school.
Marsh also worked to bridge the city’s racial divide, creating what is now known as Venture Richmond. He was often quoted as saying, “It doesn’t impress me to say that something has never been done before, because everything that is done for the first time had never been done before.”
He died on Jan. 23, 2025, at the age of 91.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Judge tosses evidence tampering against Tim Herrington

A Lafayette County circuit judge ended an attempt to prosecute Sheldon Timothy Herrington Jr., the son of a prominent north Mississippi church family who is accused of killing a fellow University of Mississippi student named Jimmie “Jay” Lee, for evidence tampering.
In a March 7 order, Kelly Luther wrote that Herrington cannot be charged with evidence tampering because of the crime’s two-year statute of limitations. A grand jury indicted the University of Mississippi graduate last month on the charge for allegedly hiding Lee’s remains in a well-known dumping ground about 20 minutes from Herrington’s parent’s house in Grenada.
“The Court finds that prosecution for the charge of Tampering with Physical Evidence commenced outside the two-year statute of limitations and is therefore time-barred,” Luther wrote.
In order to stick, Luther essentially ruled that the prosecution should have brought the charges against Herrington sooner. In court last week, the prosecution argued that it could not have brought those charges to a grand jury without Lee’s remains, which provided the evidence that evidence tampering occurred.
The dismissal came after Herrington’s new counsel, Jackson-area criminal defense attorney Aafram Sellers, filed a motion to throw out the count. Sellers did not respond to a request for commend by press time.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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