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‘It needs to be discussed’: College board begins JSU president search without accounting for Hudson’s resignation

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‘It needs to be discussed': College board begins JSU president search without accounting for Hudson's resignation

The Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees is moving ahead with the search for the next president of Jackson University without first accounting for what went wrong with Hudson's presidency.

Hudson's resignation earlier this month made him the third straight president to resign from Jackson State, the largest historically Black university in the state and a cornerstone of economic development in Mississippi's capital .

So far, the board has not provided any information about the circumstances surrounding Hudson's resignation, saying only that it does not comment on “personnel matters.” This silence continued at a board meeting on Thursday when trustees said nothing about leadership at Jackson State despite weeks of press releases suggesting they would. Instead, after 20 minutes, the board voted to go into executive session.

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Then at 5 p.m., the board sent out a press release announcing it would begin a search for Jackson State's next president. Steven Cunningham, the only Jackson State alumnus on the board, will chair the search. Listening sessions will be held this spring.

It is unclear if the board made a to commence the search during executive session. IHL's spokesperson, Caron Blanton, did not respond to questions by press time. Cunningham did not respond to a call or text from .

Now, unanswered questions about the board's search are stacking on top of unanswered questions about Hudson's resignation.

C. Liegh McInnis, a poet, short story writer and retired Jackson State English instructor, said community members are wondering to what extent the board, with its unilateral power to hire and fire presidents, is responsible for the pattern of resignations at the university, or if Hudson's resignation was a fluke.

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“Whatever it is, it needs to be discussed,” he said. “Not only so it can be avoided, but because he (Hudson) was doing right in so many ways. He was a great fundraiser; he was a great face of the institution.”

McInnis said at a minimum, he thought it was important for the community to know if the Faculty Senate's “no-confidence” vote played a role in Hudson's resignation since that could affect the next president's .

But McInnis added that he does not expect more transparency because he “can't think of a time that the board has ever made a decision that works in the favor of HBCUs.”

“Name me one roach who likes when the lights are turned on,” he said.

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The board gives itself two options when it searches for a new university president, according to IHL policy: an extended search with a consultant or an expedited process in which the trustees interview candidates “that are known to the Board.” The board has latitude to flip-flop between the two types of searches.

The board used the expedited process to select Hudson's predecessor, William Bynum Jr., prompting outcry from the community and a from Black lawmakers. Bynum's presidency ended in scandal after he was during a prostitution sting in early 2020.

At the end of 2020, the IHL commissioner, Alfred Rankins, acknowledged “there were some issues” with the search for Bynum during listening sessions. But the board still decided to forgo a national search and appoint Hudson.

McInnis said that while many community members were unhappy with the board's decision to appoint Hudson without a national search, they ultimately accepted the move because Hudson is an alumnus.

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He hopes the community will hold the board accountable to publicly discussing leadership at Jackson State and providing more information about why Hudson's presidency was cut short.

“They think they'll never have to address it,” he said. “The question becomes, who is going to push them on it?”

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

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Mississippi Today

Supreme Court ruling sidesteps issue of spending public money on private schools

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mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2024-05-02 16:06:09

The in a 7-2 ruling found that for Public Schools does not have legal standing to challenge the constitutionality of the Legislature sending public money to private schools.

The opinion, released Thursday, did not address the issue of whether the $10 million appropriation made in 2022 by the Legislature to private schools was constitutional.

Justice Robert Chamberlin of Southaven, writing for the majority, concluded Parents for Public Schools did not have standing to bring the , in part, because harm to the public schools could not be proven.

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Chamberlin wrote that the public education advocacy group says the legislative appropriation “will adversely affect the funding of public schools by legislating a competitive advantage to the independent schools who will receive the funds. This alleged future harm, however, is speculative and not sufficient to meet even Mississippi's permissive standing requirements.”

Coloring the ruling of the majority at least in part, is that the funds appropriated to the private schools were federal COVID-19 relief funds and not state money.

The office of state Lynn Fitch had argued that the case should be dismissed because of lack of standing. Fitch's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the court's ruling.

Will Bardwell, an attorney for Parents for Public Schools, told that the Thursday ruling was “outrageous” because the organization he represents had a “direct interest” in ensuring Mississippi's public schools were not undermined.

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“This is not how courts are supposed to operate,” Bardwell said. “This is not how courts are supposed to work. When lawmakers ignore the constitution, courts are supposed to stand in their way. Other than Justice Leslie king and Justice Jim Kitchens, seven members of the Mississippi Supreme Court didn't do that . And that's sad.” 

The lawsuit revolved around Section 208 of the Mississippi Constitution, which declares simply that no public funds shall go to any school “that at the time of receiving such funds is not conducted as a public school.”

During oral arguments before the Court in February, attorneys for Parents for Public Schools contended that it made no difference whether the funds were state or federal funds, only that they were public funds.

Parents for Public Schools argued that it was a group composed of parents of public school children so it should have standing to pursue the lawsuit.

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Chancellor Crystal Wise Martin agreed with that argument, but the state's highest court overturned her ruling.

Chamberlin wrote that because the funds were federal, “state taxpayer standing
is untenable under the facts of this case.”

Justice Leslie King of Greenville argued that Parents for Public Schools did have standing. King, who was joined in his opinion by Justice James Kitchens of Crystal Springs, questioned whether anyone would have standing to file a lawsuit under the majority's opinion.

King wrote, “The majority's holding today flies in the face of our longstanding liberal standing jurisprudence and severely limits the ability of Mississippi citizens to challenge actions that violate the constitution.”

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Mississippi Today's Taylor Vance contributed to this report.

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

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Mississippi Today

IVF heir bill heads to governor’s desk

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mississippitoday.org – Sophia Paffenroth – 2024-05-02 15:08:05

A bill to correct an outdated barring in vitro fertilization children from next of kin inheritance passed both chambers Wednesday afternoon and now heads to the governor to be signed into law. 

This is the fifth year Rep. Dana McLean, R-Columbus, filed the measure to give inheritance rights to children conceived via IVF after the death of one parent, as 27 other states have done. These bills died in the legislative process the last four years.

“What a relief … I am just so thrilled that after all this time we came to an agreement that will soon be law,” McLean said. “This will countless families and children have the right to be able to receive these as they should.”

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McLean's legislation was inspired by the personal story of one of her constituents, Katie Studdard, whose 5-year-old daughter has been denied Social Security benefits from her late biological father since birth. 

READ MORE: Five years later, this Mississippi mom is still fighting an outdated law blocking her child's inheritance

“And that's how a lot of bills that we end up sponsoring come to us – from stories, from an issue someone is where we need to make adjustments to state law,” McLean said.

Rep. Dana McLean, right, sits in the House Chamber during the Legislative Session at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Thursday, March 7, 2024. Credit: Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

Studdard, who lives in Columbus, started fertility treatments with her late husband, Chris McDill, before he died of cancer. She did not have with the embryos while her husband was alive, but decided to continue for a baby after her husband's death. She conceived her daughter Elyse a year after her husband died. 

House Bill 1542 passed the House unanimously in mid-March and overwhelmingly passed the Senate in mid-April at the eleventh hour. But the Senate passed it with a reverse repealer, referring it to conference in the hopes of expanding the bill beyond its original scope to protect in vitro fertilization and other forms of assisted reproduction, in the wake of recent events calling fertility treatments into question in Alabama. 

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Ultimately, that was too big a task to take on at the end of the session, with pro-life groups coming out publicly to express concern about new language they didn't have time to vet, explained Sen. Joey Fillingane, R-Sumrall. Fillingane was one of the lawmakers tasked with debating the details of the bill in conference. 

House and Senate conferees reverted the bill back mostly to its original language and were able to achieve the primary goal of securing inheritance rights for posthumously-conceived children with the final version. In addition to that goal, Fillingane said, conferees were able to come up with a definition for “alternative reproduction,” which didn't previously exist in Mississippi. 

“I think Chairman (Brice) Wiggins and Chairman (Joey) Hood (of the Judiciary A committee where the bill was assigned) thought … ‘let's get this issue addressed for this family in Columbus that has waited (five) years … and let's at least get a definition in place sort of as a starting point to build a framework out hopefully over the next sessions to add to protect the IVF procedures and processes and surrogacy,'” said Fillingane.

Sen. Joey Fillingane, R-Sumrall, speaks about a bill concerning Medicaid expansion at the Capitol in Jackson, Miss., Thursday, March 28, 2024. Credit: Eric J. Shelton/Mississippi Today

Fillingane had two of his own children through surrogacy, but traveled to California to do so – because the state has clear statutory guidelines around parental rights in surrogacy cases. 

“I did not feel comfortable having my kids in Mississippi … there were absolutely no protections that the state of Mississippi offers for who have children this way. As a family lawyer, I was uniquely situated to see some of these things,” he said.

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Senate Judiciary A Chairman Brice Wiggins, R-Pascagoula, who was instrumental in getting the bill to the finish line, wasn't available for comment. 

Although it's been a trying few years, Studdard said she has a newfound appreciation for the . As a teacher, she has live streamed floor debates during her lunch period at school, has become acquainted with the legislative language of various iterations of the bill, and talked extensively with lawmakers. She says that every time she hears a new legislative word that she doesn't know, she googles it.

“I've learned a lot,” she said. “I think anybody going through any life-changing , like I did with (my husband's) cancer, and then IVF, and now this bill …you gain a whole new appreciation and so much knowledge you never thought you'd know.”

Studdard is overjoyed that the Senate proposed naming the law after her late husband, Chris McDill, and is proud to model for her daughter and her that it is possible for an everyday person to enact policy change. 

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Primarily, she hopes the benefits her daughter will start receiving next year will go toward her future education.

“I just think this financially will create so much security for her and her education, that's number one for me,” Studdard said. “I want her to not have to worry about taking out a student loan. I want her to have a good financial start to life when she goes to college. To be able to hand that to your child is a gift.”

When McLean first authored a bill to address Studdard's predicament, it was the first year of her first four-year term. Now, it's the first year of her second term, and she says it feels full circle. 

“When (Studdard) first told me about her little girl and being a single mom, at that time Elyse was just a baby, and it really hit home to me because I am also a single mother of a daughter, and I understood the significance of this and how we really need to protect children and women and mothers and families,” McLean reflected. “I felt like it was really something I could get behind.”

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

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Mississippi Today

 Belhaven man’s widow will decide what will be done with his remains, but independent autopsy will be done

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mississippitoday.org – Mina Corpuz – 2024-05-02 13:06:28

A Hinds County chancery judge has the brother of Dau Mabil from a filed against the man's widow that would have allowed him to gain access to his brother's body for an independent autopsy. 

Judge Dewayne issued two orders Thursday morning several days after a hearing in a lawsuit between Bul Mabil and Karissa Bowley, along with state investigators, about what will happen to Dau Mabil's remains. 

In the hearing and court filings, Bowley said she will allow an independent autopsy to be conducted. 

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“I do feel relief that this part of things is over and we can move on to what we were doing before, which is continue to dig for information,” she said Thursday after the judge's orders were released. 

On March 25, the 33-year-old Belhaven resident went on a walk in his usual area without his phone. He was seen on surveillance on Jefferson Street between Fortification and High Street, and at one point went to the Trail in Belhaven Heights to check on corn he planted. 

About three weeks later, a fisherman spotted a body floating in the Pearl River near Lawrence County, more than 50 miles away. By April 18, a preliminary autopsy revealed the body belonged to Mabil. The Lawrence County sheriff said there was no evidence of foul play.

In his order, Thomas imposed safeguards proposed by Bowley and the Department of Public Safety for the independent autopsy: It needs to be conducted after the state finishes its investigation and be conducted by someone who is a qualified pathologist with a certain medical degree and certification. 

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After the state finishes its investigation, official autopsy results shall be released only with consent of Bowley, as the surviving spouse and next of kin, according to the court order. 

Bowley is awaiting the from the first autopsy to shed more light on what happened and whether anyone from the public knows anything or has any video from the day Mabil disappeared, including video Bul Mabil's attorney mentioned that supposedly shows people at the Museum Trail moving that appears to be a body into a truck around the time Mabil was at there. 

The Department of Public Safety will hold Mabil's remains for 30 days after the state finishes its investigation so the independent autopsy can be done. 

Bul Mabil filed the lawsuit the night before his brother's body was identified because he believes it is the only way to know whether there was foul play in his brother's death. U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson has asked the Justice Department to investigate.

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In a separate order, Thomas agreed that Bowley, as Mabil's surviving spouse, is Mabil's next of kin and the one who can direct what happens with his remains. 

He dismissed Bul Mabil as a plaintiff because he lacked standing in the matter. 

At a Tuesday hearing, his attorney, Lisa Ross, argued that he should be Dau Mabil's next of kin because his brother and Bowley had a strained relationship leading up to his disappearance. Ross said Mississippi has no existing case that defines who is a surviving spouse, but referenced a New York case in which a wife separated from her husband was not allowed to cremate his body and interfere with the mother's request for an autopsy. 

He has also argued in court records that he should remain in the case because he is the next of kin for Dau's child. 

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Ross could not be reached about whether she plans to appeal. 

The lawsuit has been renamed to reflect the new parties: Bowley v. Mississippi Department of Public Safety. 

Now that the judge has written the orders, Bowley said she feels relieved and has more to grieve her husband, including visiting places around the city where they went together. 

One of those is the patch along the Museum Trail where Mabil planted corn. Bowley said she's returned there to the plants and see them grow. 

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“It's a nice place to be reminded of him along with many others,” she said.

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

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