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After bumpy FAFSA rollout, Mississippi extends deadline for low-income students seeking financial aid

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mississippitoday.org – Molly Minta – 2024-01-23 13:45:15

Low-income Mississippi will get an extra two months to file a federal form in order to get the state's need-based college financial aid program.

In Mississippi, students from families generally making less than $35,900 a year qualify for the Higher Education Legislative Plan for Needy Students, or , grant if they meet certain academic criteria.

To apply, students must complete two applications — the Mississippi Aid Application and the federal Application for Federal Student Aid. This year, the deadline to submit MAAPP will remain March 31, but low-income students will now get until June 30 to file the FAFSA with the state's financial aid office and confirm their income.

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The FAFSA extension as students and families have encountered hours-long wait times and glitchy forms after the federal unveiled a “streamlined” at the end of last year. 

“I do believe in the end it is going to be better, but right now it doesn't feel that way,” Jennifer Rogers, the director of Mississippi's financial aid office, told members of the Post-Secondary Education Financial Assistance Board who approved the new deadline on Tuesday. 

Rogers told board members she didn't know if the extension would result in an overall increase in the cost of the HELP program. That has been a regular concern as HELP is the state's most expensive financial aid program because it pays full tuition for all four years of college. 

Still, it's important to ensure low-income students, who may have less in applying for college, don't miss out on the HELP grant, Rogers said. They likely would not be able to afford a higher education in Mississippi without it. 

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“Giving students that extra time to get the FAFSA in this year when the FAFSA has changed so drastically is important to those lower-income students who don't necessarily have the resources and the guidance and the help that other better-resourced, non-first-generation students have,” she said. “But I can't tell you if it's going to cost more.” 

Students who are applying for Mississippi non-need-based college financial aid grants — the Mississippi Tuition Assistance Grant and the Mississippi Eminent Scholars Grant — do not need to submit the FAFSA to OSFA. The deadline for those grants is Sept. 15.

Rogers added that financial aid applications in Mississippi are on par with last year as school counselors and advocates for college access have been advising students to go ahead and fill out Mississippi's aid application, a form that is working, while they wait for the FAFSA.

So far, about 25,500 students have applied for college financial aid in Mississippi this award cycle, to roughly 26,000 last year, Rogers told .

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READ MORE: ‘No one is losing out' in proposed college financial aid changes, board says

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

Mississippi Today

On this day in 1968

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-05-11 07:00:00

MAY 11, 1968

Five-year-old Veronica Pitt touches a tattered poster of Martin Luther King Jr. as she and her 3-year-old brother Raythorn Resurrection with other evacuees on May 24, 1968. Credit: AP: Bob Daugherty.

The Poor People's Campaign arrived in Washington, D.C. A town called “Resurrection City” was erected as a to the slain Martin Luther King Jr. 

King had conceived the campaign, which was led by his successor at the head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Ralph David Abernathy. leader Jesse reached out to young Black wanting vengeance for King's assassination. 

“Jackson sat them down and said, ‘This is just not the way, brothers. It's just not the way,”' recalled Lenneal Henderson, then a student at the of California at Berkeley. “He went further and said, ‘Look, you've got to pledge to me and to yourself that when you go back to wherever you , before the year is out, you're going to do two things to make a difference in your neighborhood.' It was an impressive moment of leadership.”

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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

Lawmakers may have to return to Capitol May 14 to override Gov. Tate Reeves’ potential vetoes

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mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2024-05-10 12:50:25

Legislators might not have much notice on whether they will be called back to the Mississippi Capitol for one final day of the 2024 session.

Speaker Jason White, who presides over the House, and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann, who presides over the Senate, must decide in the coming days whether to reconvene the Legislature for one final day in the 2024 session on Tuesday at 1 p.m.

Lawmakers left on May 4. But under the joint resolution passed during the final days of the session, legislators gave themselves the option to return on May 14 unless Hosemann and White “jointly determine that it is not necessary to reconvene.”

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The reason for the possible return on Tuesday presumably is to give the Legislature the to take up and try to override any veto by Gov. Tate Reeves. The only problem is the final bills passed by the Legislature — more than 30 — are not due action by Reeves until Monday, May 13. And technically the governor has until midnight Monday to veto or sign the bills into or allow them to become law without his signature.

Spokespeople for both Hosemann and White say the governor has committed to taking action on that final batch of bills by Monday at 5 p.m.

“The governor's office has assured us that we will final word on all bills by Monday at 5 p.m.,” a spokesperson for Hosemann said. “In the meantime, we are reminding senators of the possibility of return on Tuesday.”

A spokesperson for White said, “Both the House and Senate expect to have all bills returned from the governor before 5 p.m. on Monday. The lieutenant governor and speaker will then decide if there is a reason to back on May 14.”

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The governor has five days to act on bills after he receives them while legislators are in session, which technically they still are. The final batch of bills were ready for the governor's office one day before they were picked up by Reeves staff. If they had been picked up that day earlier, Reeves would have had to act on them by Saturday.

At times, the governor has avoided picking up the bills. For instance, reporters witnessed the legislative staff attempt to deliver a batch of bills to the governor's Capitol office one day last , but Reeves' staff refused to accept the bills. They were picked up one day later by the governor's staff, though.

Among the bills due Monday is the massive bill that funds various projects throughout the , such as projects and infrastructure projects. In total, there are more than 325 such projects totaling more than $225 million in the bill.

In the past, the governor has vetoed some of those projects.

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The governor already has taken action of multiple bills passed during the final days of the session.

He allowed a bill to strip some of the power of the Public Employees Retirement System Board to become law without his signature. The bill also committed to providing a 2-and-one-half percent increase in the amount governmental entities contribute to the public employee pension plan over a five year period.

A bill expanding the area within the Capitol Complex Improvement District, located in the city of Jackson, also became law without his signature. The CCID receives additional from the state for infrastructure projects. A state Capitol Force has primary law enforcement jurisdiction in the area.

The governor signed into law earlier this week legislation replacing the long-standing Mississippi Adequate Education Program, which has been the mechanism to send state funds to local schools for their basis operation.

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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

On this day in 2007

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MAY 10, 2007

Left to right, John Lewis, Ralph Abernathy, Martin Luther King Jr. and Andrew Young attended the 1965 funeral of Jimmie Lee , whose inspired the Selma march to Montgomery. Credit: AP

An Alabama grand jury indicted former trooper James Bonard Fowler for the Feb. 18, 1965, killing of Jimmie Lee Jackson, who was to protect his mother from being beaten at Mack's Café.

At Jackson's funeral, Martin Luther King Jr. called him “a martyred of a holy crusade for and human dignity.” As a society, he said, “we must be concerned not merely about who murdered him, but about the system, the way of , the philosophy which produced the murderer.”

Authorities reopened the case after journalist John Fleming of the Anniston Star published an interview with Fowler in which he admitted, despite his claim of self-defense, that he had shot Jackson multiple times. And Fleming uncovered Fowler's killing of another Black man, Nathan Johnson. In 2010, Fowler pleaded guilty to second-degree manslaughter and was to six months behind bars.

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

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