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Mississippi Today

Clarksdale health department, once possibly poised to close, gets a new building

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Instead of potentially closing, the Coahoma County Health Department is moving to a nicer, newer home.

The move to a building at the local hospital will preserve public in Clarksdale, the heart of the Mississippi Delta and a region with unique health needs. As health departments across the state struggle, the relocation is an example of what happens when local entities partner with the to serve the community, said Jon Levingston, economic development director for Coahoma County.

The decades-old building was in need of multiple repairs, but it would be too expensive to renovate, and no other buildings in the area were suitable, according to a July 24 press release from Crossroads Economic Partnership, an organization tasked with increasing economic viability in Coahoma County.

“Simply by looking at it, one could tell it was an old building with multiple issues,” Levingston said. “The staff, I think, really wanted to be in a different facility where their felt more at ease.”

Coahoma County is not alone – some of the state's county health departments are beyond repair. Former State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs in 2021 showed photos to lawmakers of county health departments with gaping holes in the walls, leaking ceilings, mold and dilapidated bathrooms, according to a New York Times article.

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The State Health Department was prepared to direct Coahoma County patients to nearby facilities. The closest health departments are miles away in Quitman, Tunica, Tallahatchie, Sunflower and Bolivar Counties. In an area where transportation can be a major challenge to health care access, keeping the health department in Clarksdale is a major win, Levingston said.

In a statement emailed to , State Health Officer Dr. Daniel Edney denied that the health department was going to close, though it's unclear how it would have remained open. Levingston said his understanding was that the facility would have closed without another building.

Daniel Edney, M.D., is the State Health Officer. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

The new became available after Delta Health System, which has undergone financial stress in recent years, bought out its lease of the Northwest Mississippi Regional Medical Center in April, and the county resumed its operation. Delta Health had leased the facility since February 2021.

Together, the hospital's board of trustees and Coahoma County Board of Supervisors offered the space to the health department.

“… It was an easy and natural for our board to offer to assist the State Department of Health,” said Bowen Flowers, president of the hospital board of trustees, in the press release. “The county health department needed to upgrade their space. We have the space and wanted to make it available to them, which our board voted unanimously to do.”

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After relocation and a ribbon cutting, the health department will be located in the hospital's adjacent medical office building, along with other health care offices connected to the hospital.

While it's relocating, the health department, which is usually open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Mondays and Fridays, will only be open on Fridays during the entire month of August, according to the state health department's website. Once it's complete, the health department will resume normal hours, and there are no plans to extend its hours in the future, according to Mississippi State Health Department spokesperson Liz Sharlot.

Edney has spoken extensively about increasing health care services in the Delta, where he was raised, as well as the need for partnerships between local and state partners to ensure the vitality of county health services especially. Edney called the collaboration in Coahoma a “model” to follow in other communities.

“These are the types of partnerships that are necessary to sustain excellent healthcare for all our citizens, especially in the rural of our state such as the Mississippi Delta region,” he said in the press release.

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Public health services are becoming even more essential as Mississippi's health care continues to crumble. Almost half of the state's rural hospitals are at risk of closure, according to one report.

Though budget cuts imposed on the State Health Department in recent years have trickled down to reduced hours and services at county health departments, they still offer essential services, such as STI testing, vaccinations, diabetes and hypertension care, pap smears and pregnancy testing.

Edney has prioritized increasing staffing, hours and services at county health departments statewide despite not receiving the he requested from the state this year.

“I can't allow this to continue,” Edney previously told Mississippi Today. “I can't allow counties not to have access to public health.”

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Currently, Mississippi has 86 health departments and 82 counties — several counties have more than one, while others have none.

Levingston recalled reactions from Coahoma County Health Department employees when he showed them the new facility.

“They were just looking around with stunned looks on their faces because it was so clean and so nice,” he said. “One lady looked at me with tears in her eyes and whispered, ‘Do you think this could really be ours?'

“‘Absolutely,' I said.”

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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

The Pulse: Mississippians rally for full Medicaid expansion

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Rev. Reginald Buckley joined hundreds of , clergy, and from over 35 communities at the Capitol in for a “Full Expansion Day” rally, urging legislators to expand coverage under the federal Affordable Care Act on Tuesday, April 16, 2024.

READ MORE: ‘A matter of life and death': Hundreds rally at Capitol for full Medicaid expansion

Mississippi health news you can't get anywhere else.

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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

Senate ushers in new college board appointees with few questions asked about higher education

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mississippitoday.org – Molly Minta – 2024-04-30 11:53:38

Hearings for new members of the governing board of Mississippi's public universities last week were in a small, out-of-the-way room on the fourth floor of the Capitol that does not have -streaming capabilities. 

Senate committee meetings are usually broadcast on YouTube, a point of pride for the chamber where lawmakers occasionally mock the Mississippi House for not doing the same. 

But the failure to broadcast the hearings for Gov. Tate Reeves' nominees to the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees means there is no way for students, faculty or staff who could not make it to Jackson to observe the proceedings to know what occurred, even as, according to multiple senators, the meeting was standing-room-only. 

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This is noteworthy because the IHL Board meetings are pro forma; the 12 trustees almost always vote in lock-step and rarely discuss policy proposals during regular open meetings in Jackson. The Senate has advise-and-consent power on the governor's nominees, so its confirmation hearings are one of the few times trustees, who serve nine-year terms, must take questions from representatives of the public. 

Though Reeves' four nominees were asked by Sen. Nicole Boyd, R-Oxford, the chair of the Senate Colleges and Universities Committee, about why they wanted to serve on the IHL board, multiple senators told Mississippi Today they could not recall, or did not ask, the appointees any questions about higher education issues. The nominees were confirmed by the full Senate with no questions on Sunday afternoon. 

The committee hearing occurred on April 23 at 1 p.m. in room 407, a small room tucked away in a corner of the fourth floor observation balcony, behind a scanner, a security guard, an assistant's desk and a sign that says “NO ADMITTANCE Senate Staff Only.” 

Room 407 on the fourth floor of the Capitol Building where a Senate committee spoke with Gov. Tate Reeves' four nominees to the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees on April 23, 2024. Credit: Molly Minta/Mississippi Today

“I really don't think I thought about how it didn't have live-streaming capabilities,” said Boyd, who is also a Senate conferee embroiled in the contentious Medicaid expansion negotiations. “There wasn't anything sinister about it.” 

Boyd added that before the committee hearing, she and the chair of the House Colleges and Universities Committee had interviewed the four nominees. She said she was excited about the different experiences the new trustees would bring to the board. 

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“Our committee really wants to work closely with the college board and the community college board,” Boyd said. “I wish there were cameras in there because it's more of an intimate setting. I would like to have more meetings in there … just because the room is small and you're around the table.”

New IHL board member Jerry Griffith, a retired IRS agent who previously served on the Gaming Commission, said he was even confused if the hearing was public or private when he was contacted by Mississippi Today. 

“Please forgive me, I'm not to be ugly or anything, but I'm so new to the board,” Griffith said. “I'm not sure if I can share anything.” 

Griffith said he would be happy to chat with Mississippi Today after he made some calls, but he did not respond to further inquiries. Charlie Stephenson, the president of the Mississippi Bulldog Club Board of Directors, and Don Clark, an attorney at Butler Snow, did not respond to Mississippi Today's requests for comment. 

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The final new board member, Jimmy Heidelberg, an attorney from Pascagoula, said he did not know all the committee members, but that Boyd and several other senators asked him about his education and professional experience. 

“She just said we've all got your information and your background, is there anything else you want to add or ask me and I said, ‘well, it was pretty thorough,'” Heidelberg recalled, adding that he told the committee he was also concerned with Mississippi's declining population of college-aged residents. 

“I said, ‘we need the best universities that we can have to keep kids home,'” he added. 

Heidelberg was not asked about any policies he would to achieve that goal, and he said he wouldn't speak on that because he is not yet familiar with the board's inner workings. 

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Mississippi Today asked if he supported the proposal from State Auditor Shad White to defund college degrees that don't contribute to the state's economy. 

“I don't know specifically what you're talking about, but I think everybody would share if you go to college and study and achieve a degree, hopefully you will out to be a contributing citizen with a skill that you can support yourself and your on,” he said. “That's the point of education.” 

This session, a failed effort to rename Mississippi for Women threw a spotlight on the ailing enrollment of the state's regional colleges. Lawmakers introduced several controversial proposals to reduce the number of public universities in the state, prompting outcry, particularly from supporters of Mississippi's historically Black public universities — Jackson State University, Alcorn State University and Mississippi Valley State University. 

Now, just one graduate of those three universities will sit on the IHL board after the Senate confirmed Reeves' nominees. Griffith's background report shows he graduated from Delta State University and had attended Jackson State, Boyd said. 

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But senators barely, if at all, asked the nominees questions about higher education, multiple sources told Mississippi Today. 

“I really didn't have that many questions, and I don't remember that many questions being asked of really any of them,” said Sen. Scott DeLano, R-Biloxi. 

That's not the purpose of these hearings, DeLano added. He noted Room 407 was so packed, extra chairs had to be brought in. The presidents of Mississippi State University and Delta State University were in attendance.  

“Generally speaking, we don't get into that kind of stuff,” DeLano said. “It's very rare, unless it was a reappointment, but other than that, you don't want to catch somebody off guard or flat-footed on an issue they do not have … background information to understand why we're asking.” 

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The hearings are more about affirming the nominees' backgrounds, multiple senators said, after an investigation by the legislative watchdog. Boyd asked the nominees why they wanted to be on the IHL board. 

Sens. Nicole Boyd, R-Oxford (left) and chairman Kevin Blackwell, during discussions on the cost of Medicaid expansion at a public meeting held at the state Capitol, Tuesday, April 23, 2024. Credit: Vickie D. King/Mississippi Today

“We got a really good sense of who they are and what they're going to bring to the college board, and I'm appreciative of people of that caliber, who could go sit and retire, giving back because the college board takes a ton of time,” Boyd said. 

The last time the Senate used its power to reject an IHL appointee was in 1996 when it repeatedly turned down four of Gov. Kirk Fordice's nominees: Hassell Franklin of Houston, Ralph Simmons of Laurel, John McCarty of Jackson and Tom McNeese of Columbia. The four nominees were later confirmed in a special session.

“We want to have some general idea of where someone stands,” DeLano said, “but for the most part those boards are supposed to be independent, and they're supposed to be subject-matter experts.” 

Sen. Briggs Hopson, R-Vicksburg, said he couldn't recall much of the meeting because it is the busiest time of year for him. Like other senators who spoke with Mississippi Today, he complimented the accomplishments of two of Reeves' nominees: Clark, the attorney for Butler Snow, and Heidelberg, the Pascagoula attorney, who both graduated from University of Southern Mississippi before attending the University of Mississippi School of Law. 

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“I don't remember exactly, and I don't know what questions were asked,” Hopson said. “I know I complemented two of the nominees that I've known … My experiences with them have always been positive.”

DeLano said that he had worked with Heidelberg on insurance policies affecting the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Boyd recalled that Clark and Griffith discussed the enrollment cliff that will uniquely affect the regional colleges. 

“We've got to make sure that we're progressively and actively managing that and that we're helping our regional universities make sure that they have strong enrollment numbers and growing enrollment numbers,” Boyd said. 

Ultimately, the meetings are more about jumpstarting a working relationship than they are fact-finding missions, DeLano said. After the committee wrapped, he said he spoke with Clark about public-private partnerships, because it is relevant to a bill this session that would authorize IHL to enter into a long-term lease agreement on behalf of the University of Mississippi. The bill died in conference yesterday.

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“It just gives me a good to shake hands with whoever those people are and look them in the eye and tell them I look forward to working with them in my role,” DeLano said. “I've seen some committee meetings where they might get partisan on this issue. I don't care about partisanship as much as I care about their willingness to dive deep into the issues and try to understand the totality of the duties that they have.” 

Sen. Sollie Norwood, D-Jackson, concurred. He said he did not ask the new trustees any questions but that he hopes to meet with them later this summer to discuss issues pertaining to the HBCUs, mainly the end of the Ayers settlement, which was meant to redress the IHL's historically underfunding of those institutions, and IHL's presidential selection process. 

“I want to let them get a chance to get in and get familiar with it and then we can have those conversations,” he said. 

Multiple committee members did not return inquiries from Mississippi Today or declined to comment, : Sen. John Polk, Sen. Daniel Sparks, Sen. Josh Harkins,Sen. Alfred Butler and Sen. Tyler McCaughn. 

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“I am away from the Capitol and I suggest you call the committee chairwoman Senator Nicole Boyd,” Sen. Walter Michel wrote in a text. 

“I wouldn't be the one to to,” wrote Sen. Joel Carter, also over text. “I was late due to negotiations on a conference report. I know there weren't very many questions.”

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 1945

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2024-04-30 07:00:00

April 30, 1945

Publicity of American musician Sister Rosetta Tharpe in 1938. Credit: Wikipedia

Sister Rosetta Tharpe, known as the “godmother of rock ‘n' roll,” made history by becoming the first gospel artist to rocket up the R&B charts with her gospel hit, “Strange Things Every Day.” In so doing, she paved the way for a strange new sound. 

“Rock ‘n' roll was bred between the church and the nightclubs in the soul of a queer Black woman in the 1940s named Sister Rosetta Tharpe,” National Public Radio wrote. “She was there before Elvis, Little Richard and Johnny Cash swiveled their hips and strummed their guitars. It was Tharpe, the godmother of rock ‘n' roll, who turned this burgeoning musical into an international sensation.” 

Born in Arkansas, the musical prodigy grew up in Mississippi in the Church of God in Christ, a Pentecostal denomination that welcomed all-out music and praise. By age 6, she was performing alongside her mandolin-playing mother in a traveling evangelistic troupe. By the mid-1920s, she and her mother had joined the Great Migration to Chicago, where they continued performing. 

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“As Tharpe grew up, she began fusing Delta blues, New Orleans jazz and gospel music into what would become her signature style,” NPR wrote. 

Her hard work paid off when she joined the Cotton Club Revue in New York . She was only 23. Before the end of 1938, she recorded gospel songs for Decca, “Rock Me,” which became a huge hit and made her an overnight sensation. Little Richard, Aretha Franklin and Jerry Lee Lewis have all cited her as an influence. 

“Sister Rosetta played guitar like the I was listening to, only smoother, with bigger notes,” said singer-songwriter Janis Ian. “And of course, personally, any female player was a big influence on me, because there were so few.” 

After hearing her successors on the radio, Tharpe was quoted as saying, “Oh, these kids and rock and roll — this is just sped up rhythm and blues. I've been doing that forever.” 

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On the eve of a 1973 recording , she died of a stroke and was buried in an unmarked grave. In the decades that followed, she finally began to the accolades that had eluded her in

In 2007, she was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame, and money was raised for her headstone. Eleven years later, she was inducted into the Rock and Rock Hall of Fame. 

“She was, and is,” NPR concluded, “an unmatched artist.”

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

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