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Parents worry opioid money not properly spent

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mississippitoday.org – @MSTODAYnews – 2025-06-11 09:41:00


Less than three weeks after losing his daughter Chelsea Sadler to an opioid overdose, Jonathan Aultman from Sumrall is frustrated by how Mississippi officials are managing opioid settlement funds without input from families affected by addiction. Mississippi is set to receive \$370 million from national opioid settlements, but state and local governments have allowed up to 30% of the money to be used for non-addiction purposes. In Hattiesburg, Forrest County has spent some funds on drug courts and sheriff’s department equipment, while other local shares remain unspent or unplanned. Families urge prioritizing prevention and treatment to avoid more deaths.

HATTIESBURG — Sitting in Moore’s Bicycle Shop in Hattiesburg less than three weeks after his 35-year-old daughter died of an overdose, Jonathan Aultman wondered aloud what he was supposed to do next. 

It wasn’t grief that made the mourning father from Sumrall feel lost. It was the prospect of Mississippi wasting an opportunity to prevent more tragedies like his family’s. 

Chelsea Aultman Sadler struggled with addiction for most of her life, starting when she was prescribed opioid painkillers after a surgery. The pills’ manufacturers falsely told her and other Americans that their products were safe and nonaddictive, all while drug companies flooded towns with prescriptions.

Shelby Aultman holds a photo of her daughter, Chelsea Sadler, who died from opioid use, at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

Her father was frustrated by the plan – or lack thereof – his local and state elected officials put together to spend the money paid by companies for their roles in the thousands of deadly overdoses they catalyzed in Mississippi. The state is expected to receive $370 million of the nearly $50 billion in settlement funds the corporations have committed to states so far. 

While addiction researchers and the lawyers who negotiated the settlements have said it’s important for all the money to go toward preventing more drug deaths, the settlements themselves allow for up to 30% to be spent on other uses.

Attorney General Lynn Fitch and the Legislature, the decision-makers for Mississippi’s settlements, have maximized that portion. Fitch developed a contract that allows towns, cities and counties to spend about $56 million on any expense – regardless of whether it addresses the opioid epidemic. In 2021, she said in a letter to localities this was done to “free local governments up to use your funds as you see fit.”

It’s a setup that’s allowed the three local governments in the Hattiesburg area — Forrest County, Lamar County and the city of Hattiesburg — to take different approaches using their settlement shares, which public records indicate have totaled just under $750,000 as of late May. 

Some of this money went to a criminal justice diversion program and a series of sheriff’s department expenses, including pole surveillance cameras and a handheld X-ray device, a public records request revealed. Another chunk is set to go to a new local mental health facility. 

And a third portion of the shares remains unspent and without a plan.

Some local officials Mississippi Today spoke to hadn’t yet considered what to do with the money that’s been trickling in since 2022. They had a variety of justifications for their spending decisions, often citing small amounts of money they received relative to the cost to address addiction. 

Sharon Miller talks about losing her son, Mackenzie Massenburg, and his romantic partner, Amanda Phillips, to opioid use during a discussion with other parents at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

That late May afternoon inside the Hardy Street bike shop, Aultman and four other Hattiesburg area parents who also lost children to drug deaths learned about the plans – and the inaction – from Mississippi Today. 

They expressed concern that elected officials hadn’t sought the voices of people in their shoes and worried these funds could be used in ways that wouldn’t prevent more deaths.

“From sitting in this chair, where do I go next?” Aultman asked, sitting next to a framed photo of his daughter. “Other than taking my pictures and going to the AG’s office and saying, ‘I’d like some accountability.’” 

Jonathan Aultman expresses emotion while discussing the loss of his daughter during a gathering at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

“This is very, very new and very, very fresh for me, and doesn’t sound like y’all are going to be doing right by this big pot of money you just got handed to you.”

Michelle Williams, chief of staff for the Mississippi attorney general, said that while Fitch would love for all the settlement dollars to be spent on addressing the overdose epidemic, the state’s top lawyer followed the requirements of the settlement when creating the agreement.

Since James Moore, the bike shop owner, lost his son to an overdose in 2015, he’s publicly advocated for policy changes that will prevent more parents from losing their children. He raises a flag at half-staff in front of his shop every time there’s an overdose death in the Hattiesburg area. It’s purple, the color for overdose awareness.

A sign outside Moore’s Bicycle Shop in Hattiesburg, Miss., Friday, May 30, 2025, explains the significance of the purple flag raised to honor those who have died from opioid overdoses in the community.

A log kept by James Moore records people in the area who have died from opioid use, Friday, May 30, 2025, at Moore’s Bicycle Shop in Hattiesburg, Miss. Moore raises a purple flag each time someone in the community dies from an overdose.

He’s raised it at least 65 times since Mississippi local governments have been receiving opioid settlement checks. 

Moore said he watches local news every night, and he’s never heard a word about Forrest, Lamar or Hattiesburg settlement shares. Knowing the dollars had been coming in for years as residents continued to die “really drives me crazy,” he said. 

Surveillance cameras, gun flashlights and an X-ray device

Over the next 14 years, the three Hattiesburg governments are expected to receive about $2.6 million from the national opioid settlements – about 5% of the local shares being sent to Mississippi cities and counties.

From October 2022 to May 2025, the city of Hattiesburg, Forrest County and Lamar County have received a total of $748,505, according to public records and administrators. Of that, $200,000 has been allocated.

The only locality to spend any of its share is Forrest County, which is responsible for most of the money. Pharmaceutical companies distributed over 85 pills per Forrest County resident each year from 2006 to 2019 – the second highest rate of any county in Mississippi, according to the Washington Post.

In November, the county’s supervisors awarded $100,000 to the local drug court, a program aimed at diverting people who’ve been arrested for nonviolent drug charges away from jail and to addiction treatment. Board meeting minutes say the funds are for court staff, addiction treatment and transportation.

In February, the supervisors considered Forrest County Sheriff Charlie Sims’ request for about $190,000 for items he said would help his department “in responding to narcotics violations.”

The county granted him $100,000, and Sims told Mississippi Today he’s prioritizing the first few items — a handheld X-ray device, a drug identification machine, pole surveillance cameras, a vehicle tracking device and weapon accessories like gun flashlights. Sims said his department has purchased the first three.

Many of the items listed may not have qualified as appropriate spending if the local government agreement had said all funds must be spent addressing addiction. But, unlike most states, Mississippi’s agreement doesn’t mandate that. 

Sims said the biggest drug problem his department focuses on is cracking down on fentanyl distribution, and these devices will help. He said he may look to use future funds for items like naloxone, an opioid overdose-reversing medication

Sims said his department has enough naloxone now. 

Roderick Woullard, a Forrest County supervisor, said the county recently put over $500,000 of other county funds toward a new regional crisis stabilization unit, a facility that provides short-term, urgent psychiatric care. It shows the county’s commitment to treating substance use disorder beyond the opioid settlements, he said.

Gentry Mordica, another Forrest County supervisor, said the board has public meetings and no one from the recovery community had brought ideas about how to spend these funds. Mordica said that to his knowledge, the board hasn’t publicly announced receiving the money. 

The remaining amount, about $550,000, is unallocated.

cards visualization

Lamar County and the city of Hattiesburg are behind Forrest County. Neither have allocated any of their settlement money.

Hattiesburg received just over $50,000 – a small portion of its over $160 million annual budget

In June, after Mississippi Today filed a public records request about Hattiesburg’s opioid settlements, Mayor Toby Barker contacted Moore, the Hattiesburg bike shop owner and recovery advocate. Barker asked Moore to form a committee to advise how Hattiesburg should spend the money. 

James Moore poses next to a photo of himself and his son, Jeffrey Moore, at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

Barker said the city hasn’t spent any of its money because payments have been small and infrequent. He hopes the opioid settlement committee includes those who have recovered from substance use disorder, families who’ve lost loved ones to overdoses, addiction treatment clinicians, law enforcement officers and others.

“I want to see Hattiesburg make a focused investment on where it can do some good,” he said. 

Lamar County administrator Joseph Waits said his supervisors plan to use their settlement dollars to help build the new regional crisis stabilization unit. The county made that decision without public participation because supervisors didn’t expect it to make up a lot of the county’s annual budget of tens of millions of dollars, he said. 

Waits and Mordica, the Forrest supervisor, said that while the Mississippi Attorney General’s office has repeatedly told local governments that these funds can be spent like any other public dollar, their counties were intent on using their funds to address the opioid crisis. 

“We’re concerned about it (the crisis),” Mordica said.

‘We don’t want it to happen to you and your children’

Shelby Aultman and her husband, Jonathan, comfort each other during a discussion about opioid-related deaths at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

Jonathan Aultman, from left, Shelby Aultman and Brooke Zimmerman pose with a photo of Chelsea Sadler, who died from opioid use, at Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Friday, May 30, 2025, in Hattiesburg, Miss.

In Moore’s Bicycle Shop, Jonathan Aultman was joined by his wife, Shelby Aultman. While the weeks since her daughter’s death have been an “emotional roller coaster,” she said, she’s spent time thinking about how much joy Chelsea brought to everyone who surrounded her, even as she suffered from addiction. 

The last public post on Chelsea’s Facebook page is a love note to her mom. At the celebration of life just a week earlier, on the Sumrall shores of the Bouie River, Shelby Aultman recalled Chelsea’s 7-year-old daughter Lily calling out to her mom as double rainbows appeared above their heads.

“Lily going, ‘I love you forever. I love you from the ocean deep. I love you from the sky high, no matter what,’” Aultman said. 

Jonathan Aultman watches his granddaughters, Lily and Esmae, at the shores of the Bouie River on May 24, 2025 in Sumrall, Miss. They were at a celebration of life for Chelsea Aultman Sadler, Aultman’s daughter and Lily’s mother, after she died of an overdose.

She believes her daughter always wanted to maintain longterm recovery, and additional resources, like those that could be purchased with local opioid settlement dollars, may have helped her do that. Aultman suggested ideas like therapy services for those whose addiction stems from trauma and education for parents about helping children with addiction. 

Even if local governments can spend their shares on other purposes, she thinks ending this crisis should take precedence. 

“This has happened to us. And we don’t want it to happen to you and your children.” 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The post Parents worry opioid money not properly spent appeared first on mississippitoday.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article focuses on the human and community impact of the opioid crisis, highlighting the experiences of grieving parents and their concerns about how local officials are managing opioid settlement funds. The language emphasizes accountability and the need for public involvement in spending decisions, portraying government actions as insufficient or misdirected. While it reports on facts about the settlements and local government choices, the tone and framing lean toward advocating for more compassionate, prevention-focused use of funds, which aligns with a Center-Left perspective prioritizing public health and community voices over broad discretionary spending by officials.

Mississippi Today

JPS superintendent visits on first day of school

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mississippitoday.org – @devnabose – 2025-07-28 14:16:00


Students in Jackson Public Schools returned to class Monday with enthusiasm and some new policies. Superintendent Errick L. Greene greeted students, emphasizing his commitment to being visible and supportive. High schoolers, including seniors like Rakeem Burney, expressed excitement about the new year. The district has implemented a stricter cellphone ban to reduce bullying and improve communication. Greene’s focus this year includes academic excellence, safer schools, and stronger family communication. At North Jackson Elementary, teachers introduced young students to classroom routines and expectations, building relationships from day one. The energy and optimism marked a hopeful start for the district’s 2025-26 school year.

As teenagers flooded into Callaway High School on Monday morning, one shirt that read “last first day” drew the attention of Jackson Public Schools administrators greeting students at the door.

“Last first day!” cheered Superintendent Errick L. Greene, prompting a smile from the senior striding past.

Across the city, students went back to school Monday for the start of the new year. For some, it was their first day in a classroom. For others, like Rakeem Burney, it would be the last time they celebrated the first day of grade school. 

“It’s my senior year, but it hasn’t really hit me yet,” he said, dressed sharply in sparkling white sneakers. “I’m just excited to meet all my teachers and embark on this journey and everything this year will bring. The fact that the superintendent came, too, means a lot to me.”

That was the goal, Greene said. By showing up on the first day, he wanted to show students his support and commitment to them.

“This is where the magic happens,” he said. “For all of the back of the office things I have to do, the most important thing is to be here, to observe what’s going on but also to be visible with scholars and team members. They need to know I’m part of this work on the ground.

“This fills my cup.”

The energy was high at Callaway — volunteers and cheerleaders shook pompoms as students meandered through hallways, greeting one another and checking out their schedule for the year — but district changes were also apparent.

As some students entered the high school with cell phone imprints clearly visible in their jean pockets, administrators warned them to put their devices in their backpacks, out of reach. 

Phones were already banned at JPS schools, but the board approved a stricter policy over the summer in an effort to curb bullying, violence and miscommunication with parents. 

It’s part of Greene’s vision for the school year — a safer, more scholastically successful and well-staffed district. He said academic excellence remains a top focus for JPS, but there’s also work to be done around district culture. That includes supporting teachers and strengthening communication with families.

And the work starts from day one, he said.

Just down the block at North Jackson Elementary School, preschoolers were learning for the first time how to behave in a classroom. Greene joined them later that morning, stacking rainbow blocks on a brightly colored rug, while principal Jocelyn Smith circled the classroom, troubleshooting and smiling at the young students.

Despite her cheeriness, by 9 a.m. on Monday, Smith had been awake for hours. 

“The first day for me is just like for the children,” said Smith, who’s been working in education for three decades. “I couldn’t sleep last night. I was too excited to see the children.”

For the elementary students, the first day is essential to the rest of the year, she said.

“They get an introduction to the curriculum … they learn our procedures and how to be safe,” she said. “But most of all, they start learning our expectations for them, and they start to build a relationship with their teachers.”

In a different classroom up the hall, Rakesia Gray was figuring out what her third graders would be interested in reading this year. She passed out a worksheet, and asked her students to circle the topics they liked best. 

“On the first row, tell me which one you’d rather read out,” she said. “Polar bears or penguins?”

The room was silent. Students shyly glanced at each other.

“Come on now,” Gray said, laughing. “Y’all have gotta talk to me!”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The post JPS superintendent visits on first day of school appeared first on mississippitoday.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

This article presents straightforward, fact-based reporting on the first day of school in Jackson Public Schools, highlighting the superintendent’s involvement and district policies without promoting a particular political viewpoint. The tone is neutral and focused on community and educational themes, with no ideological framing favoring left or right perspectives. It covers administrative actions and student experiences in an objective manner, providing balanced context on policy changes like the cellphone ban and emphasizing educational goals. The coverage reflects standard local news reporting rather than advancing any ideological stance.

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Mississippi Today

Attorneys baffled by federal court order with factual errors

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mississippitoday.org – @MSTODAYnews – 2025-07-28 10:47:00


A federal judge in Mississippi, Henry T. Wingate, issued a temporary restraining order filled with factual errors, such as naming non-parties and quoting nonexistent case law, raising speculation that artificial intelligence may have been involved in drafting it. The order, which paused a law banning diversity, equity, and inclusion programs, was later replaced with a corrected version backdated to the original filing date. Legal experts noted the errors resemble AI “hallucinations,” but the judge has not responded to inquiries. Parties will next argue a preliminary injunction on August 5. Wingate has served since 1985 and was a former chief judge.

A ruling from a federal judge in Mississippi contained factual errors — listing plaintiffs who weren’t parties to the suit, including incorrect quotes from a state law and referring to cases that don’t appear to exist — raising questions about whether artificial intelligence was involved in drafting the order.

U.S. District Judge Henry T. Wingate issued an error-laden temporary restraining order on July 20, pausing the enforcement of a state law that prohibits diversity, equity and inclusion programs in public schools and universities. 

Lawyers from the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office asked him to clarify the order on Tuesday, and attorneys for the plaintiffs did not oppose the state’s request. On Wednesday, Wingate replaced the order with a corrected version.

His original order no longer appears on the court docket, so the public no longer has access to it. The corrected order is backdated to July 20, even though it was filed three days later.

“Our attorneys have never seen anything like this,” a Mississippi Attorney General’s Office official told Mississippi Today, speaking only on background because the litigation is pending.

Some attorneys who have reviewed the ruling questioned whether artificial intelligence was used to craft the order. Wingate did not respond to repeated questions about the order or whether he or his staff used AI to prepare it.

The original order lists plaintiffs such as the Mississippi Library Association and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., who have never been involved in the pending litigation and who do not even have cases pending before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. 

Wingate’s original order also appears to quote portions of the initial lawsuit and the legislation that established Mississippi’s DEI prohibition, making it seem as though the phrases were taken verbatim from the texts. But the quoted phrases don’t appear in either the complaint or the legislation. 

Wingate’s corrected order still cites a 1974 case from the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, Cousins v. School Board of City of Norfolk. However, when Mississippi Today attempted to search for that case, it appears that either it does not exist or the citation is incorrect. 

Christina Frohock, a University of Miami law school professor who studies the dangers artificial intelligence poses to the integrity of the legal system, said a common way attorneys are getting caught using AI is due to “hallucinations,” or instances where AI programs cite cases that don’t exist or use fabricated quotes. 

Frohock was hesitant to draw conclusions about the errors in the Mississippi ruling and attribute them to AI, but she was similarly perplexed by how basic facts from the case record were incorrect. 

“I actually don’t know how to explain the backstory here,” she said. “I feel like I’m Alice in Wonderland.”

Attorneys have an ethical obligation to make truthful representations in court, so when they are caught using artificial intelligence, judges have applied sanctions and demanded explanations. Just this month, a federal judge in Colorado ordered two attorneys to pay thousands in fines after they used AI to write a mistake-riddled court filing.

But there’s little recourse when the tables are turned. 

“If an attorney does this, a judge can demand explanations, but it’s not true in the other direction,” Frohock said. “We will probably never know what happened, unless an appellate court demands it.”

Parties in the case will meet again Aug. 5 to argue about a preliminary injunction in the case. 

Wingate, 78, was nominated to the bench by President Ronald Reagan in 1985. He was confirmed by the U.S. Senate that same year. He served as chief judge of the Southern District from 2003 to 2010. 

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The post Attorneys baffled by federal court order with factual errors appeared first on mississippitoday.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article reports on factual errors in a federal judge’s court order, raising questions about the possible use of artificial intelligence in drafting the document. It presents information from multiple perspectives, including legal experts and involved parties, without endorsing any ideological position. The tone remains neutral and focuses on the procedural and ethical implications of the errors, avoiding partisan framing. The coverage neither supports nor criticizes specific political views but rather highlights concerns about legal integrity and technology’s role in the judiciary, maintaining an objective stance overall.

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Mississippi Today

Some hope, some worries: Mississippi’s agriculture GDP is a mixed bag

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mississippitoday.org – @MSTODAYnews – 2025-07-28 05:16:00


Mississippi’s agriculture sector faces mixed fortunes. Row crops like soybeans, cotton, and corn have suffered due to natural disasters, trade wars, high costs, and declining prices, with soybean production valued over $1 billion. Federal disaster payments are helping but have been criticized as slow and insufficient. Conversely, livestock and poultry industries have grown strongly, with livestock up 14% and poultry 10%. High beef prices stem from historically low U.S. cattle numbers. In 2024, agriculture GDP fell slightly by 0.4%, while overall state GDP grew 4.2%. Early 2025 growth was boosted mainly by $120 million in federal payments, masking ongoing challenges for farmers.

It’s been a disparate few years for Mississippi’s agriculture sector. Even as natural disasters and trade wars have caused row crop prices to decline, record high beef prices, growing poultry production and hundreds millions of dollars in federal disaster payments have bolstered the sector.

Some farmers have reported that federal payments have been slower and lower than needed as they continue to feel the impacts of bad weather in 2023 and 2024 exacerbated by low prices, high costs and trade wars. In Mississippi, row crops, which include soy beans, cotton and corn, have been among the hardest hit.

“This is one of the worst years for row crops,” said Dr. Joshua Maples, an agricultural economist at Mississippi State University. 

Row crops, especially soybeans, are an important part of Mississippi’s economy with soybean production valued at over $1 billion. Farmers are still recovering from the effects of past severe weather conditions and the outlook for 2025 is not promising with higher than normal rainfall that may result in a lower crop yield.

The prices of row crops have declined since 2022 leading to smaller profits for farmers who are struggling to break even with high production costs. As a result of 2018 tariffs, China, the biggest importer of soybeans in the world, shifted to buying more from South America, a loss that the U.S. industry has not recovered from.

The bright spots in the agriculture industry have been the livestock and poultry industries. Poultry, the largest agriculture sector in Mississippi, grew by 10% according to data from the Mississippi State University Extension largely due to strong production.

But livestock saw the most growth, with a 14% increase.

“Livestock is the shining star of Mississippi,” said Mike McCormick, a cattle farmer and president of the Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation. Beef prices have soared due to historically low numbers of cattle in the United States. As of January 1, 2025, there were 86.7 million head of cattle in the United States, the fewest since 1951. 

While cattle farmers are currently seeing higher returns, they struggled for years with drought and weak profit margins leading to smaller herds. Farmers are trying to grow their herds but the process will likely take a few years, so beef prices will likely continue to be high.

In 2024, the state’s agricultural nominal GDP remained relatively unchanged with a decrease of 0.4% while the overall state GDP grew by 4.2%.

Agriculture GDP makes up around 2% of the state GDP. At the end of June, data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis showed that in the first quarter of 2025, Mississippi’s economy grew 0.7%.  The agriculture sector was the largest contributor to growth of any industry at 0.83%. This was the third straight quarter that agriculture had the largest GDP growth rate in the state.

But agriculture GDP growth in the first quarter of this year was largely due to $120 million in direct payments from the federal government to Mississippi farmers.

“It’s not reflective of the reality farmers are facing right now,” said Andy Gipson, Mississippi’s agricultural commissioner on a recent episode of Mississippi Today’s podcast The Other Side, of what would appear on paper to be robust growth in farming output.

These payments are part of the American Relief Act that was passed in December 2024 that set aside more than $30 billion in direct payments to farmers to help with losses from economic changes and natural disasters. The money is being paid out through multiple programs, including the Emergency Commodity Assistance Program, or ECAP, and the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program, or SDRP. The commodity program helps farmers impacted by increased production costs and falling crop prices while the disaster program helps those affected by severe weather in 2023 and 2024.

 “The $120 million is about 3.5% of the total GDP the state gained from ‘Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting’ in 2024,” said Dr. Sondra Collins a Senior Economist at the Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning. She expects to see the impact of these programs on GDP throughout the year as applications continue to be submitted and money is paid out. 

McCormick’s family has been farming in Mississippi since the 1820s and says this is one of the most challenging periods for farmers since the farm crisis of the 1980s. 

“Farming has always been a risky business,” said McCormick.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

The post Some hope, some worries: Mississippi’s agriculture GDP is a mixed bag appeared first on mississippitoday.org



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Centrist

The article presents a balanced, factual overview of Mississippi’s agricultural economy without promoting any ideological stance. It reports on the challenges faced by farmers due to weather, trade, and market factors alongside the positive growth in livestock and poultry sectors. The tone is neutral, relying on data and quotes from economists and industry representatives without editorializing. The inclusion of federal disaster payments is explained as a factor affecting GDP figures but is not framed with partisan judgment. Overall, the article adheres to straightforward reporting of economic conditions and policy impacts without evident bias.

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