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The Number of Weather Disasters that Hit Mississippi in the Last Decade | Mississippi

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www.thecentersquare.com – Samuel Stebbins, 24/7 Wall St. via The Center Square – 2023-05-19 09:56:26

Nine out of 10 U.S. counties suffered a federally-declared climate disaster between 2011 and 2021, according to a recent report. Disasters such as flooding, wildfires, hurricanes, winter storms, or other extreme weather events affected nearly every part of the country.

This means most U.S. residents are potentially in the path of natural disasters, which are increasing in both frequency and severity.

According to data compiled in the Atlas of Disaster report published by Rebuild by Design, there were 22 climate disaster declarations in Mississippi from 2011 to 2021.

Over that period, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Department of Housing and Urban Development spent a reported $476 million in post-disaster relief, the 23rd highest amount of all 50 states. Adjusting for population, FEMA and HUD spending in the state totaled about $159 per resident.

All data in this story is from the Atlas of Disaster report published by Rebuild by Design, a nonprofit that helps communities struck by natural disasters.

 

State Climate disaster declarations, 2011-2021 FEMA and HUD total cost ($) Cost per capita, 2011-2021 ($)
Alabama 17 1.3 billion 275
Alaska 15 294 million 401
Arizona 5 12.6 million 2
Arkansas 16 244 million 81
California 25 6.2 billion 157
Colorado 7 799 million 141
Connecticut 10 532 million 149
Delaware 5 13.6 million 14
Florida 11 8.3 billion 390
Georgia 11 675 million 64
Hawaii 10 325 million 229
Idaho 9 56.5 million 32
Illinois 5 311 million 24
Indiana 4 46.5 million 57
Iowa 21 717 million 228
Kansas 13 175 million 60
Kentucky 16 470 million 105
Louisiana 18 8.1 billion 1,736
Maine 6 24 million 18
Maryland 10 237 million 39
Massachusetts 9 501 million 73
Michigan 6 235 million 23
Minnesota 11 276 million 49
Mississippi 22 476 million 159
Missouri 14 992 million 162
Montana 12 67 million 63
Nebraska 14 749 million 390
Nevada 3 34 million 11
New Hampshire 16 74 million 55
New Jersey 13 7.2 billion 815
New Mexico 10 203 million 97
New York 16 26.3 billion 1,348
North Carolina 15 2.5 billion 243
North Dakota 13 561 million 738
Ohio 6 225 million 19
Oklahoma 22 849 million 215
Oregon 12 879 million 210
Pennsylvania 9 630 million 49
Rhode Island 4 56.3 million 53
South Carolina 8 1.5 billion 289
South Dakota 13 237 million 269
Tennessee 20 657 million 97
Texas 17 14.8 billion 518
Utah 7 36.1 million 11
Vermont 17 370 million 593
Virginia 11 417 million 49
Washington 16 267 million 36
West Virginia 17 870 million 481
Wisconsin 10 154 million 27
Wyoming 4 18.4 million 32

 

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The post The Number of Weather Disasters that Hit Mississippi in the Last Decade | Mississippi appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com

The Center Square

What are data centers and why do they matter? | National

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www.thecentersquare.com – Shirleen Guerra – (The Center Square – ) 2025-09-14 09:33:00


Data centers, vital for digital activities like shopping, streaming, and AI, process immense computing power and consume vast electricity. Hyperscale data centers, operated mainly by U.S. tech giants such as Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, have doubled globally in five years, with the U.S. holding 54% of capacity. These facilities, akin to small cities in power use, significantly impact local grids, especially in states like Virginia, Texas, and California. The AI boom is accelerating data center growth in size and number. As digital reliance deepens, data centers remain crucial yet largely unseen infrastructure shaping technology, energy demand, and regional economies worldwide.

(The Center Square) – Data centers may not be visible to most Americans, but they are shaping everything from electricity use to how communities grow.

These facilities house the servers that process nearly all digital activity, from online shopping and streaming to banking and health care. As the backbone of artificial intelligence and cloud computing, they have expanded at a pace few other industries can match.

Research from Synergy Research Group shows the number of hyperscale data centers worldwide doubled in just five years, reaching 1,136 by the end of 2024. The U.S. now accounts for 54% of that total capacity, more than China and Europe combined. Northern Virginia and the Beijing metro area together make up about 20% of the global market.

John Dinsdale, chief analyst with Synergy Research, said in an email to The Center Square that a simple way to describe data centers is to think of them as part of a food chain.

“At the bottom of the food chain, you’re sitting at your desk with a desktop PC or laptop. All the computing power is on your device,” Dinsdale said.

The next step up is a small office server room, which provides shared storage and applications for employees.

“Next up the chain, you can go two different directions (or use a mix),” he explained.

One option is a colocation data center, where companies lease space instead of running their own physical facilities. That model can support a multitude of customers from a single operator, such as Equinix.

The other option is to move to public cloud computing.

“You buy access to computing resources only when you need them, and you only pay for what you use,” Dinsdale said.

Providers like Amazon, Microsoft and Google run massive data centers that support tens of thousands of servers. From the customer perspective, it may feel like having a private system, but in reality, these servers are shared resources supporting many organizations.

Cloud providers now operate at a scale that was “unthinkable ten years ago” and are referred to in the industry as hyperscale, Dinsdale added. These global networks of data centers support millions of customers and users.

“The advent of AI is pushing those data centers to the next level — way more sophisticated technology, and data centers that need to become a lot more powerful,” he said.

What is a data center?

At its simplest, a data center is a secure building filled with rows of servers that store, process and move information across the internet. Almost every digital action passes through them.

“A data center is like a library of server computers that both stores and processes a lot of internet and cloud data we use every day,” said Dr. Ali Mehrizi-Sani, director of the Power and Energy Center at Virginia Tech told The Center Square. “Imagine having thousands of high-performance computers working nonstop doing heavy calculations with their fans on. That will need a lot of power.”

Some are small enough to serve a hospital or university. Others, known as hyperscale facilities, belong to companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Meta, with footprints large enough to be measured in megawatts of electricity use.

How big is the industry?

Synergy’s analysis shows how dominant the U.S. has become. Fourteen of the world’s top 20 hyperscale data center markets are in the U.S., including Northern Virginia, Dallas and Silicon Valley. Other global hotspots include Greater Beijing, Dublin and Singapore.

In 2024 alone, 137 new hyperscale centers came online, continuing a steady pace of growth. Average facility size is also climbing. Synergy forecasts that total capacity could double again in less than four years, with 130 to 140 new hyperscale centers added annually.

The world’s largest operators are American technology giants. Amazon, Microsoft and Google together account for 59% of hyperscale capacity, followed by Meta, Apple, and companies such as Alibaba, Tencent and ByteDance.

How much power do they use?

Large data centers run by the top firms typically require 30 to 100 megawatts of power. To put that into perspective, one megawatt can power about 750 homes. That means a 50-70 megawatt facility consumes as much electricity as a small city.

“Building one data center is like adding an entirely new town to the grid,” Mehrizi-Sani said. “In fact, in Virginia, data centers already consume about 25% of the electricity in the state. In the United States, that number is about 3 to 4%.”

That demand requires extensive coordination with utilities.

“Data centers connect to the power grid much like other large loads, like factories and even towns do,” Mehrizi-Sani said. “Because they need so much electric power, utilities have to upgrade substations, lines and transformers to support them. Utilities also have to upgrade their control and protection equipment to accommodate the consumption of data centers.”

If not planned carefully, he added, new facilities can strain local power delivery and generation capacity. That is why every major project must undergo engineering reviews before connecting to the grid.

Why now?

The rapid rise of AI has supercharged an already fast-growing sector. Training models and running cloud services requires enormous computing power, which means facilities are being built faster and larger.

“AI and cloud drive the need to data centers,” Mehrizi-Sani said. “Training AI models and running cloud services require massive computing power, which means new data centers have to be built faster and larger than before.”

Dinsdale noted in a report that the industry’s scale has shifted sharply.

“The big difference now is the increased scale of growth. Historically the average size of new data centers was increasing gradually, but this trend has become supercharged in the last few quarters as companies build out AI-oriented infrastructure,” he said.

Why certain states lead the market

Different states and regions offer different advantages. According to a July 2025 report by Synergy Energy Group, Virginia became the leading hub because of relatively low electricity costs when the industry was expanding, availability of land in the early years and proximity to federal agencies and contractors.

Texas and California are also major markets, for reasons ranging from abundant energy to the presence of technology companies.

Internationally, Synergy’s analysis shows that China and Europe each account for about a third of the remaining capacity. Analysts expect growth to spread to other U.S. regions, including the South and Midwest, while markets in India, Australia, Spain and Saudi Arabia increase their share globally.

What is at stake?

For most Americans, data centers are invisible but indispensable. Almost everything digital depends on them.

“Streaming movies, online banking, virtual meetings and classes, weather forecasts, navigation apps, social media like Instagram, online storage and even some healthcare services” all run through data centers, Mehrizi-Sani said.

Synergy’s forecast suggests the trend is unlikely to slow.

“It is also very clear that the United States will continue to dwarf all other countries and regions as the main home for hyperscale infrastructure,” Dinsdale said.

This story is the first in a Center Square series examining how data centers are reshaping electricity demand, costs, tax incentives, the environment and national security.

The post What are data centers and why do they matter? | National appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



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 provides an informative overview of the growth and significance of data centers, focusing on their technological, economic, and infrastructural impact without adopting an ideological stance. It reports on facts, expert opinions, and industry data in a straightforward manner, avoiding language or framing that promotes a particular political viewpoint. While the article touches on regional advantages and economic aspects, it does so neutrally, presenting multiple perspectives and emphasizing the broad importance of data centers across sectors without advocating for specific policies or partisan positions. This indicates an adherence to neutral, factual reporting rather than promoting or aligning with any political ideology.

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Mississippi News Video

Report: Only two states better than Mississippi in teacher freedom | Mississippi

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www.thecentersquare.com – By Alan Wooten | The Center Square – (The Center Square – ) 2025-09-14 08:01:00


The Heritage Foundation’s Education Freedom Report Card ranks Mississippi 17th overall and 3rd in teacher freedom, behind Florida and Arizona. Nearly 47% of Mississippi teachers entered through alternative certification, benefiting from full licensure reciprocity with other states. Teachers must pass the Praxis exam, though Heritage questions its effectiveness and suggests removing this requirement. Mississippi does not employ chief diversity officers or use Common Core-aligned tests. The state dropped six spots overall, but improved one in teacher freedom. Other rankings include 20th in education choice, 25th in return on investment, 29th in transparency, and 39th in civic education. Heritage promotes policies based on free enterprise and traditional values.

(The Center Square) – Only two states are better than Mississippi in teacher freedom, a report from the Heritage Foundation says

The Education Freedom Report Card put Mississippi 17th overall, and No. 3 behind Florida and Arizona in teacher freedom.

“A solid 47% of teachers in the state found their way to the classroom through alternative teacher certification options, and Mississippi has full reciprocity of teacher licensure with other states,” Heritage says. “Educators in Mississippi are required to pass the Praxis test, a teacher certification exam administered by the Educational Testing Service. There is little evidence that this assessment predicts teacher quality or effectiveness. No school district in the Magnolia State employs a ‘chief diversity officer,’ and Mississippi does not use Common Core-aligned assessments.”

Heritage encourages “eliminating the requirement for prospective teachers to take the Praxis exam.”

The overall ranking is down six spots, and the teacher freedom ranking is up one from last year.

Other category rankings are 20th in education choice, 25th in return on investment, 29th in transparency, and 39th in civic education.

Heritage bills itself as a nonprofit formulating and promoting “public policies based on the principles of free enterprise, limited government, individual freedom, traditional American values and a strong national defense.”

The post Report: Only two states better than Mississippi in teacher freedom | Mississippi appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



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-Right

The article primarily reports on the findings of a Heritage Foundation report regarding teacher freedom rankings in Mississippi. While the content itself is largely factual and descriptive, it references the Heritage Foundation, a known conservative think tank, and highlights their recommendations and ideological principles. The framing of teacher freedom and the emphasis on eliminating certification requirements align with conservative education policy preferences. However, the article does not explicitly endorse these views but rather presents them as part of the report’s conclusions, maintaining a mostly neutral tone with a slight center-right leaning due to the source and subject matter.

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The Center Square

‘We got him:’ Kirk shooting suspect in custody | National

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www.thecentersquare.com – J.D. Davidson and Dan McCaleb – (The Center Square – ) 2025-09-12 07:35:00


Tyler Robinson, 22, from Utah, has been arrested for the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, who was shot at Utah Valley University. Robinson’s family alerted authorities after he implicated himself. Investigators found a bolt-action rifle believed to be used, with engraved bullets bearing messages like “Hey fascist! Catch!” Robinson reportedly disliked Kirk’s political views. Discord messages from Robinson referenced retrieving the rifle and engraving bullets. Kirk, a Trump ally, was shot in the neck during his “American Comeback Tour” speech and died shortly after. The FBI and Utah Department of Public Safety are leading the investigation.

(The Center Square) – Authorities on Friday confirmed the suspect in the assassination of Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk is in custody.

The suspect was identified as Tyler Robinson, 22, of Utah.

“We got him,” Utah Gov. Spencer Cox said at a Friday news conference.

Cox said that on Thursday night, a family member of Robinson’s “reached out to a family friend,” saying Robinson had implicated himself in the shooting. The friend then contacted authorities, who took Robinson into custody.

Law enforcement interviewed a family member of the suspect, who said that Robinson had become “more political in recent years,” Cox said.

The unidentified family member shared a recent incident in which Robinson mentioned Kirk was coming to speak at the Utah Valley University campus, where Kirk was shot and killed.

Robinson said he didn’t like Kirk’s political viewpoints and thought he was “full of hate and spreading hate,” the family member told authorities, Cox said.

Investigators then interviewed Robinson’s roommate, who showed them various messages on Discord, a free communication platform, one of which referenced Robinson saying he needed to retrieve a rifle from a drop point. The messages also referenced engraving bullets.

Authorities found the bolt action rifle Thursday believed to be used in Wednesday’s assassination. Bullets were found inside the rifle, one of which was engraved with the message, “Hey fascist! Catch!” Cox said. 

Earlier Friday, President Donald Trump told Fox News the suspect in the killing of  Kirk has been caught. Kirk was a close ally of Trump.

“I think with a high degree of certainty, we have him,” Trump told Fox & Friends. “Essentially, someone who knew him turned him in.” 

As previously reported by The Center Square, the Utah Department of Public Safety released photos depicting the person of interest on Thursday.

Authorities had initially detained two individuals at different times following the shooting but released them after determining neither was involved.

Kirk, the Turning Point USA founder and ally of Trump, was shot in the neck while speaking at his “American Comeback Tour” on Utah Valley University’s campus Wednesday. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter, leaving behind his wife and two children under the age of 5.

School authorities traced the shots to the roof of the Losee Center, about 200 yards from the outdoor event.

The FBI, along with the Utah Department of Public Safety, is leading the investigation.

The post ‘We got him:’ Kirk shooting suspect in custody | National appeared first on www.thecentersquare.com



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 primarily reports factual information about the suspect in the assassination of Charlie Kirk, presenting statements from authorities and relevant parties without using charged or partisan language. It details the suspect’s motives as reported by family members and law enforcement, and includes quotes from political figures such as Utah’s governor and former President Trump, but does so in a straightforward manner. The piece focuses on the events and investigation rather than promoting a particular ideological viewpoint, maintaining a neutral tone throughout. Thus, it reports on ideological positions and actions without exhibiting a discernible political bias itself.

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