Mississippi
MS Auditor: State-level DOGEs could find millions in waste
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Americans spent four years watching Joe Biden throw billions of dollars down the drain and give out tax dollars like candy to all of his left-wing activist buddies.
Compare that to the historic leadership President Trump has displayed with his creation of the Department of Government Efficiency. We finally have a president who makes an effort to save trillions instead of lighting it on fire.
DOGE is a benefit because it’s not only doing real work to make our federal government more efficient, but it’s also inspiring state government officials around the country to start state-level DOGE efforts.
I have the privilege to serve as Mississippi’s State Auditor, and we have spent the last few years finding similar sorts of examples of waste in state government. We even jokingly started calling ourselves MOGE (the Mississippi Office of Government Efficiency) and have released an 800-page MOGE report with tons of detail on how state taxpayer money is going down the drain.
For example, in Mississippi’s Medicaid program, we found the state paid over $600,000 in a year to cover dead folks who were still on the program rolls.
We also found that in any given year, anywhere from 5-7% of people on Medicaid appear to be making too much money to be eligible for the program. That costs taxpayers anywhere from $60-$144 million in wasted funds, depending on the year. And the specific examples of what we found were insane: one couple was living in a 7,000 square foot home valued at over $1 million, and Mississippians were paying for their healthcare via Medicaid.
The Medicaid number is large, but we find smaller examples of waste that add up over time. Mississippi spends about $340,000 every year on cell phones for state employees that are never turned on. State agencies here entered into IT contracts to pay $5,800 each for TV screens (while the federal government bought the exact same TV screens for $2,200). Politicians use the state plane to fly to out-of-state baseball games.
Another area I’ve been excited to see DOGE look into is the massive amount of tax dollars being spent on DEI across our government. Here in Mississippi, my office found that over a four-year period, Mississippi universities spent over $23 million on DEI programs. One university has 20 DEI staffers.
Their head DEI staffer makes more than the governor and the lieutenant governor of Mississippi combined. And when asked what they did with all this money and manpower, that DEI office produced a document showing one of their accomplishments was handing out a grant to study equity-based social justice yoga for preschoolers (it sounds fake, I know).
We’ve found state taxpayer money going to purchase books for public libraries that teach kids that “whiteness is a bad deal.” We have taxpayer funding for left-wing degree programs in universities that teach classes like “Gender and Zombies.” We see grant money going to non-profits for community gardens that don’t exist or paying the speeding tickets of the non-profit’s managers.
Which leads me to this point: all of these left-wing activist ideologies are being promoted even here in Mississippi, the last state you’d imagine you’d find this garbage. This makes starting a state-level DOGE in every state even more important.
I’ve been Mississippi’s State Auditor for seven years now, and I’ve learned a lot during my tenure. I’ve learned that sometimes government waste happens because a bureaucrat is just lazy and isn’t being efficient with other people’s money. But other times, the waste is deliberate. Other times, the waste is there on purpose because it benefits someone powerful or well-connected.
This explains why Democrats spend all their time attacking DOGE and Elon Musk. I’ve had my fair share of attacks from establishment politicians over my office’s findings, too — some from my own party. Most politicians and government bureaucrats have no interest in weeding out the waste and some of them actually depend on it. They will attack and slander anyone who attempts to put a stop to it.
But I know that President Trump and Elon Musk won’t let that stop them. That’s the attitude you must have to go after the pet projects, and it’s what I’ve had to do here in Mississippi as the state auditor. My prediction is DOGE will inspire a new generation of leaders who know how to stand up to the left-wing bureaucratic ideologues and the establishment politicians to finally get a good deal for taxpayers.
— Shad White is the 42nd State Auditor of Mississippi.
Mississippi
Mississippi State Drops Series Opener at Texas A&M Despite Late Chances
Some losses feel like they drag on longer than the box score suggests, and Mississippi State’s 3-1 opener at Texas A&M fits that category.
It wasn’t a blowout. It wasn’t a game where the Bulldogs looked outmatched.
It was just one of those nights where the early mistakes stuck around and the offense never quite found the swing that could shake them loose.
The frustrating part is how quickly the hole formed. Two solo homers and a wild pitch in the first two innings put Mississippi State behind 3-0, and that was basically the ballgame.
Against a top tier SEC team on the road, spotting three runs that early is a tough ask. The Bulldogs didn’t fold, but they also didn’t cash in when the door cracked open.
“I liked our fight. I think we’re really just working through some things offensively, and trying to stay together,” Mississippi State coach Samantha Ricketts said. “This team still believes, and we’re going to battle and fight every chance we get, and I think I saw a lot of that. I’m encouraged for what that means for us moving forward, but, you know, they’re a good hitting team, and we’ve got to be able to shut them down early. I don’t think Peja [Goold] had her best stuff, but she continued to battle out there and find ways to get outs.”
They had chances. Two runners stranded in the fifth. Two more in the sixth. Another in the seventh. Des Rivera finally got the Bulldogs on the board with an RBI single, but the big hit that usually shows up for this lineup never arrived.
It wasn’t a lack of traffic. It was a lack of finish.
If there was a bright spot, it came from the bullpen. Delainey Everett gave Mississippi State exactly what it needed after the rocky start.
“That was just a huge relief appearance by Delaney to keep us in it,” Ricketts said. “It’s really good to have her back and healthy these last few weeks because these are the moments where we really need her and rely on her. We know that she’s going to be a big part of the remainder of the season going forward as well.”
Three hitless innings, one baserunner, and a reminder that she’s quietly putting together a strong stretch.
There were individual positives too. Nadia Barbary keeps climbing the doubles list. Kiarra Sells keeps finding ways on base.
But the bigger picture is simple. Mississippi State is now 6-10 in the SEC, and the margin for error is shrinking. Nights like this one are the difference between climbing back into the race and staying stuck in the middle.
They get another shot this morning with the schedule bumped up for weather. The formula isn’t complicated.
Clean up the early innings, keep getting quality relief, and find one or two timely swings. The Bulldogs didn’t get them Friday. They’ll need them today.
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Mississippi
Mississippi farmers struggle through years without profit as war with Iran deepens crisis
YAZOO COUNTY, Miss. — Mississippi Delta farmers are facing another expensive planting season as fertilizer and fuel costs continue to climb.
Farmers in Yazoo and Sharkey counties, Clay Adcock and Jeffrey Mitchell, said it has been years since their crops turned a real profit.
“I guess it would be since 2022,” Adcock said.
“Last 2.5 to three years since we had a very profitable year,” Mitchell said.
Rising input costs squeeze farmers
Adcock said he was paying $300 per ton of fertilizer before the war with Iran broke out. He is now paying double for the same amount. Mitchell saw similar spikes.
“Fertilizer was up 25% before the Iranian conflict already,” Mitchell said. “Then since that started Diesel fuel is up 40% in the last six months.”
Survey and research from the American Farm Bureau show they are not the only ones feeling the pinch.
“We’ve got trouble with the farming community,” Adcock said. “And you can see that with the bankruptcies that are there and no young farmers that can afford the capital to get started.”
Mitchell said today’s farmers face a shrinking industry of suppliers. 75% of all fertilizer in the U.S. comes from four companies: Yara USA, CF Industries, Nutrien and Koch Industries.
“With the world market on fertilizer, pretty much everyone has the same price,” Mitchell said. “It’s not like you can go to store B, get a better price.”
forces
Oil and natural gas cut off in the Strait of Hormuz forces energy companies worldwide to compete for less supply. The spike in costs passes on to fertilizer producers, who pass higher prices on to distributors, leaving family farms at the end of the line with the most expensive bills.
“They deliver it to us and we’re at their mercy,” Adcock said.
Adcock said he would like to see more regulation to even the playing field among fertilizer companies and prevent potential price gouging.
“There should be guiderails in place to keep fertilizer producers within a range and if they get out of that range it throws up red flags as they do in the SEC with stocks,” Adcock said. “Have some consistency in our business.”
Mitchell said the costs will circle back to consumers at the store. The spike in diesel also increases the cost of transporting finished crops after harvest to stores.
“Everything will be higher once it gets to Kroger or Wal-Mart or wherever,” Mitchell said. “They’ll just pass it onto consumers.”
It is too early to tell what the final prices will look like once harvest season is over. Each farmer said one way consumers can help is to buy as much produce as possible directly from farmers at markets and buy American items.
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Mississippi
Backlog in liquor, wine deliveries frustrates retailers in Mississippi
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Brandi Carter needs her wine.
As the owner of Levure Bottle Shop in Jackson, Mississippi, she sells natural wine delivered to her business by a state agency responsible for distributing alcoholic beverages to liquor stores, bars and restaurants. But delays caused by problems in a state warehouse have led Carter and many other retailers to see their inventory dwindle and their business drop as they wait for new shipments.
Carter, who also handles the beverage program for a restaurant in Jackson, said she has been dealing with delays since February, and she’s feeling helpless as traffic in her store goes down.
“I’ve just reached acceptance that this is our new normal, and it’s awful,” Carter said Wednesday.
The state is the only distributor of liquor in Mississippi
In Mississippi, the state’s Alcoholic Beverage Control department — an arm of the Mississippi Department of Revenue — is responsible for distributing wine and liquor to businesses that sell it. That’s different than other states, where individual companies handle alcohol distribution, Carter said.
During the week ending April 12, there were more than 172,000 cases that were pending delivery, and it was taking an average of 17 days for businesses to receive their orders, according to the Mississippi Department of Revenue.
Those numbers are down from the week ending March 1, when the backup appeared to be at its peak for the year. At that time, there were more than 220,000 cases pending delivery, and it was taking an average of 25 days for the process to be completed.
In contrast, the number of cases pending delivery was more than 51,000 and the wait time was three days for the week ending Jan. 11., the department said.
Carter said the backlog has resulted in a wait of four to five weeks, as opposed to a few days to two weeks before the delays began.
Warehouse issues caused the delay
Shipping delays from the state’s 40-year-old warehouse emerged in January as it went away from an “obsolete” conveyor belt system to one where pallets were used to move cases, according to a statement from the Mississippi Department of Revenue. A new warehouse management system experienced technical issues, leading to delays, the department said.
“The computer program that they implemented for the warehouse wasn’t working effectively with the ordering side,” Carter said. “So the first big chunk was the biggest problem, because things were being marked as shipped, but they weren’t shipped.”
The department said technical issues have been resolved and the warehouse is operating at full capacity, with pending orders being shipped as retail orders increase.
“While capacity at the existing facility has been a challenge for well over five years, there is not an alcohol shortage,” the department said. “As retail ordering stabilizes, we anticipate shipments returning to normal volume within the coming weeks.”
Lawmakers thought about changing the system
The Mississippi legislature debated temporarily allowing out-of-state distributors to sell and ship alcohol directly to retailers. The law would have been repealed after two years, but it did not pass. The state’s legislative session has since ended.
A new warehouse set to be completed by the end of this year will be able to store and ship over twice as many cases as the current facility, the revenue department said.
Retailers, customers stymied by the backlog
Josh Sorrell, owner of Spillway Wine and Spirits in Brandon, said he used to order 600 cases in a day, but he is now limited to 100 cases per day. About 30% to 40% of the items he usually orders on a daily basis have been unavailable, he said.
Sorrell believes restoring the conveyor belt system would fix the problem. He has asked Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves to declare a state of emergency.
If delays continue, Sorrell’s concerned that business will suffer into the end of the year, when he makes a lot of his sales.
“As it gets busier, we’re gonna crumble,” he said. “I mean, it’s going to be really hard at 100 cases a day to stock up for a full October, November, December.”
Meanwhile, customers are going to three or four stores looking for their specific bottle, and they sometimes can’t find it, Sorrell said.
“It’s frustrating to lose people at the door who are looking for a specific product that I can’t even get from the state,” he said.
On Thursday, Lauren Roberts went to Sorrell’s store looking for Soda Jerk’s orange cream shots, but he was out, just like the supermarket where she usually buys it. So, she bought another type of drink for an upcoming celebration with her family.
“We’re having a little get-together this weekend because it’s my daughter’s prom and her boyfriend’s family’s coming,” Roberts said. “So everybody has their drink of choice, but me.”
______
Sainz reported from Memphis, Tennessee.
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