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Everything Rick Barnes said after Vols' win over Mississippi State

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Everything Rick Barnes said after Vols' win over Mississippi State


Everything Rick Barnes said after Vols’ win over Mississippi State

Tennessee responded to a 1-point loss at Vanderbilt with one of its most complete performances of the season against Mississippi State Tuesday.

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The No. 6 Vols dominated the first half, then answered the No. 14 Bulldogs’ push in the first couple of minutes of the second half with a strong close in a 68-56 triumph at Food City Center.

TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM

Chaz Lanier found his shot again, scoring a game-high 23 points, while Tennessee (17-2, 4-2 SEC) dominated in the paint, out-rebounding Mississippi State (15-4, 3-3) and holding it to season lows in scoring and points in the paint.

Felix Okpara grabbed 12 rebounds and finished just shy of a double-double with 9 points.

Here is everything Vols’ head coach Rick Barnes said about the win.

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On Chaz Lanier being more active on the defensive end, if that translated to his shooting performance

“I do think it helps when (Lanier) is locked in defensively. Because I think it takes pressure off, thinking that you’ve got to make shots. And I think anytime you can get lost in the game defensively, it helps. And I really thought he did a better job tonight of trying to set up cuts early. Obviously getting out in transition helps all of us. Any team would say that. But I do think the fact that he was locked in defensively helps him on the offensive end.”

On the biggest points of emphasis for Tennessee coming off of loss

“Details. Paying attention to the scouting report. Too many miscommunications last game (against Vanderbilt). And just details, really. And then offensively, details again. We didn’t rebound, we didn’t run like we need to. A lot of things. I don’t want to take away from any team that beats us. They beat us. And tonight, coming in, just so much respect for Coach (Chris) Jans. I have always had admiration for the way he goes about things. And his teams are so hard to beat because they’re not going to beat themselves. I’m sure they’ll look at it and see they had some shots, that they expect to make, just like anybody when you’re shooting it well, like we did in the first half. It obviously takes care of a lot of things.

“I thought that Felix (Okpara) was really good tonight and I thought he put together a really good stretch there. He was doing a lot of what we need him to do. I thought our screening was better, our movement was better. I thought Zakai (Zeigler) had a really good floor game overall. I thought Jahmai (Mashack) was terrific. He has worked hard more, focused hard more with his shot, trying to get it consistently. And I thought when he drove the ball, he was in control and all that. Jordan (Gainey), obviously. We started the second half, turnovers let (Mississippi State) get back in the game. And too many of them were unforced mentally, where we did things that we talked about not doing. And when we did that Jordan’s buckets were big. And I thought their movement underneath the basket, getting some separation was big.

“But physically, we knew we had to try to match them as much. They just manhandled us the last two times we played again. Again, I love their style of basketball. I’ve seen a lot of time myself like that. Just proud of the overall team effort. I really thought it was a terrific team effort, and we needed it. Otherwise we couldn’t have gotten the win tonight.”

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On Felix Okpara’s physicality, how it effects Tennessee defense

“One, we have guys that have been here. We still talk about there are guys that are still learning the whole system overall. But what (Okpara) has done, he’s brought physicality. We lack some of that. And that’s obviously something we really felt that he and JP (Estrella) at the beginning of the year, with those guys, that we would be as physical as we’ve been in a long time. With JP going down, we obviously lost part of that. But still impressed with what Cade (Phillips) can do. Cade is stronger than you think. Igor (Milicic) is stronger than you might think. (Darlinstone Dubar) and those guys can do it a different way. And even Jahmai, when he goes there, he can guard. What Felix is bringing us in protection, I thought he really, I thought he’s getting better at screens and all that. Just everything in particular. And I spent a lot of time with him the last three days working on a three-point shot and he made one. You believe that, right? That was a designed play. That was a big play, it really was. Sometimes you get those and Lord knows we needed one at that time.”

On scouting reports, if he’s surprised Tennessee has struggled with them at this point in the season

“No, and we’ll have it some more, probably, just because it’s hard. Winning is hard. Winning is really hard. The mental side of it, getting guys to lock into it. It’s hard. You see things at the highest level, where breakdowns that you wouldn’t think happen, maybe in the NFL that still happens. And it’s hard, because what you’re trying to do sometimes the other team is maybe pop something on you and if you’re not ready for it, you can only give them so much. But then there’s times where, when the team, the flow, the way the flow changed. I mean think about when we scored and didn’t get back. You try to build momentum. Those are the plays that can’t happen and you wonder why they do happen. That has nothing to do with scouting report. It has to do with playing basketball. You don’t celebrate a shot and let somebody run by you. You go back, you build a wall. That should happen every single time. Some reason it doesn’t. Maybe a bad shot, turnover. We tell our guys all the time, we can’t defend bad shots and turnovers. You can’t. So feel has a lot to do with it. Some guys, they know exactly and they’re great at it. They just can’t absorb so much. And even not only what they need to do, they know what everybody else needs to do and that’s when you can really become lethal on the defensive end.”

On post-practice conversation with Chaz Lanier earlier in the week

“Well (Lanier) did what we talked about. I just keep telling him, he’s at a different level. This is all new for him. He’s never been guarded physically, probably never been bumped like he has been. It’s just a whole different level and he can’t get open if he’s not gonna make two, three, something to get guys off of him. If you’re being down, how you going set him up? what’s gonna be your counter to it? And then you got guys waiting to get you up but they can’t screen if you don’t get enough separation (so) they can get a body on. And that was what it was about. Showed him tape. Been showing him tape. But to be honest with you, we’ve done that all year and sometimes it takes him a little bit longer, but I thought tonight he really did do some of the things that we had been talking about that allowed him to get some separation and get a good look at and knowing where to attack on the court, the space he needs to get to, ready to shoot. Sometimes he comes off, he’s not sure. Passer’s not sure what he is going to do. We need him to do what we need him to do and ball to be delivered because the guy guarding is going to catch up if he doesn’t get that quick. I thought he did a pretty good job tonight. Probably a better job (than he has) recently getting himself ready to shoot the ball.”

On using scouting report to hold Mississippi State to season-low 16 points in first half

“I thought, again, these guys want to be good. They know we’ve gotta get better. They know that. They realize that. They know this league is a brutal league and they know that. But it’s hard. Like I said, winning is hard. You can play hard some games and it’s not enough because a few mistakes here or there. It could be leaving your feet. (Could) Be fouling a three-point shooter. You shouldn’t foul three-point shooters. You shouldn’t. I wish I could do the NBA rule. I think in the NBA if you foul a three-point shooter, you got to buy everybody’s dinner at a high end restaurant. We maybe should implement that now. But the fact is, you know how much we talked about not fouling a three-point shooter after games all year and I think you we’re leading the nation, I don’t know, they keep that stat. We come out and do it again tonight. Can’t do it.”

On Felix Okpara’s 3-pointer late in the shot-clock in the second half

“Well, (Mississippi State) definitely took control of momentum. And again, I’m not taking anything away from them, but you turn the ball over the way we did, and the first four minutes, we went totally away from what we talked about at halftime and they took advantage of it. They’re too well coached, too many good players. You throw lifelines to people, they grab them and it energizes them. It gives them a chance. I mean, having a 15, 20-point lead at halftime is not that big of a deal. It really isn’t. It’s hard to coach with a lead. It’s hard to catch up with a lead when you’re behind. Some guys forget the scouting report. You wouldn’t think they would, but it’s a natural human tendency when they get up 15, 18 (points). Some guys think the game’s over. It’s never over.

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“I don’t think it’s over. I mean, I don’t know how other people feel. It’s funny, I sit at home, I watch games sometimes and I’m like, this game’s over, you know? And most of the time it could be, but I’ve been on games before where I’ve seen teams come back down 30 and win games. So I don’t ever think they’re over from our end.

“But it was a big play. Like I said, it was a lucky play obviously because he hadn’t taken one all year. If he were smart, he wouldn’t take another one and he’ll leave here as the all-time leading three-point shooter. He would be Tennessee’s version of Danny White at Notre Dame. You know, Danny is the all-time leading field-goal percentage shooter, so they can have that in common.”

On the difficulty of being a head coach and accepting things that are out of his control

“Well, it’s hard. It’s hard. You’d like to be able to stop the game and do what I do in practice. You guys see me in practice. I can’t do that and ask. I don’t understand it. There’s so many things that go through a young guy’s head. I can’t tell you why, but I watch NBA games and I’m like, ‘why would he do that?’ It takes all of us to be on the same page, understanding the flow. Like, I thought we took a couple three’s tonight–and again, we want our guys to shoot the ball when they’re open–but I think some guys think when we talk about being aggressive and being in attack mode, I think some guys think that means shooting the ball, and that could be the furthest thing from it. It could be being aggressive, setting the screen, driving the ball. Just taking the shots to take shots is not being aggressive. That’s not what it’s about. But too many players think that. That, okay, if he wants me to be aggressive, that means he wants me to shoot it. That’s not what I mean at all.”



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Mississippi homeowners blame a noisy data center plant for sleepless nights. The mayor’s advice? “Consider selling.”

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Mississippi homeowners blame a noisy data center plant for sleepless nights. The mayor’s advice? “Consider selling.”


It was 4 a.m. on a Sunday and 46-year-old Jason Haley was once again wide awake. 

The suburban silence that Haley had grown used to in his two decades as a resident of Southaven, Mississippi, had, for the last few months, been replaced by a constant whirring, like an airplane hovering over his home, he said.

The noise keeping Haley awake was coming from a plant powering Elon Musk’s xAI data centers in the area, according to a lawsuit filed in June against the company and its subsidiary, MZX Tech. Haley and two other Southaven residents, who live within a mile of the plant, allege in the suit that “near-constant” noise and vibrations are causing negative physical and psychological health effects.

The filing comes amid growing resistance toward data center development, with the majority of Americans opposing local construction of a data center, according to a Gallup poll published earlier this year.

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Similar disputes are playing out across the country, like in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, where a lawsuit this month filed by residents alleges a data center emits “unreasonable and excessive noise” onto residents’ properties and in Lowell, Massachusetts, where noise from a data center’s cooling center “disrupts neighbors’ sleep,” according to an April suit.

There are more than 4,000 data centers in the U.S., according to a recent United Nations report. To power the data centers, developers are building their own plants, sometimes with little warning to residents like Haley. 

Haley reached out to Southaven Mayor Darren Musselwhite about the noise in emails he shared with CBS News. In one last November, he urged Musselwhite to drive through the neighborhood “and take a listen to the constant high pitch noises.”

“I am aware of the noise and working on a solution with xAI officials,” Musselwhite had responded to Haley an hour later. “It is a problem,” he said in another email later in the day.

But soon, another sleepless night rolled around and Haley was emailing the mayor again.

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“Anyone else I can reach out to?” Haley wrote to Musselwhite. “It’s almost 4 am and I can hear it from my bed. The high pitch and roaring combined is full force at this time. My ears are ringing. I can’t live in this. How was this ever approved?”

“I don’t care that this is Elon’s project”

Just north of Southaven, which sits on the Mississippi-Tennessee border, xAI’s data center Colossus went online in Memphis in September 2024. The company dubbed it “the world’s largest AI supercomputer.”

By late July 2025, Musk was announcing that another data center, Colossus 2, was set to begin operation in the area within weeks.

Days later, an announcement popped into the Facebook feeds of Southaven residents: An energy facility that had been dormant for decades will be revived to support xAI’s expanding data center operations in the area, Musselwhite said.

The post was met by a flood of comments, with some lauding the development and others expressing concern about the plant’s impact on the environment and strain on local resources. 

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Meanwhile, Haley started hearing sounds.

“My first thought was somebody’s got a leaf blower going all the time,” he said. 

By December, the noise had become a fixture. He started getting headaches, stopped getting sleep and slipped into feelings of hopelessness and depression. The noise was inescapable, he said, and despite his best efforts to drown it out (sleeping with earplugs, getting a box fan for white noise), it continued to drone on.

So Haley began speaking up — at city government meetings, on Facebook and through TikTok, where he posts videos of himself measuring the noise with a sound meter. He later became involved in a grassroots coalition called Safe and Sound, drawing awareness to concerns surrounding xAI’s undertakings in the region.

The “activist” label is one he’s reluctantly accepted. 

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“I’ve never been into any kind of activism, never really kept up with politics a whole lot,” he said. “I’m just a guy that has a problem with this noise, and started speaking out and trying to raise awareness.”

When he emailed Musselwhite about the noise again in December, his message came with a disclosure: “I am not a republican or democrat, I don’t care that this is Elon’s project. I didn’t know whose it was when I started complaining about the noise that started in August.”

Musselwhite responded a few days later. 

“As I mentioned to you in the public meeting, you seem to be a reasonable person,” he said. “I will give you some unsolicited advice from an older man, be careful with whom you associate so you don’t damage your credibility.”

By January, xAI was expanding its footprint with a third data center in Southaven, MACROHARDDR. As residents like Haley continued pushing back online and in city meetings, Musselwhite had a new message.

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Southaven, he said in a Facebook post, was “under attack by all who choose to oppose Elon Musk because of his high-profile political stances.” He warned residents to “beware of the smokescreen of radical politics.”

In his emails to Haley, Musselwhite continued to acknowledge the noise as a problem.

“The noise issue is one of my highest priorities and I have been in detailed discussions with xAI and many independent professionals to resolve this,” he wrote in March.

But in the same email, he offered Haley more advice: “I know they want houses for employees, so you may want to consider selling your home.”

CBS News made multiple attempts to speak with Musselwhite and did not receive a reply.

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Migraines, ringing ears and sleepless nights

Moving isn’t Haley’s preference, but he said he is in the financial position to do so if he chooses.

That’s not the case for everyone.

A little over a decade ago, 31-year-old Taylor Logsdon bought a home for her growing family in Southaven and began building her life around it. 

“We loved it here,” she said. “It was peaceful, it was quiet, didn’t have to worry about nothing.”

But that was before the noise, so loud, she said, that it sometimes shakes her home. Logsdon, who is also involved in the Safe and Sound coalition and is suing xAI with Haley and one other Southaven resident, said she has experienced migraines and anxiety as a result of the noise. 

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She said she has persistent ringing in her ears and so do her children. A full night of sleep has become rare for the family.

“I would move tomorrow if I could,” she said, adding that she needs to save money before she can afford to move.

Her children, all under the age of 13, are having trouble staying awake at school.

“One of them is extra angry all the time — never, never has been that way, but he’s just irritable like all the time,” she said. “I feel like I’m snappier too.”

xAI spent millions of dollars trying to mitigate the sound with a sound wall, a berm and evergreen trees, Musselwhite said in a February Facebook post. 

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“It still hasn’t helped. It hasn’t even put a dent in it,” Logsdon said. 

People living in areas where there is “constant humming or buzzing” report headaches, stress and sleep disturbance, said Dr. Samoon Ahmad, a clinical professor of psychiatry at New York University.

A 2023 study found that environmental noise exposure can lead to adverse associations for cardiovascular disease and mortality, diabetes, hearing impairment, neurological disorders and adverse reproductive outcomes.

“People think of annoyance as an abstract term,” Ahmad said. “It’s not an abstract term because it has real physiological ramifications.”

The World Health Organization recommends less than 40 decibels of annual average nighttime noise outside of bedrooms to prevent adverse health effects. Haley has recorded noise levels over 60 decibels as late as 10:15 p.m. from his Southaven backyard. 

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Musk’s Memphis

Even before Logsdon and Haley decided to take action against xAI, Musk’s growing presence in the Memphis area garnered attention from advocacy groups over health and environmental concerns.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People filed a lawsuit in April against xAI claiming the Southaven plant emits “significant” amounts of harmful pollutants from its 27 gas turbines, which has since increased to 59, according to a court filing reviewed by CBS News. The NAACP has also filed an appeal to challenge the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality’s decision to issue an air permit allowing the Southaven plant to operate 41 permanent methane gas turbines. An independent study found their operation would increase air pollution in an area already grappling with a disproportionate number of asthma-related emergency room visits.

CBS News has reached out to xAI for comment.

Musk’s investment in the latest Southaven data center brings his company’s contribution to the area to $20 billion, according to the office of Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves. The governor called it “the largest economic development project in Mississippi’s history.”

Musk’s financial footprint has also extended beyond the data centers — MZX Tech donated over $1.3 million to the Southaven Police Department in February, according to the donation agreement obtained by CBS News, and has offered half-priced Starlink for those in the Memphis region.

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But Logsdon says the cost to her and her family’s health has her wondering why it feels like her city is willing to “hurt the few to get the benefits.”

“We were not a failure town before,” Logsdon said. “It’s not like our economics were terrible here.”

Southaven had a median household income of over $70,000 in 2024, according to the U.S. Census Bureau — $20,000 more than the state average. 

Logsdon, currently a stay-at-home mom, will be searching for work this fall so she and her husband can start saving up to move away from the plant. For now, her goal is a full night’s sleep.

“I hope that my family can go back to having our normal,” she said. “Being able to sleep at night, being able to enjoy my backyard, being able to go swimming.”

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GPS data tracks boat Mississippi teen Nolan Wells was on before he went missing

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GPS data tracks boat Mississippi teen Nolan Wells was on before he went missing


GPS data from the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, obtained by CBS News, tracks the movements of the boat that carried Nolan Wells to Horn Island on July 4. Wells was found dead after going missing following an outing on the island.

The vessel left a dock at approximately 9:56 a.m. that morning and arrived at Horn Island at 11:14 a.m. CBS News has previously reported that Wells was not on the boat when it departed the island. 

According to the GPS data, the boat left Horn Island at 4:31 p.m. and returned to its original departure dock. It then traveled into Fort Bayou around 5:52 p.m. before returning to the dock at 6:06 p.m.

Later that evening, the boat went to the Fort Bayou boat launch at 7:19 p.m., according to the MSDMR report. From there, it traveled over land — presumably towed by a vehicle — to the Biloxi, Mississippi, residence of the boat’s owners. 

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The MSDMR report indicates that the boat’s owner, his mother and one other individual who was reportedly with Wells on the day of the incident have cooperated with the investigation.

The department’s report ends on July 5, following notification that the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office would take over as the lead investigative agency.

This undated photo provided by the family in July 2026 shows Nolan Xavier Wells with his mother, Christine Wonsley.

Family photo via AP

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Wells, 18, was last seen on July 4 on Horn Island, where he had taken a boat trip with friends to celebrate the holiday, officials said. Wells traveled to the island with his friends but did not return to the mainland with them that afternoon, Jackson County Sheriff John Ledbetter has said.

He was last seen on the island at 3 p.m., according to attorney Ben Crump’s office. His mother reported him missing later that night and a search began.

His body was discovered July 6 off the coast of the island, which is about 10 miles south of the Mississippi mainland, following a search that involved the U.S. Coast Guard, the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources and the National Park Service.

Dental records confirmed the body was Wells, Jackson County coroner Bruce Lynd told CBS News. An autopsy took place on July 7, Lynd said, but the results were not immediately made public. Wells’ body was flown to Washington, D.C., for an independent autopsy, according to Crump. 

Wells’ parents have said they don’t believe their son would’ve stayed behind on the island by choice when his friends left by boat.

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Christine and Elmore Wonsley, the parents of Nolan Wells, spoke to “CBS Mornings” on Friday, July 10, 2026.

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“No, he wouldn’t. Nolan always stays with the group,” Elmore Wonsley, Nolan’s father, told “CBS Mornings” last week. “If you be with me, you come back with me. So that I don’t understand, and with me being a parent, if I was in that situation, I would have told them, ‘You’re going to get back on this boat with me because I don’t want to answer to your parents if something happens to you.’”

When directly asked if he believed Nolan was left behind on the island, his father responded, “Yes. I don’t believe he decided to stay on the island by himself. It just doesn’t — that’s not his character.”

Wells went to Ocean Springs High School and was a rising sophomore on Southwest Mississippi Community College’s football team. Crump said Wells was a good swimmer.

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How permanent daylight saving time would impact Mississippi

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How permanent daylight saving time would impact Mississippi


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Are Americans finally done changing the clocks twice a year? Congress moved a step closer to ending the ritual after the U.S. House passed legislation that would make daylight saving time permanent.

It hasn’t been approved by the Senate yet, but it did pass the House with broad support (308-117). If it passes the Senate, it could be signed by President Donald Trump or become law without his signature, unless he vetoes it.

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Trump has previously backed ending twice-a-year time changes.

“I am going to work very hard to see The Sunshine Protection Act signed into Law. It’s time that people can stop worrying about the ‘Clock,’” he wrote in a May Truth Social post.

A few versions of the Sunshine Protection Act were introduced in Congress. Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Florida, introduced the one that’s gaining ground last year.

Here’s what to know about daylight saving time and the move to change it.

What is daylight saving time and why do we use it?

Daylight saving time is the practice of setting clocks forward an hour from March until November in an effort to gain more sunlight during the summer months.

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According to the Library of Congress, it was first enacted in 1918 as a fuel cost-saving measure during World War I.

Daylight saving time became federal law under the Uniform Time Act of 1966. Under the law, some states can opt to exempt themselves from daylight saving time.

Would Mississippi keep daylight saving time year-round?

In 2021, the Mississippi Legislature passed a law saying the state plans to stick with daylight saving time year-round. But that only takes effect if Congress changes the federal law to let states adopt it all the time. A bill updating the effective date died in committee in the 2026 session.

Nineteen states, including Mississippi, are ready to make daylight saving time permanent if Congress changes the law to make the twice-a-year time shift optional, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL).

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How later sunrises would affect Mississippi

Sunrise and sunset times in summer would look the same.

But the period from November to March would be different. The amount of daylight would be the same, just shifted an hour later than usual.

Mississippi could expect the latest winter sunrises around 7:59 a.m. in mid-January. The earliest sunsets would shift from about 4:46 p.m. in early December to 5:46 p.m., according to timeanddate.com.

Why permanent daylight saving time failed before

Yes. Congress did drop Daylight Saving Time before.

The move failed in 1974 after parents worried about kids going to school before dawn, risking more vehicle crashes.

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Some parts of the country, like Michigan or Indiana, don’t see sunrise until after 9 a.m. with the permanent daylight saving time.

When clocks fall back in 2026

Clocks will “fall back” from 2 a.m. to 1 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 1, 2026, unless Congress changes the law.

Daylight saving time ends on the first Sunday in November each year, under current law. That’s when we get back that missing hour of sleep from the spring time change.

Does Mississippi change clocks twice a year?

Yes. Mississippi, which is in the Central time zone, observes daylight saving time.

What time is it in Mississippi?

Visit timeanddate.com to see the current time in Jackson.

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Which states don’t observe daylight saving time?

Most of the U.S. participates in daylight saving time except for Hawaii and most of Arizona. The Navajo Nation in the northeast corner of the state does participate.

Bonnie Bolden is the Deep South Connect reporter for Mississippi with USA TODAY Network. Email her at bbolden@usatodayco.com.

Melina Khan is a national trending reporter for USA TODAY. Keep up with her on X @melinakh and Instagram @bymelinakhan.





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