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One Writer’s Return to the Mighty Mississippi

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One Writer’s Return to the Mighty Mississippi


Photo: TOM RANKIN (1–7); Euphus Ruth (8)

Scenes from an expedition down the Mississippi River.

In the spring of 1882, after a twenty-one-year absence, the writer known as Mark Twain embarked on a six-week return trip up and down the Mississippi River. “I felt a very strong desire to see the river again, …and such of the boys as might be left,” the one-time steamboat pilot wrote in Life on the Mississippi, the book that emerged from the journey. Yet the river itself kept flummoxing Twain, having “reshaped a landscape he had once strenuously committed to memory,” as Ron Chernow notes in his recent biography of Twain. “Hamlets that had fronted the river now stood landlocked, and when the boat stopped at a ‘God forsaken rocky point,’ disgorging passengers for an inland town, Twain stared mystified.” Whether Twain ever read Heracleitus is unclear, but the ancient Greek philosopher’s best-known lines might’ve offered him solace, or at least an epigraph: “No man ever steps in the same river twice. For it’s not the same river and he’s not the same man.”

Twain happened, in Life on the Mississippi, to relay an anecdote about the very locale at which I am now peering. Island 63, roughly twelve highway miles west of Clarksdale, Mississippi, and 637 river miles north of where the current spills into the Gulf, is where the captain of a steamboat called the Skylark turned the wheel over to a visiting pilot, a “broken-down, superannuated fellow,” in Twain’s telling. “The ancient mariner went up through the chute, and down the river outside; and up the chute and down the river again; and yet again and again; and handed the boat over to the relieving pilot, at the end of three hours of honest endeavor, at the same old foot of the island where he had originally taken the wheel!” (Twain quotes a man onshore, observing the steamboat chugging by thirteen times: “’Clar to gracious, I wouldn’t be s’prised if dey’s a whole line o’ dem Skylarks!”) Even for the pilot of the Skylark, it seems, one couldn’t ply the same river twice—or for that matter a dozen times.

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Like Twain, I’ve returned to the Mississippi after a long absence—twenty-eight years, in my case. In 1997, an outdoors magazine commissioned the photographer Tom Rankin and me to voyage 250 miles of the river to surveil its fishing opportunities as well as its mysterious landscapes. Mysterious, because while twenty million people live and work in the hundred-plus counties bordering the river, most of us experience it only from a distance, or as an abstraction: something to cross via a bridge, or insure against, or fear, or maybe dimly romanticize in the Huck Finn way Twain bequeathed to us. In many minds the Mississippi exists solely as a giant interstate upon which travel hundreds of tons of freight every year, except on water, not asphalt. And as with an actual interstate, it’s not a place to play.

That’s not how John Ruskey sees it. The sixty-two-year-old Colorado native, who’s swimming in the chute with me as Tom is making last-minute checks of our boat, has been playing in the Mississippi ever since he and an equally Huck-besotted classmate built a twelve-by-twenty-four-foot raft to float its length after high school. That expedition fired a lifelong love affair with the river. A few years afterward, he planted himself in Clarksdale, and in 1998 he founded the Quapaw Canoe Company, where he hand builds voyageur-style canoes and guides visitors on daylong and multiday river trips. Ruskey is the single greatest resource for recreationally navigating the lower Mississippi—his mile-by-mile online guide, called Rivergator, runs to more than a thousand web pages—which is why we’ve timed our launch for when he’s at the landing across from Island 63, greeting a guide returning clients from a canoe trip. Ruskey and I emerge from the cool brown water refreshed and clearheaded, as though baptized.

The banks of the Mississippi River

Photo: TOM RANKIN

On the bank of the Mississippi.

“It’ll be surprising if you see more than a dozen recreational boats all next week,” Ruskey tells us while we’re securing our gear—tents, food, sleeping bags, cameras—to the bow. As on our first voyage, we’re piloting an eighteen-and-a-half-foot, flat-bottomed jon boat; unlike back then, when a fuel-line issue stranded us in the main channel with a giant barge bearing down on us, we have a newish ninety-horsepower outboard motor. Who navigates the river, I ask Ruskey, for anything beyond freight commerce nowadays? “Besides a few fishermen and a few long-distance paddlers and a few local paddlers,” he says, pausing, “no one.”

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We spend some time chewing on the possible reasons for this. “The river is so unimaginably big, and hard to understand, and so many people have lost their lives in it,” Ruskey offers, citing the Arkansas grandfather of one of his apprentice guides who warned, “Six out of ten people who go out on the Mississippi don’t come back.” Despite the curious specificity, this claim is patently untrue. The river’s menacing repute, however, is not unearned. Midway through my and Tom’s previous voyage, the singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley vanished during an evening swim in the river in Memphis; his body wasn’t found until six days later. You cannot “trust yourself without danger to its stream,” an English captain warned in 1837. “It is a furious, rapid, desolating torrent, loaded with alluvial soil; and few of those who are received into its waters ever rise again.”

A man by a canoe; a man pulls a boat on a river

Photo: TOM RANKIN

River guide John Ruskey at his Quapaw Canoe Company; the author pulls the boat at Choctaw Bar.

“It’s the Mount Everest of rivers,” Ruskey says, sketching comparisons to the river’s and mountain’s size and force and stature, before noting one distinction that seems to confound if not offend him: “More people summit Everest than paddle the Mississippi River. More people, by a magnitude of ten, climb Everest than top-to-bottom paddle the Mississippi every year.” One of the world’s great natural wonders is right here, he’s saying, in the heart of the heart of the country—and hardly anyone seems inclined to meet it.

We wave farewell to Ruskey and motor to Island 63’s southern end where in a pewter fit of riffles and boils the chute reunites with the broad main channel, the two of us received, once again, into its waters.

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For Heracleitus, nature centered around an omnipresent element: change. That’s why, for his central metaphor, he chose rivers. Take the Mississippi. In the 1940s, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers geologist and cartographer named Harold Fisk mapped its “meander belt”: the area across which the river has snaked and shifted over thousands of years. Fisk’s genius stroke was to use different colors to illustrate the wildly varied past courses: green for its 1880 route, light blue for 1765, shades of auburn for all its prehistoric curves and corkscrews, and so forth. The finished map resembled a tangle of rainbow spaghetti spilling down the middle of America, making visual an essential truth about the Mississippi: It’s never followed one sinuous course but rather hundreds, thousands. With every flood, with every soaking rain, the river wanders and rambles, seeks and slithers. It’s alive, and because of that, ever-changing. Panta rhei, wrote Heracleitus: Life is flux.

The same goes for Tom and me, our boat skimming the river’s corrugated surface as indigo thunderheads loom downstream. Tom was a young father when we made this voyage last; now he’s a young grandfather. I was living feral in a one-room cabin in Mississippi’s Hill Country, existing on a diet of nicotine, whiskey, and books; now I’m more than a quarter century into marriage, with three grown children, one of whom counts Tom as her godfather. In that long interim, we’ve found ourselves with less to prove and more to lose. Our faces have lines and our memories are occasionally moth-holed. Still, impressions from that first day on the river almost three decades ago have stuck fast: the exhilarating freedom of it, as though we’d slipped the border of what Huck called the “sivilized” world. “I stood like one bewitched” is how Twain described his own first passage. “I drank it in, in a speechless rapture.” Beyond the natural splendor, however, flowed another kind of grandeur for us. Here was not the fountain of youth but rather the fountain of American mythology, the praline-colored source waters of so much of our culture. Muddy Waters and Louis Armstrong and Jimmie Rodgers and Lead Belly and Johnny Cash all sang about it. Thelonious Monk channeled it onto his piano, and Walt Whitman and Lucille Clifton into their poems. To travel the Mississippi, I wrote in my journals then, is to coast down the jugular vein of Americana.

An illustrated map

Illustration: JOE McKENDRY

Mississippi pit stops: Waypoints the author hit for shut-eye, gin and tonics, catfish, and good company.

Though life may be flux, constants remain. One of these (aside from my persistent affection for whiskey) is the ferocity of storms on the river. They battered us so thoroughly on our original voyage that, like the Ancient Mariner, we came back talking of almost nothing else. This time, eyeing the thunderheads, we land the boat at the bottom of Island 69, normally an archipelago beaded together over seven river miles but now, with the river high, just a single sandy bulge draped in young willows. We have just enough time to triple-tie the boat, pitch our tents, and scarf down dinner before the birds fall silent and the light dims to an eerie purple. Then the skies crack open. Inside my whipped, drenched tent, I scan the weather apps, watching as warnings stack upon warnings: sixty-mile-per-hour gusts, tornadoes, floods. From inside his own tent, Tom monitors the boat as it’s tossed by the gusts and waves, tendriled flashes of lightning strobe-lighting it as it bobs in a violent froth. Thunder booms. Willow branches split and tumble. There’s no sleep this night. When the storm finally passes, close to daybreak, we crawl dazed from our tents. The rest of the island, we see, has turned to muck, with only our tiny spearhead of sand remaining solid. Had we made camp any deeper inland, like in the low pocket of willow shade that’d briefly tempted us, we would’ve felt the earth turn to pudding under our backs in the middle of the night, would’ve found ourselves completely fluxxed.

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Here’s one of the enigmas of the lower Mississippi: Ever since 1720, when the first waist-high levee was completed in New Orleans, the river has been relentlessly and elaborately engineered via rock dikes, wing dams, concrete embankments, drainage canals, floodgates, spillways, and more than a thousand miles of levees, in order to curtail flooding and, to a lesser degree, facilitate commercial transport. The result can seem, from a certain angle, like a synthetic environment, a byzantine plumbing project writ large: the river managed, bridled, tamed. The enigma, however, is that the land and water and waterland between the levees—in the area known as the “batture,” deriving from the French word for something beaten—can feel as untouched, as unspoiled, as untamed, as anywhere else in the continental United States. Hiding there is a lush, tangled corridor of bottomland hardwood forests, sloughs, swamps, and alluvial islands—a 2.2 million–acre ribbon, as wide as fifteen miles in some parts, of the Mississippi’s original floodplain, preserved not by statute but by the river’s inundations. A 2018 Army Corps of Engineers report deemed it “one of the most important remaining wilderness areas” in the country.

Readers of William Faulkner’s novella “The Bear” might recognize this terrain: It’s what remains of the Big Woods, having made “their last stand” here, just as Faulkner predicted: “too dense, too strong with life and memory…ever to die,” as he put it in a related story. Versions of the hunting camps Faulkner wrote about remain widespread in the batture. To access one, Tom and I push the boat through a logjam on the backside of Montgomery Towhead, a four-thousand-acre, question mark–shaped island on the Arkansas side, and then putter up a swampy chute to where an old friend named Wiley Prewitt—such of the boys, as Twain wrote, as might be left—awaits us.

The Montgomery Island Hunting Club was formally incorporated in 1981, but the island’s thick forests of ash, elm, and pecan have been prime hunting ground since Faulkner’s time. Prewitt’s father built the club’s first private cabin, prior to electricity making it to the island; now there are ten cabins, the newer ones perched atop stilts and crowned with DirecTV dishes. The Prewitt cabin, crammed with old sporting magazines and snake boots and bass lures and books (Teddy Roosevelt’s The Wilderness Hunter; The Young Sportsman’s Guide to Game Animals), radiates that old-timey, barrel-aged camp vibe. (The Smithsonian once painstakingly re-created its front porch for the American Folklife Festival.) “For a long time,” Prewitt says, “this was an old guy’s place.” It still had that crusty, spartan vibe when Tom and I visited on our first voyage; nowadays, big air conditioners hum beside some of the other cabins while moms chill wine inside and kids sprawl with iPads. A wide-screen TV dominates the main camp house.

Two men stand in front of a hunting cabin

Photo: TOM RANKIN

The author with Wiley Prewitt at his Montgomery Island Hunting Club cabin.

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We ride along with Prewitt in his boat as he checks his trotlines. Baited hooks hang from nylon lines arrayed near drowned willow trees, seven or eight of them heavy with catfish. Blues, flatheads, and channel cats: the entire mud cat menu, almost all of them males snagged in the frenzy of mating season. Prewitt lays one of the gunmetal-colored channel cats into a cooler. “That guy’s like a seventeen-year-old on spring break,” he explains. “They change the look of themselves completely during spawning. A few months ago, he would’ve looked just nice and silver, like a good eating fish. But now, as you can see, his head swells up and he turns green and black. The old guys call them willow cats, but they’re just channel cats in their mating form.” Prewitt sends us downriver with a ziplock full of fillets and a bucket of fresh ice. We part with a bottle of Scotch in return.

On our first voyage here, Prewitt happened to be hosting a filmmaker from New York who was shooting a documentary about the river’s fishing culture. The filmmaker thought himself very smart, admiring his every utterance as though it were a flawless smoke ring. At one point, over dinner in the camp house, he proclaimed the river a metaphor, letting the word go delicately wheeling across the table.

“A metaphor,” I asked him, slowly chewing a hush puppy, “for what?”

“What you and Tom are doing, traveling down this river, is escaping adulthood,” he said. “I think it’s quite obvious. This is every boy’s dream, you understand. It all comes from Huck Finn. You see, the river is—always has been—a metaphor. A metaphor for escape.”

It’s a dubious point. I recognized it dimly back then and more clearly now. For generations of enslaved people, after all, being sold downriver was hardly a metaphor for escape; rather one for horror and heartbreak and doom. No, if we’re going to make the Mississippi River represent anything, that something is change: panta rhei. The channel cat, re-coloring himself for mating time. Twain, blinking from a steamboat deck at an unidentifiable landscape. The thousand curlicued strands of the river’s meanders. And now this: an island from our first trip, name of Choctaw Bar, that no matter how hard I squint bears scant resemblance to the place I remember.

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That’s the thing with the Mississippi’s islands: Rising and falling, the river is constantly scouring and reshaping and washing and remodeling them. Three years ago, back on Montgomery, Wiley Prewitt was strolling a gravel bar during low water when a peculiar shape caught his eye. What he picked up was the fossilized tooth of the American lion, Panthera atrox, last seen more than ten thousand years ago: a deeply rare find that excited paleontologists nationwide. By the time he’d donated it to a museum in Jackson, the river had reclaimed the gravel bar, submerging whatever other secrets it didn’t want divulged.

People set up a tent on a river island; steak and potatoes over a fire

Photo: TOM RANKIN

Making camp on Island 69 ahead of a rip-roaring storm; grilling dinner on Island 69.

On the north end of Choctaw Bar lies a huge expanse of fine, pale khaki sand. Looking one direction, I feel sure I’m in the Caribbean; looking another, I’m almost definitely in the Sahara; in no direction does it compute that I’m in Arkansas, or for that matter that twenty-eight years ago we weathered a storm on this same island. As you wander south, the landscape shifts to pool-dotted grasslands and scrub where warblers and flycatchers and other marsh birds flit and flock and curious tracks—possum? armadillo?—crisscross the sand. A raft of cormorants rises at our approach, shuddering the late-afternoon sky. If another human being has been here, recently or otherwise, there’s no sign. Aside from our own footprints, a few tattered plastic bags, flood-snared in a thatch of wild roses, are the sole evidence we creatures exist.

As the sand turns pink then salmon in the setting sun, we mix gin and tonics and grill the catfish over a driftwood fire while engaging in that most sublime practice of old friendships: retelling stories we’ve told a hundred times before, the laughter no less genuine with the punch lines foretold. As darkness falls, one by one and then dozen by dozen the stars begin emerging until, absent any interference from urban light, they overrun the sky. Like Huck and Jim, we contemplate them. “We had the sky up there,” Twain wrote, “all speckled with stars, and we used to lay on our backs and look up at them, and discuss about whether they was made, or only just happened.” Jim’s theory was that the moon laid the stars like eggs, which Huck thought reasonable because he’d seen a frog lay most as many eggs as that, “so of course it could be done.” What a magical notion, it occurs to me, gawking upward: that freckling the night sky are thousands upon thousands of moon-eggs that upon hatching will flood the galaxy with a vast silvery glow. This is all that occupies my mind as I sink into my tent, drifting off to the whoosh of the waves lapping the shore as a midnight barge passes south.

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One reason the lower Mississippi may not attract more recreational boaters is that, frankly, it can be dicey. John Ruskey figures that the river and its tributaries have claimed more lives than all other American waterways combined. Running your tank dry of fuel on a lake, for example, is a buzzkill, a crap day. But running it dry on the Mississippi can leave you in the path of a towboat pushing as much as a hundred million pounds of cargo toward you, in the worst-case scenario sucking you under twelve hundred feet of hull like an escalator hoovering a shoelace. Best to top off when you can.

One-pump riverside marinas still existed during our first voyage, though even then we once found our tanks so low we had to sweet-talk a fisherman into driving me to a gas station in Elaine, Arkansas. I’ve heard various reasons those marinas have gone extinct: the 2008 recession, the 2011 flood, COVID. But the net result, as the commodore of the yacht club in Greenville, Mississippi, tells Tom, is that his is the only fuel stop between Memphis and Baton Rouge. With so little activity on it nowadays, the river’s become a fuel desert. We top off.

A man fishes in a river; a man cuts up a fish

Photo: TOM RANKIN

The author fishing at Wilson Point Bar; Prewitt cutting skipjack for catfish bait along Montgomery Island.

With a population of twenty-nine thousand, Greenville is the single quote-unquote city on our trip, its downtown connected to the river by a five-mile slack-water harbor lined with towboat repair yards, loading terminals, cranes, and vast mounds of whatever’s shipping north or south. When beguiled by the birdlife and starlight on Choctaw Bar Island, it’s easy to forget or ignore the river’s day job as an industrial channel; that identity snaps back into place as we go put-putting into Greenville’s port.

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Our guide for the day is Euphus Ruth, a photographer and longtime friend of Tom’s whose affection for the river approaches Ruskey’s. Ruth specializes in Victorian-era photographic techniques, using antique cameras and a portable darkroom to create haunting, even ghostly images. Theoretically he could do this anywhere. Yet despite the challenges endemic to living in the Delta—poverty, crime, racial and economic stratification, educational and health deficits; the list is long and often disheartening—Ruth has chosen, for forty-five years, to stay. And he makes no bones about why: the Mississippi River itself. With his home and studio within walking distance, Ruth spends long hours on its banks. “I go to it for sanctuary,” he says. “It’s almost like going to church. There’s something about that flowing water, and all the history of it running in the back of my mind as I’m watching it.” Sometimes he swims; at other times, he stands waist-deep in the shallows or sits on the bank assessing the barge traffic. “If I’m in a bad mood, I take my ass to the river,” he says, before busting out a laugh. “And if I’m in a good mood, I take my ass to the river.”

During our first trip, when we likewise stopped in Greenville, a man watched us trudge into a hotel lobby all decked in rain gear with mud-streaked faces, and eyeballing our stacks of vinyl dry bags asked us: “Y’all come from the ocean?” Twenty-eight years later, as we’re checking out of a different hotel, another man gawks at our gear and asks: “Y’all doing the Oregon Trail?” Again: Life may be flux, but symmetries abound. In both cases the men listened raptly to the details of our time on the Mississippi as though the idea of such a trip had never crossed their minds, as though encountering a new strain of lunacy.

A river only has one desire: to become the sea. Just how it goes about fulfilling that desire, however, doesn’t really matter—not to the river, anyway. It’s constantly changing course, constantly recalibrating, constantly seeking the most efficient route to its wide blue destiny. As we cruise downstream toward an island called Wilson Point Bar, our penultimate campsite before Ruth will meet us with a trailer at the Vicksburg harbor, I find myself studying the water, which has attracted more adjectives than probably any other single natural feature in North America: dusky, muddy, rusty, molasses-colored, opal-tinted, thick, blue, chocolate, yellow, chalky, metallic, cypress-gray. Every one of these, I realize, is dead-on. That’s because the Mississippi’s surface is an infinitely shifting mosaic of riffles and boils and dimples and whitecaps and eddies and smooth glassy patches that moment by moment swing from blue to brown to green to brass to every other color chronicled. The Mississippi exhausts description because it exhausts our senses. The river may be a book, as Twain proposed, that one needed to learn to read. But it’s a book being ceaselessly rewritten, one sentence to the next, words vanishing here and new ones appearing there, four million gallons of revision per second surging past New Orleans.

After making camp on Wilson Point, Tom and I roam the pathless interior, astonished anew at the solitude afforded by these islands, at the no-man’s-land tranquility hiding in America’s belly like a pearl in an oyster. Much has changed since 1997, but not that. If anything, the river is even more of a refuge from the ruck of society, the ordinary, modernity, take your pick, than it was back then. In the interior, cottonwood fluff glides gently through the gold sunlight, drifting like snowflakes. Buckvine sprawls. Green hillocks of lush Bermuda grass undulate toward the shorelines, like dislodged pastures deposited here by a flood. Gin and tonics get mixed as the sunset turns the sky’s few fleecy clouds to orange. We set them on the boat’s stern as we take our nightly plunge, tickled by the notion of having our own personal swim-up bar. Dinner sizzles over driftwood flames. Stories get told and retold in the campfire glow. “Sometimes we’d have that whole river all to ourselves for the longest time,” I recall Huck Finn saying. “Yonder was the banks and the islands, across the water; and maybe a spark—which was a candle in a cabin window; and sometimes on the water you could see a spark or two—on a raft or a scow, you know; and maybe you could hear a fiddle or a song coming over from one of them crafts.

“It’s lovely,” Huck concludes, “to live on a raft.” And that, above all, remains the same.

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Mississippi

Illegal immigration costs Mississippi over $100 million, auditor says

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Illegal immigration costs Mississippi over 0 million, auditor says


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  • Mississippi State Auditor Shad White estimates that immigrants without legal status cost state taxpayers $100 million annually.
  • The estimate is based on a conservative figure of 22,000 undocumented people living in Mississippi.
  • The report calculates costs in three main areas: education ($25 million), health care ($77 million), and prisons ($1.7 million).
  • The health care total includes $28 million for Medicaid services for U.S. citizen children of undocumented parents.
  • The auditor’s report does not factor in taxes paid by undocumented immigrants.

When some lawmakers in the Mississippi Legislature took their immigration bills to the floor this session, a question emerged among opponents. Are these measures really necessary?

Mississippi has a smaller population of immigrants than its other southeastern counterparts, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau, and the state has mainly remained in the background as its neighbors have been targeted by task force raids.

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The lack of federal attention to the Magnolia State hasn’t stopped many Republican lawmakers and state officials, including State Auditor Shad White, from maintaining that immigration without legal permission presents a major threat to Mississippi. At the crux of White’s argument for stronger local and national enforcement is money. One hundred million dollars, to be specific.

That amount, $100 million, is what White said immigrants without legal status in the country cost Mississippi taxpayers every year. He explained the math behind the total and its significance to residents in an April 22 interview with the Clarion Ledger.

The first piece of the puzzle was to estimate the number of people living in the state without legal status, White said, a calculation guided by data from the U.S. Census and Department of Homeland Security.

“We settled on 22,000 illegal immigrants living in Mississippi,” he said. “It’s important to mention that that is a very, very conservative estimate. It’s the lower bound of what that number could be.”

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Both the number of immigrants in the country illegally and the amount that they cost taxpayers could be, and likely are, greater than the estimate, White said. The numbers have also almost definitely changed since the auditor’s office first researched and compiled the report at the end of 2024.

When the office reached a consensus on the number of people, White said, analysts looked at three major cost buckets: education, health care and prisons. These areas were the ones with the largest potential price tags, he said.

Every child, regardless of immigration status, is entitled to a public education in the United States. The office estimated that around 2,500 children, roughly 0.57% of the total public enrollment last school year, were in the country without legal status.

The cost for these students, based on the Mississippi Student Funding Formula approved in 2024, is $17 million. On top of that, White said, many of these children would likely receive funding supplements for low-income students and English language learners.

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The total taxpayer cost in education totals around $25 million a year, the report stated. Neither the report nor White detailed how analysts determined the number of students who would qualify as low-income or English language learners.

The health care total is likely an even more conservative number, White said, in part because the office didn’t have enough data to make an estimate as comprehensive as he would have preferred.

“If you walked into an emergency room right now, you’re going to be treated. It doesn’t matter who you are,” he said. “Add onto that the cost of anyone who is an illegal immigrant mother who walks into a hospital and gives birth. Of course, we’re going to treat her, but that cost will flow back to taxpayers.”

Citing numbers from health policy organization KFF (formerly known as Kaiser Family Foundation), the report stated that those births would likely cost around $4 million each year. Emergency room visits would probably total around $45 million annually, assuming about half of the undocumented population goes to the ER once a year.

The total estimate in the health care section of the report is $77 million, because it includes approximately $28 million spent providing Medicaid services to the U.S. citizen children of immigrants without legal status. Without the Medicaid treatment for U.S. citizens, the health care cost is around $49 million.

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The final area is criminal justice, White explained, which used detention data collected from prisons and jails to estimate that 79 incarcerated people did not have legal status in the country. Multiplied by the daily cost of incarcerating a person in Mississippi, the report stated that taxpayers would contribute around $1.7 million every year to keeping them in jail.

This amount is also likely much higher, White said, because the office didn’t have the means to include the costs incurred before a person goes to prison.

“When we looked at the prison costs, we did not look into the cost of investigating crimes committed by illegal immigrants,” he said. “The cost of the criminal investigation was some non-zero number, we just don’t know what it was.”

When the report as first released, White recounted, some people told him that it should have included the amount that undocumented immigrants contribute in local and state taxes. He dismissed that as people “trying to distract from the larger point” that people without legal status “drive costs higher.”

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Expressing his support for the bill that passed making illegal immigration a state crime, White said he is hopeful that the legislature will continue to pursue measures strengthening the state’s approach to immigration enforcement.

“When people see the $100 million cost, I think people think, ‘What else could we be using that for?’” he said. “It could be used for massive teacher pay increases. We could be well on the way to eliminating the grocery tax completely. It could result in real improvements in people’s lives.”

Bea Anhuci is the state government reporter for the Clarion Ledger. She has covered immigration in the state since the start of 2026. Email her at banhuci@usatoday.com.



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8 rivers, lakes are the most alligator-infested water in Mississippi

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8 rivers, lakes are the most alligator-infested water in Mississippi


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Alligators are iconic in Mississippi. Time outdoors, especially near lakes or rivers, often brings close-up encounters with wildlife, whether you expect them or not.

If you walk on the wild side, chances are good you’ll find alligators in freshwater somewhere in the state. Knowing where they tend to gather — and when they’re most active — can help both people and gators avoid unwanted surprises.

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“The American alligator is native to Mississippi and still turns up across much of the state, but not everywhere in equal numbers. Mississippi has around 32,000 to 38,000 alligators across 408,000 acres of habitat, and while 14 of its 82 counties have no alligator record, others have some of the highest concentrations in the state,” World Atlas wrote.

That uneven distribution is key. Some rivers, lakes and wetlands are far more gator-heavy than others.

World Atlas compiled a list of the most alligator-infested waters in Mississippi. Two Mississippi rivers also made its ranking of the most alligator-filled water in the Deep South.

Not interested in a wild encounter? There’s always a zoo or animal park. HGTV even chose a Mississippi swamp tour to see the giant reptiles as part of a bucket list of 50 things you should do across America.

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Here’s what to know about where alligators are most common, when they’re most active and what to do if you get too close so everyone leaves safely.

Where is the most alligator-infested water in Mississippi?

The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks says alligators can live anywhere in the state. Most live in the southern two-thirds.

They’re not usually aggressive, but juvenile gators often move to new areas in spring and summer. That makes them more likely to turn up near people. They’re also attracted to food sources.

According to World Atlas, these are these waterways have the highest alligator populations in Mississippi.

Pascagoula River is home to giant alligators

About 24% of the alligators in Mississippi live in Jackson County, according to MDWFP. It’s the highest concentration by county.

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The Pascagoula River Basin is one of the last unimpeded river systems in the lower 48 states. The area is known for record-breaking gator sightings, including some about 14 feet long.

The current Mississippi state records are 11 feet, 3/4 inches for longest female caught and 324 pounds for heaviest female caught. Both came from the Pascagoula River.

The river also made World Atlas’ list of the seven most alligator-filled places in the Deep South.

Fish, wildlife in Pear River help gators thrive

The Pearl River is home to a diverse range of fish and animals, which helps the alligators in the area thrive.

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The river flows through LeFleur’s Bluff State Park in Jackson and continues south to the Gulf. There are lots of recreation options along its path.

Rankin County is home to about 7.4% of the state’s gator population, MDWFP said. There are about 7.35 alligators per mile.

“Most of the Rankin County alligator population is located in and around Ross Barnett Reservoir and in the Pearl River to Ratliff Ferry,” they wrote.

Wolf River wetlands are gator-friendly

Hancock County is home to about 12% of the state’s gators, according to MDWFP.

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Most are found in the Wolf River, which World Atlas says provides ideal breeding and habitat conditions thanks to its wetlands and tidal marshes.

Gators bask along Leaf and Chickasawhay river banks

The Leaf River flows 185 miles before joining the Chickasawhay River, which runs 159 miles. The two rivers form the Pascagoula River system.

Both rivers are home to significant alligator populations.

“Gators are often seen gliding through the water and basking along the banks,” World Atlas wrote.

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Yazoo River is known for record-breaking gators

The Yazoo River has earned a reputation as a prime spot for alligator hunters. It is known for producing large gators.

The longest male harvested in public water was caught in the Yazoo River in 2023. It measured more than 14 feet long and weighed over 800 pounds.

The river also appears on World Atlas’ list of the most gator-infested waters in the Deep South.

Alligator Lake is true to its name

Alligator Lake in Washington County is a 60-acre oxbow lake known for its dense gator population. It sits inside Leroy Percy State Park, a designated wildlife management area.

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“The resident alligators can be seen swimming in the lake, lounging in the shade under cypress trees, or lazing on logs in the sunshine,” World Atlas wrote.

Tchoutacabouffa River has lots of smaller alligators

Development around the Tchoutacabouffa River near Biloxi has pushed larger alligators away from populated areas, according to World Atlas.

That’s left behind a population made up largely of gators under 10 feet long.

The river winds for 31 miles and flows through the DeSoto National Forest.

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Ross Barnett Reservoir is fishing hotspot

Gator hunters flock to Ross Barnett Reservoir, which is popular for fishing and boating. There’s a lot to do around the lake.

“The gentle waters of the reservoir, its marshy banks, and a large fish population create ideal conditions for gators to live, breed, and hunt in the area,” World Atlas wrote.

Where are the most alligator-filled waters in the Deep South?

“Alligators like slow-moving freshwater rivers but are also found in swamps, marshes, and lakes,” World Atlas wrote.

According to World Atlas, these places have the highest alligator populations in the Deep South.

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  • Lake Martin, Louisiana
  • Cypress Lake, Louisiana
  • Pascagoula River, Mississippi
  • Caddo Lake, Louisiana
  • Yazoo River, Mississippi
  • Millwood State Park, Arkansas
  • Lake Marion, South Carolina

Is it legal to feed alligators in Mississippi?

MDWFP warns that feeding alligators causes serious problems.

“Usually an alligator that has been fed will begin seeking out people and has trouble differentiating hands from handouts. That alligator has become a nuisance and will probably need to be removed; generally, ‘a fed gator is a dead gator,’” MDWFP wrote.

Alligators will come to food sources, including fish feeders or places that fish remains get thrown into the water.

If you know someone is feeding a gator, you can report it to your local MDWFP regional office or conservation officer.

Is it legal to shoot a nuisance alligator?

MDWFP says an alligator simply existing near people isn’t considered a nuisance.

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“If an alligator is in a river, oxbow, swamp, or lake — particularly if they are in public water simply doing what alligators do — that is not a nuisance alligator. If you choose to live in alligator habitat, then alligators are an amenity that often comes with the property,” MDWFP wrote.

If it’s being aggressive and approaching people or trying to hunt humans, pets or wildlife, it needs to go.

If you have a nuisance alligator, don’t try to handle it yourself. Contact the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks to help move or destroy the animal.

Hunting requires a permit and must be done in the right places and during the specified hunting seasons. Shooting one illegally could carry jail time or a fine of $2,000 to $5,000.

I’m way too close to an alligator. Now what?

GatorWise suggests that people stay aware any time they’re near water. Assume gators are present and watch pets and kids closely.

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If you hear it hissing, you’re already too close, according to Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Don’t panic. Back away slowly and calmly.

While most alligators retreat, mothers protecting nests may charge. And they’ll defend themselves.

Gators can run surprisingly fast, up to 35 mph. for short distances. Don’t assume it’ll be slow.

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What to do if an alligator attacks

Unprovoked alligator attacks are rare but possible. Here’s what the University of Florida suggests if it happens to you.

  • Run away in a straight line. Do not zig-zag.
  • Fight as if your life depends on it. Poke it in the eyes, punch and kick it, especially around the head.
  • Try to make the alligator gag by jamming objects in the back of its mouth.
  • Alligators will often reposition prey in their mouths. Use the opportunity to escape.

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

A lifelong outdoorsman and wildlife enthusiast, Brian Broom has been writing about hunting, fishing and Mississippi’s outdoors for the Clarion Ledger for more than 14 years. He can be reached at 601-961-7225 or bbroom@gannett.com.



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