Month: October 2022

  • Four bingo entities distribute $616,999 for
    September; Greenetrack switches from bingo to parimutuel

    The  Greene County Sheriff Department issued a listing of the bingo distributions for September, totaling $616,999.19 from four of the five licensed bingo gaming facilities.  The bingo facilities regularly distributing through the sheriff include Frontier, River’s Edge, Palace and Bama Bingo.  Greenetrack, Inc. stopped its bingo gaming as of August 28, 2022, currently offering parimutuel gaming only. According to Greenetrack President/CEO Luther Winn, the distributions to local charities will be handled through the Greene County Racing Commission.
    The recipients of the September  distributions from bingo gaming include Greene County Sheriff’s Department, the cities of Eutaw, Forkland, Union, and Boligee, the Greene County Board of Education and the Greene County Hospital (Health System).    Sub charities include Children’s Policy Council, Guadalupan Multicultural Services, Greene County Golf Course, Housing Authority of Greene County (Branch Heights), Department of Human Resources, the Greene County Library, Eutaw Housing Authority, Historical Society, REACH, Inc., Headstart  Community Service and This Belong To US. 
         Bama Bingo gave a total of $117,157.97 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500, and the Greene County Health System,  $12,500. Sub Charities, each received $1,034.22 including REACH, Inc. Community Service received $470.10 and This Belong to Us received $94.02. 
    Frontier (Dream, Inc.) gave a total of $114,995.78 to the following: Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $9,250; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each received $1,034.22, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc.  Community Service received $470.10 and This Belong to Us received $94.02.
        River’s Edge (Next Level Leaders and Tishabee Community Center Tutorial Program) gave a total of  $118,288 to the following:  Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $48,070; City of Eutaw, $12,500; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee  each, $3,875; Greene County Board of Education, $10,500; Greene County Health System, $12,500. Sub Charities each, $1,027,, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc.  Community Service received $467 and This Belong to Us received $92.
         Palace (TS Police Support League) gave a total of $266,558.44 to the following:  Greene County Sheriff’s Department, $111,426.26; City of Eutaw, $21,441.50; and the Towns of Forkland, Union and Boligee each, $8,982.25; Greene County Board of Education, $24,339, and the Greene County Health System, $28,975. Sub Charities received $2,017.89, including the Historical Society and REACH, Inc. Community Service received $917.22 and This Belong to Us received $183.44. The sheriff’s supplement for September from four bingo facilities totaled $70,631.80.

  • Judge dismisses Greenetrack from bingo suit; grants mediation request for remaining parties

    In a Procedural Hearing, held Thursday, October 20, 2022 in Greene County Circuit Court with retired Circuit Judge Arthur Hanes presiding, Greenetrack, Inc. was dismissed as a defendant in a suit filed by Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall in 2017, seeking an injunction blocking the use of electronic bingo machines in Greene County, declaring that they are illegal gambling and a public nuisance.
    The suit in Greene County Circuit Court also included the Center for Rural Family Development, Inc. d/b/a Green Charity, Dream Inc. d/b/a Frontier Bingo, Tenntom Community Development d/b/a River’s Edge, Tommy Summerville Police Support League, Inc. d/b/a Palace Bingo, Jonathan Benison, in his official capacity as sheriff of Greene County, Next Level Leaders, Tishabee Community Center Tutorial Program, Woman to Woman, E-911, and Greene County Volunteer Fire Association.
    The Circuit Court Judge previously assigned to hear the case dismissed the lawsuit and the Attorney General appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court. The Attorney General’s office has already filed similar Preliminary Injunctions against bingo gaming in Macon and Lowndes Counties.
    Earlier this year on May 20, 2022, the Supreme Court reversed the ruling and remanded the case back to the Circuit Court for a determination of whether the operation of electronic bingo constitutes a public nuisance which should be permanently enjoined or prevented. The Court also appointed another Judge to preside over the case.
    Greenetrack, Inc. sought dismissal from the suit, arguing that its facility no longer operates bingo in Greene County as of August 28, 2022. Assistant Attorney General John Kachelman stated that the order for Preliminary Injunction included all gaming machines, however, it was clarified by Greenetrack’s legal representative, Attorney Gail Gratton Green, that the suit specifically identified the gaming as bingo machines.
    According to Attorney Gratton Green, the case against Greenetrack should be dismissed because all of the electronic bingo machines targeted by the lawsuit have been removed from its business establishment; Woman-To-Woman, E-911, and Greene County Volunteer Association, the Charities authorized to operate electronic bingo pursuant to Amendment 743, were no longer operating electronic bingo at Greenetrack; and Greenetrack did not intend to allow the operation of electronic Bingo at its premises unless there was new legislation authorizing the activity.
    On Sunday, October 23, 2022, Judge Hanes issued the following orders dismissing Greenetrack from the lawsuit:
    “Upon verified motion and arguments Greenetrack, Inc, and the charities alleged to be operating entities in connection with it including Woman to Woman., E-911, and Greene County Volunteer Fire Assn. are hereby dismissed from this action without prejudice. Pursuant to mandate, all other motions to dismiss are overruled.”
    As requested by legal representative for Epic Tech, Judge Hanes also granted a motion for Remediation between all parties remaining in the suit. The Judge’s order is stated below.
    “Although similarities exist between this case and cases in other counties, there are arguable differences between them and this case in several respects, including the statutory allowance of bingo in Greene County and the powers and duties of the Sheriff thereunder. The conflict between claimed hyper-technical application of law on one extreme and practical, if not humanitarian, needs and desires of the citizens of Greene County on the other make this case one for honest, good faith, effort on both sides to explore compromise, assessing the risks of continued litigation and the possible undesirable effects which may ensue, even from success in such litigation. Upon further consideration of the arguments and statements made in the hearing October 20 this order is made as to all parties remaining, not just the movant for mediation. It is therefore ORDERED: 1. The parties shall mediate this case as soon as practicable. It is suggested that good faith informal premediation discussions to explore possible avenues of compromise be engaged in prior to said mediation. To that end Mr Dillard is designated as representative of the defendants and Mr Kachelman as representative of the Attorney General. 2. The Hon. Charles Malone of Tuscaloosa is appointed as mediator.”
    Attorney William Somerville representing River’s Edge offered the following statement: “The Court’s order issued Sunday acknowledges the “practical” if not humanitarian, needs and desires of the citizens of Greene County” to have charitable bingo in Greene County and requiring the parties to mediate the case with the Honorable Charles Malone as soon as practicable. We are pleased with the Court’s order. We will continue to defend the interests of the people of Greene County in this lawsuit in which the State seeks to shut down all charitable bingo in Greene County – the people who voted for Constitutional Amendment 743, which allows the charitable bingo that the State is attempting to permanently prohibit, and the people and organizations who benefit from the charitable contributions received as a result of the operation of charitable bingo in the County, organizations like the Greene County Hospital and the Greene County Board of Education and people like the hospital’s patients and the students of Greene County.
    At the October 20 hearing Judge Hanes indicated that the trial for the remaining Greene County bingo entities is expected to be scheduled for January 2023.

  • Newswire: Overfishing and environmental changes could leave thousands jobless in Africa

    African fishers face environmental challenges

    Oct. 22, 2022 (GIN) – After decades of overfishing combined with environmental changes, Namibia’s sardine population has finally collapsed, writes Conservation Namibia, a publication of the Namibian Chamber of Environment. “Falling by 99.5% from an estimated 11 million tonnes in the 1960s to a tiny 50,000 tonnes in 2015, this resource is exhausted.”
     
    Despite calls for a moratorium on sardine fishing by scientists since 1995, this was only implemented in 2018 for a period of three years, according to the Chamber of the Environment. The Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR) is now contemplating reopening sardine fishing, but the stocks may not have recovered sufficiently.
     
    The fishing industry provides jobs for more than 10,000 workers at the country’s port towns of Walvis Bay and Lüderitz in the Kharas Region, according to figures by the Erongo Regional Council. The industry has, over the years, gone through bouts of stress caused by quota corruption, overfishing, and climate change factors making it unstable for its workers.
     
    Fishermen have blamed the government and fishing companies over the years for unfair treatment and mismanagement within the industry.
     
    In 2017, local newspapers reported that ex-fisheries minister, Bernard Esau, who is currently facing charges of fraud and corruption, allegedly downplayed the sardine and pilchard shortage despite advice by scientists at the time calling for a ban. 
     
    One-third of the planet’s assessed fishing stocks are already being overfished. According to the World Wildlife Organization, overfishing can cause also loopholes in entire ecosystems worldwide and creates an imbalance that can “erode the food web”, and can alter the size of fish that are remaining and affect how these fish reproduce including the speed at which they mature.
     
    The demand for fish will continue to increase globally leaving more businesses and jobs dependent on dwindling food fish stocks and high-demand seafood will also continue to drive overexploitation and environmental degradation.
     
    “The collapse of the sardine fish stocks in this highly productive ecosystem is a stark example of the severe repercussions of unsustainable management combining with negative environmental conditions. By delaying the moratorium for many years after fisheries scientists sounded the alarm, the hole was dug ever deeper for this economic sector.
     
    “Getting out of the hole will require a different mindset to the one that got us into it – rather than just focusing on short-term economic gains, Namibia needs a long-term ecosystem-based recovery plan.” 
     
     

  • Newswire: Adidas terminates relationship with Kanye West after pressure to cut ties over antisemitic comments; George Floyd’s relatives plan to sue West for his comments

    Compiled from press reports by NNPA and NBCNews

    Kanye West

    Adidas has cut ties with Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, after facing pressure to end its partnership with the rapper in the wake of his antisemitic comments with backlash mounting against the entertainer and leading to him losing additional business deals. 
    “Adidas does not tolerate antisemitism and any other sort of hate speech,” the company said in a statement Tuesday. “Ye’s recent comments and actions have been unacceptable, hateful and dangerous, and they violate the company’s values of diversity and inclusion, mutual respect and fairness.”
    The German athletic brand said the decision to terminate its partnership with Ye “immediately” came after a “thorough review.”
    Gap, which announced in September it was ending its Yeezy Gap partnership, said in a statement Tuesday: “We are taking immediate steps to remove Yeezy Gap product from our stores and we have shut down YeezyGap.com.” 
    “Antisemitism, racism and hate in any form are inexcusable and not tolerated in accordance with our values,” the company said. “On behalf of our customers, employees and shareholders, we are partnering with organizations that combat hate and discrimination.”
    Adidas, which began its partnership with Ye in 2013, said it will end production of Yeezy branded products and stop all payments to Ye and his companies. 
    The move is anticipated to have a “short-term negative impact of up to 250 million euro,” or about $246 million USD, on the company’s net income in 2022, the company said. 
    George Floyd’s family planning suit against West

    Calling comments by Kanye West repugnant, the family of George Floyd said they are filing a $250 million lawsuit against the troubled superstar
    .
Filed by Roxie Washington, the mother of Floyd’s daughter, Gianna, the lawsuit also will include West, his business partners, and associates for “harassment,” “misappropriation,” “defamation,” and “infliction of emotional distress.”
    
The suit comes after West’s controversial “Drink Champs” interview in which he stated that Floyd didn’t die from convicted police officer Derek Chauvin’s knee pressed against his neck for more than 9 minutes. West falsely asserted that Floyd died from fentanyl use and pre-existing medical conditions.
    
Chauvin, 46, pleaded guilty in federal court earlier this year to charges of depriving Floyd of his constitutional rights. He’s serving 252 months in prison.
    
In plea documents, Chauvin agreed that the sentencing for his crime should be based on second-degree murder because he acted willfully and in callous and wanton disregard for the consequences of Floyd’s life.
Further, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled Floyd’s death a homicide due to Chauvin kneeling on his neck.
    
“Kanye’s comments are a repugnant attempt to discount George Floyd’s life and to profit from his inhumane death,” Attorney Pat D. Dixon III said in a statement.
“We will hold Mr. West accountable for his flagrant remarks against Mr. Floyd’s legacy.”
    
Lee Merritt, the attorney for Floyd’s other family members, also issued a cease-and-desist letter to West for his comments.
    
While the law renders it virtually impossible to defame a dead individual, Merritt cautioned that the family might sue West for his false statements. “Claiming Floyd died from fentanyl and not the brutality established criminally and civilly undermines and diminishes the Floyd family’s fight,” Merritt said.
    
Another of Gianna’s attorneys, Kay Harper Williams, also scolded West.
“Free Speech Rights do not include harassment, lies, misrepresentation, and the misappropriation of George Floyd’s legacy,” Williams asserted. “Some words have consequences, and Mr. West will be made to understand.

  • Newswire: Russian court upholds Brittney Griner conviction

    By Stacy M. Brown, NNPA Newswire Senior National Correspondent

    Brittney Griner in Russian jail

    WNBA Star Brittney Griner will remain in a Russian prison and serve the bulk of her 9-year sentence following the Moscow Regional Court’s decision on Tuesday to uphold her earlier conviction and sentence.
    The court slightly reduced the sentence by granting Griner 1.5 days of time served. The Phoenix Mercury all-star has been in custody since Feb. 17.
    Tuesday’s outcome only hastened fears that Griner would now be sent to one of Russia’s brutal prison colonies, where abuse and even torture reportedly occurs routinely.
“We are aware of the news out of Russia that Brittney Griner will continue to be wrongfully detained under intolerable circumstances after having to undergo another sham judicial proceeding today,” U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan Sullivan told reporters.
    “President Biden has been very clear that Brittney should be released immediately.”
According to CNN, Sullivan stressed that the Biden administration is working to get Griner, and Paul Whelan released.
    Sullivan said the administration “remains in contact with representatives of the families. ”Whelan, an ex-Marine, has been detained since 2018.
    “In recent weeks, the Biden-Harris Administration has continued to engage with Russia through every available channel and make every effort to bring home Brittney as well as to support and advocate for other Americans detained in Russia, including fellow wrongful detainee Paul Whelan,” Sullivan said.
    “The President has demonstrated that he is willing to go to extraordinary lengths and make tough decisions to bring Americans home, as his Administration has done successfully from countries around the world.”
    Biden has offered Russian Viktor Bout, a notorious arms dealer, in exchange for Griner and Whelan but thus far hasn’t been able to strike a deal with Moscow.
    “We are very disappointed. The verdict contains numerous defects, and we hoped that the court of appeal would take them into consideration,” Griner’s lawyers Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boykov said in a statement. “We still think the punishment is excessive and contradicts to the existing court practice.”
    “Brittney’s biggest fear is that she is not exchanged and will have to serve the whole sentence in Russia. She had hopes for today as each month, each day away from her family and friends matters to her,” her lawyers noted.

  • Newswire: The 1955 lynching became a catalyst for the civil rights movement. Mississippi unveils Emmett Till statue near where white men kidnapped and killed Black teen decades earlier

    By The Associated Press

    photo of Emmett Till

    GREENWOOD, Miss. (AP) — Hundreds of people applauded — and some wiped away tears — as a Mississippi community unveiled a larger-than-life statue of Emmett Till on Friday, not far from where white men kidnapped and killed the Black teenager over accusations he had flirted with a white woman in a country store.
    “Change has come, and it will continue to happen,” Madison Harper, a senior at Leflore County High School, told a racially diverse audience at the statue’s dedication. “Decades ago, our parents and grandparents could not envision that a moment like today would transpire.”
    The 1955 lynching became a catalyst for the civil rights movement. Till’s mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, insisted on an open-casket funeral in Chicago so the world could see the horrors inflicted on her 14-year-old son. Jet magazine published photos of his mutilated body, which was pulled from the Tallahatchie River in Mississippi.
    The 9-foot (2.7-meter) tall bronze statue in Greenwood’s Rail Spike Park is a jaunty depiction of the living Till in slacks, dress shirt and tie with one hand on the brim of a hat.
    The rhythm and blues song, “Wake Up, Everybody” played as workers pulled a tarp off the figure. Dozens of people surged forward, shooting photos and video on cellphones.
    Anna-Maria Webster of Rochester, New York, had tears running down her face. “It’s beautiful to be here,” said Webster, attending the ceremony on a sunny afternoon during a visit with Mississippi relatives. Speaking of Till’s mother she said: “Just to imagine the torment she went through — all over a lie.”
    Mississippi has the highest percentage of Black residents of any state, now about 38%. Democratic U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, whose district encompasses the Delta, noted that Mississippi had no Black elected officials when Till was killed. He said Till’s death helped spur change.
    “But you, know, change has a way of becoming slower and slower,” said Thompson, the only Black member of Mississippi’s current congressional delegation. “What we have to do in dedicating this monument to Emmett Till is recommit ourselves to the spirit of making a difference in our community.”
    The statue is a short drive from an elaborate Confederate monument outside the Leflore County Courthouse and about 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the crumbling remains of the store, Bryant’s Grocery & Meat Market, in Money.
    The statue’s unveiling coincided with the release this month of “Till,” a movie exploring Till-Mobley’s private trauma over her son’s death and her transformation into a civil rights activist.
    The Rev. Wheeler Parker Jr., the last living witness to his cousin’s kidnapping, wasn’t able to travel from Illinois for Friday’s dedication. But he told The Associated Press on Wednesday: “We just thank God someone is keeping his name out there.”
    He said some wrongly thought Till got what he deserved for breaking the taboo of flirting with a white woman, adding many people didn’t want to talk about the case for decades.
    “Now there’s interest in it, and that’s a godsend,” Parker said. “You know what his mother said: ‘I hope he didn’t die in vain.’”
    Greenwood and Leflore County are both more than 70% Black and officials have worked for years to bring the Till statue to reality. Democratic state Sen. David Jordan of Greenwood secured $150,000 in state funding and a Utah artist, Matt Glenn, was commissioned to create the statue.
    Jordan said he hopes it will draw tourists to learn more about the area’s history. “Hopefully, it will bring all of us together,” he said.

    Till and Parker had traveled from Chicago to spend the summer of 1955 with relatives in the deeply segregated Mississippi Delta. On Aug. 24, the two teens took a short trip with other young people to the store in Money. Parker said he heard Till whistle at shopkeeper Carolyn Bryant.
    Four days later, Till was abducted in the middle of the night from his uncle’s home. The kidnappers tortured and shot him, weighted his body down with a cotton gin fan and dumped him into the river.
    Jordan, who is Black, was a college student in 1955 when he drove to the Tallahatchie County Courthouse in Sumner to watch the murder trial of two white men charged with killing Till — Carolyn’s husband Roy Bryant and his half brother, J.W. Milam.
    An all-white, all-male jury acquitted the two men, who later confessed to Look magazine that they killed Till.
    Nobody has ever been convicted in the lynching. The U.S. Justice Department has opened multiple investigations starting in 2004 after receiving inquiries about whether charges could be brought against anyone still living.
    This year, a group searching the Leflore County Courthouse basement found an unserved 1955 arrest warrant for “Mrs. Roy Bryant.” In August, another Mississippi grand jury found insufficient evidence to indict Donham, causing consternation for Till relatives and activists.
    Although Mississippi has dozens of Confederate monuments, some have been moved in recent years, including one relocated in 2020 from the University of Mississippi campus to a cemetery where Confederate soldiers are buried.
    The state has a few monuments to Black historical figures, including one honoring civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer in Ruleville.
    A historical marker outside Bryant’s Grocery has been knocked down and vandalized. Another marker near where Till’s body was pulled from the Tallahatchie River has been vandalized and shot. The Till statue in Greenwood will be watched by security cameras.
    Jordan won applause when he said Friday: “If some idiot tears it down, we’re going to put it right back up.”

  • Newswire: Biden discusses loan forgiveness at HBCU, amid court victories and setbacks

    By Julius Washington, Howard University News Service

    President Biden with Delaware

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit granted a stay on appeal Friday evening in a case challenging President Biden’s loan forgiveness plan. The decision “prohibits the appellees from discharging any student loan debt under the cancellation program,” pending a full ruling from the court. The Federal District Court in St. Louis had originally dismissed the case.
    Earlier on Friday afternoon, President Biden delivered remarks about his plan at Delaware State University in Dover.
    “It’s good to be home,” Biden said upon taking the podium at the Historically Black University.
    The visit came the day after the district court in St. Louis dismissed a legal challenge brought by several states and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett denied an emergency request from the Brown County Taxpayers Association in Wisconsin.

    “But just yesterday, the state court and the Supreme Court said, ‘No, we’re on Biden’s side,’” the president said. Delaware’s Congressional delegation joined Biden during his appearance at the university, including Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, alongside Senators Chris Coons and Tom Carper.


    One of those Americans, Zachary Bernard, who is Mister Senior at Delaware State, introduced Biden and expressed his gratitude for the program. “President Biden’s student debt relief has given me the liberty to graduate debt free,” Bernard said. “This relief is breaking barriers in our communities and in our minds about what we can do with our future.”
    Biden also addressed some of the Republican elected officials who had called out the program, but had received loan forgiveness from the Paycheck Protection Program. “Representative Vern Buchanan of Florida said our plan was reckless,” Biden quoted. “Guess how much he got in that program, forgiven? $2,300,000. That’s not a joke. Can’t make this stuff up.”
    Sen. Ted Cruz fired back at Biden’s comments in a tweet, saying, “now he’s comparing PPP loans that people got to deal w/ those govt mandates to loan forgiveness he gave to his Ivy League slacker fringe liberal base to buy their votes.”
    In a letter addressed to President Biden, 22 Republican governors criticized the plan, writing: “A high-cost degree is not the key to unlocking the American Dream — hard work and personal responsibility is.”
    Like Cruz, opponents of the loan forgiveness program in the Republican Party have dismissed it as a handout to the wealthy or as an attempt to earn Democratic votes ahead of a consequential midterm election, or they claimed that Biden lacks the authority to make such a decision without Congress.
    The Department of Education estimated that “nearly 90% of relief dollars will go to those earning less than $75,000 a year” and released a five-page memo deriving authority for loan forgiveness from a provision of the 9/11-era HEROES Act.“Republican members of Congress and Republican governors are doing everything they can to deny this relief, even to their own constituents,” Biden said. “Who in the hell do they think they are?”

    Mekhi Riley, a junior at Morgan State University, was supportive of the program and opined that a lack of empathy was responsible for much of the opposition to the relief plan. “I feel like they’re doing exactly what needs to be done,” Riley said. “I think a lot of people fail to be empathetic towards someone who has to take out a bunch of loans because their job requires a [college] education.”
    President Biden also used the speech to urge the students in attendance to vote in November, pitching them on his agenda for the next term. “Your generation will not be ignored. You will not be shunned. You will not be silenced,” Biden said. “If we maintain the Senate and pick up a couple senators, we’re going to see to it that we completely codify Roe v. Wade in every state.”
     

    Denesia Spencer, also a Morgan State student, said she was looking forward to signing up for the student loan relief program and could understand how it could bring more young people to the polls. “I think it could promote some change in how students vote,” Spencer said. “When they see that voting is actually helping them in the long run, they will probably be more likely to vote.”
    Julius Washington is a reporter for HUNewsService.com.

  • SOS protests on Capitol steps in Montgomery to make Medicaid Expansion a key issue in Nov. 8th election

    SOS members push for Medicaid Expansion at State Capitol in Montgomery

    Members of the Save Ourselves Movement for Justice and Democracy (SOS) held a press conference and speak-out for Medicaid Expansion on the steps of the State Capitol in Montgomery on October 14th.
    “We recognize that every issue is a voting issue as we approach the November 8th General Election in Alabama, we are here today on the steps of the Alabama State Capitol, where Governor Ivey has her office, to highlight and elevate Medicaid Expansion as a critical and deciding issue in this election,” said former State Senator Hank Sanders of Selma, an SOS Steering Committee member.
    “We have been here urging our Governors – Robert Bentley and Kay Ivey – for the past eight years since 2014, to sign the agreement to expand Medicaid to serve 300,000 working poor people, who need health care insurance. This has become more critical since the coronavirus pandemic has impacted more people with underlying medical conditions. Many of these people were unable to seek medical assistance before it was too late because they didn’t have health insurance,” said retired UA Constitutional Law professor, Martha Morgan, also an SOS Steering Committee member.
    Medicaid Expansion will provide healthcare coverage for people up to 138% of poverty level income, $14,000 for a single person or $24,000 for a family of four, in Alabama. There are 300,000 people, Black and White, who fall in the gap between current Medicaid eligibility ($4,600) and eligibility to purchase subsidized insurance on the  Affordable Care Marketplace in Alabama. These are the people who would be covered if the Governor signed the agreement to provide Medicaid Expansion under the Affordable Care Act.
    SOS has been coming to these Capitol steps for eight years to protest and urge our Governor to Expand Medicaid. Governor Ivey’s staff said the funds were not available for taking this step. We know there are funds in the American Rescue Plan, which would give states like Alabama an incentive in their current Medicaid reimbursement, if they expanded Medicaid to those in the coverage gap. There are funds to cover the cost of the first three years of coverage, after which the state would have to pay 10% of the cost and the Federal government would pay 90%, as it does now for people in other states,” said John Zippert, Co-Chair of the SOS Health Committee.
    “Governor Ivey has no more excuses for not signing to Expand Medicaid. She continues to resist and oppose needed healthcare coverage for working poor people in Alabama. According to a Kaiser Healthcare study, 500 to 700 people, each year in Alabama, are dying needlessly because they do not have this healthcare coverage. The pandemic has highlighted this problem even more and proportionately more Black and low-income people have died from COVID-19 because they were not treated for their underlying health conditions, like high blood pressure, diabetes, asthma, and others,” said Zippert.
    “If the Governor expands Medicaid, it will create as many as 30,000 new jobs in healthcare and ancillary fields. State taxes paid by these workers will help the state to pay its 10% share of the cost of Medicaid Expansion. This will also help rural hospitals, in fact all hospitals, to stay open and be more financially viable, because more people will have insurance to pay toward their bills, said Zippert, who also serves as the Chair of the Board of the Greene County Health System.
    Martha Morgan mentioned that former Republican Governor, Dr. Robert Bentley, a dermatologist in Tuscaloosa, has come out publically saying the State of Alabama can now afford to expand Medicaid and help more people to have needed health insurance.
    Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Yolanda Flowers, has stated that she supports Medicaid Expansion. Other statewide and local Democratic candidates also support Medicaid Expansion.
    “SOS strongly urges every voter to turn out to vote on November 8 and look at the records of the candidates on issues like Medicaid Expansion, voting rights, and criminal justice reform. Expanding Medicaid is the single step that would help our state the most. Expanding Medicaid will save lives, will help 300,000 people to have health insurance, will create 30,000 jobs in every county in the state, keep rural hospitals open and will help everyone in Alabama to have a better quality of life,” said Hank Sanders.

  • Superintendent gives overview of state 
    testing; CSFO says system still in year-end close-out

    At the Greene County Board of Education’s regular monthly meeting held October 17, 2022, Superintendent Dr. Corey Jones presented an overview of the State’s process for annual student assessments.  The Alabama Comprehensive Assessment Program (ACAP) is administered to grades 3,4,5,7,8.  The 11th grade students are assessed through the ACT test. Dr. Jones stated that  results for testing administered in March of the 2021-2022 school year have been determined but the grading of school systems and the listing of individual schools in the state on the failing list will be available by the November board meeting.
    Dr. Jones continued his report with positive news on each of the schools. At the conclusion of his report, Superintendent Jones presented a Certificate of Appreciation to Dr. Carol P. Zippert for her eight years of service on the board. Ms. Kashaya Cockrell, who was not present, was acknowledged for her six years on the board.  Their board positions will continue until new board members are sworn in at the November board meeting.
    CSFO Marquita Lennon presented preliminary monthly financials as of September.  Ms. Lennon explained that the school system is still in the process of close-out for the school year ending September 30, 2022 and the financials presented were for informational purposes only.  The system close-out will be completed by the November board meeting. Her report included the following: General Fund Balance-$2,921,991; Accounts Payable Check Register – $1,135,295; Payroll Register $949,220.38; Combined Ending Fund Balance – $4.029,886.33; Total Revenue – $230,217.
    In other business the board approved the following personnel items recommended by the superintendent.

    Employment: Valencia Moore, Special Education teacher, Robert Brown Middle School, 2022-2023
    Resignations: Mary Caruthers, Bus Driver, Department of Transportation, effective September 30, 2022; William Mack, Bus Driver, Department of Transportation, effective October 7, 2022; Jamiyiah Smith, 5th Grade Teacher, Robert Brown Middle School, effective October 14, 2022.
    Additional after school tutorial, effective Monday, Oct. 10, 2022:
    Eutaw Primary School: Gloria McGhee; Walter Taylor. Robert Brown Middle School: Tyletha Lord, Substitute Teacher.  Bus Drivers: Gerald Holloway; Freddie Merriweather, David Peterson; George Pippen; Wennoah Peebles; Jerdin Gray; Marsha Powell, Bus Aide; Lesley Carlisle, Substitute Driver; Johnny Pelt, Substitute Driver.
    2022-2023 After School Tutorial Rate of Pay: Lead Teacher – $35 per hour; Teacher – $30 per hour; Bus Driver – $25 per hour x 2; Bus Aide – $12 per hour x 2.
    Supplement Basketball Contracts for 2022-2023 School Term: Rodney Wesley, Head Varsity  Coach, Boys Basketball Team; Halven Carodine, Assistant Boys Basketball Coach; Howard Crawford, Head B. Team Basketball Coach; Ralph Marshall, Head Girls Basketball Coach; Torethia Mitchell, Assistant Girls Basketball Coach; Quentin Walton, Baseball Coach; Shafontaye Myers, Girls Softball Coach.
    Administrative services approved by the board:
    * Payment of all bills, claims and payroll.
    * Contract between Greene County Board and Behavioral Solutions of Mississippi.
    * Amend School Resource Officers contract to ensure they receive 5% raise.
    *Contract between Greene County Board and Druid City Basketball Officials ASSO contract for 202202023 School Term.
    * Approval to appeal Rhinnie Scott v. Greene County Board of Education Ruling.

    Dr. Carol P.  Zippert is presented a Certificate of Appreciation by Superintendent Dr. Corey Jones for her eight years of dedicated service on the Greene County Board of Education.

  • Covid-19

    As of October 13, 2022, at 10:00 AM
    (According to Alabama Political Reporter)

    Alabama had 1,528,739 confirmed cases of coronavirus,
    (3,015) more than last report, with 20,505 deaths (32) more
    than last report.

    Greene County had 2,148 confirmed cases, 8 more cases than last report), with 52 deaths

    Sumter Co. had 2,988 cases with 55 deaths

    Hale Co. had 5,381 cases with 109 deaths

    Note: Greene County Physicians Clinic has testing and vaccination for COVID-19;
    Call for appointments at 205/372-3388, Ext. 142; ages 5 and up.