Meridian Mayor Cheri Barry said Friday that the town of Marion has officially paid off its debt to the city of Meridian, but neither of the mayors would say how much it was.
Marion and Meridian have battled over the debt, owed for sewage services, for years. With the battling over, Marion Mayor Elvis Hudson was elated. "I am just glad this is over," he said Friday. "This is a great day for not just Lauderdale County but East Central Mississippi as a whole... There is no telling how many opportunities were missed because this ordeal was going on."
Hudson presented Barry with a check for an undisclosed amount agreed to by the Meridian City Council and the Marion Board of Aldermen earlier this month, and the legal ordeal between the neighboring municipalities came to an end after the related paperwork was finished.
"The debt has been paid," Barry said in a written statement. "Unity and partnership are critical for the advancement of East Mississippi. It has been a pleasure to work with Mayor Hudson in an effort to build trust, respect, and working relationships with our sister community."
Hudson blamed the previous city administration for the long court battle, saying "The past administration in my opinion did not work with Marion to settle that debt... The new administration realized that this whole thing could be over if we could just cut a check."
Like Barry, Hudson was optimistic about the future relationship between Marion and Meridian. "I want to mend all the fences that need to mended with the City of Meridian and I'm looking forward to working with them," he said.
Local News
Mayors mum on Marion debt settlement
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Local law enforcement officials honored
State Rep. Greg Snowden said he remembered as a child looking up to those "men in blue."
He said police officers in uniform were larger than life, riding in their patrol cars and carrying guns to protect and serve the population. Today, he said he is still in great admiration of the men and women who put their lives on the line every day so that citizens can feel safe. -
MPD probes vehicle crash
Evidence of a mother's desperate attempt to save her children from harm were spread all over a car lot — and could be seen on her as well in the form of bruises, cuts and scrapes.
Tuesday night, a vehicle with three children inside crashed through a plate glass showroom floor window damaging four new cars and totaling the vehicle the children were in. -
Skeleton found in residence
Members of the forensics team of the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI) were called to a dilapidated home in Chunky to probe the discovery of a skeleton.
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Police search for robbery suspects
Two men who reportedly robbed a woman at gunpoint in the parking lot of a local bank are still being sought.
Mike Vick, public information officer with the Meridian Police Department, said the two men approached a woman about 8 p.m. Tuesday at the ATM of Regions Bank on North Hills Street. Vick said one of the suspects was armed with a handgun and after taking an undetermined amount of cash and the victim's car keys, the two suspects fled on foot. -
City cuts payment to Watkins
The Meridian City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to cut their monthly payment to David Watkins, project developer of Meridian's new police station, by $9,999 until work resumes on the project.
The order, made during the Meridian City Council meeting Tuesday morning, included a mutual agreement between the councilmen and Watkins to reduce the project developer's monthly consultant fee of $10,000 to $1, effective Tuesday. -
Crews work on gasoline pipeline
If you hear a loud, booming sound early today, between 4 a.m.-10 a.m., there is no cause for alarm.
Workers with Plantation Pipeline will be performing maintenance work on their 30-foot gasoline pipeline in the Meridian area to accommodate the widening of Highway 493. The location of the work activity will be at Highway 493 North and Oak Hill Baptist Church, just inside the city limits. -
Team Spirit
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High Honor
The flowers and balloons Crestwood Elementary School Principal Kimberly Kendrick received at school Monday were not an early Valentines' Day gift.
Kendrick has been named Meridian Public School District's 2012 Administrator of the Year – an announcement that both surprised and wowed the 17-year veteran educator when made by MPSD Superintendent Dr. Alvin Taylor. -
Master Dance Class
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Digital system promises better communication
Hopefully in the near future you won't hear someone in the emergency services ask over the radio, "Can you hear me now?"
A digital communications system, one which is being pushed by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC), is a few months away and, in some cases, is already in the testing phase in Lauderdale County. - More Local News Headlines
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