Voters in Mississippi House District 82 spoke loud and clear Tuesday.
They elected Wilbert Jones to represent them in the Legislature with a comfortable 64 percent of the vote.
Jones beat out opponent Bill Marcy in Tuesday's run-off election with 1,664 votes. Marcy received 920 votes, or 36 percent of the total vote, including adsentee ballots.
"It's a calmness," Jones said shortly after his victory became clear. "I feel great. I have very strong supporters that believe in me. It was just a matter of getting out the vote."
Though Jones was happy with his percentage of the vote, he admitted he was disappointed with the low overall voter turnout. Only 2,385 people turned up to vote in the election, though the circuit clerk's office reported there were more than 10,000 active registered voters in the district.
Jones, who plans to declare as a Democrat, will replace the late Rep. Charles L. Young, Sr., who passed away in April while in his 30th year in office. The Young family endorsed Jones immediately after he qualified for the special election to fill Rep. Young's seat.
Five candidates ran in the special election earlier this month. Jones and Marcy both received far more votes than any of the other candidates in that election, winning the right to compete in Tuesday's run-off.
When asked if he plans to follow in the footsteps of his predecessor, Jones said, "I will definitely vote for the best interest of East Mississippi, and that's what Mr. Young always did. He understood the needs of this community... I learned a lot from Mr. Young, and yes I will be following in his path of growth and prosperity for East Mississippi."
Jones, who works as director of Greater Meridian Health Clinic, said he does not know exactly when he will be seated, but that when he is, he's ready to go. "Right now it's just a matter of rolling up my sleeves and getting back to work," he said.
His main concerns as a legislator, Jones said, will be economic development, forming consensus in the East Mississippi delegation, and procuring nationally competitive funding for education in Mississippi.
Marcy was not bitter about his loss.
"I just called Wilbert Jones and I wished him the best," he said Tuesday night. "He ran a good race."
Marcy said he will continue to be active in political causes and remain in the public eye, but was unsure whether he will run for public office again. He has previously run for mayor of Meridian and U.S. Congress.
Marcy said he looks back happily on his race for the Legislature, particularly to his support from the Republican Party.
"I think it says a lot in the state of Mississippi where the white governor and the white power structure reach out and support a black candidate," he said.
Local News
Jones eases to victory
District 82 had low turnout
- Local News
-
-
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.
-
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
-
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
-
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
-





