Meridian Star

State News

December 17, 2009

Miss. proposals make firing tenured staff easier

JACKSON (AP) — The state College Board has given initial approval to policy changes that could simplify the process for firing tenured professors.

The board unanimously approved the first reading of the changes Thursday.

The changes include shortening the time universities have to give tenured employees notice of termination from up to a year to six months. A lack of funds also has been added as a cause for termination for tenure-track employees.

New policy language also strips faculty of the right of appearing before the board if they are denied tenure.

A final vote will be taken in January. If approved, the changes would take effect July 1.

‘‘It’s written to give institutions flexibility,’’ Institutions of Higher Education Commissioner Hank Bounds said.

Bounds said university presidents could set their own standards on terminations, and that the proposals were a ‘‘minimum’’ after University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones asked if the colleges could give faculty more security.

The board in recent months has been looking at ways to help the state’s eight universities cope with reduced state funding in the tight economy. Early next year, universities will present the board with their plans to reduce spending on campus.

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State News
  • Ind. gov helps raise cash for Miss. GOP

        Two governors seen as potential 2012 presidential candidates appeared together Thursday night at a fundraiser for the Mississippi Republican Party.
        Mississippi’s Haley Barbour and Indiana’s Mitch Daniels wouldn’t say whether either has ambitions for the White House.

    September 3, 2010

  • Leaders consider saving some of stimulus

        Republican Gov. Haley Barbour and a bipartisan group of Mississippi lawmakers are considering saving, rather than spending, one of the two pots of federal stimulus money Congress recently approved.
        Doing so could make it easier for officials to craft a state budget during the 2011 election-year session when most lawmakers are either seeking another term or running for higher office, and when Barbour — a potential 2012 presidential candidate — is wrapping up his final year as governor.

    September 1, 2010

  • Cooking oil case before appeals court

        The state Court of Appeals is scheduled to hear arguments Sept. 30 in the case of Edna Mae Sanders, who is seeking a new trial in the death of her husband.
        The man died a week after he was doused with hot cooking oil. Sanders, of Diamondhead, was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison after a trial in Hancock County in 2008.

    August 30, 2010

  • Barbour: Biofuel project tops Miss. session agenda

         Mississippi lawmakers on Friday will consider $50 million in state incentives for research and production of renewable fuel made from timber, one of the state’s most widely available natural resources.
        Gov. Haley Barbour said Tuesday the biofuels project will be one of three items on the agenda for a special session, and he’s asking legislators to let DeSoto County supervisors build a new jail outside the county seat of Hernando.

    August 25, 2010

  • Danielle forms in Atlantic

        Hurricane Danielle has formed far from land in the Atlantic with maximum sustained winds of 75 mph (120 kph), and it’s expected to strengthen in the next couple of days.

    August 24, 2010

  • Lesbian student files suit in photo fight

        Another teenage lesbian is suing a Mississippi school district, this time over a policy banning females from wearing tuxedos in yearbook portraits.
        Ceara Sturgis’ dispute with the Copiah County School District started in 2009, before Constance McMillen made headlines for her fight to have a same-sex prom date and wear a tuxedo to her school’s dance in a different district.

    August 18, 2010

  • First beer sales allowed at Coliseum in October

        On Oct. 16, Hank Williams Jr. will be in Jackson to perform at the Mississippi Coliseum. Joining him will be country music acts Jamey Johnson, Colt Ford, Josh Thompson and The Grascals.
        But perhaps the star of the show will be something that’s never appeared — at least legally — at the four-decade-old coliseum: beer.

    August 18, 2010

  • Mississippi lawmakers hold hearings on redistricting

        Fast-growing and relatively affluent suburbs could gain representation in the Mississippi Legislature, while economically struggling areas with shrinking populations could lose some seats.
        That’s how things are shaping up as state lawmakers prepare for redistricting in 2011.
        Officials in the fastest-growing county in the state, DeSoto, say they anticipate picking up at least one additional seat in the 122-member House and one more in the 52-member Senate. DeSoto now has all or part of six House districts and two entire Senate districts.

    August 18, 2010

  • Hood: No decision yet on whether Miss. will sue BP

        Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood said Tuesday he hasn’t decided yet whether to file a state lawsuit against BP over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
        In an interview with The Associated Press, Hood said he’s taking time to evaluate possible claims for damages created by the spill or by chemicals used to break up the oil. He said determining the environmental impact on fish, for example, could take months or longer.

    August 18, 2010

  • Soybeans USDA, Miss. extension service: crops look good

    August 16, 2010 1 Photo

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