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Mississippi’s private and public schools could lose more than $137 million after the U.S. Department of Education decided to rescind remaining COVID-19 relief funds. The federal government awarded the funds amid the pandemic to help states and school districts address issues arising from the crisis, but until this month had said it would allow states an extension to finish using the money.

The decision has left Mississippi education leaders reeling and school administrators scrambling to figure out how to proceed, with some schools potentially left holding the bag for work that is in progress and that depended on the funds for payment.

“This is the equivalent of you going to a lender and them granting you a half million dollar builders loan (but) you get $300,000 into it and (they) say, ‘Oh yeah, we’re only gonna give you $300,000,” Mississippi State Superintendent Dr. Lance Evans, who is trying to get the decision reversed, said during the Mississippi Board of Education meeting on Thursday. “Literally, that’s what it equates to.”

Schools are now wondering if they need to make immediate changes as they await updates.
 

Thanks to Trump’s repeated executive order attacks on US clean energy policy, nearly $8 billion in investments and 16 new large-scale factories and other projects were cancelled, closed, or downsized in Q1 2025.


The $7.9 billion in investments withdrawn since January are more than three times the total investments cancelled over the previous 30 months, according to nonpartisan policy group E2’s latest Clean Economy Works monthly update.
 
“This is the equivalent of you going to a lender and them granting you a half million dollar builders loan (but) you get $300,000 into it and (they) say, ‘Oh yeah, we’re only gonna give you $300,000,” Mississippi State Superintendent Dr. Lance Evans, who is trying to get the decision reversed, said during the Mississippi Board of Education meeting on Thursday. “Literally, that’s what it equates to.”
It tickles me when people dumb enough to vote for Trump later try to explain stuff to the rest of us.
Yeah, we know. You don’t have to explain anything to us. We have been telling you this for a long time now.
 

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That big talk did not dissuade then-President Joe Biden from quickly signing off on disaster relief for Arkansas after the March 31, 2023, tornado.

Indeed, a retrospective press release from the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management sent a year later noted how quickly the Biden administration responded to the 2023 storms that killed five:
 

Volvo plans to lay off 250 to 350 employees at its New River Valley plant in Dublin by the end of June as part of a round of job cuts affecting up to 800 people in all.

Volvo currently employs about 3,400 people making heavy-duty trucks at the Pulaski County location. The 2.3-million-square-foot plant is the largest Volvo manufacturing facility in the world.

Employees were notified Thursday. Affected employees’ last day at the Dublin plant will be June 27, Volvo spokesperson Janie Coley said in a statement.

“Heavy-duty truck orders continue to be negatively affected by market uncertainty about freight rates and demand, possible regulatory changes, and the impact of tariffs,” Coley said.

In February, the company announced layoffs affecting 250 to 350 employees at the Dublin plant. Coley said that ended up being 180 people due to attrition.


Screenshot 2025-04-22 at 8.06.46 PM.png
 

Volvo plans to lay off 250 to 350 employees at its New River Valley plant in Dublin by the end of June as part of a round of job cuts affecting up to 800 people in all.

Volvo currently employs about 3,400 people making heavy-duty trucks at the Pulaski County location. The 2.3-million-square-foot plant is the largest Volvo manufacturing facility in the world.

Employees were notified Thursday. Affected employees’ last day at the Dublin plant will be June 27, Volvo spokesperson Janie Coley said in a statement.

“Heavy-duty truck orders continue to be negatively affected by market uncertainty about freight rates and demand, possible regulatory changes, and the impact of tariffs,” Coley said.

In February, the company announced layoffs affecting 250 to 350 employees at the Dublin plant. Coley said that ended up being 180 people due to attrition.


Screenshot 2025-04-22 at 8.06.46 PM.png

Come On Idk GIF by The Democrats
 
It tickles me when people dumb enough to vote for Trump later try to explain stuff to the rest of us.
Yeah, we know. You don’t have to explain anything to us. We have been telling you this for a long time now.
Here's another good one: “It’s not a negotiation, right? It’s a, ‘Hey, we need what we were promised.'”

Damn, dude, what rock have you been living under during the last nine years?
 
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) pleaded with President Donald Trump to "reconsider" his denial of disaster relief after tornadoes hit Arkansas.


Cotton, who has opposed similar aid for blue states, joined the Arkansas delegation in writing a letter directly to Trump to support Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders' request for funds.

On Friday, Sanders appealed the federal government's denial in a letter telling Trump that her state was in "dire need of federal assistance."

However, Trump's administration has refused to budge.

...

Cotton, however, has a history of voting against disaster relief for other states.

"I don't think Arkansas needs to bail out the Northeast," Cotton said in the aftermath of 2013's Hurricane Sandy.
 
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Mississippi’s private and public schools could lose more than $137 million after the U.S. Department of Education decided to rescind remaining COVID-19 relief funds. The federal government awarded the funds amid the pandemic to help states and school districts address issues arising from the crisis, but until this month had said it would allow states an extension to finish using the money.

The decision has left Mississippi education leaders reeling and school administrators scrambling to figure out how to proceed, with some schools potentially left holding the bag for work that is in progress and that depended on the funds for payment.

“This is the equivalent of you going to a lender and them granting you a half million dollar builders loan (but) you get $300,000 into it and (they) say, ‘Oh yeah, we’re only gonna give you $300,000,” Mississippi State Superintendent Dr. Lance Evans, who is trying to get the decision reversed, said during the Mississippi Board of Education meeting on Thursday. “Literally, that’s what it equates to.”

Schools are now wondering if they need to make immediate changes as they await updates.
Dirt poor, deep red states like Mississippi and West Virginia are going to get utterly screwed in this administration. Yet I'm sure most Republican voters in these states will find creative ways to blame Democrats for their problems, not their Jesus-anointed god king.
 
Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) pleaded with President Donald Trump to "reconsider" his denial of disaster relief after tornadoes hit Arkansas.


Cotton, who has opposed similar aid for blue states, joined the Arkansas delegation in writing a letter directly to Trump to support Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders' request for funds.

On Friday, Sanders appealed the federal government's denial in a letter telling Trump that her state was in "dire need of federal assistance."

However, Trump's administration has refused to budge.

...

Cotton, however, has a history of voting against disaster relief for other states.

"I don't think Arkansas needs to bail out the Northeast," Cotton said in the aftermath of 2013's Hurricane Sandy.
Self-righteously trying to deny federal aid for places that dare to not support your cult leader when they're hit by a natural disaster and are suffering, and then openly begging and pleading for federal aid for your own state when it's hit by a natural disaster, is the very image of hypocrisy. Of course we've all known that they are hypocrites for a long time, but while I feel sorry for the victims of these tornadoes who will likely not get any federal help like they normally would, I don't feel at all sorry for people like Cotton or Huckabee. You reap what you sow, as they say.
 
Dirt poor, deep red states like Mississippi and West Virginia are going to get utterly screwed in this administration. Yet I'm sure most Republican voters in these states will find creative ways to blame Democrats for their problems, not their Jesus-anointed god king.
West Virginia's State budget is 5.3 billion. They have zero room for emergencies. Like NC their goal is to eliminate income tax where possible.......
 
sign-ideas-for-all-you-getting-out-there-v0-djbxfu3ywche1.webp

Mississippi’s private and public schools could lose more than $137 million after the U.S. Department of Education decided to rescind remaining COVID-19 relief funds. The federal government awarded the funds amid the pandemic to help states and school districts address issues arising from the crisis, but until this month had said it would allow states an extension to finish using the money.

The decision has left Mississippi education leaders reeling and school administrators scrambling to figure out how to proceed, with some schools potentially left holding the bag for work that is in progress and that depended on the funds for payment.

“This is the equivalent of you going to a lender and them granting you a half million dollar builders loan (but) you get $300,000 into it and (they) say, ‘Oh yeah, we’re only gonna give you $300,000,” Mississippi State Superintendent Dr. Lance Evans, who is trying to get the decision reversed, said during the Mississippi Board of Education meeting on Thursday. “Literally, that’s what it equates to.”

Schools are now wondering if they need to make immediate changes as they await updates.
Why is the Federal government still giving out COVID money? Biden declared the pandemic over.
 
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