John McKay is the incumbent. According to the Miss. Press (8/8/07), McKay said, "I worked extremely hard in District 5 to give the residents the kind of personal service they want. I am extremely proud to represent the people of District 5 and will give them the personal service over the next four years that I have given in the past."
John_McKay@co.jackson.ms.us
1/29/08
Mississippi House of Representatives ![]()
Brandon Jones
District 111 - Jackson
Democrat ![]()
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Legislative Experience: |
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Contact Information: |
Representative Jones is a member of the Pascagoula Kiwanis Club, Jackson County Bar Association, Mississippi Bar Association, Mississippi Association for Justice, and Wake Forest University Divinity School Board of Visitors. |
Email: bjones@house.ms.gov |
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Dear Friends,
I hope you all had a safe and enjoyable summer. I also hope that those of you with school age children and grandchildren are having a peaceable transition into the school year.
Those of us who live in Jackson County are blessed to have access to high quality schools and motivated teachers. Unfortunately, even students and parents in the best school districts must deal with stress on a regular basis. As I speak to students, teachers, and parents, I hear more and more about the heavy burden of keeping pace with today’s fast moving curriculum. That’s why I have been pleased to meet Teresa Little, the Director of the Sylvan Learning Center and learn more about what their Center has to offer.
I encourage parents and grandparents who are having difficulty developing homework and study strategies to contact the Sylvan Learning Center at 497-2343. Sylvan is able to provide assessments of your child’s academic development and devise programs intended to make homework time less of a nightmare. Regardless of whether your child is excelling in school or having difficulty with certain classes, I encourage you to take advantage of this important resource. I have also been pleased to learn that Sylvan will work with families to make sure that their services fit into any budget.
2010 Legislative Session
Over the next several weeks, I will be researching issues and drafting bills for the upcoming legislative session which begins in January of 2010. I invite you to contact me with issues and bill ideas that are important to you. Your input is very valuable to me.
I also wanted to share with you bills that I introduced or co-sponsored in 2009 that I plan to introduce during the next session. While these bills are likely to undergo further revisions, the current form will you give you a good idea of their intended purpose:
In addition to these bills, I intend to introduce legislation dealing with homeowners insurance, increased funding of the state Wind Pool, cyber crime, protection from identity theft, voter reform, and the Governor’s pardon power.
Insurance Commissioner Denies Rate Hike
Last week, Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney informed State Farm that its request to increase homeowners’ rates by 45 percent in three Coastal counties has been denied. State Farm was granted a 13.6 percent increase in 2008. In statements last week, Commissioner Chaney said that it was too soon for State Farm to increase rates again and that he was discouraged by State Farm’s unwillingness to write new business if the increase was allowed.
I applaud Commissioner Chaney for his decision. Insurance affordability and availability continue to be among the biggest issues facing Coastal residents. Allowing any private company to charge its policyholders 45 percent more in this economic climate would be the wrong decision.
Shrimp Boil a Success
I want to thank the more than 150 of you who turned out for my shrimp boil in honor of Jackson County businesses and business leaders. I especially want to thank Pastor Jay Cook of First Baptist Church of Pascagoula for offering the blessing and Gary Anglin for playing his song “My Mississippi Home”.
The purpose of this event was to say thanks to those of you who have continued to serve our local community by offering your goods and services in these hard economic times. We are very fortunate to have a fantastic array of large and small businesses here in Jackson County.
Watch Me on Channel 7 Tonight and Next Wednesday
Yesterday, I sat down with Doug Mansfield at WKFK Channel 7 to discuss the 2009 legislative session and my goals for the upcoming session. Doug’s program “Spotlight on Jackson County” will air tonight at 5:30 and again at 11:00. Since we couldn’t get to all of our material in one segment, we also recorded a segment for next week’s show which will air at 5:30 and 11:00 next Wednesday.
How to Contact Me
I invite you to call me on my cell phone at 228-326-7649 or e-mail me at bjones@house.ms.gov. For real time updates, you can also follow me on Twitter under the user name “brandoncjones”. If you haven’t heard of Twitter, you can check out my page at http://twitter.com/brandoncjones or by following the link on my website. Please feel free to forward this report to folks in our district and let me know if I need to add someone to my list.
I will also be posting my updates and House related news on my campaign website at www.electbrandonjones.com.
Thank you for the opportunity to serve.
Brandon
The district includes South Pascagoula, Gautier, Fountainbleu and Ocean Springs.
http://billstatus.ls.state.ms.us/members/senate/moffatt.xml
Mississippi State Senate ![]()
T. O. Moffatt
District 52 - Jackson
Republican ![]()
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Legislative Experience: |
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Email: tmoffatt@senate.ms.gov |
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Web Site: http://wicker.senate.gov/public/
8-18-09
WICKER SAYS ILLEGAL PRISON CELL PHONES ARE GROWING SAFETY CONCERN
Senator Backs Legislation to Allow Prisons to Jam Inmates’ Use of Smuggled Phones
Across Mississippi and the rest of the nation, a dangerous new epidemic is occurring in prisons and correctional facilities. In years past smuggled drugs were the top concern of prison officials, but the newest threat is something so common it can be found in the pocket or purse of nearly every American: cellular phones.
Today’s prison inmates are using smuggled cell phones for a number of nefarious reasons, including planning prison escapes, plotting murders and gang-related activities, and other crimes. To help address this widespread public safety concern, I have cosponsored legislation that aims to prevent prison inmates from using smuggled cell phones.
The Safe Prisons Communications Act of 2009 would allow states to petition the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to operate wireless jamming devices in correctional facilities. The legislation earned an important endorsement earlier this month from the Senate Commerce Committee, on which I serve,and is now awaiting action by the full Senate.
A WIDESPREAD PROBLEM
Mississippi has not been immune to this growing problem. Last year, state officials confiscated nearly 2,000 phones that were available for criminals to plan crime from their jail cells. In June, an inmate in a Mississippi prison escaped and is accused of shooting a Nashville police sergeant. The inmate was able to plot his jail break using a smuggled prison cell phone.
Our state is not alone in dealing with this issue. Last year in California, prison officials confiscated nearly 2,800 cell phones, which was nearly double the number recovered the year before. Also last year, a Texas state senator received a threatening phone call from a death row inmate using a smuggled cell phone. And in Maryland, a man awaiting trial for homicide has recently been accused of using an illegal prison cell phone to plot the murder of a key witness in his pending trial.
COMMON SENSE APPROACH
The Safe Prisons Communications Act takes a common sense approach to stopping this growing problem. Because it is currently illegal to intentionally interfere with wireless communications, the bill requires the FCC to establish rules and criteria for the approval of jamming systems and devices for use by correctional facilities.
The measure also puts safeguards in place to ensure emergency communications from prison officials are not disrupted. Each correctional facility that receives approval to use jamming devices would be required to have a documented procedure to shut down the systems in any security events at the prison, such as a fire or riot. Additionally, the legislation takes steps to ensure the jamming devices do not fall into the wrong hands, specifying they may only be purchased and operated by approved correctional facilities.
Prison officials in Mississippi and elsewhere in the country work hard to keep their inmates at bay. However, recent advancements in technology – including the proliferation of affordable cell phones – have made the job more difficult for America’s correctional systems.
Our prisons are meant to stop crime, not further it. We must act now to give America’s prison officials the tools needed to ensure it is no longer business as usual for those who are locked up. The Safe Prisons Communications Act would help do so.
8/6/09 letter to Robert Spivacke re Healthcare Reform:
I am opposed to the current health care reform bills being debated in Congress. We should not create an expensive new government health program or promise new government health benefits when we have not figured out how to pay the future costs of Medicare, Medicaid, Tricare, and other federal health programs that were promised by previous Presidents and previous Congresses.
The current health care system offers high quality care to many Americans, but at very high cost. We have allowed a system in which the private sector provides coverage while people are young, healthy, and employed, and then shifts them to government programs when they are older, have chronic health problems, or are poor.
About 54% of health care spending is paid by private insurance and individuals' out-of-pocket costs, while 46% of the health care spending is paid by the federal, state, and local governments. Because Medicare and Medicaid cover the elderly and the poor, the government pays for the majority of spending on hospital care, nursing home care, and home health care in the United States. The retirement of the baby-boom generation will substantially increase the costs of Medicare. The current economic recession has added to the Medicaid population.
More than $2.5 trillion will be spent on health care in the United States in 2009. Health care spending will account for more than 17 percent of U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which means that one of every six dollars spent in America will be spent on health care. By 2018, health care is projected to take 20% of GDP, or one of every five dollars. By 2025, health care spending is projected to take one of every four dollars spent in America.
I do not believe that it is economically possible for one-fourth of all spending in the United States to be spent on health care. It also is not possible for the federal government to keep spending more and more every year on health care. There are just too many other needs for individuals, families, communities, and the nation that would have to be neglected for us to afford to spend so much on health care. We should not pass legislation that will increase costs. We have to make our health care system more efficient, without compromising the quality of care, and we have to improve our efforts at preventing and curing chronic medical conditions and diseases.
There are three major concerns about health care - access, quality, and cost - but they often conflict with each other. The only way that health care reform can work for taxpayers and consumers is to put cost containment first, ensure the quality of care, and then using the savings to improve access to care for people without insurance.
There are several ways to make health care more efficient without increasing costs. I am a cosponsor of H.R. 684, the Medicare Prescription Drug Savings and Choice Act, introduced by my good friend and fellow Blue Dog Representative Marion Berry of Arkansas. This bill would require Medicare to operate at least one drug benefit plan and negotiate prices directly with drug manufacturers. H.R. 684 also encourages the use of generic drugs instead of more expensive alternatives unless the prescribing physician says that a name brand drug is medically necessary.
When Congress passed the Medicare prescription drug benefit in 2003, Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-LA), then the chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee, added language that prohibits Medicare from negotiating with drug companies for lower prices. A few years later, Tauzin retired from Congress to become President and CEO of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), the industry he had helped as committee chairman.
The bill also did not add the prescription benefit to regular Medicare benefit package. The Bush Administration insisted that Medicare would have to contract with insurance companies to offer prescription drug benefit plans. Instead of Medicare negotiating lower prices for its 45 million beneficiaries, Medicare pays insurance companies and the insurance companies pay the drug companies. This adds administrative costs and unnecessary profits with the result that Medicare pays higher prices than the Department of Veterans Affairs, which negotiates prices directly with the drug companies.
I also am a cosponsor of H.R. 1583, legislation to repeal the insurance industry's antitrust exemption. The insurance industry was granted a temporary exemption in the McCarran Ferguson Act in 1946, but the industry has successfully lobbied to make it permanent. Repeal of the antitrust exemption would force health insurers to compete with one another in a competitive market on the basis of price, service, and value.
The biggest challenge of health care reform will be to create incentives for doctors, hospitals, and other health care providers to reduce the costs of care. There are several promising approaches that deserve further study. For example, I would support demonstration projects to establish Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) to determine whether they can lower Medicare costs. Under an ACO, a local network of doctors and hospitals would agree to provide medical care to a specific population of Medicare beneficiaries. If the ACO can provide the care at less cost than regular Medicare, the doctors and hospitals would receive bonuses from the savings.
We also need to encourage individuals and families to be more aware of prevention and early diagnosis of medical problems in order to reduce health care costs and improve their lives. Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurance spend hundreds of millions of dollars each year in Mississippi treating preventable illnesses. Our state has a high rate of obesity, which increases the risks of diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic medical conditions. We need much better prevention and management of those and other illnesses.
The health care reform bill that currently is being debated in the House is H.R. 3200, American's Affordable Health Choices Act of 2009. The bill would require all individuals to enroll in a health insurance program. Individuals in households with incomes up to 133% of the poverty level would be eligible for Medicaid. Those from 133% to 400% of the poverty level could receive some government assistance to help pay their premiums. That assistance could be used to enroll in the public health plan or in a private insurance plan that participate in the insurance exchanges that would be developed.
Federal poverty guidelines are based on household size and are adjusted every year. For example, the poverty level in 2009 for a 2-person family is $14,570. Under H.R. 3200, two-person families with incomes below $19,378 (133% of poverty level) would be eligible for Medicaid. Two-person families with incomes between $19,378 and $58,280 (400% of poverty level) would receive federal premium assistance on a sliding scale. For families making about $20,000, the government would pay most of the cost. For those with incomes above $50,000, the government assistance would be a cap on how much of their income they would have to spend.
The bill would allow anyone who receives health insurance from an employer-provided plan to keep their current coverage. The public insurance plan would be an option for people who do not receive insurance through their employers. Those individuals also could choose a private insurance plan that agrees to provide the basic benefit package required by the government.
The bill gives employers the option to "pay or play." Employers could either offer health insurance to their employees or pay 8% of their payroll into a government fund to help insure their employees. The bill exempts small businesses with payrolls below $500,000 from the requirement. Other businesses could apply for a hardship and delay for up to two years.
The proposal is partly funded by a new tax on individuals whose total annual income exceeds $280,000 and for joint filers whose total income is over $350,000. It would not increase taxes on other taxpayers. The bill also makes changes in Medicare that are estimated to save $50 billion over the next ten years. The savings include provisions to freeze some Medicare payments and increase other payments by less than they would increase under current formulas. Some of the provisions have been negotiated with hospitals, doctors, and drug companies.
I oppose the House bill. We cannot add an expensive new subsidized health care program on top of the huge current debt that is $11 trillion and growing rapidly.
H.R. 3200 is currently under consideration by House committees. Some changes are being negotiated, but I do not believe it can pass Congress without substantial changes. This is the beginning of the debate over health care policy. Congress and the American people will be dealing with this issue for much of the next twenty years until we figure out how to manage the costs much more efficiently.
Thanks again for sharing your views. If you have any more questions, please feel free to contact my office.
Sincerely,
GENE TAYLOR
Member of Congress
GT:JP
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