Current:Home > BackMississippi sets new laws on Medicaid during pregnancy, school funding, inheritance and alcohol-LoTradeCoin
Mississippi sets new laws on Medicaid during pregnancy, school funding, inheritance and alcohol
View Date:2025-01-11 10:37:22
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Mississippi is enacting several new laws, including one that says sign language courses may replace foreign language courses for students to earn credit toward high school graduation.
A look at some of the other new laws taking effect on July 1:
Medicaid during pregnancy
Mississippi will allow earlier Medicaid coverage during pregnancy to try to improve health outcomes for mothers and babies in a poor state with the worst rate of infant mortality in the U.S. The “presumptive eligibility” law says Medicaid will pay for a pregnant woman’s outpatient medical care up to 60 days while her application for the government-funded insurance program is being considered. Processing Medicaid applications can take weeks, and health professionals say early prenatal care is vital.
School funding
A new law changes the way Mississippi pays for public schools. The Mississippi Student Funding Formula replaces the Mississippi Adequate Education Program, which has been fully funded for only two years since it was enacted in 1997. The new formula is designed to give districts a boost for students who can be more expensive to educate. For example, extra money would be calculated for students who live in poverty, those with special needs, those in gifted programs, those with dyslexia or those who are learning English as a second language.
Inheritance rights
A child born from a pregnancy that begins after a parent’s death will have inheritance rights, even if the embryo is not yet implanted when the parent dies. The new law says there must be clear indication that a parent intended to use his or her genetic material for “assisted reproductive technology” such as in vitro fertilization, that implantation of the embryo must happen no more than three years after the parent’s death, and the child must live at least five days after birth.
Alcohol
A new law allows any town or city, regardless of its size, to hold an election on whether to allow the sale of alcohol, even if that municipality is in a dry county. The previous law had population thresholds of at least 5,000 for any municipality that is entirely within one county or 6,000 for any municipality in two different counties.
Elections
Mississippi is mostly banning ranked-choice voting in statewide, county, city and school district elections, but the method will remain available for military members and U.S. citizens overseas who use absentee ballots to vote in Mississippi elections. Voters rank candidates in order of preference. Even if a voter’s top choice doesn’t win, the ranking of other candidates helps determine the winner. Two states use ranked-choice voting: Maine for state primaries and for federal elections, and Alaska for state and federal general elections. Some cities also use it, including New York, San Francisco and Minneapolis.
Shoplifting
Mississippi is expanding its law against shoplifting to specify that aiding, abetting or encouraging people to steal at least $1,000 worth of goods is a felony. The punishments are the same as for the previously existing punishments for grand larceny: up to five years for stolen items totaling $1,000 to $5,000; up to 10 years for items totaling $5,000 to $25,000; up to 20 years for items totaling more than $25,000.
Other laws
— A law that took effect when Republican Gov. Tate Reeves signed it in May regulates transgender people’s use of bathrooms, locker rooms and dormitories in public education buildings. Mississippi became at least the 12th state to restrict transgender students from using facilities that align with their gender identity. The law requires all public education institutions to equip their buildings with single-sex bathrooms, changing areas and dormitories, as well as at least one gender-neutral bathroom and changing room.
— If no candidate wins a majority in a primary or general election for a federal, state or local office, a runoff between the top two candidates will take place four weeks later. Current law sets the runoff three weeks later. This law will take effect Jan. 1.
veryGood! (41)
Related
- Love Is Blind’s Chelsea Blackwell Reacts to Megan Fox’s Baby News
- Is your Ozempic pen fake? FDA investigating counterfeit weight loss drugs, trade group says
- AP Week in Pictures: North America Sept. 29 - Oct. 5
- Current 30-year mortgage rate is highest in over two decades: What that means for buyers
- Everard Burke Introduce
- Simone Biles leads U.S. women to seventh consecutive team title at gymnastics world championships
- US moves closer to underground testing of nuclear weapons stockpile without any actual explosions
- Utah Utes football team gets new Dodge trucks in NIL deal
- Father sought in Amber Alert killed by officer, daughter unharmed after police chase in Ohio
- Former Arkansas state Rep. Jay Martin announces bid for Supreme Court chief justice
Ranking
- Jennifer Garner and Boyfriend John Miller Are All Smiles In Rare Public Outing
- How Travis Kelce's Mom Donna Is Shaking Off Haters Over Taylor Swift Buzz
- Fired Northwestern football coach Pat Fitzgerald is suing school for $130M for wrongful termination
- Billy Eppler resigns as Mets GM amid MLB investigation
- Hurricane forecasters on alert: November storm could head for Florida
- Texas asks appeal judges to let it keep floating barrier in place on the Rio Grande
- Police officer serving search warrant fatally shoots armed northern Michigan woman
- Colorado funeral home with “green” burials under investigation after improperly stored bodies found
Recommendation
-
Mike Tyson impresses crowd during workout ahead of Jake Paul fight
-
Nonprofit service provider Blackbaud settles data breach case for $49.5M with states
-
Which team faces most pressure this NHL season? Bruins, Lightning have challenges
-
A mobile clinic parked at a Dollar General? It says a lot about rural health care
-
Ford agrees to pay up to $165 million penalty to US government for moving too slowly on recalls
-
Bangladesh gets first uranium shipment from Russia for its Moscow-built nuclear power plant
-
The CDC will no longer issue COVID-19 vaccination cards
-
Baltimore police ask for help IDing ‘persons of interest’ seen in video in Morgan State shooting