PICAYUNE —
Editor, As I listen to all the rhetoric about whether to increase taxes in order to meet the budget request, I am concerned that we would ever think about raising taxes to meet a county budget that increasing year after year. Lets go back 30 or 40 years when times were better. Every time the county needed more money they just raised the millage rate to meet their needs. This has gone on for years and now when the whole country is in a severe recession, they have the millage rates so high that any increase is going to hurt a lot of people.
I challenge the supervisors to look around the county, a lot of people are hurting.
What this county needs is to bite the bullet and do what the rest of us in the county are having to do, adjust your spending to your income. With appraisals on property being down, our elected officials should have seen the loss of tax revenue coming.
As a property owner, I humbly and prayerfully ask this board not to increase taxes on Pearl River County citizens. We can do with less.
Jerry Mitchell
Letters
Letter to the Editor
- Letters
-
-
Palazzo's stand on disaster relief embarrassing
Dear editor,
U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo's recent vote against funding to pay flood insurance claims of Sandy victims should provoke embarrassment and disgust in Mississippians irrespective of individual politics. -
Letter to the Editor
Editor:
I would like to address the problem of unwanted animals being dumped in rural areas within the county. To those animal owners that do not want their animals anymore, for whatever reason; please be responsible and try to find a new home for your animal. -
Letter to the Editor
Never in the history of our nation has a president been reelected who has caused 23 million unemployed, 6 trillion of debt and a certainty that his policies will continue on steroids. Economics 101 would refute these policies. He told his followers to “vote for revenge.”
-
We need checks and balances
Dear Editor,
Never in the history of our nation has a president been reelected who has caused 23 million unemployed, 6 trillion of debt and a certainty that his policies will continue on steroids. Economics 101 would refute these policies -
Butler Now contract raises questions
Dear Editor:
The new contract with Butler Snow creates many unanswered questions. First, after pleading poverty before and during the budget hearings, why is it necessary to spend over $450,000 dollars to hire a firm to do what we already pay the supervisors to do? It’s obvious that the taxpayer was the least considered party to this one-sided contract. Once again, the supervisors have validated one of the 5 characteristics of government. “The few who pay taxes are simply a source of revenue to fund the socialist policies of politicians and their politically connected cronies.” -
letter to the editor
Editor;
I had long feared that Obama would be reelected to a 2nd term due to his policies that inordinately benefitted and increased the size of the dependency class -— who would then overwhelmingly vote for him. -
Need to thank Mississippi farmers
Editor:
As a member of the agricultural community that provides food and fiber for the 98% of the population that is not involved in farming, I want to thank all of you for your support of this most vital industry in Mississippi. -
Letter to the Editor
Editor: I had a nightmare that I was in the middle of a presidential election.
-
Letter to the Editor
Editor;
Gene Lyons is a master of inneundo and obfuscation as illustrated in his column in the August 30th Item. He starts off by intimating that Mitt Romney lies a lot and then cites 2 probable lies and 1 direct accusation of lying. That’s a total of 3. -
letter to the editor
Editor:
Was the reverse 911 used to warn county residents about the flooding danger. I experienced this first hand at 2:30 a.m. while bringing my wife to work in Picayune. I started to investigate and get the word out to media outlets and the only one to pick up on this was WGNO TV in NOLA. - More Letters Headlines
-
Palazzo's stand on disaster relief embarrassing




