JACKSON — The Mississippi Public Service Commission continues to function, even though legislators failed to pass a budget for the agency that regulates utilities.
As the state fiscal year started Wednesday, commissioners said Attorney General Jim Hood told them the PSC has the legal authority to keep operating because it is considered a core function of state government.
Commissioners and their staff members were being cautious about spending, though. Chairman Lynn Posey said the PSC is minimizing expenses by cutting travel.
Commissioner Brandon Presley said the staff is taking smaller steps to save money, such as delaying the purchase of copier paper.
“We have not lost one bit of authority to enforce law,” Presley said. “We have just lost authority to spend money.”
Officials said the PSC is in an unusual position in Mississippi government. In 1968, lawmakers failed to pass a state budget before July 1. Longtime lawmakers have said they don’t recall any times in recent decades that individual agencies have been unfunded at the beginning of a budget year.
Gov. Haley Barbour will call another special session so lawmakers can pass budgets for the PSC and for the Public Utilities Staff, a companion agency that examines utility companies’ finances and evaluates the companies’ requests for rate changes. The Public Utilities staff makes recommendations to the PSC, and the three elected members of the PSC vote on whether to approve rate changes.
Barbour spokesman Dan Turner said Wednesday that session will be set when the House and Senate agree on budgets for the PSC and the Public Utilities staff.
Lawmakers were in special session from Sunday afternoon until midnight Tuesday to approve most parts of the state’s $6 billion budget for the year that began Wednesday.
The utility regulation budgets died amid a dispute over letting the PSC hire more employees. Commissioners say they need their own experts to evaluate the recommendations made by the Public Utilities staff.
The House voted to give the PSC 89 full-time and four part-time staff positions. The Senate cut that back to the existing 73 full-time and four part-time positions.
A separate budget bill for the Public Utilities staff passed both chambers Sunday, but a House member held it for the possibility of more debate — a procedural move that eventually killed the bill.
Posey said because of the reduction in travel by the PSC, utility customers might have to wait longer for state regulators to investigate complaints about unwanted telephone solicitations or spotty electrical service. He also said utility companies or contractors could be affected. For example, companies that want to install natural gas pipelines might not expect a quick decision from the state.
The bills are House Bill 4 and 5.
State News
Miss. utility regulators working without budget
- State News
-
- Miss. high court hears arguments over pardons Feuding attorneys asked the Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday to determine the validity of pardons that Haley Barbour gave to convicted killers and other convicts during his final days as governor. Chief Justice Bill Waller Jr. said the court would not rule Thursday, but he didn’t say when a decision would come.
- Senate votes to merge 3 Sunflower school districts The Mississippi Senate passed a bill Wednesday that would merge Sunflower County’s three school districts into one, easing into the politically sensitive topic of consolidation by focusing on a single area in the impoverished Delta.
-
Kansas, Missouri fight to keep Marine data center
Kansas and Missouri officials are working together to fend off New Orleans’ effort to lure a Marine Corps data center and its 400 high-paying jobs away from Kansas City.
The congressional delegations and governors from both states have written to Marine Corps Commandant James F. Amos, arguing to keep the center where it is. -
Judge temporarily blocks Mississippi execution
A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked the execution of a Mississippi inmate who killed two men during a robbery spree in 1995. The man’s attorneys asked for the order, not arguing guilt or innocence, but that corrections officials prevented Edwin Hart Turner from getting medical tests that could prove he is mentally ill.
-
New rules, tests proposed for public aid in Miss.
People who receive public assistance would be subject to random testing for drugs or nicotine and would have to perform community service under new requirements being considered by Mississippi lawmakers.
-
Home strengthening may lower insurance
Mississippi Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney said he is working with legislators on a bill that would require insurers to offer discounts to homeowners who have strengthened homes against wind damage.
State officials told the Sun Herald that they hope the reinforcement of roofing, doors, windows and other components also will qualify homeowners for insurance discounts, although there are no guarantees. -
Inmate asks courts to stop execution
Condemned inmate Edwin Hart Turner’s lawyer told a federal judge Friday that a corrections policy prevented Turner from getting tests that could prove he’s mentally ill and ineligible for execution.
-
Pardoned killer to fight return to Mississippi
A convicted murderer who left Mississippi after being pardoned by former Gov. Haley Barbour seems poised to fight attempts to force him to return from Wyoming. Joseph Ozment’s attorney, Robert Moxley, told The Associated Press on Thursday that he will defend Ozment’s freedom if he decides to try to stay in Wyoming.
-
Universities say financial aid fund running short
Recipients of state scholarships could see their aid packages trimmed unless the Mississippi Legislature puts more money into financial aid. That includes the more than 20,000 students who receive the Mississippi Tuition Assistance Grant.
-
Bad info infuriated kin of pardoned man’s victims
In another twist in the often confusing aftermath of pardons granted by former Gov. Haley Barbour on his way out of office, Mississippi corrections officials said Tuesday that victims’ relatives were given bad information by the state that fanned their outrage.
- More State News Headlines






