Posted inPolitics & Policy, Voting

Black Voters ‘Finally’ Get Win After Federal Judge Strikes Down Mississippi Map

In Dyamone White’s rural Mississippi town, churches long served as the gathering spot for community events.  As a millennial, she recognized the need to bring those events elsewhere as a way to increase civic engagement and host important community discussions. Over the years, she’s seen the participation grow in Edwards and Bolton, towns near her […]

Posted inHealth, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues

Medicaid Cuts Endanger Life-Saving Care for Black Families in Rural America

Over the past few months, Marcia Dinkins’ eldest child has been hospitalized frequently. A serious infection swept through her daughter’s body, affecting her pancreas, spleen, and gallbladder. Fortunately, Dinkins’ daughter, Marshale Malone, was able to afford and receive life-saving surgery, thanks to Medicaid. But without it, Dinkins said, the health emergency could have meant either […]

Posted inBlack Businesses, Black Farmers, Economy, Politics & Policy

Black-Owned Businesses Confront Rising Costs Amid Trump’s Tariffs

Sweeping tariffs took effect Thursday, and while President Donald Trump has said the tariffs would lead to factories and jobs moving back to the United States, for Black Americans and small-business owners, it is not that simple.  Prices are expected to dramatically rise for clothing and shoes; electronics like cellphones and computers; cars and auto […]

Posted inAgriculture, Black Farmers, Economic Development, Food Access

USDA Cuts Food Business Centers Supporting Black Farmers

Over the past seven months, Kenneth Sparks lost at least five federal grants as a result of cancellations and funding freezes. The grants would have supported his four-year-old farm, where he grows vegetables, and sells seeds and eggs.  Now, the Southern California farmer is about to lose out again. For the past two years, he […]

Posted inAgriculture, Black Farmers, Rural Issues

USDA Ends Key Support for Black Farmers Amid Trump Anti-DEI Orders

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Posted inAgriculture, Black Farmers, Rural Issues

In the Mississippi Delta, Black Farmers Are Rebuilding the Legacy of Land Ownership

JONESTOWN, Miss. — As Pastor Bennie Brown sat in the bright red pews of St. James Missionary Baptist, just a few feet away from the podium where he preaches every Sunday, the 71-year-old farmer recalled feeling the spiritual presence of the ancestors.  The church is located in Jonestown, an all-Black rural town in the Mississippi […]

Posted inCulture, History

South Carolina’s Gullah Geechee Are Denied Their Right to Bury Their Loved Ones

For generations, Mary Mack’s family has offered free burial plots to the bereaved families on St. Helena Island. It’s an ancestral calling and a tradition.  Spanning 64 square miles, the island on the coast of South Carolina is home to one of the largest remaining Gullah Geechee communities in the southeast U.S. Surrounded by creeks, […]

Posted inCulture, Economic Development, History

‘Sinners’ Shows Clarksdale’s Past. What’s Next for the Birthplace of the Blues?

CLARKSDALE, MISS. – Tyler Yarbrough makes it clear. Sinners and the cultural fest that followed may have thrust Clarksdale into the national spotlight, but this moment represents the culmination of years of hard-fought progress. In as little as three weeks, community members, more than a dozen sponsors, and partners planned and executed Clarksdale Culture Capital’s […]

Posted inCulture, History

Clarksdale Pushed for a Screening of ‘Sinners’. They’re Getting One This Week.

When Jaleesa Collins discovered that Sinners was set in her hometown, she saw it as a great opportunity to organize a public screening. The military veteran, philanthropist and entrepreneur — along with Dave “Dooney” Houston, owner of Dooney’s Barbershop and Carnival Treats — originally pitched the idea as a fundraiser for the first-ever Clarksdale Day, […]

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