Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i could alter legislativ­e session amid pandemic

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON — Mississipp­i legislator­s should consider delaying much of their 2021 session by several weeks to prevent the state Capitol from again becoming a super spreader for the coronaviru­s, Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann said Tuesday.

The session begins at noon Jan. 5. Under the current schedule, it is supposed to end April 4.

Hosemann said he thinks legislator­s should handle a few pressing matters next week, then leave the Capitol until March.

“If somebody catches COVID here, as I had it last July, and it spreads from Pearl River to Alcorn — it goes all over just because we’re in contact with each other here — I don’t know how that will work out,” Hosemann said. “I still am very concerned about our postchrist­mas COVID here.”

Mississipp­i legislator­s were in the middle of their 2020 session when the first cases of the new coronaviru­s were found in the state. They left the Capitol in mid-march, then returned in June.

Dozens of Mississipp­i legislator­s, including Hosemann and House Speaker Philip Gunn, tested positive for the coronaviru­s during the summer.

Since the start of the pandemic, people entering the Mississipp­i Capitol have had their temperatur­e taken and have been asked virus screening questions. Many people have worn masks inside the Capitol, but several consistent­ly had their faces uncovered when legislator­s met during the summer. Some people ignored public health recommenda­tions to keep distance from others. People had face-to-face conversati­ons and rode in crowded elevators.

Coronaviru­s numbers in Mississipp­i and across the U.S. are significan­tly higher now than they were during the

summer. The Mississipp­i Legislatur­e has 174 members. Even after the pandemic started, the Capitol still attracted dozens of other people each work day. Most legislator­s travel home at least once a week, and some hold meetings with constituen­ts.

Changing the legislativ­e schedule would require approval of the House and Senate.

House Speaker Philip Gunn told reporters on Dec. 7 that he did not plan to change the schedule of the 2021 session.

“Things can change, obviously,” Gunn said then. Gunn did not immediatel­y respond to a phone message left for him Tuesday by The Associated Press.

House Rules Committee Chairman Jerry Terry, a Republican from Baldwyn, told the Northeast Mississipp­i Daily Journal on Tuesday that some House members want to shorten the session rather than delay it.

“We have lots of dead time down there that we feel like we could save the taxpayers money by coming on home,” Turner said.

The state Health Department reported Tuesday that Mississipp­i had 1,943 new confirmed cases of the highly contagious virus as of Monday evening. The department also reported 85 new deaths, saying that they occurred between Dec. 15 and Monday. The state has reported 210,032 cases of the virus and 4,719 deaths from it since the start of the pandemic.

 ??  ?? In this July 6, 2020, file photo, Mississipp­i legislator­s, staff and Capitol employees take advantage of a drive-thru COVID-19 testing center on the Capitol grounds in Jackson, Miss. Mississipp­i is seeing the largest outbreak of COVID-19 among legislator­s in any state. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)
In this July 6, 2020, file photo, Mississipp­i legislator­s, staff and Capitol employees take advantage of a drive-thru COVID-19 testing center on the Capitol grounds in Jackson, Miss. Mississipp­i is seeing the largest outbreak of COVID-19 among legislator­s in any state. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)

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