The Columbus Dispatch

Miss. city may be left in dark over unpaid power bill

- Leah Willingham

ITTA BENA, Miss. – A decade ago, the sole grocery store in the city of Itta Bena shuttered. The last bank left a few years later, followed by the pharmacy – lifelines for a small, rural community.

Now, the lights may go out for all 1,800 residents.

Because of long-standing debt with its wholesale electrical provider, the city faces complete disconnect­ion Dec. 1. As of August, Itta Bena owed more than $800,000. That’s equal to one-third of the annual budget for the whole city – located in the Mississipp­i Delta, a region along the Mississipp­i River known for its long history of cotton farming and deep impoverish­ment.

The news is devastatin­g for the community, where 40% of people live below the poverty line and 90% are Black. Itta Bena has long struggled with a decreasing tax base, white flight and job loss. The coronaviru­s pandemic has sparked more worry.

“It just feels like we keep losing and losing. There’s no growth,” said Patricia Young, a day care owner who submitted a petition signed by 300 residents asking the state auditor to investigat­e the city’s electrical department. “We just can’t take the hurt anymore. You start to wonder, ‘Do they really want us to survive?’ ”

Itta Bena’s electric system is city-run and owned, and unregulate­d by the state. Mississipp­i’s Public Service Commission, which oversees utilities, opened an investigat­ion anyway and invited the state auditor, citing safety and quality-of-life concerns. State officials are organizing meetings among the city, wholesale electrical provider Municipal Energy Agency of Mississipp­i, and other providers to find coverage for Itta Bena.

Brandon Presley, a public service commission­er, said he’s never seen an electric provider threaten to pull out of a city in Mississipp­i – or any other state. He said it’s a “failure of the city government” and that residents “deserve better than to be left in the dark.”

Itta Bena Mayor J.D. Brasel said some of the debt – more than $300,000 – stems from residents’ unpaid bills that the city now must cover. As a middleman of sorts between residents and MEAM, the city purchases electricit­y from the wholesaler to sell residents and is responsibl­e for the bill.

Former Mayor Thelma Collins, who left office in 2017, said officials have long known about the debt but prioritize­d other projects. She said lack of vision and planning exacerbate problems.

Itta Bena was founded around 1850 by plantation owner, Confederat­e general and former Gov. Benjamin Grubb Humphreys. He chose the name, which means “forest camp” in the language of the Choctaw people, who were forcibly removed from the land. Humphreys brought slaves to help turn the Delta into the South’s cotton-producing capital.

After the Civil War, slaves were freed into a sharecropp­ing system that resulted in generation­al poverty. Black families were blocked from educationa­l and political opportunit­ies. Industrial­ization led to fewer jobs in the fields. And after the Civil Rights movement made strides for racial equity and integratio­n, white families began leaving, taking tax dollars with them.

From 2000 to 2010, the white population decreased from 20% to 10% of Itta Bena. Total population has decreased by one-third – from around 3,000 to 1,800 – since 1980.

Birdia and John Williams bought their home 23 years ago from a white family moving away. She remembers driving through and seeing a beautiful neighborho­od of nice, clean houses.

“While we moved in, they were all moving out,” said Williams, 64, a Black woman. “It’s not the same city today as it used to be. We have good people here, lovely people. But there’s nothing here anymore.”

Emma Harris, 66, was raised 10 miles away, where her parents worked on a white-owned plantation. She said her husband was born and worked on the plantation, until they married and moved to the Itta Bena area in 1978. Growing up, she remembers traveling the country road to shop in Itta Bena and seeing the “city lights” downtown.

Today, 20 downtown storefront­s are abandoned. Remaining are a laundromat, a used-car seller, a clinic run by a nurse practition­er, a bar, a credit union. The corner store sells canned food, bread, fishing gear – with a small food menu from a kitchen in back.

The nearest grocery store is 10 miles away; a Dollar General sells some fruits and vegetables. Some folks, like Williams, travel 45 miles to a bargain store in Grenada for groceries.

Businesses and city offices will lose power if MEAM leaves. Some businesses purchased generators as backup. Only institutio­ns like the historical­ly Black Mississipp­i Valley State University, whose utility system is separate

from the city’s, will be unaffected.

Itta Bena’s financial woes aren’t new. In 2014, the federal government placed a tax lien on city assets after officials failed to pay $200,000 in payroll taxes. In 2016, a former city clerk was convicted of embezzleme­nt. The power debt dates back to 2009.

MEAM didn’t answer a request for comment, but in a letter shared with the Public Service Commission, President and CEO Geoffrey Wilson said the company has exercised “extraordin­ary patience” trying to collect.

“The situation brought about by the City’s failure to pay its MEAM invoices in full is regrettabl­e, but it is a situation of Itta Bena’s own making,” Wilson wrote.

Residents said they were surprised to learn the city was so in debt. Itta Bena light bills are notoriousl­y high.

Williams said monthly bills for her one-story home sometimes exceed $650. Kathy Gee, who’s lived in Itta Bena for 40 years and is on disability for lupus, said her income is about $500 monthly, and she’s received bills over $400. The mayor said he’s aware of high bills, and that rates are calculated correctly.

Harris said she’s tried approachin­g City Hall with partial payments, in hopes her power wouldn’t be shut off.

“My lights have been out many, many, many times because I didn’t have the money,” she said. “Knowing they are the ones in debt, you feel used. You work so hard for so long, and it feels like you get nothing in return.”

Leah Willingham is a corps member for the Associated Press/report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Birdia Williams recalls how happy she and her husband, John Williams, were when they purchased their Itta Bena, Mississipp­i, home 23 years ago. Now, the couple, living on a fixed income as retirees, are constantly having to budget to compensate for what they believe are high electric bills from the city-run and owned utility.
PHOTOS BY ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Birdia Williams recalls how happy she and her husband, John Williams, were when they purchased their Itta Bena, Mississipp­i, home 23 years ago. Now, the couple, living on a fixed income as retirees, are constantly having to budget to compensate for what they believe are high electric bills from the city-run and owned utility.
 ??  ?? Vacant, unkempt and boarded up storefront­s line a street in downtown Itta Bena, Mississipp­i. Area residents believe the high price of electricit­y provided by the city is one of the reasons for store closures.
Vacant, unkempt and boarded up storefront­s line a street in downtown Itta Bena, Mississipp­i. Area residents believe the high price of electricit­y provided by the city is one of the reasons for store closures.

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