Bank of Holly Springs

Letters to the Editor

Signage needs to be improved in industrial park area

Dear Editor:

There are a number of 18-wheelers that have begun using Quinn Road since the Chickasaw Industrial Park has been built. All of these large trucks are headed south toward Goodman Road or north into Tennessee. It appears they are all coming from Wingo Road.

I went to Wingo Road west bound and noticed that there are signs that say the large trucks should not proceed west bound past the new road that goes from the industrial park.

However, these signs are posted far enough west of the new commercial road that the 18-wheelers are committed to proceeding before they get to the signs.

There is no place for them to turn around and no way for them to back up.

There needs to be signs on the commercial road that state large trucks may only turn right on Wingo. In other words, the signs should indicate that the trucks cannot turn west off of the commercial road.

The signage also needs to be improved so that west bound large trucks are told long before the intersection that they MUST turn left.

I am hoping that if enough people begin to pay attention to this problem, then we can prevent a major accident on Quinn Road before it happens.

Thank you,
Will Colston

It has been a milestone election year in Mississippi

To the Editor:

In 2011, 62 percent of Mississippians approved a citizen-initiated State Constitutional Amendment requiring voters to show photo ID at the polls. This year, 99.9 percent of voters came to the polls on Election Day with acceptable ID.

While many other states remain embroiled in expensive litigation over voter ID, Mississippi’s law has not been challenged.

The Secretary of State’s Office consulted a broad cross-section of key Mississippi and federal stakeholders in implementing voter ID. These included the heads of political parties, circuit clerks, election commissioners, attorneys, interest groups, and the U.S. Department of Justice.  Litigation is expensive.  Our schools need our taxpayer dollars.

On November 8, the Justice Department dispatched more than 500 federal monitors to 28 states. Their purpose included ensuring there was no prohibited racial discrimination on Election Day.

None were sent to Mississippi.

Rarely does the Justice Department exclude Mississippi from its list of states in need of observance in a Presidential election.

The credit belongs to Mississippi voters who showed up to their polling places, displayed courtesy to their friends and neighbors, cast their ballots, and departed to allow others to do the same. We trusted each other, and the result was a free and fair election.

Conducting an election is a human endeavor. The Secretary of State’s Office takes every single problem, no matter how minor, and every impacted vote seriously.  Our agency, circuit clerks, and election commissioners are continually searching for ways to improve the process.   

All in all, Election Day in Mississippi — with voter ID and without federal monitors — was a clear success.  Governance begins at the ballot box. Mississippi voters turned a page in the history of our State’s electoral process on November 8. Each of you who cast your ballot had a hand in turning that page.

Delbert Hosemann
Secretary of State

Holly Springs South Reporter

P.O. Box 278
Holly Springs, MS 38635
PH: (662) 252-4261
FAX: (662) 252-3388
www.southreporter.com