Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
11:19 am Saturday, May 1, 2004

Barbour: Jailed mental patients doing better?'

By by Sid Salter / syndicated columnist
April 28, 2004
In dank, solitary confinement county jail cells across Mississippi, innocent people whose only crime is mental illness are decidedly not "doing better" they're doing time.
Haley Barbour campaigned on a simple, direct promise to the people of this state. Frustrated voters flocked to him. "Mississippi can do better," the Yazoo City Republican promised over and over again.
But in terms of the plight of mental patients incarcerated in county jail cells while taxpayer-built treatment centers stand empty and unused, the voters might as well have left Ronnie Musgrove in office. Same song, different singer.
Barbour, Musgrove tied
Former Gov. Musgrove provided zero leadership to get the state's court-committed mental patients out of jail and Gov. Barbour's new administration hasn't done one whit better.
The Barbour administration has offered absolutely nothing in the way of a solution to one of the sorriest chapters of state government waste and ineptitude ever written the fact that the Legislature built a total of eight mental health treatment centers with 160 bed spaces while 152 of them remain empty for lack of operating funds. Just like Musgrove.
Barbour didn't create this fiasco. The current leadership of both houses of the Legislature engineered this mess long before Barbour took office. Yet unlike the governor, both houses of the Legislature are at least making an effort to right this onerous wrong.
The House has proposed a 9-cents per pack tobacco tax hike that would dedicate all of the $21.9 million it raises toward funding all the centers. The Senate is talking about a plan to fund the centers at half-capacity with no tax increase. At least it's a plan.
But Gov. Barbour's only contribution to the debate has been to say he'll veto the proposed tobacco tax because he's "against raising anybody's taxes." One can only assume that incarcerated mental patients will leap for joy to learn that the governor has made such a Solomonic decision on their behalf.
It might be difficult to fault Barbour for his no-new-tax stance since it's been consistent since his campaign began. But for the governor to hold to that stance while offering no solution to getting mental patients out of county jail cells isn't a show of leadership it's just simply a calculated expression of a rather cruel willingness for innocent people to continue to suffer because it's politically expedient for them to do so.
Writing off the poor
The House wants to raise taxes to get the mental patients out of jail. The Senate wants to use contingency fund monies to make a step toward getting these innocent people out of jail.
Apparently, it's okay with Gov. Barbour if the mental patients stay in jail so long as he protects them from higher taxes. Perhaps that the "tough love" we hear so much about.
There might be some conservatives out there who call that kind of thinking "compassionate conservatism." But this is one conservative who sees that kind thinking toward the mentally ill as "let them eat cake" conservatism.
The relatives of wealthy, well-connected mentally-ill patients won't be incarcerated in county jail cells. They'll be placed in private treatment facilities without going through the county commitment process necessary for the poor to receive state mental health hospital treatment.
But relatives of the poor and the powerless in this state are being thrown in county jails to rot until a bed space opens in one of the state mental hospitals. Raise taxes. Cut spending. Do whatever you have to do. Get them out of jail.
Mississippi can with certainty "do better" than caging mental patients like criminals to cover for legislative ineptitude or a governor's political expedience.
Sid Salter is Perspective editor of The Clarion-Ledger in Jackson. Contact him at (601) 961-7084 or e-mail ssalter@clarionledger.com.

Also on Franklin County Times
Dog owner goes to trial for manslaughter
Main, News, Russellville
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — The trial of a Red Bay woman who was charged with two counts of manslaughter after her dogs allegedly attacked and killed two people in...
Police chief’s brother retires
Main, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Brothers Chris and Joe Hargett worked side by side in law enforcement for more than two decades. Now, as Captain Joe Hargett retires fr...
City leaders sworn in for a new term
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — City leaders and community members gathered Sunday at city hall for the swearing-in ceremony for the new city council members, whose te...
Safeplace walk renews focus on domestic violence awareness
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — SafePlace brought its Domestic Violence Awareness Walk back to Franklin County for the first time in nearly two decades. SafePlace Exec...
RHS showcases its pumpkin creativity
News, Records, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Russellville High School’s second annual Pumpkin Palooza filled the old main building hallway with themed pumpkin displays created by e...
GFWC holds North District fall meeting
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
November 5, 2025
DOUBLE SPRINGS — Fellowship, service and community spirit filled the air as members of GFWC Alabama’s North District met for its fall gathering at Loo...
Our moral documents are failing hungry families
Columnists, Opinion
November 5, 2025
Our country is about to do something unthinkable: let millions of people go hungry while spending billions elsewhere without hesitation. As of Nov. 1,...
BTCPA kicks off new season with ‘You Can’t Beat the House’
News, Red Bay
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
November 5, 2025
RED BAY — The Bay Tree Council for the Performing Arts opened its 2025-26 season this week with “You Can’t Beat the House,” a comedy by Pat Cook co-di...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *