Épisodes

  • LINK Lawsuit Reveals Details Around Higgins' Firing
    Nov 19 2025

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    This week we pull apart two intertwined storylines shaping Columbus: a federal lawsuit that lays bare internal strife at the LINK and a City Hall showdown where a fired lobbying firm chose to resign instead. We explain how an insurance dispute revealed surprising details about 700 recordings, why one-party consent matters in Mississippi, and what “far exceeds $75,000” actually signals about potential settlements and risk.

    We also use the city's lobbying drama to examine how Mayor Stephen Jones 'and Councilman Jason Spears' reactions could hurt them in the long run. Accountability is essential, but so is knowing when to bank the win and move on. We examine claims of backroom influence, why this council’s independent streak makes puppetry unlikely, and what it takes to rebuild trust.

    Amid heavy topics, we spotlight a local bright spot—Plymouth Bluff Environmental Center—reminding ourselves why quality of life assets matter to families and employers alike.

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    42 min
  • A Fired Lobbyist & a $47K Speaker System PLUS We Talk Deer and Conservation With Brent Lochala
    Nov 13 2025

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    Nonprofits deliver value but need predictability, not ad hoc walk-up funding that puts the city council on the spot. We talk candidly about impromptu funding requests, why full-context answers from city staff matter, and how a straightforward application process protects core commitments to libraries, arts and community events. We also cover the vote to end the city’s lobbyist contract and a timely handoff of records to the state auditor, underscoring a renewed focus on transparency and accountability.

    We also sit down with Brent Lochala, land pro and host of The Woodsman Perspective to unpack the new reality of hunting and habitat in this part of Mississippi. Brent breaks down what new landowners miss about cutovers and pine stands, and why opening the canopy, planting with purpose, and using prescribed fire can turn “ugly” ground into a living buffet for deer, turkeys, and quail.

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    1 h et 3 min
  • Blue Flu Brewing at CPD? PLUS On Site at a Food Pantry
    Nov 6 2025

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    The tension is real when frontline officers say their “day off” is anything but. We dig into Columbus PD’s on-call policy, why rank-and-file feel boxed in without pay, and how leadership’s response lands with a department already worried about morale.

    Safety doesn’t stop at the station. A Facebook Marketplace meetup at a busy Lowe’s turned into an alleged armed robbery, and quick police work led to arrests. Public places aren’t always protective; smart places are.

    Then we stand in the Helping Hands line and listen. Parents feeding five kids on noodles and water. Caregivers stretching one paycheck and caring for elders. Pantry directors pivoting to SNAP boxes with protein, fiber, and shelf-stable goods because demand is up and certainty is down. The math is sobering: for every one person a pantry feeds, SNAP feeds nine. Charity matters, but it can’t shoulder a ninefold gap alone. If you want to help, target the items that move the needle—peanut butter, canned veggies, cereal, oats, grits, and ready-to-eat soup—and route them through organizations that already have sourcing, storage, and distribution dialed in.

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    48 min
  • State Auditor Investigates Columbus, Joe Higgins’ New Venture and Local Ghost Stories
    Oct 29 2025

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    The State Auditor’s office sent Columbus a detailed request for contracts, receipts, and proof of services across multiple departments, and we unpack what that means. We break down why specific vendors were named, how procurement rules and sick leave policies come into play, and where council members face real legal exposure when approving claims dockets.

    With Joe Max Higgins launching a new consulting firm and a noncompete extending to 2027, the LINK's next hire takes on outsized importance.

    To round out the hour, local historian Rufus Ward steps into the studio with stories that still echo down the Tombigbee. From the chilling legend of the Eliza Battle steamship to footprints in the dust at Waverley and Native tales around Tibbee Lake, we hear some local ghost stories, one reaching back 800 years.

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    57 min
  • Ristorante Italiano in Columbus PLUS Franklin Academy, Trotter, and Haunted Houses
    Oct 24 2025

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    A downtown culinary glow-up, a historic gut check, and a community scare that does real good—this week packs it all. We open with the long-awaited news: an authentic Italian restaurant is moving into the old Main Street Thai spot, directly across from The Commercial Dispatch. From there, we turn to Franklin Academy, the oldest public school in Mississippi, now vacant and looking at an estimated $23 million bill just to stabilize and weatherize. The heart of the debate isn’t whether Franklin matters—it does—it’s how to secure a capable, well-capitalized development partner who can honor the building while making it viable for decades.

    We unpack two competing approaches: a targeted, expert-driven search for developers who can play at this scale versus an open call that risks attracting underfunded ideas and short-lived tenants. Drawing on local preservation history, we talk about what happens when big, fragile buildings sit too long.

    Then we tackle the Trotter Convention Center fee proposal, including the eyebrow-raising $125 ice charge. Finally, Lt. Rhonda Sanders joins us to share the “Horror at the Fairgrounds,” a haunted house and hayride that funds thousands of holiday turkeys, brightens foster families’ Christmas, and directs concession proceeds to four local families facing cancer.

    If you care about downtown growth, historic preservation, and public spaces that serve everyone, hit play. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more neighbors find the show.

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    49 min
  • Soros & AIPAC Enter the Senate Race PLUS Reason for Amphitheater Hope
    Oct 16 2025

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    We break down how Cindy Hyde-Smith built a million-plus quarter with heavy PAC backing while Scott Colom sprinted to nearly $600k off mostly individual donors in the US Senate race. George Soros and AIPAC feature prominently in the candidates' campaign finance documents. Hyde-Smith's fundraising signals her campaign is taking Colom seriously.

    From there, we leave spreadsheets for seatbacks and walk through what a finished amphitheater could deliver. A field trip to LaGrange’s Sweetland Amphitheater by David offers a real-world mirror of what Columbus' amphitheater could be.

    We also put the city’s lobbyist debate under a bright light. Worth Thomas Consultants made their case to city leaders. We also question the validity of finger-pointing at the previous administration as a reason for communication failures.

    Along the way, we share Three Things to Know—an aluminum company expansion, a city tire drive to fight dumping, and a community festival that will keep this weekend lively.

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    39 min
  • Lobbyist on the Line PLUS Sam Allison Talks School Choice & Consolidation
    Oct 9 2025

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    A $72,000 question hangs over Columbus: are taxpayers getting real value from a lobbyist many council members haven’t heard from in months? We pull apart the claims and expectations behind the city’s contract and ask what legitimate deliverables look like. When public money is on the line, “trust us” doesn’t cut it; proof and transparency do.

    Then we pivot to the classroom with Lowndes County Superintendent Dr. Sam Allison for a plain‑spoken tour of school accountability. He explains why proficiency and growth are different—and why growth matters for students who start behind. We dig into the Mississippi Miracle, school choice, vouchers, and potential consolidation. If public dollars follow students, Allison argues, comparable accountability must follow too.

    Follow the show, share it with a neighbor, and drop us your thoughts at tips@cdispatch.com. Your feedback helps shape what we dig into next.

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    49 min
  • From Grenades to Panhandling
    Oct 2 2025

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    This week on Between the Headlines, Zack Plair and David Chism dig into two big local stories — one bizarre, one contentious. First, they unpack the tale of a live World War II-era hand grenade that wound up at the Lowndes County Sheriff’s Office (yes, really). Then, the hosts turn to Columbus City Council’s unanimous rejection of the so-called “Safe Solicitation Act,” a state law aimed at regulating panhandling. The discussion ranges from free speech to compassion to public safety — and what communities like ours can realistically do when faced with complex social challenges.

    From grenades to government, it’s a wide-ranging look at the issues shaping life in Columbus and the Golden Triangle.

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    37 min