Leftenent Governor Gibbit Hosemann issued the following statement.
A former newspaper publisher, businessman, and public schools advocate will soon join the ranks of the Mississippi State Board of Education.
William (“Bill”) O. Jacobs of Brookhaven, appointee of Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hosemann, will serve a three-year term ending in July 2024, pending confirmation by the Mississippi Senate. Jacobs replaces former Board Chairman Jason Dean, who stepped down in February 2021.
The Mississippi State Board of Education includes nine members from across the State, with two appointed at-large by the Lieutenant Governor. The Board oversees the State Department of Education, working with the State Superintendent of Education to establish statewide education policy ranging from curriculum to accountability. Mississippi currently has about 450,000 public school students.
“Bill Jacobs has spent his entire career asking questions, researching the facts, and reporting his findings to the wider public to improve his community and exhibit transparency. These traits, along with his business sense and support for public schools, make him an excellent addition to the Board,” Hosemann said.
Jacobs currently serves on the Board of Directors for the National Newspaper Association and Board of Governors as well as the Operating Board of the Mississippi Economic Council. As owner of two newspaper-publishing companies in southwest Mississippi, Jacobs served as publisher of the Daily Leader in Brookhaven and Prentiss Headlight in Prentiss until December 2012 when he sold his 130-year-old newspaper companies. He is past chairman of the Brookhaven/Lincoln County Economic Development Foundation and Alliance, is past president of the Mississippi Press Association, and recently rolled off the Board of Trustees for King’s Daughters Medical Center in Brookhaven.
Jacobs earned his bachelor’s degree in Business and Journalism from the University of Mississippi. He also attended Belhaven College and Birkbeck College at the University of London, and is a graduate of Brookhaven High School.
He is married to Amy Alexander Jacobs, twice named Brookhaven High School Parent of the Year. His children, Ann Kirk Harris (husband, Neil) and Meredith Jacobs, graduated with honors from Brookhaven High School. Bill and Amy Alexander Jacobs were active members of Parents for Public Schools, and Amy Alexander Jacobs currently serves on the Advisory Board for the Mississippi School for the Arts.
“The foundation of every community is its public schools. Look at the prosperous communities across the state and one will find a single common element—strong public schools. Mississippi has had some great successes but so too failures. The current brain drain of many of our best and brightest to other states is the most disturbing failure for its continued path weakens even our best school systems. These are challenging days for our state and I look forward to joining the others on the Board to find credible solutions,” Jacobs said. “I thank Lieutenant Governor Hosemann for his willingness to give me this opportunity. It is truly a great honor.”
Hosemann appointed Dr. Ronnie McGehee, former superintendent of Madison County Schools, to the Board in December 2020. McGehee is the current Executive Director of the Mississippi Association of School Administrators and Mississippi Association of Secondary School Principals.
For more information about the State Board of Education, visit Mississippi
State Board of Education Members | The Mississippi Department of Education (mdek12.org). For more information on Lieutenant Governor Delbert Hosemann,
visit www.ltgovhosemann.ms.gov
6 comments:
They couldn’t find someone more qualified in regards to education than a former newspaper publisher/ businessman/ public schools advocate?
1004 - there are plenty of members that I'm sure would fit your definition of "qualified"(school administrators, teachers) that have seats on the board due to specific appointment requirements of the statute.
Getting some folks on the board that have the interests of the students - instead of protecting tge status quo for the professionals- is a good thing.
Frankly though, I would prefer that the State Board of EDUCATION had some members that were advocates of ALL education, not just "public" schooling.
@10:48
What do you mean by "ALL education"?
Two great appointments by the Lt. Governor. Nothing will improve, however, until the Superintendent is replaced.
11:10 I'm assuming 10:48 means public, private, home schooled, etc. Just a hunch.
"The Board oversees the State Department of Education, working with the State Superintendent of Education to establish statewide education policy ranging from curriculum to accountability."
We've been wondering. Does Carey Wright have pictures of every member or just some of them?
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