.....Advertisement.....
.....Advertisement.....

Opinion

  • New Albany has taken another major step toward improving its water system.

  • This Saturday is New Albany’s annual foray into bluegrass and fiddlin’ music as the community hosts the Down From the Hills Heritage Music and Mississippi Blue Grass Championships.

  • We think the New Albany Board of Alderman acted responsibly in approving unanimously the ordinance to make the sale of wine and liquor legal in the city beginning June 6.

  • The announcement yesterday of a partnership between the Toyota Education Endowment Fund and Mississippi State University to provide a course in development of web applications was overshadowed by city elections in New Albany and Tupelo.

  • Next Tuesday’s primary election is important in New Albany because all of the races except Alderman, Ward 4, and Alderman, Ward 3, will be decided that day.

  • Our local businesses, our cities, our schools and our state are being hurt because many online businesses do not collect sales tax on purchases.

  • The installation of a solar-panel array at the Toyota manufacturing plant in Blue Springs is significant to our community in two ways.

  • This Saturday the local coalition that organized the Excel by 5 early childhood initiative is celebrating the community’s official certification in the program.

  • It’s spring cleanup time and our area certainly needs it. Recent rains have spurred the growth of weeds and high grass, leaving a generally overgrown look in some areas both in and outside the city of New Albany.

  • The upcoming city primary election promises to be an important one with lively contests for mayor and chief of police as well as races in three of the five aldermen spots.
    All of the city elections except Alderman, Ward Four, will be decided in the Democratic primary on May 7 or the runoff election May 21.

  • Later this month we will have an opportunity to hear one of the world’s best young pianists. And she won’t be on television or satellite radio. She will be right here in New Albany.

  • The Mississippi Senate Education Committee has wisely blocked the appointment of Joel Bomgar to the state Board of Education.

  • The deal is done.
    The Mississippi Legislature has given final approval to a bill that will allow the money available for public education to be further diluted by creation of more competing charter schools.

  • The annual New Albany Home and Garden Show will take place Friday and Saturday, April 5 and 6, at the Union County Fairgrounds.

  • State Sen. Nickey Browning of Pontotoc has become the latest Mississippi legislator to switch political parties.

  • It’s a case of putting a fox in the henhouse.
    Pardon us for starting with a trite expression, but it fits the situation perfectly. Monday House Speaker Phillip Gunn, a Republican from Clinton announced he is appointing Joel Bomgar to the state Board of Education.

  • New Albany voters have ended the decades old issue about whether the city should allow the sale of alcoholic beverages, first by approving beer three years ago and then wine and spirits this week.

  • Severe weather season is here again. It’s the time when we start paying more attention to the weather forecast, and worrying about whether there are tornado watches or tornado warnings for our areas.

  • Next Tuesday New Albany voters will decide a simple issue: whether to permit the sale of wine and spirits within the city limits.

  • President Obama signed Thursday the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act, which was originally passed in 1994 under the leadership of then Sen. Joe Biden.

The New Albany Gazette is your source for local news, sports, events, and information in New Albany and the surrounding area.