For decades Mississippi was one of only six states without a lottery. There was strong opposition from politically powerful churches.
People often drove to neighboring states such as Louisiana to buy
tickets there.
“We are getting a lot of customers from Alabama,” he said, speaking about the customers he’s seen since the gas station and store started
selling the tickets around 9 a.m. And customers are already making
financial plans, he said: “They are saying what they are going to do
with their money after they win.”
The tickets are available in roughly 1,200 convenience stores and other sites across the state.Democratic state Rep. Alyce Clarke of
Jackson has been pushing for years to bring a lottery to Mississippi.
She bought a ceremonial first ticket at a RaceWay store and gas station
in south Jackson.“It feels great. Finally, it becomes a reality. And it
just goes to show you what happens if you don’t give up,” Clarke said.
“Sometimes you have to try and try and try again.”
The state had resisted a lottery for years until lawmakers in 2018 authorized a lottery as a way to finance road maintenance and
infrastructure needs. At the time, the state had been forced to close
hundreds of unsafe bridges.
For the first ten years, the first $80 million a year from lottery revenue will go to infrastructure needs. After the $80 million benchmark
is hit, the rest goes to education. After the ten-year period is over,
the first $80 million will go to the state’s general fund with the
remainder continuing to go toward education.
Clarke had been pushing for all the money to go to education. She said she was disappointed with the way the money was apportioned but
that the roads and bridges also needed investment.
Right now, people can play four different types of games, and the Mississippi Lottery Corporation plans to introduce new games in the
coming weeks. On January 30, tickets for both Mega Millions and
Powerball will go on sale. Winners can remain anonymous.
At the Stop & Go Foodmart in Picayune, owner Hiren Bhakta said people have been talking about the sales for weeks. In this corner of
southwestern Mississippi, residents wanting to buy lottery tickets can
easily pop across the border to towns in Louisiana like Pearl River and
buy tickets there. Bhakta hopes that traffic will now stay in
Mississippi.
“People have been going to the state lines to get tickets, so they’ve heard about it and are excited about how we don’t have to go to
the state line anymore,” he said. “We can get everything here in
Mississippi.”
In Brooksville, Amro said if he had the choice he wouldn’t sell the tickets because he’s not sure it’s worth the expense; he had to hire an
extra employee specifically to sell the tickets. But since other stores
are selling the tickets he needed to remain competitive. But if someone
is going to win big, he hopes they buy the ticket at Tenn Tom Express.
“I hope somebody will win from my store because that is how we get a whole bunch of money,” he said. “I wish everybody good luck.