Vicksburg mayor sets sights on becoming Mississippi’s technology leader

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Officials in Vicksburg want to make Mississippi’s River City the state’s hub for technology and innovation.

Willis Thompson, the city’s recently elected mayor, told a panel of his peers at an Oct. 6. event at the Mississippi College School of Law, that his administration is fixating on being more tech-focused.

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“From the moment I took office, my goal has been for Vicksburg to lead when it comes to innovation and technology,” Thompson said. “We’ve already taken concrete steps to make that goal a reality for our people by building on our existing federal assets.”

He referred to a memorandum of understanding signed in Vicksburg by Gov. Tate Reeves, the federal Engineer Research and Development Center, the Mississippi Development Authority, and the Mississippi Apex Accelerator, aimed at supporting technology transfer, commercialization, and small-business innovation, as a basis for this initiative.

Thompson also highlighted a partnership between Cisco Systems, Rust College, and the Thad Cochran Mississippi Center for Innovation and Technology as a driving force that can elevate Vicksburg in the Magnolia State’s tech scene. The collaboration will provide networking infrastructure, technical support, and workforce training. The city recently received nearly $300,000 from Accelerate Mississippi to expand the center for innovation and technology.

“Having the Governor come to Vicksburg, sign the MOU, and commit to this work alongside us is meaningful,” Thompson said. “It shows that our state sees what we see: Vicksburg belongs in the conversation about innovation, defense tech, entrepreneurship, and regional growth.”

Thompson said that while technology initiatives will continue to be addressed, community improvements remain important, contending that Mississippi’s best hope of strengthening cities and their local neighborhoods is for municipalities to share resources and work as a team.

“Every time we deliver on promises like these, we build credibility with our people — and that trust fuels bigger change and directly affects our ability to attract new, outside investment,” he said. “No city can go it alone in the 21st-century economy. If we leverage shared resources, knowledge, talent, and infrastructure, then every community can benefit.”

The mayor is hopeful that, in his first term, his administration can make Vicksburg a shining star that the rest of the state looks to mimic.