-
After an over 40-hour filibuster on the Senate side on the tax, the House passed it in less than 10 minutes.
-
In Springfield on Tuesday, three women who say they survived severe child abuse at religious boarding schools in Missouri staged a small demonstration. Along with an advocate with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, they hope to raise awareness about boarding school abuse in the Ozarks and around the state.
-
The Clean Slate campaign is backing four Missouri bills, which all provide for a more automated expungement process for low-level offenses.
-
The St. Louis University/YouGov poll found many undecided voters as ballot campaign gathers signatures. The poll also found strong support for repealing the sales tax on food and sports wagering.
-
Diapers aren’t luxury items, but they’re considered as such in Missouri’s tax code.
-
-
The bill still needs the approval of the Senate.
-
Opponents worry drag would be banned from some areas.
-
Regularly updated codes can also aid with disaster resilience. The Federal Emergency Management Agency estimates adopting current building codes can avoid hundreds of billions of dollars in damages.
-
Counties across the state will take part in the caucuses, and Missouri Republicans registered to vote are invited to be part of it.
-
Currently, school bus drivers 70 and older are required to take the school bus portion of the driver’s license exam annually for renewal. The bill passed Thursday would raise that age to 77.
-
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey's lawsuit relies on a video from the right-wing Project Veritas. A former Missouri Supreme Court chief justice said it presents the courts with a hypothetical question rather than a reality.