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NewsBook: Missouri Government News for the Week of May 2, 2005

 


. Legislature passes $19.2 billion budget (05/05/05)

JEFFERSON CITY - Completing its work one day before the constitutional deadline, the General Assembly agreed to a $19.2 billion budget that increases funding for the school foundation formula by $113 million.

It also cuts more than 90,000 people from the Medicaid program, closes a state prision and an inmate work camp and eliminates more than 1,000 full time positions in state government while giving higher education what it received last year.

  • Get the newspaper story.
  • Get the radio story.
  • Get another radio story.
  • Get the House Medicaid budget vote.
  • Get the Senate Medicaid budget vote.
    . House fix for school funding to phase-in over seven years -- Flip by suburban GOP sends bill to House floor(05/04/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - A House committee approved an overhaul in how Missouri funds public schools Wednesday that Republican say would balance the underfunded and highly criticized system. The plan, however, wouldn't take full effect for more than seven years.

    One day after Gov. Matt Blunt demanded action, suburban Republicans, who last week blocked the bill, reversed their votes. The shift proved strong enough to muscle the plan Blunt says will fix the state system on to the House floor.

  • Get the newspaper story.
    . House begins debate on budget (05/04/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Floor debates began today over the 2006 fiscal year budget.

    Lawmakers spent the early afternoon discussing the elementary and secondary education budget.

  • Get the radio stories
    . Missouri's legislature sends the governor a measure to make it easier for phone companies to raise their rates. (05/04/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - State regulation of local phone rates would be eased under the measure.

    Among the provisions, it expands the definition of areas where a phone company faces competition and, as result, is free to set rates as it wishes.

    Although opposed by consumer advocates, the final version of the measure won by overwhelming margins in the House and Senate.

  • Get the House roll call.
  • Get the Senate roll call.
    . The governor threatens a special session on school funding. (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Gov. Matt Blunt warned lawmakers Tuesday that he would call a special session if they fail to pass legislation revising the state's school funding system.

    Blunt also outlined a compromise plan that would add more money for metro area school districts than the version now stalled in a House committee.

    Blunt's proposal would cost more money and take longer to implement than the bill cleared by the Senate.

  • Get the newspaper story.
    . Refusing to give a police officer your identification would become a crime (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Police officers would have the power to request identification from people they suspect committed a crime.

    Failure to provide your name and address could result in 15 days behind bars.

  • Get the radio stories.
    . Senate committee hears midwifery arguments (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Supporters and opponents of legalizing home birth without a doctor flooded a Senate hearing room. Doctors, parents, and lawmakers gave their opinions about the bill.

    The bill's sponsor, O'Fallon Rep. Cynthia Davis, says women should be allowed to choose who helps them give birth. But opponents say complications during home birth can be more dangerous to the baby.

  • Get the radio stories
    . Students one step closer to governing board voting power (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - The Senate Education committee has voted to allow a student representative on a governing board of a Missouri college to vote on any matter coming before the board.

    Opponents say allowing students to vote on sensitive personnel issues could have unintended consequences for that student.

  • Get the radio stories
    . Senator aims to clarify state's indecent exposure law to protect school children (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Sen. Matt Bartle wants to clarify the state's indecent exposure law to make sure sexual predators don't slip through the cracks in public schools.

    This action is in response to last week's Missouri Supreme Court ruling that reversed the conviction of a St. Louis elementary school counselor, previously found guilty of exposing himself to three boys in a school restroom.

  • Get the radio stories
    . The legislature's budget conference finishes the budget, retaining most of the governor's budget cuts. (05/03/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - The House-Senate conference committee adopted most of the Medicaid budget cuts recommended by Gov. Matt Blunt.

    The Senate version of the budget would have restored some of the cuts with money from an across-the-board cuts in higher education.

    The higher ed cuts were dropped under the conference committee.

    The committee finished the budget days ahead of the 6pm Friday constitutional deadline for finishing the budget.

    The budget now goes to the House and then the Senate for final approval.

  • Get the newspaper story.
    . Despite bipartisan support Senators failed to pass animal legislation. (05/02/05)

    JEFFERSON CITY - Both Republican Senator John Loudon of St. Louis County and Democratic Senator Victor Callahan of Independence propsosed bills to help family pets.

    Neither of the bills passed, but both senators will push them again next legislative session.

  • Get the radio stories.
    . Terri Schiavo's death hasn't ended the debate on end-of-life decisions (05/02/05)
    JEFFERSON CITY - Two legislators have filed bills addressing decision making when a patient lacks a living will. The bills, which have had public hearings, await votes in their committees.

    Abortion rights advocates and anti-abortion groups disagree on how invovled the government should be in these decisons.

  • Get the newspaper story.