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Story Search Results for Jim Kreider

9/4/2001 - Meat Pricing:
On the other hand, Speaker of the house Jim Kreider supports the law because it provides protection to smaller state farmers.
9/07/2001 - Beef Price Law on Table for Session:
In a statement released Thursday, Missouri's Speaker of the House, Jim Kreider, expressed his support of the 1999 law because of the protection it provides smaller state farmers from unfair competition with larger organizations.
9/05/2001 - Special Session's First Day:
"There's no use in spending the taxpayers' money," said House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. "We'll all be here Monday, ready to go to work."
9/04/2001 - Meat Law Debate:
In a statement released Thursday, Missouri's Speaker of the House, Jim Kreider, expressed his support of the 1999 law because of the protection it provides smaller state farmers from unfair competition with larger organizations.
9/04/2001 - Kinder questions legality of state House policy:
He added that he has not spoken about the issue yet with the House leadership, including Speaker of the House Rep. Jim Kreider and House Majority Leader Catherine Hanaway.
5/18/2001 - General Assembly ends session:
It was clear that many lawmakers were anxious for the session to end. House members threw their papers in the air shortly after Speaker Jim Kreider struck his gavel to close the session.
4/25/2001 - Holden's "One Missouri" evaporates:
"Republicans," said House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, "have put partisan politics ahead of the interests of the people and are trying to shut down state government."
4/23/2001 - Democrats Beware! Bush's lawyer comes to the aid of the Missouri Senate:
Lurie is suing Gov. Bob Holden, Secretary of State Matt Blunt, Speaker of the House Jim Kreider and Senate President Pro Tem Peter Kinder, for a denial of equal protection of the law as guaranteed by the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
4/2/2001 - Missouri Government News for Week of April 2, 2001:
Sponsored by the two highest ranking members in the Democratically controlled House, Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, and Majority Floor Leader Wayne Crump, D-Potosi, the plan would allow gun owners who undergo training and get a license to carry a concealed firearm.
4/19/2001 - Cardinals stadium faces uphill battle:
House Speaker Jim Kreider told reporters now isn't the right time to spend state money on a baseball stadium.
4/18/2001 - Both the House and Senate pass legislation to use tobacco money.:
Many legislators found themselves violating campaign promises to use the tobacco money for health care and smoking cessation. Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, changed his position and voted for the measure.
4/16/2001 - Missouri Government News for Week of April 16, 2001:
JEFFERSON CITY - In just a matter of minutes, both Gov. Bob Holden and Speaker of the House Jim Kreider made statements signaling a difficult path for the ballpark proposal.
4/03/2001 - Bob Holden : A man from Birch Tree:
"He never lets up, he never quits," says Speaker of the House Rep. Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. "I wonder if I could keep up with him."
4/03/2001 - Concealed carry legislation revived in House committee:
Sponsored by the two highest ranking members in the Democratically controlled House, Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, and Majority Floor Leader Wayne Crump, D-Potosi, the plan would allow gun owners who undergo training and get a license to carry a concealed firearm.
3/5/2001 - A Bipartisan Proposal Would Put One Billion Dollars In A Fund:
And the people will vote to see how the money is spent, which House Speaker Jim Kreider says is important.
3/13/2001 - Transportation funding big issue for lawmakers:
"That's the one to watch...the one the House has picked as its transportation bill," said House Speaker Rep. Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. "Wiggins' bill is a good place to start."
3/06/2001 - Holden transportation plan hits Republican opposition:
The Democratic Speaker of the House, Rep. Jim Kreider, from Nixa, said Holden's plan would ultimately need Republican support before it could pass the legislature. It could likely pass the House without Republicans, but it would need bipartisan support in the Senate.
3/05/2001 - Lawmakers debate on how to use tobacco money:
Missouri House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa, and House Minority Leader Catherine Hanaway, R-Warson Woods, held a joint press conference Monday touting the spirit of bipartisanship.
3/01/2001 - Guns dominate the statehouse agenda:
"I own a gun and at times I carry a gun--and I'm a Democrat," said House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. "Missouri Democrats are fiercely independent. We still believe in the traditions and freedoms that built this country," he said.
2/27/2001 - House Speaker Advocates Bill to "Police the Police":
JEFFERSON CITY - House Speaker Jim Kreider faulted law enforcement agencies Tuesday for failing to provide public schools with forfeiture funds, saying it may be necessary to police the police when it comes to criminal seizures.
2/22/2001 - Holden halted in the house:
Fifteen of Holden's fellow Democrats voted against his request, including House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. Kreider said that while he supported the governor's effort, the governor had failed to win over enough Republicans to make it a bipartisan effort.
2/22/2001 - State politics turned strange during budget debate:
Gov. Bob Holden "knows the way I stand and he knows I'm sticking to my guns that this has to be a bipartisan effort or it's going back to the table," said House Speaker Jim Kreider, D-Nixa. Kreider voted no with 14 other Democrats and 72 Republicans on the governor's plan to use $127 million of tobacco settlement money owed to the state to help balance the budget. Only one Republican voted yes. The plan was part of an amendment to the supplemental budget bill.

22 stories found