• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

MidMO Business

The people, the cities, and the businesses in Mid Missouri

  • Home
  • Columbia
  • Jefferson City
  • Mid-Missouri
  • Business Shout-Out
  • About/Contact

Columbia

Missouri will exempt Social Security and public pension payments from state income taxes

by

Gov. Mike Parson on Thursday signed the tax cut he said a week earlier was responsible for his decision to veto most of the 201 spending items he cut from the state budget.

The bill, exempting Social Security benefits and public pension payments from income tax, would reduce state general revenue by an estimated $309 million annually. It would also allow counties to hold a vote on whether people 62 or older should be exempt from increases in their annual property tax bills.

The bill passed with broad bipartisan support – only two House members voted against it – but not without some misgivings among Democrats, said Rep. Peter Merideth, D-St. Louis.

Under current law, exemptions allowed for retirement income are phased out for single taxpayers earning more than $85,000 and married couples with incomes above $100,000.

“I was not thrilled with it,” Merideth said. “But honestly, to me, it was the best of the options presented.”

The Republican House leadership was pushing for a $1 billion cut in corporate and income taxes. The bill’s property tax language began as a cap on increases in assessments for all property owners.

“Many of us agree that there is a real problem with seniors right now that are on fixed incomes dealing with inflation and property taxes are a big part of that,” Merideth said.

Homeowners around the state, especially in metropolitan areas, are seeing massive increases in their assessments due to the recent rise in real estate prices. And while provisions in the constitution require rates to be rolled back when overall assessment increases exceed inflation, individual property owners could still see big increases if their property assessment went up more than the general average.

Parson’s decision to cite the tax cut for retirement benefits as a reason to veto spending items is not playing well with lawmakers. Budget leaders from both chambers said this week they will consider overrides, and said fiscal policies pushed by the governor, more than the retirement exemption, are doing more to reduce state revenues.

“Maybe the governor’s concerned about what possible, further tax reductions that the legislature may be looking at, but that’s not necessarily how, in my opinion, you build this budget,” Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Lincoln Hough, R-Springfield, said in an interview this week.

Missouri took in $13.2 billion in general revenue in the year that ended June 30. The state was also holding surplus funds of nearly $8 billion. Parson vetoed $555 million in spending, including $365 million in general revenue appropriations, from the $16 billion in general revenue items in the budget.

Growth in state revenue slowed, however, to 2.7% during fiscal 2023 and is expected to be just 0.7% in the current fiscal year. It is a large income tax cut passed last year, not the retirement exemptions, responsible for slowing growth, Merideth said.

“It’s one thing to blame this tax cut,” Merideth said, “but really, the real tax cut that’s gonna be costing us money is the other one.”

State Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer, R-Parkville and sponsor of the bill, could not be reached Friday morning for comment.

Rudi Keller

/

Missouri Independent

A temporary tag that expired at Christmas found during May on a Jeep Cherokee in a Columbia parking lot.

Automobile sales tax

Tucked into a bill that will ban texting while driving for all motorists is a provision requiring automobile dealers to begin collecting sales tax at the time of a purchase.

At a February hearing, Missouri Association of Auto Dealers lobbyist Jay Reichard estimated that up to $60 million in auto sales taxes were delinquent. The dealers are paying an extra administrative fee for the new computer system, estimated to cost $120 million, and the system is designed for dealers to collect the tax.

Every motorist on the road knows if a fellow driver has paid the sales tax on a vehicle by looking at their license plate. If it is a paper temporary tag, the tax is still due because it must be paid at the state license office at the time a person registers their ownership of the vehicle.

“We think this is a great thing for our customers,” Reichard said in a May interview. “They want to go to one place and get the job done.”

Auto dealers are the only retailers who do not collect sales tax at the time of sale, he noted.

For an article in May, The Independent found a half-dozen temporary tags in a short period in Columbia, including one that had expired on Christmas Day.

The texting provision, which currently applies only to drivers under 21, will take effect on Aug. 28.

A driver could not be cited for a violation, however, unless the officer stops the car for another reason. That is similar to the law governing seat belt violations.

This story was originally published by the Missouri Independent, part of States Newsroom.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Carl Edwards joining 23XI Racing?

by

Denny Hamlin stated that he feels Carl Edwards is itching to return to NASCAR and that he is open to the idea of 23XI Racing being his landing spot.

Since Carl Edwards unexpectedly announced his retirement before the 2017 NASCAR Cup Series season, not even two months after competing in the Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, there have been all kinds of rumors surrounding a potential return.

As far as driver retirements that fans have never fully been able to accept, Edwards’ ranks at the top of the list.

Six and a half years later, that still holds true. The 43-year-old Columbia, Missouri native returned to the track for the first time since 2016 in May as a guest announcer in the Fox Sports booth at Darlington Raceway, and he returned again two weekends ago at Nashville Superspeedway to be introduced as the inaugural member of the venue’s new “Legends Plaza.”

With two recent Carl Edwards sightings at NASCAR races, the speculation that has never truly faded has begun to heat up again.

Edwards said, for about the 50th time, that he does not currently have any plans to return to the Cup Series, but he didn’t totally rule out the idea like he has appeared to in the past.

He admitted at Darlington Raceway that it is getting harder and harder for him to stay away from the sport, and his two appearances in two months after none in six years show that there is definitely some truth to that.

But is it possible that he will actually compete in another Cup Series race?

Denny Hamlin, a former Joe Gibbs Racing teammate of Edwards, stated last week on his Actions Detrimental podcast that he senses Edwards is “itching” to return to the sport.

Hamlin added that 23XI Racing, the team he co-owns with NBA legend Michael Jordan, could be Edwards’ landing spot and that discussions have already been had with the 28-time race winner.

“I have talked to Carl early on when we started this race team about doing some one-off stuff. I’d be interested in that for sure. He does some similar work for us — he’s done some Chicago stuff for us at JGR (Joe Gibbs Racing). … I talked to him at that NASCAR 75 celebration and he’s itching a little bit. I think he does miss it for sure, so we’ll see where this goes…

“Don’t think this story ends anytime soon.”

23XI Racing, which expanded from one car to two last year, now run a third car in select races. Travis Pastrana debuted the No. 67 Toyota in this year’s Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway, and Kamui Kobayashi is set to drive it in August at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course.

So the car is certainly available for Edwards if he does find that he truly can’t stay away forever. He has the connections with Toyota, Hamlin, and Joe Gibbs Racing, which have a technical alliance with 23XI Racing, from his seasons working with them, and it seems that all parties involved would be more than happy to welcome him back.

It goes without saying that nothing is set in stone, but the fact that Hamlin added that the story probably won’t end anytime soon can only mean one thing: get ready for additional Carl Edwards return rumors, and don’t expect them to slow down until he actually comes back.

  • Published on 07/04/2023 at 12:15 PM
  • Last updated at 07/04/2023 at 12:15 PM

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

‘We get a lot of forces working against us here’ | You Are Here

by

The North Central Neighborhood is known as one of Columbia’s oldest, most resilient communities, its residents steadfast in their determination to protect their homes.

It hasn’t been an easy fight.

kAm%96 ?6:893@C9@@5 😀 2 4=FDE6C @7 DEC66ED =:?65 H:E9 >@DE=J D:?8=672>:=J 9@>6D[ 2 76H G242?E =@ED[ 2 49FC49 2?5 D@>6 D49@@=D] q6:?8 H65865 36EH66? 5@H?E@H? 2?5 qFD:?6DD {@@A f_ >2<6D :E :D @?6 @7 E96 >@C6 H2=<23=6 2C62D @7 E@H?]k^Am

kAm(92E FD65 E@ 36 >@DE=J 9@FD:?8 7@C 72>:=:6D 2?5 3@2C56CD H9@ H@C<65 2E E96 w2>:=E@?qC@H?6 $9@6 u24E@CJ @? (:=<6D q@F=6G2C5 :? E96 62C=J a_E9 46?EFCJ 92D C6>2:?65 2 A@4<6E @7 277@C523=6[ D>2== 9@FD:?8 😕 E96 46?E6C @7 E96 4:EJ] qFE ?@E H:E9@FE 2 7:6C46 4@>>F?:EJ D9:6=5:?8 E96 2C62 7C@> F?H2?E65 492?86D 2?5 7:89E:?8 7@C :>AC@G6>6?ED]k^Am

kAm$FD2? |2K6[ E96 >@DE C646?E 7@C>6C ?6:893@C9@@5 2DD@4:2E:@? AC6D:56?E[ D2:5 E96 46?EC2= =@42E:@? >2<6D :E 2 42E492== 2C62 7@C :DDF6D E96 4:EJ 5@6D ?@E H2?E E@ 562= H:E9i 28:?8 :?7C2DECF4EFC6[ E96 E9C62E @7 5:DA=246>6?E 7C@> ?6H 56G6=@A>6?E[ E96 C6DA@?D:3:=:EJ @7 42C:?8 7@C >2?J @7 E96 4:EJ’D =@H6DE:?4@>6 C6D:56?ED]k^Am

kAm“(6 86E 2 =@E @7 7@C46D H@C<:?8 282:?DE FD 96C6[ H9:49 :D 2 D92>6[” |2K6 D2:5] “xE H2D?VE =:<6 E92E H96? x >@G65 96C6]”k^Am

k9bm{@D:?8 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8k^9bm

kAm$FK2? $49F6EK 92D C6?E65 96C 9@>6 7@C 6:89E J62CD] $96 =@G6D E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 2?5 76==@H =@?8E6C> C6D:56?ED 😕 E96 2C62[ 2?5 G2=F6D =:G:?8 😕 2 ?6:893@C9@@5 H96C6 96C D@? 42? H2=< E@ >:55=6 D49@@= 2?5 9:89 D49@@=]k^Am

kAmqFE ?@H[ $49F6EK’D 46:=:?8 😀 42G:?8 :?] $96 D2:5 :E’D 366? 92AA6?:?8 7@C 2E =62DE 2 J62C]k^Am

kAmw6C <:E496? 46:=:?8 H2D =62<:?8[ 2?5 96C =2?5=@C5’D 4C6H A2CE:2==J 7:I65 :E[ 3FE :E C6>2:?D F?7:?:D965 >@?E9D =2E6C] x? 2?@E96C C@@>[ E96 46:=:?8 92D D28865 @?E@ 2 H2C5C@36 E92E H2D A=2465 E96C6 E@ 9@=5 :E FA] uC@> E96 @FED:56[ E96 C@@7 G:D:3=J 5:AD H96C6 E96 46:=:?8 92D 8:G6? H2J] $49F6EK D2:5 :EVD 366? =:<6 E92E 7@C @G6C 2 J62C 2?5 5:5 ?@E 92AA6? @G6C?:89E[ 3FE ?@ @?6 42>6 E@ 7:I :E]k^Am

kAm$96 D2:5 D96’D DEF4< H:E9 E96 9@FD6 7@C D@ >2?J J62CD 56DA:E6 E96 A@@C 4@?5:E:@?D 3642FD6 D96 42?’E 277@C5 E@ =:G6 2?JH96C6 6=D6]k^Am

kAm“x ;@<6 2== E96 E:>6 E92E D@>652J xV> 8@:?8 E@ =:G6 😕 2 C62= 9@FD6[” $49F6EK D2:5] “(9:49 😀 C62==J D25] *@F D9@F=5?VE 92G6 E@ ?@E =@G6 H96C6 J@F =:G6]”k^Am

kAm$49F6EK D2:5 96C =2?5=@C5’D 4C6H 2C6 8C62E[ 3FE D96 E9:?@F?E @7 H@C< E92E ?665D E@ 36 5@?6 24C@DD 2== E96 C6?E2= AC@A6CE:6D]k^Am

kAmp =@E @7 E96 9@>6D 😕 E96 2C62 2C6 C6?E2=D[ @H?65 >@DE=J 3J w:?D92H !C@A6CE:6D 2?5 r@=F>3:2 r@==686]k^Am

kAm%96 4@==686 92D 925 564256D @7 :?7=F6?46 @? E96 ?6:893@C9@@5] r@=F>3:2 r@==686 3682? 2D r9C:DE:2? u6>2=6 r@==686 😕 E96 >:5`hE9 46?EFCJ 2?5 92D ?2EFC2==J 8C@H? :ED A9JD:42= 7@@EAC:?E ]k^Am

kAm~G6C E96 J62CD[ 6IA2?D:@? 92D =65 E@ E96 56DECF4E:@? @7 9@>6D[ 3FE r=:77 y2CG:D[ E96 D49@@=’D 724:=:E:6D 5:C64E@C[ D2:5 E96 4@==686 H@C2:?E2:? E96 =:>:E65 9@FD:?8 DE@4< :E @H?D :? E96 2C62]k^Am



Susan Maze puts hot packs in a neighborhood giving box on Saturday, April 22, 2023 at the North Central neighborhood in Columbia. Maze donates the hot packs so that people in need can use it during the exceptionally chilly spring. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAmqC25 qCJ2?[ E96 A2DE@C 2E (:=<6D q@F=6G2C5 &?:E65 |6E9@5:DE r9FC49[ D2:5 r@=F>3:2 r@==686 6IA2?5:?8 😀 8@@5 7@C E96 4@>>F?:EJ[ 3FE H96? E96J 3F:=5 >@C6 9@FD:?8 7@C DEF56?ED[ :E ?2EFC2==J E2<6D 2H2J 9@FD:?8 7C@> @E96CD]k^Am

kAm“x7 J@F E2<6 5@H? E9C66 9@FD6D E@ 3F:=5 DEF56?E 9@FD:?8[ E96? E92EVD E9C66 =6DD DA@ED E@ C6?E :? }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5[” qCJ2? D2:5]k^Am

kAmtG6CJ 7:G6 J62CD[ E96 4@==686 4C62E6D 2 >2DE6C A=2? 7@C E96 ?6IE 7:G6 J62CD 2?5 😀 5F6 E@ AC@5F46 2?@E96C @?6 D@@?[ E9@F89 E96C6 😀 ?@ 4=62C 52E6 J6E]k^Am

kAmpD @7 ?@H[ y2CG:D D2:5 E96 4@==686 😀 <66A:?8 :ED @AE:@?D @A6? C6=2E65 E@ E96 A@E6?E:2= 56>@=:E:@? @7 E96 C6?E2= 9@FD:?8 :E @H?D]k^Am

kAmQ(6’C6 7F==J 2H2C6 @7 E96 ?665 7@C 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8 2?5 H6 5@?VE A24E E92E 92D @? E96 =@42= 4@>>F?:EJ[” y2CG:D D2:5]k^Am

kAmz6?E y@9?D@? 😀 ECJ:?8 E@ >@G6 324< :?E@ E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 27E6C 96 2EE6?565 r@=F>3:2 r@==686[ 2?5 =2E6C |&[ 😕 E96 `hf_D]k^Am

kAmp7E6C 8C25F2E:?8[ y@9?D@? >@G65 324< E@ 9:D 9@>6 DE2E6 @7 x==:?@:D] }@H 96 H2?ED ?@E9:?8 >@C6 E92? E@ 3FJ 2 D>2== 9@>6 @? (:=<6D q@F=6G2C5 2?5 DE2CE 2 =@42= 3FD:?6DD ?62C H96C6 96 FD65 E@ =:G6]k^Am

kAm“x 8@E E@ E9:?<:?8 — H6==[ H92E xV5 =:<6 E@ 5@ :D >@G6 C:89E 324< E@ (:=<6D 2?5 @A6? 2 8C@46CJ DE@C6 @? E96 4@C?6C[” y@9?D@? D2:5]k^Am

kAmy@9?D@? 92D 366? D62C49:?8 7@C 2 9@>6 E@ 3FJ 3FE 92D?’E 925 2?J =F4<] %96C6 2C6?’E >2?J 7@C D2=6[ 2?5 E9@D6 E92E 96 92D 7@F?5 2C6 AC:465 E@@ 9:89]k^Am

kAmy@9?D@? D2:5 96 2AAC64:2E65 r@=F>3:2 r@==686[ 2?5 96 6?;@J65 8@:?8 E@ D49@@= E96C6[ 3FE E96 D49@@= 92D E2<6? @G6C E@@ >F49 9@FD:?8 2?5 3@I65 A6@A=6 @FE @7 @H?:?8 9@>6D 2?5 DE2CE:?8 3FD:?6DD6D 😕 E96 2C62]k^Am

kAm“x7 E96J 4@F=5 ;FDE <:?5 @7 ?@E 8@ 2?J 72CE96C H:E9 W6IA2?D:@?]X x >62?[ :E H2D 2 8@@5 D49@@=[ 2?5 x 4@F=5 D66 E96:C A@:?E] qFE[ W]]]X x 5@?VE 6 :D[” y@9?D@? D2:5]k^Am

kAm|@DE ?6:893@CD DA62< 9:89=J @7 r@=F>3:2 r@==686 2?5 D2:5 :E 255D G2=F6 E@ E96 2C62] %96J 6?4@FC286 E96 >:I65FD6 ?2EFC6 @7 E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 2?5 H6=4@>6 >@C6 DEF56?ED[ C6?E6CD 2?5 3FD:?6DD6D[ 3FE 7:?5:?8 2 32=2?46 92D 366? 5:77:4F=E]k^Am

kAm(9:=6 E96 2C62’D 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8 😀 2 >2;@C 5C2H[ u@H=6C D2:5 @?6 @7 E96 3:886DE E9C62ED E@ C6D:56?ED 😀 762C @7 5:DA=246>6?E[ 2A2CE 7C@> 2?J 7FEFC6 6IA2?D:@? 3J E96 4@==686]k^Am

kAm$96 D2:5 :7 D@>6@?6 =:G6D 😕 2? @=56C 9@>6 H96C6 E96J 42? 277@C5 C6?E[ 3FE E96 FE:=:E:6D 2C6 6IA6?D:G6 3642FD6 :E 😀 ?@E 6?6C8J 677:4:6?E[ E96J 42? 36 5:DA=2465] x7 D@>6@?6 =:G6D ?6IE E@ 2 G242?E =@E[ :E 42? 36 C656G6=@A65 :?E@ 2 =2C86D42=6 2A2CE>6?E 4@>A=6I] u=@@5:?8 2?5 D6H6C 324@F?E @7 H2E6C ?646DD2CJ E@ 244@>>@52E6 >@C6 C6D:56?ED 2?5 6I46DD:G6 ?@:D6 42? 5C:G6 @FE ?6:893@CD]k^Am

k9bmx?7C2DECF4EFC6 :DDF6Dk^9bm

kAms:=2A:52E65 DE@C>H2E6C :?7C2DECF4EFC6[ 5H:?5=:?8 3FD C@FE6D 2?5 4:EJ 56G6=@A>6?E A=2?D 92G6 2== 4@?EC:3FE65 E@ E96 ?6:893@C9@@5’D 4:C4F>DE2?46D] #6D:56?ED 😕 E96 2C62 92G6 D2:5 :E’D H6== 6?ED 😕 E96 2C62 7=@@5[ 2?5 DE@C>H2E6C :DDF6D 92G6 366? AC6G2=6?E 7@C 564256D]k^Am

kAm|2K6 D2:5 E96 ?6:893@C9@@5’D A@D:E:@? 36EH66? 5@H?E@H? 2?5 E96 qFD:?6DD {@@A AFD96D 2 =@E @7 DE@C>H2E6C E@H2C5 E96> 3642FD6 @7 E96 =24< @7 5C2:?286 42FD65 3J 2== E96 4@?4C6E6]k^Am

kAm|2K6 D2:5 E96 D6H286 =:?6D 86E :?7:=EC2E65 H:E9 DE@C>H2E6C[ 42FD:?8 E96> E@ 324< FA :? 9@FD6D] %96 AC@3=6> 😀 4@>A=6I[ 2?5 |2K6 D2:5 :E :D?’E 4@>A=6E6=J FA E@ E96 4:EJ[ 3FE @77:4:2=D’ :?24E:@? 😀 2 4@?EC:3FE@C E@ E96 AC@3=6>]k^Am

kAmr:EJ @77:4:2=D D2J E96J’C6 E2<:?8 DE6AD E@ 562= H:E9 E96 AC@3=6>]k^Am

kAmx? E96 A2DE 76H J62CD[ 2 4:EJ AC@;64E 255C6DD65 2 7=@@5:?8 :DDF6 ?62C ?@CE9 $:IE9 $EC66E 2?5 w:4<>2? pG6?F6 3J C6A=24:?8 2 56E6C:@C2E:?8 3@I 4F=G6CE[ H9:49 😀 E96 F?56C8C@F?5 DECF4EFC6 E96 H2E6C 7=@HD E9C@F89] xE 2=D@ 4C62E65 2? @G6C7=@H D64E:@? 2?5 C6A=2465 72:=:?8 A:A6D E@ C65F46 7=@@5:?8[ 244@C5:?8 E@ |2EE }6DE@C[ 2 DA@<6DA6CD@? 7@C r@=F>3:2 &E:=:E:6D]k^Am



A lot sits abandoned next to Hickman High School on Saturday

A lot sits abandoned next to Hickman High School on Saturday, April 22, 2023 in the North Central neighborhood of Columbia. The neighborhood had hoped to use it for the community, but there hasn’t been any luck so far. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAm}6DE@C D2:5 E96 4:EJ 😀 2=D@ 4@>A=6E:?8 2 DEF5J ?62C u:7E9 $EC66E 2?5 (:=<6D q@F=6G2C5 E@ 82E96C 52E2 @? H2E6C 2?5 D6H6C 7=@H[ E96? 2 4@?DF=E2?E H:== 56E6C>:?6 E96 36DE H2J E@ >@G6 7@CH2C5 H:E9 4@?E:?F65 :>AC@G6>6?ED @? DE@C>H2E6C :?7C2DECF4EFC6]k^Am

kAm%96 4:EJ H:== 2=D@ 36 :>AC@G:?8 D@>6 9J5C2F=:4D 2=@?8 p=E@? pG6?F6 E@ 2==@H H2E6C E@ >@G6 BF:4<=J 2?5 C65F46 J2C5 A@@=:?8 2?5 @G6C7=@H[ }6DE@C D2:5]k^Am

kAm}@E 2== @7 E96 4:EJ’D AC@A@D65 D@=FE:@?D 7@C E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 92G6 366? D66? 2D 36?67:4:2= E@ E96 C6D:56?ED =:G:?8 E96C6]k^Am

kAm!2E u@H=6C D6CG65 2D E96 AC6D:56?E @7 E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= r@=F>3:2 }6:893@C9@@5 pDD@4:2E:@? H96? E96 4:EJ AC@A@D65 2 4@?EC@G6CD:2= 6?92?465 6?E6CAC:D6 K@?6 A=2?[ @C tt+[ 😕 a_`a] u@H=6C[ H9@ H2D C646?E=J C66=64E65 2D AC6D:56?E @7 E96 2DD@4:2E:@? 27E6C D6CG:?8 2D u:CDE (2C5 4@F?4:=A6CD@? 7@C E9C66 J62CD[ D2:5 E96 tt+ H@F=5 92G6 8:G6? E2I 3C626?E 2?5 2 46CE2:? ?F>36C @7 ;@3D]k^Am

kAm%96 tt+ C6BF:C65 E96 4:EJ E@ 564=2C6 =2C86 2C62D @7 r@=F>3:2 2D 3=:89E65[ :?4=F5:?8 E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5] %96 A=2? F=E:>2E6=J 72:=65 27E6C u@H=6C 2?5 4@>>F?:EJ >6>36CD AC@E6DE65[ 762C:?8 E96 3=:89E65 56D:8?2E:@? 4@F=5 3C:?8 5@H? AC@A6CEJ G2=F6D 2?5 DE:8>2E:K6 E96 2C62] u@H=6C D2:5 C6D:56?ED 5:5 ?@E 2AAC64:2E6 A6@A=6 H9@ 5@?’E =:G6 E96C6 FD:?8 2 =236= E@ 4C62E6 64@?@>:4 36?67:E 7@C E96>D6=G6D[ 3FE ?@E E96 ?6:893@C9@@5]k^Am

kAm“qFD:?6DD @AA@CEF?:E:6D 2C6 8@@5[ 6I46AE J@F DE:== 92G6 E@ C6>6>36C E92E J@FC A6@A=6 92G6 E@ 92G6 2 A=246 E@ =:G6[ 2?5 E96:C <:5D 92G6 E@ 92G6 2 A=246 E@ A=2J[” u@H=6C D2:5]k^Am

kAmy6C6>J #@@E[ 2? 2EE@C?6J[ D6CG65 @? 2? tt+ 3@2C5 E92E H2D 3C:67=J 4C62E65 E@ 96=A 56G:D6 2 A=2? E96 4@>>F?:EJ 4@F=5 2446AE]k^Am

kAm#@@E D2:5 E96 :?:E:2= A=2? 925 DF49 2 3C@25 D4@A6 E92E :E :?4=F565 ?@E @?=J E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5 3FE =2C86 DH2E96D @7 r@=F>3:2 E@ 36 56D:8?2E65 2D 3=:89E65]k^Am

kAm“%96C6 2C6 E:>6D H96C6 E92E 56D:8?2E:@? 42? 36 FD65 67764E:G6=J E@ :>AC@G6 46CE2:? D6CG:46D @C :?7C2DECF4EFC6[” #@@E D2:5] “qFE H:E9 2 56D:8?2E:@? 2D 3C@25 2D :E H2D[ :E ;FDE 4C62E65 2 =@E @7 GF=?6C23:=:EJ 2?5 A@E6?E:2==J 5@H?H2C5 AC6DDFC6 @? AC@A6CEJ G2=F6D 7@C C6D:56?E:2= C62= 6DE2E6]”k^Am

kAmp7E6C E92E 32EE=6[ u@H=6C D2:5 E96 4:EJ H2?E65 E@ 4C62E6 2 E2I :?4C6>6?E 7:?2?4:?8 5:DEC:4E[ @C %xu[ E92E :?4=F565 E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5] p %xu 5:DEC:4E :?46?E:G:K6D 3FD:?6DD 3642FD6 :E FD6D E96 :?4C62D6 😕 E2I6D E92E C6DF=E 7C@> ?6H 56G6=@A>6?E 2?5 7F??6=D :E 324< :?E@ E96 AC@;64E 7@C E96 36?67:E @7 E96 AC@A6CEJ @H?6C]k^Am



Susan Maze shows the shed she has been renovating for the past year

Susan Maze shows the shed she has been renovating for the past year on Saturday, April 22, 2023 at her home in the North Central neighborhood of Columbia. “Someone may be able to live here, at an affordable price,” Maze explained. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAmw@H6G6C[ u@H=6C D2:5 :7 2 %xu C6DF=ED 😕 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8 36:?8 E@C? 5@H? 2?5 C6A=2465 H:E9 >@C6 6IA6?D:G6 9@FD:?8[ :E 5:DA=246D E96 A6@A=6 H9@ =:G65 😕 E92E @C:8:?2= 9@FD:?8 :7 E96J 42? ?@ =@?86C 277@C5 E@ =:G6 😕 E96 ?6H 56G6=@A>6?E]k^Am

kAm“%96 5:DA=246>6?E 67764E :E 92D 😀 5:DCFAE:G6 E@ E96 723C:4 @7 @FC ?6:893@C9@@5 7@C ?@ C62= 82:?[ 6I46AE 7@C E96 7:?2?4:2= 36?67:E @7 D@>63@5J H9@ 4FCC6?E=J 5@6D?VE =:G6 E96C6[” u@H=6C D2:5] {:<6 E96 tt+[ E96 %xu A=2? F=E:>2E6=J 72:=65]k^Am

kAm|2K6 D2:5 E96 4:EJ 4@F=5 92G6 255C6DD65 :?7C2DECF4EFC6 :DDF6D @C AC@G:565 DFAA@CE 7@C 9@>6@H?6CD D@ E96:C 9@>6D H@F=5?’E 92G6 364@>6 5:=2A:52E65] $96 D2:5 E96 4:EJ 4@F=5?’E 92G6 7F==J DE@AA65 E96 564=:?6[ 3FE :ED :?24E:@? 😀 @?6 @7 E96 >2?J 724E@CD] $F49 DFAA@CE 4@F=5 DE:== 96=A E96 ?6:89E3@C9@@5[ D96 D2:5]k^Am

kAm“%96 4:EJ 4@F=5 :?E6CG6?6 @C AC@G:56 C6D@FC46D 7@C @?6 @7 E96 76H 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8 2C62D 😕 E@H?[” |2K6 D2:5[ “2?5 E96JVC6 49@@D:?8 ?@E E@]”k^Am

kAms6AFEJ r:EJ |2?286C |:<6 vC:88D D2:5 E96 4:EJ :D =@@<:?8 E@ 96=A E96 @H?6CD @7 @=56C 9@>6D =:<6 E96 @?6D :? E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5 3J 7F??6=:?8 >@C6 p#!p 7F?5D :?E@ 6I:DE:?8 4:EJ 9@>6@H?6C AC@8C2>D]k^Am

kAm%96 4:EJ >2?286C’D @77:46 92D C6BF6DE65 E92E E96 4:EJ 4@F?4:= 255 S` >:==:@? 6249 7C@> E96 p#!p 7F?5D E@ E96 4:EJ’D w@>6@H?6CD9:A pDD:E2?46 !C@8C2> 2?5 w@>6 #6923 2?5 t?6C8J t77:4:6?4J !C@8C2>[ vC:88D D2:5] %96 AC@8C2>D 2==@H C6D:56?ED E@ 2AA=J 7@C 7@C8:G23=6 =@2?D H:E9 ?@ :?E6C6DE E@ 96=A 3FJ 2 9@>6 @C 4@G6C 4@DE=J C6A=246>6?ED =:<6 C@@7D @C 7FC?246D]k^Am

k9bm%FC?:?8 A@:?E 2?5 =@2G6D 2?5 7:D96Dk^9bm

kAm$FK2? $49F6EK’D 9@>6 @? u2:CG:6H pG6?F6 324AEJ =@E] p H6==H@C? 7@@EA2E9 EC2:=D 7C@> E96 D:56H2=<[ 36D:56 96C 9@FD6 2?5 E9C@F89 E96 324

kAm%96 49FC49 9@FD6D EH@ <6J C6D@FC46D 7@C A6@A=6 6IA6C:6?4:?8 9@>6=6DD?6DD 😕 r@=F>3:2i %FC?:?8 !@:?E 52J 46?E6C 2?5 {@2G6D 2?5 u:D96D D@FA <:E496?] xE 92D 364@>6 A2CE @7 E96 ?:6893@C9@@5’D 723C:4]k^Am

kAm!2DE@C qC25 qCJ2? D2:5 E96 49FC49 DE2CE65 :ED D6CG:46D 23@FE `_ J62CD 28@ 3642FD6 E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 H2D D9:7E:?8 2?5 EC6?5:?8 E@ 2 =@H6C D@4:@64@?@>:4 =6G6=] (96? A@==:?8 E96 4@>>F?:EJ E@ 2DD6DD H96C6 E96 82AD H6C6[ qCJ2? D2:5 :E 3642>6 4=62C E92E 2 D@FA <:E496? H2D ?646DD2CJ E@ 255C6DD 7@@5 :?D64FC:EJ :? E96 2C62]k^Am

kAm“r@=F>3:2 H2D 6IA2?5:?8 2?5 56G6=@A:?8 E@ E96 D@FE9H6DE[ 2?5 E96 ?@CE9 46?EC2= ?6:893@C9@@5 925 <:?5 @7 72==6? @FE @7 AC:@C:EJ :? E6C>D @7 56G6=@A>6?E 2?5 :?G6DE>6?E[” qCJ2? D2:5]k^Am



Suzan Schuetz’s door hangs open as it doesn’t fully close

Suzan Schuetz’s door hangs open as it doesn’t fully close on Thursday, April 27, 2023 at her home in the North Central neighborhood. Schuetz has tried to reach out to the landlord but hasn’t had any success. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAm$49F6EK H@C 96C 324A@DE 2?5 8C@HD 7C282C2?E 96C3D =:<6 >:?E 2?5 D286] $96 D2:5 D96 D66D D6G6C2= A6@A=6 A2DD E9C@F89 E96 A2E9 6249 52J E@ 2446DD E9@D6 D6CG:46D]k^Am

kAm|@DE A6@A=6 2C6 A6C764E=J A@=:E6 2?5 4@FCE6@FD[ $49F6EK D2:5] $@>6 96=A 96C 😕 E96 J2C5 2?5 D92C6 E96:C DE@C:6D H:E9 96C[ H9:49 D96’D 8C2E67F= 7@C]k^Am

kAmqFE[ $49F6EK D2:5 D6G6C2= :E6>D 92G6 366? DE@=6?[ :?4=F5:?8 96C D@?’D 3:<6] |@DE C646?E=J[ 96C H966=32CC@H H2D DE@=6? 7C@> 96C 324

kAmqCJ2?[ H9@ 92D 366? E96 A2DE@C @7 (:=<6D q@F=6G2C5 &?:E65 |6E9@5:DE r9FC49 7@C D:I J62CD[ D2:5 DF49 AC@3=6>D 42? 36 2 C6DF=E @7 @776C:?8 C6D@FC46D E@ 9@>6=6DD A6@A=6[ 3FE E96C6 😀 ?@H96C6 6=D6 7@C E96> E@ C646:G6 E96 96=A %FC?:?8 !@:?E 😀 @776C:?8]k^Am

kAm“(6VG6 DE6AA65 :?E@ 2 82A[ 2?5 H6V5 =@G6 E@ D66 >@C6 ?6:893@C9@@5D[ >@C6 H2C5D[ E2<6 @? >@C6 @7 E9:D H@C< 2?5 A2CE:4:A2E6 >@C6 566A=J 😕 E9:D <:?5 @7 H@C<[” qCJ2? D2:5] “qFE F?E:= E92E 92AA6?D @C F?=6DD E92E 92AA6?D[ H6V== 4@?E:?F6 E@ @776C E92E DA246 E@ A6@A=6]”k^Am



Suzan Schuetz stirs molten wax to make bug repellents for her small business

Suzan Schuetz stirs molten wax to make bug repellents for her small business on Thursday, April 27, 2023 at her home in the North Central neighborhood. Schuetz has lived in the neighborhood for the past eight years. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAm|2K6 D2:5 E96 4:EJ 2=D@ 5@6D?’E H2?E 9@>6=6DD A6@A=6 5@H?E@H? @C 2E E96 (232D9 qFD $E2E:@?[ D@ E96J 2C6 AFD965 FA E@H2C5 E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5 2?5 @E96C DFCC@F?5:?8 ?6:893@C9@@5D]k^Am

kAm“$@>63@5J 92D E@ E2<6 42C6 @7 F?D96=E6C65 A6@A=6[ F?7@CEF?2E6=J[ 2?5 E96 49FC496D W?62CX %9@C?3C@@< 2C6?VE 5@:?8 :E[” |2K6 D2:5]k^Am

kAmxE 😀 ?@E ;FDE 23@FE 2G2:=23=6 C6D@FC46D[ qCJ2? D2:5[ :E’D 23@FE H96C6 E96 4:EJ AC:@C:E:K6D :?G6DE>6?ED =:<6 :?7C2DECF4EFC6 2?5 EC2?D:E] w@H E96 9:896DE =6G6= @7 8@G6C?>6?E 92?5=6D AC:@C:E:6D 27764ED E96 A@@C6DE A6@A=6 7:CDE[ 96 D2:5]k^Am

kAm“%96 =@DD @7 3FD 5C:G6CD 2?5 3FD C@FE6D] xEVD ?@E 9FCE:?8 $@FE92>AE@?] xE 5@6D?VE 9FCE A6@A=6 😕 E96 w:89=2?5D[ :E 9FCED A6@A=6 FA 96C6[” qCJ2? D2:5]k^Am

kAm$E6G6 w@==:D[ E96 9F>2? D6CG:46D >2?286C 7@C r@=F>3:2 2?5 q@@?6 r@F?EJ[ D2:5 4:EJ @77:4:2=D 2C6 24FE6=J 2H2C6 @7 E96 3FC56? @? E96 ?6:893@C9@@5 2?5 9@A6 E@ >@G6 D6CG:46D E@ ?6H 724:=:E:6D 😕 E96 7FEFC6] x? 2? 6>2:=65 DE2E6>6?E[ w@==:D D2:5 E96 4:EJ “46CE2:?=J 5@6D?VE 9@=5 E96 A@D:E:@? E92E F?9@FD65 A6CD@?D 2C6?VE H2?E65 5@H?E@H?]”k^Am



Suzan Schuetz’s house shows numerous problems, including cracks

Suzan Schuetz’s house shows numerous problems, including cracks, caving down ceilings, and leaking walls. 


Lin Choi/Missourian

kAm%96 4:EJ AFC492D65 E96 @=5 ‘u( A@DE 3F:=5:?8 @? pD9=6J $EC66E =2DE 72== E@ =62D6 E@ E96 #@@> 2E E96 x?? H:?E6C D96=E6C] w@==:D D2:5 E96 4:EJ 😀 4@?D:56C:?8 C6?@G2E:@? 4@DED E@ A@E6?E:2==J 4@=@42E6 %FC?:?8 !@:?E @C {@2G6D 2?5 u:D96D E@ E92E 3F:=5:?8[ 3FE E96J 2C6 DE:== 😕 E96 6IA=@C2E@CJ A92D6] w6 C6:E6C2E65 E92E 2== @7 E96D6 C6D@FC46D 2C6 AC:G2E6 6?E:E:6D E92E[ H9:=6 E96J C646:G6 D@>6 7F?5:?8 7C@> E96 4:EJ[ 2C6 E96 @?6D E@ F=E:>2E6=J 564:56 H96C6 E96J >@G6]k^Am

kAm“xEVD ?@E 62DJ E@ 4C62E6 2 4@>>F?:EJ 4@2=:E:@? E@ ECJ E@ AF== @77 2 AC@;64E E92E =2C86[” w@==:D D2:5] “%96 8@@5 ?6HD 😀 E92E :E 😀 😕 E96 H@C @7 E96 ~AA@CEF?:EJ r2>AFD]”k^Am

kAm%96 ~AA@CEF?:EJ r2>AFD 😀 2 AC@;64E 3J 2 8C@FA @7 D6CG:46 AC@G:56CD E@ 4C62E6 2 ac9@FC D6CG:46 46?E6C] %96 42>AFD H@F=5 A=246 E96 @A6C2E:@?D @7 C6D@FC46D DF49 2D @7 #@@> 2E E96 x??[ %FC?:?8 !@:?E[ {@2G6D 2?5 u:D96D 2?5 E96 ‘@=F?E2CJ p4E:@? r6?E6C F?56C @?6 C@@7 H:E9 4:EJ DFAA@CE] r:EJ r@F?4:= 2AAC@G65 2 4@?5:E:@?2= FD6 A6C>:E 7@C E96 AC@;64E 😕 u63CF2CJ]k^Am

kAm(9:=6 E96D6 D6CG:46D 2C6 DE:== A2CE @7 E96 ?6:893@C9@@5[ $49F6EK D2:5 D96 H2?ED E96 A6C>2?6?E C6D:56?ED E@ 4@6I:DE H:E9 E96 9@>6=6DD A6@A=6 H9@ 2C6 D@ 962G:=J 4@?46?EC2E65 😕 E96 ?6:893@C9@@5]k^Am

kAm“q642FD6 2D >2?J E:>6D 2D xVG6 366? 3FC?65 3J A6@A=6 E2<:?8 >J DEF77[ :E 5@6D?VE >2<6 >6 2?8CJ 2?5 25G6CD2C:2=[” D96 D2:5] “}@[ :E ;FDE >2<6D >6 9FCE 2?5 H:D9 E92E A6@A=6 925 E96 C6D@FC46D E96J ?665]”k^Am

k9bm%96 7FEFC6 @7 E96 }@CE9 r6?EC2= }6:893@C9@@5k^9bm

kAm%96 r@=F>3:2 r@>>F?:EJ {2?5 %CFDE[ 2 ?@?AC@7:E 565:42E65 E@ 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8[ C646?E=J F?G6:=65 :ED rF==:>@C6 r@EE286D 56G6=@A>6?E @? }@CE9 gE9 $EC66E] %96 AC@;64E[ ?2>65 7@C 2 7@F?5:?8 3@2C5 >6>36C @7 E96 =2?5 ECFDE 2?5 7@C>6C ?6:893@C9@@5 2DD@4:2E:@? D64C6E2CJ[ 4C62E65 ?6H 9@FD:?8 @? 2 G242?E =@E]k^Am

kAm{2?5 ECFDE AC6D:56?E p?E9@?J $E2?E@? 56D4:36D E96 ?@?AC@7:E 2D 2 DE6H2C5 E@ 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8] (96? E96 =2?5 ECFDE D6==D 2 9@FD6 :E <66AD E96 =2?5 36?62E9 :E 2?5 8:7ED 6BF:EJ E@ E96 9@>6@H?6C 😕 @C56C E@ >2:?E2:? E96 AC@A6CEJ’D 277@C523:=:EJ]k^Am

kAm“%92E <:?5 @7 DE@AD E96 6?4C@249>6?E 6:E96C 7C@> E96 AC:G2E6 D64E@C @C 6G6? r@=F>3:2 r@==686 7C@> E2<:?8 @G6C E92E =2?5 2?5 564C62D:?8 E96 277@C523=6 9@FD:?8 DE@4<[” $E2?E@? D2:5]k^Am

kAm$49F6EK D2:5 E96 4@>>F?:EJ 😀 E:89E

kAm“x H@F=5 =@G6 E@ D66 }@CE9 r6?EC2= 36 2 ECF6 >:I65 FD6[ H:E9 32CD ?6IE 5@@C E@ 9@>6D @C H:E9:? H2=<:?8 5:DE2?46[ 2?5 ?:46 A=246D E@ 62E] p?5 J@F 42? 86E 2 92:C4FE 2?5 ?@E ;FDE 2E E96 qFD:?6DD {@@A[ 3FE @? }@CE9 t:89E9 $EC66E[” |2K6 D2:5]k^Am

kAm%96 ?6:893@C9@@5 H:== 4@?E:?F6 E@ 7246 492==6?86D[ 3FE ?@E H:E9@FE 4@>>F?:EJ >6>36CD C:D:?8 E@ E96 @442D:@? 6249 E:>6 E@ 7:89E 7@C H92E E96J 36=:6G6 E96 2C62 56D6CG6D]k^Am

kAm“u@C E9@D6 @7 FD E92E 2C6 =67E[ :EVD =:<6[ W]]]X H92E 2C6 H6 8@:?8 E@ 5@n” |2K6 D2:5] “p?5 9@H 42? H6 D2G6 :En p?5 :EVD 86EE:?8 92C56C E@ 5@]”k^Am

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Mid-Missouri Fisher House | VA Columbia Missouri Health Care

by

The Fisher House Program

The Fisher House Program is a unique private-public partnership between the Fisher House Foundation and the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense that supports America’s military in their time of need. The Fisher House Foundation builds, furnishes and donates these “comfort homes” located on major military and VA medical centers. The local community raises a portion of the construction costs, and the Fisher House Foundation contributes the rest. Zachary and Elizabeth Fisher first recognized the need to provide “homes away from home” for families of hospitalized military men and women in 1990. 

Mid-Missouri Fisher House

The Mid-Missouri Fisher House is a beautiful “home away from home” for the families of Veterans and military service members receiving care at the Truman VA Medical Center. The Fisher House provides temporary lodging in a comfortable and relaxed setting only steps away from the Medical Facility. Guests can stay at the Fisher House at no cost for as long as their loved one is hospitalized.

Amenities

The Fisher House creates a warm and compassionate environment for families to find support from others in similar situations. Caring staff and volunteers are available to assist guests. The Mid-Missouri Fisher House is a 3-story, 15,000 square foot home which offers 16 spacious private guest rooms, each with a private bath-room. Each room has a TV, DVD player, alarm clock, hair dryer, internet connection and telephone for local calls. Guests share the fully equipped, gourmet kitchen, dining room with seating for 26, living room with library, family room with a flat screen TV and out-door patio. Other features include modern laundry facilities, Wi-Fi in the common areas, and wheelchair accessibility.

Guests

Mid-Missouri Fisher House welcomes guests who:

  • Have a loved one receiving care at the Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans’ Hospital
  • VA providing service or authorized by Care in the Community.
  • Live 50 miles or more away from the medical facility
  • Are able to stay in a non-medical, unsupervised setting
  • Follow all Fisher House Rules and respect fellow guests and Fisher House.

Families seeking Fisher House lodging should contact the Veteran’s social worker or VA provider for a consult. Guests rooms can accommodate up to four (4) guests per room. Reservations are not accepted. We strive to accommodate all requests for lodging. We recommend checking availability before arriving.

Donations

Be a part of the Fisher House mission!

Mid-Missouri Fisher House relies on support from individuals and groups to provide for the ongoing, daily needs of the Fisher House, enhance the stay of Fisher House guests and expand our programs. To find out how you can support our military and Veterans’ families at Mid-Missouri Fisher House as a volunteer or with a donation, please contact 573-814-6000 ext. 52538.

Monetary donations to the Mid-Missouri Fisher House can also be done online. Please select “Columbia, MO – Harry S. Truman VA Medical Center” as the facility and “General Purpose” as the program for donation, then fill out the Donor Intent and put in “Fisher House”. 

Fisher House Wish List

Click the link below or scan the QR code to donate supplies from our Amazon wish list:

Amazon.com

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Columbia Savings & Loan Invites Public to Free Home Buyer Seminar

by

By Karen Stokes

William Martin, executive vice president & CRA officer, Columbia Savings & Loan Association
(Photo/Columbia Savings and Loan Association)

Columbia Savings & Loan Association and Port Washington State Bank are inviting the public to a FREE Homebuyer Seminar on Friday, June 30. This is an opportunity to gather valuable information concerning home ownership.

“Port Washington State Bank is nearly a billion dollar bank. They’ve been working with us to serve more of our community and so we’re partnering to hold this home buyer’s seminar,” said William Martin, executive vice president & CRA officer, Columbia Savings & Loan Association. “It’s really a chance for people to learn the steps for success in terms of getting themselves prepared for home ownership.”

The informative event will provide attendees with guidance on the basic steps of homebuying, the type of information they should gather, as well as an understanding of how lenders evaluate their financial situations and credit.

The seminar will cover available grants and down payment assistance and offer practical tips for those embarking on their home search. This is an invaluable opportunity for individuals to prepare themselves as they navigate the path to homeownership.

Columbia Savings & Loan Association Bank Loan Officer, Ngozie Omegbu and Linda Chay, Port Washington State Bank, Vice President/Mortgage Lender will be presenters.

“One thing they will be discussing is first time home buyer grants. Columbia Savings & Loan Association is able to provide up to a $10,000 first time home buyer grant through a relationship we have with the Federal Home Loan Bank. There are other special programs through the city of Milwaukee,” Martin said. “We just helped someone recently get $17,000 worth of first time home buyer grants which can not only help with closing costs but it can help pay down part of their loan, actually borrowing less and their payments will be lower. We’re trying to make sure that we get all the information and funds out to families so they can buy a piece of their own American dream,” Martin said.

“There’s so many African Americans that think they cannot buy a home and Columbia Savings & Loan has now raised over $5 million this year to make sure we have ample funds to be able to do more loans,” Martin said. “Our goal is to raise $10 million this year for our “100 by the 100th” campaign. Next year is our centennial. We want to make sure that we raise $10 million this year so we can help 100 families become new homeowners by our 100th anniversary. We want to make sure that we’re helping our people succeed.”

Martin explained that only 25 percent of African Americans in Milwaukee own their own home while 67 percent of white Milwaukeans are homeowners.

“Home ownership isn’t just about a place to live, it’s about owning part of your own community, it’s about making sure that we have the ability to gain equity when we want to be able to buy a new home, start a business, send kids to college, people use the equity in their home to be able to do those things.

This is the first step toward generational wealth. We want to make sure that more African American families have the opportunity,” Martin said.

Columbia Savings & Loan is celebrating their 99th year. Founded in 1924, the Halyards moved from Beloit, Wisconsin to Milwaukee specifically so they could address some of the deplorable housing conditions that families found themselves in here because loans were not widely available to Black families.

“The reason for the longevity of Columbia Savings & Loan I think is there’s a real need and hunger for a bank that respects, appreciates and values our community. We’ve been headquartered in the poorest zip code in the state of Wisconsin where many banks have moved out of our neighborhoods, this bank has always stayed. The mission is to make sure we’re serving the community here,” said Martin.

Despite the housing market being tight, Martin remains optimistic about the numerous opportunities available in Milwaukee. The local government, along with other institutions are actively working towards creating more avenues for home ownership.

“The city is launching HomeMKE and that initiative is putting 150 of currently dilapidated homes back into service. They’re actually renovating those homes with federal funds and local developers and they’re giving a whole new life to those homes,” Martin said. “Those homes will be pegged as affordable so more of our families can afford them and those are the type of opportunities that are happening.”

The Homebuyer Seminar will be held at Columbia Savings & Loan, 2020 W Fond du Lac Ave.

Two sessions will be available on June 30, with the first session from 12-1 PM and the second session from 5-6 PM.

Register by calling Columbia Savings and Loan at 414-374-0486.

Columbia Savings & Loan Invites Public to Free Home Buyer Seminar

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Coming Up in COMO – COMO Magazine

by

27 things to do in Columbia this weekend – and beyond 

Coming Up In COMO is a brief peek at concerts, plays, art exhibits, events for families and kids, and more. You may send your event notice to [email protected]. Please put “Coming up in COMO” in the subject line. Include the date, time, a brief description, and website or Facebook page (or phone number) for your event. 

COMING UP IN COMO 

FRIDAY, JUNE 23 

Moms Who Coffee – Toasty Goat Coffee. 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. 515 S. Scott Blvd., Ste 101. Event by Willow Clearwater and CoMo Moms Connect. 

The Bait Shop Boys Happy Hour Show. 5-7 p.m. Dive Bar, 1116 Business Loop 70 East. No cover. 

Simple Road at Pierpont General Store. 6 p.m., 7650 MO 163.  

Water Street Band live at the Arcade District, Sentinel Park. 6-9 p.m., The Arcade District, 1214 Eugenia St. Great food and drinks in adjoining restaurants. 

Junk or Treasure Caravan. 6-8 p.m., Love Coffee, 15 Business Loop 70 E. Free admission.  

2023 Missouri Dance Organization Conference and Festival – Moving Forward. 7 p.m., Mareck Center for Dance, 110 Orr St. Event runs through Sunday. 

Sister Act – Columbia Entertainment Company. 7:30-10 p.m., 1800 Nelwood Dr. 

Native State + Dream Squeeze @ Café B. 7-11 p.m., Café Berlin, 220 N. Tenth St. $5 at the door. 

Kewpie/Bruin 40-year class reunion. Through Sunday. Kick-off event 7 p.m. to close at The Heidelberg Rooftop Patio, 410 S. Ninth St. (Other events planned for Saturday and Sunday. Click link for details.)  

Molly Healey concert. 8-11 p.m., Dive Bar, 1116 Business Loop 70 East. No cover. 

The Crucible. 8-10:30 p.m., Maplewood Barn Theater, 2900 E. Nifong. (Show runs through June 25).  

SATURDAY, JUNE 24 

Columbia Farmers Market. 8 a.m.-noon, MU Health Care Pavilion at Columbia’s Agriculture Park, 1769 W. Ash. 

Friends of Columbia Public Library book sale. Noon-3 p.m., 100 W. Broadway. Cash or checks only. 

World Refugee Day. 5-8 p.m., MU Healthcare Pavilion, 1701 W. Ash St. Welcome some of our community’s newest members. 

The Daves LIVE at Cooper’s Landing. 6-9 p.m., 11505 S. Smith Hatchery Rd. Food truck: The Bus Old School BBQ and Gino’s Italian Ice, 12-8 p.m. 

Rainbow House 2023 Masquerade Ball. Father Tolton Regional Catholic High School, 3351 E. Gans Rd. Don your poodle skirts and leather jackets to celebrate the legacy of Grease. Benefits mid-Missouri’s most vulnerable kids. Silent auction, photo booth, wine pull, dance contest, and more. 

Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country at Rose Park. 7 p.m., Rose Music Hall, 1013 Park Avenue. $22 day of show. 

Firefly Music Festival | Fanfare CoMo Grand Opening – The Missouri Symphony. 7 p.m., Missouri Theatre, 203 S. Ninth St. Tickets $29-$49 (+ processing fees). 

The Edibles at Dive Bar. 8-11 p.m., 1116 Business Loop 70 East. No cover. 

Karaoke Night. Every Saturday at 9 p.m., McGinty’s Pub, 1312 Old 63 S.  

SUNDAY, JUNE 25 

Rhett’s Run – 24th annual race. 8 a.m., Rhett’s Run Mountain Bike Trail, Cosmo Park. Proceeds benefit COMO Trail Association.  

Criterium at the Columns. 8:45 a.m., Criterium racing is back in Columbia for the first time in about 20 years. Start/finish is at Eighth and Elm near Shakespeare’s Pizza.  

Columbia’s Agriculture Park field day. 10 a.m.-3 p.m., 1769 W. Ash St. Stay for food truck lunch and “shop” a used tool swap.  

Voices of Columbia 2023. 3-6 p.m., Logboat Brewing Company, 504 Fay Street, FREE entertainment. Benefit for Heart of Missouri CASA. Live auction, silent auction, raffles, unlimited carnival games and prizes for kids with purchase of $5 wristband. 

MONDAY, JUNE 26 

Cosplay Clothing Swap and DIY Wings. 6-8 p.m., Friends Room, Columbia Public Library, 100 W. Broadway. Please register. Children will read for 15 minutes to one of Ann Gafke’s Teacher’s Pet Therapy Dogs.  

TUESDAY, JUNE 27 

Happy Hour Bingo. 5:30-7:30 p.m., DogMaster Distillery, 210 St. James St., Ste D. 

As Yet Unnamed Comedy Show. 8 p.m., Eastside Tavern, 106 E. Broadway. FREE comedy open mic night. 

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Grace named George clerk-treasurer | Columbia Basin Herald

by

GEORGE — There’s a new clerk-treasurer in George, and she has a new assistant.

Former Deputy Clerk-Treasurer Amy Grace, who has holding down the fort since the last clerk-treasurer left in March, was officially appointed to the position at Tuesday night’s city council meeting. SA temporary worker the city contracted to help Grace, Tonya Nelson, was appointed the new deputy clerk-treasurer at the same meeting. The city will pay more than $8,000 to the agency Nelson currently works for to allow her to work for the city immediately.

“It’s a challenging job,” Grace told the Herald. “I have to say that I think this is the most challenging job I have ever gone after.”

Grace has only been working for the city since last November when she was hired as deputy clerk-treasurer. That position was a lot simpler, she said: acting as the clerk-treasurer’s right-hand person and handling utility billing, animal licenses and the like. She really enjoyed that work, she said, but after two clerk-treasurers left in a month, she was left on her own with only three months’ experience.

Then, while the city was looking for another clerk-treasurer, Grace had to go on medical leave.

“So we got (Tonya Nelson) in here to help,” she said. “I had to train her to do the utility billing and answer phones and stuff like that. But I just dove in headfirst. I wasn’t being the clerk-treasurer. I was just helping the engineers with what’s going on with the water, and answering questions, helping the mayor with this and that.”

“She’s been doing an excellent job,” Nelson told the council. “She’s been doing a lot of training. Even when she was on sick time, she watched videos and took classes. She was able to do online training. So she’s getting very familiar with all of the requirements that the clerk-treasurer has to meet.”

“I was just sitting there, I might as well,” said Grace.

“The whole six weeks I was gone on medical leave, just texting back and forth with the temp deputy clerk and FaceTiming with her and walking her through the system,” she told the Herald.

When she returned, Mayor Gerene Nelson asked her to make it official.“

She asked me if I would ever consider it and I’m like, I’m really happy as deputy clerk,” Grace said. “The more I thought about it, (the more it was) like, ‘Well, I’ve already been doing it for this long. I might as well keep going.’”

This is Grace’s first foray into municipal management, she said. She previously managed a bar and grill in Ephrata, where she learned how to handle payroll and some bookkeeping. When that business closed, she went to work managing the Moose Lodge in Quincy, where she learned to handle more complex matters like taxes and working with accounting software.

“My personal experience working with Amy has been super positive,” Council Member Julie Schooler said at the Tuesday meeting. “Every time I go in there, she’s working super hard. I think that she’s taking steps to grow, and I have really enjoyed working with her. Every time I asked her for information she’s always gotten back to me super quickly.”

“It’s actually kind of scary, honestly,” Grace said. “The responsibility and liability that I have on my shoulders I take very seriously, and I’m going to try my best to do everything correctly.”

Joel Martin can be reached via email at jmartin@columbiabasinherald.com.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Missouri hospitals house children in foster care with no place to go

by

On an early June day, five foster children were being housed by SSM Health at hospitals in the St. Louis area not because they were sick, but because there was no other place for them to live. They had each been in the hospital an average of 56 days.

There were 23 adult clients of the Department of Mental Health — people with a developmental disability or behavioral issue — being boarded by SSM. Each had been hospitalized an average of 193 days.

And there were 10 adults over age 65 or considered fragile, also mental health clients, boarded in SSM hospitals for no medical reason, who had been there an average of 403 days each.

SSM is not the only hospital system housing children and adults who have no other place to go after receiving treatment. All of Missouri’s hospital systems have served this function at one point or another in the last year, and the number of children in limbo has been growing.

Of the 13,183 foster children in the custody of the Missouri Children’s Division at the end of April, 52 were housed in medical facilities and 258 were housed in mental health facilities. At the end of April 2022, there were 72 foster children in medical facilities and 92 in mental health facilities.

The Department of Mental Health also has difficulty finding residential support providers. It has 704 clients who are developmentally disabled waiting for a residential placement, with the more than three dozen housed in hospitals considered among the most critical for placement.

“Unfortunately, right now, hospitals are a place where both residential facilities and in some cases, therapeutic foster families — or you know, or families in general — will bring their children because they don’t feel adept at caring for the child,” said Michelle Schafer, regional vice president for behavioral health at SSM. “There are usually significant behavioral components to the situation.”

‘It’s happening everywhere’

Foster children living in hospitals or other temporary locations for long periods isn’t just a Missouri problem. Many states are finding it difficult to recruit foster parents, especially in rural areas, KFF Health News reported this week.

Many are working to regain staff lost during the COVID-19 pandemic or lured away by rising wages in less demanding jobs.

“We lost about 50% of our residential beds, because we had a workforce shortage, which then sort of turned this cycle into a situation where we had a lot of kids, and we had no place for them to go,” Schafer said.

During the legislative session that ended in May, lawmakers added a modest amount to the budget for community service providers supporting people with developmental disabilities. The extra money will allow those providers to boost pay by about $1 an hour, to just over $16 an hour.

They also passed legislation, sponsored by Sen. Elaine Gannon, directing the Mental Health and Social Services departments to study and report on the impact of hospitalizing foster children and Department of Mental Health clients “without medical justification because appropriate post discharge placement options are unavailable,” and how to end it.

The bill also includes a number of other provisions, such as changes to professional licensing and changes to where the mental health department must treat people facing criminal charges who are not competent to stand trial.

Gannon doesn’t remember who first convinced her to file a bill addressing foster children being housed in hospitals, she said.

But she remembers thinking it couldn’t be true.

“This doesn’t happen,” Gannon recalled thinking. “They don’t leave somebody in a hospital for six months, a year or even a month because they don’t have anywhere to send them. I can’t really believe that. Well, let me tell you, it’s the truth, and it is happening, and it’s happening everywhere.”

‘All the top people’

If signed by Gov. Mike Parson, the legislation that passed this year would formalize work already being done in consultation with providers, clients, schools and the courts, thanks to a conversation Gannon had with Schafer after a hearing in 2022.

Schafer had followed Gannon back to her office.

“She comes in and sits down, and all of a sudden, I’m hearing all these issues in the mental health area, and the foster care system, and all the problems they’re having, this patient boarding, everything,” Gannon said. “And I’m just kind of sitting there overwhelmed.”

The problem, she recalls thinking, was too important to wait for the legislation.

“The biggest complaint was that there was a lack of communication,” Gannon said. “Nobody wanted anybody else telling them what to do. Or how to do their job. And nothing was getting done.”

That is when she decided to bring department and division directors together with hospital representatives, as well as advocates for children and people with developmental disabilities or behavior disorders. And although she has been a legislator since 2013, Gannon wasn’t sure exactly who to invite.

But she knew that Schafer did.

“I said ‘I want all the top people in this,” Gannon said. “‘I don’t want the person that’s three under the top person or even one under the top person. I want the top people. You know who they are. I do not know who they are.’ I said ‘You get a list.’”

And she made Schafer the chair.

The first meeting, in April 2022, brought together Robert Knodell, director of Social Services, Val Huhn, director of the Department of Mental Health, Darrell Missey, director of the Children’s Division, Brian Kinkade, vice president of children’s health and Medicaid advocacy at the Missouri Hospital Association, and about a dozen others.

Given the name Children’s Behavioral Health Committee, also referred to as the Children’s Mental Health Collaborative, it now meets monthly and has at times 30 or more participants. Schafer said the emphasis has been on collaboration and keeping the focus on who is being served rather than finding blame.

“What we’ve decided to do instead is come together in what is truly a crisis and say, ‘You know, we’re all going to recognize that it is a failed system, that deinstitutionalization is failing right now. And we’re all going to lean in and be committed to doing our part to make it better,’” Schafer said.

What a hospital can’t provide

Kinkade, director of social services under Gov. Jay Nixon, said finding placements for foster children after treatment, especially for high-needs children, has always been difficult.

At the end of April 2017, about the time Kinkade left the department, there were 33 foster children in medical facilities and 53 in mental health facilities. The numbers were virtually the same in April 2019. The numbers started creeping up a year later, when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

“The pandemic really kicked it into high gear in terms of being a major issue,” Kinkade said.

Hospitals are not designed or staffed to provide housing for foster children and adults with developmental disabilities or behavior issues that do not need treatment for acute conditions, Kinkade said.

“Equally important, and what we need to remain mindful of, is that that’s not a good setting either for the child or the young adult who’s in that situation,” Kinkade said. “They need social supports, they need connections to communities, that a hospital just can’t provide.”

The majority of children in foster care are removed from their homes because of neglect tied to behavioral health issues, explained Mary Chant, chief executive of Missouri Coalition for Children during a hearing this year on House legislation identical to Gannon’s bill.

She said in the hearing that the state has lost about half its residential placements for high needs foster children during the past three years.

“The reality of the situation is if we look at our entire continuum of care for children and youth, we’ve got issues and capacity at every point in time,” Chant said in an interview with The Independent.

Solutions floated

Children in foster care and adults with behavioral and developmental issues living in hospitals is just a symptom of a bigger issue, Kinkade said, and the solutions have to be bigger as well.

“The way this problem presents itself, in the most stark and dramatic fashion, is in these boarding situations,” he said. “But in many ways, those boarding situations are reflecting kind of a general lack of capacity in the systems of care that treat these folks with developmental disabilities and with emotional or behavioral health problems.”

Missouri puts children into foster care at nearly twice the national average rate, according to the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform. And part of the process of rebuilding the division is focusing on preventing removal in the first place.

“If you put services on the front end to prevent those things from getting to a place where a child had to be removed, that’s a much better expenditure of money,” Children’s Division Director Darryl Missey said during a January budget hearing.

Each child in foster care costs the state around $25,000 per year. Traditional foster families receive a maintenance stipend of $450 to $630 a month, and the state pays up to $1800 a month for families fostering children with “elevated needs.”

Gannon’s legislation directs the committee to make three reports, with the first due Dec. 1. The committee would continue working through 2024, with a second interim report in the summer and a final report due at the end of that year.

Whatever solution it offers is almost certain to cost money. And not a small amount.

Increasing the wages of direct care workers in residential programs serving people with developmental disabilities by $1 an hour cost $171 million. That is only a fraction of the $910 million in new funding called for by a market study on workforce needs.

Support for rebuilding the program and recognition that provider rates need to be increased are signs that lawmakers are taking the issues seriously, said Erica Signars, a special assistant professional in the Department of Social Services.

“We’re in a good place because we’ve got folks’ attention,” Signers said. “We’ve got good support by the legislature and others to kind of help us identify some solutions to solve the issues that we’re seeing today.”

The committee is considering statutory and administrative changes to make interagency communication and cooperation — identified as a major factor in some cases — easier. The point, Chant said, is to break down jurisdictional barriers where people disclaim authority, leaving people in limbo.

“Those things may be true, but none of those things help us figure anything out,” Chant said. “Our first question has to be: What is it that the child’s family needs? And what do we need to do to get them that?”

The committee is also looking at how services are funded, how they are delivered, and how to support better use of residential facilities, Schafer said. It is examining models for delivering residential support services to children with behavioral or developmental needs, and what can be adapted to the current problem, she said.

With everyone at the table agreeing Missouri’s systems are in crisis, the first step was to get past blame, Schafer said.

“Blame has no place in this,” she said. “It is literally all collaboration and partnership as we are committed to do this work, and up to it including having legislative support.”

This was first published by the Missouri Independent, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization covering state government, politics and policy, and is reprinted with permission.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Burns’ dominant relief outing carries Vols to a 6-4 win over Stanford in College World Series | Other Sports

by

OMAHA, Neb. — Chase Burns pitched six shutout innings in relief of Chase Dollander, Tennessee manufactured two runs to break a tie in the seventh and the Volunteers knocked Stanford out of the College World Series with a 6-4 victory Monday.

Tennessee (44-21) ended a six-game CWS losing streak dating to 2001 and plays Tuesday against the loser of the Monday night game between No. 1 national seed Wake Forest and No. 5 LSU.

Stanford (44-20) went 0-2 at the CWS for a second straight year.

Burns (5-3), who went from weekend starter at the start of the season to bullpen bulldog at the end, mixed his slider with a fastball he ran up to 102 mph while striking out nine and limiting the Cardinal to two hits.

“Coming out of the bullpen, you’ve got one thing in mind; it’s just do your job,” Burns said. “No fight is too big for us. Just going to go out there, do my job, hope for the best.”

Burns’ best was great against the Cardinal. He was the first reliever since 1997 to blank an opponent for six innings at the CWS.

“Hat’s off to him because that was an all-time performance at the College World Series,” Stanford coach David Esquer said.

Burns won national freshman honors last year as a weekend starter, and he continued in that role the first two months of this season. After he started 2-3 with a 6.10 ERA, he moved to the bullpen April 21.

Burns said he’s fully adjusted to the role, and the Vols are comfortable calling on him for middle relief or as a closer. In four tournament appearances, Burns has allowed one run and struck out 22 in 16 innings.

“It’s extremely special to have a guy like this in our program,” teammate Jared Dickey said. “He does great things for us. He showed you today that if you put your mind to something you can do whatever you want to do. So credit to him for a great outing.”

The Vols took the lead in the seventh when Griffin Merritt drew a leadoff walk from Matt Scott (5-5), reached third on Blake Burke’s double and scored on Denton’s grounder to short. Burke made it a two-run game when he came home on Brandt Pancer’s wild pitch.

Quinn Mathews, who made national headlines for throwing 156 pitches in super-regional win over Texas on June 11, held the Volunteers scoreless until they batted around on him in the fifth inning and forced his departure.

“Quinn’s bailed us out all year,” reliever Drew Dowd said. “When I took the ball I said, ‘You picked us up enough this year. I’ve got you right here.’ Today it wasn’t easy for him. I don’t think he had his best stuff, but he battled. Just didn’t go his way that fifth inning.”

Hunter Ensley’s sacrifice fly, Jared Dickey’s base hit up the middle and Christian Moore’s two-run single tied it 4-all. Mathews left with the bases loaded after having thrown 89 pitches and allowing 10 hits.

Dollander lasted only three innings, matching his shortest outing of the season. The projected first-round draft pick gave up two runs in the first inning and two in the third, allowed four hits, walked two and struck out two.

The wind was blowing in, making conditions unfavorable for two teams that use the home run to generate much of their offense.

Tennessee’s Maui Ahuna attempted to score on a fly to left in the first inning but was easily thrown out at home by shallow-playing Alberto Rios.

“It was a kick in the gut to think we’re going to be ahead in the first,” Vols coach and former Missouri player and assistant Tony Vitello said, “and now we’re down in the first.”

The Vols tried Rios again in the fifth, sending Denton home on a fly that was a bit deeper. Rios’ throw was off line, and Denton was able to slide in ahead of Malcolm Moore’s tag.

Stanford asked for video reviews of the call at the plate and to see if Denton left third before the catch. The play stood, and the Vols continued their onslaught against Mathews.

It was the third time in six NCAA Tournament wins that the Vols came from behind. They’ve wiped out four-run deficits twice when facing elimination. After losing their super regional opener at Southern Mississippi, they were down 4-0 after three innings in Game 2 and rallied to win 8-4.

“This is a wild place,” Vitello said. “You’re dying to get here as a ball player from the time you’re a little tyke, but you better be careful what you ask for because when you get here, it’s not going to be easy at any point.”

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

Parson’s office hid plans on gender-affirming care, transgender athletes bills

by

When Missouri lawmakers passed bills restricting gender-affirming care and barring transgender athletes, many wondered: When will the governor sign the much-debated legislation?

Representatives and senators signed up to receive alerts about the bills from the governor’s office and asked for signed copies of the legislation. People emailed, called and sent handwritten letters to the governor — with at least two-thirds of the inquiries asking Gov. Mike Parson to veto the bills.

“If you sign this legislation into law, you give permission for extremists to continue to attack young children and their families for being who they are,” a resident of Kansas City wrote in an email to Parson, obtained by The Independent in a Sunshine Law request.

It appeared that, although the single-subject bills were a high priority for some Republican lawmakers, the bills wouldn’t be among the first to get Parson’s blessing. The governor has until July 14 to sign bills into law.

The governor signed a bill relating to physical therapy to kickstart his signatures in late April. On June 2, a press advisory outlined his schedule for the following week with a plan to sign five noncontroversial bills June 7.

But after signing those five bills in an open-door ceremony, Parson’s office announced the endorsement of two different bills: the gender-affirming care restrictions for minors and legislation barring transgender athletes from competing according to their gender identity.

Through a records request under Missouri’s Sunshine Law, The Independent learned that the governor’s office planned for a secret signing of the bills and ignored questions about the date the legislation was up for Parson’s signature.

The governor’s office did not respond to questions about the decision to sign the bill so quickly and without ceremony.

In May, Kansas City Star reporter Kacen Bayless asked the governor’s communications director Kelli Jones multiple times when Parson might sign the two bills.

The evening of May 31, Bayless asked Jones for “any update on when Gov. Parson plans to sign (the gender-affirming care restrictions) into law.”

Jones had just received an email from Jared Hankinson, operations and communications specialist, that said the office would add the closed-door bill signing to the calendar for June 7. Hankinson’s email denoted the two bills’ authorization as “in office, closed to public” with the five other signings as “in office, open to public.”

About 15 minutes after receiving Hankinson’s email, Jones told Bayless: “All bills are still being reviewed.”

The next morning, the governor’s staff received a calendar alert of the “closed-door signing.”

Bayless wasn’t the only one left out of the loop.

The sponsor of the gender-affirming-care ban, Sen. Mike Moon, R-Ash Grove, said his aides alerted him to the news after the bill’s signing.

“We even had some folks from out of state wanted to be a part of the bill signing,” Moon said. “I received several notes of disappointment that they weren’t allowed to be a part of it.”

This is the first bill of Moon’s to make it to the governor’s desk after 10 legislative sessions, and he thought it was customary to have the bill sponsors there.

The governor’s executive legislative assistant, Sherri Kempf, sent a letter to legislators’ office, allowing them to opt into receiving updates about Parson’s action on bills and obtaining signed copies of legislation.

“Not all bills have ceremonial signings, however, we will keep you updated on any decisions that are made on the bills when the information is available,” the email says.

Multiple lawmakers from the House and Senate signed up to receive updates and signed copies of Moon’s bill.

But after the office scheduled the June 7 signings, staff members only alerted the sponsors of the bills signed in the open-door ceremony, according to internal emails.

The gender-affirming-care and transgender athletes bills were second and third on a list of legislation for staff to review, yet staff didn’t reveal to inquirers that the two bills may be some of the first to receive Parson’s signature.

“I know that there are a lot of people who are not happy” about the private signing, Moon said. “I guess, on the other side, the bill was signed, and now we wait to see how that turns out.”

This was first published by the Missouri Independent, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization covering state government, politics and policy, and is reprinted with permission.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Columbia

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 12
  • Page 13
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 19
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

More to See

four seasons in missouri

Seasonal Self-Storage Is Essential in Missouri

Storage Tips for Missouri Residents from Route K Storage Missouri’s ever-changing seasons bring diverse needs for residents who rely on self-storage. … [Read More...] about Seasonal Self-Storage Is Essential in Missouri

S and S Nationwide is your locally owned logistics partner

New Year | Better Logistics

U.S. Machinery Moving, Inc., also known as USMMI, is the fleet of trucks, trailers and drivers behind S and S NATIONWIDE, LLC. These trucks are the … [Read More...] about New Year | Better Logistics

sarah jane photography portrait gallery wall

Sarah Jane Photography Adds Unique Family Portrait Wall Service in Columbia, MO

Sarah Jane Photography introduces the Portrait Gallery Wall Design & Installation service in Columbia MO. Elevate your home or office space easily … [Read More...] about Sarah Jane Photography Adds Unique Family Portrait Wall Service in Columbia, MO

show-me dinosaurs rex and baby dinosaurs

Show-Me Dinosaurs Party Entertainment Service Roars into Columbia MO

"Show-Me Dinosaurs", a newly launched party entertainment service, is set to bring the magic of dinosaurs to life in Columbia, MO and other towns in … [Read More...] about Show-Me Dinosaurs Party Entertainment Service Roars into Columbia MO

Footer

Copyright © 2012 - 2024 | All Rights Reserved | About/ Contact

Terms and Conditions - Privacy Policy