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Jefferson City

Palmer praised, thanked at last meeting as Jeff city administrator

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Retiring Jefferson city administrator Mike Palmer attended his last city council meeting in that capacity June 27. Palmer’s retirement is effective July 7; the next council meeting is July 11.

Jefferson mayor Matt Gordon (right) presents a plaque to Mike Palmer for his 15 years as city administrator

He thanked the council, calling his 15-year tenure “a good ride.” He credited the council as having “generated a lot of ‘can-do’ attitude that has permeated out to the general public. I see youth getting involved. It’s really been great to see…”

He said he and his wife Sherry plan to stay in Jefferson. “Jefferson has everything we could want here. I want to thank everybody,” Palmer said.

Mayor Matt Gordon presented Palmer with a plaque and then invited comments.

City attorney David Morain referred to Palmer’s “steady leadership” and “good stewardship.” City council member Harry Ahrenholtz recalled that the city is much changed from when he moved here 20 years ago and that the changes have been positive.

Council member Matt Wetrich, who is now director of Jefferson Matters: Main Street, thanked Palmer for his involvement with Jefferson Matters, particularly as a volunteer outside of office time.

Council member Darren Jackson noted that Palmer’s door was always open and he was willing to answer questions.

“In the last 15 years more has happened in Jefferson than in years before that,” council person Dave Sloan said. “A lot of that is due to Mike.”

In the business portion of the meeting, the council approved updating the policy regarding the forgiveness of sewer fees in certain circumstances. The change increases the sewer charge needed before the water/sewer/streets committee considers waiving a portion from $500 to $675. The change reflects the increase in sewer rates, as bills under normal circumstances are higher than they were.

The council approved three public hearings to be held at the July 11 meeting. One will be on rezoning properties near the Union Pacific railroad tracks and N. Cedar St from residential to light industrial. Two of the parcels to be rezoned are owned by the city. The second public hearing will be on the sale of those properties (205 and 207 E. Perry) to Tim Buenz for rental storage units. The third is regarding zoning for a planned unit development by Rowland Real Estate near Head Park in northeast Jefferson.

Ahrenholtz reported from the city finance committee that revenues and expenses are “pretty much on track” through the end of May, although there have been some timing issues in accessing bond funds for the wastewater treatment plant project. “We’re well on track for a balanced year,” he said.

Wetrich reported that golf course revenues are up 35 percent and expenses are down 2 percent. “Joe’s (Foote) been doing a great job buttoning things up and getting more accountability,: Wetrich said. He also mentioned increased usership.

Jackson reported that several pickleball players attended the last parks and recreation board meeting to ask for more pickleball courts. The city has painted pickleball lines on the tennis courts at Russell Park and the racquetball court at the community center can be used for pickleball, but that’s the extent of courts in the city. Parks and rec staff report as many as 50 persons play pickleball regularly in Jefferson.

Jackson also said the state is slow to inspect and approve the new slide and climbing wall at the municipal pool. They cannot be used without that approval. Wetrich said it may not happen before the end of the swim season.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Mid Mo Express Black captures GB Bash crown

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The Mid Mo Express Black 16U took home the championship during the weekend in the GB Summer Bash after finishing the tournament with a 3-1 record at the American Legion Post 5 Sports Complex.

The Express split their two contests Friday, beating the Jefferson City Post 5 Juniors Auxiliary 3-1 before dropping an eight-inning contest to the Jefferson City Post 5 Juniors by a final of 7-6.

Nolan Laughlin threw a two-hit complete game to pick up the win on the mound against the Juniors Auxiliary. Laughlin struck out 10 batters with no walks and allowed just one run.

The Juniors Auxiliary scored their lone run in the bottom of the fourth on a sacrifice fly, but the Express used an error to tie the game with two outs in the sixth.

Wyatt Wilfrey broke the tie for the Express in the seventh by scoring on a double steal, and Ethan Burt created the final margin by crossing the plate via an error.

The Juniors plated four runs in the eighth inning Friday against the Express to pick up the victory.

The Express jumped ahead 2-0 with a run in each of the third and fourth innings — Wilfrey drove in Hayden Lackman with a sac fly in the third and Laughlin drove in Burt with a single in the fourth — but the Juniors responded by tying the game with two runs in the fifth before taking a 3-2 lead with another run in the sixth.

The Express tied the game back up in the bottom half. Lackman reached base on a leadoff single and scored the tying run two batters later on a sacrifice fly by Max Howell.

After the Juniors scored four runs in the top of the eighth, the Express nearly tied it in the bottom half.

Back-to-back walks opened the frame and Buhr cut the deficit in half with a two-RBI double to left. Cummings drove in Buhr with a sac fly to make it 7-6 before a strikeout ended the contest.

Burt got the start on the mound and allowed two runs on three hits with one walk and six strikeouts, Gabe DeFily allowed one run on one hit and walk in his one inning and Blake Holtmeyer took the loss after giving up three runs on one hit and two walks in his two innings.

The Express used an 11-run fifth inning to end their contest with Eureka Post 177 JV by run rule.

The Express started fast by scoring four runs in the top of the first and two more in the second to create a 6-0 lead.

Post 177 JV responded with a run in the bottom of the second and third to cut their deficit to 6-2, but the Express scored the final 13 runs of the contest to create the 19-2 final.

The Express finished with 16 hits in the contest. Miles Bethellled the way after finishing 3-for-3 with three RBI and two runs, while Laughlin, Lackman, Justin Case and Howell all picked up two hits. 

Wilfrey pitched all five innings on the mound for the Express, allowing two runs (one earned) on five hits with three walks and three strikeouts.

The Express scored at least one run in every inning of the championship game Sunday to avenge their loss from Friday beat the Juniors 12-2 in a run-rule victory in five innings.

Each side scored a run in the first before the Express took a 2-1 lead into the third inning.

The Express took control with a three-run third. Gavin Williamsdrove in the first run with a groundout, Lackman singled in Jackson Koch and Case extended the lead to 5-1 with a sac fly.

The Juniors scored their final run in the bottom of the third before the Express clinched the win by scoring three in the fourth and five in the fifth.

Laughlin finished the game 3-for-3 at the plate to lead the Express, DeFily scored four times and collected two hits and Lackman and Howell each added two hits.

Williams was credited with the win on the mound after throwing all five innings and allowing just two runs on four hits and a walk while striking out three.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

B Magazine: Business Briefs (6/28/23)

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APPROVALS

Cape Girardeau County Public Health Center approved operation of two brick-and-mortar restaurants and five food trucks for operation in April.

* Restaurants: Rosie’s Bake Shoppe in Egypt Mills; Burger King in Jackson.

* Mobile units: Frozen Scoops & More; A La Carte Meal Prep; Mueller’s Munchies; Lemonade House Grill; The Back 40 Mac Shack.

FOOD TRUCK LAUNCHED

Mudcat Coffee House, 4056 Route E, Oak Ridge, in continuous operation since 2015, added a mobile food truck in May.

“My family was at a flea market, and we saw a 12-foot metal catfish there. My oldest son looked at it and said, ‘If I ever opened a coffee shop, the name should be ‘mudcat’, after freshwater catfish, because it’s a cool name,” she recalled.

Moore said 90% of Mudcat Coffee House’s food served is made from scratch, generally farm to table. Friday is always catfish night.

OPEN HOUSE FOR TECH SCHOOL

Ranken Technical College, 1907 N. Perryville Blvd., Perryville, held a June 20 open house for its new 25,000-square-foot location at 1907 N. Perryville Blvd. in Perryville, Missouri.

Ranken has operated classes out of Perryville’s TG Missouri building since 2017, offering programs including diesel technology, industrial engineering technology, information technology and fabrication and welding.

Beginning in fall 2023, a new heating/ventilation/air conditioning (HVAC) class will be added to Ranken’s curriculum.

HOSPITAL SYSTEM RECEIVES GRANT

Saint Francis Foundation has been awarded a $25,000 transportation grant from American Cancer Society.

In a prepared release, the foundation said the money will underwrite gas cards and car service rides for eligible patients “who face transportation barriers for cancer-related appointments.”

CO-WORKING SPACE ESTABLISHED

Amanda and Matt Huber have opened HubCo, a two-story, 8,400-square-foot business offering coworking spaces at 1427 Thomas Drive in Cape Girardeau.

NEW FAST-FOOD EATERY

IN JACKSON

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Midamerica Hotels has opened a new Burger King restaurant at 2235 E. Jackson Blvd (U.S. 61) on the same site of one it razed in late October.

The new 3,315-square-foot eatery, with a double-lane drive-thru instead of its predecessor’s single-lane access, was a more than $1 million project.

Midamerica said it operates three dozen Burger King franchises in four states: Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky and Arkansas.

NEW JACKSON BRIDGE BY

THE NUMBERS

Jackson’s $1.6 million West Mary Street Bridge and Sidewalks project opened to the public in May, the second major infrastructure project completed in the city in recent years.

The bridge replaced a low-water crossing into City Park, which flooded regularly and left West Mary, a collector street, frequently impassible for motorists.

MISSOURI TAKES NO ACTION

ON CONTROVERSIAL APP

A bill to remove TikTok from governmental information technology devices filed in Jefferson City by GOP Sen. Travis Fitzwater of Holts Summit, Missouri, expired with the close of the General Assembly session in mid-May.

Senate Bill 596 was assigned to the Senate’s Emerging Issues Committee but never reached the floor for a vote.

Royal Café opens in downtown Poplar Bluff

Mimi’s Market officially opened its Royal Cafe to diners during the week of May 22. The retail shop and café are run by owner Leigh Morgan, daughter CoCo Raymer and mother Mimi Shelly Moore. The retail shop has been open since September, but the cafe portion, which serves sandwiches and salads, needed additional work before opening.

The location was purchased by the family in 2015, then gutted and renovated to include exposed brick and other historical details. The business is open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. from Monday to Saturday at 305 S. Main in Poplar Bluff.

BREAK FOR AMEREN

CUSTOMERS

Ameren Missouri received permission from the state Public Service Commission to adjust its fuel adjustment charge (FAC) downward, which will allow the utility’s 1.29 million electric customers to see a savings on bills.

According to a May 18, news release, a residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity a month will see the FAC charge lowered by approximately $1.01 per month, from $6.27 to $5.26.

The change, PSC said, took effect June 1.

LOCALLY-BASED HOTEL CHAIN MARKS HALF A CENTURY

Drury Hotels, which opened its first hotel in 1973 in Sikeston, Missouri, marked 50 years in business in April. Drury Hotels owns and operates 150 hotels in 26 states.

JACKSON NAMES NEW

RETAIL DIRECTOR

Shelly Wessell Kaiser is the new retail and membership director for both the City of Jackson and Jackson Area Chamber of Commerce.

Kaiser, who succeeded Jen Berti in the role, left a 30-year career in banking to accept the post.

FORMER NFL STAR RAISES FUNDS FOR PERRYVILLE

MEMORIAL

Rocky Bleier, retired Super Bowl-winning running back for the Pittsburgh Steelers, keynoted a fundraiser for Perryville’s Missouri National Veterans Memorial.

Bleier’s appearance at the gala, held at Hilton St. Louis Frontenac Hotel in Frontenac, Missouri, netted the memorial $250,000, according to the not-for-profit’s executive director, Rae Lynn Munoz, herself a Marine Corps veteran.

Poplar Bluff Regional Medical Center receives award

Poplar Bluff Regional Medical Center’s Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Center received the 2022 President’s Circle Award for achieving clinical and operational excellence.

This award was given by Healogics, the nation’s largest provider of advanced wound care services, for their positive outcomes and quality of care, according to a press release from PBRMC. Out of 600 wound centers, 31 were awarded the President’s Circle.

Sikeston Chamber to renovate former post office building

The Sikeston Regional Chamber now owns the former post office building at 215 N. New Madrid Street. During the Sikeston City Council meeting Monday, Council approved a request for proposal from the Sikeston Regional Chamber and Area Economic Development Corporation to take over the building.

With the help of an ARPA Tourism Grant, the SRC will renovate the building and create a visitor’s center housing the Sikeston Regional Chamber, Economic Development Corporation, Convention and Visitors Bureau, Historic Downtown Sikeston and a rodeo museum.

Hearts with Hooves has ribbon cutting

The Sikeston Regional Chamber held a ribbon cutting for one of its newest members, Hearts with Hooves. Hearts with Hooves Inc. is a program for kids, at-risk kids, foster kids, kinship kids, guardianship and adopted kids. They work on six areas of life skills as well as earned riding and fun activities.

Hearts with Hooves always welcomes donations both monetary and in supplies to allow for field trips, proper footwear and more.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Businessman became namesake for rural Cole County town

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Many communities have been titled out of respect for pioneering spirits and dreamers who incurred the risks associated with building a business.

In rural Cole County, there remains the legacy of an individual who embraced an opportunity presented by the coming of the railroad and has been memorialized by having his name attached to a small town.

Born in St. Louis on Dec. 1, 1848, Charles W. Lohman was the oldest of eight children — two of whom died in infancy. His father, Charles F. Lohman, a native of Prussia, moved his family to Jefferson City when his oldest son was quite young.

According to “The Illustrated Sketch Book and Directory of Jefferson City and Cole County” printed in 1900, Charles W. Lohman was “educated in the public schools of Jefferson City.”

The book continued, “He later attended the Bryant & Stratton Commercial College in St. Louis, from which he graduated in 1870. … (H)e took a position as clerk on the steamer ‘Viola Bell’ of which his father was the owner and which operated between St. Louis and the head-waters of the Missouri.”

As young men, Charles W. Lohman and his brothers learned much from their father, who engaged in several successful mercantile interests and was an organizer and director of First National Bank in Jefferson City.

The experiences he received working aboard his father’s steamboat helped prepare him for future entrepreneurial endeavors, but was cut short when the ship sank in 1871. The following year, he purchased a mercantile business on the corner of Dunklin and Jefferson streets in Jefferson City previously owned by William Herman Morlock.

A milestone event occurred Dec. 11, 1873, when the 25-year-old Lohman married Elizabeth Steininger. She was the daughter of Capt. Jacob Steininger, a German immigrant and Union veteran of the Civil War who served as a postmaster for Jefferson City. The couple raised one son, who was named Charles F. in honor of Lohman’s father.

The 1889 edition of “Godspeed’s History of Cole County” noted that Lohman and his new wife moved to the growing community of Stringtown in 1874, purchasing a general store from Edward Linsenbardt in addition to a large swath of timber-covered property.

“Stringtown received its name, due to the fact that along a stretch of road about four miles long, there were 12 families who built log houses about 1/6 mile apart, farmed the land around their homes, but made most of their money by conducting a business of some sort,” wrote the late O.W. Soell, a Lohman-area businessman.

He added, “This four-mile road was traveled by stagecoach by nearly all the folks that wanted to go from Jefferson City to Springfield.”

Located about two miles west of the North Moreau River in the center of Stringtown, Charles W. Lohman was appointed the town’s postmaster in 1875, operating the post office from his store. Stringtown, in addition to serving as a stagecoach stop, boasted several businesses such as a dance hall, saloon, blacksmith, wagon-making shop and a one-room log school.

“Godspeed’s History of Cole County” explained that “in 1882, (Lohman) built a storehouse on the branch railroad recently completed through Cole County, and established a station there.” (This new store was located a couple miles north of his first store in Stringtown.)

A Lohman historical booklet printed in 1976 reveals that “the village of Lohman saw its establishment in 1882, continuing to be known by the familiar name of Stringtown. Exactly when the town began to be known as Lohman after its founder is not clear.”

Records show that when the town was originally platted on Feb. 11, 1882, it was recorded under the name of Stringtown, prior to becoming known as Lohman.

“Lohman’s store did grow and prosper, and soon a village began to build up below St. Paul’s (Lutheran) Church and the storehouse and post office established by Charles W. Lohman,” the Lohman historical booklet explained.

As a Lutheran and son of German immigrants, Lohman shared a connection with many area residents. As early as the 1830s, German immigrants began settling in the vicinity and, in 1852, organized St. Paul’s Lutheran Church on a hill south of where Lohman’s store was later established.

Intially, Lohman opened his new store in partnership with John Henry Kautsch, naming the firm Lohman & Company. The Lohman historical booklet adds, “In 1885, Mr. Lohman moved his stock of goods from Stringtown to Lohman, and shortly after (1887) became sole possessor of the establishment.”

On March 1, 1882, after the post office in Stringtown was abolished, Lohman was commissioned the first postmaster of the town that soon bore his name. Additionally, the forested property he owned in the Stringtown area began to be harvested and sold to the railroad for construction projects.

Little is known about Lohman’s exit from the town other than he remained in business there until shortly after the turn of the century. On Dec. 10, 1904, the 56-year-old merchant died in Jefferson City. He was buried in Riverview Cemetery; his wife was laid to rest in 1932.

His 48-year-old son, Charles F., was employed as a reporter in Spokane, Washington. When he died from a stroke in 1926, he was 51 years old.

The Lohman family has essentially disappeared from the area and the community carrying its name fell into decline when the railroad quit operating in 1962. Improvements made to local highways, along with residents opting to travel to Jefferson City for employment, also contributed to its business and population decrease.

An old adage asserts that time marches on. However, as mentioned in the Russellville sesquicentennial book from 1988, “Lohman is a town that has maintained among its residents a neighborly fellowship and community spirit,” thus serving as a reminder of the early vision of its namesake.

Jeremy P. Ämick is the author of “Moments on the Moreau.”





Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri Supreme Court sets date for arguments in abortion ballot question fight

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JEFFERSON CITY — The Missouri Supreme Court said Friday it would hear oral arguments July 18 in a fight over a ballot initiative to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution.

Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem on Tuesday ordered Attorney General Andrew Bailey to sign off on the abortion initiative’s cost estimate prepared by a fellow Republican, State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick. Bailey has refused to do so.



Missouri State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick, left, and Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey.

Beetem ordered Bailey to approve the fiscal note summary within 24 hours of the ruling. That deadline passed Wednesday with no such action from Bailey.

Bailey instead asked the Missouri Supreme Court to intervene in the case. The Supreme Court on Friday scheduled oral arguments for 3 p.m. on July 18.

Anna Fitz-James, represented by the ACLU of Missouri, originally filed the lawsuit May 4.

After Bailey failed to sign off on the summary this week, the ACLU asked Beetem to issue an order enforcing his order, arguing Bailey couldn’t automatically stay Beetem’s ruling by appealing the case, the Missouri Independent reported.

The outlet reported the attorney general argued his notice of appeal was sufficient to stay Beetem’s order.

The legal conflict stems from a March determination by Fitzpatrick that passage of the amendment would have an estimated cost to state and local governments of at least $51,000 annually.

In response, Bailey said the price tag could be $51 billion, including the possibility of losing all federal Medicaid health insurance funding, which is about $12 billion per year.

Fitzpatrick rejected the claim, arguing that submitting an inaccurate fiscal note would violate his duty as state auditor.

During arguments before Beetem on June 7, ACLU attorney Anthony Rothert said the stand-off has left his client unable to move forward with the collection of signatures needed to place the amendment on the November 2024 ballot.

Beetem acknowledged that Bailey’s delay tactics had impacted the group’s ability to collect signatures, saying his involvement deprived the process of 50 days.

Judge rejects Missouri attorney general's bid to rewrite ballot language on abortion issue

Attorney General Andrew Bailey, who has refused to sign off on the amendment’s potential cost estimate, will have to do so, the judge ordered

Top Missouri Republicans face off in court over abortion amendment

The face-off is part of a lawsuit brought by the Missouri ACLU, which is representing a client seeking to restore abortion rights in the state after the procedure was banned last June.

Missouri AG had no authority to inflate cost of abortion amendment, auditor argues

The case is scheduled for trial on Wednesday morning, with the ACLU asking a judge to order the secretary of state to finalize the summary.

Why have ‘so many good conservatives’ left the Missouri AG’s office, challenger asks

Key lawyers who worked to advance Eric Schmitt’s agenda quit in the first five months of Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s tenure.

Lawsuit over Missouri AG push to inflate cost of abortion ballot measure heads to trial next month

Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick refused to acquiesce to a demand by Attorney General Andrew Bailey to increase the estimated cost of the proposed amendment

ACLU asks judge to force state to finalize ballot summary for Missouri abortion amendment

Supporters of an abortion-rights initiative petition contend the attorney general acted unlawfully when he pressed the state auditor to increase the projected cost of the proposal.

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

ACLU calls ‘shenanigans’ on Missouri AG’s refusal to follow court order on abortion petition

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Complying with an order to certify the fiscal summary on 11 abortion petitions would be an “affirmative irreversible action” that he is entitled to refuse until an appeal is heard, Attorney General Andrew Bailey argued in a court filing Wednesday.

Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem ordered Bailey on Tuesday to issue the certification to State Auditor Scott Fitzpatrick “within 24 hours.” That time limit passed at 9 a.m. Wednesday with no action except Bailey filing an appeal with the Missouri Supreme Court.

The ACLU of Missouri, representing Anna Fitz-James, a St. Louis doctor who submitted the petitions, then filed a motion asking Beetem to order Bailey to comply. The ACLU motion argued that the attorney general’s office is not among parties entitled to an automatic stay when a judgment is appealed.

That is wrong, Bailey’s office wrote in a response brief filed Wednesday afternoon. While Beetem issued a writ of mandamus, he put in a footnote in his decision stating that if that form of an order was not available, he would have issued a declaratory judgment and permanent injunction.

That footnote, Bailey’s office argues in the brief signed by assistant attorney general Samuel Freedlund, means that a 1969 case stating appeals of “an order in the form of a mandatory injunction” results in an automatic stay of the order.

Beetem has not scheduled a hearing on the ACLU’s motion to enforce his order.

Jefferson City attorney Chuck Hatfield, who worked in the attorney general’s office under Democrat Jay Nixon, said Bailey’s actions, first refusing to certify the fiscal note summary and now refusing to comply with the court order, are unprecedented in his experience.

“This has never happened as far as I can tell,” Hatfield said. “This has never happened where an attorney general has refused to certify a fiscal note because he disagrees with the substance of the note. I don’t think it has ever happened that an attorney general has not obeyed a direct court order like this.”

When the appeal was filed to the Supreme Court, he said, Bailey’s office should have asked for a stay of Beetem’s order.

“I think they put themselves at risk of being in contempt,” Hatfield said.

The appeal

In filings at the Supreme Court, the parties are disputing how fast the case should move ahead.

But the court must decide if it wants the case at all. The Supreme Court could send it to the Western District Court of Appeals instead.

In his scheduling request, ACLU of Missouri attorney Tony Rothert asked for all briefs to be filed by July 3.

“The attorney general’s shenanigans have already robbed (Fitz-James) of nearly 60 days from the period in which to challenge that ballot title and collect sufficient signatures,” Rothert wrote.

Bailey is asking the court to give him a deadline of July 5 for the appeal brief, with all filings in by July 19. That is faster than the court’s standard schedule and will leave plenty of time for signature collection, Freedlund wrote.

Fitz-James said in a June 6 deposition that nothing has been done to initiate a signature campaign, Freedlund wrote.

The quicker schedule proposed by Rothert “is unnecessary because there is an independent, non-legal barrier to her collecting signatures: She is not prepared, as a matter of planning and resources, to do so.”

The Supreme Court has not ruled on the scheduling issues.

Abortion politics

Bailey, a Republican appointed in January who is facing a tough primary next year in his first time before voters, refused to accept the fiscal note summary of the petitions prepared by the auditor’s office. Anti-abortion groups have heavy sway in GOP primaries.

Bailey has involved his office in other abortion fights. He has filed briefs in other states in support of anti-abortion laws and joined in federal lawsuits to stop abortions in the Department of Veterans Affairs medical facilities and an FDA rule allowing abortion-inducing medications to be mailed to patients.

On Thursday, he issued a news release encouraging donations to a national fund for agencies operating centers that give anti-abortion counseling to pregnant women.

Missouri was the first state to ban abortions when a law passed in 2019 was triggered by last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade.

Polls show the broader electorate in Missouri supports legal abortion, albeit with some restrictions.

Expecting the initiative campaign, GOP leaders tried and failed in the Legislature to make it more difficult to put initiatives on the ballot and raise the majority needed for passage.

Backed by a political action committee called Missourians for Constitutional Freedom, the proposals would amend the constitution to declare that the “government shall not infringe upon a person’s fundamental right to reproductive freedom.”

That would include “prenatal care, childbirth, postpartum care, birth control, abortion care, miscarriage care and respectful birthing conditions.” Penalties for both patients seeking reproductive-related care and medical providers would be outlawed.

But there are key differences on a range of topics among the 11 proposals.

Each version says there must be a “compelling governmental interest” for abortion restrictions to be put in place. But while some allow the Legislature to regulate abortion after “fetal viability,” others draw the line at 24 weeks of gestation.

Some versions make it clear the state can enact parental consent laws for minors seeking abortions. Others leave the topic out entirely.

The difference between Bailey and Fitzpatrick is over how large the fiscal impact should be.

Fitzpatrick wrote a summary stating that it would have no known impact on state revenues and that one local government had estimated lost future revenue at $51,000.

Bailey wanted Fitzpatrick to write that the initiative endangered the state’s Medicaid funding, Beetem noted in his ruling, and that it would reduce future revenue and it should cite an opponent’s estimate of the cost at $6.9 trillion. Fitzpatrick has been elected state representative, state treasurer and now auditor with the support of anti-abortion groups and said in a statement after Beetem’s ruling that he remains opposed to abortion.

“However,” he said, “I firmly believe my personal stance cannot and should not impact the duty my office has to provide voters with an unbiased assessment of each measure’s fiscal impact.”

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri S&T – News and Events – Summer Scholars spending break on research

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For some students at Missouri University of Science and Technology, summer doesn’t mean a break from learning. Over a dozen students are getting hands-on research experience as part of the Summer Scholars Program.

Participating students are matched with professors and assist them with ongoing research projects for 25 hours per week during the eight-week summer session. In the spring of 2024, the students will present the results of this research as part of Missouri S&T’s Undergraduate Research Conference.

In addition to research experience, the students will participate in weekly professional development seminars covering topics related to research and graduate school. They will also complete a course for at least three credit hours. For more information about this and other hands-on learning programs, please visit experientiallearning.mst.edu.

The following students and professors are participating in the program:

  • Logan Banker, a senior in aerospace engineering from Columbia, Missouri, will work with Dr. Davide Vigano, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, on “Tomographic PIV System for Supersonic Wind Tunnel Application.”
  • Noah Brown, a first-year student in mechanical engineering from Leslie, Arkansas, will work with Dr. David Lipke, assistant professor of materials science and engineering, on “Additive Manufacturing of Ceramic Matrix Composites.”
  • Tylor Cheatham, a junior in environmental sciences from Rolla, Missouri, will work with Dr. Dev Niyogi, professor of biological sciences, on “Phosphorus Cycling in Urban Ponds in Rolla.”
  • Akira Durbin, a first-year student in psychology from St. Robert, Missouri, will work with Dr. Amy Belfi, assistant professor of psychological science, on “Music and Autobiographical Memory in Everyday Life.”
  • Charles Green, a sophomore in biological sciences from Kansas City, Missouri, will work with Dr. Chen Hou, associate professor of biological sciences, on “Metabolic Economy of Cellular Biosynthesis, Defense, Repair, and senescence.”
  • Harrison Hawxby, a sophomore in chemistry from Edmond, Oklahoma, will work with Dr. Garry Grubbs II, associate professor of chemistry, on “A Novel Microwave Spectrometer for Phase and Chiral Coherent Quantum Control.”
  • Kaitlin Miles, a sophomore in chemistry from Griggsville, Illinois, will work with Dr. Klaus Woelk, associate professor of chemistry, on “Industrial Methanol Synthesis Evaluated by Magnetic Resonance Relaxation.”
  • Gunner Shanks, a first-year student in mechanical engineering from Rolla, Missouri, will work with Dr. Jonghuyn Park, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, on “3D-Printed Wearable Batteries.”
  • Aaron Spillars, a senior in aerospace engineering from California, Missouri, will work with Dr. Xiaosong Du, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, on “Deep Learning-Based Efficient Global Optimization Framework with Novel Infilling Criteria for Aerodynamic Design.”
  • Briannah Tiarks, a transfer student in environmental engineering from Rolla, Missouri, will work with Dr. Joel Burken, department chair and Curators’ Distinguished Professor of civil, architectural, and environmental engineering, on “Amendment-Assisted Enhanced Revegetation for Doe Run Mining: Designing, Establishing, and Monitoring of Pilot Scale Field.”
  • Rowan Torbitzky-Lane, a junior in computer science from Fenton, Missouri, will work with Dr. Genda Chen, Robert W. Abbett distinguished professor of civil engineering, on “Horizontal Hyperspectral Imaging Characterization.”
  • Ashton Ventura, a junior in metallurgical engineering from Carthage, Missouri, will work with Dr. Mario Buchely, Roberta and G. Robert Couch assistant professor of materials science and engineering, on “Next Generation Alloy Development for Scanning Induction Hardened Bearings.”
  • Sage Wood, a junior in biological sciences from Jefferson City, Missouri, will work with Dr. Robin Verble, associate professor of biological sciences, on “Evaluations of Wildland Firefighter Environmental Health.”

About Missouri University of Science and Technology

Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T) is a STEM-focused research university of over 7,000 students. Part of the four-campus University of Missouri System and located in Rolla, Missouri, Missouri S&T offers 101 degrees in 40 areas of study and is among the nation’s top 10 universities for return on investment, according to Business Insider. For more information about Missouri S&T, visit www.mst.edu.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

MDC encourages public to water and mulch trees during extreme drought

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – As Missouri continues to experience extreme drought, the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) encourages the public to implement a watering plan for trees, especially newly-planted seedlings. In the urban and suburban forest, where valuable trees shade homes, sidewalks and businesses, watering them now can prevent losing them altogether.

“Living plants are more than 50-percent water,” explained MDC Forestry Field Programs Supervisor Russell Hinnah. “Water taken up by tree roots feeds the tree and transpires through the leaves. A mature tree can move hundreds of gallons of moisture a day!”

When trees lose moisture through leaves and are not able to replace it, water stress develops. Windy conditions can even accelerate this stress. Water stress may not kill a tree outright, but it could weaken a tree and predispose it to other insect and disease problems. Water stress also reduces fruit and nut production.

Symptoms of water stress include leaf droop and the eventual drying and scorching of leaves, resulting in tree canopies turning brown.

“Some trees are dropping leaves to reduce water usage,” said Hinnah. “That doesn’t mean they are dying, but it does mean they’re thirsty and they may have gone dormant. Some species will regrow leaves if watered or if rains return.”

Hinnah advises people to water and mulch trees to help them through the drought.

“Trees and shrubs replenish water loss overnight and early in the day, so watering anytime except afternoon works best,” he said. “It stresses the tree less and less water evaporates.”

Slowly soaking the ground under the canopy of the tree allows roots more chances to absorb water. Hinnah advises against watering the foliage since it could result in fungal growth on the leaves and sunlight could scorch wet leaves if watered during the day. He also advises against watering a tree through a pipe stuck in the soil. Slow watering will cover a larger area and will reach all the absorbing roots.

“Use a soaker hose, sprinkler, or drip irrigation system,” Hinnah suggested. “For smaller trees, simply poke holes in an old hose or recycle milk jugs or other large containers by poking a few holes in the base and filling them with water. If possible, water from the trunk to the drip lines where the longest limbs end.”

Apply the equivalent of about two-inches of rainfall per week.

“If you’re using a sprinkler system, you can estimate this amount of water by placing several small containers under the canopy of your trees,” said Hinnah. “When the average depth in the containers equals two-inches, you’re done with that tree.”

Newly-planted trees are the most susceptible to water stress and should be monitored closely. Many times these trees have lost a percentage of their root system in the digging process and are not very efficient with water uptake.

Applying a ring of mulch around the tree trunk, not up against the trunk, helps retain moisture. Apply a three-foot-wide circle of mulch about three-inches deep ad keep it about three-inches from the trunk. Mulch keeps soil cool and adds nutrients.

Cracks in the soil indicate severe soil drying and add to drought stress for trees by allowing air to reach roots and subsoil to dry them out. Mulching or filling soil cracks with additional soil can help, but simply pushing in the sides of cracked areas can damage surface roots and expose a new layer of soil to sun and wind – creating dryer soil.

For more information on tree care, visit https://mdc.mo.gov/trees-plants/tree-care.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Health Alert Jefferson City: Diabetes increases your risk of blindness. Doctor Explains

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In the news: New research from Dr. Elizabeth Lundeen is showing that as more and more Americans get diabetes–this in turn, is going to increase the number of Americans that are going to be at risk for blindness in the coming years.

Over 10 million Americans are at risk. Talking to your doctor about diabetic retinopathy is important. Getting a dilated eye exam once a year, at the minimum, is recommended.

Diabetes can lead to blindness. You can prevent this!

The Health Standard Newswire

Doctor’s Expert Insights about Managing Eye Health and Diabetes Health in Missouri

Know this: “This study clearly highlights the scary trend that is becoming a reality–more and more people are getting diabetes. And, this puts more and more people at risk for the many side effects of diabetes. This is especially true for our younger populations. If you have diabetes, you should know that your risk for blindness does go up; as does your risk for heart disease. I tell my patients to make sure that they get a dilated eye exam. We keep a very close eye on your blood sugars and A1c levels. The better we manage your diabetes, the less likely you’re going to develop retinopathy and other issues that come from having diabetes. ” Dr. Puja Uppal, Family Medicine.

Next steps to take if you have diabetes: Keep an eye on your A1C levels. And understand that diabetes can harm many parts and systems of your body, including your eyes. Stay in touch with your doctor.

You should know that diabetes can lead to strokes and heart disease. As indicated in prior Health Standard articles, it’s important that you know your ASCVD score. This test can provide guidance on how to decrease your heart attack risks. (Visit Resource Here)

Living in Jefferson City, the following health facts impact your well-being directly!

Did you know there were 1876.0 deaths from diabetes in Missouri in 2021?

17.1% of you in Cole County smoke?

8.9% of you in Cole County have diabetes?

9.6% of you in Cole County feel that you’re health is not good.

All of these variables play an important role in your overall health and diabetic health.

Health Alert Jefferson City: Diabetes increases your risk of blindness. Doctor Explains | News

Health Standard Newswire: JAMA/Ophthalmology. June 2023. doi:10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2023.2289

“Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a common microvascular complication of diabetes and a leading cause of blindness among working-age adults in the US… This study used data from nationally representative and local population-based studies that represent the populations in which they were conducted. For 2021, the study team estimated 9.60 million people (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 7.90-11.55) living with DR, corresponding to a prevalence rate of 26.43% (95% UI, 21.95-31.60) among people with diabetes. The study team estimated 1.84 million people (95% UI, 1.41-2.40) living with VTDR, corresponding to a prevalence rate of 5.06% (95% UI, 3.90-6.57) among people with diabetes. Prevalence of DR and VTDR varied by demographic characteristics and geography.” (Study Source)

JAM Ophthalmology published the findings: Prevalence of Diabetic Retinopathy in the US in 2021 (Read it Here)

The Health Standard Newswire

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

‘Black hole’: Public faces long delays obtaining records from Missouri attorney general

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — When Andrew Bailey took over the Missouri attorney general’s office from Eric Schmitt in January, he inherited more than 200 unfulfilled records requests submitted by members of the public.

Six months later, that backlog continues to grow.

The result: Missourians seeking public records from Bailey’s office face delays that can stretch up to a year.

It’s a situation observers say would be unacceptable for any government agency. But it is especially problematic for the office in charge of enforcing Missouri’s Sunshine Law, which is designed to ensure the public has access to government records and meetings.

“Transparency in government is a good goal, but so is timeliness and responsiveness,” said Jean Maneke, attorney for the Missouri Press Association. “At this rate, responsiveness is almost nonexistent. If justice delayed is justice denied, then delayed responses are the same as denial of a response.”

Maneke said she’s not heard of any other state agencies facing a similar “black hole” of open records requests. She doesn’t understand how the attorney general’s office has managed to fall so far behind when nearly every public record is digital.

According to the attorney general’s office, it is currently working on 374 pending records requests filed by the public. Of those requests, 150 were filed since Bailey took over the office in January and 224 were inherited from Schmitt, who was elected to the U.S. Senate last year.

To verify the scope of the backlog, last week the Independent asked for the attorney general office’s Sunshine log — a list or spreadsheet that most government offices maintain that documents pending records requests.

This sort of narrow request historically can be turned around in a matter of days, Maneke said. The attorney general’s office says the earliest the Sunshine log could be turned over is Dec. 11.

“This date reflects our office’s good faith effort to process Sunshine requests as quickly as possible in the order they are received,” the office’s custodian of records wrote in response to the request.

Bailey may have inherited much of the problem, but the attorney general can’t simply allow the backlog to continue growing while delays mount, said David Roland, director of litigation for the libertarian nonprofit Freedom Center of Missouri.

“It’s not an excuse to say, ‘Oh, well, we’ve just gotten so many requests.’ All right, fine. You’ve gotten a lot of requests. You don’t get to just ignore the law. Treat this as the priority that it ought to be and allocate your resources accordingly,” Roland said. “And if you just don’t have the resources, go to the appropriate legislative body and request more resources. But the solution cannot be to just wave your hands or kick the can down the road.”

A spokeswoman for the attorney general’s office said in an email to the Independent that because of the volume of requests the office receives, “we have named not only a full-time custodian of records, but also dedicated one attorney for full-time legal review and support.”

But Roland said he’s concerned the attorney general’s office has put policies in place that exacerbate the delays in turning over records to the public.

When requests are submitted, an automated response is generated from the office’s custodian of records that declares that requests will be reviewed “in the order they are queued.”

The automated response likely delays when the custodian of records actually receives and reviews a request, Roland said, and insisting on dealing with requests in order means small requests linger needlessly as the office deals with larger inquiries.

“As they’ve got it set up right now,” he said, “it just seems to me that they are intentionally trying to forestall dealing with citizens’ requests. That is a huge problem.”

‘Sunshine Law as an offensive tool’

Previous criticism of the attorney general’s office has focused less on its responsiveness to requests than on allegations that under Schmitt it was weaponizing the Sunshine Law against perceived political enemies during his successful run for U.S. Senate last year.

Schmitt issued broad records requests to a university professor in Seattle who led an organization that studied misinformation online. He demanded 3.5 years of emails from two staff members and a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Missouri, as well as four years of emails from two Missouri School of Journalism professors.

Days after a Missouri State University professor tweeted disparaging comments about Schmitt, the attorney general’s office sent him a request for three months of his emails.

The office also issued requests for records to numerous local school districts, including multiple requests to Springfield Public Schools. The superintendent of the Warren County School District said in March that the district was still holding a huge amount of documents that the attorney general’s office requested but never came to collect.

The Independent filed an open records request in early October asking for all the requests issued by the attorney general’s office during Schmitt’s tenure.

In response, Schmitt’s custodian of records said the documents would be provided in mid-November. At that time, shortly after Schmitt won a U.S. Senate seat, the Independent was informed the records would not be available until mid-December.

In the final days before turning the office over to Bailey, Schmitt’s staff said the records would not be available until March.

When the Independent inquired about the records in March, Bailey’s custodian of records said she was essentially starting from scratch on the October request.

As of last week, the request was still pending.

During an event in March in Warrenton, Bailey suggested he was not interested in copying Schmitt’s tactics regarding the state’s open records laws.

“Keep your documents. I’m good,” Bailey told a local school official, according to the Warren County Record. “I don’t intend to use the Sunshine Law as an offensive tool.”

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

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