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Why Missouri currently doesn’t allow divorce during pregnancy

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A Missouri lawmaker has introduced legislation to clarify that the state’s judges can grant divorces even when one spouse is pregnant.

The notion that they can’t already has sparked anger from people who see it as an antiquated policy that controls women unfairly, possibly trapping them in abusive marriages.

But divorce lawyers say the practice – which goes beyond Missouri – is not meant to be punitive for pregnant women and has some important practical benefits.

Here’s a look at the issue.

CAN PREGNANT WOMEN GET DIVORCED?

The Missouri law on divorce does not specifically bar finalizing divorces for pregnant women, but “whether the wife is pregnant” is one of the eight pieces of information — along with things like where the parties live and when they separated — that’s required when someone files for divorce.

Lawyers and advocates say judges in Missouri and some other states do not finalize divorces when a woman in the couple is pregnant. But that doesn’t prevent someone from starting the process during a pregnancy.

Nevada Smith, a St. Charles, Missouri, lawyer who handles divorces, said it makes sense that judges will not finalize divorces during a pregnancy because a child would impact the custody and child support terms of a divorce. And divorces usually take months, even in the rare ones without contested issues.

“You kind of need to know if you have two children or if you have three,” he said.

Or a child born with special needs could change the equation, too.

The situation is similar in other states, said Kris Balekian Hayes, a Dallas-based lawyer who handles divorces. She said that Texas judges also don’t finalize divorces during a pregnancy of one of the spouses. Exactly which other states have similar practices is hard to determine since it’s not spelled out in divorce laws.

Family law courts in many places are clogged with cases already, Hayes said, so it would not help to revisit them after the birth of a child.

“People have complained that it’s so outlandish that we could force someone to stay married to the batterer,” said Hayes, who said that in 25 years of divorce law, she can think of just four cases she handled that involved pregnancy. “It’s not intended to be punitive to her but to account for the child’s needs.”

She said the first step in dealing with an abusive relationship is to seek a protective order, not divorce.

WHY IS A MISSOURI LAWMAKER CALLING FOR CHANGES?

Missouri Rep. Ashley Aune, a Democrat who is up for reelection this year, said she wants to use the law to make it clear that divorces can be finalized even during pregnancy.

She said the issue was brought to her attention by a group that serves victims of domestic violence, which she said needed to build an additional facility to house women who have several children, partly because they’re not allowed to get divorced while pregnant.

“If you can keep someone perpetually pregnant, it has devastating consequences,” Aune said in an interview.

Aune said there are also men caught up in the policy, including cases where they’re stuck in a marriage to a wife who is pregnant by another man.

“Life is different in 2024 and I’d like to see our policies keep up with the times,” she said.

WHAT’S THE OUTLOOK FOR THE LEGISLATION?

At a committee hearing in February, everyone who signed up to testify about the measure supported it.

In written testimony, Julie Donelon, the president of the Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault, told lawmakers that the restriction on divorce during pregnancy “creates an unnecessary obstacle and delays a woman’s ability to leave an abusive relationship.”

But the path for the legislation isn’t clear.

Aune said she’s been revising the exact language of the measure.

And she said that even after that’s fine-tuned, she’s not sure it will advance, in part because she’s a Democrat in a legislature dominated by the GOP — even though the sponsors of the bill include Republicans.

Rep. Bill Hardwick, chair of the House Emerging Issues Committee, where Aune’s bill was assigned, said he’s open to it but unsure whether it will be brought up for a vote.

“That’s kind of a new frontier for some judges and some lawyers,” Hardwick said. “I think we’ve just got to think through that responsibly.”

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Associated Press reporters Jacques Billeaud in Phoenix; Andrew DeMillo in Little Rock, Arkansas; and David Lieb in Jefferson City, Missouri, contributed to this article.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri is suing Planned Parenthood based on a conservative group’s sting video

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ST. LOUIS (AP) — Missouri’s attorney general filed a lawsuit Thursday accusing Planned Parenthood of illegally taking minors into Kansas to obtain abortions without parental consent, basing the allegation on a video from a conservative group that has promoted false claims on other issues.

Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s lawsuit accuses Kansas City, Missouri-based Planned Parenthood Great Plains of violating Missouri law, which makes it illegal to “intentionally cause, aid, or assist a minor to obtain an abortion” without consent from a parent or guardian. The lawsuit filed in state district court in Columbia, Missouri, asks the court to stop Planned Parenthood from engaging in the conduct it alleges.

Bailey’s lawsuit provides no evidence of the actions alleged outside of a hidden camera video from a conservative group, Project Veritas. The video is of a conversation between Planned Parenthood employees and someone impersonating someone seeking an abortion for a fictitious 13-year-old.

Project Veritas is known for conducting such hidden camera stings. Earlier this month, it acknowledged that claims it made in a video alleging ballot mishandling at a Pennsylvania post office in 2020 were untrue as it settled a lawsuit against the group by a postmaster. In 2021, a Project Veritas video fueled a false claim online that Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine contains aborted fetal cells.

Planned Parenthood Great Plains President and CEO Emily Wales said the lawsuit is based on false information. She said in a statement that Planned Parenthood does not provide any form of transportation for patients. Besides, she said, Kansas law requires minor patients seeking abortion services to have parental consent or to show an order from a Kansas judge authorizing it.

“We will continue following state and federal laws and proudly providing Missourians with the compassionate sexual and reproductive care that remains available to them in a state with a total abortion ban,” Wales said.

Project Veritas did not immediately respond Thursday to a telephone message or email seeking comment.

Missouri is among several conservative-led states that adopted restrictive abortion laws in 2022, after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision establishing the nationwide right to abortion. State law prohibits almost all abortions, except in cases of “medical emergencies.”

GOP lawmakers and state officials have long been at odds with Planned Parenthood. The Republican-led Missouri House on Wednesday gave initial approval to a bill that would bar Medicaid funding from going to Planned Parenthood. Weeks earlier, the Missouri Supreme Court thwarted a previous attempt to end that funding.

Bailey said in a statement it is time to “eradicate Planned Parenthood once and for all.”

Bailey’s lawsuit, based on the Project Vertias video, alleges that Planned Parenthood employees said they could take the girl to a Kansas clinic without parental knowledge, using a doctor’s note written by someone at Planned Parenthood to get the girl out of school.

“This is the beginning of the end for Planned Parenthood in the State of Missouri. What they conceal and conspire to do in the dark of night has now been uncovered,” Bailey said.

Bailey did not say whether he planned to file criminal charges against Planned Parenthood over the conduct the lawsuit alleges. His spokesperson said the office’s investigation is ongoing but did not immediately respond to a question about whether criminal charges could be coming.

But Wales said the Project Veritas video “is heavily doctored and edited.” She called the lawsuit “a press release dressed up as legal action from an unelected attorney general.”

The lawsuit also asks the court to prohibit Planned Parenthood from referring minors for abortions, providing doctor’s notes for minors, paying for lodging for out-of-state abortions for minors, or coordinating with others for any of those activities.

Democratic House Minority Leader Crystal Quade told reporters that she believes that Bailey’s action “falls in the bucket again of another lawsuit just to try to get some headlines in an election year.”

Bailey was appointed attorney general by Republican Gov. Mike Parson after Eric Schmitt was elected to the U.S. Senate in November 2022. Bailey is running for election to the post this year.

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Hanna reported from Topeka, Kansas. Summer Ballentine in Jefferson City, Missouri, contributed to this report.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Winter lead testing results show five Jefferson City schools with sinks above allowable limit

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo (KMIZ)

Results from the Jefferson City School District’s winter lead testing show that five schools had water fixtures with lead levels above the state’s allowable limit. 

The tests were conducted in January, according to data on the Jefferson City School District’s website from the EPA Office of Groundwater and Drinking Water. Of the schools tested, Thomas Jefferson Middle School had the highest number of fixtures that came in above the reporting limit with 14 sinks throughout the building. 

Lawson Elementary had five sinks test above the allowable limit. Cedar Hill Elementary had one sink and one water fountain above the limit, while Nichols Career Center and North Elementary each had one sink above the limit. 

“Of the 415 fixtures we have tested since the spring of 2023, only 36 have tested over the reporting limit,” Jefferson City Public Schools spokesperson Ryan Burns said in a statement to ABC 17 News. “Nearly all of the fixtures that have tested over the reporting limit have been in sinks throughout the schools and have been easily remediated.”

Belair Elementary, East Elementary, Jefferson City Academic Center, Jefferson City High School – Weber Center Weight and Locker Rooms, Moreau Heights Elementary, Pioneer Trail Elementary and Thorpe Gordon STEM Academy were also tested in January and each had no fixtures above the limit. Over the summer, Callaway Hills Elementary had lead levels above the allowable limit and were eventually retested.

Areas tested included water sources used for drinking or food preparation, including drinking fountains, bottle-filling stations, sinks and ice dispensers, according to the district website.

“The district is pleased overall with the outcome of the lead testing we have conducted so far,” Burns said. “We are seeing a very low percentage of fixtures testing above the reporting limit across the district.” 

According to Burns, water sources that test above the reporting limit are immediately removed. The District then begins developing a mitigation strategy which can include replacing a sink faucet or adding a filtration system. Once a solution is in place the fixture is still not used until they get results from a follow-up test. 

Jefferson City Schools Director of Facilities Frank Underwood told ABC 17 News in July that the federal mandate is 15 parts per billion, while the state mandate is 5 parts per billion. 

In 2022, the Missouri Legislature passed the “Get the Lead out of School Drinking Water Act” which sets standards for lead concentrations in school drinking water, according to the Department of Health and Senior Services.

According to the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, the act mandates that educational institutions perform inventory, sampling, remediation and ongoing monitoring for all water outlets for potable use — including drinking, food preparation and utensil cleaning — within a school building. 

A national 2022 study posted on the JAMA Network — a website published by the American Medical Association that hosts medical journals — found that in Missouri 4.5% of children had elevated levels of lead in their blood, which surpassed the national average of 1.9%.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri candidates head to Jefferson City for first day to file for 2024 elections

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Political candidates who make national headlines — and those who may only be known in their hometown — descended on Jefferson City Tuesday morning for the first day of a month-long window to file to run for office in Missouri.

To run for office, candidates have no choice but to show up in person. Some take advantage of the moment, talking to journalists and sending press releases. Others exit through the building’s back door to avoid questions.

Those making the trek on the first day have a separate entrance into the James C. Kirkpatrick State Information Center, home of the Secretary of State’s office. First, they confirm registration with a political party and pay a fee to run under that party’s banner. 

Then they wait in a line on the building’s third floor.

U.S. Rep. Sam Graves was the first to get through the line Tuesday morning, finishing the process at 8:07 a.m. according to the Secretary of State’s website. A total of 435 candidates filed by 5 p.m.

Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft greeted candidates upstairs, smiling ear-to-ear while taking their photos as they waited in line and making quips about the political process.

Candidates’ place on the ballot is determined by a number they pull from an acrylic box as part of a lottery system. Those with the lowest numbers are first on the ballot.

A line of people with numbers in the 900s, some of the highest of the day, took a photo together. 

“The Bible says, ‘The first will be last,’” one said.

One filer joked with Ashcroft that, next election, the numbered tickets should be placed in a machine that blows them around the candidate — like the money-blowing machines in some arcades.

“Well, there are some people who don’t like machines in elections,” Ashcroft said with a laugh.

Valentina Gomez, a Republican candidate for Secretary of State who recently came under fire for burning books, has spoken against “voting machines.” She posted on X, formerly Twitter, that “we must blow up the corrupt voting machines” less than a week before filing day.

Gomez is one of four Republican candidates for Secretary of State who filed Tuesday along with three Democrats. Current Missouri lawmakers Denny Hoskins, a Republican state senator; Adam Schwadron, a Republican state representative; and Barbara Phifer, a Democratic state representative are running for Secretary of State.

Sen. Caleb Rowden, a Columbia Republican, has announced he’s running for secretary of state but did not file Tuesday.

Some of Tuesday’s filers brought political consultants and campaign managers. A staffer for Wesley Bell carried a kelly green Hermes Birkin bag with her as she followed Bell around the building.

Others brought loved ones. Gubernatorial candidate Mike Kehoe’s wife, Claudia, donned a kelly green suit to match her husband’s campaign colors.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Darrell Leon McClanahan III, who wore a feathered western hat, brought his children. McClanahan lost a bid for a U.S. Senate seat in 2022, receiving less than 1% of the votes in the primary.

A dozen supporters of U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, who represents Missouri’s First District, followed her around the building and reverberated in agreement as she spoke to reporters.

Democratic Attorney General candidate Elad Gross brought along one of his biggest fans and a campaign sidekick: Liberty Belle, his rescue dog.

Gross held a filing-day tailgate in the parking lot prior to registration opening, with Panera bagels and coffee. His truck says “End puppy mills,” along with campaign visuals.

He told The Independent he believes Liberty Belle came from an abusive breeding situation he would describe as a “puppy mill.” Liberty Belle, who is familiar with the campaign trail, hobbles on three legs with the fourth tucked.

Gross, who has raised almost $115,000 as the only Democrat in the attorney general race, is hoping to face candidates with much larger campaign war chests. Andrew Bailey, the current Attorney General appointed by Gov. Mike Parson, has raised over $2 million between his campaign and associated political action committee. Will Scharf, a former assistant U.S. attorney and an aide to ex-Gov. Eric Greitens, has raised almost $1.2 million. 

U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley has $4.9 million on hand for his campaign to keep his seat. Hawley did not attend the first day of filing Tuesday.

His Democratic opponent, Marine veteran Lucas Kunce, filed that morning with nearly $2.2 million in hand for his campaign.

“I don’t care if you’re Democrat or Republican or who you’ve voted for in the past,” Kunce told reporters. “This race is going to make a huge difference, my race in this state. And we need to flip this seat.”

Other no-shows on Tuesday include State Treasurer Vivek Malek, who is facing State Sen. Andrew Koenig and State Rep. Cody Smith among others for his position.

This story has been updated at 6:18 p.m. Tuesday to reflect the cash on hand for U.S. Senate candidates.

After filing for re-election, Congresswoman Cori Bush speaks to reporters about her campaign (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Missouri candidates head to Jefferson City for first day to file for 2024 elections • Missouri Independent

After filing for re-election, Congresswoman Cori Bush speaks to reporters about her campaign (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Wesley Bell, who is hoping to unseat Cori Bush for Missouri’s First District congressional seat, tells reporters he believes Bush isn’t properly representing the district (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Will Scharf, a GOP candidate for Missouri Attorney General, tells reporters about his campaign Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Lucas Kunce, who is challenging Josh Hawley for a U.S. Senate seat, speaks to reporters on the first day of campaign filing Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Lucas Kunce, who is challenging Josh Hawley for a U.S. Senate seat, speaks to reporters on the first day of campaign filing Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent)

Lieutenant Governor Mike Kehoe answers questions outside prior to filing his candidacy for governor Tuesday morning (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

State Sen. Bill Eigel, R-Weldon Spring, tells reporters his plan if he becomes governor, like a “capture and deport” policy for undocumented immigrants, prior to filing his candidacy Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

State Rep. Crystal Quade, a Springfield Democrat, answers questions about her campaign for governor Tuesday before filing for candidacy (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

State Rep. Ed Lewis, R-Moberly, waits to file for re-election Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

U.S. Rep Emanuel Cleaver walks through the Missouri candidate filing process Tuesday morning (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

State Sen. Andrew Koenig, R-Manchester, walks upstairs to file his candidacy for Missouri State Treasurer Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft takes candidates’ photos as they wait in line to file for the upcoming primary election (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Congresswoman Ann Wagner cringes after seeing the result of the lottery-based number draw. Candidates with high numbers will be below their opponents on the ballot (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Democratic candidate for Missouri Attorney General Elad Gross trots out of a room where candidates pull their filing number Tuesday (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

Maria Yepez Damian, regional manager for Elad Gross’s campaign, stands with Gross’s dog Liberty Belle. Earlier in his campaign for Missouri Attorney General, Gross held a tour in Liberty Belle’s name (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent).

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Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Lessons from Missouri parishioner’s journey to faith find expression in new children’s book- Detroit Catholic

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (OSV News) – Children’s book author Laura Theissen was taking a French test at the University of Missouri when she found out that terrorists had flown commercial airliners into the Pentagon and the World Trade Center.

“That day shaped my life forever,” she said of 9/11. “Because I knew more than ever that I wanted to serve my country and give something back.”

That conviction led to a 17-year career as a counterterrorism officer with the CIA. It also launched her into a faith odyssey toward a level of communion with God that she never imagined possible.

“I tell people that God literally led me through the desert to bring me home to himself,” said Theissen, author of “Cuthbert: The Eagle Who Found His Wings” (Christian Faith Publishing).

Modeled on the life of St. Cuthbert, a seventh-century Anglo-Saxon saint, the book stemmed from a project to name the mascot of her son’s Catholic grade school in Virginia, where the family was living at the time, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Cuthbert is the tale of a majestic American bald eagle who loves to swoop and fly above the clouds until one day, his life changes,” Theissen told The Cath stated. “Through adversity, he learns the power of God’s love and grace and what it really means to soar.”

The first copies of the book arrived at her home in Columbia in October.

“All the glory goes to God!” she told The Catholic Missourian, newspaper of the Diocese of Jefferson City. “There’s just no other way to explain the miraculous things that have transpired for me and my family.”

Theissen was born into a devout Christian family in Jefferson City and lived for eight years in a home overlooking the Missouri River, where she watched eagles soar.

Her family moved to St. Peters near St. Louis when Laura was in second grade, and her father began work as an agent for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. After high school, she went to the University of Missouri in Columbia to study political science and international affairs, with a minor in French.

She met her now-husband, Andy Theissen, at a student government event they helped organize for children of international students. They talked for hours, started dating and eventually married at St. George Church in Hermann, where Andy had grown up as a parishioner.

Laura Theissen was working for the Institute of Public Policy at the University of Missouri in 2005 when her application to the CIA was accepted.

Two years after their son was born, they moved from Missouri, living in Washington and later overseas – Theissen is still not allowed to say where.

“I felt very proud to be able to do my part for the country and help keep people safe,” she said. “But that kind of work is hard on you mentally and hard on your family.”

Both husband and wife drifted away from their faith.

“There were definitely a lot of years that I not only put my light under a basket, I covered it with dirt and buried it and did everything I could to tamp down my relationship with God at work,” said Theissen.

Upon returning to the United States, she wanted her family to get right with God.

She and her husband went to a Sunday service at a nondenominational church but it didn’t feel right. “I want to go to a Catholic church,” her husband told her.

Laura Theissen said she’d try it, although as a counterterrorism officer with secrets to keep, as a non-Catholic wife of an inactive Catholic, and as a mother of a 7-year-old who was being raised with no faith, she worried about being judged.

But the pastor of the church where they went to Mass was a military chaplain and understood her completely.

The couple were making arrangements to have their son baptized just before his eighth birthday when the director of religious education said to Laura Theissen, “And what about you?”

She entered the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults a week after Lucas’ baptism, with her husband as her sponsor.

“And you know, through those classes, not only did I fall in love with the Catholic Church, but Andy fell in love with it again,” she said. She received the sacraments of initiation the following Easter.

The Theissens became active parishioners and enrolled their son in All Saints Catholic School in Manassas, Virginia, in the Diocese of Arlington.

The school went to virtual learning at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020.

To raise spirits and preserve a sense of community, school administrators had a contest to choose a name for the school’s bald eagle mascot.

Mom and son researched saints associated with eagles and found St. Cuthbert, known for protecting birds as well as praying to ward off plagues.

Fellow students liked the suggestion, and Cuthbert became the eagle’s new name.

One day in Lent, while Theissen was reading her daily devotional, she started thinking about St. Cuthbert, in light of all the turmoil that was going on in the world, with children feeling sad and frightened about the pandemic and being separated from friends and loved ones.

She started writing the story of Cuthbert the Eagle.

“I wanted to write a story that we would have wanted to read to him back then,” she said. “The message that even in hard times, God’s light will shine through. No matter what happens, your spirit will always soar in the love of God. Embrace his grace. Look for the helping spirit in others. There are good people out there.”

She wrote the whole in about an hour, which she attributes to “inspiration from the Holy Spirit.” She included an afterword about the life of St. Cuthbert and submitted the manuscript to a handful of publishers.

Months later, she got a voicemail from Christian Faith Publishing. They liked the book and wanted to get it into print. That process, including editing and illustrating, took about a year.

She called it “really surreal” and “an incredible blessing,” adding, “I hope the book can be a blessing to others.”

Last year, the Theissens moved back to Missouri. Laura and Andy both work at the University of Missouri in Columbia.

She hasn’t forgotten what it felt like to not have God in her life.

“I knew he was walking beside me, but not to be holding his hand was awful,” she said. “Now, I know what it’s like to walk with him hand-in-hand. It’s wonderful!”

“Cuthbert: The Eagle Who Found His Wings” ($14.95) can be ordered at amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri upholds voting districts drawn for state Senate

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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A divided Missouri Supreme Court upheld voting districts drawn for the state Senate on Wednesday, rejecting a legal challenge that claimed mapmakers should have placed a greater emphasis on keeping communities intact.

The high court’s 5-2 decision means the districts, first used in the 2022 elections, will remain in place both for this year’s elections and ensuing ones.

The case was one of about a dozen still lingering around the country that challenged state legislative or congressional boundaries after the 2020 census.

Many of those fights have pitted Democrats against Republicans as each party tries to shape districts to its advantage, but the Missouri lawsuit has divided the GOP into two camps.

While a Republican Senate committee supported the Senate map enacted in 2022 by a panel of appeals court judges, a GOP House committee sided with Democratic-aligned voters suing for the districts to be overturned.

The lawsuit alleged that mapmakers should not have split western Missouri’s Buchanan County or the St. Louis suburb of Hazelwood into multiple districts.

At issue were revised redistricting criteria approved by voters in a 2020 constitutional amendment. The first two criteria say districts must be nearly equal in population, as much as practical, and must comply with the federal Voting Rights Act. The third prioritizes “contiguous” and “compact” districts, and the fourth requires communities to be kept whole in districts if possible under the equal population guidelines.

The Supreme Court said a trial judge correctly decided that the constitution makes “compact” districts a higher priority than keeping communities intact. The majority opinion was written by Judge Kelly Broniec, one of Republican Gov. Mike Parson’s newest appointees to the court.

In dissent, Judge W. Brent Powell said he would have struck down the map because it included a population deviation of more than 1% in the districts containing Buchanan County Hazelwood — diluting the vote of those residents while also failing to keep those communities intact. He was joined by Judge Paul Wilson.

The result of the Senate map is that residents in the challenged districts “are unable to vote in unison with their neighbors to voice the concerns and desires of their individual communities,” Powell wrote.

Attorney Chuck Hatfield, who represented the suing voters, said the ruling could have long-term implications for how districts are reshaped after the 2030 census.

“I think it’s going to change the way everybody thinks about drawing districts,” Hatfield said. “Whether it helps Democrats more or helps Republicans more, I’m not sure.”

State Senate President Pro Tem Caleb Rowden, a Republican, said he is “happy to see the court uphold the map and maintain the districts many candidates have already started running in.”

The candidate filing period for Missouri’s August primary elections runs from Feb. 27 through March 26.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Springfield state Sen. Lincoln Hough joins race for Missouri lieutenant governor

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After weeks of flirting with the idea, state Sen. Lincoln Hough of Springfield jumped into the Republican Primary for lieutenant governor on Thursday.

Hough, who is serving his second term in the Missouri Senate, joins a field that includes a colleague, state Sen. Holly Thompson Rehder of Scott City, House Speaker Dean Plocher, Franklin County Clerk Tim Baker and St. Louis County businessman Paul Berry III.

In an interview with The Independent, Hough said he will highlight his sponsorship of a 2022 tax cut as a signature accomplishment, as well as the infrastructure funding he’s put into the state budget as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Last year, when Gov. Mike Parson proposed spending $859 million to improve three sections of Interstate 70, Hough bumped it to $2.8 billion to add new lanes across the state and got the rest of the General Assembly to go along with it.

“We’ve made investments in infrastructure and in education, and taken care of our firefighters and our first responders,” Hough said. “I’ve had a good run in the Senate and this is just the next step.”

Hough first won election to the Missouri House in 2010 and won a seat on the Greene County Commission in 2016. Two years later, he won election to the Senate and was re-elected last year with almost 58% of the vote.

Over the past three years, Hough has been one of the more vocal antagonists of the hardcore conservatives that have engaged in factional warfare with the GOP Senate leadership. And in the upcoming primary, some of those fights could become fodder for attack ads.

In 2021, after voters approved Medicaid expansion to add coverage for adults ages 18 to 64, Hough was one of only two Senate Republicans who voted to include money in the budget to pay for it.

The Missouri Supreme Court, a few months later, said the state had no choice but to provide the coverage even if the budget did not include funds specifically earmarked for the expansion group.

At the time, Hough said Missouri should act to get the $1.2 billion in additional support for its traditional Medicaid program only available if it expanded Medicaid eligibility.

“I believe in my heart,” Hough said during the 2021 floor debate, “it is the right thing to do.”

Asked how he would defend himself against attacks that he had voted for Obamacare, Hough said he accepted the will of the voters that approved expansion and the ruling from the state Supreme Court.

“It’s less about expanding Obamacare and it’s more about reimbursing healthcare providers that are providing services to that population,” he said.

In this year’s session, Hough is sponsoring a bill renewing provider taxes that fund a large portion of the state’s Medicaid program. He’s under fire from the Freedom Caucus, the current name of the faction fighting leadership, for seeking to keep off amendments that would bar Planned Parenthood from providing Medicaid services.

Hough said he’s ready for any attacks and will point out that the budgets he’s written as Appropriations Committee chairman have set zero dollars as the amount available for paying Planned Parenthood.

“There are no dollars in fiscal year 2024 being appropriated or being reimbursed to that provider,” Hough said.

The Missouri Supreme Court, in a ruling issued Feb. 14, said the state could not deny payments to Planned Parenthood through an appropriation bill.

Hough enters the race well-stocked with cash. His campaign fund held $405,000 on Dec. 31 after raising $66,275 in the final three months of 2023. A joint fundraising PAC, LincolnPAC, raised $171,800 in the final three months of 2023 and had $367,500 on hand.

His two best-funded rivals are Plocher and Rehder.

Plocher had $542,008 in the bank in his campaign fund on Dec. 31 and $832,779 in Missouri United, his joint fundraising PAC. Rehder had $267,170 in her campaign fund and $238,434 in Southern Drawl PAC, her joint fundraising committee.

Filing for office opens Tuesday.

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

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Company behind marijuana recall poses legal challenge to state’s regulations

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Missouri’s crackdown on a cannabis company accused of illegally importing THC concentrate could lead to a showdown over the state’s authority to regulate the industry.

Delta Extraction had its license to manufacture cannabis products revoked in November, months after a massive recall pulled more than 60,000 products off the shelves — which the state says were illegally made with a hemp-derived THC concentrate imported from out of state.

As the legal battle continues to drag out, the company has upped the ante: If the state continues its efforts to sanction Delta and the recalled products, it will respond with litigation the company’s attorneys believe could gut Missouri’s marijuana regulations.

“Delta is also not limited to only challenging the (Department of Health and Senior Services’) authority to regulate hemp-derived products,” Delta’s attorney Chuck Hatfield, wrote in a Nov. 15 letter to the state. “Any lawsuit will likely include claims relating to the department’s regulatory authority in other areas of the marijuana industry.”

On the outside, the company with 20 employees located at the end of a dusty farm road near Pacific seems an unlikely candidate for upending Missouri’s regulatory framework.

But behind the scenes, Delta’s owners and associates include some of the most influential players in Missouri cannabis.

From its ownership group — which hosted Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey at a Ladue fundraiser just two weeks after his office took over defending the state in Delta’s litigation — to the powerful lobbyists and attorneys enlisted to represent the company and its affiliates, Delta is anything but an underdog.

State Sen. Nick Schroer, a Republican from O’Fallon who chairs the legislative committee that oversees Missouri’s marijuana rules, said Delta hired the “big guns” to win its license back — including longtime Jefferson City attorneys Hatfield, a Democrat, and Lowell Pearson, a Republican.

“That’s where I think this is a very interesting issue because it’s not necessarily political,” Schroer said. “It impacts all the parties, all individuals across the state, from veterans to people that just like to smoke recreationally and so many others in between.”

In order to reach a settlement with state regulators, Delta was willing to admit that it “failed to strictly comply with regulatory requirements,” according to Hatfield’s letter.

However, the company won’t admit that it did something wrong when it imported a hemp-derived THC concentrate, Hatfield said, because hemp is not a federally controlled substance.

Lisa Cox, the department’s spokeswoman, said Delta Extraction’s license was revoked for “numerous violations of rules, including extensive failure to comply with seed-to-sale tracking requirements.”

Cox also said the company “was not permitted to use THC in its products unless that THC was created from cannabis grown by a licensed cultivation facility.”

A question for the courts

At the center of Missouri’s massive marijuana recall is a THC concentrate, or distillate, made partially from hemp.

Delta bought oil from a Florida lab containing THC-A extracted from the hemp plant. Once the oil was in Missouri, the company heated it through a decarboxylation process — which turns it into Delta-9 THC, the cannabinoid most commonly known for producing a high.

Buying hemp-derived THC-A from Florida is much cheaper than producing it from Missouri marijuana.

While hemp is federally legal, state regulators argue that once hemp-derived THC comes into the marijuana realm, they can regulate it.

The Missouri constitution “expressly requires all marijuana and marijuana-infused products sold in Missouri to be cultivated or manufactured in Missouri,” the department argued in a Dec. 4 document in the Delta’s appeal of the recall and license revocation before the Administrative Hearing Commission.

The question currently before the commission is whether or not Missouri regulators have the authority to prohibit licensed companies from infusing Missouri-grown marijuana products with hemp-derived THC.

The commissioner overseeing the case, Carole Iles, has already said in an Aug. 29 order that it’s illegal to add “hemp-derived chemically modified ‘converted’ cannabinoids” to marijuana products.

That’s why the fight will likely end up in court.

In September, a federal judge in Arkansas sided with hemp companies in granting a preliminary injunction on a state law aimed at regulating hemp-derived THC.

U.S. District Judge Billy Roy Wilson said if Arkansas wants to participate in the federal hemp program, then it can’t pick and choose which parts of the law it wants to follow.

“Clearly, under the 2018 Farm Bill, Arkansas can regulate hemp production and even ban it outright if it is so inclined,” the Sept. 7 ruling states. “The legislature seems to have tried to keep the parts of the program it likes (purely industrial uses) and eliminate the parts it doesn’t (human consumption).”

Hatfield said that’s what Missouri cannabis regulators are trying to do.

“The Division of Cannabis Regulation’s authority to regulate is limited to non-hemp marijuana and does not depend on whether it is used to make THC,” he states in the letter to the department.

Schroer said he’s heard from numerous marijuana businesses that are suffering from the recall, and he’s not sure the state’s decision to pull Delta’s license and thousands of products from the shelves was the right one. He said voters wanted a marijuana program where all products were homegrown in Missouri.

“And arguably, was hemp part of that?” he said. “I think we’re gonna find out in the courts.”

The underdog

Aside from the legal battle, the case sets up another conflict.

For Missouri’s marijuana cultivators, hemp-derived THC poses a threat to their livelihoods because Missouri marijuana licensees must go through a rigorous and costly regulatory process — one that hemp companies don’t.

If Delta and other manufacturers can buy hemp-derived THC concentrate for a fourth of the price that it costs to purchase Missouri-grown marijuana THC concentrate, then the state’s marijuana cultivators will suffer.

But it would be a big win for the state’s hemp farmers.

Sean Hackmann, president of the Missouri Hemp Trade Association, said Delta sold more than $20 million of distillate that was a mixture of marijuana grown in Missouri and hemp from other states.

“Twenty million dollars in the Missouri hemp industry would be huge, if that was produced, extracted and processed inside our state,” Hackmann told The Independent in September. “But it was all some other state that benefited from that. Not our Missouri industry.”

While normally the underdogs, the hemp industry now has people like the marijuana industry’s top lobbyist Steve Tilley and attorneys Hatfield, Pearson and Alec Rosenblum fighting for its interests because it benefits their clients.

And the web of political ties runs deep.

A member of Delta Extraction’s ownership team, Josh Ferguson, hosted a fundraiser for Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s election campaign Nov. 7.

Delta’s lawsuit against the state has made its way to the Court of Appeals, and that’s where the attorney general’s office normally takes over legal representation in marijuana cases.

Two weeks before the fundraiser, Bailey’s office began representing the state in Delta’s appeal. The case is being handled by Solicitor General Josh Devine, the highest-ranking lawyer in the attorney general’s office.

“The AG’s Office represents state agencies in these cases at the appellate level,” said Madeline Sieren, Bailey’s spokeswoman. “That is what we did here. Any political activity is separate and apart from his work as attorney general. I would direct any questions about political activity to the campaign.”

Political power

Delta Extraction is 50 percent owned by A Joint Operation, a management group with three principals: Ferguson, Josh Corson, and Ryan Rich.

Ferguson is the owner and founder of Kaldi’s Coffee. Corson comes from a real estate background and Rich is owner and CEO of Hot Box Cookies.

Rachael Herndon Dunn is chief development officer at A Joint Operation and one of the initial founders of Greenway Magazine, which covers the cannabis industry.

The other half of Delta Extraction is owned by Ozark Highland Cannabis LLC, which is the umbrella for the Midwest Magic brand that uses Delta Extraction’s facility to make its products. Edward Maritz is the registered agent for Ozark, and Jack Maritz is the general manager for Delta Extraction.

Delta was also manufacturing products for the Conte brand. According to documents filed in both the lawsuit and appeal with the commission, Delta has been producing Conte’s THC distillate for more than a year. The majority of the distillate is hemp-derived THC-A combined with a small amount of Missouri marijuana.

The company has sold 700 liters of this concoction since at least July 2022, Jack Maritz said in his Aug. 14 testimony before the Administrative Hearing Commission.

And it’s sold to 135 Missouri marijuana license holders, with Delta making $20 million since it began offering a hemp-marijuana distillate in April 2022, company leaders said in their testimonies.

The 700 liters of oil has the potential to make “millions of packs of edibles,” Maritz said in his testimony.

Over the summer, Conte Enterprise Holdings hired the Jefferson City lobbying firm Strategic Capitol Consulting. The firm is owned by Tilley, a former state lawmaker and fundraiser for Gov. Mike Parson.

Rosenblum serves as Conte’s attorney.

The Administrative Hearing Commission will hold a three-day hearing on the company’s appeal of the recall and license revocation in February or early March. If the commissioner sides with the state, then Delta will continue the fight in court.

A separate lawsuit against the state was filed in September by a company that purchased the recalled THC oil from Delta and is now challenging the regulators’ authority to pull the product from the shelves.

While not a Missouri licensee, the company, Integrated Sales Solutions, argues its products are on lockdown and the company’s livelihood is suffering.

Integrated Sales Solutions is represented in the lawsuit by Marc Ellinger — Bailey’s campaign treasurer.

Ellinger did not return The Independent’s request for comment.

The Missouri Independent, www.missouriindependent.com, is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization covering state government and its impact on Missourians.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Eight candidates file for five open Jefferson City Council positions

by

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ)

Filing for local elections taking place April 2, 2024 opened Tuesday.

Candidates could officially put their names in for local elections starting at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Filing in most places will continue during regular business hours for the city or county government building until 5 p.m. Dec. 26.

Races will take place across Mid-Missouri. Here are a few:

Jefferson City Council

All five Jefferson City Council wards have one seat up for election April 2024.

The Jefferson City Council is made up of 10 council members, two from each ward, and the mayor. The council members’ two-year terms are staggered, so that a seat in each ward is up for election every year.

The council members whose terms are expiring are:

  • Jack Deeken (Ward 1)
  • Mike Lester (Ward 2)
  • Erin L. Wiseman (Ward 3)
  • Randall Z. Wright (Ward 4)
  • Jon Hensley (Ward 5)

According to the city’s bylaws, a qualified candidate for Jefferson City Council must be at least 21 years old at the time of the election, be a U.S. citizen and qualified voter in Jefferson City, have lived in the city for at least a year before the election and have lived in the ward they’re running for at least six months before the election.

Those filed so far are:

Ward 1:

Ward 2:

  • Darrel P. Bryan
  • Michael Lester (incumbent)

Ward 3:

Ward 4:

  • Randall Z.Wright (incumbent)
  • Chris Leuckel

Ward 5:

Candidates will appear on the ballot in the order they file, and they must have three endorsements from residents of their ward to file. Candidates can file at the city offices in the Boone Bancroft Room at City Hall on 320 E. McCarty St.

Two people have also filed for the Jefferson City Board of Education. Those are:

Auxvasse Mayor and Aldermen

The seats for three Aldermen and the mayor are up election in April 2024 in Auxvasse.

Former Auxvasse Mayor Ronald Dye resigned in October. His resignation letter explains he stepped down because of backlash from the community. Dye served as mayor for less than a year.

“Due to the persisting feeling from the Citizens of Auxvasse that I am not a competent mayor, along with that I do not have the city’s best interest in heart, and I only care about money. I hereby resign my position as mayor effective immediately,” the resignation letter reads.

Whoever is elected as mayor will serve the remainder of Dye’s term.

Four aldermen serve on the Board of Aldermen, two from each ward. The mayor sits on and presides over the board.

Two Northward aldermen seats are up for election; one is for a full two-year term, while the other is to serve the remaining one year of a two-year term. One full term as a Southward alderman is also up for election.

To file, candidates must submit a written statement of candidacy in person at City Hall on 104 S. Main St.

Columbia Board of Education

Two three-year seats are available on the Columbia Board of Education. As of Tuesday, no one filed to fill these seats.

Candidates have to file in person at 1818 West Worley St., but first, they need to get the official candidate filing packet and forms from Board of Education Secretary Noël McDonald, who can be reached at 573-214-3416 or nmcdonald@cpsk12.org.

Tuesday, candidates can file in person with no appointment until 4 p.m. After that, candidates must make an appointment with McDonald.

On the last day of filing, Dec. 26, walk-ins will be welcome to file from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Aslin Administration Building. Candidates are asked to arrive before 4:30 p.m. that day to ensure all filing is done by the 5 p.m. deadline.

Candidates’ names will be listed on the ballot in the order they file, with one exception. All candidates who file by 4 p.m. Tuesday will have their names in a drawing to determine order. The drawing will be on a later date, according to the Columbia Board of Education website.

The Board is offering an information workshop on Dec. 14 from 6 to 7 p.m. to answer questions about filing and running.

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

Missouri Supreme Court hears challenge to state Senate district map

by

The Missouri Supreme Court must now decide if a directive in the state’s redistricting law that says cities and counties must be split as little as possible in legislative district maps allows them to be split at all.

In the first case testing provisions added to the Missouri Constitution in 2020, the court on Thursday was asked to reject a state Senate map that splits Buchanan County in western Missouri and Hazelwood in St. Louis County.

Attorney Chuck Hatfield, arguing for voters who are challenging the map, said there is no reason for either split. The 2020 revisions, he told the court, provide the “most objective criteria yet” for establishing districts and remove most opportunities for gerrymandering districts to favor one political party.

“It is still an inherently political process, but it is shaped now by clear boundaries,” Hatfield said.

Assistant Attorney General Maria Lanahan, defending the current maps, said the districts being challenged are constitutional because they promote compact districts. Hatfield is trying to reverse constitutional priorities, she said, to elevate keeping cities and counties whole above other considerations.

That, she said, would open other districts up for challenges.

For example, Lanahan said, there are several districts in the state’s most populous counties that could be challenged for exceeding the 1% limit on variance.

“You are treating counties that are bigger differently than the rest of the state,” she said.

Missouri Supreme Court Judges Kelly Broniec, left, and Robin Ransom listen to arguments Thursday in a case over state Senate redistricting in Jefferson City.

Hatfield is appealing a September decision by Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem that found the districts meet constitutional muster.

After Thursday’s hearing, Hatfield said he would like a quick decision. Filing for state offices opens Feb. 27.

“We would like to get those districts in place,” he said.

The districts for the 163-member House and 34-member Senate are revised every 10 years after a census. Since the 1960s, bipartisan citizen commissions have been responsible for redrawing the district boundaries, with a commission composed of appeals court judges taking over the job when the citizens commissions cannot agree.

For the current districts, the House Independent Bipartisan Citizens Commission was able to agree on a map but the Senate commission was not. The map being challenged in court was produced by a judicial commission.

In 2018, an initiative petition called Clean Missouri changed the criteria for the commissions to consider, elevating partisan fairness as a consideration along with traditional criteria such as equal populations in compact and contiguous districts.

The 2020 changes were pushed by Republicans worried the 2018 plan would erode their majorities. It set the maximum deviation in population at 1%, with an exception that districts that do not cross political subdivision or natural boundaries could be up to 3% different from the ideal population.

Under older rules, Senate districts had to be made up of whole counties unless there was enough population for an entire district within a county. There was no such rule for the House, and in the district map produced after the 2010 census, six of the 82 counties that have fewer than an ideal number of residents for a single district were split among three or more districts.

Now, no county that is less than the ideal population is split more than once in the House. In the case before the court, Hatfield is arguing that the Senate map should have no splits in counties with a population less than a full district.

Attorney Chuck Hatfied, left, argues his case challenging the Missouri Senate district map as Assistant Attorney General Maria Lanahan takes notes on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024, before the Missouri Supreme Court in Jefferson City.

Attorney Chuck Hatfied, left, argues his case challenging the Missouri Senate district map as Assistant Attorney General Maria Lanahan takes notes on Thursday before the Missouri Supreme Court in Jefferson City.

One new idea included in the 2020 revisions was that only people living in a district could challenge it as violating the constitution.

In the case a resident of Hazelwood and a resident of Buchanan County wanted Beetem to redraw the lines for 13th and 14th districts in St. Louis County and to revise the boundaries of the 12th, 21st and 34th districts in northwest Missouri. The plan Hatfield submitted to Beetem would have put all of Buchanan County in the 12th District, shift a portion of Clay County from the 21st to the 34th District and shift eight small population counties from the 12th District to the 21st.

Hatfield’s proposal would put Hazelwood entirely within the 13th District and shift other small cities and unincorporated territory into the 14th.

Half the Senate is elected every two years, with odd-numbered districts on the ballot this year.

The case created a rift between House and Senate Republicans. The House Republican Campaign Committee filed an amicus brief supporting the challenge, and the Missouri Senate Campaign Committee, the political arm of Senate Republicans, backed Beetem’s ruling.

During arguments, the judges sought to clarify which of the provisions of the constitution are more important than others in crafting the maps. They must sort out what lawmakers meant from clauses that cross-reference each other

Judge W. Brent Powell questioned whether residents of a split county or city get adequate representation.

“It really decreases the voice from Buchanan County,” Powell said. “Isn’t that what we are trying to protect?”

If maintaining whole counties and cities was the top priority, Lanahan said, lawmakers would have listed it higher in the constitutional language.

Hatfield told the court that maintaining whole counties and cities gives citizens a louder voice in government.

“That is the real value,” he said, “making sure that a community has one representative and knows who it is.”

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

Originally Appeared Here

Filed Under: Jefferson City

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