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Missouri could pay blind residents $19M after court ruling

Blind man crosses street. Photo courtesy Ben Churchill via Flickr
Blind man crosses street. Photo courtesy Ben Churchill via Flickr

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — An appeals court has ruled that a previous calculation of damages owed to about 3,000 blind Missouri residents receiving state benefits was too low.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that the decision Tuesday means the state could soon provide more than $19 million in damages for shortchanging their benefits.

An attorney representing the blind residents says the new figure is up from a previous court’s determination of less than $200,000.

A 2006 lawsuit filed by the Missouri Council of the Blind claims the state had been miscalculating the monthly pension for blind people for years. The council’s executive director says the problem was addressed but the group has been battling the state over damages.

A spokesman for Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster says that office is reviewing the ruling.

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