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Kansas Ag Director: It has to be one of the most frustrating years that producers have experienced

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Kansas State Agriculture Director Mike Beam says he’s heard a lot of frustration when he talks with farmers lately.

“It has to be one of the most frustrating years that producers have experienced in recent memory,” Beam tells KFEQ Farm Director Melissa Gregory.

Beam says veteran Kansas farmers say this past winter was the worse that they could remember.

“Especially in regards to livestock. The rural road conditions and now trying to get the 2019 fall crop in the ground.”

Beam says flooding has ruined any chance for spring planting on as many as 25,000 acres of farmland in the four northeast Kansas counties.

Beam says the state will help farmers impacted by the flood as much as it can, but state resources are limited.

“The state’s role tends to be to make sure that we make application to USDA to have those counties declared federally eligible for disaster programs,” according to Beam.

Beam suggests farmers with flood damage contact their local Farm Service Agency.

In Washington, the U.S. Senate is expected next week to debate a disaster relief package approved earlier in the House.

Not just agriculture took the brunt of damage when the Missouri River flooded throughout the region. Kansas roads took a pounding.

Beam points out that the closure of Interstate 29 had a wide-ranging impact.

Flooding in southwest Iowa heavily damaged I-29 just across the Missouri state line. Missouri transportation officials closed the interstate to through traffic just north of St. Joseph. Though MoDOT urged travelers to take I-35 or U.S. 71 north into Iowa to re-connect with I-29, the bulk of the traffic, including semi tractor-trailers, drove on Highway 36 into Kansas, then north into Nebraska.

Beam says Kansas roads aren’t built for such heavy traffic. He says the state is working with the U.S. Department of Transportation to see if it can secure any resources to help rebuild the rural infrastructure.

Brief lock-down ends at St. Joseph elementary school when police arrest suspect

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Carden Park Elementary School/Photo courtesy of St. Joseph School Distrcit

A St. Joseph elementary school went into a very brief lockdown this morning after a parent spotted a man with a rifle nearby.

The St. Joseph School District confirms Carden Park Elementary School, near Highway 36 and I-229, went into lockdown at 8:30 this morning. The lockdown was lifted seven minutes later after police officers arrested a suspect.

St. Joseph Police Captain Jeff Wilson says officers arrived and took into custody a 20-year-old white male, who had ditched the gun.

“We later learned that he did have an air-style BB gun, rifle that he had dropped as he was walking prior to the officers approaching him, but they recovered it,” Wilson tells St. Joseph Post.

The suspect is being held in St. Joseph, pending any charges which might be filed by the Buchanan County Prosecutor’s Office.

No students or staff were ever in any danger, according to St. Joseph School District officials.

Little hope left for passage of bill aimed at curbing Missouri opioid crisis this legislative session

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Little time is left for Missouri lawmakers to approve a prescription drug monitoring program.

And, it seems unlikely they will.

State Rep. Sheila Solon of St. Joseph says Missouri is the only state which doesn’t monitor the prescribing of Schedule II and Schedule IV controlled substances and she says joining the other states would help Missouri combat its opioid addiction crisis.

“That’s something that we need to get passed for our state and especially for northwest Missouri,” Solon tells St. Joseph Post. “I know law enforcement has told me this will be a tool that they need to stop the selling of these narcotics and also stop folks from doctor shopping and actually coming in from out of state to buy them.”

House Bill 188, known as the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, has stalled in the Senate with little belief that it will even make its way to the floor for debate. The measure would authorize state health officials to establish a state Narcotics Control Program to monitor the prescribing of powerful pain relief medication.

Solon says area law enforcement tells her it is needed.

“Sheriffs in both Andrew and in Buchanan Counties have told me that this is really important. We do have an opioid crisis, not just in our state, but particularly in our area,” according to Solon. “It destroys people’s lives. Sometimes folks get on it innocently, to manage pain when they’ve had an operation and they get hooked on it. So, this is a bill that we need so we can monitor the folks who are abusing opioids and, hopefully, get them the help they need and also stop the doctor shopping and the selling of these medications by dealers.”

It breezed to passage in the Missouri House early in this legislative session on a 103-53 vote. Opponents in the Senate argue it is an invasion of patient privacy that has proven ineffective in fighting the opioid crisis in other states. They also contend it could lead to the release of private health information.

HB 188 sponsor, Re. Holly Rehder of Scott City, basically conceded the legislation was dead in an open letter released to her colleagues this week.

Holly Rehder – PDMP Letter[3393]

Missouri Senate filibuster ends, measure with $50M GM tax breaks, passes

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Gov. Mike Parson talks with reporters during a news conference in St. Joseph earlier this year.

A filibuster that lasted 27 hours finally ended and the Missouri Senate late Tuesday approved a workforce development bill which includes $50 million in tax breaks for General Motors to expand its factory in Wentzville.

Gov. Mike Parson acknowledged the incentives for General Motors were a late addition to a measure he has touted from the beginning of the legislative session.

“The General Motors factory came in way late in the game. It just happened to be the one that proved that what we’re trying to do in workforce development works,” Parson told reporters during a hastily called news conference at the Capitol.

General Motors will receive $50 million in tax credits over 10 years if it invests at up to $1 billion to expand its Wentzville plant which makes trucks and vans. GM plans a 150,000 square foot expansion in Wentzville.

“We know a billion-dollar investment in that plant I believe is a signal to say we’re staying here in Missouri and they could definitely go to any other state. They could go overseas,” Parson said. “That’s why this is so important to do that. And I think with the entire package that we put in there is important to do that.”

The House approved the legislation earlier, but it bogged down in the Senate with objections coming from fellow Republicans. The Senate Conservative Caucus claims the upfront business tax breaks are ripe for corruption and questions how proposed new scholarships would be distributed.

Parson said Missouri needed to act and not just to lure new jobs to the state.

“So many times, everybody is talking about new jobs, new jobs. It’s just as important to retain jobs in this state as it is to create new jobs,” according to Parson. “When you think about the thousands upon thousands of people who will be going to this site, working, on construction jobs alone, not counting your everyday people that work in that plant is huge.”

Parson defended adding the GM package to the measure, arguing it will benefit the entire state.

“This is just too big of an opportunity. It’s one we’ve never had in the state of Missouri. You just don’t want to lose that opportunity,” Parson said. “It doesn’t happen very often.”

The GM incentives were wrapped into legislation that also creates a new scholarship for adults to finish their college degrees and gives the Department of Economic Development discretion to provide upfront tax breaks to other businesses before they complete their planned expansions or hire additional employees.

Opponents have denounced the upfront tax breaks as a “slush fund” that would be ripe for corruption and also criticized the new scholarship, which could only be offered to people going into fields designated by state higher education officials.

The filibuster ended when it threatened a sweeping abortion bill that the Conservative Caucus favors. The legislative session ends Friday evening at six o’clock.

“Our desire to protect innocent human life was leveraged against us,” Republican state Sen. Bob Onder told the Associated Press.

Onder joined the filibuster even though his St. Charles County district includes the GM plant.

The GM plant in Wentzville employs about 4,250 people in three shifts to make the Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon mid-size trucks as well as the Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana full-size vans, according to GM’s website.

Gov. Parson defends Wentzville tax breaks, workforce development bill as Senate filibuster drones on

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson during a news conference in St. Joseph earlier.

Gov. Mike Parson is pushing for the Missouri Senate to end a filibuster and move to approve an economic development package which includes $50 million in tax breaks for General Motors to expand in Wentzville.

Fellow Republicans, who call themselves the Conservative Caucus, have staged a filibuster against Senate Bill 68, which the governor calls his workforce development bill.

Parson today, during a hastily called news conference with reporters, called on the senators to drop their efforts to talk the bill to death and allow an up or down vote.

Parson says Missourians have made it clear to him that workforce development and upgrading the state’s infrastructure are their top priorities.

The governor says the GM package was added late in the game.

“It just happened to be the one that proved that what we’re doing in workforce development works,” according to Parson.

Parson says it has taken weeks for negotiators with the Department of Economic Development to reach a contract agreement with GM.

“And when I say that, my whole career I have been in business and there’s a whole difference between a contract from a business perspective or a contract; what people would like to label a bailout or basically just a give-away program,” Parson says. “These contract negotiations that we’re doing takes a long time to get them done. They’re time consuming. They’re very sensitive to what the deals are that are made and how we implement that and how we finish that.”

General Motors has pledged to invest a billion dollars to expand the Wentzville factor by 150,000 square feet if the legislature approves the incentive package.

Parson insists the General Assembly has plenty of time to pass the measure, even though the legislative session ends at 6 o’clock Friday evening.

But, if it doesn’t get done this week, the legislature might have to re-visit the issue, according to state Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer of Parkville.

“It’s very probable that if we fail to do something on the workforce development front, we may see the governor call a special session and bring us back to Jefferson City to focus specifically on that issue,” Luetkemeyer tells St. Joseph Post.

When asked about the possibility of a special session, the governor brushes the question aside, reiterating that there remains plenty of time in this session.

 

Fire alarm prompts evacuation of Rayburn office building in Washington, D.C.

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

No pedestrian traffic outside the Rayburn House Office Building Tuesday afternoon after alarms sounded throughout the building./Photo by Melissa Gregory

Fire alarms prompted an emergency evacuation of the Rayburn House Office Building, which houses members of the Untied States House of Representatives.

KFEQ Farm Director Melissa Gregory, in Washington this week, says police cleared the building and wouldn’t allow anyone to enter for a couple of hours before the alert was lifted and work returned to normal. No threat was discovered. No one was hurt.

Capitol police indicate the alarms were tripped accidentally.

Gregory had been scheduled to interview central Missouri Congresswoman Vicky Hartzler in her office, located in the Rayburn building. After police cut off entrance to the building, the interview shifted to the Longworth House Office Building where it was conducted in the chambers behind where the House Agriculture Committee holds its hearings.

$19B disaster aid package passing House contains flood relief

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

A $19 billion disaster aid package passing the House and moving to the Senate includes relief for flood-stricken communities and farms in the Midwest.

Congressman Sam Graves says the package contains $500 million to repair roads and bridges damaged by flooding as well as $310 million to repair the broken levee system.

“The hardest part is just trying to figure out what it’s going to take to fix some of those holes in the levees, because there’s still water in them and it’s very hard to make that determination,” Graves tells St. Joseph Post. “It’s hard to tell how deep the holes are and how much fill it’s going to take, but I think we have a pretty good idea, at least as far as an estimate goes.”

Another provision would offset the loss of stored grain due to the flood, a first in a disaster aid package. In all, the package contains $3 billion to offset agricultural losses due to this year’s flooding.

Graves says if the Senate can approve the package and the president signs it, repair of the broken Missouri River levee system could begin this year.

“I think it may be this summer before we’re able to do a whole lot of that work. There will be preliminary work going on, but actually getting bulldozers out there, I think it’s going to be this summer when the river goes down,” Graves says.

A dispute over money allocated for Puerto Rican hurricane relief might yet derail the aid package. Some Republican senators and President Trump object to the amount of money going for damages sustained by Puerto Rico from Hurricane Maria in 2017.

Grave broke with fellow Republicans in voting in favor of the package. He says, overall, he’s pleased with it.

“Things can always move faster, that’s for sure,” Graves says. “But it being out of the House, that’s obviously a big step in the right direction and a good move. I’m okay with the package. I’m pleased with it.”

Bill hopes to reduce the cost of civil lawsuits in Missouri

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer speaks during debate in the Senate chambers/Photo courtesy of Senate Communicatons

Its sponsor says it will reduce the cost of civil lawsuits as well as reduce the number of frivolous lawsuits filed.

A bill to change the rules of discovery in a lawsuit has overcome a filibuster in the Senate to make it to the House this last week of the Missouri legislative session.

Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer of Parkville sponsors Senate Bill 224 and says he modeled it after federal procedures. It would change the rules for discovery in civil court cases. Luetkemeyer says though it sounds a bit legalese, reforming discovery will make a big difference.

“About 75-80% of both the cost and the length of time that it takes to resolve a lawsuit surrounds around discovery,” Luetkemeyer tells St. Joseph Post. “If you can shorten discovery and make it more efficient, you’re going to reduce the length of a lawsuit and you’re also going to reduce the cost to the parties.”

The Missouri General Assembly adjourns for this legislative session Friday at 6pm.

Luetkemeyer had to overcome a filibuster which kept the Senate in debate into the morning hours a few weeks ago to send it to the House. He hopes the House will pick up the legislation and send it to Gov. Mike Parson this week.

“Hopefully, come August, when the governor hopefully signs the bill and it goes into effect, we’re going to be joining 27 other states and the federal government in making sure that we’re also keeping our lawsuits reasonable and making sure they’re resolved efficiently,” Luetkemeyer says.

SB 224 reforms the rules of discovery in civil court cases. It limits the time to gather evidence prior to a trial or court date.

 

Showdown over abortion could come in this last week of the Missouri legislative session

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

An anti-abortion bill, which could take direct aim at the landmark Roe versus Wade Supreme Court ruling, awaits debate in the Missouri Senate during this last week of the legislative session.

The so-called “Heartbeat Bill” bans abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected or the fetus can feel pain. It also would ban all abortions in Missouri, except to save the life of the woman, if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe.

Republican State Rep. Shelia Solon of St. Joseph supports the measure and hopes the Senate will fight a promised filibuster against it.

“The Senate hopefully will go ahead and, I guess, stay up all night fighting for it, but if something is worth fighting for it’s for the unborn, it’s for babies and so if there is something that we should stand up and fight all night for it’s the passage of this bill,” Solon tells St. Joseph Post.

Solon had a hand in House Bill 126 moving through the legislature. It was approved by the House Children and Families Committee, which she chairs.

The House approved the measure, but it hasn’t come up for debate in the Senate. It could this week, the last week of this legislative session. It is sure to face fierce opposition.

Solon says the bill has been crafted with an eye to the courts, anticipating the courts might not uphold a ban as early in a pregnancy as when a heartbeat is detected.

“If that provision doesn’t stand, then the bill also has implemented a pain-capable standard that would prohibit abortions past 18 weeks, gestational age,” according to Solon. “Studies have shown that doctors give anesthesia to babies in utero to stop pain. So, I think the science protects that part of it. So, I actually combined two bills and put that in there just in case part of it did not stand up to a court challenge.”

Solon says the legislature cannot back off just because the measure could face a court challenge.

“Missouri is a unique state. We are a very conservative state and serving in the legislature I guess I’ve learned that we just need to do the right thing and hopefully the courts will make the right decisions,” Solon says. “But, we need to just do our jobs and stand up for the citizens of our state and, most importantly, for babies, who are the most vulnerable of all our citizens.”

The legislative session wraps up at six o’clock Friday evening.

 

$30B state spending plan approved in wee hours, contains $8M for flood victims

By BRENT MARTIN

St. Joseph Post

Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer speaks during a news conference at the Capitol as Sen. Dan Hegeman, Senate Appropriations chair, listens./Photo courtesy of Sen. Luetkemeyer office

Missouri lawmakers agreed to a nearly $30 billion state spending plan for the next fiscal year after clearing a last-minute hurdle.

House budget negotiators insisted on keeping a provision in the budget that would prohibit students in the country illegally from receiving in-state college tuition, including DACA children.

State Sen. Tony Luetkemeyer, a Republican from Parkville, says he’s pleased the budget passed without a tax increase.

“One of the things that I talked about whenever I campaigned is that we need to be in government  living within our means and this year the Missouri legislature said we’re going to live within our means, we’re not going to raise taxes, and we’re going to find priorities that we need to fund, like higher education and K-through-12 education and making sure we’re getting relief to the flood victims who have been impacted by the recent flooding,” Luetkemeyer tells St. Joseph Post. “We were able to do all that without raising anyone’s taxes.”

The budget approved in the early morning hours by the General Assembly increases funding to public schools by $61 million, fully funding the school Foundation Formula.

The budget also includes an increase to the core budgets of Missouri public colleges and universities.

“And so, Missouri Western, which is obviously in my district in St. Joe, received a $1 million increase to its core funding,” Luetkemeyer says. “This is after years of cuts to higher education. And so that’s an important victory, making sure that we’re keeping higher education affordable for Missouri families is critically important and I’m happy we were able to get that done.”

The budget also includes $8 million to help offset the losses to flood victims. The money can be used to provide the state and local match for expected federal assistance.

Members of the Missouri House approved the spending plan, then sent it to the Senate which wrapped up work on it in the very early hours of this morning. The budget now goes to Gov. Mike Parson.

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