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Democrats react to Missouri governor’s speech

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Latest on Missouri Gov. Mike Parson’s budget and State of the State address Wednesday (all times local):

Senate Minority Leader Gina Walsh

Missouri Democrats are taking a dig at former Republican Gov. Eric Greitens while calling on his successor to do better.

Democratic Senate Minority Leader Gina Walsh on Wednesday said “simply being better than Eric Greitens is too low a bar to set for any of our leaders.”

Walsh delivered the Democratic response to new Republican Gov. Mike Parson’s first State of the State address Wednesday.

Greitens resigned in June in the face of potential impeachment over allegations of sexual and political misconduct. Parson had been serving as lieutenant governor, but took over as the state’s chief executive when Greitens stepped down.

Democratic House Minority Leader Crystal Quade on Wednesday called for more access to health care, a bigger mental health safety net, stronger local public schools and quality early childhood education. While she said Parson also outlined programs that Democrats care about, she says she’s not sure how he plans to pay them.

Kansas man dies after pickup rear-ends tractor

MONTGOMERY COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 6p.m. Thursday in Montgomery County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 GMC Sierra driven by Ronald L. Rogers, 78, Cedar Vale, was westbound on U.S. 166 three miles east of Niotaze, Kansas.

The pickup rear-ended a farm tractor driven by Kenneth D. Sullivan, 67, Havana, Kansas.

Sullivan was pronounced dead at the scene.

Rogers was transported to a hospital in Bartlesville, Oklahoma.  He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Kansas City professor in slave labor case has resigned

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A University of Missouri-Kansas City professor has resigned after being accused of coercing foreign graduate students to perform work and personal tasks for him.

Mitra -photo courtesy UMKC

University officials announced Wednesday that Ashim Mitra resigned from the School of Pharmacy one day before a hearing was scheduled to determine his future at the university.

Mitra was put on paid suspension in November after The Kansas City Star reported former students accused him of forcing students from India to do his lawn work, care for his dog and other tasks. One student likened the work to “slave labor.”

The students said they feared losing their visas if they refused Mitra’s demands.

Mitra has denied any wrongdoing.

Mitra joined the university’s faculty in 1994 and was chairman of the Pharmaceutical Sciences Division until last year.

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Man, woman from Indianapolis charged in Missouri killing

FULTON, Mo. (AP) — Authorities are searching for a man and woman from Indianapolis who are charged in the killing of a central Missouri man.

Ricketts -photo Callaway Co. Sheriff
Cabrera -photo Callaway Co. Sheriff

33-year-old Ruben Corales Cabrera and 22-year-old Emily Ricketts are charged with first-degree murder in the death of 34-year-old Lauro Garza-Perez of Columbia. Cabrera also is charged with armed criminal action.

Garza-Perez was found dead earlier this month in a business parking lot east of Columbia after a report that shots were fired in the area. People fled the area before deputies arrived.

Callaway County Sheriff Clay Chism said Tuesday that authorities are working with several agencies to find them. Officials said both suspects have ties to the Columbia area and are considered armed and dangerous.

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WATCH Replay: Missouri Governor State of the State address

JEFFERSON CITY — Just after 3pm watch live as Governor Parson delivers the State of the State address.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri Gov. Mike Parson is set to give his first State of the State address since taking office after his predecessor resigned.

The Republican on Wednesday will outline his top policy priorities and propose a spending plan for Missouri’s roughly $28 billion budget.

Parson was serving as lieutenant governor this time last year. He assumed the governorship in June after former Republican Gov. Eric Greitens resigned in the face of potential impeachment over allegations of sexual and political misconduct.

Parson has worked to strike a markedly different tone than Greitens, who openly fought with fellow Republican lawmakers.

Parson’s priorities for the 2019 legislative session include enacting a law to allow the state to collect tax revenue from out-of-state online retailers who sell things to Missourians.

USDA temporarily reopening farm service offices during shutdown

Washington, D.C.– U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue  announced Wednesday that many Farm Service Agency (FSA) offices will reopen temporarily in the coming days to perform certain limited services for farmers and ranchers.

According to a media release, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has recalled about 2,500 FSA employees to open offices on Thursday, January 17 and Friday, January 18, in addition to Tuesday, January 22, during normal business hours. The offices will be closed for the federal Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday on Monday, January 21.

In almost half of FSA locations, FSA staff will be available to assist agricultural producers with existing farm loans and to ensure the agency provides 1099 tax documents to borrowers by the Internal Revenue Service’s deadline.

“Until Congress sends President Trump an appropriations bill in the form that he will sign, we are doing our best to minimize the impact of the partial federal funding lapse on America’s agricultural producers,” Perdue said.  “We are bringing back part of our FSA team to help producers with existing farm loans.  Meanwhile, we continue to examine our legal authorities to ensure we are providing services to our customers to the greatest extent possible during the shutdown.”

Staff members will be available at certain FSA offices to help producers with specific services, including:

• Processing payments made on or before December 31, 2018.

• Continuing expiring financing statements.

• Opening mail to identify priority items.

Additionally, as an intermittent incidental duty, staff may release proceeds from the sale of loan security by signing checks jointly payable to FSA that are brought to the county office by producers.

Information on the locations of FSA offices to be open during this three-day window will be posted:

• On the USDA website.

• On Twitter at @SecretarySonny and @USDA.

• On USDA’s Facebook page.

While staff are available in person during this three-day window, most available services can be handled over the phone. Producers can begin contacting staff on January 17 here.

Additionally, farmers who have loan deadlines during the lapse in funding do not need to make payments until the government shutdown ends.

Other FSA Programs and Services

Reopened FSA offices will only be able to provide the specifically identified services while open during this limited time. Services that will not be available include, but are not limited to:

• New direct or facility loans.

• New Farm loan guarantees.

• New marketing assistance loans.

• New applications for Market Facilitation Program (MFP).

• Certification of 2018 production for MFP payments.

• Dairy Margin Protection Program.

• Disaster assistance programs, such as:

o Livestock Indemnity Program.

o Emergency Conservation Program.

o Wildfires and Hurricanes Indemnity Program.

o Livestock Forage Disaster Program.

o Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees and Farm-Raised Fish.

While January 15, 2019 had been the original deadline for producers to apply for MFP, farmers have been unable to apply since December 28, 2018, when FSA offices closed because of the lapse in federal funding.  Secretary Perdue has extended the MFP application deadline for a period of time equal to the number of business days FSA offices end up being closed, once the government shutdown ends. These announced days of limited staff availability during the shutdown will not constitute days open in calculating the extension. Producers who already applied for MFP and certified their 2018 production by December 28, 2018 should have already received their payments.

More information on MFP is available at www.farmers.gov/manage/mfp.

USDA Working on FSA Fix

Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue says his agency is working with the Office of Management and Budget to find ways to reduce the impact of the government shutdown on farmers and ranchers. Farm Service Agency offices across the country are closed and it’s causing several challenges for producers.

“We’re working with OMB to see if we can find some relief in that area,” Perdue says on Fox Business. “We’re hoping to work up some strategies very soon to get these offices back open soon.” In the meantime, the Food and Drug Administration is planning to expand its daily food safety work amid the continuing lapse in funding. High-risk food safety inspections could start up again as soon as of Tuesday. Also, the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service remains on the job.

Perdue also tells Fox Business that the agency’s food safety work hasn’t been disrupted at all. “We’re not shortcutting any type of food safety issues there at USDA in our meat processing,” he says. States are also hustling to get Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program February benefits out to recipients starting this week, which Politico says is a big logistical and communications undertaking.

Trump Talks Trade, Immigrant Labor at Farm Bureau Convention

For the second-straight year, President Donald Trump spoke at the American Farm Bureau’s Annual Convention. While the president used his speech to try and build support for a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico, he did bring up subjects near-and-dear to the hearts of U.S. farmers.

While he’s looking to build the wall, the president did offer one exception to his hard-line stance. He promised to make it easier for seasonal farm workers to enter the country in spite of his hoped-for wall. Farmers have been struggling to find enough labor to operate their farms. “A lot of people don’t understand that,” Trump told Farm Bureau members. “You need people to help you with your farms and I’m not going to rule that out.”

The Washington Post says the farm organization has stood behind the president, even as the delegates were set to debate whether or not to toughen its policy stance on tariffs that were a direct result of Trump’s trade war. Trump only talked for s short time about China, saying that talks were “going well.” He said the USDA was doing everything it could to help farmers deal with the impacts of the government shutdown, now the longest in U.S. history.

State Departments of Agriculture Call for an End to Shutdown

The partial government shutdown is having a profound and cascading impact on American farmers and ranchers. Because of this, the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture is calling on Congress and the Administration to rapidly get to a settlement and end the shutdown as soon as possible.

The organization says in a news release that, “We know that some USDA employees are working on a limited number of programs, but we also know that all hands on deck are required to successfully direct every program American farmers, ranchers, and communities depend on.” The organization says that includes successful implementation of the 2018 Farm Bill.

Jeff Witte is the Secretary of Agriculture in New Mexico and the President of NASDA. He says, “The impacts of this shutdown are real. Not only are farmers and ranchers unable to use a host of existing USDA programs they depend on, they also can’t use the programs now available in the recently enacted farm bill.” Witte says if farmers can’t access those programs, the financial stress and challenges farmers are facing will only get worse. Many farmers depend on the Farm Service Agency for loans and need the shutdown solved as soon as possible.

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