Website l E-mail Me l Biography l Press Releases l Legislation
Legislative Highlights from the Missouri Senate
Week of March 31, 2014

Shown above, Nola Ruth, right, presents Sara Ashbaugh, a senior from Rock Bridge High School, with a Senate Resolution. Sara competed at the Regional Poetry Out Loud Competition in Columbia.

 

I presented Senate Joint Resolution 36 in the House General Laws Committee on Tuesday, April 1. The bill now awaits placement on the House calendar for discussion in the chamber. The legislation modifies constitutional provisions regarding the right to keep and bear arms.

On Tuesday, the 2014 Class of Junior Leadership Columbia students visited the Capitol. All of the students visiting were juniors representing Hickman, Rock Bridge, Battle and Fr. Tolton high schools; Columbia Independent School; Heritage Academy; and Christian Fellow School. Congratulations to all who participated in this leadership program.

On Wednesday, a conference committee was held between the Senate and the House on House Bill 2014, the supplemental budget bill, to iron out the differences between both chambers. The bill now awaits passage.

Line by line mark ups of the budget will begin on Monday, April 7, in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

I was honored to introduce several Farm Bureau Youth Leadership students on the Senate floor on Thursday morning, April 3. Thank you for making the trip to the Capitol. Best of luck to you in your future endeavors!

The status of my sponsored legislation for the 2014 session is as follows:

  • Senate Bill 498, which would require health insurance navigators to be bonded and create a private cause of action against navigators for the unlawful release of information, has been second read in the House. Representative Kevin Austin is handling the bill in the House for me.

  • Senate Bill 696, which increases the penalties and driver’s license suspension periods for those who fail to yield the right-of-way in certain instances, was approved by the Senate on Thursday, March 27. The bill awaits committee referral in the House.

  • Senate Bill 697, which allows the Department of Revenue to disclose the annual number of cigarettes sales by the tobacco manufacturer, was second read and referred to the Appropriations Committee.  A hearing was held on the bill on Monday, Feb. 10. 

    Currently, the Department of Revenue is prohibited from disclosing information relating to a person's tax return, with certain exceptions under Section 32.057, RSMo. This legislation opens the confidentiality section and creates an exception allowing the Department of Revenue to disclose to the public the annual cigarette sales by a tobacco product manufacturer.

    The legislation would provide government transparency and availability of data that is otherwise difficult to obtain and readily assemble. Existence of public information may provide state legislators with insight on growth or decline in the state smoking population and its potential effect on future state revenues.
  • Senate Joint Resolution 36, which modifies constitutional provisions regarding the right to keep and bear arms, was voted and passed by the Senate on Thursday, Feb. 20. The bill was heard in the House General Laws Committee on Tuesday, April 1.  Representative John Diehl is handling this bill for me in the House.
  • Senate Joint Resolution 44 is a constitutional amendment that, if approved by the voters, would require any revenue received by the state in a fiscal year in excess of the amount appropriated for such fiscal year shall be returned to taxpayers in the form of a refundable tax credit.  The bill awaits a vote by the Senate Ways and Means Committee to proceed to the full Senate for possible debate.
  • House Bill 2014, the supplemental budget bill, was reported to the Senate on Wednesday, March 12, and awaits a conference committee between the Senate and the House.

In local news, the Department of Conservation (MDC) invites young hunters to discover nature and learn more about turkey hunting at a free youth turkey clinic Tuesday, April 1, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the MDC E. Sydney Stephens Central Regional Office and Conservation Research Center in Columbia. Participants will learn how to select the best ammunition and shotgun for turkey hunting, how to improve their hunting and shooting skills, how to properly pattern their shotgun, how to call turkeys, and how to use decoys during the hunt.

Those attending the clinic will also have an opportunity to submit their name for a youth turkey hunt. The turkey hunt will take place on April 12 in Boone County. Any first time youth turkey hunter, ages 11 to 15 and who is hunter education certified, is eligible to apply. All selected participants must be accompanied by a parent or adult mentor age 18 or older.

For more information about the clinic or youth hunt, contact Conservation Agent Brian Flowers at Brian.Flowers@mdc.mo.gov or (573) 815-7901, ext. 3388. The Central Regional Office and Conservation Research Center is conveniently located off of U.S. Highway 63 just west of the Discovery Parkway exit on the south side of East Gans Road. For more information about this and other Discover Nature programs, go online to www.mdc.mo.gov.

Thank you for your interest in the issues that affect the citizens of Boone and Cooper counties.  If you have any questions or concerns throughout this session, or plan on coming by the Capitol, please contact my office at (573) 751-3931.

Did you know...?

Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first president to be televised—the event was the New York World’s Fair in 1939.

If you would like to unsubscribe from this newsletter, click here.