a Better Bubbleā„¢

MoInd šŸ“°

Vaccine mandates have always faced resistance and saved lives | Opinion

3 years 5 months ago

Health care professionals had high hopes that rapid vaccination of our entire U.S. population would slow COVID-19 transmission and stem the disproportionately high death count in the United States. We also hoped to avoid more concerning mutations that are inevitable when viruses multiply unchecked. I lost my mother to COVID-19 in November of 2020, less […]

The post Vaccine mandates have always faced resistance and saved lives | Opinion appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Randy Olson

Buttigieg points to Pittsburgh bridge collapse as blunt reminder of infrastructure spending needs

3 years 5 months ago

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Friday the collapse of a bridge in Pittsburgh illustrated the necessity of federal investment in the nation’s infrastructure, including more than 1,000 bridges in poor condition in Kansas and twice that total in Missouri. Buttigieg braved winter chill to stand at the rusting Rock Island […]

The post Buttigieg points to Pittsburgh bridge collapse as blunt reminder of infrastructure spending needs appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Tim Carpenter

COVID surge forced rural Missouri hospital to build makeshift ICU for dying patient

3 years 5 months ago

For six days, Dr. Mohamed Nabeel Kuziez and his team at a small emergency room in southeastern Missouri did everything they could to keep a 67-year-old woman with severe pneumonia alive. The day after Kathie Ganime was admitted on Jan. 12, Kuziez saw that her infection was so critical that she needed to be transferred […]

The post COVID surge forced rural Missouri hospital to build makeshift ICU for dying patient appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rebecca Rivas

ā€˜A lasting impact’: Missouri Senate panel hears pitch for using federal COVID funds

3 years 5 months ago

There was skepticism about new temporary state employees and the cost of developing the Rock Island railroad corridor into a new trail during the Senate Appropriation Committee’s first look at Gov. Mike Parson’s plan for spending $2.8 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds. But for the most part, the 90 minutes presentation Thursday by Budget […]

The post ‘A lasting impact’: Missouri Senate panel hears pitch for using federal COVID funds appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rudi Keller

Ketanji Brown Jackson considered among Biden’s top candidates for the U.S. Supreme Court

3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON — With theĀ retirementĀ of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer by this summer, President Joe Biden has said he will fulfill a campaign promise of appointing a Black woman to an open seat on the highest court in the land. A top contender, who was even vetted by the Obama administration in 2016 as a […]

The post Ketanji Brown Jackson considered among Biden’s top candidates for the U.S. Supreme Court appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Ariana Figueroa

Missouri congressional redistricting battle shifts focus to bolstering GOP seat in St. Louis area

3 years 5 months ago

Differences over a new map for Missouri’s eight congressional districts have narrowed to how to design three districts in the St. Louis area, Republican leaders of the Missouri Senate said Thursday. During a news conference that capped a week of continuing rancor in GOP ranks, Senate President Pro Tem Dave Schatz and Majority Leader Caleb […]

The post Missouri congressional redistricting battle shifts focus to bolstering GOP seat in St. Louis area appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rudi Keller

Biden vows to nominate first Black woman to Supreme Court by end of February

3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer formally announced his retirement Thursday, giving President Joe Biden his first, and possibly only, opportunity to make a nomination for the lifetime appointment. At the White House, Biden said he will make his decision by the end of February and recommitted to nominating the court’s first Black female […]

The post Biden vows to nominate first Black woman to Supreme Court by end of February appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Jennifer Shutt

Counties ask Missouri Supreme Court to strike down law restricting local CAFO rules

3 years 5 months ago

A pair of Missouri counties is asking the state Supreme Court to overturn a 2019 law that stripped them of their ability to set their own rules for concentrated animal feeding operations.Ā Ā  Under the law, county commissioners are prohibited from setting policies that are ā€œinconsistent with or more stringent thanā€ state rules for CAFOs. The […]

The post Counties ask Missouri Supreme Court to strike down law restricting local CAFO rules appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Allison Kite

The initiative petition is a Missouri treasure | Opinion

3 years 5 months ago

Missouri’s initiative petition system has been in place for 115 years. It allows citizens to put an issue on the ballot for a statewide vote. This critical tool, used through the years by citizens from all political persuasions is now under attack by lawmakers who want to curtail the people’s power. Thirty years ago, when […]

The post The initiative petition is a Missouri treasure | Opinion appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Marilyn McLeod

Reversing state’s decision, Missouri panel awards marijuana license to jilted applicant

3 years 5 months ago

In a rare move, a Missouri commission granted a medical marijuana license to an applicant after discovering irregularities with how state regulators evaluated applications. The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) decided to forgo appealing the ruling, announcing Tuesday that it had reached a settlement with the jilted applicant to end the litigation.Ā Ā  […]

The post Reversing state’s decision, Missouri panel awards marijuana license to jilted applicant appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Jason Hancock

Capitol Perspectives: The profound change in Missouri’s legislature

3 years 5 months ago

This column is prompted by a question from a long-time statehouse observer as to why Missouri’s legislature has become so divided. My answer involved the number of changes in the statehouse over the decades. A major cause has been the deep and growing ideological divide for the public and elected public officials. Years ago, a […]

The post Capitol Perspectives: The profound change in Missouri’s legislature appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Phill Brooks

Senate committee advances ā€˜6-2’ Missouri Congressional map

3 years 5 months ago

A new Congressional map won the approval of a Missouri Senate committee on Tuesday, setting the stage for a debate that promises to be among the most contentious of the 2022 legislative session. After two hours of public testimony, a pair of Democrats joined with seven Republicans Tuesday to advance a map that keeps the […]

The post Senate committee advances ‘6-2’ Missouri Congressional map appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Jason Hancock

With a vaccine mandate looming, Missouri nursing homes face more staffing problems

3 years 5 months ago

This story was originally published by Kaiser Health News. ST. CHARLES, Mo. — Jamie Smith, a staffing agency nurse who loves end-of-life care, said she has been warmly welcomed by staffers and residents at Frontier Health & Rehabilitation in this conservative St. Louis suburb. That’s even though she has not been vaccinated against covid-19. But […]

The post With a vaccine mandate looming, Missouri nursing homes face more staffing problems appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Eric Berger

Eric Schmitt fails a moral test on school masks | Opinion

3 years 5 months ago

On Friday, I had to work from home because my son’s school district canceled classes due to a COVID-related staff shortage. While working between interruptions from him, I saw the news that Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt sued our school district — and nearly three dozen others — for having the audacity to reimplement a […]

The post Eric Schmitt fails a moral test on school masks | Opinion appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rev. Brian Kaylor

Parson pay raise plan in limbo as $5.4 billion spending bill awaits vote

3 years 5 months ago

Missouri state employees counting on seeing a big raise in their February paychecks may be disappointed, as lawmakers fiddle with a $5.4 billion spending bill pushed by Gov. Mike Parson. When the Republican governor in December proposed a 5.5 percent pay raise for all state workers, he said he wanted it in effect by Feb. […]

The post Parson pay raise plan in limbo as $5.4 billion spending bill awaits vote appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rudi Keller

Dry ground and unmet promises: Platte County wetlands project is dead in the water

3 years 5 months ago

This story was originally published by the Kansas City Beacon. A wide expanse of plastic netting sits partially buried by dirt and vegetation in Parkville’s Platte Landing Park. Intended as the base of an ongoing wetlands restoration project, the netting has instead become an expensive — and dangerous — nuisance. The City of Parkville in […]

The post Dry ground and unmet promises: Platte County wetlands project is dead in the water appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Emily Wolf

As Missouri looks to legalize recreational marijuana, expungement gets renewed attention

3 years 5 months ago

The push to legalize recreational marijuana use in Missouri is coming from multiple directions, with a handful of proposed initiative petitions and at least one bill, and potentially more, backed by Republican lawmakers.Ā  Each hopes to place the issue on the 2022 ballot for voter approval. And each proposal also includes a provision that, while […]

The post As Missouri looks to legalize recreational marijuana, expungement gets renewed attention appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rebecca Rivas

No matter what we call it, let’s find common understanding about race and racism | Opinion

3 years 5 months ago

Critical Race Theory. Uncritical Race Theory. Factual Race Theory. Call it what you will. But as the saying goes, ā€œA rose called by any other name is still a rose.ā€ Racism called by any other name is still racism. So, let’s step away from the naming, and name calling, and try to find some common […]

The post No matter what we call it, let’s find common understanding about race and racism | Opinion appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Janice Ellis

With voting rights stalled, some senators mull an update to the Electoral Count Act

3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON — A bipartisan group of senators is exploring legislation to overhaul how Congress counts Electoral College votes, but backers of stalled voting rights legislation are lukewarm on the effort as a substitute. The Electoral Count ActĀ is an obscure law that has come under recent scrutiny,Ā a year after the Jan. 6 attackĀ on the U.S. Capitol […]

The post With voting rights stalled, some senators mull an update to the Electoral Count Act appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Ariana Figueroa

Military medical team heads to St. Louis to support COVID care at Christian Hospital

3 years 5 months ago

St. Louis hospitals straining to keep up with a record-breaking number of COVID-19 cases will get some relief in the form of a military medical team. A 40-member team will begin arriving at BJC-Christian Hospital in North St. Louis County on Wednesday, a news release from BJC HealthCare stated. The St. Louis Metropolitan Pandemic Task […]

The post Military medical team heads to St. Louis to support COVID care at Christian Hospital appeared first on Missouri Independent.

Rudi Keller