logo
Lawmakers negotiating Missouri budget add $300M to public schools spending

Lawmakers negotiating Missouri budget add $300M to public schools spending

Yahoo08-05-2025
A screenshot from the livestream of the House-Senate budget conference committee meeting Wednesday night. Members began work about 8:30 p.m. and settled their differences on eight spending bills at 11:30 p.m. (Screenshot from livestream video via Missouri House Communications)
Missouri's public schools would be fully funded and a policy some blame for undermining a child care subsidy program would be fixed, legislative budget negotiators decided Wednesday night as they worked through eight of the 13 spending bills for state operations in the coming year.
Over about three hours, the conference committees of five lawmakers from both the House and Senate resolved differences between the spending bills, more often than not by selecting the option that spent more money.
Tracking by The Independent shows the eight bills completed Wednesday would spend $450 million more general revenue than Gov. Mike Kehoe's January budget proposal, $636 million more than the House version approved in April and $118 million more than the version approved in the Senate last week.
The committees will reconvene Thursday to finalize spending decisions on five more bills, with the full House and Senate scheduled to vote Friday in advance of the constitutional deadline.
The differences that must be resolved are between the $49.4 billion plan for day-to-day operations approved in the Senate and the $47.9 billion plan approved in the House.
The education budget that will go to the chambers for final approval includes $4 billion for the public school foundation formula, including a $297 million increase that Kehoe opposed. The Department of Elementary and Secondary Education budget will also include $107 million Kehoe recommended to revamp how child care providers are paid, basing it on enrollment instead of attendance.
House Budget Committee Chairman Dirk Deaton, a Republican from Noel, tried to defend the decision to back Kehoe's view that the money shouldn't be spent. But he was outnumbered, with Democratic House members joining unanimous backing from senators for Senate Appropriations Chairman Lincoln Hough's position that state law required the money to be appropriated.
'This is the most important thing we're going to do today, and this is a statutory minimum that we have in a commitment that we've made to our kids back home,' state Rep. Betsy Fogle, a Springfield Democrat, said as she advocated for the foundation formula increase.
As he agreed to the increase, Deaton looked forward to the commission Kehoe created to consider changes to the formula.
'I do hope, when you look at the formula, if we have an opportunity to rewrite it, that we won't let unelected bureaucrats make a $300 million call or something similar to future general assemblies,' Deaton said.
Along with the two big items in the education department, the conference committees:
Adopted Kehoe's pay plan proposal for state employee raises, which will reward longevity. State workers will get a 1% raise for every two years of state employment, capped at 10% for 20 years.
Agreed to increase the base budgets for all state colleges and universities by 3%, which was the amount approved in the Senate. The House had adopted Kehoe's recommendation for a 1.5% boost and added $27.1 million for campus maintenance needs, which was cut by the negotiators.
Removed language directing the Missouri Lottery to begin a three-year pilot program for lottery courier services.
The budget negotiators began working about 8:30 p.m., about 12 hours later than the scheduled start.
The day began with tensions between Deaton and Hough. As Hough was wrapping up a meeting of the Senate Appropriations Committee two rooms away, Deaton was announcing that because Hough was absent, the conference meetings would begin at 10 p.m.
Deaton said he was kept waiting six hours Monday before Hough met with him. They worked for about seven hours to resolve issues that they could present to the conference committees, then for 15 minutes on Tuesday.
He said he was not informed of Hough's intent to be ready to work in the afternoon after a recess of the committee for short floor sessions.
'I've not heard anything since yesterday at 1 o'clock,' Deaton said.
Hough said he worked with Senate leadership to plan time for the conference meeting. He thought it was communicated to the House.
'It was stated by me on multiple occasions that my intention was to get together this afternoon after a few hours of floor time,' Hough said.
Hough tried to get the conference committees together about 3 p.m., after both chambers had adjourned for the day, but Deaton was not willing and did not appear.
The budget negotiations, when they finally began, went relatively quickly and without rancor. Deaton and Hough took turns reading through the budget lines and stating the intent to take the House or Senate position, or a compromise number in between.
Members interrupted often, usually to challenge a decision about an item among the 166 new earmarked items for programs or projects added to the eight bills. Only 12 added at some point didn't make the final cut.
State Sen. Barbara Washington, a Kansas City Democrat, spoke up in favor of one threatened with a cut, $50,000 for Global One Urban Farming in Kansas City.
'This really helps the children in that community with growing food,' Washington said. 'It is only $50,000. It's so little. I know I ask for a lot, but I don't ask for a lot of money.'
Instead of being cut, the organization will receive $25,000.
Hough and Deaton both got the earmarks most identified with them in the budget. Deaton cut $8 million to restore a historic footbridge in Springfield and Hough cut $19 million to buy land for a state park in McDonald County.
Unsurprisingly, both made it into the budget.
State Sen. Brian Williams, a University City Democrat, questioned Deaton on the decision to cut $500,000 slated for an urgent care program for veterans in Kansas City. It was one of three earmarked items for veterans alongside $1 million for temporary housing for veterans in St. Louis and $1 million for a veterans housing program in Columbia.
Williams said one consideration for earmarked appropriations of general revenue should be where the money is generated in taxes. Kansas City and St. Louis need to be treated fairly as the richest areas of the state, he said.
'Jackson County makes up a significant amount of the economy in our state, we need to ensure that our budget reflects that,' Williams said.
Deaton said one factor in the decision was the amount being dedicated to veterans programs and the limited nature of state funds.
'There's the give and the take, there's money in, money out,' Deaton said. 'We can't do everything, unfortunately and be all things for all people at all times. We're doing a lot for veterans in this budget.'
The final budget will have $500,000 for the Kansas City urgent care program and $500,000 for the St. Louis temporary housing program.
No one challenged Hough or Deaton when they said they were approving earmarked spending that was in or near their districts. Fogle, however, challenged Hough when he cut $4 million from an economic development organization called Innovate SOMO.
'I know you feel like you gotta give a little bit, but I would rather not give with our community,' Fogle said.
'I think,' Hough replied, 'our community is fairly well served in this legislature.'
SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC
Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC

The Hill

timea minute ago

  • The Hill

Mississippi joining 3 other GOP-led states sending National Guard troops to DC

Mississippi on Monday became the fourth Republican-led state to announce plans to send National Guard troops to Washington, D.C. to bolster President Trump's crackdown on crime in the nation's capital. 'I've approved the deployment of approximately 200 Mississippi National Guard Soldiers to Washington, D.C., to support President Trump's effort to return law and order to our nation's capital,' Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves (R) said in a post on the social platform X. 'Crime is out of control there, and it's clear something must be done to combat it,' he continued. 'Americans deserve a safe capital city that we can all be proud of. I know the brave men and women of our National Guard will do an excellent job enhancing public safety and supporting law enforcement.' West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey (R), South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster (R) and Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) all announced over the weekend that they would send hundreds of soldiers from their states to nearly double the 800 D.C. National Guard members already mobilized. All three GOP governors said in their advisories that they were acting on requests from the Trump administration. The president announced a massive crime-fighting effort in Washington last week, with a federal takeover of the Metropolitan Police Department and infusion of federal agents and National Guard troops. 'Until 4 days ago, Washington, D.C., was the most unsafe 'city' in the United States, and perhaps the World,' Trump wrote in an update on Truth Social early Monday. 'Now, in just a short period of time, it is perhaps the safest, and getting better every single hour!' Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X on Monday morning that federal authorities made 137 arrests over the weekend, bringing the total arrests since the initiative began to more than 400. 'We are not slowing down,' she wrote. 'We are committed to making DC safe again!' Trump has set his sights on tackling crime in the nation's capital, even as local officials have pushed back on characterizations of violent surges. According to the District's statistics, which Trump has deemed 'fake,' violent crime is down about 26 percent compared to this point last year.

Suffolk Sheriff Steven Tompkins's arraignment on extortion charges pushed to Thursday
Suffolk Sheriff Steven Tompkins's arraignment on extortion charges pushed to Thursday

Boston Globe

timea minute ago

  • Boston Globe

Suffolk Sheriff Steven Tompkins's arraignment on extortion charges pushed to Thursday

Tompkins, a prominent Democrat in Boston political circles, was arrested earlier this month in Florida for allegedly pressuring the company under the threat of revoking a partnership with his office that was central to its licensing application. Prosecutors allege that in addition to forcing a company official to sell him stock for $50,000 before the venture went public, Tompkins subsequently demanded he be repaid after the value of his shares sank below his initial investment. Advertisement Tompkins has served as sheriff since 2013, overseeing the Nashua Street and South Bay jails in Boston and other detention operations in Suffolk County. He was initially appointed sheriff by former governor Deval Patrick, and then won the seat in the following election. He has been very active in local Democratic politics, offering up Tompkins has not resigned nor given any indication that he plans to in light of the criminal charges, though Advertisement Before he was named sheriff, Tompkins worked as the department's chief of external affairs and created the Common Ground Institute, a vocational training program for inmates about to be released, as well as The Choice Program, which sends correctional officers into Boston's public schools. As part of the legislation that shaped the cannabis industry in Massachusetts, the state requires businesses, as part of the licensing process, to lay out plans to promote diversity and invest in individuals and communities disproportionately affected by previous cannabis prohibitions. Federal prosecutors allege a cannabis company hoping to open in Boston sought to meet that licensing requirement through an agreement with Tompkins to train and hire people recently released from jail. But Tompkins used that partnership to extort the stock deal, prosecutors allege. The indictment of Tompkins didn't name the cannabis company. But a person familiar with the matter confirmed it is Ascend Mass, part of Ascend Cannabis, a multistate retailer whose local operations were once run by Tompkins's close friend Andrea Cabral. Cabral has since left the company. She was previously Suffolk County sheriff, and Tompkins was her top aide. When she was appointed to a statewide post as public safety secretary in late 2012, Patrick tapped Tompkins as her successor. Cabral is not the Ascend official who was allegedly extorted, according to the source, who asked for anonymity because they are not authorized to speak about it publicly. Ascend continues to operate the store in question on Friend Street in Boston, which was relicensed most recently in November, according to the state's Cannabis Control Commission. Material from prior Globe stories was used in this report. Advertisement Travis Andersen can be reached at

Oval Office meeting again puts rocky, tense Trump-Zelenskyy relationship to the test
Oval Office meeting again puts rocky, tense Trump-Zelenskyy relationship to the test

USA Today

timea minute ago

  • USA Today

Oval Office meeting again puts rocky, tense Trump-Zelenskyy relationship to the test

Trump's appraisal of the Ukrainian president has been an exercise in zigzag diplomacy as their relationship has unfolded since Trump's first term. WASHINGTON – He has his bromance with Vladimir Putin. But President Donald Trump's relationship with Volodymyr Zelenskyy is more whiplash than kinship. Trump's appraisal of the Ukrainian president has been an exercise in zigzag diplomacy, deriding him one moment as a modestly successful comedian who doesn't want peace and the next minute calling him a nice man with whom he has a good relationship. "Did I say that?" Trump asked back in February, when reporters reminded him that just a week earlier he had mocked Zelenskyy as a dictator. "I can't believe I said that," he exclaimed. He said it. Zelenskyy returned to the White House on Monday, Aug. 18, to discuss a potential peace deal to end Ukraine's three-and-a-half year war with Russia. The visit marks his first time back since a disastrous Oval Office meeting back in February in which Trump berated him on live television and then kicked him off the White House grounds. This time, Zelenskyy brought some backup. French President Emmanuel Macron, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and other European leaders joined Zelenskyy at the White House meeting with Trump. Trump's like-him-one-minute, lampoon-him-the-next relationship with Zelenskyy stands in stark contrast to his rapport with Putin. Trump gave the Russian leader a red-carpet welcome to Alaska on Aug. 15 for a summit that was big on pageantry but produced no results. The two leaders left The Last Frontier without a deal to end the war. Troubled history for Trump and Zelenskyy Trump and Zelenskyy have a troubled history. It started with a phone call that led to Trump's first impeachment. The two leaders connected in July 2019, just three months after Zelenskyy's stunning rise from television comedian to newly elected president of Ukraine. The call started off well enough. Trump congratulated Zelenskyy on "a great victory" and complimented him for a doing a terrific job, according to a summary later released by the White House. But then Trump asked for a favor. He pressured Zelenskyy repeatedly to reopen an investigation into a Ukrainian energy company to focus on a political rival, Joe Biden, and Biden's son, Hunter. At the time, Joe Biden was considered a likely candidate for president and would, in fact, go on to defeat Trump in the 2020 election. Democrats said Trump's asking a foreign government to investigate a political rival amounted to an egregious abuse of power. Trump was impeached for the first time just a few months later but was acquitted in a Senate trial. From then on, Trump and Zelenskyy have never been on the best of terms. Trump has insisted repeatedly that Ukraine's war with Russia would never have started if he had been president and at times has even appeared to blame Zelenskyy for the conflict. But it was Putin who started the war when he ordered Russian troops to invade their Eastern European neighbor. Trump has also taken Zelenskyy to task on social media when efforts to strike a peace deal have come up short. "Think of it, a modestly successful comedian, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, talked the United States of America into spending $350 Billion Dollars, to go into a War that couldn't be won, that never had to start, but a War that he, without the U.S. and 'TRUMP,' will never be able to settle," Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Feb. 19. "A Dictator without Elections, Zelenskyy better move fast or he is not going to have a Country left." A week later, Trump suggested he didn't remember calling Zelenskyy a dictator and insisted he gets along with Zelenskyy just fine. "I have a very good relationship with President Putin. I think I have a very good relationship with President Zelenskyy," he said. Discord on full display in Oval Office The next day, though, the discord between them exploded in spectacular fashion when Zelenskyy came to the Oval Office to sign a deal for the U.S. to receive revenue from Ukraine's minerals in exchange for military assistance. As tempers flared, Zelenskyy told Trump an ocean separates the U.S. from the conflict now, "but you will feel it in the future." "Don't tell us what we're going to feel," Trump shot back. 'We're trying to solve a problem. Don't tell us what we're going to feel." Trump mocked Zelenskyy's clothes, Vice President JD Vance called him "disrespectful" and Trump booted the Ukrainian president from the White House without signing the minerals deal. Trump later wrote on social media that Zelenskyy "is not ready for Peace if America is involved, because he feels our involvement gives him a big advantage in negotiations." Trump said Zelenskyy "disrespected the United States of America in its cherished Oval Office," adding "he can come back when he's ready for Peace." Trump and Zelenskyy met again in private at Pope Francis' funeral in Rome in April – the White House called the meeting 'productive' – and again at a NATO summit in June. Trump greeted Zelenskyy with a handshake when he arrived at the White House on Monday, Aug. 18 and said it was an 'honor' to have him back. Michael Collins writes about the intersection of politics and culture. A veteran reporter, he has covered the White House and Congress. Follow him on X @mcollinsNEWS. Contributing: Francesca Chambers and Joey Garrison

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store