February 11, 2012

Two Missouri House Speakers-elect, only one Speaker

We have two House Speakers-elect, one Republican and one Democrat, hoping to replace Speaker Ron Richard , a Republican from Joplin. Who actually becomes Speaker depends on which party wins the majority in the 2010 elections.

Rep_Talboy.jpg Rep. Mike Talboy , a Democrat from Kansas City, speaks with confidence when assessing the chance that Democrats could break through next year and re-capture the majority in the House, reversing Republican gains that gave them the majority in 2002.

"Well, I think we have been reversing that trend, "Talboy says. "We started out in 2002 and you look at 2004 and we were down 16 seats and then 2006 we win five, 2008 we win three more. That trend is reversing itself and we’ve cut that deficit in half."

Though Democrats swept into power in Washington, D. C. in the 2008 elections, they failed to win back either chamber of the General Assembly in Jefferson City. Democrat Jay Nixon won as governor, but Republicans maintained their majorities in the House and Senate. In the House, Republicans hold 88 seats in the Missouri House. Democrats hold 73. There are two vacancies.

House Democrats have chosen Talboy as Speaker-elect, but House Republicans like the status quo.

Rep_Tilley_with_Speaker_Richard.jpg "We’re going to work on keeping that Minority Leader-elect," responds Majority Floor Leader Steven Tilley , a Republican from Perryville.

Tilley has been chosen Speaker-elect by his fellow Republicans. Tilley expects Republicans to keep the majority, which will make him Speaker.

"The citizens of this state have felt, overwhelmingly, that they want a Republican majority,

because we hold the line on taxes, we invest in education, we encourage economic growth and development," Tilley says. "So, it’s nothing that’s going to be magical. Our job is to do a good job here in the Capitol on behalf of the citizens and let the citizens decide who the next Speaker is"

Tilley and Talboy agree on one thing: the key to the elections next year is candidates. Both are in charge of recruiting the best candidates for their respective parties. There will be 54 open seats in the 2010 state representative races, seats in which the incumbent is forced out due to term limits. Republicans hold 35 of those seats with Democrats holding 19.

Tilley claims that of the 163 seats in the House, 40% are secure Republican seats and 40% are secure Democratic seats. He says that leaves the battle focused on 20% of the seats, which he says are truly up for grabs next year.

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (1:15 MP3)

Mark Twain National Forest prepares for free camping and picnicking day

Saturday is special at Mark Twain National Forest as the campgrounds will offer free camping and picnicking. It’s part of National Public Lands Day, which encourages people to enjoy the outdoors and honors volunteers who have helped maintain Missouri’s 1.5 million acre National Forest.

“We’re having free camping and free day use – all the campgrounds and recreation areas that are operated by the National Forest,” said Mark Twain National Forest Recreation Manager Nancy Feakes in an interview with the Missourinet.

It’s an idea that has been around for a few years, with the weather playing an important role in annual participation.

“We’ve had this for at least the last five years,” said Feakes. “Our attendance seems to be related more to the weather than whether or not things are free. If we have a beautiful weekend to celebrate this then we’ll have lots of people that will come out to enjoy the free camping and the free day use. But if it’s a rainy day we get a lot less attendance – even if it is free.”

Taking advantage of the free camping will mean “roughing it” for some folks as most sites have no electrical hookups.

“The basic campground fee for most of them for basic sites without electrical hookups run $8 to $10 a night, normally,” said Feakes. “On electrical sites you may be saving as much as $13 to $15.”

Some of the campsites at Mark Twain National Forest will be closing in a few weeks, while others remain open throughout the year.

Download/Listen: Steve Walsh report (:60 MP3)

Human Trafficking Awareness Week in full swing

Modern day slavery exists … even in Missouri. The University of Missouri is hoping to increase awareness of the problem this week.

Stop Traffic is one of the groups hosting several events throughout the week at the University of Missouri to educate the public about labor trafficking and sex trafficking.

Movie screenings, free-trade fairs, lectures and more are happening on campus throughout the week.

Organizer Shannon Montanez says both are in Missouri, but in two different markets. While Missouri’s metro cities — St. Louis and Kansas City — are bringing in those who are victims of sex trafficking, rural areas often utilize cheap labor on farms and in factories.

Shopping from major retail stores that also take advantage of carrying products resulting from cheap labor is another way people inadvertantly support human trafficking.

Montanez says people shouldn’t solicit sex from the erotica section on Craigslist, a hotbed of illegal trafficking activity, or buy items from large retail corporations, which could be buying from labor shops where people are underpaid, under-fed and overworked.

The International Labor Organization estimates nearly 2.5 million people have been victims of human trafficking over the past ten years.

The U-S Department of Justice estimates 50 percent of victims of human trafficking are children.

The U-S Department of State estimates that 80 percent of human trafficking victims are women and girls. While the majority of them are exploited for sex, some of them are also illegally imported for the labor market.

For a schedule of events or more information, visit http://www.stoptrafficnow.com


Jessica Machetta reports [Download/listen MP3]

Cardinals downed in 11 innings

It was worth a shot.  Matt Holliday slid hard into Cubs shortstop Ryan Theriot who threw the ball wide of first base.  Ryan Ludwick was safe at first and it appeared the Cardinals won again in the ninth inning on Sunday.  But hold on.

Jake Fox circles the bases after his 11th inning homer Runner interference was called on Holliday who slid out of the baseline, which was the correct call.  The play turned into a double play to end the inning.  In the 11 th , Jake Fox of the Cubs hit a two run homer and they added another to win 6-3 and keep St. Louis’ magic number at four. (photo by Bill Greenblatt, UPI)

All year the Cardinals fight in every game and last night it was more of the same.  After Holliday got hit by a pitch in the eighth, he scored on a wild pitch from Kevin Gregg to tie the game at 3-3.

Adam Wainwright had yet another solid outing, but got another no decision.  The numbers for Wainwright are amazing.  According to stlcardinals.com,  Wainwright is 13-5 with three no-decisions in 21 starts since May 31, but has given up two earned runs or fewer in all eight of his winless starts. The righty has lost games by scores of 2-1, 2-0, 3-2 and 1-0 and got a no-decision when he allowed one run in nine innings in a 2-1 Cardinals win on July 1 against San Francisco.   The Cy Young hopeful is 18-8 with a 2.59 ERA with two regular-season starts remaining but should have a much better win-loss record than his stats show.

The Cardinals will now clinch the Central Division on the road.  They play at Houston for three, then a weekend series in Colorado where the Rockies lead the NL wild card.

Career Ladder stance sends signal about next year’s budget

A signal about just how tight the state budget is and how difficult a task awaits the legislature next year has already caused quite a stir.

House Budget Committee Chairman Allen Icet (R-Wildwood) set off a controversy when he and his Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Gary Nodler (R-Joplin) wrote a letter to the Education Commissioner suggesting the Career Ladder, a program that awards teachers for extra work, could be cut. House Democrats scheduled a news conference on the day of the Veto Session to criticize both the position of the two budget chiefs and the fact that they sent a letter speaking for the General Assembly as a whole.

Icet says everything funded through General Revenue is open to scrutiny, because state revenue has fallen with no sign of a rebound in sight.

"If you look at the 2002-2003 timeframe, I think we had a 3% drop and a 4% drop (in state revenue), something like that. Of course, last year was a 7% drop. Year-to-date it’s 7%. I’m not saying the first quarter is the way we’re going to end up, but we’re talking a 14% (drop in state revenue)," Icet says. "So this is a much more serious drop in state revenue than what we experienced when I was here those first few years."

The deteriorating state revenue picture caused Governor Nixon to withhold more than $400 million from the appropriations approved by the General Assembly in the 2009 session. The money will be released only if state revenue picks up. State lawmakers could find themselves

$400-to-500 million in the hole before they even begin considering the state budget that begins July 1, 2010.

Icet says the state will truly struggle with falling revenue and rising obligations.

"Not only are our revenues dropping, we still have mandatory programs. Medicaid for example, $150 million, new general revenue that we don’t have, because the budget is dropping. So that delta of what we need to find, money-wise, just gets bigger and bigger," says Icet. "2011 is going to be a challenge."

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (:60 MP3)