February 11, 2012

Deeken: State employee job loss will negatively affect economy

A state representative with a lot of state workers in his district says the Governor is doing the best he can to balance the state budget amid declining state revenue.

Rep. Bill Deeken (R-Jefferson City) says some 18,000 of his constituents work for the state. Deeken says he’s talked to Gov. Nixon about the loss of nearly 2,ooo state positions since the start of the year; he wants the cuts made throughout the state so his district doesn’t suffer the full consequences of declining state revenue. Deeken says he thinks Nixon did a good job of doing just that.

Deeken says he’s prepared to spend a lot of time balancing the state budget when the legislature convenes in January, but that he’s optimistic state revenue will rebound.

He says Missouri can increase revenue by bringing more jobs into the state.

When he was elected seven years ago, the state was $1.1 billion dollars in debt, Deeken says, and “before the stock market crashed, we were looking at an $800 million surplus. It can be done.”

Nixon authorized cuts to the budget approved by the state legislature this past session to $634 million. Nixon vetoed $105 million dollars from the state budget, and then he withheld $325 million. Nixon is trimming $12 million from the state payroll through lay offs and attrition.

Nixon says the core budgets of schools, colleges, public safety and Medicaid will be spared. So-called cost containment should trim $32 million from the Medicaid budget. Maintenance and repair takes a $20 million hit, which comes on the heels of a $47.8 million cut announced earlier, a drastic reduction to the $107.8 million budget. The school transportation budget, which helps offset the cost to local school districts to run buses, will be trimmed by $15.8 million. The Life Science Research Board will be cut by $13 million.

Nixon insists that the budget cuts will not harm the core functions of the state budget: education, public safety and Medicaid. Though Nixon has authorized cuts to all departments, he said that the basic school funding formula will not be touched, that state colleges will receive the money promised in the budget, that there would be no cuts to state troopers, Water Patrol personnel or prison guards and that no one would lose eligibility for Medicaid.

State Budget Director Linda Luebbering released a detailed list  of the budget cuts, which can be viewed at http://oa.mo.gov/bp/FY2010AdditionalExpenditureRestrictions.pdf.

Brent Martin contributed to this article.

Jessica Machetta reports [Download / listen Mp3]

Public defender “caseload crisis” comes before Supreme Court

Whether the State Public Defender System can cope with a tight budget by refusing to represent certain defendants is a question now before the State Supreme Court.

The court has heard oral arguments in two cases. In St. Francois County, public defenders refused to represent an indigent defendant, because he had earlier hired a private attorney. A regulation adopted by the State Public Defender Commission prohibits public defenders from taking on clients who had hired their own attorneys. In Boone County, a regulation prohibits public defenders from accepting new probation revocation cases in which a suspended execution of sentence had been imposed. In both cases, trial judges overruled the commission.

[Read more...]

SLU priest expects no abortion provision in final health care bill

It’s getting to crunch time on Capitol Hill in Washington as the U.S. House prepares to bring its version of a health care reform bill to the floor for debate. There is division within the Democratic Party, which has the numbers needed to easily pass the legislation, over the issue of abortion and whether the procedure should be covered by any bill that is passed. Many miles away from the Nation’s Capital, in St. Louis, a Catholic priest who supports universal health care coverage is expressing his view that expansion of abortion rights will not be a part of any final bill. [Read more...]

Rams make roster move

The St. Louis Rams have signed CB Danny Gorrer from the New Orleans Saints practice squad, the Rams announced today. To make room for Gorrer on the roster, the Rams have waived WR Tim Carter.

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MU’s Weatherspoon named impact P.O.W.

Sean WeatherspoonMissouri senior linebacker Sean Weatherspoon has been named the Lott Trophy IMPACT Player of the Week, for his game high 12 tackles in Mizzou’s 36-17 win at Colorado. Weatherspoon led the Tigers as they held Colorado to negative-14 yards rushing overall, and just 176 yards of total offense in the win.

Weatherspoon, a Lott Trophy quarter-finalist the past two years who was an Associated Press 3rd-Team All-American in 2008, now has 73 tackles on the season to lead the team and 375 in his career, which is currently 5th-best on the school career chart. Missouri will receive $1,000 for its general scholarship fund in recognition of Weatherspoon’s award.

Named after Hall of Famer Ronnie Lott, the Lott Trophy is awarded to college football’s Defensive IMPACT Player of the Year. Now in its sixth year, the Lott Trophy is the first college football award to equally recognize athletic performance and the personal character attributes of the player.

On Monday, Weatherspoon talked about getting that first big win and how he knows Baylor will be coming after Mizzou this weekend.

Listen to Sean Weatherspoon