January 27, 2012

End of Life Coalition addresses the challenge of dying

Consumers, providers and professionals gathered in Jefferson City Thursday to address hospice care in prisons, legal issues for the seriously ill and palliative care for the developmentally disabled. Reg Turnbull is the director of the Coalition.

He says society continues to age, and with that comes unique legal and ethical challenges. The End of Life Coalition is addressing the fact that the healthcare industry is evolving to meet demand, but some state policies are not.

[Read more...]

Districts consider fees for PAT (AUDIO)

Some Missouri school districts have started thinking about charging parents a fee for services in the Parents as Teachers program.

The state budget shortage and funding shortfalls in the school foundation formula have led the legislature to pass a law letting districts charge fees for the early childhood education program that has been free for three decades. [Read more...]

Changes made to Missouri Plan (AUDIO)

Changes have been made to Missouri’s non-partisan court plan, the method used to select the state’s appellate judges and judges in certain judicial circuits.

Chief Justice Ray Price says the primary change will be to make public the interviews the Appellate Judicial Commission conducts with candidates. Also, the votes for the three successful candidates forwarded to the governor will be made public and the public will be encourage to nominate candidates.

Price asserts that the Missouri Plan of appointing judges is superior to direct elections, especially since the amount of money poured into judicial elections in other states has doubled the past ten years, with most of the money coming from big contributors. [Read more...]

House Budget chair Icet joins Missouri Club for Growth

State Representative Allen Icet, a Republican from Wildwood, has bounced back from his defeat in the primary race for Auditor.

Icet has accepted the position of chairman of the Missouri Club for Growth. Icet, the House Budget Committee chairman, says the non-profit, fiscally conservative organization is a perfect fit for him.

“Missouri Club for Growth, just like their national organization, the sister organization, they get involved in fiscal issues; taxes, regulations, free market,” Icet tells the Missourinet. “So that fit quite well with my particular philosophy and obviously fit quite well having served as chairman of the House Budget Committee for the past five years.”

Icet will serve out his term as state representative and says he will not participate in the political side of the Missouri

Icet lost the Republican nomination for Auditor to Tom Schweich.

AUDIO: Rep. Allen Icet (R-Wildwood) on Missouri Club for Growth [:20 MP3]

UCM hopes to turn energy grant into jobs (AUDIO)

A Missouri university hopes to leverage a $190,000 grant to create as many as 2,400 jobs over the next 10 years while making houses in Kansas City more energy efficient.

Efforts to promote energy efficiency have been around for a while, but officials at the University of Central Missouri want to make a more concerted effort to retrofit houses built prior to 2000 to turn on the air conditioner fewer times in the summer and use less heat in the winter. Current energy efficiency codes date back to 2000. Scott Boyce, Workforce Development representative in UCM’s School of Graduate and Extended Studies, calculates that a $10,000 average investment in the 750,000 older homes in the Kansas City metro area would create a $7.5 billion spike in construction jobs.

The job projection is based on a formula used by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, a bureau of the U.S. Department of Commerce, which estimates that for every $1 million spent on energy improvements five direct, five indirect and 10 induced jobs are created. The program suggested the energy upgrading could occur at time of sale.

Boyce says this is much more than saving a few dollars through cutting utility costs.

“I think that’s part of our challenge and our consumer awareness and our industry awareness campaign, to support the job creation that this industry sector promises to produce,” Boyce says.

The university received the grant from the Missouri State Energy Sector Partnership and Training grant to establish the program. The grant is provided by the Missouri Department of Economic Development, Division of Workforce Development, which received federal funding through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

How homes could be retrofitted to be more energy efficient depends, according to Boyce, on what an energy audit suggests.

“It will range from things like sealing the rim joist, upgrading the R value of the insulation in the attic. It might prescribe windows. It might prescribe doors, new siding. It might prescribe a new HVAC system,” says Boyce. “It could prescribe a variety of things just based on what the auditor assesses when they’re on site.”

Several organizations are working with the university on the project, including the Greater Kansas City Building and Construction Trades Council; AFL-CIO; Liberty Homes; Rebuilding Management LLC; Hathmore Technologies; Kansas City & Vicinity Workforce Investment Board and the Full Employment.

In addition to work in the Kansas City metro area, the university plans to work in a more rural setting, the area surrounding Warrensburg where UCM is located.

For more on the program, visit the UCM website.

AUDIO: Brent Martin reports [1:20 MP3]