January 27, 2012

Changing of guard at Supreme Court (AUDIO)

One of the few people to be Missouri’s Chief Justice more than once wraps up his second term, reflecting on how political pressures and money shortages could be affecting the course of justice.

Judge William Ray Price Junior was a partner in a Kansas City law firm when Governor Ashcroft appointed him to the court in 1992.  He’s a little more than ten years away from mandatory retirement, so he stays on the court after the end of his term as chief justice.. 

Price says one of he biggest challenges is maintaining the sense of individual justice that citizens expect from their courts at a time when budget cuts are endangering the court system’s ability to process citizens’ lawsuits.  He says the court has always felt political pressure, too. But he says it has intensified..

Price knows he could have made a lot more money in the last two decades if he had stayed in private practice but he says the best part of being a judge is trying to find the right answer for the people of Missouri rather than working for somebody who was paying them to advocate for their answer.

He says it might be wrong to say the job is still fun.  But he says it’s satisfying to do some good in a broader sense.

 Hear Judge Price’s press conference 33:12 mp3

Blunt won’t vote to raise taxes in budget negotiations (AUDIO)

Senator Blunt says he and other Republicans won’t be voting to raise taxes to fix the federal government’s budget problems as the deadline to raise the debt ceiling looms. Blunt says it’s not even worth debating with Democrats, because he says the Obama Administration had the chance to increase taxes when there was a majority of Democrats in Congress.

Blunt says he doesn’t have the option to close tax loopholes in order to make the budget work – especially because so many of them expire in six months. He says it’s also just not fair to those who are relying on the tax break.

Blunt says taking spending down to 2008 levels, when Republicans had the majority, would solve the budget problems. He says he didn’t hear anyone in 2008 saying the federal government wasn’t spending enough money.

Blunt says Obama is a little late to the game to be involved in talks about the budget, but says Obama will have to compromise on raising taxes if he wants to come to a solution – saying Obama will have to do what he needs to do, not what he wants to do.

Blunt and other members of Congress will be voting on the budget and on whether or not to raise the debt ceiling in the next few days.

 (AUDIO) Allison Blood reports Mp3 :59

“Lost” medals unveiled at State Museum

Two medals awarded to one Missourian have been placed on display in the State Museum.

The State Treasurer’s office received the medals after they were found in a bank safe deposit box. Clint Zweifel says the Distinguished Service Cross and the Croix de Guerre (French Cross of War) were earned by a Dover native, Major Ernest Slusher, during World War I.

Zweifel says previously, medals recovered such as this were auctioned off. He ceased that practice and began looking for the families of original recipients.

Margaret Means of Festus is the closest relative to come forward after earlier stories circulated, looking for family of Major Slusher. She happened to have volumes of information that fleshed out the story behind the Medals. That includes documentation establishing that the Major, after he returned home, displayed the medals at his doctor’s office in the Kansas City area.

Means is in the process of seeing if she is the lawful owner of the medals, but has agreed to continue to loan them to the State Museum.

Zweifel says since taking office, his staff has returned 23 medals out of 86. He hopes to find families for the remainder.

911 Committee to begin work soon

Work will begin in July for an interim House committee looking into updating and improving 911 service statewide.

Lake St. Louis Representative Chuck Gatschenberger will chair the group. He hopes to find a way to unify how 911 is funded. Currently it is supported in various ways across the state.

Knowing other lawmakers have found no support for the issue in the past, Gatschenberger isn’t sure if he can find traction for it now.

Gatschenberger says he doesn’t know at this point whether he would suggest 911 remain locally controlled, or become state run under a statewide funding mechanism.

County governments are pushing for 911 funding to be addressed. Right now, many supplement the service out of their general revenue funds.

USDA says Missouri planting numbers up

USDA has, surprisingly, increased its planted area estimate for corn.

Most analysts expected a decrease following a late start to planting and widespread flooding in some key U.S. growing areas.

In Missouri, USDA says 3.25 million acres of corn has been planted with 3.1 million acres harvested; both up 100-thousand from last year. Soybeans planted are up 5.1 million acres, down 50-thousand from 2010; harvested is at 5.05 million acres, down 20 thousand from a year prior. Winter wheat planted, 830 thousand acres, up 460 thousand from 2010. Harvested is 690 thousand acres, 410 over last year.