May 19, 2013

Missourinet Mornings: Time for some horse racing! (VIDEO)

What I like about this new feature we call Missourinet Mornings is it allows you to get to know me a little better. When I was in college, I was turned onto the sport of horse racing and have been in love with it ever since. I enjoy this time of year as racing looks for it’s next Triple Crown Winner.  We’ll watch the end of the Kentucky Derby and talk about why Orb’s finish is even more remarkable when you watch it a second time. Plus, I’ll give you the best advice when it comes to picking a winner.

Whether you are a fan of Missourinet.com, or you follow me on my Google+ page, or subscribe to my Missourinet Sports YouTube Channel…I’ll share some of the sports stories in Missouri you may have missed, plus tell you about some stuff you need to keep your eye on.  Every Monday-Friday right here!  Have a good weekend.

Legislature overwhelmingly approves fix to workplace injury issues

The state legislature has passed a bill meant to cover two issues regarding workers hurt in the workplace.

Representative Todd Richardson (photo courtesy; Tim Bommel, Missouri House Communications)

Representative Todd Richardson (photo courtesy; Tim Bommel, Missouri House Communications)

The bill seeks to right the state’s Second Injury Fund, from which settlements are paid out to workers who have a disability and then sustain a work-related injury. Legislation passed and signed in 2005 capped at 3 percent the surcharge that supported the fund, paid by all businesses on their workers’ compensation insurance. Since then the fund had become insolvent by more than $20 million dollars, with more than 30,000 claims against it still pending.

The legislation proposes doubling that surcharge from 2014 to 2021, long enough to pay down pending and outstanding claims. It would also restrict the fund to cover only the most serious claims.

The House handler of the bill, Representative Todd Richardson (R-Poplar Bluff) says that should keep the Fund from becoming unbalanced again.

“By limiting the number of claims that go into the Second Injury Fund, everybody that looks at it believes that current surcharge will be sufficient to cover the ongoing liability.”

Richardson says if the bill is signed, the first step will be for the increased surcharge collections to begin after January 1, 2014. Then the backlog of claims will begin to be paid down.

“It’ll start with the permanent total disability benefit cases first. Those are the people that have the most extensive injury. They’ll pay that money out as it becomes available.”

The bill also moves coverage for occupational disease back into the state’s workers’ compensation system. A court interpretation of a 2005 law had led to those cases being handled in the courts.

Richardson says the House and Senate recognized the need to include an enhanced benefit for specific diseases, and one specific to mesothelioma, a cancer caused by exposure to asbestos.

“We’ve included what amounts to a $500,000 enhancement for mesothelioma cases, but we’ve also given employers the ability to choose to avail themselves of the workers’ comp system and that $500,000 remedy or continue to operate under the status quo and have those cases tried in civil court.”

Richardson says another mechanism guarantees a benefit to workers suffering diseases due to toxic exposure including berylliosis, coal worker’s pneumoconiosis, brochiolitis obliterans, silicosis, silicotuberculosis, manganism, acute myelogenous leukemia, and myelodysplastic syndrome.

House Minority Leader Jake Hummel (D-St. Louis) spoke against the legislation. Hummel has said on the House floor before that his grandfather died of poisoning due to exposure to asbestos.

“I don’t believe that when someone is suffering, that someone who is dying a slow, painful death should have a price tag put on their life. I think that needs to be done in the courts.”

House Speaker Tim Jones (R-Eureka) called the bill’s passage “historic,” and noted it passed out of the House with 135 votes.

“My entire caucus. I think the Governor’s going to sign that, for all indications, but if he does not for any reason I think we have an easy override on that.”

The proposal on Tuesday cleared the Senate 32-1.

Jones says Attorney General Chris Koster also sent him a text message on Thursday to thank him for the work he did on the Second Injury Fund issue. Koster has joined other politicians in saying the fund needed to be addressed.

Legislature shifts CCW permitting to sheriffs (AUDIO)

The legislature has approved Republican plans  to take away from the revenue department the power to issue concealed weapons permits.  The same effort changes the way gun owners have to be trained.

Legislative Republicans are getting their revenge on the Revenue Department for copying and keeping concealed weapon permit paperwork.  They’ve cut department funding for the program and shifting responsibility for issuing the permits to local sheriffs.

But sponsor Dan Brown of Rolla says a shortage of bullets is changing the training that concealed weapons holders have to finish before they can get the license.  The bill reduces the number of practice shots potential licnesees have to fire from fifty to thirty. 

The legislature is giving sheriffs some extra money to pay for the extra step of issuing the permit.  The governor has to approve the bill.

AUDIO: debate highlights 5:33

Funding for developmentally disabled, blind still in question on final morning of session

One unresolved issue in this final day of the legislative session is how four programs will be funded, that the legislature tied in its budget to the passage of a bill to repeal a tax credit for low-income seniors in rental properties.

Those are First Steps, that supports families with children with developmental disabilities, early childhood education, healthcare for the blind and community health centers.

House Budget Committee Chairman Rick Stream (R-Kirkwood) (photo courtesy; Tim Bommel, Missouri House Communications)

House Budget Committee Chairman Rick Stream (R-Kirkwood) (photo courtesy; Tim Bommel, Missouri House Communications)

House leadership had earlier in the week said that one possibility was to attach that tax credit repeal to a larger tax credit reform package. It was amended on the House floor to a Senate bill, SB 24, on Wednesday, but the House failed to adopt the changes. The same amendment had been among those drafted for SB 112 that the House sent back to the Senate yesterday, but it was not offered on the floor.

House Budget Committee Chairman Rick Stream (R-Kirkwood) says the Senate has indicated it won’t support the tax credit repeal.

Instead, it has amended language to a couple of bills to use higher-than-expected state revenue to fund those programs. Stream had first been cool to that approach because it would mean exceeding the Consensus Revenue Estimate, a budget spending amount agreed to by the House, the Senate and the Governor in December. He says now, however, that’s the way to go.

“We have to face reality, and the reality is that the Senate has moved in a different direction in the last several days. So, we’re going to follow suit and make sure the people get the funding for the programs that we think need to be funded.”

The Senate’s funding mechanism has been added to HB 986, which has been sent back to the House where it will likely be taken up today.

Stream maintains Governor Jay Nixon created the question of how those programs would be supported.

He says the legislature’s budget was balanced on, “a bill that the Governor had initially proposed in his budget, had supported for three months, then backed away from it at the last minute.”

House leadership has said that the bill to repeal that senior renters tax credit used language drafted and offered by the Governor’s Office, and that Nixon’s state Budget Director Linda Luebbering had privately assured Stream that the Governor supported the bill less than two days before he said he would veto it.

Law enforcement buckles down on drivers not buckling up (AUDIO)

Law enforcement officers throughout the state are buckling down on drivers who are not buckling up.

The Department of Transportation is urging motorists to click-it or get a ticket, as part of the national “Click It or Ticket” campaign on the importance of seatbelt safety, beginning May 20 through June 2.

Spokesman Bill Whitfield says drivers who choose to not wear their seatbelt could be cited with a $10 fine, or worse. “The consequence of being unbuckled if you are involved in a crash, is your chances of being severely injured or fatally injured increase,” Whitfield said.

Whitfield says statistically, males, pick-up truck drivers, and teenagers all tend to buckle up less frequently than those who drive cars, vans, or sport utility vehicles. “We know that if seatbelts are properly worn, and worn by all occupants in the vehicle will mitigate the chances of being severely injured or killed,” he said.

Whitfield explains why these groups in particular wear their seatbelts less frequently than others, here. (1:19)

Missouri’s seatbelt use is at 79%, below the national average of 86%.

For more information, visit www.saveMOlives.com

 

AUDIO: Mary Farucci reports. (1:00)