May 23, 2012

Nixon Administration puts brakes on MoHELA projects

Five public universities have been told by the Nixon Administration that planned capital improvements on their campuses likely will be scuttled.

Letters were sent by Commissioner of Administration, Kelvin Simmons, to the University of Missouri-Columbia, Missouri State University in Springfield, The University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg, Southeast Missouri State University in Cape Girardeau and Truman State University in Kirksville. Each letter informs the various campuses that expected funding from the sale of Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MoHELA) assets might not be forthcoming.  The letters state that MoHELA has not been able to make its scheduled payments into the Lewis and Clark Discovery Initiative Fund, through which the capital improvements were to be paid.

The Office of Administration sent the letters via overnight mail and hand-delivered copies to state representatives and senators with affected campuses in their districts.

Sen. David Pearce (R-Warrensburg) received a letter at mid-morning. He says the action comes as a surprise.

"This is the same governor that last Thursday said, ‘I won’t cut higher education. I won’t do any withholds.’ And yet, to me, this is a real disservice to higher education across the state," Pearce tells the Missourinet.

Pearce says the action will have a drastic impact on the University of Central Missouri, putting the skids on a project that now totals $20 million. Pearce says UCM was to receive $10 million in Lewis and had raised $2 million in private funding. Also, the university students had approved a fee increase to raise another $8 million to renovate the Morrow and Garrison buildings, turning the aging buildings into a health science center. Pearce says the project is well underway and that the buildings have already been gutted.

A letter sent to University of Missouri Vice President of Finance and Administration, Nikki Krawitz, informs Krawitz that a $31 million appropriation for the Ellis Fischel Cancer Center in Columbia has been suspended indefinitely. Simmons writes that the project, and others, "will not be reinstated to active consideration unless and until you receive further written notice from my office."

Similar wording is used for separate letters to officials at the other campuses. The letters also warn the campuses that no expenditures will be reimbursed unless authorized in writing by the Office of Administration.

The Lewis and Clark Initiative was a pet project of former Governor Matt Blunt. Governor Nixon has been a harsh critic of the program from the beginning. He attempted to stop the sale of MoHELA assets as Attorney General and claimed Blunt was diverting MoHELA assets from their intended purpose:  financing low-interest college loans. Throughout the gubernatorial campaign, Nixon avoided directly answering what he would do with the MoHELA projects authorized during the Blunt Administration.

Nixon hits the road to talk up Show-Me JOBS initiative

Governor Jay Nixon (D-MO) has traveled to Springfield to tour a small business and to talk up his Show-Me JOBS initiative, which is designed to improve the state’s employment situation and to support the growth of small business.

Nixon spoke of the need to encourage the development and growth of small businesses, saying that is the key to improving the economy and creating good-paying jobs.

Nixon signed three executive orders, this week, as part of his effort to achieve that goal. The Governor says the next step after executive orders must be passing bills to enact the entire Show Me JOBS plan. That legislation would include such things as expansion of the Quality Jobs Act and the providing of incentives for companies to provide worker training and retraining.

Bill would allow psychologists to write prescriptions

An apparent lack of available psychiatrists has led to a bill that would allow psychologists – with special training – to prescribe medication to patients with mental illnesses.

Missouri Families for Access to Comprehensive Treatment – or MO-Fact – was joined by psychologists, patients with mental illnesses and other proponents of the bill at the state capitol Jan. 14 to rally support for the bill.

Thomas Parquette, Executive Director of MO-Fact, says this bill would save lives because many with mental illnesses who don’t receive the care they need in a timely fashion end up committing suicide. He says there were 710 suicides in Missouri last year, many of which could’ve been prevented if victims with mental illnesses could’ve sought more immediate and accessible prescription-drug treatment.

Parquette says the statewide average of attempted suicides is about two per day.

State Rep. Bob Dixon (R-Springfield) and Sen. Jack Goodman (R-Mount Vernon) are co-sponsors of the bill.

Both legislators say they’ve tightened language in the bill to alleviate concerns that prevented the bill’s passage last year.

Dr. Roy Holden, a former state legislator and practitioner, also spoke in support of the bill. He says primary health physicians in Missouri prescribe 80 percent of mental health drugs and that the psychopharmacological training that would be required by psychologists, according to the legislation, would well exceed that which general practitioners currently receive in medical school.

Donna McArthur, a mental health patient, described her journey through depression and how the current system "holds patients hostage."

She sees a psychologist once a week for an hour but had to travel 80 miles round-trip to see a psychiatrist, who spent 20 minutes with her before ultimately misdiagnosing her as being bi-polar and put her on lithium. The visit to the psychiatrist, as well as being extremely inconvenient, was a huge financial burden, McArthur says.

"My psychologist probably knows more about me than my mother," she says, yet the current system allows psychiatrists to analyze patients, diagnose them and prescribe medication after only a brief, expensive visit.

Dr. Holden says there are a decreasing number of psychiatrists in the field, which could lead to months of waiting for patients who need to be on drug therapy.

Missouri would become the third state to allow psychologists prescriptive authority if the bill is signed into law. New Mexico and Louisiana already have laws in place, which proponents say have been successful – and the military implemented the practice seven years ago, successfully treating soldiers overseas.

For more, visit mofact.com.

McCain to visit Springfield

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain (R-AZ) is making a visit to Missouri.

A Republican Party source says the Arizona Senator will take part in two events next Wednesday in Springfield. The first event is a fundraising luncheon, and the second is a town hall meeting at Missouri State University. McCain’s topic of discussion at the town hall meeting will be America’s energy situation.

Missouri soldier killed in Iraq

A soldier from Springfield is the latest Missourian killed in Iraq.

The Department of Defense has identified 34-year-old Staff Sergeant Ronald Blystone as having died April 23rd in Baghdad from wounds suffered when he encountered small arms fire while on patrol.

Blystone was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 66th Armor Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, in Fort Hood, Texas.