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Donors to private school voucher program removed from Missouri transparency site

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missouriindependent.com – Annelise Hanshaw – 2025-07-29 05:55:00


Missouri’s State Treasurer’s Office removed donor information from the MOScholars private school tax credit program’s transparency portal in July 2024, citing a “clerical error.” Major donors previously disclosed included a Fortune 500 healthcare company, a cable firm, and the Kansas City Chiefs’ founding family. The program routes donations through nonprofits, allowing donors to claim tax credits, complicating public disclosure due to donor privacy laws passed in 2022. Critics, including Senate Minority Leader Doug Beck, demand increased accountability and transparency amid audit findings of financial mismanagement and missing program audits. Despite a $51 million direct funding boost and a related lawsuit, the Treasurer’s Office asserts fiscal responsibility.

by Annelise Hanshaw, Missouri Independent
July 29, 2025

Who’s funding a state’s tax credit program for private school tuition is no longer available through Missouri’s transparency portal, following a decision by the State Treasurer’s Office to permanently remove the information.

Donors and their contribution amounts were available July 2, 2024, when The Independent accessed the information and published a report three days later showing the largest donors to the program at the time were a Fortune 500 health care corporation, a cable company and the founding family of the Kansas City Chiefs.

When the article was released, the State Treasurer’s Office called The Independent to ask how the information was accessed. The office didn’t seem to be aware that the list was available on a state-run website detailing state spending.

According to Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, donor information was wiped by the end of the month.

Jackson Bailey, chief of staff to Missouri Treasurer Vivek Malek, chalked the situation up to a “clerical error,” saying the office never intended the information to be posted in the first place.

The office declined to answer further questions on the removal, including whether or not the information is available upon request. 

In 2022, Missouri lawmakers passed a law to shield nonprofits from being forced to disclose donor information. And it was quickly used to conceal public records, such as then-Gov. Mike Parson redacting the names of donors and attendees of his holiday gala.

A year later, lawmakers approved a fix to the law clarifying how it should be implemented.  

Missouri’s tax-credit scholarship program, called MOScholars, is set up using state-approved nonprofits. Donors apply for a tax credit through the State Treasurer’s Office and donate to the nonprofits, which are called educational assistance organizations. At tax time, they are able to deduct the donation amount from their state tax obligations, so long as it’s less than half of their total bill.

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Because the program is set up using private nonprofit organizations as an intermediary, the state might be barred, or at least exempt, from disclosing the donation information, according to Dave Roland, director of litigation at the Freedom Center of Missouri.

Programs like MOScholars, Roland said, are “specifically designed to have the funding treated as private money rather than public money.”

“Due to the connection to a government-created program, the government might be able to require public disclosure of the persons donating to these programs (and thus receiving the tax credits), but they are not obligated to make this information public if they don’t want to,” he wrote in an email.

But for those wary about the MOScholars program, less transparency only makes frustrations worse.

Senate Minority Leader Doug Beck, a Democrat from Affton, has been a vocal critic of MOScholars and has sought clarity from program administrators, including Malek. In 2024, Beck asked for “all the data” the office had compiled on MOScholars and received a screenshot of a webpage with basic demographic information.

“We should have accountability and transparency,” he told The Independent. “We don’t know where the money is coming from. We don’t know how much money it is. How do we know it’s getting where it is supposed to go?”

He pointed to a report from the State Auditor’s Office released earlier this month which called out Malek’s office for depositing $35 million of general revenue into the wrong fund.

The audit also identified a lack of transparency in the administration of the MOScholars program. The treasurer’s office wasn’t hiring annual audits of the program as required and it missed inconsistencies in quarterly reports from educational assistance organizations.

Trent Blair, director of programs in the State Treasurer’s Office, told The Independent that the office has already rectified this mistake and recently hired an auditing company.

The demand for more oversight of MOScholars has accelerated in recent months, with state lawmakers passing a $51 million direct appropriation to the program. A lawsuit filed at the beginning of July is challenging the constitutionality of the funding windfall.

But Blair, when asked if Missourians should feel safe handing over $50 million in the wake of oversight issues, said taxpayers could trust the state.

“There are no fewer accountability issues with this program than any other,” he said in an email. “So Missourians should feel confident about the fiscal responsibility associated with this appropriation.”

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Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.

The post Donors to private school voucher program removed from Missouri transparency site appeared first on missouriindependent.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This content presents a critical view of a state program and its administration, emphasizing issues of transparency, accountability, and potential misuse of public funds. It highlights concerns raised by Democratic lawmakers and watchdogs, while also including responses from the Treasurer’s Office. The focus on government oversight and skepticism toward private school voucher funding aligns with perspectives commonly found in center-left reporting, which often advocates for increased transparency and regulation in public programs. However, the article maintains a factual tone without overt partisan language, placing it near the center but leaning left.

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Two killed, three others hurt in downtown Kansas City shooting

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fox2now.com – Andrew Lynch – 2025-08-24 08:33:00

SUMMARY: Two men were killed and three others injured, including a critically wounded juvenile, in a shooting Sunday morning at a downtown Kansas City parking lot near 13th and Grand. Police indicate the shooting followed an argument around 4 a.m., but the exact involvement of victims remains unclear. One man died at the scene, another at a hospital, while other victims suffered serious and non-life-threatening injuries. A College Basketball Experience building was struck by 31 bullets. Authorities are seeking witnesses and surveillance footage. Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas expressed grief and pledged justice and preventive policy efforts. No suspect information has been released.

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As rural maternity care units close, Missouri families lose options

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missouriindependent.com – Meg Cunningham – 2025-08-23 05:55:00


Rural Missouri faces a growing maternity care crisis as 11 obstetric units have closed since 2009, forcing women to travel farther for care. About 41.7% of Missouri counties are maternity care deserts, higher than the national average. Medicaid underpayment causes financial losses for hospitals providing obstetric services, threatening their sustainability. Rural providers like Dr. Kelsey Davis-Humes manage high-risk pregnancies amid rising chronic conditions and limited resources. Transportation barriers worsen access to prenatal care, increasing risks. Innovative partnerships and state incentives are proposed to support rural OB-GYN services. Hospital leaders call for Medicaid reimbursement reform to sustain rural maternity care.

by Meg Cunningham, Missouri Independent
August 23, 2025

For Dr. Kelsey Davis-Humes, practicing medicine in rural Missouri is a way of life. She’s on call almost constantly in northeast Missouri’s Scotland County, where she cares for patients from their birth until their death.

As an osteopath practicing in a rural community, part of her job includes caring for patients throughout their pregnancies.

“I do inpatient hospital coverage,” Davis-Humes said. “I deliver babies and do women’s health. I do pediatric care, newborn care. I am in the clinic. I go to the nursing home.”

While her area hasn’t lost an obstetrics unit in recent years, Davis-Humes has seen the impact on the state as a whole as pregnancy care becomes more difficult to access.

Missouri has lost 11 obstetric units since 2009, with seven of those in rural parts of the state, a report from the University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center found. The closure of hospital obstetric units means women have to travel farther for their appointments and their deliveries.

As the units have closed, more parts of the state have fallen into maternity care deserts — areas without access to birth units or maternity care providers.

Based on 2023 data, Missouri is marked by more maternity care deserts than the nation as a whole. March of Dimes data shows that 41.7% of Missouri’s counties are classified as maternity care deserts, compared to 32.6% nationwide.

Part of the problem for rural providers? Medicaid payments. The government-sponsored health insurance plans do not reimburse obstetric care fully, meaning for every baby they deliver, the hospital takes a loss.

“Every hospital who does birth services loses money,” said Alison Williams, vice president of clinical quality improvement at the Missouri Hospital Association. Williams also leads Missouri’s Perinatal Quality Collaborative, a statewide task force dedicated to improving outcomes for moms and babies across the state.

In Missouri, about 40% of the state’s births were covered by Medicaid in 2023, KFF data shows.

As Medicaid cuts under President Donald Trump’s budget plan begin to materialize, anywhere from 130,000 to 170,000 Missourians are expected to lose their coverage over the next five years. The budget also changes how states can pay for Medicaid patients — and how much.

“We are going to be paid less,” said Craig Thompson, the CEO of Golden Valley Memorial Hospital in Clinton.

That could put rural hospitals with obstetric units at higher risk when it comes to continuing to offer their services, and will require more creative thinking from Missouri and its health care providers.

Rural Missouri’s maternity care shortage 

Missouri’s health care challenges are compounded when it comes to maternity care. As health care services become more difficult to access, chronic conditions rise and lead to more complicated pregnancies.

Then, obstetric providers and care teams must be prepared to take on more high-risk pregnancies.

In Missouri, 68.7% of counties have a high burden of chronic health conditions and a high rate of preterm births, March of Dimes data shows, higher than the nationwide average. An estimated 45.5% of women living in Missouri had one or more chronic health conditions, compared to 37.8% nationwide.

“In general, you see more high-risk patients,” Davis-Humes said. “People are sicker, they’re more unhealthy, so we just see more patients that have more of these high risk conditions during their pregnancy.”

An added layer is the growing distance that rural women in Missouri must travel to get their care. Women living in maternity deserts — just over 40% of the counties in Missouri — have to travel 3.6 times farther than women living in areas with full access to maternity care.

That means things like prenatal care and regular checkups are even farther out of reach, and missing appointments raises the risk during pregnancy even more.

That’s showing up in Clinton and impacting how Thompson and his team think about maternity care. At their hospital, 63% of about 350 deliveries that happen every year are considered high-risk.

“Many Medicaid patients don’t have access to transportation, either they cannot afford transportation or there is no public transportation in rural Missouri,” Thompson said. “So without transportation access, people don’t have the ability to access that prenatal care, which then causes poor birth outcomes.”

And with high-risk pregnancies, soon-to-be moms in rural areas are drawn to more robust hospital systems with more speciality providers.

The downside to that, Williams said, is people who have the ability to travel to a larger hospital often take their commercial insurance with them, driving up the rate of deliveries that are covered by Medicaid for their nearby hospital and making it even harder to continue providing labor and delivery services.

“It creates an even larger, disproportionate share of Medicaid and vulnerable patients, or patients who don’t end up engaging in prenatal services,” Williams said.

As a hospital leader, Thompson and his team are committed to continuing to provide obstetric services in their hospital. But because so many of their births are covered by Medicaid and cost more than what they are paid, they rely on other services to cover that loss.

“If we were to look at those services on their own, they would be a significant financial drain to the system,” Thompson said. “We are kind of robbing Peter to pay Paul, to some extent.”

Plus, obstetricians and gynecologists, like most other medical providers, are looking for work-life balance, such as splitting their patient loads with multiple providers and other upsides that often come with working in a more populated area.

It can be difficult for rural providers to balance all of those needs, especially since monitoring labor and deliveries are so sporadic.

“If you have enough providers, you will likely have enough (patient) volume,” Williams said of rural providers looking to keep their birth units open. “The challenge is making sure you can maintain enough providers to where they have that work-life balance.”

What do health leaders want to see for OB-GYN providers moving forward? 

As providers look to fill the gaps in maternal care, they’re leaning on innovative ways to ensure that every Missouri mother has access to adequate care.

For example, providers in Harrison County, which sits in northwest Missouri along the Iowa border, created a partnership with North Kansas City Hospital for labor and deliveries. Expecting mothers get prenatal care in the county, but travel to Kansas City for their deliveries. Afterward, patients are handed back to their providers in Harrison County.

Those types of partnerships are key to ensuring that mothers are followed every step of the way throughout their pregnancies, Williams said. Creating similar partnerships is one of the state’s goals moving forward.

“It’s important to have that good flow of prenatal records,” Williams said. “It’s important to have that connectivity, that handoff for the patient, so the patient feels like people know what’s going on with their care.”

The state is also focusing on recruitment and retention as part of the path to solving the problem. Davis-Humes mentors many aspiring doctors, who say that the workload of being on call constantly in rural communities is a deterrent for them.

“You’ve got to have people that are willing to come to an area and wear multiple hats, and also be willing to be called in in the middle of the night, too,” she said.

But she also wants to see more unique ways of encouraging rural providers to continue providing a service that makes them lose money.

“I think the state needs to put their money where their mouth is,” Davis-Humes said.

“We keep seeing all these birth centers close. We keep seeing that OB has a hard time making money … I think there should be some type of reward there,” she said. “You keep your OB center open, every year you get some sort of incentive from the state that says ‘Thank you … we’re going to help support you so you can continue to keep that OB unit open.’”

Although hospital executives are expecting to reassess their finances and the services they provide in the coming years as a result of Medicaid cuts, they are encouraged that they are seeing a new willingness to discuss the financial difficulties rural providers face.

“At some point, there has got to be real reform around reimbursement for rural health care services,” Thompson said. “We’re just not the same as our urban and suburban counterparts.”

This article first appeared on Beacon: Missouri and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://thebeaconnews.org/stories/2025/08/22/maternity-care-closures-rural-missouri-hospitals-ob-gyn/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }

Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.

The post As rural maternity care units close, Missouri families lose options appeared first on missouriindependent.com



Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Left

This article focuses on the challenges rural Missouri faces with access to maternity care and highlights structural issues such as Medicaid reimbursement rates, hospital closures, and disparities in healthcare access. It presents these topics with an emphasis on systemic problems and the need for increased support and innovation within public healthcare systems, including calls for state incentives and reform. The mention of Medicaid cuts under the Trump administration adds a critical framing of conservative policy impacts on healthcare access. Overall, the article approaches the topic with a perspective that leans toward advocating for government intervention and support in healthcare, aligning it with a center-left viewpoint.

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Six officers awarded for investigating Border Patrol murder plot, violent gun crime

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www.ozarksfirst.com – Drew Tasset – 2025-08-22 15:40:00

SUMMARY:

Six local and federal law enforcement officers received the 2025 Guardian of Justice Award for their roles in investigating a conspiracy to murder border patrol agents and violent gun crimes in Springfield. FBI Special Agent Isaac McPheeters led the investigation into Bryan Parry and Jonathan O’Dell, co-founders of the “2nd American Militia,” who planned to kill border agents and immigrants. O’Dell escaped jail in 2023 but was recaptured within 48 hours. Additionally, ATF Special Agent Jerry Wine and local officers investigated a series of shootings linked to gangs “F**k The Opps” and “Only Da Brothers,” resulting in multiple indictments and prison sentences, reducing Greene County shootings.

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