News from the South - Missouri News Feed
End of multi-billion Missouri fiscal surplus is near, budget director says
by Rudi Keller, Missouri Independent
June 10, 2025
The historically high surplus Missouri has enjoyed for the past six years will be nearly depleted at the end of the coming fiscal year, state budget director Dan Haug warned lawmakers during a committee hearing last week.
For several years, the state has budgeted billions more from the general revenue fund than current taxes were generating. The extra money has come from a surplus accumulated from double-digit growth in tax collections during 2021 and 2022 and substituting federal COVID-19 relief funds for general revenue, generating savings.
When Gov. Mike Kehoe unveiled his budget plan in January, the unobligated general revenue balance at the end of the coming fiscal year was projected to be $1.4 billion. Five months later, that estimate has been slashed in half.
Now, Haug said, the unobligated reserve will be $600 million to $700 million.
“The times are going to be getting tougher as we go forward, and so I think we would like to try to limit general revenue spending so that we are able to craft responsible budgets,” Haug said last week to the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Lawmakers are meeting in special session to consider Kehoe’s plan to set aside nearly $1.5 billion in future tax revenue to finance new or renovated stadiums for the Kansas City Royals and Chiefs. To win passage in the Missouri Senate, Kehoe agreed to add $125 million in general revenue to a spending bill.
Missouri governor allows more spending, property tax cap as he pursues stadium deal
That addition would reduce Haug’s projection for the June 30, 2026 balance to $500 million to $600 million, the lowest since June 2020.
Haug declined to respond to questions from The Independent explaining what changed to lower the projected balance. The top leaders of the House Budget Committee, which will hold a hearing Tuesday on the special session spending bill, said they had not heard the latest forecast and will ask Haug to explain it.
“I’ll need to ask him about that and have him walk me through what that projection is,” said Budget Committee Chairman Dirk Deaton, a Republican from Noel. “There is a real, legitimate concern around long-term fiscal sustainability, and we’ve got to be mindful of that.”
State Rep. Betsy Fogle of Springfield, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said she’s getting pressure from members who want to add spending that failed when a construction spending bill was spiked before a final House vote.
“In order to make decisions about the economic future of Missouri, we need to have all the facts in front of us,” Fogle said.
Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Lincoln Hough, a Republican from Springfield, said he disagrees with Haug’s estimate, which he said is too low.
“They’re taking a more pessimistic approach to their calculation than is warranted,” Hough said.
Surplus history
The peak for reserve cash was nearly $8 billion at the end of fiscal 2023, including funds that could be spent like general revenue. For comparison, the lowest recent end-of-year balance was $5.1 million on hand at the end of fiscal 2017.
With the avalanche of cash, the state embarked on several major projects unthinkable just a few years earlier. General revenue made up half of the $2.8 billion allocated for widening Interstate 70. Another $600 million was set aside to fund a major expansion of the Capitol Building.
There were new general-revenue funded buildings on every public college campus, a new state health lab and a new $300 million mental hospital in Kansas City.
The state employee pension system received $500 million to help its long-term outlook and state workers are enjoying pay raises totaling 21% over the past three years, with another raise of up to 10% coming for long-term workers.
Lawmakers have also taken advantage of the surplus to fund local priorities. The trend began in 2022 with a few dozen items, and accelerated in each of the last three years with about 275 new earmarks added in 2023 and another 280 in 2024.
Former Gov. Mike Parson used a line-item veto to cut many of the items added by lawmakers, but most remained in place.
The budget on Kehoe’s desk includes 250 new earmarked items, using $417.7 million in general revenue.
During the regular session, before the new, lowered surplus projection, Deaton warned that this may be the last year for dipping into the surplus for local needs.
“We’re still in a good position, but certainly those opportunities are diminishing,” he said. “And if it’s not next year, it’ll be the year after that.”
When Kehoe took over in January, the outlook was that the general revenue surplus would be $2.5 billion when the fiscal year ends on June 30, with another $1.4 billion in other funds that can be spent like general revenue.
The budget before Kehoe uses $1.1 billion of those other funds.
The special session spending bill began with $50 million in general revenue. Kehoe agreed to add $125 million, for two items: $100 million for St. Louis tornado recovery and $25 million for a new research reactor at the University of Missouri.
The funds for tornado recovery and the reactor were items demanded by Senate Democratic lawmakers as the price for supporting — or at least not filibustering — the stadium bill.
Democrats in the House, who provided the decisive votes in favor of the stadium financing plan during the regular session, will meet to decide if they will also ask for favors, Fogle said.
The earmarked items in the spiked construction bill is a place to start, she said.
“There were vitally important investments in that bill,” Fogle said.
There may be little room for negotiation, she noted.
“There’s some truth to the fact that there’s an assumption that the House is going to pass the bill, the stadium bill specifically, considering we already have,” Fogle said.
The Republican majority will not seek additions to the spending bill, Deaton said.
“I’ve certainly had members talk to me and basically inquire as if there would be an opportunity, or if there was the possibility of things to be added, as you would expect,” Deaton said. “I certainly won’t be dropping any kind of a House committee substitute or adding anything.”
Financial future
Haug’s warning of a disappearing surplus came despite positive trends in state tax collections, a growing total balance in the general revenue fund and a budget before Kehoe that spent $119 million less in general revenue than the governor requested in January.
After running below the previous year for 11 months, revenues have turned sharply positive. If the year-to-date growth rate reported Friday continued to the end of the month, the state would collect about $300 million more than was forecast in December for the full fiscal year.
And with modest growth projected for the coming year, the higher-than-expected revenue would carry over into a reset of the basic assumption for tax collections.
The negative factors that will lower tax collections include a tax cut approved by lawmakers, expected to reduce revenue by about $250 million in the coming year, and federal tax changes, currently expected to cost the treasury at least $170 million.
The federal budget bill being considered by the U.S. Senate also has the potential to impose large new costs on the state, up to $400 million annually to continue the SNAP food benefits program and unknown amounts due to changes in federal support for Medicaid.
The state will be limited in its ability to launch new programs in the future, Haug said last week.
“We feel like we need to sort of get back to basics on general revenue spending,” he said.
Future budgets will be tight because the state will need to pay those new costs and continue the programs it has already begun with surplus funds, Deaton said.
“It’s one thing to be able to do it this year, but can you do it next year?” Deaton said. “Can you do it the year after that, obviously, is the big open question. We will see what tax revenues do or don’t do, but we’re definitely on somewhat of a perilous path.”
Hough, however, said he sees no reason to hold money just to maintain a large balance.
“I try to take what would be a more realistic approach,” Hough said. “Everybody always talks about taxation as theft. Well, if we’re going to steal your money, we ought to invest it in your communities on the things that matter to you and support you.”
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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 End of multi-billion Missouri fiscal surplus is near, budget director says 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 presents a detailed, fact-based analysis of Missouri’s budget situation, featuring perspectives from both Republican and Democratic lawmakers. It highlights fiscal caution and concerns about sustainability, while also emphasizing increased spending on public services, infrastructure, and employee benefits. The coverage is generally balanced but leans slightly left due to its focus on government spending for public programs, scrutiny of tax policy impacts, and attention to Democratic lawmakers’ views and priorities alongside Republican commentary.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Southwest Airlines is changing its seating policy for larger customers
SUMMARY: Starting January 27, 2026, Southwest Airlines will require plus-size passengers who cannot fit in a single seat to purchase a second seat in advance, with potential refunds issued post-flight if conditions are met, such as the plane having extra unused seats. This policy change coincides with Southwest’s shift to assigned seating, ending its previous open-seating approach. Advocates for plus-size travelers express disappointment, citing increased anxiety and concerns over fairness. Some passengers support the policy as fair to others, while others view it as discriminatory. Southwest states flight load information won’t be disclosed before departure for competitive reasons.
Read the full article
The post Southwest Airlines is changing its seating policy for larger customers appeared first on fox2now.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
New Missouri law means state is no longer allowed to seize assets of prison inmates
by Rudi Keller, Missouri Independent
August 25, 2025
One of the most-watched bills approved by Missouri lawmakers this year put the state back in control of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department.
The police takeover provisions made the bill one of the most controversial of the session, and sparked a lawsuit, set for trial Nov. 5. But tucked inside, and noticed only by those watching closely, the bill also includes bipartisan provisions ending the practice of seizing assets from incarcerated people that are unrelated to their crimes.
Known as the Missouri Incarceration Reimbursement Act, the law was passed in 1988, when any idea intended to make life harder for criminals received a favorable hearing. Now, the law is viewed as a violation of property rights and a barrier to a law-abiding life.
“We need to pay our debts to society,” state Rep. Tara Peters, a Rolla Republican, said in an interview with The Independent. “Those who have paid their debt to society should have every opportunity to have a fresh start and to get out on the right foot when it comes time to go back into society.”
Peters sponsored a bill with the repeal, as did state Sen. Stephen Webber, a Columbia Democrat. It was added to the St. Louis police takeover bill to persuade Democrats in the Senate to end a filibuster.
Once enacted, it is one of two bills that will allow people under the control of the state to keep assets they would use when released. The other stops the state from taking foster children’s Social Security benefits to cover the cost of foster care.
The incarceration reimbursement law was intended to take money from inmates to cover the cost of maintaining them in prison. The most recovered over the past five years is $523,000 in fiscal 2024, while the cost of operating the Department of Corrections is greater than $1 billion.
In the fiscal year that ended June 30, efforts to enforce the act brought in only $136,000.
“People who are incarcerated by the state should not have to pay like it’s a hotel or an Airbnb,” said Amy Malinowski, director of the Missouri office of the MacArthur Justice Center. “It’s a prison. It’s the state’s responsibility to maintain those prisons, not the people who are detained there.”
Missouri has laws allowing prosecutors to seize assets gained in a criminal enterprise, and the courts can enforce restitution for stolen or damaged property as part of a sentence. The incarceration reimbursement act allows the attorney general to seek other assets, such as a family inheritance or proceeds from the sale of a house, that are unrelated to the crime.
State Rep. Brad Christ, a Republican from St. Louis County, sponsored the St. Louis police bill and chaired a committee where Peters’ bill was discussed in February. It was an easy decision to accept Democratic requests to include the repeal, he said in an interview.
“Democrats support it from a criminal justice aspect and a number of Republicans supported this, too, because it’s just basic property rights,” Christ said.
Missouri’s prisons hold about 24,000 people. In any given year, about 11,000 will be released on parole or because they have completed their sentence. The goal of prison is to punish and to prepare inmates to live within society’s rules, Christ said.
The seized money can be an important part of avoiding a return to prison, he said.
“Whatever it may be, whether it’s two grand, 20 grand or 200 grand,” Christ said, “to knock someone down a peg while they are in prison, I thought, was a little unjust after their sentence has been fulfilled.”
Under the law, people sentenced to state prison are required to make a statement of their assets when they arrive in custody and, on release, allow the department to garnish their wages for five years.
The attorney general can file a lawsuit to seize any assets found or received by the incarcerated person.
With the repeal, the Department of Corrections is no longer requiring the statement of assets on entry, agency spokeswoman Karen Pojmann said in an email. But any current garnishments will be stopped only if the person making the payments petitions the courts to end them, she said.
At the House hearing in February, St. Louis attorney Bevis Schock, who has represented clients in civil litigation against the department, said he has won judgments that the attorney general then tried to seize.
Schock said he believes the law is unconstitutional and expected a court would rule that way in the future. But he still urged lawmakers to act.
“I hate criminals,” Schock said. “I don’t want to help them all. I want them to go to jail, but a criminal’s property should be as sacred as the property of a non-criminal.”
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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 New Missouri law means state is no longer allowed to seize assets of prison inmates 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: Centrist
This content presents a balanced view on a bipartisan legislative issue involving criminal justice reform and property rights. It highlights cooperation between Republican and Democratic lawmakers and includes perspectives from multiple sides, focusing on practical and legal considerations rather than ideological extremes. The tone is neutral and informative, reflecting a centrist approach to the topic.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Boeing, machinists union to return to contract negotiations Monday amid ongoing strike
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The two will return to the negotiating table Monday morning, two union officials said.
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