News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Missouri secretary of state cuts jobs as budget feud with state Senate escalates
by Rudi Keller, Missouri Independent
June 3, 2025
Almost two dozen employees in Missouri State Archives and the State Library are on paid leave and will lose their jobs at the end of the month because of a politically motivated budget cut targeting Secretary of State Denny Hoskins.
Twenty-two employees — 17 in the archives, five in the library — were told Friday that they did not need to return to work Monday. The employees are being paid through the end of the month, — the final month of the current budget year — but according to Hoskins could not be retained because of “budget restrictions enacted by the Missouri General Assembly.”
However, the Republican lawmakers behind the cut say it only targeted unfilled positions in the office and there was absolutely no financial reason for Hoskins had to lay off any staff.
Hoskins, a Republican, is former state senator and has been secretary of state since January. While in the General Assembly, he tried repeatedly to cut job slots he said had been unfilled for months or years, arguing that agencies that had functioned without filling some jobs didn’t need the help.
Hoskins was also a member of the Missouri Freedom Caucus, which fought harder with the GOP majority leadership than it did against Democrats. State Sen. Mike Cierpiot, a Lee’s Summit Republican regularly tussled with Hoskins and the Freecom Caucus, punished him earlier this year with a budget amendment cutting 25 of the office’s authorized personnel strength of 267 full time equivalent employees, or FTE, and $680,000 from one of the funds that helps pay salaries.
In the last full year under Hoskins’ predecessor, only 204 of those positions were filled. The office has not used more than 215 of its full time slots for at least eight years.
At the time the cut was made, Cierpiot said it should not require any layoffs.
In a statement to The Independent, Rachel Dunn, spokeswoman for Hoskins, claimed the office had no choice.
“The General Assembly did not cut vacant or flexible FTE authority,” she said. “It explicitly eliminated 25 FTEs from our budget, meaning we were required by law to reduce filled positions to meet that mandate. These cuts were not based on current vacancies but on a hard reduction in authorized staffing levels.”
The employees were given leave with pay to allow them time to seek new jobs, she wrote.
“This was done out of respect for their service, and to give them time to plan next steps with dignity, rather than executing immediate unpaid terminations,” Dunn said.
The $19.6 million budget approved for Hoskins’ office operations includes $11.6 million in general revenue and $8 million from other funds. In addition to the archives and library, the office is the state’s chief election authority, the repository of records establishing every business and not-for-profit in the state, and the regulator of securities brokers and sales.
Lawmakers give Hoskins — and every other statewide elected official — complete flexibility in determining whether each dollar is spent on payroll or the expense of maintaining the office.
And in each of the past three years, the office has returned about $3 million unspent to the state treasury, including $300,000 to $400,000 of general revenue.
There was enough money and enough flexibility for Hoskins to retain all his employees, Cierpiot said. The budget change, he said, did not mandate layoffs.
“If Secretary of State Hoskins thinks that he needs to pull back the number of people working at the archives, that’s his decision,” Cierpiot said.
State Sen. Lincoln Hough, a Republican from Springfield who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee, said there is no reason Hoskins should have terminated employees.
“I can’t understand a financial reason,” Hough said, “that there isn’t ample personal service dollars within the 100% flexibility that the Secretary of State has to continue paying not only all those folks, but I’m sure they’re still flexing some other dollars associated with the vacant FTEs.”
The problem with looking to the flexibility within the office budget for money to retain the staff is the limited nature of some funds. Money collected to regulate securities can only be spent on that function, Dunn said, and there isn’t enough general revenue to cover the cut in the dedicated funds that support the archive and library functions.
“The legislature cut both the FTEs and associated appropriations,” Dunn said. “Previous administrations had kept many unfilled FTEs on the books, but unfilled FTEs don’t always have funds associated with them. When the legislature cut both unfilled FTEs and payroll funds, our hands were tied.”
The archives is one of the office’s most public-facing functions. It stores and preserves records from the most important to the most mundane and is used for historical and genealogical research. It is also the only part of the office to have regular evening and Saturday hours.
The archives for example, is where the original document for Gov. Lilburn Boggs’ 1838 order that Mormons “must be exterminated or driven from the state” is stored, as is former Gov. Kit Bond’s 1975 order rescinding Boggs’ directive.
Online collections include territorial and state censuses, every volume of the Revised Statutes going back to 1825, and service records for soldiers and sailors from the War of 1812 through World War I.
The archives will have 43 employees after the cut, and the library will have 11, Dunn said.
“The Missouri State Archives are a vital part of our shared history and cultural legacy,” Dunn said. “These cuts will have lasting impacts on public access, preservation, and the historical transparency Missourians deserve.”
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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 Missouri secretary of state cuts jobs as budget feud with state Senate escalates 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
The article from the Missouri Independent presents a critical view of Missouri Secretary of State Denny Hoskins, focusing on staff layoffs within the State Archives and Library following legislative budget cuts. While it includes multiple Republican voices countering Hoskins’ narrative, the framing suggests skepticism toward his justification for the layoffs and highlights the consequences on public services. The consistent emphasis on the archive’s civic importance and the inclusion of critical commentary about internal GOP conflicts adds a tone of concern. Though largely fact-based and citing multiple sources, the article subtly aligns with concerns typically emphasized by center-left outlets—namely public service impact and transparency.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Boeing, machinists union to return to contract negotiations Monday amid ongoing strike
SUMMARY: Boeing and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers will resume contract negotiations Monday amid a nearly three-week strike in the Saint Louis area. Around 3,200 machinists are striking for better pay, retirement benefits, and improved pay structures, rejecting Boeing’s latest offer of a 20% wage increase. The union cites economic struggles and demands fair respect and a satisfactory proposal. Boeing previously offered an 8% wage increase in the first year and 4% for subsequent years, which was rejected by 63% of union members. Health benefits for workers are set to expire soon, adding urgency to talks.
The two will return to the negotiating table Monday morning, two union officials said.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Donors to private school voucher program removed from Missouri transparency site
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.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
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.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Two killed, three others hurt in downtown Kansas City shooting
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.
The post Two killed, three others hurt in downtown Kansas City shooting appeared first on fox2now.com
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