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Missouri should establish a commission on boys and men 

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missouriindependent.com – Anthony J. Nixon Jr. – 2025-06-13 05:55:00


June highlights men’s health, Father’s Day, Juneteenth, and LGBTQ Pride, urging reflection on boys’ and men’s challenges. Missouri faces issues like boys struggling in school, disconnected young men, and fathers feeling shut out. Mental health crises among men often go unspoken. A proposed Missouri Commission on Boys and Men could address these by gathering data, elevating voices, and recommending solutions. Similar initiatives exist in Washington, California, D.C., and Boston. Supporting boys and men benefits families and communities, complementing efforts for women and children. This commission could mark a turning point toward comprehensive, compassionate policies advancing men’s well-being statewide.

by Anthony J. Nixon Jr., Missouri Independent
June 13, 2025

June is a significant time for men’s health.

In addition to Father’s Day on Sunday, June is both Men’s Health Month and Men’s Mental Health Month, and includes both Juneteenth and LGBTQ Pride. All this provides a great opportunity to reflect on the challenges that men and boys face and how we can better support their health and well-being.

And it should be more than just celebrating fathers or reminding men to get their check-ups. We must take a closer look at how our state and society are supporting the lives of boys and men and consider whether Missouri is ready to take a new step by establishing a Commission on Boys and Men.

A growing conversation is taking place across the country.

In community meetings, classrooms, and places of worship, people are quietly naming a set of challenges that have been building for years. Nationally, boys are struggling in school. Young men are disconnected from work or education. Fathers are trying to stay involved but feeling shut out by systems. Men experiencing mental health crises in silence.

These are not new problems, but we are finally starting to acknowledge them out loud. These stories cross racial, economic and geographic lines. And they matter – not just for the people involved, but for families and communities who need boys and men to be healthy, present and supported.

A statewide Commission on Boys and Men would allow Missouri to examine these same issues through a community-based lens. We could begin to chart a path forward by gathering data, listening deeply, and elevating voices. The commission would bring together researchers, community leaders, practitioners, and people with lived experiences to study the challenges boys and men face and recommend impactful solutions.

The commission would ask questions that too often go unspoken in policymaking: How do we help young boys thrive in schools? How do we better support fathers who are struggling? What would it look like to create mental health services that men are more likely to use?

The State of Missouri has councils, committees, and departments that help children, women, veterans and older adults. These organized groups recognize the importance of addressing specific needs and developing solutions tailored to these populations. A commission focused on boys and men would help fill a gap in how we understand and respond to urgent issues.

To be clear:  Supporting boys and men doesn’t mean turning away from the needs of women and girls.

In fact, the health and well-being of men is closely connected to the health of families and communities. When boys are supported in school, it creates better classroom environments for everyone. When men are healthier and more emotionally engaged, their partners and children benefit. When fathers are involved, children are more likely to do well across a range of outcomes.

To achieve this goal, we must accept that things can be complex. We have to be willing to talk about gender and identity, social isolation, economic shifts and generational trauma – without judgment, but with respect and compassion.

We have to ask what it means for men to seek help, express emotions, and build relationships in a culture that has not always encouraged them to do so. And we have to be ready to design policies that reflect these complex realities.

Other states and cities have already started this work. The State of Washington has a grassroots campaign to pass legislation. California established a Select Committee on the Status of Boys and Men of Color in 2011. Cities like Washington, D.C. and Boston have launched initiatives to support boys and men.

And this year, the Missouri House passed legislation to establish the “Missouri Fathership Project” with the state social services department to promote fathership and empower fathers to become successful in fathership, though the bill died in the Senate.

Missouri could be among the first states in the Midwest to take this seriously, to say, “We see you. We hear you. And we are committed to understanding what’s happening and what needs to change.”

As we observe Father’s Day and Men’s Health Month, we have an opportunity to shift the narrative. We can create a new story. To move beyond short-term programs and one-off initiatives and toward a more intentional, informed, and inclusive approach. A Commission on Boys and Men wouldn’t just be a policy win. It would be a turning point.

Maybe this June, in between cookouts and celebrations, we can take a moment to ask: What would it look like to truly support boys and men in Missouri? And what might change if we tried?

That’s a question worth exploring. And a commission could help us find the answers.

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 should establish a commission on boys and men  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 article advocates for the creation of a Missouri Commission on Boys and Men by highlighting challenges faced by males across racial, economic, and geographic lines. The tone is solution-focused and emphasizes data-driven, community-based policymaking. It explicitly rejects a zero-sum gender framing and affirms support for both genders, which helps it maintain a balanced perspective. While the piece promotes governmental action and references similar initiatives in progressive states, it avoids partisan language or ideological appeals, resulting in a neutral and inclusive stance that transcends typical political divides.

News from the South - Missouri News Feed

A crowd saw a man get shot. Decades later, nobody claims to know who did it

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fox2now.com – Megan Mueller – 2025-06-16 13:44:00

SUMMARY: A true crime podcast, *Morbid*, revisits the unsolved 1981 killing of Ken McElroy in Skidmore, Missouri. Known as “the town bully,” McElroy was accused of numerous crimes but avoided conviction through intimidation. On July 10, 1981, he was shot in broad daylight in front of around 50 people, yet no one came forward. The community, fed up with his reign of terror, allegedly took justice into their own hands. Despite FBI involvement, the case closed without indictments. Over 40 years later, with many witnesses deceased, the murder remains unsolved, and locals continue to keep the secret.

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Joe’s Blog: 90s coming with some nasty storms (6/16)

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fox4kc.com – Joe Lauria – 2025-06-16 08:53:00

SUMMARY: Kansas City has yet to hit 90°F this year, though summer’s heat and humidity are building. A very moist atmosphere will fuel possible storms Tuesday into Wednesday, with flooding downpours the main concern. Models show varying rainfall totals and locations, with uncertainty about where storms will hit hardest. Severe storms are more likely late Tuesday night into early Wednesday, but flooding poses the greatest risk due to moisture-rich conditions and possible training storms. There’s also a chance for strong “wake low” winds Tuesday. The first 90° day could arrive later this week or weekend as the pattern shifts.

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News from the South - Missouri News Feed

Blair’s Social Second: What hobbies did you enjoy before social media and technology?

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www.youtube.com – FOX 2 St. Louis – 2025-06-16 06:36:10

SUMMARY: A growing number of people are rediscovering “grandma hobbies” to take a break from constant phone use and social media. According to a Wall Street Journal report, activities like crocheting, scrapbooking, baking, crafting, and reading are on the rise. Eventbrite reports that interest in scrapbooking and junk journaling has doubled since 2023, while Shopify notes an 89% increase in cross-stitch pattern sales. A survey found 71% of U.S. adults have participated in a craft project in 2024. The Blair’s Social Second segment encourages viewers to share the hobbies they enjoyed before smartphones took over daily life.

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