Office of Rep. Ed Lewis
Note: The following Capitol Report is fromMissouri House District 6 Representative Ed Lewis of Moberly sharirng legislative highlights from the week of Feb. 8-12. Rep. Lewis can be reached by calling 573-751-6566 or email at; Ed.Lewis@housemo.gov.
Bills Focused on Helping Farmers
I had the privilege of voting out of the House and on to the Senate two important bills involving farmers and their business. HB 153 and HB 574 both will make the work occurring on a farm easier and safer. HB153 passed through the House with bipartisan support but HB 574 passed along party lines.
Feb. 11, 1886: The Comet informed readers, “The Johnson City Machine Shop has just finished overhauling one of the Narrow Gauge engines. It made its first trip to Cranberry Monday
The Independent
MASSILLON City voters will likely weigh in this spring on continuing a road levy that has already paved the way for more than $7 million of improvements over the last four years.
City Council reviewed legislation during a Monday night work session that if approved would place a renewal levy on the May 4 primary ballot. Continued collection on the 0.2% of income tax would start in January 2022 and run through December 2026 if approved.
Councilman Ed Lewis, R-at large, who chairs council s Finance Committee, said he plans to call for a vote next week on whether to place the road measure on the primary ballot.
State lawmakers respond to Wednesday violence on Capitol Hill komu.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from komu.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Living Room at Number 1
In a decade bookended by global crises, starting with financial meltdown and ending in pandemic, global property markets have been on a constant rollercoaster ride. And none more so than central London, whose own fairground attractions in recent years have included the Brexit Knife Edge and the Boris Bounce.
The Prime London market has faced a barrage of coconuts since hitting its last peak in 2014. There have been stamp duty hikes and punishing tax changes for buy-to-let investors, there was a certain EU referendum, political chaos, Corbyn-phobia, Covid…
But there’s still hope, thinks Ed Lewis, head of London Residential Development Sales at Savills. “Believe it or not, London has been incredibly resilient and its bright lights will burn again. It has seen year on year falls since 2014 and it is due for a recovery.”