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Bonus for executive director of Arkansas Economic Development Commission exceeds $50,000

Bonus for executive director of Arkansas Economic Development Commission exceeds $50,000
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Teach the Truth rally to protest push against divisive concepts, 1619 Project

Kansas disability providers cheer funding boost for Medicaid waivers

Shawn Voss is a creature of habit. Routine is not the only thing Voss loves he also enjoys Disney movies, 1980s music and even the most dreaded household chore: doing laundry. But the 27-year-old has autism and can become agitated when even little details  like the location of medicine in a cabinet  is out of place. Shawn is very observant. And if you don t do stuff, in the right routine, he s smart enough to know that, said Diane Voss, his mother. He s going to call you on it. Ever since he moved out of the family s Stockton residence, the elder Voss said they have missed his bubbly personality.

Kansas GOP senators denounce proposed 2 5% pay raise for state employees | News, Sports, Jobs - Lawrence Journal-World: news, information, headlines and events in Lawrence, Kansas

Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector photo by: Screen capture/Kansas Reflector Sen. Rick Billinger, center, said the Legislature would consider a proposed 2.5% salary hike for state employees next week when lawmakers return to Topeka to address vetoes by Gov. Laura Kelly. Salina Sen. J.R. Claeys, left, opposes the pay hike, while Manhattan Sen. Tom Hawk, right, supports the increase. TOPEKA Republicans on the Kansas Senate’s budget committee attacked Gov. Laura Kelly’s plan to allocate $52 million to raises of 2.5% for state executive, legislative and judicial branch workers and to appropriate $10 million to state universities that could be used to bolster employee compensation.

2021 Arkansas legislative nightmare: lawmakers stick it to their own constituents

2021 Arkansas legislative nightmare: lawmakers stick it to their own constituents Kasten Searles A year into a pandemic that stole jobs, lives and any sense of stability, Arkansans might have hoped for some help when lawmakers convened in January for the 93rd General Assembly. What they got was a kick in the face. Untethered by any check or balance on their hefty Republican supermajority, extremist lawmakers spent their time belittling and attacking their own constituents. For transgender children, renters, would-be voters, pregnant women or public safety advocates, Arkansas senators and representatives refused aid, offering insults and punishments instead. Advertisement A few football fields to the right of

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