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JEFFERSON CITY â Gov. Mike Parson has vetoed a piece of legislation that would have kept Columbia Mayor Brian Treece out of potential hot water. The legislation that hit Parson s desk would have created an exemption to an existing state statute and clarified that lobbyists running for municipal and school district offices could maintain candidate committees. Because Parson vetoed that exemption, lobbyists running for office must dissolve any candidate committee, according to the statute. Treece has been a registered as a lobbyist since 1996 and also co-owns a consulting firm with his wife, Mary Phillips, based in Jefferson City. Treece did not respond to several requests for comment from the Missourian, but later sent an email stating that he believes he is not in violation of state law. ....
JEFFERSON CITY â Gov. Mike Parson has vetoed a piece of legislation that would have kept Columbia Mayor Brian Treece out of potential hot water. The legislation that hit Parson s desk would have created an exemption to an existing state statute and clarified that lobbyists running for municipal and school district offices could maintain candidate committees. Because Parson vetoed that exemption, lobbyists running for office must dissolve any candidate committee, according to the statute. Treece has been a registered as a lobbyist since 1996 and also co-owns a consulting firm with his wife, Mary Phillips, based in Jefferson City. Treece did not respond to several requests for comment from the Missourian, but later sent an email stating that he believes he is not in violation of state law. ....
by John Haughey, The Center Square | July 09, 2021 05:00 PM Print this article Missouri lawmakers agreed to raise the state’s gas tax for the first time in 25 years during their 2021 session, but Gov. Mike Parson has not signed the bill amid concerns about its constitutionality under the state’s Hancock Amendment. The 1980 Hancock Amendment requires Missouri to refund money to income tax payers when a new tax or fee exceeds a percentage of total state revenues unless approved by voters in a statewide referendum. Named after the late Taxpayer Survival Association founder and four-term Republican U.S. Rep. Mel Hancock, under amendment, lawmakers set that percentage. During fiscal year 2022 (FY22) budget deliberations, it was 1%, about $111 million. ....
Missouri's governor details reasons for vetoes on emissions, child advocate and lobbyist legislation missourinet.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from missourinet.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.