Thursday, December 18, 2025

Suspect in November McDonald County officer involved shooting taken into custody


(From the McDonald County Sheriff's Office)

On December 17, 2025, the McDonald County Sheriff’s Office received information that the suspect involved in an officer-involved shooting that occurred in November 2025 was being released from the Mercy Springfield hospital.

After receiving this information, a Captain with the McDonald County Sheriff’s Office contacted the Mercy Springfield hospital to confirm the suspect’s release. Mercy Springfield Hospital staff advised that the suspect, identified as Dylan Martinez, had already been released and had left the facility.








The McDonald County Sheriff’s Office then contacted the United States Marshals Service to assist in locating Martinez and taking him into custody.

Later that evening, the McDonald County Dispatch Center, along with other Sheriff’s Office units, received information indicating that Martinez had been given a taxi voucher by the Mercy Springfield hospital and was transported to Bella Vista, Arkansas.








The Benton County Sheriff’s Office was notified and was able to obtain a phone ping confirming Martinez was still in the Bella Vista area. At approximately 12:30 a.m. on December 18, 2025, the Benton County Sheriff’s Office, with assistance from the Bella Vista Police Department, located and took Dylan Martinez into custody without incident.

Martinez was transported to the Benton County Detention Center, where he is being held on multiple charges originating from McDonald County as well as local Arkansas charges including parole violations.
This incident remains under investigation. Additional information will be released as it becomes available.

Missouri among states offered Trump DOJ deal to purge voters flagged by feds as ineligible


By Jonathan Shorman

The U.S. Department of Justice has sent a confidential draft agreement to more than a dozen states that would require election officials to remove any alleged ineligible voters identified during a federal review of their voter rolls.

The agreement — called a memorandum of understanding, or MOU — would hand the federal government a major role in election administration, a responsibility that belongs to the states under the U.S. Constitution.

A Justice Department official identified 11 states that have expressed an interest in the agreement during a federal court hearing in December, according to a transcript reviewed by Stateline. Two additional states, Colorado and Wisconsin, have publicly rejected the memorandum of understanding and released copies of the proposal.








The 11 states “all fall into the list of, they have expressed with us a willingness to comply based on the represented MOU that we have sent them,” Eric Neff, the acting chief of the Justice Department’s Voting Section, said at the hearing. He spoke at a Dec. 4 hearing in a federal lawsuit brought by the Justice Department against California, which has refused a demand for the state’s voter data.

Neff’s courtroom disclosure, which Stateline is the first to report, comes as the Justice Department has sued 21 states and the District of Columbia for unredacted copies of their voter rolls after demanding the data from most states in recent months. The unredacted lists include sensitive personal information, such as driver’s license and partial Social Security numbers.

The states Neff identified are led by Republicans — Alabama, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Tennessee, Utah and Virginia.

The draft memorandum of understanding represents a new effort by the Trump administration to gain access to some states’ voter data without litigation.

The administration’s lawsuits mostly target Democratic states, where election officials refused initial requests for voter data and allege the demand is unlawful and risks the privacy of millions of voters. They have also voiced fears that the Trump administration could use the information to target its political enemies.

Neff said four states with Republican secretaries of state — Arkansas, Indiana, Kansas and Wyoming — have “complied voluntarily” with the Justice Department’s demand without memoranda of understanding.

The Justice Department says it needs voters’ detailed information to ensure ineligible people are kept off state voter rolls and that only citizens are voting.

Federal officials say they will follow federal privacy laws, but critics fear voter data is being shared with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, which operates a powerful citizenship verification tool known as SAVE. The Trump administration has previously confirmed the Justice Department plans to share voter data with Homeland Security.

“What the DOJ is trying to do is something that should frighten everybody across the political spectrum,” said David Becker, executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research. “They’re trying to use the power of the executive branch to bully states into turning over highly sensitive data: date of birth, Social Security number, driver’s license — the holy trinity of identity theft.”








Becker, who worked as a senior trial attorney in the Justice Department’s Voting Section during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, told reporters on Dec. 8 that several states received the memorandum. But Neff’s identification of 11 states wasn’t widely available until the judge in the California lawsuit on Tuesday ordered the transcript of the Dec. 4 hearing immediately posted to the lawsuit’s public docket, where Stateline accessed it.

The draft memorandum of understanding, which is labeled “confidential,” outlines the terms of the proposed agreement between each state and the Justice Department. After a state provides its voter roll, the federal department would agree to test, analyze and assess the information. The department would then notify states of “any voter list maintenance issues, insufficiencies, inadequacies, deficiencies, anomalies, or concerns” found.

Each state would agree to “clean” its voter roll within 45 days by removing any ineligible voters, according to the memorandum. States would then resubmit their voter data to the Justice Department for verification.

While the Justice Department has demanded states’ voter rolls since this summer, the memorandum of understanding offers the most detailed picture to date of how the Trump administration plans to use the data.

“It lays out in a way that we haven’t seen in any other context their plan for one of the things, I will say, that they plan to do, which is disturbing,” said Eileen O’Connor, a senior counsel and manager in the voting rights and election program at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University, a progressive think tank.

O’Connor was a trial attorney in the Justice Department’s Voting Section during the Obama, first Trump and Biden administrations. “I think with each passing lawsuit, they are clearly trying to create a national database of every voter in the country,” she said.

The Justice Department didn’t answer questions from Stateline about how many states had been sent the memorandum and whether any had signed it.

Assistant U.S. Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who leads the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, wrote in a statement to Stateline that the department has a statutory mandate to enforce federal voting rights laws. Ensuring the voting public’s confidence in election integrity is a top priority of the Trump administration, she wrote.

“Clean voter rolls and basic election safeguards are requisites for free, fair, and transparent elections,” Dhillon wrote.








Federal involvement in elections

The Justice Department memorandum, if implemented, would mark a significant departure from how election officials typically maintain voter rolls.

States, often in coordination with local election officials, check lists for changes in address, deaths and other reasons for ineligibility, such as a felony conviction. States typically perform this task with little to no federal involvement.

Some states participate in voluntary programs that allow election officials to share voter information with other states for the purposes of looking for voters who may have moved or who are registered in multiple locations. But those don’t include the federal government, which plays a limited role in election administration under the United States’ decentralized approach to elections.

Matt Crane, executive director of the Colorado County Clerks Association, said clerks continually look at death records and other sources of data to update voter lists. He said the United States’ localized election system is a strength that guards against election interference.

“The federal government has no role in list maintenance,” Crane said.

But that has begun to change under the Trump administration, as President Donald Trump has made removing noncitizen voters a priority.

Earlier this year, Homeland Security overhauled the SAVE program into a tool that can scan millions of voter records against government databases for evidence of citizenship. The program was previously used for one-off searches to check whether noncitizens were eligible for government benefits.

Some Republican secretaries of state have agreed to upload their voter rolls into SAVE. Democratic secretaries of state object to using the program and say they are wary of what will happen to the voter information once it’s provided to the Trump administration, including its potential use by the Department of Homeland Security.








While SAVE can flag voters with potential eligibility issues, the onus now is still on state officials to investigate whether those voters are actually ineligible and decide whether to initiate a process to remove them from the rolls.

By contrast, the Justice Department memorandum would empower federal officials to take a more active role, allowing them to check the work of state election officials as they remove — or don’t remove — voters.

“We have a system that allows Americans to voice their opinions and to hold government accountable, and that is so fundamentally central to the way our system works,” Oregon Democratic Secretary of State Tobias Read, who has been sued by the Justice Department, said in an interview. “We should be focused on how to make that better, not on erecting artificial barriers and putting people’s privacy and confidence at risk for no reason.”

Republican interest

Some GOP election officials have welcomed the Trump administration’s interest and have accused the Biden administration of not doing enough to help states vet their voter rolls. In particular, they praise the overhaul of SAVE, which some GOP secretaries of state had requested before Trump took office.

Some secretaries have touted the removal of noncitizen voters after using SAVE. Wyoming Secretary of State Chuck Gray, a Republican, in November announced three voters identified as noncitizens had been removed from his state’s voter rolls. Gray has also provided the Justice Department with full access to Wyoming’s voter roll.

“The voter list maintenance that we have been conducting is extremely important for election integrity,” Gray said in a news release.

But as of early December, nearly all states hadn’t provided the Justice Department access to their unredacted voter rolls, with Neff identifying only four that had shared their lists. It also remains unclear whether any state has signed the memorandum of understanding. No state has told Stateline it signed the document.

Nebraska Secretary of State Robert Evnen, a Republican, has received a memorandum of understanding and plans to comply with the Justice Department request, pending the outcome of an ongoing lawsuit, Evnen spokesperson Rani Taborek-Potter wrote in an email to Stateline. A voting advocacy group has sued to block the release of the data.

In an interview with Kentucky Lantern, Kentucky Republican Secretary of State Michael Adams said that his office was “going back and forth a little bit” with the Justice Department over what federal law requires.

“We’ve not really figured out exactly where that line is of what-all they’re entitled to,” Adams said. “What’s not in dispute is they’re entitled to the vast majority of information — people’s names, addresses, birthdays — and we’ve given them all of that.”

Adams added that many state officials “are in the same boat of trying to figure out what exactly they need to do their job and what our obligations are legally.”

Utah Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, a Republican, confirmed in a statement to Stateline that her office received a proposed memorandum of understanding from the Justice Department. “We are in the process of reviewing the document with our attorneys and carefully considering our options,” Henderson wrote.

Rachael Dunn, a spokesperson for Missouri Republican Secretary of State Denny Hoskins, wrote in an email that the state hadn’t entered into an agreement with the Justice Department “at this time.”

DOJ ‘contractor’ could get voter data

The draft agreement would give the Justice Department wide authority to share the voter data of states that sign on.

The department would be authorized to share the data with “a contractor” who needs access “to perform duties related” to voter list maintenance verification, according to the draft agreement. The agreement doesn’t name any contractors or specify whether they would be inside or outside of government.

Two states have publicly rejected the draft agreement. Colorado Democratic Secretary of State Jena Griswold announced Dec. 11 she would refuse to sign the memorandum. The Justice Department sued Colorado the following day.








The Wisconsin Elections Commission also rejected the draft agreement that week. In a Dec. 11 letter to Neff, the Justice Department official, the commissioners wrote that state law prohibits them from releasing certain personally identifiable information, such as date of birth, Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers.

“I don’t look at the action that we’re taking today to be commentary on the motive of the appropriateness of the Department of Justice’s request,” Commissioner Don Millis, a Republican appointee, said at a virtual commission meeting the same day. “The U.S. DOJ is simply asking the commission to do something that the commission is explicitly forbidden by Wisconsin law to do.”

The Justice Department on Thursday sued Wisconsin for its voter data.

Justin Levitt, who served as senior policy adviser for democracy and voting rights in the Biden White House and is now a law professor at Loyola Marymount University, told Stateline in an email that he expects no states to sign the agreement.

“It’s no surprise that both Colorado and Wisconsin said no — and I don’t think that’s a question of political leadership,” Levitt wrote. “It’s hard for me to imagine any Republican state with faith in its own list maintenance capacity agreeing to outsource that decision to the DOJ.”

Kansas lawmakers meet Monday about deal to move Kansas City Chiefs out of Missouri


By Peggy Lowe, Sherman Smith and Steve Kraske
Kansas Reflector

Kansas legislative leaders will meet Monday to take one of the final steps toward luring the Kansas City Chiefs across the state line, floating bonds worth hundreds of millions so the team can build a domed stadium and an entertainment district.

With a year-end deadline looming, the Legislative Coordinating Council will consider approving Sales Tax and Revenue Bond agreements with the Chiefs. Monday is the council’s last scheduled meeting of the year.








With the bonds’ approval, the Kansas City Chiefs could move closer to uprooting six decades of NFL history in Missouri and relocate to Kansas. The deal is said to call for placing the new stadium near the Legends, a regional shopping mall and commercial area in the Village West development in Kansas City, Kansas.

The council will not consider any deals with the Kansas City Royals on Monday.

Legislative and state leaders refused to offer specifics about the meeting and would say only that the Chiefs will be on the agenda. Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson, a Republican running for governor, said he has worked diligently to explore the change to bring the Chiefs to Kansas without raising taxes.

“He remains fully committed to these efforts and will continue working tirelessly up to and through the upcoming Legislative Coordinating Council meeting to facilitate this exciting opportunity for Kansas,” said Megan Stookey, Masterson’s spokesperson.

Kansas Senate Minority Leader Dinah Sykes, a Lenexa Democrat, said she was told the council, which is composed of legislative leadership from both parties, would be talking about the Chiefs on Monday — but not the Royals.

“We will be talking about the Chiefs,” Sykes said. “It sounds like there is some proposal that we will be looking at.”

The Kansas Department of Commerce, which handles such deals, posted on Facebook that the state is in active discussions with the Chiefs about “building a new stadium and other facilities in Kansas.”

“No final agreement has been reached, but this would be a massive economic win for Kansas and benefit Kansans for generations to come,” the statement said. “We are aggressively pursuing this opportunity.”








The Kansas City Chiefs didn’t return an email seeking comment.

In an interview Tuesday, Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly declined to say whether the Chiefs or Royals were coming to Kansas.

“You really think I’m going to answer that question?” Kelly said.

Missouri Gov, Mike Kehoe said his team remains in frequent communication with the Royals and the Chiefs and wants to keep the teams in Missouri.

“He believes Missouri is the best home for both teams and continues working with the teams to make the right decision to grow and invest in the Show-Me State,” said Gabby Picard, his communications director.

Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas issued a statement Thursday saying the city doesn’t negotiate in public.

“As the city and our Missouri partners continue discussions with our long-term partners at the Chiefs and the Royals, we remain steadfast in working toward an arrangement in the best interest of our community and the greatest success of our teams on and off the field,” Lucas said.

After a ping-pong of public-financing proposals offered by the two states, the Chiefs face a decision on Kansas’ deal, which could cover up to 70% of the project through bonds. Missouri’s plan offered 50%.

Missouri hit a wall in its bid to keep the Chiefs after voters rejected a sales tax extension in April 2024, throwing in jeopardy a plan that would have helped fund a new $2 billion downtown ballpark for the Royals and $800 million in renovations to Arrowhead Stadium. That’s when Kansas lawmakers aggressively stepped in, authorizing STAR bonds to finance 70% of development projects with a minimum investment of a billion dollars.

Kansas Sen. David Haley, a Democrat from Wyandotte County, said Thursday he’s hearing talk that the team is headed to the Legends.

The site of the new stadium could be west of the Kansas Speedway, at the junction of Interstate 435 and Interstate 70. The potential entertainment district surrounding the stadium would be placed near other existing businesses, like Legends Outlets, the Hollywood Casino, and Sporting KC’s soccer stadium.

The Kansas Legislature during a special session last summer created a financial incentive package designed to lure the Chiefs and Royals across state lines. The law allows for STAR bonds to pay for 70% of a development project with a minimum investment of a billion dollars. The bonds would be paid through liquor sales and retail sales tax revenue in the development area, with a window up to 30 years.

Reaching a deal now could allow a stadium to open by 2031, when the team’s leases with Jackson County, Missouri, expire.









The Chiefs began playing in Kansas City in 1963 after owner Lamar Hunt moved the franchise from Dallas. The team first played at Municipal Stadium, at 22nd Street and Brooklyn Avenue, then moved to Arrowhead in 1971. The Truman Sports Complex, on the city’s east side, is also home to the Royals and the teams share parking lots.

The Chiefs sold naming rights in 2021 to the Government Employees Health Association and the official name became GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium.

The Chiefs’ negotiations with Kansas intensified last month when the team floated a request for proposals from firms to design a domed stadium, which would be available for use during the Super Bowl and other winter events. The team was said to be negotiating with NASCAR for land near the Speedway.

Five months earlier, in June, the Chiefs requested an extension to a deadline for a stadium financing package from the state of Kansas, which was an indication the NFL franchise’s move across the state line was a real possibility.

But that same month, Kehoe called lawmakers into a special session to offer a competing stadium financing deal, hoping for something that could keep both the Chiefs and the Royals on that side of the state line. The Missouri Legislature approved the plan, which authorized bonds covering up to half of the cost of new or renovated stadiums, plus up to $50 million in tax credits for each stadium and more aid from local governments.

This story was originally published by Kansas Reflector, a States Newsroom affiliate.

Joplin man indicted on meth, cocaine trafficking, weapons charges


The indictment of a Joplin man on meth trafficking and weapons charges was unsealed today in U. S. District Court for the Western of Missouri.

According to the indictment, Ivy Dewayne Lee Iverson, 34, was charged with possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of a firearm in furtherance of drug trafficking and possession of a firearm by a felon.

The crimes allegedly took place August 14 in Jasper County.







The charges are from the same incident in which Iverson was charged with two counts of drug trafficking, delivery of a controlled substance, resisting arrest and unlawful use of a weapon.

From the probable cause in the Jasper County case:

On August 14, 2025, Ivy Iverson commited the offenses of Trafficking Drugs in the First Degree,
Resisting Arrest, Unlawful Use of Weapon and Endangering the Welfare of a Child at 403 N. Main,
Joplin, Jasper County and 220 N. Byers Avenue, Joplin, Jasper County. 

During this incident officers were investigating methamphetamine sales when they observed Ivy Iverson leave his residence before contacting him at his vehicle in the parking lot of Casey's, 403 N. Main Street. 








Iverson was detained, then fled from officers on foot. While fleeing, Officers observed Iverson discarding multiple bags containing a crystal substance. Iverson was apprehended and four bags were located along his path of travel that contained a substance that tested positive as methamphetamine. The total weight of the bags was found to be 101 grams. 

A search warrant was then obtained for Iverson's residence of 220 N. Byers Avenue, Joplin, Jasper County. An adult female and five children were found to be living inside of the residence with Iverson, to include a baby in his bedroom. Inside Iverson's bedroom a Ruger, 9mm pistol with a serial number of 32972896 was located, 22 grams of cocaine, 19 grams of crack cocaine and 16 grams of fentanyl pills, electronic scales, plastic bags and $5,995.00.

(Photo- Cherokee County Sheriff's Office)

Detention hearing set for Carthage man on federal weapons charge


A December 22 detention hearing has been scheduled in U. S. District Court in Springfield for Phillip Jordan Neese, 33, Carthage whose indictment for being a felon in possession of a firearm was unsealed earlier this week.

In a detention motion filed today, the U. S. attorney's office described the allegations against Neese, detailed his criminal history and said that he had waved the gun at several juveniles.

From the motion:

The evidence against the defendant is overwhelming and he is likely to be sentenced to a significant term of imprisonment should he be found guilty, and further, the defendant has shown he is unlikely to comply with any conditions this court imposes for bond. 








The evidence should this case go to trial is that on or about September 17, 2025, the defendant was contacted by law enforcement in regards to a report of unlawful use of a weapon incident. 

When approached by law enforcement, the defendant was observed placing a handgun behind the corner of a house; the firearm was subsequently recovered. During a pat down search, the defendant was found to have a pipe used for smoking methamphetamine and fentanyl in his pocket. 








The defendant was interviewed regarding the aforementioned unlawful use of a weapon incident and admitted to displaying a weapon at several juveniles; he also admitted to using methamphetamine prior to his arrest and he knew that was a felon, unable to possess firearms.

Furthermore, the defendant has been on and off of probation & parole for several f
elony offenses, including three separate burglary convictions, and a resisting arrest conviction. While on probation, the defendant was cited for several failures to abide by the conditions of his probation, in which the court had to issue warrants for his arrest.

Neese is currently being held in the Greene County Jail.

MO Republican State Committee supports Kehoe proposal to eliminate state income tax


(From the Missouri State Republican Committee)

During a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Missouri Republican State Committee on December 16, 2025, an endorsement was issued to back Governor Kehoe's intent to eliminate Missouri's State Income Tax.

"This has been a long time coming," said Chairman Peter Kinder.

"We have seen many legislative leaders discuss it and now it is being proposed by the governor. We are excited to work with Gov. Kehoe to deliver another conservative victory for Missourians.

The motion was offered by Vice-Chair Jennifer Bukowsky and seconded by Jim Berberich, and the motion received unanimous support from the Executive Committee.

 

Carthage R-9 Board promotes Jason Vance to Steadley Elementary principal

(From the Carthage R-9 School District)

We are proud to announce that Mr. Jason Vance has been named the new Principal of Steadley Elementary! 

Mr. Vance brings more than 15 years of experience in education and most recently served as Assistant Principal at Steadley and Columbian Elementary. His strong instructional background, deep connections with students and staff, and commitment to learning make him a wonderful fit to lead the Steadley community.

Please join us in congratulating Mr. Vance as he steps into this exciting new chapter.



Jasper County Sheriff's Office searching for Carthage man wanted on numerous charges


(From the Jasper County Sheriff's Office)

At approximately 4:05 AM, 12-17-2025, Jasper County Deputies responded to a report of a suspicious vehicle involving 43-year-old Cody Vinson, Carthage.

Upon contact, he refused to exit his vehicle. The deputy broke out the driver side window of the truck and then Vinson fled in his vehicle out of the city of Jasper. The pursuit terminated after entering Barton County when deputies lost visual contact.








As a result of this incident, charges have been submitted to the Jasper County Prosecuting Attorney for felony resisting arrest (Valentine’s law) and driving while revoked. 

He currently has warrants for violation of an order of protection and a warrant for probation violation; with an original charge of attempted escape from custody and damage to jail property. 

Vinson is driving a black older (late 2000s) Dodge Ram pickup with a broken driver side window. If he is seen, you should contact law enforcement immediately.

Galena residents arrested on drug, child endangerment charges


(From the Galena Police Department)

On December 17, 2025 Officers with the Galena Police department secured a search warrant for a residence located at 217 E Lilly Place Galena, Cherokee County Kansas 66739. The Search Warrant came from an ongoing investigation regarding Child Endangerment and drug related charges.

During the search warrant, officers located suspected controlled substances and paraphernaila. 







Paige Mammenga was taken into custody and transported to Cherokee County Jail for aggravated endangering a child, abuse of a child, abandonment of a child and possession of a controlled substance. 

Additionally Lonnie Atkins was arrested on a traffic stop and he also resides at 217 Lilly Place Galena. Atkins will also be charged with possession of a controlled substance and endangerment of a child and driving without a valid license. The above suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
We would like to thank the Cherokee County Sheriffs Office for their assistance!


Missouri faces budget crunch as capital gains tax cut hits harder than expected


By Rudi Keller

The capital gains tax cut passed this year by Missouri lawmakers will cost far more than expected and shrink state revenues, a new state budget estimate shows.

The consensus revenue estimate, issued Wednesday, anticipates that revenue in the year ending June 30 will be $400 million below estimates made a year ago. Growth will return for fiscal 2027, the estimate predicts, but the rebound will be modest, state Budget Director Dan Haug said in an interview with The Independent.








“The governor has been pretty transparent and pretty vocal that this is going to be a difficult budget year,” Haug said.

Gov. Mike Kehoe is scheduled to deliver his budget proposals on Jan. 13.

When lawmakers voted on the bill exempting profits from the sale of stocks and other assets from Missouri income tax, the official estimate put the revenue loss at about $160 million in the current fiscal year, with ongoing revenue losses at $111 million.

The state is now expecting a revenue loss in the current fiscal year of about $500 million from the cut, with an ongoing revenue loss of $360 million annually, Haug said.

That is close to the approximately $600 million estimate for the loss from the left-leaning Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy and reported by The Independent — and disputed by the state revenue department — weeks before the final vote in May.

During the most recent complete fiscal year, Missouri collected $13.4 billion in general revenue.

Through Tuesday, tax receipts for the year have grown 3.5%, enough to generate about $350 million in unanticipated revenue if continued through June 30 The capital gains tax cut, and to a smaller degree state tax impacts of federal changes, will help push the trend line into negative territory, with a contraction of 2.1% and total revenue of $13.15 billion.

“What we expect to happen is that most of the reduction from capital gains will occur in that February to April period when people start filing their returns,” Haug said.

The state does have a cushion to absorb the loss of revenue. 








For several years, Missouri has enjoyed historically large reserves of surplus cash. The surplus peaked at nearly $8 billion in June 2023. Large sums have been set aside for improvements to Interstates 70 and 44, a major expansion of the Capitol Building and construction projects on college campuses and elsewhere.

The state employee pension fund received a one-time injection of $500 million and state employees have seen pay raises of as much as 35% since the start of 2021.

And lawmakers have been able to earmark hundreds of millions for pet projects and programs, despite vetoes by Kehoe and his predecessor, Gov. Mike Parson, that cut many of the expenditures.

For the past three years, appropriations for ongoing programs have exceeded current revenue, with the shortfall coming from the surplus.

“We’ve sort of gotten a little out of whack on ongoing expenditures versus ongoing revenues,” Haug said. “We need to get that back under control.”

Kehoe has said he will make eliminating the state income tax, which accounts for about 65% of general revenue, his top goal for 2026.

The budget will be “challenging,” Kehoe said In the news release reporting the new revenue estimate

“Spending, not revenues, is the problem facing state government,” Kehoe said.

Republican budget leaders from the House and Senate, quoted in the news release, echoed Kehoe. Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Rusty Black of Chillicothe said he will “develop a fiscally responsible budget,” while House Budget Committee Chairman Dirk Deaton of Noel said his goal is to “deliver a sustainable budget.”

The top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, state Rep. Betsy Fogle of Springfield, said the state has problems that require attention — and money — and the issue is insufficient revenue, not overspending.

Democrats warned that the capital gains cut was being low-balled but had no power to stop it, Fogle said. Being correct doesn’t help fund services, she said.








“What helps me is making sure that my constituents have a strong social safety net, have access to good public schools and have a state government that is more focused on making proper investments in the next generation and less focused on winning a primary election,” Fogle said.

Issues that require immediate attention, Fogle said, include the growing number of people languishing in jail while they wait for state mental health evaluations and treatment, which has doubled in two years to nearly 500, and federal program changes that increase state costs for Medicaid and other benefits.

Lawmakers must also deal with department budget requests that have identified more than $1 billion in new costs to continue current programs.

“Very few people in the General Assembly have been at the table when we’ve had to make drastic cuts,” Fogle said. “It’s very important that we do so in a thoughtful way that protects the core vital services of our departments.”

It would be irresponsible to eliminate the income tax, Fogle said.

“I cannot believe we are having a good faith conversation about the elimination of the income tax and blowing a $9 billion hole in our state budget,” Fogle said.

The current budget, after Kehoe’s vetoes, projects spending $15.7 billion in general revenue, about $2.6 billion more than the new estimate anticipates in revenue.

Fogle said she is worried that the state will cut optional services for Medicaid recipients or reduce funding for higher education and public schools to align expenses with receipts.

Kehoe will include some surplus funds in his budget proposal, Haug said.

“One nice thing about the fund balance we do have is it does let us try to solve this problem over a couple of years, versus having to solve it all in one year,” Haug said. “And so I think what you’re going to see with our budget this year is the beginning of that process, sort of reining in some of the spending.”