The Turner Report
This blog features observations from Randy Turner, a former teacher, newspaper reporter and editor. Send news items or comments to rturner229@hotmail.com
Saturday, March 14, 2026
The Grind fails Joplin Health Department inspection
Katie Mock named Diamond High School principal
(From the Diamond R-4 School District)The Diamond R-IV School District is pleased to announce the hiring of Dr. Katie Mock as the new principal of Diamond High School for the 2026-2027 school year.
Dr. Mock will begin her role as principal for the 2026-2027 school year on August 1, 2026.
Joplin R-8 officials asking to extend bond for renovations for 7 elementary schools
(From Joplin Schools)Did you know that 7 of Joplin’s oldest elementary schools are in need of important safety and learning space updates to bring them up to modern standards? Regular maintenance and renovations will keep these older buildings safely equipped for generations to come. How old are the buildings?
Cecil Floyd: 41 years
Eastmorland: 73 years
Jefferson: 72 years
Kelsey Norman: 61 years
McKinley: 71 years
Royal Heights: 73 years
Stapleton: 62 years
Alongside this vital work to support our elementary students, our middle and high-school students need indoor space for co-curricular and extracurricular education and activities year-round. A new indoor facility on the JHS campus will alleviate the current overcrowding of spaces dedicated to co-curricular and extra-curricular activities at Joplin High School, which have grown exponentially in recent years.
Learn more about the proposed projects and impacts at https://JoplinSchools.org/EagleBond
Joplin city officials explain what ballot proposition would mean for police, fire departments
(In this post from the Joplin City Government Facebook page, the effects of the Proposition B Pension Sales Tax, depending on the vote, are explained.) Public Safety Staffing & Compensation
A 23% pay increase for Police Officers and Firefighters.
Why?
Currently, starting pay in Joplin is below the starting pay in comparable regional cities such as Springfield, Bentonville, and Jefferson City.
If the measure is approved, the new starting pay would still remain below the average starting pay of our benchmark cities.
The spending plan would allocate:
- Approximately $2 million for police personnel pay scale adjustments
- Approximately $2 million for fire personnel pay scale adjustments
- Guaranteed in negotiated union contracts
Prop Police & Fire also includes funding for:
Additional staffing needed according to staffing studies, to keep up with calls for service and reduce response times.
- Up to 9 police officers
- Up to 6 firefighters
If the measure is not approved:
The existing Prop B Pension Sales Tax will expire once pension obligations are fulfilled, and that revenue stream will end.
Expiration of the current tax would leave no dedicated funding for competitive pay or additional public safety personnel. It will also reduce the City’s ability to fund capital improvements for facilities, vehicles and equipment for Police and Fire.
As always, voters are encouraged to review the full ballot language and FAQs before Election Day.
Book signing set for next Saturday at Somewhere in Time in Webb City
My first ever Webb City book signing is scheduled for aa week from today, Saturday, March 21, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at Somewhere in Time Bookshop, 29 S. Main Street.
My books have been available at the store since shortly after it opened in January and I'm looking forward to the signing.
Copies of my latest book, Sharing Memories With My Friends, will be available, as well as Justice for Rowan Ford, Running Circles Around the Globe: 20 Years of The Turner Report, the 10th anniversary edition of 5:41: Stories from the Joplin Tornado, Only in Lamar Missouri: Harry Truman, Wyatt Earp and Legendary Locals and some of my earlier books.
I'll have more information about the signing in the days ahead.
Nancy Hughes: Angels ride the subway
“See, I am sending an angel ahead of you to guard you along the way and to bring you to the place I have prepared.” Exodus 23:20 (NIV)
He didn’t look like an angel to me, at least not like any angel I had pictured. He had long dark dreadlocks curling almost to his waist and a red and black bandana tied at the back of his head. His sleeveless jacket was woven with what appeared to be strands of yarn in purple, red, yellow, and green. His jeans were thin denim, frayed at the bottom.
I hadn’t even noticed him at first, sitting right next to me. My stress level was a 12 on a 10 scale as I watched the young woman in the next row alternate between leaning back in her seat and then slumping forward, her arms hugging her chest, her eyes closed.
We had been at the Passion Conference in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta when she became quite ill, and since I was the nurse with the group, I volunteered to get her back to the hotel. There was only one problem, and it was a huge one.
I was not blessed with any sense of direction when I was created. None. I get lost in closets and small bathrooms. Every way I turn is north. Always. And she and I were on the MARTA – the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority – trying to get back to the airport to catch a shuttle to our hotel. Directionally challenged. On the subway. In a strange city. Mercy.
She motioned for me to lean over, and I heard her whisper, “You know how to get us back, right Nurse Nancy?” I smiled confidently and said, “Of course I do. We are going to be fine.” She leaned back and closed her eyes, and I leaned back to find the young man next to me half-smiling. “You don’t know where you’re going, do you.” he stated quietly, not as a question, but as fact.
“Uh, no. No, I don’t. But she is really sick, and I have to get her back to our hotel” I told him as I silently prayed “Lord, help us! You know I have no sense of direction! Please get us back!”
Two minutes later, the subway slowed to a stop, and I felt panic begin to take over. Do we get off here? Do we ride further? What are we going to do? Suddenly I noticed that the young man had gotten up from his seat and was standing at the door, ready to leave.
But two other things also caught my eye: one, that he was very tall, and two, that he was motioning with his head that we were at our first stop. I grabbed the young lady with me and put my arm around her as I whispered, “Come on. This is where we get off,” with a confidence that I absolutely did not feel. We stepped out of the subway and into swarms of people trying to get around us to the seats we had just exited.
For a second time, I felt panic begin to creep into my body when I noticed the young man glance back at me and once again nod his head as he walked around a corner. “This way,” I told her, but stopped as I rounded the corner and realized there were four possible directions to go in, and I had no idea which was the one for us.
“Lord!” I cried out in my heart and looked to my left. There at the top of a flight of stairs was a beautiful sight: a very tall young man with dark dreadlocks standing still on the first step, as the rush of people flowed around either side of him. And he was looking at me.
One more nod, and I could not help the grin as I mouthed “Thank you” and helped the young woman with me as we followed him down the stairs to the next level in the subway.
“Wait right here,” I told her. “I want to thank the man who helped us.” But as I turned around, he was nowhere to be seen. Nowhere. A very tall young man with dark dreadlocks, a red and black bandana on his head, and a colorful jacket had completely disappeared in a matter of seconds.
I turned back to the young woman and said, “He’s gone! How could he have disappeared like that? He was so tall. I couldn’t have missed him!” We both looked at each other. “An angel. He must have been an angel,” I told her. She nodded. “God took care of us.” But we were not home yet.
This new level in the subway posed new problems. Which way to go now? The crowd of a few minutes earlier was gone and we were left standing with only a woman and her baby in a stroller.
“You got us this far, Lord. Which way now? Which way?” I prayed. My answer came in the form of a very tiny lady in a blue shirt and slacks who suddenly appeared in front of me. “Where you goin’ Honey?” she asked. “We are trying to get back to the airport,” I told her. “My friend here is sick, and I need to find the right subway car to get her there.”
Her smile was huge as she instructed me, “You stay right here, facin’ this way,” she replied. “Don’t move ‘cause this car that’s comin’ is gonna take you to the airport. You stand in this spot you are in now, and the doors will open right in front of you.”
“We are almost there!” I smiled excitedly at the young woman as I turned with an “Oh, thank….” But the tiny lady in the blue shirt who had helped us was gone. We looked around everywhere for her, but she, too, had disappeared in seconds.
Would you believe that the subway car opened its doors directly in front of us? Yes, it did. And we were able to get back to the airport, to a shuttle, and to the hotel to begin healing about 15 minutes later.
I have no plans to go back to Atlanta and the Georgia Dome anytime in the future. But one thing I do know: if I ever ride the MARTA again, God will provide angels on the subway to get me home.
Father, you are amazing. Being lost is always so hard for me. Thank you for sending help just when I needed it. In Jesus’ Name. Amen.
R.A.P. it up
Reflect
Have you ever been in a situation where you panicked because you were “lost” as to what to do, and received help from a stranger?
When you are faced with a hard situation, what do you do first? Pray or panic?
Apply
The next time you are confronted with a problem with seemingly no solution, ask the Lord to send help to you and watch as He is faithful.
Do not forget to thank Him for answering your prayer.
Power
Exodus 23:20 (NIV) “See, I am sending an angel ahead of you to guard you along the way and to bring you to the place I have prepared.”
Psalm 91:11-12 (NIV) “For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways; they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot against a stone.”
Luke 4:10 (NIV) “For it is written: ‘He will command his angels concerning you to guard you carefully . . .”
Carthage R-9 Board accepts eight teacher resignations, hires three
(From the Carthage R-9 School District)The Carthage R-9 Board of Education met in regular session on Thursday, March 12, 2026, 6:00 pm, at the Carthage South Technical Center – Community Room. Present were board members Ms. Niki
Cloud, Mr. Ryan Collier, Mrs. Lora Phelps, Dr. Mark Westhoff, Ms. Maria Sanchez, and Mr. Patrick
Scott. Mr. Jeff Jones arrived at 6:21pm. Ms. Niki Cloud led the Pledge of Allegiance.
Mr. Braden McBride, Head Girls Swimming Coach, and student swimmer, Olivia Manning, shared her
successes during the swim season.
Mr. Nathan Kelly, Head Girls Wrestling Coach, and student wrestler, Kaylee James, shared her successes during the wrestling season.
The Board approved the Consent Agenda for the purpose of approving the meeting agenda, minutes of previous open session meeting, payment of bills, district financial report, and amendments to FY26
budget.
The Board of Education was recognized for its service as part of the Board of Education Appreciation
week. Dr. Luke Boyer, Superintendent, presented each board member a certificate of appreciation
from the Missouri School Board’s Association.
Mr. Mark Holderbaum, Director of Athletics and Activities, appeared before the Board to review the
2025-2026 Carthage High School winter sports update. Mr. Holderbaum highlighted team performance awards, overall and COC records, and future outlook.
Ms. Maria Sanchez provided a Carthage R-9 School Foundation update highlighting scholarship
applications are being reviewed. For information regarding the Flanigan speech contest, Boylan art and writing contest, and Raise The Curtain campaign contact the Carthage R-9 School Foundation.
Mr. Dustin Perkins, Carthage High School Assistant Principal, provided the Board information
regarding Carthage Schools game and tournament sponsorships.
Dr. Holley Goodnight, Assistant Superintendent for Business, presented the Board the food supply
bids for the 2026-2027 school year.
Dr. Boyer presented the Board the proposed K-12 nonresident tuition rate for the school district and
Carthage Technical Center for the 2026-2027 school year.
Dr. Boyer and the Board discussed Pleasant Elementary School and the Beacon Autism Center.
Dr. Boyer presented his report to the Board.
The Board met in closed session immediately following the regular meeting to discuss legal, personnel, and student matters, in compliance with Section 610.021 (1), (3), (6), and (13) of the Revised Statutes of Missouri.In closed session the Board approved the following personnel actions:
Approved the employment of certified, support, and substitute staff as presented contingent upon
receiving a clear criminal record check from the Missouri Highway Patrol and Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and a clear check of the Adult Abuse/Neglect Registry maintained by the Missouri
Department of Social Services for all employees new to the district:
Mandatory minimum sentencing, juvenile crime bill sent to Missouri governor
The Missouri House gave final approval Thursday to a bill that would change the classifications of and punishments for juvenile offenders and mandate more time served before any felon is eligible for parole.
Sponsored by state Sen. Nick Schroer, a Republican from Defiance, the bill would classify older juveniles who commit crimes as adults and loosen fingerprinting privacy for minors.
It also allows counties to impose a 1% sales tax to allow for the construction of additional juvenile detention centers. Those centers can be located near regular jails as long as there is spatial separation to prevent mixing of those held, according to the bill.
The bill increases the percentage of time in a sentence that an inmate would serve before parole eligibility based on the severity of the crime. The new minimums:
Class A: 70%
Class B: 50%
Class C: 40%
Class D: 25%
Class E: 25%
State Rep. Brad Christ, a Republican from St. Louis County who handled the bill in the House, said that it will help juveniles, who are currently not being held after committing a crime and sometimes commit similar crimes on the same day.
“This system is not working for our youth,” Christ said. “Perpetual release, with no accountability and no rehabilitation.”
Opponents of the bill worry that the legislation was rushed. State Rep. David Tyson Smith, a Democrat from Columbia, voiced his frustrations with the quick passage of the bill.
“Why are we voting out bills this big that have such a huge magnitude on our criminal justice system, is going to impact so many for so long — in the middle of the night?” he asked.
The bill has seen a lot of quick action in the past week, which left some lawmakers upset as they were unable to fully read the 89-page bill. They also had frustrations about the unclear fiscal note, leaving lawmakers unsure how much this would cost Missourians.
Other opponents said this bill would negatively impact juvenile offenders.
“How do you treat (juvenile offenders), and how do we get them out to the other side and turn them into taxpayers, not tax takers?” said state Rep. Gregg Bush, a Columbia Democrat.
Supporters of the bill highlighted community and law enforcement safety as a result of keeping young criminals off the streets.
“Bottom line in this bill, if you want safe communities, justice for victims of the most heinous crimes, accountability, transparency, and you want to support safety of our law enforcement, you should hammer this yes button,” Christ said.
The bill passed 97-53. It will now go to the governor’s desk.
Friday, March 13, 2026
Carthage R-9 Board votes to close Pleasant Valley Elementary
The Carthage R-9 Board of Education voted unanimously Thursday night to close Pleasant Valley Elementary at the close of the current school year.
The board will pursue having the Beacon Autism Center in the Pleasant Valley building.
More information from the board meeting will be posted on The Turner Report Saturday.
House committee advances higher education funding changes
And the House Budget Committee also backed Chairman Dirk Deaton’s proposal to cut almost $52 million from child care payments and abandon plans to change how those payments are made.
The two issues dominated the first two hours of the committee’s work Wednesday to prepare the budget for debate before the full House. When the committee finished, at 11:30 p.m. after more than nine hours, Deaton, a Republican from Seneca, said the debate will occur soon after lawmakers return from their annual Spring Break next week.
With those two items, Deaton succeeded in protecting the biggest changes he made to the budget Gov. Mike Kehoe proposed in January.
The 12 spending bills approved by the committee would provide $50.6 billion overall for state government operations in the year starting July 1, with $15.4 billion coming from general revenue. Kehoe’s budget proposed $52.1 billion in spending on state government operations, with $15.8 billion from general revenue.
One of Kehoe’s top priorities, increasing the appropriation for MOScholars school vouchers from $50 million to $60 million, won approval despite Democratic opposition. Another Kehoe budget move, to cut $80.7 million in state and federal funding from services for adults with developmental disabilities, was reversed by the committee.
The committee also cut $250,000 Kehoe requested for The 57 Foundation, set up to “provide a facility to educate the public on the history of Gov. (Mike) Parson’s life and administration.”
Parson was Kehoe’s predecessor and the 57th governor.
Legislation to provide money for construction and major maintenance on state facilities, as well as continue projects already underway with state and federal funds, will receive attention after the operating budget passes the House, Deaton said.
The committee finished its work quicker than in recent years, and the House debate is set to occur two weeks earlier than last year.
“We’ve worked very hard to move as expeditiously as we can, while still doing our due diligence, but we feel good about where we’re at,” Deaton said in an interview with The Independent as the committee concluded its work.
Deaton is trying to cut as much as he can from general revenue spending to get state appropriations aligned with revenue. A December estimate projected a decline of about $400 million in the current budget year, to $13.15 billion. Revenue is expected to increase to about $13.6 billion in the coming year.
So far, the decline has yet to materialize. Through Monday, revenues were up 1.4% for the year, which would produce $470 million in unanticipated revenue if it continues.
Deaton added about $180 million to the general revenue fund with his budget proposal. He took about $65 million from surplus money in the Blind Pension Fund to substitute for general revenue in the public school foundation formula. The spending plan also transfers $117.5 million from interest earned on money set aside for work on Interstates 44 and 70 to the general revenue fund.
A better revenue result than forecast would decrease deficit spending, but the gap between general revenue and spending remains, and it will require most of the remaining surplus accumulated in fiscal 2022 and 2023.
“It’s a responsible budget that does leave an unobligated balance,” Deaton said. “Any way you measure it, it is a responsible spending plan that is balanced.”
The ranking Democrat on the committee, state Rep. Betsy Fogle of Springfield, attempted to remove a restriction that bars families that have a child in a public pre-kindergarten program from participating in the Parents as Teachers program.
“I understand having to tighten our belt in tough, difficult, fiscal times, but there’s no reduction in costs, no decrease in the spend, but we are prohibiting families from accessing services that are really important,” Fogle said. “I am hopeful we will be able to strip that language.”
Deaton, a Republican from Seneca, on Monday unveiled his plan for shifting about $250 million among four-year universities and $26 million among two-year community colleges. Missouri spends about $950 million on four-year universities and $180 million to support community colleges.
Kehoe’s plan for higher education was for the schools to receive the same state support as they are receiving in the current year. Deaton put all that money in a pool and redivided it based on the number of full-time equivalent students, with community colleges receiving about $3,650 for each and four-year universities receiving about $8,400.
The funding rearrangement would result in the state’s two historically Black universities — Lincoln University in Jefferson City and Harris Stowe State University in St. Louis — as well as Truman State University in Kirksville each losing 35% or more of their state funding. Others would receive large boosts, including Missouri State University in Springfield and Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville, which would each increase by about 26%.
While there was bipartisan agreement that the state’s support system for higher education is fundamentally flawed, there was no consensus for Deaton’s proposal.
“It is without question that we need to do something,” said state Rep. Raychel Proudie, a Ferguson Democrat who tried to revert funding to Kehoe’s original budget. “The way that we’re doing it now is absolutely archaic.”
A drastic cut in funding could force some schools to close, some members warned. Enrollment at Truman State is down more than 40% over a decade.
“Just the rumblings that a university can close will drive away a lot of students,” said state Rep. Greg Sharpe, a Republican from Ewing.
The biggest complaint about higher education funding is that there is no formula for deciding how to use available state dollars and current levels are a legacy of the political power of each school.
“If we pass this amendment that’s currently before us, then basically the status quo has won,” said state Rep. Bill Owen, a Springfield Republican. “ We’re going to just continue on like we have for over 80 years, and it’s just a piecemeal deal, depending on who’s in the chair, what they can get done for their university.”
The novelty of Deaton’s plan, coupled with the large funding swings it would cause, was a major source of objections.
“I have concerns about the speed and the pace at which we are moving on this,” said state Rep. Mike Steinmeyer, a Republican from Sugar Creek.
Deaton said his proposal would force colleges and universities to justify their state funding and push them to agree on a formula for future funding.
“It’s a hard conversation because now we are entrenched in this system that people have oriented around, that they’re relying on, and it’s hard, and it’s tough, and I get it,” Deaton said. “If we adopt (Proudie’s) amendment, it’s over. The conversation doesn’t continue.”
Payments based on enrollment are scheduled to start in May, but Deaton’s budget plan would require a return to payments based on attendance. He cut $51.5 million from the funding proposed by Kehoe by eliminating enhancement funds intended to bring subsidized care payments close to market rates.
State Rep. Betsy Fogle, a Springfield Democrat, said providers stressed by delayed payments in 2023 and 2024 have been counting on the changes promised by Kehoe to remain in business.
“I know we have child care providers who have left their doors open and remained in-network with child care subsidies because they were promised that these things were coming,” Fogle said. “They are sitting and waiting to see what we do on pay on enrollment, to decide whether or not they want to continue with childcare subsidy programs.”
Defending his changes, Deaton said moves to increase rates paid for subsidized care have brought more providers into the system. Paying providers based on enrollment is the current system and changes would make the entire program more expensive at a time when some parents are on a waiting list for assistance.
“I don’t think we’re walking away from any responsibility,” Deaton said.
Her amendment would have required all schools taking MOScholars vouchers to accept applicants “regardless of race, sex, ethnicity, religion or learning ability.”
“My desire here is to make sure that public tax dollars go to schools that have the pleasure and privilege of serving all children, regardless of background,” Fogle said.
Republican opposition to the amendment was swift.
“In saying that we can’t discriminate on the basis of religion, it seems to me you’re discriminating against religious schools, and doing so for their being religious,” Deaton said.
But not all Republicans opposed Fogle’s attempt to deny tax dollars to schools that require religious affiliation to attend.
“Some of what she’s touching on, I think, has some merit,” said Sharpe.
He said it should be in the statute governing MOScholars.
“There are some discrepancies and there’s some hypocrisy that we have allowed to happen that probably could be, and should be, addressed,” Sharpe said.
Some of the money Kehoe wanted to give to The 57 Foundation will instead go to a anti-abortion pregnancy resource center in Cape Girardeau. The rest will go back to the general revenue fund.
Kehoe tapped federal funds in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program for $125,000 for Parson’s foundation and matched it with $125,000 of general revenue.
State Rep. John Voss, a Republican from Cape Girardeau, offered the amendment to cut the funding. The $125,000 from TANF funds went to the pregnancy resource center in his hometown, along with another $250,000 to reverse a cut made by Deaton as he prepared his version of the budget.
“I am returning the $125,000 of general revenue to the bottom line,” Voss said.
Voss wasn’t the only member looking to cut the appropriation. When Fogle said she had hoped to find a place for it, Deaton said he will try to accommodate her.
“It is a small enough amount,” he said. “Maybe we can figure out how to do that.”








