Thursday, April 16, 2026

Liberal man arrested on weapons charge following search warrant execution


(From the Barton County Sheriff's Office)

On April 10, 2026, Deputies with the Barton County Sheriff’s Office, Liberal Police Department, Lamar Police Department, and Agents with the Mid Missouri Career Criminal and Drug Task Force (MMCCDTF) executed a search warrant in the 200 block of Fishback St. in Liberal, Missouri.

Agents had received information that an individual residing at the location was a convicted felon in possession of firearms. A search warrant was obtained on April 8, 2026, and executed on April 10, 2026.








During the search, Deputies and Agents located two firearms inside the residence. Both firearms were seized and placed into evidence. One adult male was present at the time of the search. He was taken into custody and transported to the Barton County Jail for processing, where he was placed on a 24-hour hold pending further investigation.

The individual has been identified as Andrew J. Dohle of Liberal, Missouri. Mr. Dohle has been charged with the following offenses:

• Unlawful Possession of a Firearm – Class E Felony (2 counts)








On April 10, 2026, the above charges were submitted to Barton County Prosecuting Attorney Michael Smalley. On April 11, 2026, the Honorable Judge James Nichols issued a warrant for the listed charges. Bond has been set at Capias (No Bond).

All suspects are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

The Barton County Sheriff’s Office would like to thank the Lamar Police Department, Liberal Police Department, and the Barton County Ambulance District for their assistance.

Anderson man bound over for trial on sodomy charge

 


An Anderson man was bound over for trial after waiving his preliminary hearing Wednesday in McDonald County Circuit Court.

Craig Alan Ruble, 40, is scheduled to be arraigned 9 a.m. May 18 in the trial court.

Ruble allegedly forced a woman to perform oral sex on him September 5.

The charge involved an act that allegedly took place September 5 when Ruble asked a friend to bring him food, according to the probable cause statement.

When they were inside the residence, Ruble exposed himself to the woman and ordered her to perform oral sex on him, according to the probable cause statement.

After 10 to 15 minutes, they were interrupted and the woman was able to flee, the statement said.

From the probable cause statement:

Ruble has a known history to resist arrest, by fleeing, using violence and deception to evade capture. Ruble has been charged multiple times with Domestic Assault and has been convicted of violating an Order of Protection as well as multiple other narcotics charges.







 


The case was investigated by the Anderson Police Department.

(Note: This post has been changed to reflect that Ruhle waived his preliminary hearing and the details of the alleged offense that were posted earlier were from the probable cause statement from another case in which Ruble allegedly forced a woman to perform oral sex.)

Ryan Jackson social media comments on tap for Joplin City Council Monday



 JOPLIN REGULAR MEETING AGENDA
MONDAY, APRIL 20, 2026
5th FLOOR COUNCIL CHAMBERS
602 S. MAIN ST. JOPLIN MO
6:00 P.M.


1.

Call To Order

Invocation
Pledge of Allegiance of the United States of America
2.

Roll Call

3.

Presentations

1.

Recognition Of Keenan T. Cortez, Sr. As The 2024-2026 Mayor

2.

Residential Trash Service Contract Presentation 

4.

Finalization Of Consent Agenda

5.

Reports And Communications

1.

News From The Public Information Office 

6.

Citizen Requests And Petitions

1.

Amanda Bearden 

2.

Jen Wunder

3.

Kaylann Loraine

4.

Rich Thurman 

5.

Teresa McCoy

6.

Ron Burch 

7.

Sabrina Cole 

7.

Public Hearings

8.

Consent Agenda

1.

Minutes Of The April 6, 2026, City Council Meeting

2.

Minutes Of The April 13, 2026, Special Called City Council Meeting 

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-121

AN ORDINANCE approving Amendment #3 to Work Authorization OLS-OC24-001 with Olsson for professional engineering consultation services in the not to exceed amount of One Hundred Thirty-Six Thousand Seven Hundred Eighty-Three and 00/100 dollars ($136,783.00) for the 7th Street Sanitary Sewer Relocation Project and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-121.PDF
4.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-122

AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into a construction agreement with APAC Central, Inc. in the amount of One Million Thirteen Thousand Five Hundred Eighty-Seven and 02/100 Dollars, ($1,013,587.02) for the Mill and Overlay 2026 project; authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin and setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-122.PDF
5.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-262

AN ORDINANCE approving the voluntary annexation by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, of property generally described as approximately 25 acres approximately 450 feet East of the Southeast corner of East 32nd Street and South Kodiak Rd, Newton County, Missouri.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-262.PDF
6.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-263

AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, by removing from District R-1 (Single-Family Residential) and include in District M-2 (Heavy Industrial) property as described below and generally known as approximately 25 acres approximately 450 feet East of the Southeast corner of East 32nd St and South Kodiak Rd, Newton County, Missouri.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-263.PDF
7.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-264

AN ORDINANCE amending Ordinance No. 2022-119, passed by the Council of the City of  Joplin, Missouri, August 1, 2022, by removing from District R-2 (Two-Family Residential) and include in R-2 HL (Two-Family Residential – Historic Landmark Overlay) property as described below and generally known as 612 West E Street, Jasper County, Missouri.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-264.PDF
8.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-265

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the City of Joplin to enter into an Agreement with Crafton, Tull & Associates, Inc. for Professional Planning Services relating to the creation of the Active Transportation and Bicycle & Pedestrian Plan updates for the Joplin Area Transportation Planning Organization (JATSO); authorizing the City Manager to execute said Agreement for the City of Joplin; and setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective. 

 

Documents:
  1. CB2026-265.PDF
9.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-401

AN ORDINANCE approving an Agreement between the City of Joplin, Missouri, and Joplin Economic Housing Development Initiative that pertains to 2024 and 2025 HOME funds in the total amount not to exceed $310,000.00; authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute same on behalf of the City of Joplin. 

 

Documents:
  1. CB2026-401.PDF
10.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-402

 AN ORDINANCE approving an Agreement between the City of Joplin, Missouri, and Joplin Economic Housing Development Initiative that pertains to 2024 and 2025 HOME funds in the total amount not to exceed $175,000.00; authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute same on behalf of the City of Joplin.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-402.PDF
11.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-509

AN ORDINANCE amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025, to adjust appropriations; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.           

Documents:
  1. CB2026-509.PDF
12.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-607

AN ORDINANCE approving a Purchase Order to be issued to Superion, LLC., to cover the annual support payment for the financial software and related systems the amount of $227,063.26, was budgeted and approved for FY2026 by Council during the budget process and finalized by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and establishing a date when it shall become effective.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-607.PDF
13.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-608

AN ORDINANCE Authorizing the City of Joplin to issue a purchase order to Don Brown Chevrolet in the amount of One Hundred and Fourteen Thousand One Hundred Eighty-Eight Dollars and No Cents ($114,188.00) for the purchase of two (2) Chevy Tahoe Police vehicles; authorizing the City Manager to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin and setting an effective date.

Documents:
  1. CB2026-608.PDF
9.

Resolutions

10.

Ordinances - Expedited

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-118

AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Liberty in the amount of One Million Four Hundred Eleven Thousand Eight Hundred and 00/100 dollars ($1,411,800.00) for facility relocations required for Streetlight Installations and Underground Conductor Feeding along the 7th Street Corridor included in the MoDOT 7th Street Reconstruction Project and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; amending the Annual Budget of the City of Joplin for the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 as adopted by Ordinance 2025-143 on October 20, 2025; and containing an expedited clause.

11.

Ordinances - First Reading

1.

COUNCIL BILL NO 2026-113

AN ORDINANCE authorizing the issuance of a Purchase Order to Central States Bus Sales Inc., in the amount of Ninety-six Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty and 00/100 Dollars ($96,750.00) for the purchase of one (1) 2026 Ford Transit Van with Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant lift and Q’Straint System; by and on behalf of the City of Joplin; and, setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

2.

COUNCIL BILL NO 2026-119

AN ORDINANCE approving an Agreement between the City of Joplin, the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission, and the Missouri & Northern Arkansas Railroad Company, Inc. that pertains to improved warning devices at the Enterprise Avenue railroad crossing; authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin and setting a date when this Ordinance shall become effective.

3.

COUNCIL BILL NO. 2026-123

AN ORDINANCE approving the City of Joplin to enter into an agreement with Masters Elevator Co. LLC in the amount of One Hundred Eighty Thousand Three Hundred Eighty- Three and 20/100 dollars ($180,383.20) for Elevator Modifications and upgrades of the Elevator located at Donald E. Clark Justice Center & an Elevator located at Fire Station #4 and authorizing the City Manager or his designee to execute the same by and on behalf of the City of Joplin and setting a date when this ordinance shall become effective.

12.

Ordinances - Second Reading And Third Reading

13.

Unfinished Business

14.

New Business

1.

Discussion Of Ryan Jackson’s Recent Social Media And KSN Comments.


Webb City R-7 Board accepts 7 resignations, hires 7 teachers, assistant principal


During its meeting Tuesday night, the Webb City R-7 Board of Education approved seven resignations and offered contracts to seven teachers and an assistant principal.

Resignations

– Derek Bycroft, physical education, Mark Twain and Harry S. Truman elementary schools.

– Avery Davis, sixth grade, middle school

-Johnna Johnson, physical education, junior high








– Whitney Baker, district instructional coach

– Bradley Hershey, special education, junior high.

– Daniel Osborne, math teacher, junior high.

– John Wilcox, sixth grade, middle school.

Hires

– Candace Vene, assistant principal, middle school and Webster Primary Center

– Emily Pearce, special education, Webster Primary Center








– Wyatt Hensley, high school social studies

– Robyn Wormington, high school communication arts

– Sydnee Adams, kindergarten, Madge T. James

– MacKenzie Robbins, third grade, Mark Twain Elementary

– Katie Candrl, physical education, Mark Twain

– Emma Floyd, junior high physical education

Republicans squeeze tax overhaul through Missouri Senate in late-night vote


By Rudi Keller

After unveiling a new plan just before midnight to replace Missouri’s income tax with a broader sales tax, state Senate Republican leaders moved quickly to push it to passage early Thursday morning.

Democrats unanimously opposed the proposal, but only one said anything against it — and then only briefly. The harshest criticism came from Republican dissidents, who were numerous enough, along with the missing votes of absent members, that the measure had a bare 18-vote majority in the 34-member chamber.








“It is 15 minutes after midnight,” said state Sen. Joe Nicola, a Republican from Independence. “The people are not here to watch, to listen, to take part in the process.”

Two other Republicans — state Sens. Mike Moon of Ash Grove and Lincoln Hough of Springfield — joined Nicola in opposition. The bill came up at 11:30 p.m. Wednesday and passed 18-11 a little more than an hour later.

The plan to replace income tax with an expanded sales tax that could be imposed on “any goods or services” is unneeded, puts the state in a potentially dangerous financial position and implementation, if passed by voters, will dominate legislative debates for years to come, Nicola said.

“It is appalling to me that we’re going to remove some of the constitutional limits and ask the people to trust us to figure this out,” Nicola said.

How the plan would work

Finding a path to eliminating the state personal income tax is Gov. Mike Kehoe’s top priority for the year.The key to all versions of the proposal is expanding the state sales tax to previously untaxed services, such as labor for auto and home repairs, and goods now exempt, such as prescription drugs or gasoline.

The legislation, if approved in a final Missouri House vote, would go to voters later this year as a proposed constitutional amendment.

Republican state Sen. Curtis Trent of Springfield handled the proposal in the Senate and spent hours in negotiations with Democrats to achieve the quick passage. The version produced by those negotiations removed automatic triggers for tax rate cuts and the target date for eliminating the income tax.








Instead, it directs lawmakers to set tax cut triggers if the amendment is approved by voters and gives the General Assembly a five-year window to decide which goods and services would be taxable. Legislation expanding the sales tax or increasing the rate would have to include offsetting cuts in income tax rates.

As he explained the plan, Trent had a polite discussion with the only Democrat to speak, state Sen. Stephen Webber of Columbia.

“I appreciate you and all the senators that were involved,” Trent said. “I would characterize it as a Senate-wide effort. There’s a lot of folks that were involved in the negotiation, the discussion surrounding this, and I think that the process worked very well, and we’ve got a product that is worthy of putting in front of the people of Missouri for a decision.”

Webber agreed that Trent had accurately stated what was in the proposal and how it was crafted.

“I would say it was a Senate-wide effort,” Webber said. “I’m personally going to vote no, but I think it’s important to an issue of this size that the entire senate was involved, and it was and I thank you for that.”

Hough and Moon, however, punctured the bipartisan self-congratulations by questioning whether negotiations had truly been “Senate-wide.”

“I don’t think we should be under the misrepresentation that everyone was involved,” Hough said.

“Were you involved?” Moon asked.

“No,” Hough replied. “This is the first time I’ve seen the substitute, when I walked in here and I had it on my desk.”

The math of replacing the income tax

Missourians pay a stack of sales taxes on each purchase. The base is the statewide 3% tax for general revenue, with an additional 1.225% earmarked for schools, conservation, state parks, and soil conservation.

Local option taxes imposed by cities, counties and special districts mean the actual rate can be as high as 12%. In most locations, consumers pay tax rates of 7% to 8% at checkout.








To collect the approximately 65% of state general revenue produced by the income tax, the 3% rate would have to be increased by as much as 8.5%. To replace it without increasing the rate, lawmakers would have to find an additional $300 billion in economic transactions to tax.

The entire private sector economic output of Missouri in 2024 was $316 billion. The current sales tax produces about $3.2 billion annually, which means it covers about $100 billion in goods sold each year.

Under every version of the plan, earmarked state tax rates would be adjusted downward to offset the additional revenue from an expanded tax base. Local tax rates would also fall, but local governments would be given the option to offset the additional revenue by cutting property taxes or other levies instead of sales tax rates.

The House version used a priority list that required cuts in local sales tax rates before reductions in other taxes. The Senate-passed version gives local governments discretion to decide which taxes to cut first to offset new revenue.

From specific triggers to a broad framework

The House-passed version, and an earlier Senate version that won committee approval but was never debated on the floor, included specific revenue triggers for tax cuts.

The House plan cut the top tax rate by one-one hundredth of a percentage point for every $20 million in revenue in excess of the $13.43 billion in net general revenue collections in fiscal 2025.

The revenue estimate used for writing next year’s budget anticipates $13.65 billion. After applying an inflation adjustment to fiscal 2025 revenue, that would result in the top tax rate, currently 4.7% falling to 4.6% on Jan. 1, 2028.

The House-passed plan anticipated the state would see a small decline in expected revenue of about $50 million by mid-2028, followed by a revenue cut of up to $1 billion in the following fiscal year.

The costs exploded in the version approved in Senate committees. That proposal compared revenue in half of a fiscal year to the whole revenue of fiscal 2025 and the result would have been a revenue decline of up to $4.2 billion by June 30, 2027.

Who pays more?

Moon was the only senator who tried to amend the proposal. He wanted to limit the sales tax to new goods, arguing that lower-income Missourians were more likely to be looking for savings at second-hand shops.

Many people will see their tax burden increase, Moon said, because they pay little or no income tax.

A single parent making $25,000 a year — 32 hours a week at Missouri’s $15 per hour minimum wage — currently pays no state income tax. Missouri also does not tax Social Security benefits and exempts a portion of retirement income.

Moon said his amendment would be a signal that lawmakers understand the issues facing low-income Missourians.

“It’s tax money that some people can ill afford to pay and so I think it’s just a way that we can say as a legislature we do care about you,” Moon said.

Trent opposed the change. The proposal is a framework and it will be up to future lawmakers to fill in the details, he said.

“I don’t think that this is the place to do that, because if you can think of one good policy, in isolation, that should be in this proposal, then I suspect there are 33 other people out here that can also think of good policy positions, in isolation, that should be in this proposal,” Trent said. “And then you just then you’re, then you’re simply losing control of the ability to implement this.”

The ballot fight ahead

Speculation leading up to the Senate action centered on how long Democrats would filibuster the measure before Republican leaders moved to cut off debate. But Democrats signaled privately earlier in the day that polls showing the amendment would be difficult to pass meant they believe their party will do better in this year’s elections if it is on the ballot.

A St. Louis University/YouGov poll in February found that Missourians, by a margin of 52 to 29, prefer the sales tax as a means of raising state revenue over the income tax. But that same poll found that 53% of voters oppose a sales tax on residences, 60% oppose a sales tax on car repair labor, 50% oppose a sales tax on gasoline and diesel and 45% oppose adding sales tax to professional services like accounting.

A more recent survey by the Republican consulting firm Torchlight Strategies, first reported by the political newsletter MoScout, found that Missourians oppose the switch from income to sales tax 49% to 37%. After hearing a series of reasons to oppose it, only 18% remained favorable to the plan while 75% said they would vote no.








The findings are similar to a survey commissioned by the Missouri Association of Realtors in late February and early March, where two-thirds or more of respondents found opposition messages somewhat or very persuasive.

The Realtors oppose the proposal and have signaled they will be heavily involved in the campaign to defeat it. Missouri Realtors used the initiative process twice, once to prohibit sales tax on real estate transactions and again to prevent expanded sales taxes.

Speculation leading up to the Senate action centered on how long Democrats would filibuster the measure before Republican leaders moved to cut off debate. But Democrats signaled privately earlier in the day that polls showing the amendment would be difficult to pass meant they believe their party will do better in this year’s elections if it is on the ballot.

A St. Louis University/YouGov poll in February found that Missourians, by a margin of 52 to 29, prefer the sales tax as a means of raising state revenue over the income tax. But that same poll found that 53% of voters oppose a sales tax on residences, 60% oppose a sales tax on car repair labor, 50% oppose a sales tax on gasoline and diesel and 45% oppose adding sales tax to professional services like accounting.

A more recent survey by the Republican consulting firm Torchlight Strategies, first reported by the political newsletter MoScout, found that Missourians oppose the switch from income to sales tax 49% to 37%. After hearing a series of reasons to oppose it, only 18% remained favorable to the plan while 75% said they would vote no.

The findings are similar to a survey commissioned by the Missouri Association of Realtors in late February and early March, where two-thirds or more of respondents found opposition messages somewhat or very persuasive.

The Realtors oppose the proposal and have signaled they will be heavily involved in the campaign to defeat it. Missouri Realtors used the initiative process twice, once to prohibit sales tax on real estate transactions and again to prevent expanded sales taxes.

State Board of Education approves strategic plan, Columbia charter school application


(From Department of Elementary and Secondary Education)

The State Board of Education (State Board) received a refreshed student-centered strategic plan update from the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (DESE) and approved a five-year charter application for Frontier STEM Academy – Elementary in Columbia at its Tuesday meeting.

Strategic Plan Refresh

Commissioner of Education Dr. Karla Eslinger, alongside technical assistance providers, presented an initial draft of the department’s revised strategic plan. This was the first opportunity for State Board members to discuss and provide feedback to guide the plan’s development.








Over the past seven months, DESE has undergone a significant planning process to better understand both the challenges and opportunities ahead for Missouri schools and students. Developing recommendations of the strategic plan included a stakeholder survey, work groups, and national landscape scans.

The goal of this revision is to set a clear direction for DESE’s work in the years ahead and to reflect a commitment of continued improvement for our students, schools, and communities. The plan is organized around majority priorities, each supported by defined goals, actionable strategies, and measurable outcomes that will allow DESE to monitor progress and remain accountable for results.

These priorities include:

Strengthen Academic Foundations with Great Teaching
Focus Support for Underperforming Schools and Districts
Build Kindergarten Readiness
Prepare Students for Postsecondary Success
Develop Quality Data Systems to Drive Decision-Making
Foster Strong Attendance in Safe and Healthy Schools







“All Missouri students are capable of success and deserve a strong educational foundation that equips them to reach this potential,” said Dr. Eslinger. “Delivering on that promise requires clear priorities, consistent focus, and coordinated action across our state.”

Other ItemsThe State Board approved a five-year charter application for Frontier STEM Academy – Elementary in Columbia to start operations, according to the charter granted by Saint Louis University for five years. Frontier STEM Academy – Elementary proposes opening in Columbia within the boundaries of the Columbia Public School District in the 2027-28 school year. The school will open with Pre-K through grade 2 and grow an additional grade each year. Ultimately, the school intends to serve Pre-K through grade 2.

The next State Board meeting will be May 12, 2026, in St. Louis.


Agenda posted for Carthage R-9 Board of Education meeting

 




































































































Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Freeman physicians come through for Nichols in first campaign report


Nearly $70,000 was spent during the first three months of 2026 on the 32nd District State Senatorial race between incumbent Jill Carter and challenger Ellen Nichols, according to disclosure statements filed today with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

Carter reported receiving $7,400 during the period and spending $27,555.16, leaving her with $32,763.65 in the bank

Nichols received $273,479.53 and spent $41,875.10, with $250,000 coming from a personal loan to her campaign, according to her report. She had $231,604.43 in the bank at the end of the reporting period.







Carter campaign


Those contributing at least $500 to the Carter campaign were:

Friends of Missouri State University $1,000

Phillip Slinkard, H. E. Williams CFO $2,400

John Maupin, St. Louis, $2,400

HBS MO State PAC $500

Among Carter's expenditures:

Leadbelt Strategies, Jefferson City, fundraising $4,070

Infinite Productions, Galena, Kansas- video production, $5,000

KSN- TV ads- $7,990

Newton County Republicans, Lincoln Day tables, $3,120

Nichols campaign


Those contributing at least $500 to the Nichols campaign were:

Missouri State Orthopedic Association $1,000

Cherylon Yarosh, Freeman physician $500

Joshua Sweeney, Freeman physician $1,000

Larry McIntire, retired, $1,000

Gene Baker, retired $2,400

Paula Baker, former Freeman CEO $2,400

John Scorce, farmer, $1,000

Shari Smith, pediatrician, $2,400







Brian Curtis, Freeman physician $2,400

Laurie Behm, Freeman physician $2,400

Richard Teff, Freeman physician $2,400

Freeman Physicians Group PAC $2,400

John Holds, Clayton MO physician $500

Among the expenditures:

Lamar Advertising $22,957

Victory, Davenport, Iowa, fundraising services $12,117.27

Club 1201, event venue $1,600

Binky Guy Textiles, T-shirts $680.62