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Sign up continues for the 2024 Earth Day Cleanup hosted by James River Partnership.
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The vice-president of youth development for the local YMCA says one in 10 children in the U.S. will be sexually abused before their 18th birthday.
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The passage of the supplemental budget bill is the first piece of legislation passed by both chambers in the 2024 Missouri legislative session.
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Missouri’s lieutenant governor continues to dominate the fundraising race while public polling consistently shows Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft ahead with voters.
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In Springfield, a new 30-member Citizens Commission on Community Investment is looking at renewing a city sales tax that bailed out the old police-fire retirement pension back in 2009. Commissioners are expected to make recommendations to City Council on how the money should be spent in the future, now that the retirement fund has been largely paid for. But city officials say there’s a cost to doing nothing.
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The Board of Aldermen voted 4-2 to reject a building proposed on a vacant lot on the northside of the historic square.
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A group is demanding an investigation of facilities accused of abuse, like Agape School in Stockton, Circle of Hope in Humansville and Kanakuk Kamps in Branson.
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Mark Miller comes to Lost & Found from Ozarks Technical Community College.
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Breath, Light, and Distance and Renaissance Works on Parchment and Paper will run through September 1, the last day the museum is open to the public before it closes for an extended period for renovations.
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According to MoDOT, 989 fatalities occurred on Missouri roadways in 2023. That's a decrease of 6% when compared to 2022 when there were 1,057 fatalities. This is the first year since 2019 that Missouri has seen a decrease in roadway fatalities.