From Missouri Digital News: https://mdn.org
MDN Menu
MDN Home
Journalist's Creed
Print
MDN Help
Exit
MDN.ORG
Mo. Digital News
Missouri Digital News
MDN.ORG:
Mo. Digital News
MDN.ORG:
Missouri Digital News
Help
Close
2014 Bill(s)
HCS HB 1181
Sponsor:
Redmon, Craig
Status:
S Governmental Accountability
Description:
Codifies various executive reorganization orders, putting state law into conformity with the reorganization orders.
See:
The Fiscal Note(s)
Official legislative description and status
HB 1182
Sponsor:
Redmon, Craig
Status:
H Rules
Description:
Repeals a large number of expired and obsolete laws.
See:
The Fiscal Note(s)
Official legislative description and status
HB 1854
Sponsor:
Redmon, Craig
Status:
H Transportation
Description:
Add one member to the Transportation Commission. Allow only one member from each of the department's geographic districts.
See:
The Fiscal Note(s)
Official legislative description and status
*
SS HB 1865
Sponsor:
Redmon, Craig
Status:
GOVERNOR VETOED
Description:
Exempt from the sales tax utility expenses used for the preparation of food that will be sold. The final version adds other business tax breaks. Legislative staff estimate the annual revenue lost at up $25 million per year. The governor's office estimates a much higher loss. In his veto letter, the governor wrote this was one of several bills providing special interest tax breaks that would cost state and local government $776 million per year.
See:
House roll call - SS HB 1865 (05/16/2014)
: 3rd reading and final passage of tax breaks for various commercial activities that were attacked by the governor after the session adjourned.
Senate roll call - SS HB 1865 (05/14/2014)
: 3rd reading of tax breaks for various commercial activities that were attacked by the governor after the session adjourned.
Get the veto letter
The Fiscal Note(s)
Official legislative description and status
Note: The descriptions of bills, amendments and roll-call votes are written by MDN journalists. MDN's database may not include committee assignments of bills made on the last day of the session since it is too late for the committee to act on the bill and, thus, the delayed assignment has no practical effect.