According to the federal state drought tracker, around 50% of Missouri is experiencing a moderate drought with over half of that 50% experiencing a severe drought. The drought spreads from Oregon to Boone Counties, covering a vast swath of the state.
The Missouri Times
The report details many different parts of Missouri’s economic growth. The most intriguing number might be the one for seasonally adjusted unemployment rate. The rate this month is at 2.8% which is down from May's rate of 3.1%.
Republican John Brunner Jr. has received an endorsement from the former White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
When your ol’ hillbilly pal is wrong, your old hillbilly pal is wrong, and this time I was totally 100% wrong. Springfield should totally kick Lincoln Hough out of office.
For the first time we can say that the race has a leader, and that is Eric Schmitt. Let's look at each campaign. Let’s look at each campaign.
According to the state drought monitor, the southern portion of the state and a swath of the middle portion have been classified as abnormally dry, or dealing with a “moderate drought”. Parts of Carter, Oregon, Ripley and Howell counties, which sit on the Missouri-Arkansas border, have been classified as dealing with severe drought.
At 1:30 p.m., Aug. 5, the senators will host a childhood literacy discussion at the Emerson Performance Arts Center on the campus of Harris-Stowe State University, 3026 Laclede Ave., in St. Louis. That event will be followed by another, at 4 p.m., at the Jennings High School Auditorium, 8850 Cozens Ave., in Jennings.
An interesting two-man race has developed in the Republican primary for SD 20. A proven legislator, Rep. Curtis Trent of Springfield, and a Springfield businessman with strong fundraising numbers, Brian Gelner, have thrown their hats into the ring to represent SD 20.
The race for state auditor is heating up as the Aug. 2 primary election sits just two weeks away.
The Missouri Department of Natural Resources has awarded $856,000 in financial assistance to the city of Greenfield for upgrades to the city’s wastewater treatment and collection system. The project is estimated to cost $1.86 million and is expected to be completed by May 2023.