Ongoing Coverage:

News

Pages

Agriculture
1:20 pm
Fri May 10, 2013

Field Notes: Marking the fifth anniversary of the Postville, Iowa raid

Credit Photo by Abbie Fentress Swanson/Harvest Public Media
Filmmaker Luis Argueta discusses his documentary "AbUSed: The Postville Raid."

This is the latest installment of Harvest Public Media’s Field Notes, in which reporters talk to newsmakers and experts about important issues related to food production.

Read more
Politics
10:04 am
Fri May 10, 2013

Home foreclosure legislation puts city, state governments at odds

Credit images_of_money / Flickr

The Missouri senate passed legislation Monday that would prevent local municipalities from making laws regarding mediation in home foreclosures.

Read more
Education
9:05 am
Fri May 10, 2013

Sequestration cuts hit mid-Mo. childhood education programs

Credit taylor.a / FLICKR

The future of early childhood education programs like Head Start hangs in the air as recent federal budget cuts, or sequestration, will eliminate resources aimed to provide low-income families a quality foundation for the beginning of a child’s education. The most recent cuts have put Columbia Public Schools in the position of funding two instructional aides.

Read more
Education
8:42 am
Fri May 10, 2013

Record number of students apply for financial aid

Credit 401 (K) 2013 / FLICKR

Missouri volunteers help a record number of students in the state apply for financial aid.

Read more
Global Journalist
6:36 pm
Thu May 9, 2013

Editorial cartoonists resist censorship

Credit Muzaffar Salman / Associated Press
Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat works in his office in Damascus. Syrian security forces attacked Ferzat in Damascus and left him bleeding along the side of a road, according to human rights activists.

The editorial cartoon is a dependable measure of press freedom in a given country. As advocates point out, a cartoonist cannot work when there is no freedom of speech and opinion. Two cases illustrate the point.

In the early months of the Syrian revolution, editorial cartoonist Ali Ferzat was threatened and eventually attacked for drawing cartoons making fun of President Bashar Al-Assad. The thugs broke both of his hands. But crackdowns on the free expression of editorial cartoonists don’t just happen in dictatorships.

Read more
Science, Health and Technology
5:13 pm
Thu May 9, 2013

3D printing could transform medicine [video]

Credit Bridgit Bowden / KBIA
Josh Arnone has a 3D printer on his desk that he uses to print his own inventions. Arnone built the enclosure for the printer himself and actually printed the corner brackets.

Imagine if you could take a digital model of anything and print out the actual physical object.  Thanks to a new technology called 3D printing, you can. This new technology has countless uses, but here in Columbia, several MU researchers are exploring its potential in the medical field.

Read more
Science, Health and Technology
5:03 pm
Thu May 9, 2013

Missouri health centers eligible for $3 million in insurance outreach fund

Credit Tax Credits / Flickr

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today announced another round of funding to help Americans enroll in the Affordable Care Act's new online health insurance marketplace.

About $150 million is now available for community health centers nationwide to hire and train employees who would provide in-person help for the public about their insurance options in the marketplace, which is set to open for enrollment on Oct. 1. 

Read more
Politics
3:13 pm
Thu May 9, 2013

Mo. lawmakers vote to repeal renters tax break

Credit File Photo / KBIA

More than 100,000 low-income seniors and disabled residents who live in rental housing could lose a tax break under a bill given final approval by Missouri lawmakers.

The bill passed Thursday would eliminate a tax break of up to $750 annually for individuals and redirect the nearly $57 million of savings to existing state programs.

Read more
Politics
3:06 pm
Thu May 9, 2013

Mo. House passes $1.2 billion bonding initiative

Credit Jacob Fenston / KBIA

The Missouri House has passed a $1.2 billion bonding initiative that would finance construction and repairs at public buildings across the state.

The House's 136-23 vote sends the measure to the Senate. But with only one week remaining in the legislative session, the proposed constitutional amendment appears unlikely to win final approval. If it did, the measure would go before voters in 2014.

Supporters cite a backlog of building needs at state facilities and note that low interest rates make this a good time to borrow money.

Read more
Politics
8:57 am
Thu May 9, 2013

Missouri bill prohibits use of foreign laws

Credit Brian Turner / Flickr

Court rulings based on laws made outside the U.S. would be unenforceable in Missouri if those laws violate the state or U.S. constitutions under a bill sent to Gov. Jay Nixon.

The House passed the measure 109-41 on Wednesday. The bill passed the Senate last month and now heads to the governor.

Versions of the bill considered in previous years specifically prohibited Islamic Sharia Law, but this legislation would affect all foreign legal codes.

Read more

Pages