A bill that would allow pregnant woman in Missouri to finalize a divorce has cleared both the state House and Senate, now ...
For the first time in a decade, a proposal to abolish the death penalty in Missouri received a committee hearing, with religious leaders appearing alongside Republican and Democratic lawmakers in ...
The Jefferson City Public Works Committee is set to meet Thursday morning to discuss options regarding the aging High Street viaduct. In February, the Public Works department shut down the viaduct ...
A new highway on-ramp project should be done by the end of this year and ease some drivers' frustrations when entering ...
The Missouri Supreme Court is set to hear arguments on a case that could determine whether mid-decade congressional redistricting is allowed under the Missouri Constitution, with the challengers ...
Lawmakers in the Missouri Legislature continue to advance key pieces of legislation, including votes on a comprehensive property tax bill and a proposal for the state to issue letter grades for all ...
Protesters gathered in the Capital city on Sunday afternoon to speak out against a crackdown on immigration in the United States. The protest was scheduled before President Donald Trump announced the ...
As legal battles were waged inside the Missouri Supreme Court, protesters marched and chanted outside.
This story is abridged from "Somewhere in Time, 170 years of Missouri Corrections," by Mark Schreiber and Laura Moeller. The announcement made in 1822 that Jefferson City would soon become the state ...
Missouri currently has a decades-old law that allows pregnant women only to file for a divorce — not finalize them.