• About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Thursday, June 25, 2026
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem!
    • Weekly Pickem Updates
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward
No Result
View All Result
The Platte County Landmark Newspaper
No Result
View All Result

Voters may decide several proposed constitutional changes

Landmark Digital by Landmark Digital
May 17, 2024
in Headlines
Election 2024
10
SHARES
240
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

MULTIPLE QUESTIONS MAY BE ON BALLOT IN FALL

Several proposed changes to the Missouri Constitution might face voters this coming fall.

RelatedNews

Employee charged after alleged EDC money grab

Democrat and independent sit down with Ashley Aune

Private firm will take over city trash collection

The questions could be on the November ballot, which is also when voters will also be electing state officials.

May 5 was the deadline for organizations to turn in signatures of registered voters that must be checked before placing their issues on the ballot.

Possible issues to hit the statewide ballot include:

*A new casino near Lake of the Ozarks;
*A proposal to preserve abortion rights for women;
*Legalized sports wagering;
*Increasing the minimum wage in Missouri state law to $15 an hour beginning in 2026.

To place an initiative petition on the ballot in Missouri, signatures must be collected that equal eight percent of the vote for governor in 2020 in six of the eight Congressional districts of the state. About 171,600 signatures are required. They are turned in to the secretary of state’s office in Jefferson City and must be distributed throughout the state to local county clerks and election authorities who verify the signatures of local voters.

For any of the issues with enough certified signatures to be placed on the August ballot, work of county clerks and the secretary of state’s staff must be done by early June, which is unlikely, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Additional information on the potential ballot issues, likely in November:

*The Osage River Gaming & Convention Committee turned in more than 320,000 signatures. If approved by voters, a hotel, convention center, restaurants, and other attractions would be included in the project. The casino would be located along the Osage River between the Bagnell Dam and the Missouri River. The current limit on licensed casinos in Missouri is 13. If approved, another license would be extended to the Osage River casino.

*Supporters of the abortion rights proposal turned in more than 380,000 signatures, which is more than twice the total needed to qualify for the statewide ballot. The coalition, Missourians for Constitutional Freedom, said the ballot measure would legalize abortion up to the point of “fetal viability.” Currently, nearly every abortion is illegal in Missouri except for medical emergencies.

*340,000 petition signatures were delivered to the secretary of state’s office on May 2 by a coalition of Missouri professional sports franchises seeking to put legalization of sports gambling on the November ballot. The proposal would add sports wagering to the Missouri Constitution, if approved by voters, and includes granting licenses to professional sports teams, casinos, and online websites.

*On May 1, Missouri Jobs with Justice turned in about 210,000 signatures. Since the proposal to raise the minimum wage is a state statute change, not in the Constitution, at least 115,000 signatures must be valid. The ballot issue also includes a requirement that many workers get paid sick leave.

*Another issue that voters may decide, likely in August if placed on the ballot by the governor, is a proposal needing final state legislative approval before May 17. This Constitutional amendment would raise the threshold to pass an amendment by the people. Instead of the statewide majority currently required, a proposal amending the Constitution would need a majority vote in five of the state’s eight Congressional districts to be approved.

*One more issue, certain to be on the ballot this fall because the General Assembly approved it in 2023, is a state Constitutional amendment to allow places where persons, corporations, organizations, and associations provide childcare outside of a child’s home to be exempt from property tax, intended to make childcare more available.

Tags: electionstaxes
Landmark Digital

Landmark Digital

Related Posts

Ashley Aune

Democrat and independent sit down with Ashley Aune

by Landmark Digital
June 19, 2026
0

MAKI CLAIMS THE GROUP IS OUT TO 'DECEIVE VOTERS' On the evening of Wednesday, June 11, the candidates for Platte County Presiding Commissioner from both the Democratic and the candidate seeking to run as an independent in November sat down...

Downtown Parkville

Unexpected move brings change in Downtown Parkville

by Ivan Foley
June 19, 2026
0

The end of an era, of sorts, in Downtown Parkville. There will be a new chairman of the board for the Parkville Old Towne Market Community Improvement District. That’s a mouthful, so let’s just call it the CID for the...

30 Years Ago–June 13, 1996

by Ivan Foley
June 12, 2026
0

Assault charges have been filed as a result of a dispute outside a Platte City lounge in late April. Ricki Lee Shepard, 45, of Camden Point has been charged with second degree assault, a Class C felony, resulting from a...

Traffic alert on I-29

Calming traffic, screwworm flies and such

by Guy Speckman
June 12, 2026
0

I don't want you to panic, but we have a new health threat running through the country. Apparently, some cows in Texas have been infiltrated by “screwworm flies.” Cattle farmers know all this. If you are a cattle farmer, go...

Next Post
Donald Trump

Not all bridge news is bad; Trump's courtroom

Popular News

  • Kalynn Guffey

    Employee charged after alleged EDC money grab

    162 shares
    Share 65 Tweet 41
  • Unexpected move brings change in Downtown Parkville

    35 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • Private firm will take over city trash collection

    21 shares
    Share 8 Tweet 5
  • A Taste of Mexico planned in Platte City

    14 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • Democrat and independent sit down with Ashley Aune

    14 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Pickem Terms and Conditions
Call us at 816-858-0363

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Subscribe Online
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Opinion
  • Landmark Pickem
    • Results by Week
    • The Leaderboard
    • Pickem Rules and Help
  • Landmark Live!
  • Looking Backward

Copyright © 2019-2020 The Platte County Landmark Newspaper - All Rights Reserved