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Tristin J. Yeager
Stories by
Tristin J. Yeager
include:
5/ 6/1998:
Radio Story - A man with HIV convicted of risking the infection of another man through unprotected sex before telling him he was HIV positive took his case to the Missouri Supreme Court.
4/28/1998:
Radio Story - 40 million dollars was on the line when lawyers for St. Louis City and County citizens asked the Missouri Supreme Court to make the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District give the money back.
4/21/1998:
Radio Story - Your insurance committee would not be able to use your genetic information against you under a bill passed by the state House Insurance Committee.
4/21/1998:
Radio Story - The desegregation bill takes another step forward but the hired gun for the St. Louis City School Board says the bill still needs some work.
4/21/1998:
Radio Story - The desegregation bill takes another step forward but the hired gun for the St. Louis City School Board says the bill still needs some work.
4/15/1998:
Radio Story - The settlement coordinator in the St. Louis school desegregation case testified in support of Senate-passed legislation.
4/15/1998:
Radio Story - St. Louis City School Board Members came out to defend their reputation at a state House Education Committee hearing of the Senate's desegregation bill.
4/ 8/1998:
Radio Story - A partial-birth abortion bill is passed by the House without the health exception Governor Carnahan supported.
4/ 8/1998:
Radio Story - Missouri voters overwhelmingly approved the amendment that would allow local school districts to seek voter approval for more bonds.
4/ 7/1998:
Radio Story - The state House passed a Republican leader's bill supporting married victims of sexual assault.
4/ 7/1998:
Radio Story - While the state Senate was passing the desegregation bill, the governor endorsed a provision to give him a bigger voice over St. Louis city schools.
4/ 7/1998:
Newspaper Story - Missouri voters overwhelmingly approved two constitutional amendments Tuesday that supporters say will improve the quality of public schools.
4/ 2/1998:
Radio Story - If you drug someone in order to rape them, you would face the highest criminal charge for rape under a bill passed by the state House.
4/ 2/1998:
Radio Story - The Majority House Leader said state Representatives will be getting calls all weekend.
3/31/1998:
Radio Story - Missouri would get 25 million dollars for school transportation under an amendment added to the Senate desegregation bill.
3/26/1998:
Radio Story - Union Electric and other utilities would be limited in offering repair services under a measure cleared for final passage in the state House.
3/24/1998:
Radio Story - The Missouri Senate approves legislation to toughen auto emission standards and regulations in the St. Louis area.
3/12/1998:
Radio Story - Republican Representative Pat Kelley has introduced a bill that would pay male-female couples one-thousand dollars for signing and abiding by a family and parenting values affidavit.
3/10/1998:
Radio Story - The Senate votes to establish grants for English-language education programs.
3/10/1998:
Radio Story - Missouri drivers would have to drink less before driving under a bill passed by the Senate Transportation Committee.
3/ 3/1998:
Radio Story - The first major tax cut of the session is overwhelmingly passed by the state Senate.
3/ 3/1998:
Newspaper Story - Missouri property owners could be in line for $22 million in tax credits under a bill passed by the state Senate on Tuesday.
2/26/1998:
Radio Story - Yet another day of debate on the Senate floor delays a vote on the children's health care bill.
2/24/1998:
Radio Story - The House Insurance Committee votes to ban insurance companies using genetic testing to set rates.
2/19/1998:
Newspaper Story - Gov. Carnahan continues his criticism of the desegregation funding bill before the Senate -- calling it too expensive.
2/19/1998:
Radio Story - Attorney General Jay Nixon says his office and the Missouri Gaming Commission should wait for a state Supreme Court ruling on boats-in-moats before moving forward in a dramatic fashion.
2/19/1998:
Radio Story - Governor Carnahan says he still doesn't like the desegregation bill narrowly passed by the Senate Education Committee Wednesday.
2/17/1998:
Radio Story - Missouri's governor is criticizing the school desegretation plan stalled in the Senate Education Committee.
2/17/1998:
Radio Story - Criticism, confusion and concern about the authority of the Attorney General's office postponed a decision by the Missouri Gaming Commission.
2/16/1998:
Radio Story - You could legally lose more than 500 per visit while gambling if the Committee on Gaming and Wagering gets its way.
2/12/1998:
Radio Story - Missouri's small business employees are one step closer to being able to join the state's consolidated health care plan.
2/12/1998:
Radio Story - The Senate Education Committee votes down a proposal to guarantee more funds to St. Louis schools in an effort to end court-ordered desegregation.
2/ 5/1998:
Radio Story - Summer school for those who flunk school in St. Louis was proposed to the Senate Education Committee as part of the deseg bill.
2/ 4/1998:
Newspaper Story - MU administrators are scrambling to prepare for the senior assessment tests.
2/ 3/1998:
Radio Story - St. Louis County Senator Anita Yeckel introduced a bill that would make behavior and staying in school a factor in whether minors can get a driver's license.
1/30/1998:
Radio Story - The state Attorney General's office has appealed Thursday's boats in moats ruling.
1/29/1998:
Newspaper Story - Students and legislators react to MU's decision to require seniors to take an assesment exam before they graduate.
1/29/1998:
Radio Story - A circuit judge extends his order blocking the state Gaming Commission from acting against boats in moats.
1/27/1998:
Radio Story - St. Louis could increase income and drivers could lose their liscenses after failing to pay parking tickets if a Senate bill is passed.
1/27/1998:
Radio Story - Like Democrats in Washington, Missouri's state Democratic lawmakers are staying relatively silent about the allegations against President Bill Clinton.
1/22/1998:
Radio Story - Representative Chrismer got emotional while discussing the 25th anniversary of Roe v. Wade.
1/20/1998:
Radio Story - House Democrats and Republicans are introducing legislation that would require information from The Department of Transportation.
1/20/1998:
Radio Story - The Senate Transportation Committee passed a bill that would allow individuals to report incompetent drivers in order to have their liscenses revoked.
1/13/1998:
Radio Story - House Repubicans propose giving voters the power to elect the state's Board of Education.
1/10/1998:
Radio Story - The House majority leader says anti-abortion lawmakers pressure her into dropping sponsoring a milder form of the ban on partial birth abortions.
Stories by
Tristin Yeager
include:
10/ 2/1997:
Radio Story - Maximum travel distances for medical care are proposed in order to implement the Managed Care Law.
10/ 2/1997:
Radio Story - In the proposal designed to implement the Managed Care Law, advanced nurse practitioners will play an important part.
9/18/1997:
Radio Story - Black Caucus members get promises in return for support for the economic-development, business tax-break bill.
9/18/1997:
Radio Story - The House voted down, at least initially, the economic development package of tax cuts for developers.
9/11/1997:
Radio Story - Senator Kinder introduced partial-birth legislation identical to that vetoed by Governor Carnahan in July
9/11/1997:
Radio Story - Two new abortion bills, with opposing perspectives, are introduced into the Senate
9/ 9/1997:
Radio Story - A Texas company told a governmental advisory group it wants to compete with Missouri's electricity providers.
9/ 4/1997:
Radio Story - The special legislative session called by Governor Carnahan will focus on two primary issues
9/ 4/1997:
Radio Story - A concensus on partial-birth abortion must be reached before the issue will be added to the legislative agenda
9/ 2/1997:
Radio Story - Missouri, unlike France, does not have bystander emergency intervention legislation.
8/28/1997:
Radio Story - The governor will not consider commuting sentences as a solution to overcrowding.
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