Missouri 2024 2024 Regular Session

Missouri House Bill HB2064 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/10/2024

                    COMMITTEE ON LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH
OVERSIGHT DIVISION
FISCAL NOTE
L.R. No.:4623H.06P Bill No.:Perfected HCS for HB 2064  Subject:Courts; Mental Health; Civil Procedure; Guardians; Juries; Workers 
Compensation; Elections; Crimes and Punishment; Business and Commerce 
Type:Original  Date:April 10, 2024Bill Summary:This proposal modifies provisions relating to civil proceedings. 
FISCAL SUMMARY
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON GENERAL REVENUE FUNDFUND AFFECTEDFY 2025FY 2026FY 2027
General Revenue*
(Unknown, could 
exceed $1,600,000)
(Unknown, could 
exceed $600,000)
(Unknown, could 
exceed $600,000)
Total Estimated Net 
Effect on General 
Revenue
(Unknown, could 
exceed $1,600,000)
(Unknown, could 
exceed $600,000)
(Unknown, could 
exceed $600,000)
*Includes §454.1050 for a new child support module that could cost between $500,000 to 
$1 million in FY25. Also includes §478.001 that has an unknown cost that could exceed 
$600,000 per year to establish mental health treatment courts. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON OTHER STATE FUNDSFUND AFFECTEDFY 2025FY 2026FY 2027Public Defender-
Federal and Other 
Fund (0112)**$0 to Unknown $0 to Unknown$0 to Unknown
State Highway Funds 
(0644)($177,151)($216,833)($221,170)
Treatment Court 
Resources Fund 
(0733)* $0$0$0
Basic Civil Legal 
Services Fund (0757)$0$346,217$692,434
Total Estimated Net 
Effect on Other State 
Funds(Less than $177,151)More than $129,384More than $471,264
Numbers within parentheses: () indicate costs or losses.
*Transfer-ins less expenditures will net to zero. 
** Officials from the Office of the State Public Defender (SPD) assume having a dedicated fund 
for donations (instead of to the General Revenue Fund) will allow them to solicit and collect 
donations and/or grants. Oversight assumes since a minimal amount of donations have 
historically been made to the General Revenue Fund for the SPD, this proposal will have no 
direct fiscal impact on the General Revenue Fund.
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON FEDERAL FUNDSFUND AFFECTEDFY 2025FY 2026FY 2027Total Estimated Net 
Effect on All Federal 
Funds $0$0$0
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON FULL TIME EQUIVALENT (FTE)FUND AFFECTEDFY 2025FY 2026FY 2027State Highway Fund1 FTE1 FTE1 FTEBasic Civil Legal 
Services Fund***0 FTE2 FTE2 FTE
Total Estimated Net 
Effect on FTE1 FTE3 FTE3 FTE
*** a continuation of existing FTE by removing the December 31, 2025 expiration date. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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☒ Estimated Net Effect (expenditures or reduced revenues) expected to exceed $250,000 in any  
     of the three fiscal years after implementation of the act or at full implementation of the act.
☒ Estimated Net Effect (savings or increased revenues) expected to exceed $250,000 in any of
     the three fiscal years after implementation of the act or at full implementation of the act.
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON LOCAL FUNDSFUND AFFECTEDFY 2025FY 2026FY 2027
Local Government
(More or Less than 
$99,168)
(More or Less than 
$99,168)
(More or Less than 
$99,168)
FISCAL ANALYSIS
ASSUMPTION
§193.265 – Birth, Marriage and Death Certificates for Public Attorneys
Officials from the Department of Health and Senior Services (DHSS) assume §193.265.7 of 
this proposal states no fee shall be required or collected for a certification of a birth, death, or 
marriage if the request for certification is made by a prosecuting attorney, a circuit attorney, or 
the attorney general. Currently, these entities are charged the statutorily required search fee for a 
vital record of $15.00 per birth and marriage certification and $14.00 per death certification. This 
proposed language would remove the ability for the DHSS to collect these fees for services 
provided.
According to a Missouri survey conducted by the National Prosecutors’ Consortium 
(https://www.prosecutors.mo.gov/files/Missouri%20Survey%20Report.pdf), in 2018, 41 percent 
of Missouri prosecuting offices responded, and on average, each office reviewed 1,219 felony 
cases and 1,845 misdemeanor cases. For an estimated average total cases of 3,064 per office, per 
annum. Missouri has 115 elected prosecutors from each of the 114 counties and the City of St. 
Louis. Combined, this is an average of 352,360 cases reviewed each year across the state. Not all 
prosecuting offices responded to the Consortium survey, so exact metrics were not available for 
all local offices. It is also not known how many of these cases would result in a request for a 
copy of a vital record. Therefore, up to 352,360 requests could be possible. Moreover, this 
proposed language does not limit the number of certificate requests that could be made, nor does 
it limit the purpose for which the certificates may be requested for free nor specify or require that 
the requestor be an official from Missouri. As a result, the number of certificates requested could 
exceed 352,360.
Since requests from the Missouri Attorney General (AGO) are also included in this proposed 
legislation, the estimated 700 criminal appeals (https://ago.mo.gov/criminal-division/criminal-
appeals) that are handled by the AGO each year are factored into these calculations. This  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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estimate does not include any other appeals or cases that may be handled by the AGO. This 
would bring the estimated total of potential requests to 353,060 (352,360 cases reviewed each 
year plus 700 criminal appeals handled by AGO each year). For the purposes of this fiscal note, 
DCPH assumes only 25 percent of the possible requests for free vital records will be made, for a 
total of 88,265 (353,060 times 25 percent) requests per year. Based on what vital records has 
experienced when records are provided for free, this fiscal note also assumes that the 88,265 
requests are new requests that are above the total volume of certificates issued each year. The 
Department's Bureau of Vital Records and the 115 local public health agencies (LPHAs), in 
total, currently issue approximately 827,695 birth, death, and marriage certificates each year.
The additional FTE needed comes from the calculation of a 10 minute application review, 
processing, and issuance time average with 2,080 working hours per annum which equals 12,480 
applications processed per FTE. Most applications take 15 minutes, but a shorter time of 10 
minutes per application was used in this calculation, as requests from “agencies”, such as 
prosecutors and the Attorney General’s Office, can usually be done slightly faster due to 
typically less documentation to review per request. As a result, a total of 7.00 Administrative 
Support Assistant FTE, each with an annual salary of $36,979, would be needed if 88,265 
certificates are requested. Additionally, one Senior Accounts Assistant, with an annual salary of 
$51,064, would be needed to process payments that result.
While this proposed legislation references birth, death, and marriage certificates, the cheapest 
and typically most requested certification, death certificates (a fee of $14.00 per certificate), will 
be used to make estimated calculations on lost revenues and other costs other than FTE to 
produce a free death certificate. Estimated 88,265 certificates requested times $14.00 per 
certification equals a loss of certificate revenue of $1,235,710 per year. Certificate paper and 
printing is approximately $0.25 per sheet times 88,265 certificates requested equals $22,066.25 
in paper and ink costs.
Death certificates have a current fee split of $5.00 per certificate to the Children’s Trust Fund; 
$3.00 to the Missouri Public Health Fund; $4.00 to General Revenue; $1.00 to Endowed Care 
Cemetery; and $1.00 to the Coroner’s Training fund. This is assuming all certificate requests 
come to the state office. Any requests completed at the local level by local public health agencies 
(LPHAs), would impact local public health funding.
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning (B&P) assume §193.265.7 
creates a new exemption from vital record request fees and may impact state and/or local 
revenues derived from such fees. The state and local government entities responsible for the 
collection and administration of those fees may be able to estimate the impact of this change. A 
decrease in such fee revenues will impact both TSR and 18e calculations.
Oversight inquired the Missouri Office of Prosecution Services (MOPS) regarding the number 
of vital records that they may request annually. MOPS conducted a survey on each of their 114 
county prosecutors on how many vital records are requested from their offices on an annual 
basis. Of the 114 prosecutors, 47 responded with a total of 173 vital records requested from the  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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DHSS within the past year. MOPS believes the actual vital records request for those prosecution 
authorities to be under 1,000 per year.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect the 
estimates as provided by the MOPS. Using MOPS’s estimate of 1,000 vital records request per 
year times $15 (the highest rate charged for vital records) per record would total $15,000 
annually. Oversight will assume a potential loss in fees from these records request for DHSS of 
less than $15,000 on an annual basis.
DHSS also requested FTEs for this proposal and supply costs associated with the printing of 
these certificates. Oversight assumes DHSS is provided with core funding to handle a certain 
amount of activity each year. Oversight assumes DHSS could absorb the costs related to this 
proposal. If multiple bills pass which require additional staffing and duties at substantial costs, 
DHSS could request funding through the appropriation process.
Oversight notes with the no charge being applied to certain public attorneys, state and local 
agencies would see a savings for the same amount. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a savings to 
GR of an unknown could exceed $15,000 and also to local political subdivisions of an unknown 
savings.  
§§287.615 & 287.835 – Administrative Law Judges
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning (B&P) assume 
§287.615.1(2) provides that administrative law judge salaries are set by statute and not subject to 
increase when pay raises for executive employees are appropriated. This change could result in 
potential future cost avoidance that might otherwise be budgeted. §287.835 could result in future 
potential benefit costs not being avoided but any such impact would depend on the described 
hypothetical conditions and may not be subject to estimation.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect a $0 or 
Unknown cost avoidance to GR as provided by the B&P.
Officials from the Missouri State Employee's Retirement System (MOSERS) state this 
proposal, if enacted, would remove §287.835.1 and allow an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) 
and the ALJ’s beneficiary to remain entitled to ALJ plan retirement benefits if the ALJ were 
removed from office by impeachment or for misconduct, or disbarred from the practice of law.
This proposal would result in an unknown cost as it would allow the ALJ and the ALJ’s 
beneficiary to receive a benefit that they would not otherwise receive under the current plan 
provisions.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect the 
potential impact as provided by the MOSERS. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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§347.143 – Court Ordered Dissolutions of LLC’s
In response to similar legislation, CCS/HCS/SS/SCS/SB 72 (2023), officials from the Office of 
the State Courts Administrator
organization. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will 
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note.  
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees 
Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§§435.300, 435.303, 435.306, 435.309 & 435.312 – Alternative Dispute Resolution
Officials from the Missouri Highway Patrol (MHP) assume this proposal authorizes an 
alternative dispute resolution program, similar to federal court, and creates a Uniform 
Depositions and Discovery Act. With this proposed legislation the MHP anticipates an increased 
workload related to foreign subpoenas and/or discovery requests. There may also be increased 
litigation costs associated with non-party subpoena and discovery responses. These increased 
costs would likely cause a direct impact on the MHP because the Missouri Attorney General's 
Office does not normally represent the MHP in such cases. Many of these non-party legal 
matters would likely involve some of the over 30,000 motor vehicle crashes the MHP 
investigates each year. As a result of the expected workload increase, the MHP forecasts the 
need to add one (1) FTE Legal Counsel.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect the 
estimates as provided by the MHP.
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning (B&P) assume §435.306.9 
authorizes the courts to order parties seeking alternative dispute resolution to pay fees for the 
costs of securing a neutral party. In the event that the state is such a party, this provision could 
result in additional state costs. Such costs do not appear to be subject to a reasonable estimation.
Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator (OSCA) state there may be some 
impact but there is no way to quantify that currently. Any significant changes will be reflected in 
future budget requests.
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§454.1050 - "Bentley's Law" – Adds child maintenance provisions for certain children 
In response to similar legislation from this year, HB 1958, officials from the Office of the State 
Courts Administrator (OSCA) state this proposal would have an impact in Show-Me Courts 
and possibly others systems. As regarding a budgetary impact, the estimate would be $500,000 
to $1,000,000 to develop a new Child Support module.  
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect the 
estimates as provided by OSCA.
Officials from the Department of Corrections (DOC) assume this section stipulates that the 
court shall order a defendant convicted of the offense of driving while intoxicated to pay 
restitution for a child whose parent or guardian died as a result of such offense.  The order of 
restitution under this section shall require the defendant to make restitution directly to the person 
or agency that will accept and forward restitution payments to the victim or other person eligible 
for restitution under this section; or deliver payment for restitution to the Division of Probation 
and Parole or to the DOC for transfer to the victim or person or state as appropriate. 
Currently the Division of Probation and Parole does not accept payment for any form of 
restitution. The DOC collects restitution from incarcerated individuals when it receives an order 
from the prosecuting attorney and then remits payment to the prosecuting attorney in accordance 
with RSMO 559.105. 
There would be an unknown fiscal impact to update DOC’s offender management system in 
order to send payments directly to individual victims. It is unclear the amount of additional staff 
that would be necessary to process and remit these additional payments.  It is also unclear if the 
DOC would be required to continue receiving and issuing payments to the victims after the 
defendant has been released from the department’s supervision.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect the 
estimates as provided by the DOC.
§§474.540, 474.542, 474.544, 474.546, 474.548, 474.550, 474.552, 474.554, 474.556, 474.558, 
474.560, 474.562, 474.564, 474.600 – Electronic Estate Planning Documents
In response to similar legislation from 2023, CCS/HCS/SS/SCS/SB 72, officials from the Office 
of the State Courts Administrator L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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organization. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will 
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note.
Oversight notes that according to https://trustandwill.com/learn/e-will, electronic wills are only 
accepted in a few states currently. Some states have updated their statutes to allow e-wills. 
Electronic wills are now legal in Nevada, Florida, Indiana, and Arizona. Utah and Colorado have 
also recently adopted the Uniform Electronic Wills Act, which is a model law created by the 
Uniform Laws Commission. In other instances, some state courts have accepted e-wills on a 
case-by-case basis. COVID-19 also caused some courts to temporarily allow remote witnessing 
as an emergency measure.
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees 
Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§§475.063 & 488.2300 – Guardianships/Conservatorships & the Family Services and Justice 
Fund
Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator (OSCA) state there may be some 
impact but there is no way to quantify that currently. Any significant changes will be reflected in 
future budget requests.
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning assume §475.063.4 
requires the courts to accept certain filings without charging a fee. This provision could result in 
a decrease of state and/or local revenues and impact both TSR and 18e calculations. §488.2300.4 
provides that the section does not prohibit appropriations by the state legislature to support 
certain county funds. This change may result in additional state costs in the event of such 
appropriations.
Oversight notes §475.063 specifies what assistance a court clerk must provide or make available 
for a petitioner filing for emergency or full orders regarding a minor entering adult guardianship 
or conservatorship. The duties of the court clerk will be performed without cost to the petitioner. 
No filing fees, court costs, or bond will be assessed to the petitioner as well. The clerk may be 
reimbursed from the Family Services and Justice Fund for expenses incurred under this section. 
Oversight notes §488.2300 allows fees incurred for guardianship or conservatorship proceedings 
by court-appointed attorneys, physicians, or other professionals, as well as fees incurred by court 
clerks providing assistance, to be given priority for payment from the "Family Services and 
Justice Fund". This section also doesn’t prohibit the appropriation of funds by the general  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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assembly to the various county family services and justice funds of the family courts of the 
counties.
Oversight assumes the various county circuits are provided with core funding to handle a certain 
amount of activity each year. Oversight assumes the county circuits could absorb the costs 
related to this proposal. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a $0 fiscal impact for these sections of 
this proposal. 
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees 
Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§476.1025 – Removal of Court Records from the Automated Case Management System
Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator (OSCA) state there may be some 
impact but there is no way to quantify that currently. Any significant changes will be reflected in 
future budget requests.
Oversight does not have information to the contrary and therefore, Oversight will reflect a $0 
fiscal impact for this proposal. Oversight assumes OSCA will be able to administer these 
requests within existing resources or request additional appropriations in future budget requests.
§477.650 – Basic Civil Legal Services Fund
Officials from the Office of the State Courts Administrator (OSCA) assume this proposal 
would repeal the expiration date of the Basic Civil Legal Services Fund. The Basic Civil Legal 
Services Fund annual appropriations are approximately $5.1 million and 2 FTE.   
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning (B&P) §477.650.7’s repeal 
eliminates the current December 31, 2025 sunset date for the Basic Civil Legal Services Fund. 
Because the elimination of this sunset will preserve the status quo, it will have no impact on state 
revenues, TSR or 18e.
Oversight notes the Basic Civil Legal Services Fund (BCLS) is a statutorily created fund (SB 
447 in 2003) and was created to fund the work of Missouri’s four Legal Aid programs, which 
provide access to the civil justice system to low-income Missourians (who live at or below 125% 
of the Federal Poverty Level) to protect their fundamental legal rights. The fund is set to expire 
December 31, 2025.  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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One of the focuses of the Legal Aid programs is to ensure that adults and children have access to 
medical care through the MoHealthNet system. 
Legal Aid staff bring cases to obtain access to medical care for their clients. There are four 
regional Legal Aid offices: Kansas City, St. Louis, Columbia and Springfield. In FY22, over 
$125 million from punitive damages awarded in talc litigation in Missouri was transferred from 
the Tort Victims Compensation Fund into the BCLS. This represents the largest single payment 
into the BCLS, and this funding was paid to legal service organizations.
Below is a chart of the number of cases closed during CY 2022 representing the BCLS Fund:
The fund has a court filing fee on certain civil and criminal actions of $20 in the Missouri 
Supreme Court and Court of Appeals, $10 in the circuit courts and $8 in the associate circuit 
courts. The fund has received the following receipts during FY 2019 to FY 2023:  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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Below is a history of the expended funds for the last 5 years:
Oversight notes this proposal removes the expiration date of these provisions. If the proposal is 
extended, Oversight assumes revenue and expenditure activity will continue for the fund. Since 
the fund does not expire until December 31, 2025, Oversight assumes only half of the average 
receipts and expenditures would be shown for FY26. Therefore, Oversight will use the average 
amounts from the table above to reflect the fiscal impact. 
The appropriations for the BCLS Fund includes 2 FTEs according to OSCA. Oversight assumes 
should this proposal be extended, the 2 FTEs will also continue to be funded through the BCLS 
Fund.
R
eceipts
F
Y 19
4,417,206$     
F
Y 20
4,290,667$     
F
Y 21
3,868,347$     
F
Y 22
3,865,619$     
F
Y 23
4,047,390$     
T
otal
20,489,229$   
5
 year average
4,097,846$     
B
asic Civil Legal Services 
F
und (0757)
S
ource: State Treasurer Fund 
A
ctivity Reports
A
ppropriation
A
ctual 
E
xpenditures
U
nexpended 
F
unds
F
Y 20
5,099,958$     4,467,368$     632,590$     
F
Y 21
7,701,418$     7,559,124$     142,294$     
F
Y 22
5,102,383$     2,813,393$     2,288,990$  
F
Y 23
5,108,764$     3,997,430$     1,111,334$  
F
Y 24
5,117,803$     	N
/A
N
/A
L
ast 3 yr avg.
5,109,650$     3,405,412$     1,700,162$  
S
ource: OSCA Budget Requests Books
B
asic Civil Legal Services Fund (0757) L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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In response to similar legislation from this year, HB 1838, officials from the Attorney General’s 
Office
Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a zero 
impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.  
Oversight notes the balance of the BCLS (0757) at December 31, 2023 was $510,360.
§478.001 – Mental Health Courts
Officials from the Office of the State Courts Administrator (OSCA) state the potential 
budgetary impact could initially be $600,000 and continue to increase due to the growth in 
mental health courts. There may be additional impact but there is no way to quantify that 
currently.  Any significant changes will be reflected in future budget requests.  
In response to a previous version, officials from the Attorney General’s Office assumed the 
proposal will have no fiscal impact on their respective organizations. Oversight does not have 
any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note 
for these agencies.  
Oversight assumes this proposal establishes mental health courts within the treatment court 
division and specifies that a mental health court may be established by any circuit court. 
Currently all 46 circuits provide treatment court services with an estimated 6,341 participants for 
CY 2022. The Treatment Court Division has 143 programs representing services for adult drugs, 
DWI, veterans, families and juveniles. Oversight assumes this proposal will add mental health to 
the services as an alternative to incarceration/probation. 
Based upon FY 2023 expenditures for treatment courts using the Treatment Court Resources 
Fund, cost per participant is $1,521 ($9,642,143/6,341). There are many other factors that affect 
the operating costs associated with establishing and maintaining treatment courts which vary 
from county to county throughout the state.
OSCA’s budget book presented the following information:
CY 2022 participants CY 2022 Programs
Adult Drug Treatment Court 4,470 82
DWI Treatment Court  985 25
Veterans Treatment Court  362 16
Family Treatment Court  498 16
Juvenile Treatment Court   26 4
Officials from the Christian County Auditor’s Office state creation of a "Mental Health Court" 
amounts to an unfunded mandate by the state for the burden to be placed onto counties under 
476.270 which requires all expenses of circuit courts to be paid by the county. Currently, the cost  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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for DWI, Drug and Veteran's Courts to Christian County is $38,600 per year. It is expected that 
an additional administrator would be needed for this which would be an additional $25-
30,000/year.
Oversight is unaware of the number of mental health treatment courts that could be established, 
when those services would be needed and/or where those services would be located. Oversight 
assumes when the mental health treatment court services are needed within a certain circuit, 
OSCA would request the proper appropriation authority for those expenditures through the 
budget appropriation process. Therefore Oversight will reflect a $0 or the estimated amount from 
OSCA that could continue to increase because of the potential growth in mental health courts.
Oversight will reflect this as a transfer out of the General Revenue Fund and transferred into the 
Treatment Court Resources Fund for this proposal.  Oversight will also reflect a potential costs to 
counties to help administer the mental health treatment courts.
§§488.040 & 494.455 – Compensation of Jurors
Officials from the Office of the State Courts Administrator (OSCA) assume this proposal 
states that in any county, or city not within a county, upon adoption by the governing body, no 
grand or petit juror shall receive compensation for the first two days of service but shall receive 
fifty dollars per day for the third day and each subsequent day he or she may serve.  These funds 
are to be paid by the county.  It is unknown how many counties will participate and the increase 
may result in an unknown cost or savings to the state or county.  Section 494.455 also ties the 
juror mileage rate to the mileage rate as provided by law for state employees (rather than seven 
cents per mile).  
Officials from the Office of Administration - Budget and Planning assume §488.040 revises 
current juror compensation requirements and may result in a change to the costs incurred by state 
and local courts for such compensation.
Oversight notes this section states the court of a judicial circuit may, by a majority vote, vote to 
restructure juror compensation so that grand and petit jurors do not get paid for the first two days 
of service but thereafter will receive $50 per day, as well as mileage reimbursement at the rate 
provided by law for state employees for necessary travel from the juror's residence to the 
courthouse and back, to be paid by the county. Using information from the 2018 – 2022 Annual 
Supplemental Reports for Jury Trial Information (Table 57) from OSCA, there were 5 circuit 
who had averaged 3 or more days of service. These circuits were Platte (6), Clay (7), Jackson 
(16), Cole (19) and St. Louis County (21). Oversight notes current statute already requires the 
Greene County Circuit (31) to restructure juror compensation for this proposal.  
Oversight notes according to information from the 2018 – 2022 Annual Supplemental Reports 
for Jury Trial Information (Table 57) from OSCA, there was an average of 897 days and 235 
cases where jurors were in session for both civil and criminal cases for these 5 circuits. On 
average between these circuits, 3.8 days (897/235) were spent for each case. Using the chart 
below, Oversight assumes if the court votes to adopt this restructure of juror compensation  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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within these 5 circuits, there could be an additional cost of up to $191,904 each year. If the rest 
of the circuits were to adopt this restructuring plan, then there could also be a savings of up to 
$92,736 each year. This would be the minimum payout and does not include mileage 
reimbursement to jurors, since Oversight does not have that information available. Therefore, 
Oversight will reflect an unknown cost to pay jurors that could exceed $99,168 ($191,904 – 
92,736) annually.
Officials from the Clay County Auditor’s Office assume a cost of $1,000 per year for the 
increase in mileage reimbursement for jurors.
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees 
Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§494.430 – Serving on a Petit and Grand Jury
In response to similar legislation from this year, HB 1736, officials from the Office of the State 
Courts Administrator
Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a zero 
impact in the fiscal note.  
§509.520 – Court Pleadings, Attachments, and Exhibits
In response to similar legislation from 2023, Perfected HCS for HB Nos. 994, 52 & 984, officials 
from Department of Corrections (DOC) assumed this section prohibits the court from 
including some personal identifying information in judgments or orders, therefore, making it 
difficult for staff to verify identity before individual can be accepted for incarceration. This could 
have an unknown impact.
Oversight assumes because the potential for impact is speculative, the DOC will not incur 
significant cost related to this proposal. If a fiscal impact were to result, the DOC may request 
additional funding through the appropriation process. 
In response to similar legislation from 2023, Perfected HCS for HB Nos. 994, 52 & 984, officials 
from the , Putnam County, the Attorney General’s Office and the St. 
Joseph Police Department
respective organizations. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, 
Oversight will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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§§510.500, 510.503, 510.506, 510.509, 510.512, 510.515, 510.518, 510.521 – Uniform Interstate 
Depositions and Discovery Act
Officials from the Office of State Courts Administrator (OSCA) state there may be some 
impact but there is no way to quantify that currently. Any significant changes will be reflected in 
future budget requests.
In response to similar legislation from this year, Perfected HCS for HB 1886, officials from the 
Office of the State Treasurer, the cities of St. Louis & O’Fallon, the Jackson County Board 
of Elections, the Christian County Auditor’s Office, the Local Government Employees 
Retirement System, the Morgan County PWSD #2, the Attorney General’s OfficeCity 
of Osceola, the Eureka Fire Protection District and the Osceola Water/Wastewater District 
each assumed the proposal would not change their fiscal impact estimates on the underlying 
proposal. Oversight
reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
§537.106 – Civil Liability for Publishing or Distributing Material Harmful to Minors on the 
Internet
In response to similar legislation from this year, HB 1855, officials from the Office of the State 
Courts Administrator
organizations. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight 
will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.  
§537.580 – Civil Liability for Employers Hiring Ex-Offenders Act
In response to similar legislation from this year, HB 1969, officials from the Office of the State 
Courts AdministratorAttorney General’s Office each assume the proposal will have 
no fiscal impact on their respective organizations. Oversight does not have any information to 
the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies. 
 
§600.042 – State Public Defender funding
Officials from the Office of the State Public Defender (SPD) assume the modification of this 
section would authorize SPD to receive and accept gifts. The fiscal impact is unknown.
SPD knows of no donations that have been made to General Revenue (GR) under the current 
statute. SPD has solicited grants from Americorp Vista for in-kind donations and would like to 
solicit grants from the DOJ if the Quality Defense Act is passed. That legislation authorizes 
substantial grants for public defender organizations that have completed workload studies and 
are working to establish appropriate workloads. SPD would also investigate other grant funding 
available. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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Oversight assumes since no material amount of donations have been received by General 
Revenue through this statute, changing the designation to the new Public Defender – Federal and 
Other Fund would not create a material direct fiscal impact to the state.
In response to similar legislation from 2023, Perfected HCS for HB Nos. 994, 52 & 984, officials 
from theassumed the proposal will have no fiscal impact on their 
organization. 
Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight will reflect a zero 
impact in the fiscal note for these agencies for this section. 
In response to similar legislation from 2023, Perfected HCS for HB Nos. 994, 52 & 984, officials 
from the , Putnam County, the Attorney General’s Office and the St. 
Joseph Police Department
respective organizations. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, 
Oversight will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.
Responses regarding the proposed legislation as a whole
Officials from the Office of Administration - Administrative Hearing Commission, the 
Department of Commerce and Insurance, the Department of Economic Development, the 
Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, the Department of Higher Education 
and Workforce Development, the Department of Mental Health, the Department of Natural 
Resources, the Department of Revenue, the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, 
the Department of Public Safety (Division of Alcohol and Tobacco ControlCapitol Police
Office of the Director, Fire Safety, Missouri Gaming Commission, Missouri Veterans 
Commission, State Emergency Management Agency), the Department of Social Services
the Office of the Governor, the Office of the Lieutenant Governor, the Missouri Department 
of AgricultureMissouri Department of Conservation, the Missouri Ethics Commission, 
the Missouri Department of TransportationMissouri National Guard, the MoDOT & 
Patrol Employees’ Retirement System, the Office of Administration, the Petroleum Storage 
Tank Insurance Fund, the University of Missouri System, Kansas City, the Platte County 
Board of Elections, the St. Louis City Board of Elections, the St. Louis County Board of 
Elections, the  Newton County Health Department, the Lincoln County Assessor’s Office, 
the Phelps County Sheriff’s OfficeBranson Police Department, the Kansas City Police 
Department, the St. Louis County Police Department, the County Employees Retirement 
Fund, the Kansas City Civilian Police Employees’ Retirement, the Kansas City Police 
Retirement System, the Kansas City Public School Retirement System, the Metropolitan St. 
Louis Sewer District Employees Pension Plan, the Public Education Employees’ Retirement 
System, the Sheriff’s Retirement System, the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District, the 
Pulaski County Sewer District #1, the South River Drainage District, the St. Charles 
County PWSD #2, the Wayne County PWSD #2, Missouri State University, Northwest 
Missouri State University, the University of Central Missouri, the Office of the State 
Auditor, the Missouri House of RepresentativesJoint Committee on Administrative  L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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Rules, the Joint Committee on Education, the Joint Committee on Public Employee 
Retirement, Legislative Research, the Oversight Division, the Missouri Senate, the Missouri 
Lottery Commission, the Missouri Consolidated Health Care Plan, the Missouri Higher 
Education Loan Authority, the Missouri Office of Prosecution Services and the State Tax 
Commission each assume the proposal will have no fiscal impact on their respective 
organizations. Oversight does not have any information to the contrary. Therefore, Oversight 
will reflect a zero impact in the fiscal note for these agencies.  
Officials from the Office of the Secretary of State (SOS) note many bills considered by the 
General Assembly include provisions allowing or requiring agencies to submit rules and 
regulations to implement the act. The SOS is provided with core funding to handle a certain 
amount of normal activity resulting from each year's legislative session. The fiscal impact for 
this fiscal note to the SOS for Administrative Rules is less than $5,000. The SOS recognizes that 
this is a small amount and does not expect that additional funding would be required to meet 
these costs. However, the SOS also recognizes that many such bills may be passed by the 
General Assembly in a given year and that collectively the costs may be in excess of what the 
office can sustain with its core budget. Therefore, the SOS reserves the right to request funding 
for the cost of supporting administrative rules requirements should the need arise based on a 
review of the finally approved bills signed by the governor.
Oversight only reflects the responses received from state agencies and political subdivisions; 
however, other cities, counties, local election authorities, county health departments, county 
recorders, nursing homes, county assessors, county auditors, county circuit clerks, county 
collectors, county prosecutors, county treasurers, county public administrators, local law 
enforcement agencies, fire protection districts, ambulance districts, retirement agencies, schools, 
utility districts, hospitals and colleges were requested to respond to this proposed legislation but 
did not. A listing of political subdivisions included in the Missouri Legislative Information 
System (MOLIS) database is available upon request.
FISCAL IMPACT – State GovernmentFY 2025
(10 Mo.)
FY 2026FY 2027GENERAL REVENUESavings – for state attorneys not being 
charges for death certificates §193.265 
p. 4-5
Unknown, less 
than $15,000
Unknown, less 
than $15,000
Unknown, less 
than  $15,000
Cost Avoidance – ALJ’s – potential 
savings in pay raises §§287.615 & 
287.835 p. 5$0 or Unknown$0 or Unknown$0 or Unknown L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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FISCAL IMPACT – State GovernmentFY 2025
(10 Mo.)
FY 2026FY 2027Cost – ALJ’s/MOSERS – beneficiaries 
to receive benefit that they would not 
otherwise receive §287.835 p. 5
$0 or
(Unknown)
$0 or
(Unknown)
$0 or
(Unknown)
Loss of Revenue – DHSS – no fees 
charged to certain attorneys for death 
certificates §193.265 p. 4-5
(Unknown, less 
than $15,000)
(Unknown, less 
than $15,000)
(Unknown, less 
than $15,000)
Costs – OSCA (§454.1050) New child 
support module p. 7
($500,000 to 
$1,000,000)$0$0
Cost – DOC (§454.1050) – to update 
offender management system and 
possible staff needed to process & remit 
payments p. 7(Unknown)(Unknown)(Unknown)
Transfer Out - §478.001 – to establish 
mental health treatment courts p. 12-13
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON 
GENERAL REVENUE
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$1,600,000)
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$600,000)
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$600,000)
PUBLIC DEFENDER – FEDERAL 
AND OTHER FUND (0112)
Income - (§600.042) Government 
grants, private gifts, donations, and 
bequests made to the Office of the 
Public Defender p. 15-16
$0 to 
Unknown
$0 to 
Unknown
$0 to 
Unknown
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT TO 
THE PUBLIC DEFENDER – 
FEDERAL AND OTHER FUND 
(0112)
$0 to 
Unknown
$0 to 
Unknown
$0 to 
Unknown L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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FISCAL IMPACT – State GovernmentFY 2025
(10 Mo.)
FY 2026FY 2027STATE HIGHWAY FUNDS (0644)Costs – MHP §§435.300, 435.303, 
435.306, 435.309 & 435.312 p. 6
   Personnel Service($94,380)($115,521)($117,832)  Fringe Benefits($82,771)($101,312)($103,338)  Expense & Equipment$0$0$0Total Costs - ($177,151)($216,833)($221,170)FTE Change1 FTE1 FTE1 FTEESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON 
STATE HIGHWAY FUNDS (0644) ($177,151) ($216,833) ($221,170)
Estimated Net FTE Change on State 
Highway Funds1 FTE1 FTE1 FTE
TREATMENT COURT 
RESOURCES FUND (0733)Transfer In – funds from GR §478.001 
p. 12-13
$0 or could 
exceed 
$600,000
$0 or could 
exceed 
$600,000
$0 or could 
exceed 
$600,000
Cost – program expenditures §478.001 
p. 12-13
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
$0 or (could 
exceed 
$600,000)
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON 
TREATMENT COURT 
RESOURCES FUND$0$0$0
BASIC CIVIL LEGAL SERVICES 
FUND (0757)
Revenue – OSCA – continuation of 
receipts received from $8 court fee 
(§477.650) p. 9-12$0$2,048,923$4,097,846 L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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FISCAL IMPACT – State GovernmentFY 2025
(10 Mo.)
FY 2026FY 2027Cost – OSCA – continuation of 
expenditures (§477.650) p. 9-12$0($1,702,706)($3,405,412)
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON 
THE BASIC CIVIL LEGAL 
SERVICES FUND$0$346,217$692,434
Estimated Net FTE Change for the 
Basic Civil Legal Services Fund0 FTE2 FTE2 FTE
FISCAL IMPACT – Local GovernmentFY 2025
(10 Mo.)
FY 2026FY 2027LOCAL POLITICAL 
SUBDIVISIONS
Savings – Prosecutors/Circuit Attorneys 
– no charges for death certificates 
§193.265 p. 4-5$0 to Unknown$0 to Unknown$0 to Unknown
Costs – counties – potential additional 
costs to house/administer mental health 
treatment courts §478.001
$0 to 
(Unknown)
$0 to 
(Unknown)
$0 to 
(Unknown)
Potential Revenue Loss – LPHA – no 
fees charged to certain attorneys for 
death certificates §193.265 p. 4-5
$0 to 
(Unknown)
$0 to 
(Unknown)
$0 to 
(Unknown)
Cost – potential increase compensation 
in certain circuits for jurors (§494.455) 
p. 13-14
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$99,168)
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$99,168)
(Unknown, 
could exceed 
$99,168)
ESTIMATED NET EFFECT ON 
LOCAL POLITICAL 
SUBDIVISIONS
(More or Less 
than $99,168)
(More or Less 
than $99,168)
(More or Less 
than $99,168)
FISCAL IMPACT – Small Business
Small business employers who hire ex-offenders could be impacted by this proposal. L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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FISCAL DESCRIPTION
§§435.300, 435.303, 435.306, 435.309 & 435.312 – Alternative Dispute Resolution
The bill also establishes an alternative dispute resolution process to which a court may refer, by 
rule or court order, a single case or a category of cases. The parties themselves may enter into a 
written agreement to resolve their differences through an alternative dispute resolution process 
and may agree that the provisions of this bill will apply to the process. The process, whether 
referred by the court or agreed to by the parties, is nonbinding unless the parties agree in writing 
to it being binding. In an action referred to an alternative dispute resolution process, discovery 
may proceed as in any other action, except that alternative dispute resolution communications 
will not be admissible as evidence in any proceeding or subject to discovery. Similarly, evidence 
or information that is otherwise admissible or subject to discovery will not become inadmissible 
or protected from discovery solely because of its disclosure or use in an alternative dispute 
resolution process. Any participant in an alternative dispute resolution process has standing to 
intervene in any proceeding to object to the admissibility of an alternative dispute resolution 
communication made by that person during or relating to that process. 
If the court has not referred a case to a non-binding alternative dispute resolution process and the 
parties do not themselves enter into a written agreement to resolve their differences using the 
process in this bill, the process the parties use will be considered settlement negotiations and will 
be subject to rules of confidentiality that generally apply to such negotiations.
§454.1050 - "Bentley's Law" – Adds child maintenance provisions for certain children
This bill establishes "Bentley's Law", which requires a person convicted of an offense of driving 
while intoxicated where the death of a parent or parents results to pay, upon petition by the 
surviving parent or the legal guardian, child maintenance to the child's or children's surviving 
parent or to the legal guardian until the child: dies; marries; enters active military duty; turns 18 
or, if the child is 18 and enrolls in college, until completion of a degree or until the child reaches 
the age of 21, whichever occurs first. 
The bill specifies how the amount of maintenance to be paid is determined and how the 
maintenance is to be paid. If the surviving parent or the guardian brings a civil action against the 
person prior to any maintenance being ordered and the parent or guardian receives a judgment in 
his or her favor, no maintenance will be ordered. Alternatively, if the court orders maintenance to 
be paid and the parent or guardian later brings a civil action and obtains a judgment in his or her 
favor, the amount awarded will be offset by the amount of maintenance ordered. (§454.1050) 
§477.650 – Basic Civil Legal Services Fund
Currently, the "Basic Civil Legal Services Fund" is set to expire on December 31, 2025. This bill 
repeals that expiration date. It also corrects an incorrect reference to a provision in the Missouri 
Constitution.
§478.001 – Mental Health Courts L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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This bill adds mental health courts to the list of treatment court divisions, defined as a court 
focused on addressing the mental health disorder or co-occurring disorder of defendants charged 
with a criminal offense. The bill specifies that a mental health court may be established by any 
circuit court to provide an alternative for the judicial system to dispose of cases that stem from a 
mental health disorder or co-occurring disorder.
§§488.040 & 494.455 – Compensation of Jurors
This bill specifies that each grand and petit juror will receive at least $6 per day for every day the 
juror actually serves and a mileage reimbursement rate as provided by law for state employees. 
Each county and the City of St. Louis may authorize additional compensation for its jurors. 
Alternatively, the court of a judicial circuit may, by a majority vote, vote to restructure juror 
compensation so that grand and petit jurors do not get paid for the first two days of service but 
thereafter will receive $50 per day, as well as mileage reimbursement at the rate provided by law 
for state employees for necessary travel from the juror's residence to the courthouse and back, to 
be paid by the county.
§600.042 – State Public Defender funding
Currently, any funds available from government grants, private gifts, donations, bequests, or 
other sources made to the Office of the Public Defender are deposited into the General Revenue 
Fund. This bill creates the "Public Defender - Federal and Other Fund" and provides that funding 
from any government grants, private gifts, donations, bequests, or other sources shall be 
deposited into such fund. 
This legislation is not federally mandated, would not duplicate any other program and would not 
require additional capital improvements or rental space.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
Office of the State Courts Administrator
Attorney General’s Office
Department of Mental Health
Missouri Office of Prosecution Services
Office of the State Public Defender
Office of the Secretary of State
Jackson County Board of Elections
Platte County Board of Elections
St. Louis City Board of Elections
St. Louis County Board of Elections
Greene County
Department of Labor and Industrial Relations
Department of Revenue
Missouri Department of Transportation
Phelps County Sheriff’s Office
Kansas City Police Department L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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St. Louis County Police Department
Office of Administration
Budget and Planning
Administrative Hearing Commission
Office of the Commissioner
Department of Natural Resources
Department of Public Safety
Fire Safety
Office of the Director
Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Control
Capitol Police
Missouri Gaming Commission
Missouri Veterans Commission
State Emergency Management Agency
Missouri Highway Patrol
Missouri Department of Agriculture
MoDOT & Patrol Employees’ Retirement System
Newton County Health Department
County Employees Retirement Fund
Sheriff’s Retirement System
South River Drainage District
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules
Legislative Research
Oversight Division
Missouri Consolidated Health Care Plan
Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
Kansas City
Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District
Missouri House of Representatives
Joint Committee on Education
Missouri State Employee's Retirement System
Department of Commerce and Insurance
Department of Economic Development
Department of Higher Education and Workforce Development
Missouri Department of Conservation
Office of the Governor
Department of Social Services
Missouri Lottery Commission
State Tax Commission
Joint Committee on Public Employee Retirement
Branson Police Department
Kansas City Public School Retirement System
University of Central Missouri
Department of Health and Senior Services L.R. No. 4623H.06P 
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Missouri Ethics Commission
Missouri National Guard
Petroleum Storage Tank Insurance Fund
Office of the State Treasurer
St. Louis City
O’Fallon
Christian County Auditor’s Office
Lincoln County Assessor’s Office
Kansas City Civilian Police Employee Retirement
Kansas City Police Retirement System
Local Government Employees Retirement System
Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District Employees Pension Plan 
Public Education Employees’ Retirement System
Morgan County PWSD #2
Wayne County PWSD #2
Northwest Missouri State University
Office of the State Auditor
Missouri Senate
University of Missouri System
Osceola
Eureka Fire Protection District
Osceola Water/Wastewater District
St. Charles County PWSD #2
Clay County Auditor’s Office
Department of Corrections
Springfield
Putnam County
St. Joseph Police Department
Pulaski County Sewer District #1
Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority
Office of the Lieutenant Governor
Missouri State University
Julie MorffRoss StropeDirectorAssistant DirectorApril 10, 2024April 10, 2024