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Since President Trump took office, disasters like the recent St. Louis tornado no longer get quick responses from FEMA.
The State Senate met Thursday, authorizing a plan to offer incentives to keep the Kansas City Chiefs and Royals in the state.
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First Alert 4 on MSN$100 million in state disaster relief aid is one step closer to helping St. Louis tornado victimsAs people across St. Louis continue the clean-up process following the May 16 tornado, disaster relief funding is making its ...
It is part of a pattern in Trump’s second term of longer waits and, oftentimes, denials of state requests for disaster ...
If President Trump approves the disaster declaration, individuals could receive housing, transportation and health ...
The Missouri State Emergency Management Agency announced Tuesday that it will be holding informational briefings for ...
A bipartisan group of senators say a $25 million earmark to assist tornado victims may be just a beginning. “It’s just a good ...
The Trump-backed bill also includes changes that could result in thousands of low-income families losing access to federal ...
Missouri senators authorized hundreds of millions of dollars worth of incentives to try to persuade the Chiefs and Royals to ...
Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe is calling lawmakers into a special session to consider aid for tornado victims and incentives for ...
Missouri has agreed to abide by a request from the federal government to turn over personal data about anyone receiving food ...
Tornado victims in southwestern Missouri will not get extra help from the state after a cluster of tornadoes hit the area last week. The City of Gladstone announced on Monday that it has begun a ...
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