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Author: Mark Holguin

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Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

The pandemic triggered a major housing crisis, resulting in millions of renters and unhoused people across the country becoming at risk for being evicted or displaced. Meanwhile, those living in apartments with mold or pests have been stuck with environmental conditions that exacerbate asthma and COVID-19. Locally, tenants and housing advocates are pushing back by advocating for eviction moratoriums, holding landlords accountable, and working to create a tenants bill of rights. In this episode, we hear from the three working members of State Street Tenants Resistance about what motivates them to advocate for a tenants bill of rights, and the Community Empowerment Organizer of a local community development corporation will explain how to hold problem landlords accountable and what’s at stake when large companies and the state need to be held accountable, too.

Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-05-21/part-i-tenant-rights-resistance
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Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

The pandemic triggered a major housing crisis, resulting in millions of renters and unhoused people across the country becoming at risk for being evicted or displaced. Meanwhile, those living in apartments with mold or pests have been stuck with environmental conditions that exacerbate asthma and COVID-19. Locally, tenants and housing advocates are pushing back by advocating for eviction moratoriums, holding landlords accountable, and working to create a tenants bill of rights. In this episode, we hear from the three working members of State Street Tenants Resistance about what motivates them to advocate for a tenants bill of rights, and the Community Empowerment Organizer of a local community development corporation will explain how to hold problem landlords accountable and what’s at stake when large companies and the state need to be held accountable, too.

Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-05-21/part-i-tenant-rights-resistance
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/page-not-found.rss
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Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

The pandemic triggered a major housing crisis, resulting in millions of renters and unhoused people across the country becoming at risk for being evicted or displaced. Meanwhile, those living in apartments with mold or pests have been stuck with environmental conditions that exacerbate asthma and COVID-19. Locally, tenants and housing advocates are pushing back by advocating for eviction moratoriums, holding landlords accountable, and working to create a tenants bill of rights. In this episode, we hear from the three working members of State Street Tenants Resistance about what motivates them to advocate for a tenants bill of rights, and the Community Empowerment Organizer of a local community development corporation will explain how to hold problem landlords accountable and what’s at stake when large companies and the state need to be held accountable, too.

Part I: Tenant Rights & Resistance

https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/we-live-here/2021-05-21/part-i-tenant-rights-resistance
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/page-not-found.rss
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Missouri Secretary Of State Jay Ashcroft Wants Special Legislative Session For Election Changes

Secretary of State Jay Ashcroft talked with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum on the latest episode of Politically Speaking about why he wants a special session for election administration legislation.

The GOP official said he was disappointed lawmakers didn’t resuscitate Missouri’s government-issued photo identification requirement to vote. A judge struck down a key portion of that requirement, and lawmakers would have to pass a bill to effectively make the photo ID mandate active again.

Ashcroft also wants legislators to place a proposal on the 2022 ballot raising the threshold to pass a constitutional amendment from a simple majority to two-thirds. That idea is a priority for some GOP legislators but also has opposition from both sides of the political spectrum.

Here’s what else Ashcroft discussed on the show:

  • Why he wants some of the election-related proposals passed this year instead of next year.
  • Whether Missouri will have to move its filing date back in case state legislative redistricting maps aren’t completed until 2022. That process is facing a tight timeframe because of delays in delivering census data that’s critical for drawing maps.
  • Whether Missouri should adopt runoffs for statewide and congressional contests. He also responded to criticism that those proposals are specifically aimed at depriving former Gov. Eric Greitens the U.S. Senate Republican nomination.
  • How his office handled the COVID-19 pandemic and whether a CDC announcement that vaccinated people don’t have to wear masks except under certain circumstances affects the debate over returning to in-person work.

Before earning his law degree, Ashcroft worked as an engineer after receiving undergraduate and graduate degrees from the Missouri University of Science and Technology.

He first ran for office in 2014, when he lost to Democrat Jill Schupp in the 24th Senate District race. He came back two years later and won a competitive GOP primary before defeating Robin Smith by a wide margin to become secretary of state. Last year, he defeated Democrat Yinka Faleti by a landslide even though he was outspent.

Ashcroft recently declined to run for next year’s U.S. Senate contest but is widely seen as a gubernatorial contender in 2024, once Gov. Mike Parson departs because of term limits.

Ashcroft is the son of John Ashcroft, who is the only Missouri Republican ever elected to two consecutive gubernatorial terms in office, and who also served as a U.S. senator and U.S. attorney general.

Follow Jason Rosenbaum on Twitter: @jrosenbaum

Follow Jay Ashcroft on Twitter: @jayashcroftmo

Missouri Secretary Of State Jay Ashcroft Wants Special Legislative Session For Election Changes
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/politically-speaking/2021-05-19/missouri-secretary-of-state-jay-ashcroft-wants-special-legislative-session-for-election-changes
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Sen. Lauren Arthur Previews The Last Week Of The Missouri Legislative Session

State Sen. Lauren Arthur returns to Politically Speaking to talk with St. Louis Public Radio’s Jason Rosenbaum about the final week of the 2021 legislative session.

Arthur is a Democrat who represents a portion of Clay County. She won a special election in 2018, bringing a historically Republican seat into the Democratic column. Arthur won election to a full term in 2020 and will get to serve through the end of 2024, when term limits will prevent her from running again.

Here’s what Arthur talked about on the program:

  • Why Senate Democrats did not end up filibustering legislation establishing a tax credit program for contributors to nonprofits that provide educational assistance. The bill has been a longstanding priority of some Republicans who want to provide a pathway for students to go to either better public schools or private schools.
  • How Democrats may fight election legislation that includes a government-issued photo identification requirement to vote.
  • Whether lawmakers will be back in Jefferson City for Medicaid expansion. One possible scenario is that if Gov. Mike Parson allows people in the expansion population to apply and receive services, Medicaid could run out of money — and require the legislature to pass a supplemental appropriations bill to keep the program afloat.
  • A special session that will take place later this year in which Missouri lawmakers will consider and pass a congressional redistricting map.

Arthur is a native of the so-called “Northland,” the part of Kansas City that’s north of downtown. She graduated from Smith College with a degree in history and worked as a teacher and in the advertising industry.

In 2014, Arthur won election to the Missouri House representing a portion of Clay County. After Sen. Ryan Silvey was appointed to the Missouri Public Service Commission in 2018, Arthur won the special election to replace him.

Many see Arthur as a potential candidate for statewide office once she leaves the Senate after 2024.

Follow Jason Rosenbaum on Twitter: @jrosenbaum

Follow Lauren Arthur on Twitter: @LaurenArthurMO

Sen. Lauren Arthur Previews The Last Week Of The Missouri Legislative Session
https://news.stlpublicradio.org/podcast/politically-speaking/2021-05-10/sen-lauren-arthur-previews-the-last-week-of-the-missouri-legislative-session
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