
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) – Missouri lawmakers have passed a roughly $30 billion
state spending plan after a fight over college tuition for students living in
the U.S. illegally.
The Republican-led Senate on Friday gave final approval to a budget with $61
million more in core K-12 public school funding compared to this year. Colleges
and universities are each set to get at least $1 million more in funding.
Work on the budget hit a roadblock after Senate and House negotiators agreed
to allow colleges and universities to charge in-state tuition to students living
in the country illegally. Lawmakers ditched that proposal following pushback
from House Republicans.
The budget also includes $50 million in un-earmarked general revenue on bridge
repairs next fiscal year, plus another $50 million for a local cost-share
program.
The budget now heads to Republican Gov. Mike Parson.
WebReadyTM Powered by WireReady® NSI