Saturday, February 28, 2009

DEA Stops State Raids

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder Says Justice Department Will No Longer Interfere With States’ Medical Cannabis Policies.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

California Considering Complete Legalization

Due to California's $40 Billion deficient, they began sending out IOU's in early February. California Law Makers are now considering the complete legalization of Cannabis for tax revenue generation.

Cannabis Propaganda Effective No Longer

In less than a month, cannabis supporters boycotted Kellogg Co. for dropping Olympic GOLD medalist Michael Phelps after the release of a picture portraying him using a bong.

The boycott effectively dropped Kellogg Co. from ranking 9th, to 83rd in the stock market.

Voting with your dollars WORKS!

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

A Voice of Reason

"Joe, I caught a segment about you and your town on KY3, GOD BLESS YOU and thank you so much for standing up for what we as a community know to be the TRUTH. I'm a Springfield resident, and an unashamed -former-herbal enthusiast.

It's a pity that in a state so full of natural beauty and wonderful people, WE sit idly by when the time for initiative is so important. 277 is a declaration of the people that it is in fact time for a change. WE are tired. The old standards of racism and ignorance which forced prohibition on US so long ago are fading with each generation. Hope is in the air, and I see a bright future ahead that WE will build - a culture of understanding that will be an example for the rest of the world to follow.

As a Veteran, a Christian, a concerned citizen, and as a friend and relative of so many people who would benefit, I IMPLORE YOU : Please stay strong for us who can't fight this fight on the front lines. WE THE PEOPLE are behind you, I am behind you, and sir, if there is any way I could personally help, I would be proud to lend my voice. I feel it's my DUTY as an American and a Missourian to stand up for what I know is right." - Ryan, Springfield, MO Resident

Village Metting - Joplin Globe Reports

Monday Night Village Meeting! Read Wally Kennedy's Account.

Village Meeting - Joe's Account

Joe read his account as the opening to the Monday (2/23/09), Cliff Village Meeting.

"In light of recent events, I wanted to make a clear testament regarding the events of Cliff Village Ordnance 277. On August 19th, 2008, we held our village meeting. I distributed notes to every resident in the village about a week in advance of the meeting, as I always do, and we had a large turn out. Attending were: Ellon & Mike Darr, Allan Cress, and his wife Tammy, Mike Stewart and his wife, Kathy Blundell, George Blundell, Sarah Perkins, myself, Emily Williams, Biff Bell, Phill Duff and his wife, Mark and Cindy Sweet, and Kirsten Landwer. The last 5 people didn’t sign the attendance minuets because they came late.

The meeting went as follows: special guest, Cary Lee, from the Joplin Special Road District, spoke to us about paving Norledge Ave, along with other road related business. Cary left after he was done explaining the road business. We all spoke about a village wide garage sale, and I was asked to find out more about where our village boundaries ended.

Nearing the end of the meeting, I proposed Ordinance 421. I read and explained the ordinance and my reason for it. When I asked who was in support, ALL IN ATTENDANCE were in complete support (Mrs. Williams left before ordinance was proposed). All council members said yes, and expressed support. Only two people remained silent: Mike Stewart and his wife. Everyone else was in complete favor. My Dad, George Blundell, was in descent about children being present; but was in favor of the ordinance.

I then stated that even though it passed by village standards, I would like to put it on the ballot to have more public attention in the matter. Cindy Sweet then suggested that she would ask her Sheriff friend on what he thought about the ordinance. About two weeks after the meeting, Cindy Sweet approached me with an alleged message from her Sheriff friend. She said she had spoken with him, and that he had said that since I was in a wheelchair, I could grow as long as we didn’t do the ordinance.

In late January, I learned of Missouri HB 277 regarding the legalization of medical cannabis, and thought that sense our Ordinance 421 was strongly worded, I would submit Ordinance 277 to the ballet.

On Friday the 23rd, I received a call from Kay Baum, the Newton County Clerk. I was late for filing the candidate forms. Unfortunately, no one else wanted to take a council position or that of Mayor, so my Dad and I had to do it again. In submitting the candidate forms, I asked Mrs. Baum if it was too late to submit an ordinance to be voted on in the April elections. She stated that would be fine.

After sending the fax, she called and stated that she didn’t receive it all, so I faxed it again. She then called and stated, “You’ll need a lawyer to put this on the election,” in a very snide voice. Yes, we the residents of Cliff Village had just received the “veto power” of the county clerk. I replied that she can consider that a notice, for the board had already approved it. However, that statement was not entirely true. We had approved Ordinance 421, not 277.

I then called to double check with all the council members and make sure they were still in support, and tell them about changing the wording to match that of MO HB 277. The first council members I contacted were Kirsten and Doug. Kirsten came over to our house on Saturday, and stated that even though she was in support and would like to still vote yes, her and Doug would have to vote no for fear of loosing there jobs. I stated that I could understand, and told her I would resign if the others backed out. I asked her if she would like to have a meeting about it, and she said she did not, and would still have to vote no for fear of loosing her job.

I then asked my Dad, and told him about Doug and Kirsten backing out for fear of losing their jobs. My Dad said, “Were they afraid of getting fired for practicing democracy?” He said his vote was still a yes. I then called Mrs. Darr, and got her answering machine. At a friend’s house that night, I was anticipating Mrs. Darr to revoke her support for the legalization of medical cannabis, and was in a very somber mood.

Then Mrs. Darr called. I told her that I wanted to adopt our ordinance under 277, instead of 421, and explained that it was the language of the state bill and a lot less inflammatory then our Ordinance 421, and I wanted to know if she was still for it. Mrs. Darr went into a story about how she had just lost her father-in-law to cancer, and how she was loosing her father to cancer now; and how upset she was that all her father could receive for his pain was morphine, and that the cancer treatments made him sick.

She stated that she wishes he could have something natural. Something that would make him feel better, without all the side effects. She then stated that she was still in 100% support, and her vote was still a yes. I asked her if she wanted to have another meeting about it. She stated that due to her father’s condition, she couldn’t schedule one.

With this, I considered that we still had 3 yes’s, and 2 no’s from the last meeting. So it was safe to say the ordinance still passed. This was not a new vote, but merely a checking of the previous vote, and to see if the council wouldn’t mind adopting the 277 language over the 421 language.

This being the case, this was not another meeting. Ordinance 277 was not what was adopted by the village. It was actually Ordinance 421 that was unanimously adopted on August 19th, 2008, by all board members present, (Joe Blundell, George Blundell, Ellon Darr, and Kirsten Landwer), and all village residents present, with the exception of the Stewart’s remaining silent.

I attest to all accounts of this to be true and accurate. The fact that the media was informed and given the wrong information about 277, rather than 421, is totally my fault. It was not done intentionally. I was operating under the assumption that all parties at the meeting were in total support of a much stronger ordinance, and I felt that calming the language was in the best interest of the village.

This being the case, Ordinance 421 is the ordinance that actually passed under the village bylaws. If any involved parties wish to dispute any of the above claims, I will gladly submit to a polygraph on any of these accounts."

-Joe Blundell

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Councilwoman Speaks Untruths

In the events of the recent petition regarding my supposed misrepresentation of one of the key votes of councilwoman Ellon Darr, this accusation is outright false. Latest Joplin Globe Article

Ellon, after 16 days of media coverage, decides to say she voted no, or that she didn’t know she was voting at all? I spoke with Mrs. Darr about the incident in which I reminded her about a return call she made to me on January 31st, in which I explained in no uncertain terms how our village ordinance was modeled after House Bill 277, and I wanted her vote on the matter. She went into a heartfelt story about how she has just lost her father-in-law to cancer, and how she was loosing her father now, and how she was upset that morphine was all they could give him. She then told me that her vote was YES. She was 100% behind it. I then stated that we could have a meeting for it, in which she said she couldn’t attend. “Keep me down for a yes”, she said.

Upon reminding Mrs. Darr of our conservation, and stating that “I would gladly take a polygraph as to the fact that I explained the vote to her” and that she voted yes, Mrs. Darr refused to submit to such a test. The fact of the matter is, I was prepared and looking forward to resigning if the council didn’t remain in favor of the Ordinance. At the village meeting in which we spoke first of adopting a medical marijuana bill, all residents at that meeting, with the exception of my father (who was only in descent because children were present) and two who remained silent, were in favor of the much stronger worded Ordinance 421.

I guess the real problem is that certain people in my village could stand on my porch, look me in the eyes, and tell me they were behind me all the way; and end up falling a bit short of all the way. In fact, the petitioners are unwilling to debate their flip-flopped position at a public meeting. I’m guessing they got scared of the media coverage and went into the ‘duck and cover mode’. Who can blame them? These are dark times for personal freedoms and standing up for your rights.

These events do nothing but bolster my resolve for the issue. The 78% majority in America will be heard. As far as Cliff Village law, the medical cannabis ordinance is passed.

-Joe

Riverfront Times Reports!

Read the Article by the St. Louis Riverfront Times!

Recent Research on Medical Marijuana

Read the latest on the benefits of Medical Marijuana!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Joplin Globe Article

Front page of the Joplin Globe reports!!

Replys from MO House Reps.

In response to Joe's Thugs and Drugs Article emailed to all MO House Reps., note the reply from Speaker Ronald Richard, Jeanette Oxford, and Therese Sander:

"Thanks for sharing your opinion. I’ll be watching for evidence-based information if this bill comes to the floor for debate." - Rep. JMO

"Mr. Blundell, I appreciate knowing your views regarding HB277 relating to the legalization of marijuana for the seriously ill. It is very early in the legislative process and I do not expect any action on this bill for some time, if at all. I say this because at the present time, there are not enough votes in the House to consider this legislation." - Ron Richard, Speaker, MO House of Reps.

"Dear Joseph: I will not support legalizing marijuana. Period." - Rep. Therese Sander

Are these Reps. representing you? Email MO House Reps. today and DEMAND a vote on HB277! Let's hope there are more Jeanette Oxford's than Therese Sander's willing to consider the issue.

Medical Marijuana Polls - Majority Supports

"A 2005 nationwide Gallup poll showed that 78 percent of adults support making marijuana legally available for doctors to prescribe in order to reduce pain and suffering." - Kelly Maddy, President, Joplin NORML

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Channel 10 - State Debate!

The State Debate Has Begun!
Check out our first blog and send an email Missouri Representatives DEMANDING a vote.

Channel 12 Reports

Watch It. Post It. Share It!

KY3-TV Interview

Watch the Springfield Broadcast with Joe Blundell!

Channel 7 Video Interview

Watch the KOAM-TV Interview With Joe Blundell!

Kansas City Star Article

Read what the front page of the Kansas City Star had to say!

Email MO Reps.

Checkout the First Blog & Demand a Vote By Emailing MO House of Reps.

Thugs & Drugs - Joe's Article

My name is Joe Blundell, and I refuse to live under the tyranny of the irrational.

Nine years ago in London, I was crushed under the wheels of a 30,000 ton train engine. Needless to say, this was a painful experience. It resulted in the insertion of several three inch long titanium screws, rods, and brackets drilled into my spinal column. This was also a very painful experience; which still hurts to this day. In fact, words cheapen the sensations I experience in the mornings, during weather changes, or even changing positions in my wheelchair.

The current medical industry’s assistance in helping me alleviate this pain is inadequate. For the first year after the accident, the doctors’ prescribed me Morphine, Codeine, and Demerol; all opium biased narcotics that made my first few years after the train wreck a living nightmare of surreal proportions. Surreal because the narcotics I was forced to take caused a myriad of interesting and embarrassing side effects.

I was not only subject to frightful hallucinations in the textured ceiling of my room, where I lay strung out in bed like a heroine addict; but my immobility led to bedsores that still trouble me. One such unpleasant bedsore is a 7 cm hole where I can touch my skeleton, which often looses chunks of bone. As interesting as this may be from an anatomical and psychological viewpoint, it is an extremely painful and horrifying condition; which I carry as a result of our current medical industry.

The most uncomfortable side effect of all was caused by opium based narcotics. The worst effect of the drugs was that it relaxes the muscles to the point where it greatly slowed my digestion. This effect is not noticed by able bodied people, because the natural movement of walking helps stimulate the process. This is not the case with a paralyzed individual. In a nutshell, everything stopped. I continued eating for a while; then I couldn’t even eat. There was simply no more room. It could be said, I was “full of shit”.

This is one of the most dangerous conditions that a person in a wheelchair can have: leading to Autonomic dysreflexia. This condition causes the deaths of hundreds of paralyzed individuals each year. The pain from the train wreck, from the screws, and from the holes in my body paled in comparison to not having a bowel movement for an entire week!

How does the current medical industry treat this condition? Drano. It isn’t called Drano, but Magnesium citrate; and it is simply Drano for the human body. It essentially liquefies all of the fecal matter in your digestive system until you go, and go, and go. I would spend an entire day on a portable toilet, and would measure over 10 pounds of waste flushed over the course of one shit storm…LOL. I have to say it this way, for I can think of no other way to approach this subject than humor; because it no longer happens, and I am eternally blessed for no longer having to experience it. Why does this no longer happen?

In 2001, I moved to Cliff Village and lived for a year teetering between sedation and pain on the doctors’ drugs, my Drano bowel program, and wasting away watching TV. My discomfort was felt every waking minute, and seemed to be mirrored by a neighbors’ basset hound that constantly wailed from the confinement of his 4ft by 8ft cage. One day, I had had enough. “That poor dog,” I thought. Someone has to let it out, and take it for a walk. That’s when I decided to get up, get into my power chair, and go walk the neighbors’ dog.

Joy is the only adequate word of how the dog reacted as I led him into Wildcat Park. I parked my chair and sat for hours watching him play on the glades. On my return, I happened into a neighbor that lived down the street from me. We started talking, and he wondered why he had never seen me out in the neighborhood before. I explained my situation: my pain, my sores, and my drugs. He immediately began to laugh. “Why would you take that shit?” he asked, and went into his house and brought out a joint. “Why don’t you try this and see if it helps.” I took the dog home, and then lit the joint and began to inhale.

Only people who have experienced it can truly understand the instantaneous effect. I felt as if a giant weight had been lifted from my body. I felt so good I cried. It was my first waking moment without pain since 2000. Needless to say, I found some people who could supply this medicine. With the unfortunate fact, that ounce for ounce, marijuana is more expensive than gold. I began to wonder how a naturally occurring flower, which grows like a weed, became more expensive than gold?

I began to enjoy a brand new life. Since my release from the doctors’ heroine, I began getting out and meeting the people of the village. While doing this, I began to find out that in the past decade many people and pets were dying of rare bladder cancers. I immediately asked if anyone had checked the water. The answer was a resounding no. So in this way, I began my time as a public servant.

It was like pulling teeth to get the EPA or DNR to even speak to me, let alone come and check the wells. The village suggested that I might have more pull as an elected official, so in the next election, I was voted in as the Honorable Joseph T. Blundell, Mayor of the Town of Cliff Village.

When the wells were finally tested, we found that several of the wells were contaminated with dangerous levels of TCE and lead. Rather than this being proof that our town needed assistance, it was only proof of how deeply flawed our system has become. Case in point, one of the wells by a day care had 4.8 ppb of TCE and the EPA and DNR said that it needed to be 5 ppb in order for them to ‘have’ to do anything. I asked the representative if this was a safe amount for kids to drink. He said it was according to the government. I then asked if I could bottle the water to send home for his kids to drink. He immediately said, “NO, that’s not even funny.” “No, it isn’t” I replied.

After a couple years, we finally got the contaminated wells on a bottled water program, and officials from Missouri American Water assured me that waterlines would be run with the expansion to the Wildcat Park Nature Center. No such lines have yet been run. I continue to endeavor toward this end, for we still have people in the village bathing in dangerous chemicals.

While attending NEO A&M College, my work in supplying safe drinking water earned me the first Howard R. Swearer Student Humanitarian Award in Oklahoma. With this award, I received award money to construct a community greenhouse. This greenhouse has supplied tomato and bamboo plants to many of the village residents.

But after building the greenhouse, we ran into a slight problem. While we were given the money to initially construct the building, we had no money to heat it. Necessity being the mother of invention, we designed a system of building that completely heats and cools itself with no power consumption. Visit Sustainable Living Systems to learn how it works.

You’ve often heard that there is no magic bullet that heals the world’s woes; but when you have the ability to heat and cool a structure for free, it lends itself to a myriad of applications; directly solving the most pressing humanitarian problems of the world by providing local food; water; electricity; and shelter for those living in even the harshest of climates.

Imagine homes that work for people, rather than people for their homes. Imagine solar water distilleries converting agricultural levels of seawater into safe-water, with little more than the power of the Sun. Imagine biogas digesters that greatly increase the efficiency of converting bio-waste into an abundant source of electricity. Imagine greenhouses that grow produce year round, with a fraction of traditional costs. Imagine no more; for the C.O.R.E. offers the seamless integration of technology and nature, benefiting local economies on a global scale.

Why am I telling you this? Because I wish to illustrate how much my life has been enriched by the use of marijuana, and how productive and valuable a person can be to their community while using this medicine. With the truth and the example of my life to bare, I asked the people of Cliff Village if they would support me on legalizing medical marijuana in the village. I had recently learned of Missouri House Bill #277 and the portion pertaining to the legalization of medical marijuana in the State of Missouri. Fashioning our ordinance after the state bill, I asked the village residents if they would support such a proposal. It was an overwhelming yes by most residents, and the town council voted in favor of adopting Cliff Village Ordnance 277.

I’m not saying I’ll be the first to try this ordnance, which permits qualifying patients to grow medical marijuana; but I just might. Our ordinance might just be a statement by our village of support for the state bill, or perhaps something much more. If my choice is to either live under the doctors’ heroine, which costs my friends and neighbors - the taxpayers of Missouri, hundreds of millions of dollars every year; or grow and enjoy flowers in my yard, I have to pick the flowers.

Anyone who honestly examines how the most widely used and useful plant in human history became illegal, will see a clear cut example of the subversion of the U.S. Constitution for corporate interests over the will of the people. Take for example the first law concerning marijuana in America: a decree that every farmer’s crop had to be 20% marijuana; for it is a nitrogen fixer, needs little care, and was the mainstay of human food, clothing, medicine, and fuel for nearly 8000 years. Why the first person to outlaw marijuana was Napoleon Bonaparte; and we all know what a tyrant he was. And that’s what it has become: tyranny, pure and simple.

What does this say about our country when we outlaw the plant that made the paper for the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and every page of every bible for 1900 years? Historically, marijuana was also one of the 13 herbs burnt as incense in Solomon’s Temple. So I guess you could say it is also infringing on my right to practice Judaism or Christianity.

If you delve deeper into the issue, it becomes clear that it is an illegal illegalization, purely for the selfish interests of the few, at the detriment of all. They didn’t even really make it illegal. They didn’t take it to a vote of the states. That would have been too constitutional. They simply snuck it in the backdoor as a tax you can never pay, or get permission to pay. What’s that? Taxation Without Representation! HELLO!! Is this still America? With a law like this, I say NO! This is the rule of money over people: greed and corruption.

An ounce of good marijuana in the Midwest is roughly $800. On the East Coast, you’ll pay twice that or more. The price of gold today is $901. So in some locations, gold is worth only half of what a flower is. How does this happen? The only force that gives the artificial value of gold to a flower is the Police Force. The only way we can empower drug dealers is by having the opposite side of the LAW dictating the price, and enforcing prohibition so that farmers cannot grow their own flowers. This is one of the most obvious facts of the abysmal results of the Prohibition of Alcohol. It did nothing more than empower people who didn’t mind breaking the law or hurting everyone who stood in the way of their profits and control.

I’ve already decided to stop buying marijuana. I’m tired of empowering thugs with drugs. I’m tired of helping fill our prisons with FARMERS! I’m tired of people regurgitating propaganda as some sort of truth or science. Marijuana Prohibition is simply an illogical argument between rational truth and fiscal interests.

I serve my fellow man, and I would be derelict in my duties to my friends, neighbors, and future generations if I did not act. I would be sentencing everyone to do as they’re told, and not what is right. I simply cannot stand for this. Even in a wheelchair, I can stand for something. And I stand for the rights of what can be grown from the good Earth that GOD in heaven has given us.

Just consider: methanphedimines are the #1 drug prescribed to children in the form of Ritalin. The same people that are drugging our children are the same people who tell me flowers are dangerous and evil. I can spot bullshit when I see it. And it’s piling up all around us.

This issue is less about the rule of law, and more about people using laws to unjustly rule, empowering selfish corporate interests to the determent of our whole society. It happens to be a new day, with new avenues of information, and new means of communication and thought. The people of today’s generations will no longer take the answers we’re given. We want answers with REASON.

Does “We the People” still mean “We the People”? If so, why have bills similar to Missouri House Bill #277 gone to the Missouri House several times, only to be put in special session right before the election so it is never voted on by “WE THE PEOPLE”!!!

I’m calling for every Missouri resident and reader to write their representatives at the state and federal level, and DEMAND that your voice be heard. Demand a vote. DEMAND A VOTE!!! I’m calling for YOU to examine the issue. There are many worthwhile references to help enlighten and educate about how we have arrived in our current state of affairs. I will abide by how the people rule; but I will not abide by a system that gives the people no vote, no voice. When a corrupt system has the control, and does not allow “We the People” to have a voice, I guess we don’t really have to worry about terrorists destroying America, we’re doing it all by ourselves: by our inaction.

Please visit Why Is Marijuana Illegal and Resent Research on Medical Marijuana and Watch The Union

Thanks,

The Honorable Joseph T. Blundell

MO House Reps. Email Addresses

Copy and Paste the email addresses below into 2 separate emails.
In each email, demand a vote on Missouri House Bill #277.

Email Addresses Set 1*

Sue.Allen@house.mo.gov, Bert.Atkins@house.mo.gov, Joe.Aull@house.mo.gov,
Kenny.Biermann@house.mo.gov, Walt.Bivins@house.mo.gov, Ellen.Brandom@house.mo.gov,
Rachel.Bringer@house.mo.gov, Dan.Brown@house.mo.gov, Jason.Brown@house.mo.gov,
Michael.Brown@house.mo.gov, Steve.Brown@house.mo.gov, Mark.Bruns@house.mo.gov,
Eric.Burlison@house.mo.gov, John.Burnett@house.mo.gov, Don.Calloway@house.mo.gov,
Chris.Carter@house.mo.gov, Ron.Casey@house.mo.gov, Maria.ChappelleNadal@house.mo.gov,
Mike.Colona@house.mo.gov, Wayne.Cooper@house.mo.gov, Michael.Corcoran@house.mo.gov,
Stanley.Cox@house.mo.gov , Mike.Cunningham@house.mo.gov, Shalonn.Curls@house.mo.gov,
ask.cynthia@juno.com, David.Day@house.mo.gov, Bill.Deeken@house.mo.gov,
Charlie.Denison@house.mo.gov, Mike.Dethrow@house.mo.gov, Scott.Dieckhaus@house.mo.gov, John.Diehl@house.mo.gov, Bob.Dixon@house.mo.gov, Curt.Dougherty@house.mo.gov, Tony.Dugger@house.mo.gov, Gary.Dusenberg@house.mo.gov, TD.El-Amin@house.mo.gov, Ed.Emery@house.mo.gov, Vicki.Englund@house.mo.gov, Doug.Ervin@house.mo.gov, Chuck.Gatschenberger@house.mo.gov, Jason.Grill@house.mo.gov, Jeff.Grisamore@house.mo.gov, Casey.Guernsey@house.mo.gov, Jim.Guest@house.mo.gov, edharrisfarm@yahoo.com, Steve.Hobbs@house.mo.gov, Steve.Hodges@house.mo.gov, Jason.Holsman@house.mo.gov, Denny.Hoskins@house.mo.gov, Theodore.Hoskins@house.mo.gov, leonard.hughes@house.mo.gov, Jacob.Hummel@house.mo.gov, Allen.Icet@house.mo.gov, Kenny.Jones@house.mo.gov,
Tim.Jones@house.mo.gov, Tishaura.Jones@house.mo.gov, Jason.Kander@house.mo.gov,
Shelley.Keeney@house.mo.gov, Chris.Kelly@house.mo.gov, Gayle.Kingery@house.mo.gov,
Jeanne.Kirkton@house.mo.gov, Andrew.Koenig@house.mo.gov, Sam.Komo@house.mo.gov,
Michele.Kratky@house.mo.gov, Will.Kraus@house.mo.gov, JC.Kuessner@house.mo.gov,
Mike.Lair@house.mo.gov, Sara.Lampe@house.mo.gov, Scott.Largent@house.mo.gov,
Mike.Leara@house.mo.gov, Roman.LeBlanc@house.mo.gov, Paul.Levota@house.mo.gov,
Albert.Liese@house.mo.gov, Scott.Lipke@house.mo.gov, Tom.Loehner@house.mo.gov,
Beth.Low@house.mo.gov, Rebecca.McClanahan@house.mo.gov, Tom.McDonald@house.mo.gov,

Email Address Set 2*

Mike.McGhee@house.mo.gov, Cole.McNary@house.mo.gov, Margo.McNeil@house.mo.gov,
Tim.Meadows@house.mo.gov, Kate.Meiners@house.mo.gov, Chris.Molendorp@house.mo.gov,
James.Morris@house.mo.gov, Brian.Munzlinger@house.mo.gov, Bob.Nance@house.mo.gov,
Jamilah.Nasheed@house.mo.gov, Brian.Nieves@house.mo.gov, Bob.Nance@house.mo.gov,
Jerry.Nolte@house.mo.gov, Charlie.Norr@house.mo.gov, Jeanette.Oxford@house.mo.gov,
Sharon.Pace@house.mo.gov, Mark.Parkinson@house.mo.gov, Mike.Parson@house.mo.gov,
Darrell.Pollock@house.mo.gov, Bryan.Pratt@house.mo.gov, Paul.Quinn@house.mo.gov,
Ronald.Richard@house.mo.gov, Jeanie.Riddle@house.mo.gov, Jeff.Roorda@house.mo.gov,
Martin.Rucker@house.mo.gov, Marilyn.Ruestman@house.mo.gov, Don.Ruzicka@house.mo.gov,
Ray.Salva@house.mo.gov, Therese.Sander@house.mo.gov, David.Sater@house.mo.gov,
Luke.Scavuzzo@house.mo.gov, Rob.Schaaf@house.mo.gov, Rodney.Schad@house.mo.gov,
Dwight.Scharnhorst@house.mo.gov, Ed.Schieffer@house.mo.gov, Charlie.Schlottach@house.mo.gov, Shane.Schoeller@house.mo.gov, Sue.Schoemehl@house.mo.gov, Jill.Schupp@house.mo.gov, Tom.Self@house.mo.gov, Tom.Shively@house.mo.gov, Ryan.Silvey@house.mo.gov, Trent.Skaggs@house.mo.gov, Jason.Smith@house.mo.gov, Joe.Smith@house.mo.gov, Michael.Spreng@house.mo.gov, Bryan.Stevenson@house.mo.gov, stevenbp@georgetown.edu, Mary.Still@house.mo.gov, Rachel.Storch@house.mo.gov, Rick.Stream@house.mo.gov, Mike.Sutherland@house.mo.gov, Terry.Swinger@house.mo.gov, Mike.Talboy@house.mo.gov, Mike.Thomson@house.mo.gov, Steven.Tilley@house.mo.gov, Tom.Todd@house.mo.gov, Clint.Tracy@house.mo.gov, Jim.Viebrock@house.mo.gov, Michael.Vogt@house.mo.gov, Maynard.Wallace@house.mo.gov, Gina.Walsh@house.mo.gov, Rochelle.Gray@house.mo.gov, Jay.Wasson@house.mo.gov, Steve.Webb@house.mo.gov, Stephen.Webber@house.mo.gov, Don.Wells@house.mo.gov, Raymond.Weter@house.mo.gov, Ed.Wildberger@house.mo.gov, Kevin.Wilson@house.mo.gov, Larry.Wilson@house.mo.gov, Terry.Witte@house.mo.gov, Dennis.Wood@house.mo.gov, Billy.Wright@house.mo.gov, Patricia.Yaeger@house.mo.gov, Brian.Yates@house.mo.gov, Anne.Zerr@house.mo.gov, Jake.Zimmerman@house.mo.gov

*Most email accounts will only let you email less than 100 emails at a time. That is why 2 emails are suggested.