The Missouri Supreme Court on Tuesday struck down a law that threatened homeless people with jail time for sleeping on state land.

Judges ruled unanimously to toss the law for violating a section of the Missouri Constitution that prohibits legislation from containing multiple unrelated subjects.

In this case, the sweeping 64-page bill also dealt with city and county governance and banned COVID-19 vaccine requirements for public workers in Missouri.

Judges ruled that the law is “invalid in its entirety,” Judge Paul Wilson wrote in the court’s decision.

  • magnetosphere
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    6411 months ago

    In this case, the sweeping 64-page bill also dealt with city and county governance and banned COVID-19 vaccine requirements for public workers in Missouri.

    Why is this the only sentence in the entire article that even mentions this part of the law? This is an important issue, too.

    I don’t give a shit if Mabel has a sudden “religious objection” to vaccines, and whines about “freedom” to the few people remaining who can tolerate her. I have an objection to catching potentially deadly diseases from public employees, and unknowingly spreading them. Doesn’t that matter?

    • @kaitco
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      911 months ago

      Doesn’t that matter?

      Apparently not in the state of Mississippi.

    • fmstrat
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      811 months ago

      Even bigger than this is recognizing we don’t have a national law that says a bill can only deal with one subject.

    • Melllvar
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      211 months ago

      Because the lawsuit only challenged the homelessness provision, and the ruling was based on a technicality unrelated to the merits of the law.