Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 02

New

Township organization is an option open to third- and fourth class-counties in Missouri. Townships have been chosen by 22 counties.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 04

New

The township board has three members and three votes. At the first meeting after election, one of the two board members is designated president, primarily to sign papers in the township’s name.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 07

New

The 2005 Missouri General Assembly passed legislation eliminating the office of township collector, effective March 1, 2007. The essence of the change is that the county treasurer ex officio collector is re-titled collector-treasurer and assumes the duties of the township collectors.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 10

New

The Sunshine Law, also known as the Open Meetings and Records Law, covers all political subdivisions in Missouri, including townships.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 13

New

Townships often do not think of themselves as employers needing personnel policies. Most have but one employee, an operator, and work arrangements are often informal.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 16

New

A township may, with voter approval, adopt planning, zoning or both, except in counties that have adopted county planning, zoning or both.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 19

New

Tax rates must be in the hands of the county clerk before Sept. 1 in order to receive revenue from any year’s tax bills. Rates must be set in an official board meeting.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 03

New

Township elections are held on municipal election day (the first Tuesday after the first Monday in April) and are conducted by the county election authority. To hold township office, each official must live in the township, be a registered voter in the township and remain a resident of the township during the term of office.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 05

New

The clerk must attend all board meetings, but has no vote on board decisions; must keep minutes of meetings and actions taken in a book the township provides; and buys, at township expense, such other books, forms and papers as may be needed

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 08

New

If one-fourth of the registered voters in a township or townships petition the county commission to change township boundaries, the commission must put the proposal on the April ballot. If two-thirds of those voting on the issue approve the change, it is made.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 11

New

Not a single cent of public money may be spent until a budget has been formally adopted following procedures set out in the statutes.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 14

New

Officials or public employees who appoint a relative forfeit their office or job. This happens at the time the appointment is made. Appointment does not have to be to a paid position.

Rules for Missouri Townships, Page 17

New

General road laws can be found in chapters 228, 229 and 231 RSMo. All road laws apply to township counties unless the law specifically states otherwise.

Rules for Missouri Townships

New

Township organization is an option open to third- and fourth class-counties in Missouri. This manual is intended as a resource for people who make township government work.

Wood-Destroying Pest Management (Category 7B)

Revised $15

Editor's note
The following abstract describes a publication that is only available for purchase.

Sowbugs, Pillbugs, Millipedes and Centipedes

Reviewed

Your browser does not support the video tag.Richar

Paddlefish Production: Opportunities for Missouri Pond and Lake Owners

New

Robert A. Pierce II
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences

Robert S. Hayward
Associate professor
MU Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences

Joe Parcell and Chris Boessen
Missouri Value Added Center
MU Department of Agricultural Economics

Safe Use, Storage and Disposal of Pesticides

Reviewed

Marie Steinwachs
Office of Waste Management

Pesticides are chemicals designed to kill or repel living things that are considered by humans to be pests. Pesticides include insecticides, herbicides, rodenticides, fungicides, wood preservatives, molluscicides and disinfectants.

Fathering to Meet the Needs of Children

Revised

Denise E. Taylor
Extension Program Assistant

Janet A. Clark
Associate Program Leader and Associate State Specialist
Human Development and Family Studies

Family Councils: The Key is Communication

Revised

The family council is a time for family concerns to be discussed. Visit our website to view our Family Councils: The Key is Communication.

Pumps and Watering Systems for Managed Beef Grazing

Reviewed

Watering a herd year round can be difficult and costly. Visit our site to learn about Pumps and Watering Systems for Managed Beef Grazing.

Cambio de Colores — Latinos in Missouri: Gateway to a New Community

New

Proceedings of the 2004 annual conference
Including selected papers from 2003

Editor's note
The following abstract describes a publication that is only available as a downloadable PDF.

NIMS Model Procedures Guides Package

New $155

This package includes the printed versions of the NIMS Model Procedures Guides, Books 1 and 2.

Special Operations — Incidents Involving Hazardous Materials/ WMD, Structural Collapse, Wildland, and Managing Large-Scale Incidents Using NIMS-ICS (Book 2), First Edition Manual

New $70 to $82

This manual covers incidents pertaining to wildland fires, hazardous materials incidents, USAR/structural collapse incidents, and other types of large-scale incidents. It applies ICS to specific types of incidents.

Emergency Management Handbook, First Edition Manual E-book

New $58

Editor’s note
The following abstract describes a publication that is available for purchase in print or as an e-book.

To order publications for a tax-exempt organization, contact extpubs@missouri.edu for instructions.

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