NewsFebruary 15, 2008

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Turning aside some budgetary concerns, senators endorsed legislation Thursday to boost the salaries of sheriffs' deputies by raising fees for many legal actions. Sheriffs' offices would charge an extra $10 every time they serve a summons, subpoena or court order for civil lawsuits, under the legislation. That money would be used by a state board to help raise the salaries of deputies in low-paying counties...

The Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Turning aside some budgetary concerns, senators endorsed legislation Thursday to boost the salaries of sheriffs' deputies by raising fees for many legal actions.

Sheriffs' offices would charge an extra $10 every time they serve a summons, subpoena or court order for civil lawsuits, under the legislation. That money would be used by a state board to help raise the salaries of deputies in low-paying counties.

The average salary for a deputy in Missouri is $22,262 annually, according to the Missouri Deputy Sheriffs' Association, an amount less than what it takes to qualify for food stamps and barely above the federal poverty level for a family of four.

Deputies in 91 of Missouri's 114 counties receive starting salaries so low that they are eligible for some sort of public aid, the Missouri Sheriffs' Association said.

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The legislature creates new crimes each year, yet "the people who are out there enforcing the laws we make a very, very substandard pay," said Sen. John Griesheimer, R-Washington, the bill's sponsor and chairman of a special Senate committee that studied funding for sheriffs' offices.

The Senate gave first-round approval to the legislation 24-2 with eight senators not voting. Several senators who spoke against the plan left the chamber before the vote. The bill needs a second Senate vote to move to the House.

Sheriffs' departments already charge $10 for each subpoena they serve for lawsuits and $20 for other civil legal services, such as summons.

The new fee is expected to generate between $4 million and $6 million annually, said the Missouri Sheriffs' Association. The money would be distributed to counties by the Missouri Sheriff Methamphetamine Relief Taskforce, an existing five-member board of sheriffs appointed by the governor that oversees anti-methamphetamine funding.

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