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Votes at a glance: key House roll calls from April 8, 2026

April 09, 2026 | 2026 Legislature MO, Missouri


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Votes at a glance: key House roll calls from April 8, 2026
Several House roll-call votes were recorded on April 8. The following is a concise summary of final outcomes reported on the floor:

- House Committee Substitute for House Bill 18 69 (gravestone repairs for veterans): third read and passed (yeas 137, nays 2). Sponsor described a fund administered by the veterans commission to repair gravestones damaged by natural causes for those buried in private or public cemeteries when no other provision exists.

- House Committee Substitute for House Bill 25 17 (real estate wholesaler disclosure): passed (recorded during the session); sponsors described it as a consumer protection measure requiring disclosure to sellers about wholesalers’ practices.

- House Committee Substitute for House Bill 2 517 (HCS HB2517): third read and passed (yeas 130, nays 6).

- House Bill 31 07 (financial-institution liability guidance): passed on third reading (yeas 88, nays 49).

- House Committee Substitute for House Bill 22 92 (cross-reporting for child abuse and companion animal reporting): third read and passed (yeas 125, nays 12).

- House Committee Substitute for House Bill 30 80 (historic preservation tax credit restoration): third read and passed (yeas 104, nays 34). A motion to adopt the emergency clause for that bill failed (ayes 2, nays 131).

- House Bill 28 85 (water patrol funding via boater registration fees): third read and passed (yeas 112, nays 27).

These floor tallies are taken directly from the clerk’s announcements during the April 8 session. Where specific vote counts were reported on the floor they are listed above.

What this means: measures that passed will either proceed to the Senate (where applicable) or to the governor for signature, depending on their legislative status and whether either chamber must reconcile differences.

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