Voters to determine future of retirement system for sheriffs, prosecutors
Voters to determine future of retirement system for sheriffs, prosecutors
10/02/2024
There will be a lot of ballot questions for Missouri voters to consider on election day next month. One of them directly impacts the state's sheriffs and prosecutors: Amendment 6.
This is the ballot language: "Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended to provide that the administration of justice shall include the levying of costs and fees to support salaries and benefits for certain current and former law enforcement personnel?"
Voting yes supports the resumption of a $3 court fee that was established in state statue in 1983 for the creation of the Missouri Sheriffs’ Retirement System. It is not a tax. It is a court fee for those who are found guilty of a crime in the state of Missouri. Judges can still opt to waive the fee if they determine financial hardship.
Background: This fee was in place from 1983 until 2015, when a lawsuit brought against the Retirement System went to the Missouri Supreme Court. The court ruled sheriffs and prosecutors were not part of the "administration of justice." Advocates for sheriffs and prosecutors asked state legislators to let voters decide whether the administration of justice includes salary and benefits for sheriffs, prosecutors, and retired sheriffs and prosecutors. That's why the issue is now on the ballot.
If Amendment 6 doesn’t pass, the sheriffs' retirement system is projected to be bankrupt in 9 years, and the prosecutors' system in 15 years.