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Missouri House passes bill that would get rid of residency requirements for police officers

Local governments would be able to require officers to be able to respond to work within an hour but would not be able to require they live in the area they serve
Credit: Rick Meyer / KSDK
Missouri State Capitol

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — The Missouri House of Representatives passed a bill that would do away with the residency requirement for police officers across the state.

House Bill 1604 would make it so no city, village, town, county, township or board of police would be allowed to require any employed or prospective law enforcement officer to live in the area they serve. Local governments would be able to require officers to be able to respond to work within an hour.

The bill was sponsored by Republican Representative Ron Hicks, who represents part of St. Charles County.

In January, the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department was down more than 100 police officers, and leaders in the area blamed the city's residency requirement. 

"Our biggest hurdle is this residency rule," Sergeant Donny Walters said back in January.

RELATED: SLMPD down 138 officers, blames residency requirement

Last year, Mayor Lyda Krewson supported a change that would have gotten rid of the residency requirement, but the Board of Aldermen shot it down.

At the time, Alderwoman Cara Spencer told 5 On Your Side she agreed that public safety was the "paramount" concern, but said, "This is the mayor bypassing the city legislature and city voters."

RELATED: Mayor wants state to step in and make city residency change that St. Louis BOA rejected

The bill passed out of the House by a 105-41 vote. Eleven of the no votes were by St. Louis representatives. Eight other St. Louis representatives voted in favor of it.

The bill still has a few more steps before it would become law in Missouri. It was sent to the Senate for another round of debates. If it passes the Senate, it would be sent to the Governor's desk to be approved.

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