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

Missouri House of Representatives · April 9, 2026

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Summary

The Missouri House recorded final passage on several bills April 8. Highlights: HB1869 (veterans gravestone repairs) passed 137–2; HB2517 passed 130–6; HB3107 passed 88–49; HB2292 (cross-reporting child abuse/animal reporting) passed 125–12; HB3080 (historic tax credit restoration) passed 104–34.

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.