East High Street to see new improvements
Jefferson City and Cole County are working on a joint project that will improve East High Street from Locust Street to Vetter Lane.
Continue ReadingJefferson City and Cole County are working on a joint project that will improve East High Street from Locust Street to Vetter Lane.
Continue ReadingOfficials are warning drivers to avoid Missouri Boulevard and Highway 50 for an unknown amount of time.
Continue ReadingJefferson City (will pay) for the demolition of the building at 200 E. High St., which partially collapsed in June of 2018.
Continue ReadingFootage captured at the scene of a suspected arson appears to show a person firing a projectile at the Missouri Probation and Parole Office, shortly before flames erupt inside.
Continue ReadingIt’s possible that Missourians have begun preparing their 2019 income tax return, however, thousands have complained about not yet receiving their 2018 refund from the Missouri Department of Revenue.
Continue ReadingJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) Jefferson City’s Public Works department is equipped with 24 plow trucks “ready to go” for the forecasted snow. Britt Smith, the Jefferson City Public Works operations division director said when temperatures near that freezing mark, he will have a crew of supervisors out monitoring the roads determining when to bring in
Continue ReadingFor a second time, Missouri republicans could attempt an overhaul of the state’s redistricting process, which was put in place by voters in 2018. The current process was included in Amendment 1, also known as Clean Missouri, a petition-borne measure centered on ethics reform that was approved by more than 60 percent of Missouri voters.
Continue ReadingJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) The Jefferson City Council moved to delay a discussion and vote on a demolition contract for a crumbling downtown building. 200 E. High Street has been sitting empty since the partial collapse of its western wall in June 2018. The council was set to decide on a $300,000 demolition contract at
Continue ReadingBusinesses are lending a hand in getting people safe this New Years in Columbia and Jefferson City.
Continue ReadingMid-Missouri fire experts say holiday decorations put residents at a higher risk for house fires.
Continue ReadingDHSS approved 60 cultivation applications out of the 540 requests submitted.
Continue ReadingThe Salvation Army in Columbia provides food for over five thousand members of the community as the Christmas program increased by 58 percent this year and another four thousand in Jefferson City, including 500 children.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) The Jefferson City Fire Department responded to a structure fire in the 700 block of East High Street on Thursday afternoon. “We arrived on scene, heavy fire and smoke showing from the front of the building,” Turner said. “We attempted an aggressive offensive attack and immediately went into a defensive operation.”
Continue ReadingThe Jefferson City Department of Planning and Protective Services added six buildings to its list of those considered ‘dangerous’ in November.
Continue ReadingA Jefferson City fire that killed one dog was caused by a wood-burning stove.
Continue ReadingOfficials with the Jefferson City School District said everything went as expected during Tuesday morning’s adjusted start time.
Continue ReadingRoad crews in Missouri’s capital worked around the clock on Tuesday as the second round of a winter storm moved dropped snow and water.
Continue ReadingA contract has been awarded for the demolition of 415 E. Ashley St. in Jefferson City, which was officially declared a blight on the neighborhood in 2016.
Continue ReadingJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (KMIZ) The Missouri Flood Recovery Advisory Working Group plans to continue meeting through April 2020. The group, established by Governor Mike Parson in August, is putting together flooding recovery recommendations to give the governor’s office by the end of the month. Focus areas include the state’s current levee system, flooding mitigation and
Continue ReadingThe opioid epidemic continues in Missouri despite initiatives focused on prevention, treatment and recovery.
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