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HB 1722

relative to consumer protections and energy classifications for large-use electric facilities.

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Rebecca Perkins Kwoka and 1 co-sponsor

Moves all school board elections to general election day, sets two-year terms with a plurality winner, imposes an eight-year total limit starting 2028, and makes elections partisan

Inexpedient to Legislate: MA RC 185-156 03/12/2026 HJ 8 P. 87
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Bill Summary · HB 1722

Summary — HB 1722 (school board elections)

Note: The document you provided includes multiple, unrelated bills titled “HB 1722” from different states (Arkansas — hemp regulation; Illinois — short bill descriptions; Mississippi — appropriations). This summary covers the school-board‑focused text (Missouri draft) that matches the title you supplied: “Modifies the election date, terms of office, and term limits for members of school boards.”

Purpose

Change the timing, length, partisanship, and term‑limit rules for local school board members (with emphasis on seven‑member and urban school districts), and update related statutory sections in the Missouri Revised Statutes.

Key provisions

  • Election timing:
    • Requires elections for all school board members to be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of even‑numbered years (i.e., general election day).
  • Term length:
    • Beginning with members elected on that November 2028 election date and thereafter, all school board terms are two years.
    • The candidate receiving the most votes in each race is elected (plurality rule).
  • Transition rules:
    • Members whose terms expire before the November 2028 date, or in odd‑numbered years thereafter, continue to serve until successors are elected and qualified at the next general election.
    • In even‑numbered years during the transition, the number of seats up for election equals those whose terms would have expired in the prior odd‑numbered year plus those expiring in the current even‑numbered year.
  • Term limits:
    • Beginning with the November 2028 election, no school board member may serve more than eight years total.
    • Service on a board prior to the 2028 general election is counted toward the eight‑year limit.
  • Partisan elections:
    • Beginning with the November 2028 election, school board elections must be partisan — candidates must declare a party affiliation or file as independents.
  • Affected statutes and structure:
    • Repeals and replaces multiple existing sections (e.g., RSMo §§ 162.241, 162.261, 162.341, etc.) and enacts a new section (162.082) to carry these rules.
    • Clarifies applicability to seven‑director (seven‑member) and urban school districts; in some urban/large districts, election authorities conduct the elections (and those elections will be partisan).
  • Vacancy appointments:
    • Continues provisions for filling vacancies by remaining board members; if more than two vacancies occur, county commission (or county executive/council where applicable) appoints replacements until the next election.

Who is affected

  • School board members (especially in seven‑member and designated urban districts).
  • Prospective candidates (must run in partisan contests beginning 2028).
  • Voters in local school districts (elections moved to general election cycle).
  • Local election authorities and county commissions (administration, ballot management, and appointment duties).
  • District governance/administration (more frequent elections, potential for turnover).

Timeline and implementation

  • Changes take effect for elections beginning with the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November 2028.
  • Current members continue to serve until successors are elected/qualified per the transition rules.
  • Prior service counts toward the new eight‑year limit.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Voter turnout may increase by aligning school board contests with general elections; costs and ballot management will shift accordingly.
  • Two‑year terms and partisan ballots may increase campaign frequency and politicize local school boards.
  • Term limits could reduce long incumbencies but may also reduce institutional knowledge and continuity.
  • Local election authorities will need to update candidate filing processes and ballots to accommodate partisan school board contests.

If you want, I can:
- Draft a one‑page explainer for district administrators on operational impacts (candidate filing, ballot scheduling, vacancies).
- Produce a side‑by‑side before/after comparison of the current statute versus the proposed changes.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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