Texarkana Gazette

Border Missourian­s finally get Missouri addresses

- By Jim Salter

ST. LOUIS—A quirk in the mail delivery system that forced some rural Missouri residents living along the Iowa and Arkansas borders to have mailing addresses in neighborin­g states has been fixed, U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill said Tuesday.

The idiosyncra­sy affected just a few people but created problems and red tape when they voted, paid taxes and even when they died.

McCaskill learned about the oddity last year and began inquiries to the U.S. Postal Service. In a letter to McCaskill on Monday, Postmaster General Megan Brennan wrote that the issue has been resolved and those who previously suffered from border confusion can now use Missouri as their state designatio­n.

Brennan said the conversion has actually been in place for several months without any reported problems.

McCaskill, in a statement, said she was glad “we’ve made progress in fixing this bizarre and inconvenie­nt quirk once and for all.”

McCaskill, a Democrat, serves on the Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee, which has jurisdicti­on over the Postal Service. She is running for re-election against Republican Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley.

The exact number of affected residents was unknown. Also unclear is why Missouri residents were assigned Iowa and Arkansas postal addresses in the first place.

Clark County, Missouri, residents launched a petition drive in 2017 to get address changes because the county of 6,700 residents was adopting a new 911 system and the dozens of residents with Iowa addresses were worried they’d be hard to find in an emergency.

Before the switch, Clark County Clerk Jena Church had to assign the courthouse address to voters who had Iowa addresses because the system wouldn’t allow people with Iowa mailing addresses to vote in Missouri.

Filing taxes also was often problemati­c, and the two-state confusion sometimes slowed the process of obtaining a death certificat­e or collecting life insurance after a relative’s death.

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