Mo. Code Regs. Ann. tit. 10, § 40-8.010
PURPOSE: This rule sets forth definitions applicable to 10 CSR 40-3–10 CSR 40-9, pursuant to section 444.810, RSMo.
Editor’s Note: The secretary of state has determined that the publication of this rule in its entirety would be unduly cumbersome or expensive. The entire text of the rule has been filed with the secretary of state. ASTM Standard D 388-77 is incorporated by reference as it exists on February 11, 1980. The entire text of this rule may be found at the headquarters of the agency and is available to any interested person at a cost established by state law.
(1) Definitions.
(A) As used throughout 10 CSR 40-3–10 CSR 40-9, the following terms have the specified meaning except where otherwise indicated:
of less than six (6) and in which total acidity exceeds total alkalinity, discharged from an active, inactive or abandoned surface coal mine and reclamation operation or from an area affected by surface coal mining and reclamation operations;
materials that contain sulfide minerals or other materials which, if exposed to air, water or weathering processes, form acids that may create acid drainage;
Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-87);
side the affected area, permit area or mine area, depending on the context in which adjacent area is used, where air, surface or ground water, fish, wildlife, vegetation or other resources may be adversely impacted by surface coal mining and reclamation operations including probable impacts from underground workings;
water surface area which is used to facilitate, or is physically altered by, surface coal mining and reclamation operations. The affected area includes the disturbed area; any area upon which surface coal mining and reclamation operations are conducted; any adjacent lands the use of which is incidental to surface coal mining and reclamation operations; all areas covered by new and existing roads used to gain access to, or for hauling coal to or from surface coal mining and reclamation operations, except as provided in this definition; any area covered by surface excavations, workings, impoundments, dams, ventilation shafts, entryways, refuse banks, dumps, stockpiles, overburden piles, spoil banks, culm banks, tailings, holes or depressions, repair areas, storage areas, shipping areas; any area upon which are sited structures, facilities or other property material on the surface resulting from, or incident to, surface coal mining and reclamation operations; and the area located above underground workings. Public roads may be included in the affected area and regulated on a case-by-case basis, as determined by the extent of mining-related use;
tract of land for the production of animal or vegetable life. The uses include, but are not limited to, the pasturing, grazing and watering of livestock and the cropping, cultivation and harvesting of plants;
anthracite in ASTM Standard D 388-77. Coal classifications are published by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) under the title, Standard Specification for Classification of Coals by Rank, ASTM D 388-77, on pages 220–224. Table I which classifies the coals by rank is presented on page 223. This publication is incorporated by reference as it exists on February 11, 1980;
a permit from the commission or director to conduct surface coal mining and reclamation operations or a revision or renewal of the permit;
that surface configuration achieved by backfilling and grading of the mined areas so that the reclaimed area, including any terracing or access roads, closely resembles the general surface configuration of the land prior to mining and blends into and complements the drainage pattern of the surrounding terrain with all highwalls, spoil piles and coal refuse piles eliminated. Permanent water impoundments may be permitted where it is determined that they comply with 10 CSR 40- 3.040(10) and (17) and 10 CSR 40-3.130;
group of strata that can store and transmit water in sufficient quantities for a specific use;
mining coal at a cliff or highwall by drilling holes into an exposed coal seam from the 10 CSR 40-8
highwall and transporting the coal along an auger bit to the surface;
means equipment, devices, systems, methods or techniques which will—
additional contributions of suspended solids to stream flow or runoff outside the permit area, but in no event result in contributions of suspended solids in excess of requirements set by applicable state or federal laws; and
disturbance and adverse impact on fish, wildlife and related environmental values and achieve enhancement of those resources where practicable. The term includes equipment, devices, systems, methods or techniques which are currently available anywhere even if they are not in routine use. The term includes, but is not limited to, construction practices, siting requirements, vegetative selection and planting requirements, animal stocking requirements, scheduling of activities and design of siltation structures in accordance with 10 CSR 40-3. Within the constraints of the permanent program, the commission and director will determine the best technology currently available on a caseby-case basis;
which establishes a limit of mining-related disturbance beyond which a variance to the regulations must be obtained before disturbance;
ceous rock, classified as anthracite, bituminous, subbituminous or lignite by ASTM Standard D 388-77, referred to and incorporated by reference in the definition of anthracite in paragraph (1)(A)7.;
gathering of—
physical or chemical data by mapping, trenching, drilling, geophysical or other techniques necessary to determine the quality and quantity of overburden and coal of an area; or
conditions of an area before beginning surface coal mining and reclamation operations under the requirements of the regulatory program;
cessing waste and underground development waste;
portion of the permitted area used for the benefication of raw coal and structures related to the benefication process, such as the washer, tipple, crusher, slurry pond(s), gob pile and all waste material directly connected with the cleaning, preparation and shipping of coal, but does not include subsurface coal waste disposal areas;
means the reclamation of the coal preparation area by disposal or burial, or both, of coal waste according to the approved reclamation plan, the replacement of topsoil and initial seeding;
ration plant means a facility where coal is subjected to chemical or physical processing or cleaning, concentrating or other processing or preparation. It includes facilities associated with coal preparation activities, including, but not limited to, the following: loading facilities; storage and stockpile facilities; sheds, shops and other buildings; water treatment and water storage facilities; settling basins and impoundments; coal processing and other waste disposal areas; and roads, railroad and other transport facilities;
materials which are separated and wasted from the product coal during the cleaning, concentrating or other processing or preparation of coal;
surface deposit of coal mine waste that does not impound water, slurry or other liquid or semiliquid material;
ic material that is capable of burning, either by fire or through oxidation, accompanied by the evolution of heat and a significant temperature rise;
Reclamation Commission created by section 444.520, RSMo;
density of a material by reducing the voids between the particles and is generally accomplished by controlled placement and mechanical effort, such as from repeated application of wheel, track or roller loads from heavy equipment;
production of adapted crops for harvest, alone or in a rotation with grasses and legumes and includes row crops, small grain crops, hay crops, nursery crops, orchard crops and other similar specialty crops;
area, including the permit area within which impacts resulting from the proposed operation may interact with the impacts of all anticipated mining on surface and ground water systems. Anticipated mining shall include, at a minimum, the entire projected lives through bond release of:
application has been submitted to the Land Reclamation Program; and
diligent development requirements for leased federal coal for which there is actual mine development information available;
of the Interior;
Land Reclamation Commission;
director of the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement or the representative of the director of the office;
vegetation, topsoil or overburden is removed or upon which topsoil, spoil, coal processing waste, underground development waste or noncoal waste is placed by surface coal mining operations. Those areas are classified as disturbed until reclamation is complete and the performance bond required by 10 CSR 40-7 is released;
ment or other man-made structure constructed to divert water from one (1) area to another;
between the projected outcrop of the lowest coalbed being mined along each highwall and a valley floor;
deposit of material that is raised above the natural surface of the land and used to contain, divert or store water, support roads or railways or for other similar purposes;
which flows only in direct response to precipitation in the immediate watershed or in response to the melting of a cover of snow and ice and which has a channel bottom that is always above the local water table;
or facility used in connection with or to facilitate surface coal mining and reclamation operations for which construction begins prior to the approval of a state program;
including mineral interest, owned by the United States, without regard to how the United States acquired ownership of the lands or which agency manages the lands. It does not include Indian lands;
gram established by the secretary pursuant to section 523 of the Act to regulate surface coal mining and reclamation operations on federal lands;
established by the secretary pursuant to section 504 of the Act to regulate coal exploration and surface coal mining and reclamation operations on nonfederal and non-Indian lands within a state in accordance with the Act and 30 CFR 736;
matter not emitted from a duct or stack which becomes airborne due to the forces of wind or surface coal mining and reclamation operations or both. During surface coal mining and reclamation operations it may include: emissions from haul roads; wind erosion of exposed surfaces, storage piles and spoil piles; reclamation operations; and other activities in which material is either removed, stored, transported or redistributed;
water that fills available openings in rock or soil materials to the extent that they are considered water saturated;
with a woody base whose annually produced stems die back each year;
structure consisting of any material, other than coal processing waste and organic material, placed in the uppermost reaches of a hollow where side slopes of the existing hollow measured at the steepest point are greater than twenty degrees (>20°) or the average slope of the profile of the hollow from the toe of the fill to the top of the fill is greater than ten degrees (>10°). In fills with less than two hundred fifty thousand (<250,000) cubic yards of material, associated with contour mining, the top surface of the fill will be at the elevation of the coal seam. In all other head-of-hollow fills, the top surface of the fill, when completed, is at approximately the same elevation as the adjacent ridge line, and no significant area of natural drainage occurs above the fill draining into the fill area;
overburden and coal in an open cut of a surface coal mining activity or for entry to underground mining activities;
means—
cropland for any five (5) years or more out of the ten (10) years immediately preceding the acquisition, including purchase, lease or option, of the land for the purpose of conducting or allowing through resale, lease or option the conduct of surface coal mining and reclamation operations;
additional cropland history of the surrounding lands and the lands under consideration, that the permit area is clearly cropland but falls outside the specific five (5)-year-in-ten (10) criterion, in which case the regulations for prime farmland may be applied to include more years of cropland history only to increase the prime farmland acreage to be preserved; or
used as cropland for any five (5) out of the last ten (10) years immediately preceding acquisition but for the same fact of ownership or control of the land unrelated to the productivity of the land;
tionship between the quality and quantity of water inflow to, water outflow from and water storage in a hydrologic unit, such as a drainage basin, aquifer, soil zone, lake or reservoir. It encompasses the dynamic relationships among precipitation, runoff, evaporation and changes in ground and surface water storage;
state of water movement in a given area. It is a function of the climate and includes the phenomena by which water first occurs as atmospheric water vapor, passes into a liquid or solid form, falls as precipitation, moves along or into the ground surface and returns to the atmosphere as vapor by means of evaporation and transpiration;
safety of the public means the existence of any condition or practice, or any violation of a permit or other requirements of the law in a surface coal mining and reclamation operation, which condition, practice or violation could reasonably be expected to cause substantial physical harm to persons outside the permit area before the condition, practice or violation can be abated. A reasonable expectation of death or serious injury before abatement exists, if a rational person subjected to the same condition or practice giving rise to the peril, would avoid exposure to the danger during the time necessary for abatement;
embankment or other structure used to impound water, slurry or other liquid or semiliquid material;
ment, slurry or other liquid or semiliquid holding structures and depressions, either naturally formed or artificially built;
conducted on the surface or underground in connection with in-place distillation, retorting, leaching or other chemical or physical processing of coal. The term includes, but is not limited to, in situ gasification, in situ leaching, slurry mining, solution mining, bore-hole mining and fluid recovery mining;
or reach of a stream that—
(1) square mile; or
least some part of the year, and obtains its flow from both surface runoff and groundwater discharge;
management-related activities, rather than the vegetation or cover of the land. Land uses may be identified in combination when joint or seasonal uses occur. Changes of land use or uses from one (1) of the following categories to another shall be considered as a change to an alternative land use which is subject to approval in the permit and plan:
production of adapted crops for harvest, alone or in a rotation with grasses and legumes and includes row crops, small grain crops, hay crops, nursery crops, orchard crops and other similar specialty crops. Land used for facilities in support of cropland farming operations which is adjacent to or an integral part of these operations is also included for purposes of these land use categories;
for the long-term production of adapted, domesticated, forage plants to be grazed by livestock or occasionally cut and cured for livestock feed. Land used for facilities in support of pastureland or land occasionally cut for hay which is adjacent to or an integral part of these operations is also included;
which has been historically used for crop production, as defined previously, and which has prime farmland soils as defined by the United States Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service (now known as the Natural Resources Conservation Service) in 7 CFR 657;
managed for the long-term production of wood, wood fiber or wood-derived products. Land used for facilities in support of forest harvest and management operations which is adjacent to or an integral part of these operations is also included;
multi-family housing, mobile home parks and other residential lodgings. Land used for facilities in support of residential operations which is adjacent to or an integral part of these operations is also included. Support facilities include, but are not limited to, vehicle parking and open space that directly relate to the residential use;
used for—
materials for fabrication of products, wholesaling of products or for long-term storage of products. This includes all heavy and light 10 CSR 40-8
manufacturing facilities such as lumber and wood processing, chemical manufacturing, petroleum refining and fabricated metal products manufactured. Land used for facilities in support of these operations which is adjacent to or an integral part of that operation is also included. Support facilities include, but are not limited to, all railroad or other transportation facilities; and
vices, including hotels, motels, stores, restaurants and other commercial establishments. Land used for facilities in support of commercial operations which is adjacent to or an integral part of these operations is also included. Support facilities include, but are not limited to, parking, storage or shipping facilities;
public or private leisure-time use, including developed recreation facilities such as parks, camps and amusement areas, as well as areas for less intensive uses such as hiking, canoeing and other undeveloped recreational uses;
land dedicated wholly or partially to the production, protection or management of species of fish or wildlife;
water for beneficial uses such as stockponds, irrigation, fire protection, flood control and water supply; and
is undeveloped or, if previously developed, land that has been allowed to return naturally to an undeveloped state or has been allowed to return to forest through natural succession;
coal mining and reclamation law or surface coal mining law means sections 444.800–444.940, RSMo;
the permit area. Other terms defined in this rule which relate closely to mine plan area are—
be within or the same as the permit area; and
round or extend beyond the affected area, permit area or mine plan area;
other suitable materials that aid in soil stabilization and soil moisture conservation, thus providing microclimatic conditions suitable for germination and growth;
have been included on official state lists of noxious plants;
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (OSMRE) established under Title II of the Act;
in coal mining;
chemical treatments, such as flocculation or neutralization, or mechanical structures, such as clarifiers or precipitators, that have a point source discharge and that are utilized—
of dissolved or suspended solids to stream flow or runoff outside the permit area; or
and federal water quality laws and regulations;
or embankment sloping downward from the highest elevation to the toe;
nature, consolidated or unconsolidated, that overlies a coal deposit excluding topsoil;
part of a stream that flows continuously during all of the calendar year as a result of groundwater discharge or surface runoff. The term does not include intermittent stream or ephemeral stream;
bond, personal bond or a combination of them, by which a permittee assures faithful performance of all the requirements of the regulatory program and the requirements of the permit and reclamation plan;
sion remaining after surface coal mining and reclamation operations are completed which has been approved for retention in the permit and plan and other appropriate state and federal agencies;
surface coal mining and reclamation operations or coal exploration operations issued by the commission pursuant to the regulatory program;
indicated on the approved map submitted by the operator with his/her application, which area of land shall be covered by the operator’s bond and shall be readily identifiable by appropriate markers on the site;
permit or required by this law to hold a permit issued by the commission or director pursuant to this law to conduct surface coal mining and reclamation operations and coal exploration;
nership, copartnership, firm, company, public or private corporation, association, joint stock company trust, estate, political subdivision or any agency, board, department or bureau of the state or federal government, or any other legal entity which is recognized by law as the subject of rights and duties;
may be adversely affected or person with a valid legal interest shall include any person:
nomic, recreational, aesthetic or environmental value that may be adversely affected by coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations or any related action of the commission or director; or
adversely affected by coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations or any related action of the commission or director;
submitted by an applicant as a condition precedent to receiving a permit;
of water resulting from drizzle, rain, snow, sleet or hail in a limited period of time. It may be expressed in terms of recurrence interval. As used in these rules, precipitation event also includes that quantity of water emanating from snow cover as snow melts in a limited period of time;
affected by surface coal mining operations prior to August 3, 1977, that has not been reclaimed to the standards of 10 CSR 40 Chapters 3–8;
meets the technical criteria established by the Secretary of Agriculture in 7 CFR 657 (FR Vol. 4, No. 21) and which has historically been used for cropland as that phrase is defined above;
the direction and control of a governmental entity which is open to public access on a regular basis during reasonable business hours;
of the soils and underlying materials to allow precipitation and runoff to infiltrate and reach the zone of saturation;
taken to restore mined land, as required by the regulatory program, to postmining land use approved in the permit and plan;
mitted by an applicant for a permit which sets forth a plan for reclamation of the proposed surface coal mining operations;
val of time in which a precipitation event is expected to occur once on the average. For example, the ten- (10-) year, twenty-four- (24-) hour precipitation event would be that twenty-four- (24-) hour precipitation event expected to occur on the average once in ten (10) years;
maintained under appropriate management for the purpose of measuring vegetation ground cover, productivity and plant species diversity that are produced naturally or by crop production methods approved in the permit and plan. Reference areas must be representative of geology, soil, slope and vegetation in the permit area;
of coal mine waste that does not impound water, slurry or other liquid or semiliquid material;
director of the office or a regional director’s representative;
Land Reclamation Commission, the director, or their designated representatives and employees unless otherwise specified in these rules;
and all regulations adopted pursuant to the law and submitted to and approved by the secretary of the office;
aquifers and areas for the recharge of aquifers and other underground waters, areas for agricultural or silvicultural production of food and fiber and grazing lands;
with respect to protected water supplies contaminated, diminished or interrupted by coal mining operations, provision of water supply on both a temporary and permanent basis equivalent to premining quality and quantity. Replacement includes provision of an equivalent water delivery system and payment of any excess operation and maintenance costs over what had been customary and reasonable delivery costs for premining water supplies.
and the water supply owner, the obligation to pay such operation and maintenance costs may be satisfied by a one- (1-) time payment in an amount which covers the present worth of the increased annual operation and maintenance costs for a period agreed to by the permittee and the water supply owner.
needed for the land use in existence at the time of loss, contamination or diminution, and if the supply is not needed to achieve the postmining land use, replacement requirements may be satisfied by demonstrating that a suitable alternative water source is available and could feasibly be developed. If the latter approach is selected, written concurrence must be obtained from the water supply owner.
for purposes of travel by land vehicles used in coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations. A road consists of the entire area within the right-of-way, including the roadbed, shoulders, parking and side area, approaches, structures, ditches, and surface. The term includes access and haul roads constructed, used, reconstructed, improved or maintained for use in coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations, including use by coal-hauling vehicles to and from transfer, processing or storage areas. The term does not include ramps and routes of travel within the immediate mining area or within spoil or coal mine waste disposal areas.
utilized for transportation of coal.
other than a Class I road, planned to be used over a six- (6-) month period or longer.
other than a Class I road, planned to be used over a period of fewer than six (6) months;
available shear strength to the developed shear stress, or the ratio of the sum of the resisting forces to the sum of the loading or driving forces, as determined by accepted engineering practices;
secretary of the interior or the secretary’s representative;
harm to land, air or water resources means an environmental harm is—
water resources, which resources include, but are not limited to, plant and animal life;
or violation exists which—
cause harm at any time before the end of the reasonable abatement time that would be set under section 444.855.2, RSMo; and
ciable and not immediately reparable;
tation pond, a series of sedimentation ponds, or other treatment facility, it also means a primary sediment control structure designed, constructed and maintained in accordance with 10 CSR 40-3.040(6) and including, but not limited to, barrier, dam or excavated depression which slows down water runoff to allow sediment to settle out. A siltation structure shall not include secondary sedimentation control structures, such as straw dikes, riprap, check dams, mulches, dugouts and other measures that reduce overland flow velocity, reduce runoff volume or trap sediment, to the extent that those secondary sedimentation structures drain to the siltation structure;
surface, measured from the horizontal, generally expressed as the ratio of a unit of vertical distance to a given number of units of horizontal distance (for example, 1v:5h (20%)). It may also be expressed as a percent or in degrees;
ers of soil parallel or nearly parallel to the land surface. Soil horizons are differentiated on the basis of field characteristics and laboratory data. The four (4) master soil horizons are—
al layer, often called the surface soil. It is the part of the soil in which organic matter is most abundant and leaching of soluble or suspended particles is typically the greatest;
near the surface below an A horizon and above a B horizon. An E horizon is most commonly differentiated from an overlying A horizon by lighter color and generally has measurably less organic matter than the A horizon. An E horizon is most commonly differentiated from an underlying B horizon in the same sequum by color of higher value or lower chroma, by coarser texture, or by a combination of these properties;
is immediately beneath the E horizon and often called the subsoil. This middle layer commonly contains more clay, iron or aluminum than the A, E, or C horizon; and
soil profile. It consists of loose material or weathered rock that is relatively unaffected by biologic activity;
investigation resulting in a map showing the geographic distribution of different kinds of soils and an accompanying report that describes, classifies and interprets those soils for use. Soil surveys must meet the standards of the National Cooperative Soil Surveys incorporated by reference in 10 CSR 40- 6.060(4)(C)1.;
been removed during surface coal mining operations;
of soil, spoil piles or areas of disturbed earth by modifying the geometry of the mass, or by otherwise modifying physical or chemical properties, such as by providing a protective surface coating;
than twenty degrees (20°) or a lesser slope as may be designated in the permit and plan 10 CSR 40-8
after consideration of soil, climate and other characteristics of a region;
poses of coal exploration, to significantly impact upon land, air or water resources by blasting; removal of vegetation, topsoil or overburden; construction of roads or other access routes; placement of excavated earth or waste material on the natural land surface or other activities; or to remove more than two hundred fifty (250) tons of coal;
means—
of lands in connection with a surface coal mine or surface operations and surface impacts incident to an underground coal mine. The activities include excavation for the purpose of obtaining coal, including common methods such as contour, strip, auger, mountaintop removal, box cut, open pit and area mining, the uses of explosives and blasting, and in situ distillation or retorting, leaching or other chemical or physical processing and the cleaning, concentrating or other processing or preparation, loading of coal for interstate commerce at or near the minesite; provided, these activities do not include the extraction of coal incidental to the extraction of other minerals, where coal does not exceed sixteen and two-thirds percent (16 2/3%) of the tonnage of minerals removed for purposes of commercial use or sale, or coal exploration subject to section 444.845, RSMo; and provided further that excavation for the purpose of obtaining coal includes extraction of coal from coal refuse piles; and
described in subparagraph (1)(A)98.A. of this rule occur or where those activities disturb the natural land surface. These areas shall also include any adjacent land the use of which is incidental to any such activities, all lands affected by the construction of new roads or the improvement or use of existing roads to gain access to the site of those activities, and for haulage and excavation, working, impoundments, dams, ventilation shafts, entryways, refuse banks, dumps, stockpiles, overburden piles, spoil banks, culm banks, tailings, holes or depressions, repair areas, storage areas, processing areas, shipping areas and other areas upon which are sited structures, facilities or other property or material on the surface, resulting from or incident to those activities;
operations means surface coal mining operations and all activities necessary or incidental to the reclamation of these operations. This term includes the term surface coal mining operations;
those surface coal mining and reclamation operations incident to the extraction of coal from the earth by removing the materials over a coal seam before recovering the coal, by auger coal mining, or by recovery of coal from a deposit that is not in its original geologic location;
residue, expressed as milligrams per liter, means organic or inorganic materials, carried or held in suspension in water which are retained by a standard glass fiber filter in the procedure outlined by the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulations for wastewater and analyses (40 CFR 136);
diversion of a stream or overland flow which is used during coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations and not approved in the permit and plan to remain after reclamation as part of the approved post-mining land use;
(2000 lbs.) avoirdupois (.90718 metric ton);
horizon layers of the four (4) master soil horizons;
earth materials or wastes which, if acted upon by air, water, weathering or microbiological processes, are likely to produce chemical or physical conditions in soils or water that are detrimental to biota or uses of water;
that is discharged from active or abandoned mines or other areas affected by coal exploration or surface coal mining and reclamation operations, which contains a substance that through chemical action or physical effects is likely to kill, injure or impair biota commonly present in the area that might be exposed to it;
means waste rock mixtures of coal, shale, claystone, siltstone, sandstone, limestone or related materials that are excavated, moved and disposed of during development and preparation of areas incident to underground mining activities;
means a combination of—
underground extraction of coal or in situ processing, such as construction, use, maintenance and reclamation of roads, aboveground repair areas, storage areas, processing areas, shipping areas, areas upon which are sited support facilities including hoist and ventilating ducts, areas utilized for the disposal and storage of waste, and areas on which materials incident to underground mining operations are placed; and
underground construction, operation and reclamation of shafts, adits, underground support facilities, in situ processing and underground mining, hauling, storage and blasting;
consisting of any material other than coal waste and organic material that is placed in a valley where side slopes of the existing valley measured at the steepest point are greater than twenty degrees (20°) or the average slope of the profile of the valley from the toe of the fill to the top of the fill is greater than ten degrees (10°); and
of a zone of saturation, where the body of groundwater is not confined by an overlying impermeable zone.
AUTHORITY: sections 444.530 and 444.810, RSMo 2000.* Original rule filed Oct. 12, 1979, effective Feb. 11, 1980. Amended: Filed April 14, 1980, effective Aug. 11, 1980. Amended: Filed Dec. 10, 1980, effective April 11, 1981. Amended: Filed Aug. 4, 1987, effective Nov. 23, 1987. Amended: Filed June 2, 1988, effective Aug. 25, 1988. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1988, effective Jan. 15, 1989. Amended: Filed May 2, 1989, effective Aug. 1, 1989. Amended: Filed July 3, 1990, effective Nov. 30, 1990. Amended: Filed May 15, 1992, effective Jan. 15, 1993. Amended: Filed Sept. 15, 1994, effective April 30, 1995. Amended: Filed March 21, 2000, effective Oct. 30, 2000. Amended: Filed Dec. 17, 2012, effective July 30, 2013.
*Original authority: 444.530, RSMo 1971, amended 1983, 1990, 1993, 1995 and 444.810, RSMo 1979, amended 1983, 1993, 1995.