Slight chance of rain, storms today

National Weather Service graphic
National Weather Service graphic

There is a 20 percent chance of scattered thunderstorms and rain today in Wyandotte County, however, Wyandotte County is not expected to have any severe weather, according to the National Weather Service.

A chance of severe weather will exist over northeast Missouri, generally east of Highway 65. The primary hazards will be large hail and gusty winds. While the tornado threat is low, it cannot be ruled out for that area.

Very high fire danger will develop this afternoon over eastern Kansas into far west central Missouri. Winds will shift from the west and become breezy at 15 to 20 mph by noon, while relative humidity values fall to 30 percent.

The chance of rain and thunderstorms is 20 percent in Wyandotte County after 3 p.m. today, the weather service said. Today’s high will be near 69.

It will be breezy today, with an east northeast wind 7 to 12 mph becoming north northwest 15 to 20 mph in the afternoon, according to the weather service. Winds may gust as high as 29 mph today.

Tonight, there is a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 8 p.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 40. A west wind of 10 to 14 mph may gust as high as 20 mph.

Wednesday, the high will be near 62 with mostly sunny skies, the weather service said. A west northwest wind will be 10 to 14 mph, gusting as high as 20 mph.

Wednesday night, the low will be around 38, with mostly clear skies, according to the weather service. A west wind will be 6 to 11 mph.

Thursday’s forecast is sunny with a high near 60, the weather service said. A west wind will be 9 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 28 mph.

Thursday night, the low will be 36 with partly cloudy skies, according to the weather service.

Document shows state discussing tobacco securitization, children’s advocate says

State budget director says there’s no deal but it remains an option

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

Topeka – A leading child advocate has obtained a document that she says confirms state officials are considering a deal to securitize the state’s tobacco settlement payments.

Shannon Cotsoradis, president of the nonprofit advocacy group Kansas Action for Children, raised concerns about a possible securitization deal last week in testimony to a Senate committee. At the time, she said a reliable source had told her that officials in Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration had discussed bonding future settlement payments in exchange for a one-time cash payment.

Eileen Hawley, Brownback’s spokesperson, said that administration officials had listened to a presentation on securitization, nothing more. She didn’t respond to requests made by the KHI News Service for more information about when the presentation was made and who participated in the discussion.

Cotsoradis obtained a copy of the presentation Thursday from a reporter who writes for Debtwire, an online publication for investors. The pitch was made in October of last year by representatives of Citigroup’s municipal securities division. Officials from the Kansas Development Finance Authority participated in the discussion, along with State Budget Director Shawn Sullivan.

“This document underscores that there is an active conversation and there is the potential for this deal to be struck at any time,” Cotsoradis said.

Cotsoradis and others are concerned that bonding the tobacco settlement payments for money to address the state’s current budget problems could jeopardize future funding for children’s programs. Annual payments received since the settlement was reached in 1998 have been used to fund children’s education programs. In recent years those payments have averaged just above $50 million.

In their presentation, the Citigroup representatives touted their experience in the tobacco bond market, claiming that the company had orchestrated “59 tobacco bond transactions totaling over $28 billion in par (value), more than any other firm.” They estimated Kansas could bond its remaining settlement payments for $474 million to $782 million, depending on the amount of risk state officials were willing to assume.

During a Friday taping of the KCUR podcast “Statehouse Blend,” Sullivan said the state hasn’t agreed to a securitization deal with Citigroup or any other firm. But he said it remained an option if tax receipts continue to fall short of projections and the state needs an infusion of cash.

“I’m not going to deny it’s an option,” Sullivan said, explaining any agreement would require legislative approval.

“If anything, I think there is an option of keeping the funding we have in place now (for children’s programs) and securitizing the revenue above that,” he said.

The discussion of securitization surfaced during a debate on a controversial Senate bill that would redirect money that now flows into several special revenue funds into the state general fund. The proposed shift would affect sales tax receipts that now flow into the state highway fund and the tobacco payments that are deposited in the Kansas Endowment for Youth trust fund and then appropriated to the Children’s Initiative Fund.

Supporters of the measure – Senate Bill 463 – say it would increase transparency and promote accountability. But critics say it would put money intended for specific purposes at risk, particularly if the state’s budget problems continue.

The bill is in the Senate Ways and Means Committee, which could act on it at any time.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.


– See more at:
http://www.khi.org/news/article/document-confirms-tobacco-securitization-deal-under-discussion-childrens-ad#sthash.ZdPB7GtH.dpuf

Woodlands expected to go before Planning Commission in April

The Woodlands racetrack special use permit is not expected to be at a Planning Commission meeting until 6:30 p.m. Monday, April 11, at City Hall.

According to a letter sent out by a law firm that is handling The Woodlands’ application, the meeting, which earlier was expected to be March 14, will not be until April 11.

A community meeting was held Feb. 27 at Piper Middle School on the issue of The Woodlands reopening. Plans are for The Woodlands to have slot machines.

The Woodlands effort may have opposition from Hollywood Casino. An advertisement ran Feb. 28 charging that the state might be breaching its contract with the casino if it allows slots at the Woodlands.

A bill passed the Kansas Senate last year that would increase the percentage of money that horse and dog racetracks could keep from slots, to a number comparable with the casinos.

HB 2312, allowing slots at racetracks at the same rate as at the casinos, was still in the House Calendar and Printing Committee this morning.

On March 2, the House Commerce, Labor and Economic Development Committee held an informational hearing on “The Effects of Horse and Greyhound Tracks on Commerce in Kansas.”

Last Thursday, the Unified Government Commission held a joint meeting with the Kansas City, Kan., Planning Commission. Although The Woodlands issue was not mentioned at this meeting, a UG attorney advised the Planning Commission and UG Commission not to say that they were for or against any upcoming item in advance of the meetings. The attorney said that could be a factor in overturning their decisions in court.

For an earlier story on this issue, see https://wyandotteonline.com/the-woodlands-seeks-support-to-reopen-pari-mutuel-track/.