Bus service offered to Big 12 tournament

The Big 12 Basketball Championship is in Kansas City, Mo., this week, and the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority offers the no-parking transit option to get fans to the games fast and conveniently.

On March 9-12, Main St. MAX Orange Line will offer frequent service throughout the tournament to the Sprint Center in downtown Kansas City, Mo.

Three fare options are available: RideKC fare is $1.50 per ride. An all-day pass costs $3, and can be purchased on the bus. Three-day visitor passes are available for $10 at KCATA offices, 1200 E. 18th St.

Main St. MAX service to Sprint Center: Northbound buses from The Plaza/Waldo to 3rd and Grand will stop at the Arena station at 12th and Grand. Southbound buses from 3rd and Grand will stop at the 11th at Grand station. The Big 12 Men’s Basketball Championship will be held at Sprint Center, 1407 Grand.

Park and ride areas will be at 3rd and Grand; Wornall and Gregory; and 74th Terrace and Broadway, all in Kansas City, Mo.

For further information, visit www.ridekc.org or call the Regional Call Center at 816-221-0660 weekdays from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Democrats say Brownback is ‘mortgaging Kansas’ future to Wall Street’

During a debate on a bill to remove obstacles from shifting Children’s Initiative Fund and Kansas Endowment for the Youth funds into the state general fund, it was revealed that the Brownback administration is contemplating selling future tobacco settlement funds to Wall Street for quick cash to prop up the crumbling state budget.

“Sam Brownback is literally mortgaging Kansas’ future to Wall Street on his way out the door,” said Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley. “He’s spending money we don’t even have yet and making sure that taxpayers and children will be cleaning up his mess long after he is gone. I find it offensive.”

“In yet another budget hoax, Sam Brownback wants the people of Kansas to follow the Wizard of Oz’s admonition, ‘Do not pay attention to that man behind the curtain.’ Clearly, Professor Marvel was a charlatan and so is Sam Brownback,” Hensley said.

If this plan moves forward, the steady stream of funding dedicated for children and early childhood programs for the next 15 years would be dismantled for a quick lump sum payment of $400 million into the state general fund. Once money is moved to the state general fund, there is no way to protect the funds from being used for anything the governor chooses.

“Sam Brownback and his allies have mismanaged our state so badly that they are stealing from our children’s future and selling everything that isn’t nailed down,” said House Minority Leader Tom Burroughs, D-33rd Dist. “If Sam Brownback is willing to double-cross toddlers and children, is there anything he won’t do? Just when you think the long-term damage that Sam Brownback and his handpicked legislators are doing to Kansas can’t get any worse, they come up with a plan like this. Kansas kids will pay for this governor’s actions for decades to come.”

Republican senators seek repeal of business tax exemption

Bill could force a showdown with Gov. Brownback

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

Three influential Republican state senators Tuesday introduced a bill to repeal a controversial business tax exemption approved as part of Gov. Sam Brownback’s 2012 income tax cuts.

Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican, said the measure is needed to close a tax “loophole” that is costing “at least $250 million” a year and wreaking havoc with the state budget.

“It continues to make the budget unstable,” Denning said in a news release. “Given the rapid deterioration of the budget, I believe we have the votes to close the loophole and send the bill to the governor.”

If that happens, Brownback has made it clear that he’s unlikely to sign the bill. In a statement issued last week shortly after the Kansas Department of Revenue announced that February tax receipts had fallen $54 million short of projections, Brownback said, “I will not or call for a tax increase on small business in Kansas.”

Brownback has often said that he would view the repeal of the business tax exemption as a tax increase.

In addition to Denning, Senate Vice President Jeff King, an Independence Republican, and Sen. Greg Smith, an Overland Park Republican, are sponsoring the repeal bill.

It would do away with a provision in the 2012 tax bill that exempted more than 300,000 business owners from having to pay income taxes on their non-wage business income.

“The Legislature has worked aggressively to make Kansas the lowest income tax state in the region,” King said. “But we cannot lower taxes in ways that are unfair to hard-working Kansans.”

All three of the repeal bill’s sponsors continue to support the portion of the 2012 law that lowered individual income tax rates. Many Democrats and some moderate Republicans have said those reductions also should be reconsidered.

The House Taxation Committee is expected to hold hearings next week on a bill that would repeal the business tax exemption and use the restored revenue to cut the statewide sales tax on food from 6.5 percent to 2.6 percent.

The bill’s sponsor, Rep. Mark Hutton, a Wichita Republican, said lowering the sales tax on food is the best way to restore fairness to the tax system. But he anticipates there will be efforts to change that portion of the bill and instead use the money to prevent additional budget shortfalls.

“Whether or not this ends up actually reducing the sales tax or not on food, I don’t know,” Hutton said. “It could get hijacked for (the) state general fund.”

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.

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