UG Commission moves forward with 2-mill property tax reduction

After a lengthy budget discussion tonight, Unified Government commissioners reached a consensus on a 2-mill property tax reduction.

The budget now moves to final approval at the 7 p.m. meeting July 28 at the Commission Chambers, City Hall, lobby level, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kan. The 5 p.m. budget meeting July 28 has been canceled.

Earlier, UG Administrator Doug Bach had proposed a 1-mill tax reduction for the $345.7 million budget and a 2-mill tax reduction for the following year.

The UG anticipates $12 million in additional revenue for 2017 from the early payoff of the sales tax revenue (STAR) bonds at Village West.

The commission did not make any additional cuts to programs for the 2-mill reduction, as proposed by the administrator. Body cameras for some of the police force are still in the budget, but the allocation for the first year of the program is $400,000, not $1 million as originally proposed. Bach said the program was gone over and revised, and it may now more closely resemble the Wyandotte County Sheriff’s body camera program. There should be enough cameras for patrol officers, according to officials, although it is a smaller number of cameras than originally proposed. A lot of the program’s cost is in the infrastructure and storage of photos.

As Commissioner Harold Johnson noted, tonight the UG Commission liked to have its cake and eat it, too.

The commission rejected the administrator’s proposed budget revision of cutting some of the new projects to have enough for the 2-mill reduction, instead deciding to take the funds from the proposed addition to the UG’s fund balances. The fund balances are similar to reserves and are being built up after being depleted during the recession. There will still be some additional funding going to the fund balances, even with the 2-mill reduction, according to UG officials.

Commissioner Jim Walters noted that the last budget had been conservative, with the UG ending the year with more funds than predicted.

He supported the quiet zone program for K-32, which is proposed to have a noise mitigation program for trains in the Edwardsville area in the first year, if there is an agreement made with the city of Edwardsville. The UG funding would come from the county side of the budget.

Commissioner Gayle Townsend also did not want to give up the new programs. She said she was concerned that so many of the good programs they were focused on could take a few hits with the administrator’s 3-mill reduction proposal. For example, the blight reduction program would have lost a couple code inspectors, street repairs and items people can see. “Even though mill reduction was a big request, the issue remains what are people really going to see, whether or not it’s a 3-mill reduction. They’re going to see potholes not repaired, grass not cut, they’re going to see blight,” she said.

Johnson said he liked to mitigate as much volatility as possible, whether the budget is going up or down.

“We need to take a more disciplined, deliberate approach to lowering the mill rate, whether that be by somewhere in the middle, 2 percent, I’m not even saying 3 mills is enough, we might be able to do more over an extended period of time, if a plan is in place that we can be held accountable to, to make sure those things happen, which also allows us to mitigate the volatility and not have to cut so much on the front end,” Johnson said.

In the second through fifth years, with the $12 million in place each year, the commission could have the wherewithal if it stayed focused and committed to mitigate the volatility and to stay committed to its approach, he said.

Commissioner Angela Markley said she and Commissioner Brian McKiernan had been working with the UG’s new blight reduction program, and she would like to see those new positions kept in the budget. She said those were the issues they got the most calls about. Also, she supported the body camera program as it was the chief’s highest priority, and it needed to be taken into account.

Most of the commissioners, including Commissioner Jane Philbrook and Commissioner Melissa Bynum, were in favor of keeping most of the new programs.

Commissioner Bynum proposed the 2-mill reduction and restoring the cuts, while not increasing the fund balance as much as was proposed. In answer to her question, the administrator said he had budgeted conservatively the penalty payment from the Hollywood Casino for not building a hotel, and he had included only a half-year’s payment in the budget.

Commissioner McKiernan said as the UG tries to restore service to the level of excellence to the community, they can’t get that immediate reduction to the mill rate as they would like to. As they provide excellent services, that does mitigate somewhat the lack of a mill rate reduction, he said. He agreed with Commissioner Bynum’s idea of the 2-mill reduction and the lower fund balances. He also agreed with Commissioner Johnson’s idea of being more strategic, starting well in advance of next year’s budget.

Commissioner Hal Walker led the effort to get the commission to reduce taxes. He said he thought taxes should be reduced more than 2 mills, but he would go along with the majority of the commission. He said most of his phone calls were about reducing taxes, and that residents were sold on the idea of Village West with the promise of reducing taxes.

He added that he doesn’t mean these are not good programs that are being implemented. “I have witnessed budgets 32 times at least, and this budget does what other budgets have done – it gores your ox. The things you want are the things that are looked at,” Walker said. “I am extremely disappointed on a personal level, not that I think any of you are not making sense … but I really think we haven’t kept faith with the public.”

This was not what he expected two years ago with the promise of a windfall and new money. While he concedes everything on the list is something they should be doing, he said the residents are telling him to spend the money on tax reduction.

Walker also said he planned to vote against the Board of Public Utilities payment in lieu of taxes fee, which also will be considered Thursday. No change was proposed to the BPU PILOT fee. Walker said he’s voted against it for three years now, as residents were told several years ago that it would be lowered.

Commissioner Mike Kane said the local government lost a lot of former revenues such as the machinery and equipment tax, as well as other revenues from the state, over the past several years. No one foresaw that the local government would lose revenues when they made promises about lowering taxes years ago, he said. “When something happens at your house and you lose $100 a month of income, you adjust accordingly until you find a way to be more prudent with your monies,” he said.

Three speakers appeared at the public hearing on the budget at 5 p.m. Monday. Dennis Harris spoke in favor of the Wyandotte County Fairgrounds funding; Marcia Rupp spoke in favor of public safety funding including a fire station; and Daniel Welch spoke in favor of the parks.

Police investigate homicide in 400 block of Parallel

Kansas City, Kan., police are investigating a homicide in the 400 block of Parallel Avenue.

According to a police spokesman, when they arrived around 6:23 p.m. Monday, July 25, at the location, they found a man in his mid-30s, dead in the parking lot from apparent gunshot wounds.

The identity of the victim is being withheld until there is positive identification and famil notification, police said.

The Kansas City, Kan., Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Division is asking anyone with information to call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.

Candidates hold widely varying views in 3rd District, U.S. House contest

Election 2016

by Mary Rupert

Two of the candidates running for U.S. House of Representatives, 3rd District, attended the election forum held July 12 at Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Democrat Nathaniel McLaughlin and Republican Greg Goode had very different views of what to do about national issues. Incumbent Rep. Kevin Yoder, a Republican, and another Democratic challenger, Jay Sidie, did not attend the forum. Chuck Schlittler asked the questions of the 3rd District candidates. The forum was sponsored by Business West, neighborhood business organizations and KCKCC.

As the campaign winds down toward primary election day Aug. 2, the Center for Responsive Politics (www.opensecrets.org) reported that incumbent Rep. Yoder had a huge lead in funds raised, with $1.9 million to the next highest candidate, Jay Sidie, who reported $113,332 as of July 13. Candidate Goode reported $31,840 while McLaughlin reported raising $14,989.

McLaughlin, a resident of Kansas City, Kan., said at the forum that he wants to assure America remains second to none in gross national output, education, health and defense.

“I will not automatically be an adversary to those on the opposite aisle,” he said, as no one party is always right or wrong. However, he would not bend on his principles, he added.

On the issue of gun control, he said he would use the Supreme Court Heller decision to take the military-style weapons off the streets.

Clean energy is a focus, he said, and it and sustainability will ensure a healthy population.

He is in favor of the Affordable Health Care Act, and if elected, he would establish a commission to ascertain the effects of the legislation on small business owners, because the district he represents has many small business owners.

He said he would use his business knowledge from the real estate business to bring issues to the table that small business owners will face, including overtime, minimum wage and workers compensation in 2017.

McLaughlin is a past president of the Kansas City, Kan., NAACP and the Kansas State NAACP, has served as the chairman of the Wyandotte County Black Democrats Caucus and also has been a commissioner from 2005 to 2011 of the Kansas City, Kan., Housing Authority Board.

Greg Goode, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who lives in Louisburg, Kan., said, “The voters have not had a choice since 2010,” he said. “The voters deserve a choice.”

He said the current establishment was dominated by career politicians who have spent the nation into a debt of $19 billion.

He said Republicans owe it to the nation to elect people who do not represent the political class but represent the voters. He intends to stay away from political action committee money, stay away from special interests and get in touch with the voters, he said.

He said he is walking door to door every day, and intends to give the voters in Wyandotte County a voice in Washington, D.C.

Goode said his top issue would be to “stop the insane spending.” His second top issue is pro-life, he said. He is against abortion and also supports pro-life issues for the elderly.

McLaughlin said he believes the federal government should only do those things that it has been given authority to do. He also said it was very important for every citizen to have fair and equal access to the voting booth.

McLaughlin is a proponent of securing the borders, and he also said he believes undocumented immigrants who are already in America should have a fair path to citizenship. “I would not be talking about building a wall or breaking up families,” he said.

Goode said the border between East and West Germany was controlled for 50 years, and America could control its border to the south with Mexico.

He said it was a “travesty to see immigration laws totally disregarded. Until we start with more security, how can you enforce any immigration laws?”

McLaughlin said the rhetoric and the race-baiting that is being done by some who seek the highest office in the land should be removed from the evening news and the race-baiting talk should be removed from radio.

While community and state policing is a state duty, not a federal government responsibility, McLaughlin said programs could be developed at the federal level that would encourage communities to talk to each other. He said he had been very encouraged to communicate often with a command officer on the police force.

“We need straight talk from our leaders because these professionals do put their lives on the line every day,” McLaughlin said.

He said if America can send its military experts overseas to train third world countries to fight, it certainly ought to be able to send its experts from the FBI to help train the local police.

Goode said the Dallas and other police tragedies were a loss, not a policy discussion about Second Amendment rights. “It is a loss that fathers, sons, mothers, entire communities need to deal with,” he said.

“At the federal level, I am very concerned about the overreach of the federal government when we created Homeland Security, we created a military-style force,” he said. “That is very threatening to a lot of our citizens.”

He said the mental health programs in Kansas need to be fixed to stop an increase in incidents and the prison population.

Goode said laws in America are based on Judeo-Christian values. “When we threw out the Ten Commandments, the Bibles out of school, what do these kids have to hold onto that say ‘thou shalt not kill,’” he asked. “I don’t know how to get that back into the community.”

And Goode added, “If you want to be an immigrant in this country, subscribe to this culture.”

On the topic of trade, Goode believes that the Trade Partnership with the Pacific would give away America’s national sovereignty, cost America jobs and its way of life.

“You’re not going to be able to fight in the global economy,” he said. He said workers here would not be able to compete with workers making $1.50 an hour in other countries. “You can’t compete with a government that’s cutting deals.”

McLaughlin said the wheels need to be put back on the broken wagon called the federal budget.

He said he would work with both parties and with the White House to have a zero-based approach to the budget.

McLaughlin said Social Security, programs for senior citizens, education and the military should be spared budget cuts, but all other departments should be cut 1 percent annually for eight years.

He also wanted each country that gets financial aid from America to justify its spending.

He said he believes in a fiscal program similar to the one Bill Clinton took, which McLaughlin believes would jump-start the economy.

Goode said he was in favor of cutting the size of the government. As an example, he said money was recently proposed for the National Institutes of Health to fight the Zika virus, and to do other research. But research is already being done privately in the pharmaceutical industry, and federal dollars are not needed for the NIH to do the same thing, he believes.

McLaughlin said he would be in favor of looking at labor, overhead costs and unnecessary spending to achieve savings. He said each department should be evaluated to see where it is spending money for unnecessary travel, leases that should have expired a long time ago, and how many employees are being carried that are not meeting performance. In foreign aid, “we cannot be big brother to every country on this planet,” he said.

Tax breaks that are given to farmers who grow potatoes and to corporations are entitlements, he said. He said he would approach this from a business mentality, and he favored a zero-based budget, where funds would only be spent if they need to be spent, and they are not given away. At the same time, he would protect senior citizens, veterans and make sure there is an educated population. “Everything else is on the table,” he said.

Goode said there is a political class of the establishment, and it answers to big money. “If your congressman takes $177,000 from payday loans, who’s he working for?” Goode asked. If the congressman is taking $800,000 from political action committees, who’s he working for, Goode asked.

“It’s time we stand and fight, against the political establishment, against the political class,” Goode said. “It’s time to send a message to Washington, D.C., that we are going to hold our representatives accountable.”

McLaughlin said Goode and he had a point in common – the Beltway will not be happy if they are elected.

“My first obligation is to the citizens of the 3rd District of Kansas,” he said. He added he wants to stay close to the people.

The forum is being shown on KCKCC’s cable television station and also is on YouTube. To see a schedule, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/candidate-forum-to-be-shown-on-kckcc-cable-channel-2/.

For more information on the candidates for the 3rd District, see:

http://www.nmclaughlinforcongress.com

http://goodeforcongress.com/

http://www.yoderforcongress.com/

http://www.jay4congress.com/