With a new Kansas Legislature, is a budget fix in?

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

The Kansas legislative session is not yet two weeks old, but there are already signs of the change that many voters called for in the recent elections.

New legislative leadership and an aggressive group of newcomers are pushing back against many of Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget proposal, which they say won’t fix structural problems with the state budget.

Message from voters

From the earliest days of the campaign season it was evident that many voters were frustrated about the “budget mess” in Topeka.

Way back in May, Sen. Forrest Knox, an Altoona Republican, got an unexpected earful from constituents during a listening-tour stop in Gridley, a small town in southeast Kansas just off U.S. Highway 75.

“The people of Kansas are dissatisfied with our government and they’re not happy with what’s going on,” said Jim Ochs, a rancher and retired school principal, interrupting Knox only minutes into the meeting.

“Well, I read that in the papers,” Knox said, attempting to get back on script.

“But you’re not doing anything about it,” Ochs and others in the room shouted back.

Three months later, voters ousted Knox in the primary. He was one of dozens of conservative incumbents defeated by more moderate Republicans in the primary and Democrats in the November general election.

The message was loud and clear to lawmakers who survived, said Rep. Don Hineman, a moderate Republican from Dighton who after years as a back-bencher was elected majority leader in December.

“The majority of the returning legislators and certainly the newcomers are coming in having heard the message from the voters that ‘we’re tired of these smoke-and-mirrors games of trying to patch together a state budget. You need to fix this mess,’” Hineman said.

No quick fix

Lawmakers face an immediate gap of $350 million and a bigger one in the coming budget year. They must find nearly $1 billion in cuts or revenue for this year and next or the state could be awash in red ink.

Confronted with similar challenges the last couple of years, Brownback and lawmakers applied a series of Band-Aids.

That is no longer the strategy, Hineman said.

“We can’t keep doing this. We need a long-term structural fix to this imbalance we have between revenue and expenditures,” he said.

The desire for a “structural fix” already has put lawmakers at odds with the governor.

The budget Brownback offered again relies on one-time money. It includes proposals to sell off future payments from the state’s tobacco settlement for a lump-sum payout, delay contributions to the state employee retirement plan, siphon more money from the highway program and borrow from a state investment fund.

“The damage that would be done with that budget is incredible,” said Rep. Kathy Wolfe-Moore, a Democrat from the 36th District in Kansas City, Kan. “So, I think he just actually helped us. He made the case for overhauling the tax plan.”

“We can’t keep doing this. We need a long-term structural fix to this imbalance we have between revenue and expenditures.”

Wolfe-Moore is part of a growing group of lawmakers seeking to roll back parts of Brownback’s signature income tax cuts. As a starting point, they want to repeal a tax exemption given to more than 300,000 business owners and farmers even though Brownback continues to defend it.

“The purpose of our small-business tax cut has been to increase the number of small businesses and increase private-sector growth. That policy has worked,” Brownback said in his State of the State speech.

It appears the governor is fighting a losing battle. Even Koch Industries — a politically influential conglomerate that’s benefitting from the exemption — now favors its repeal.

Spending cuts and tax increases

Taking the exemption off the books will help, but it won’t come close to closing the budget gap. That, Hineman said, will require some tough decisions on spending cuts and tax increases.

“If we can’t do it with budget cuts, then I think the public is ready for us to look at new sources of revenue,” he said.

A number of potential tax increases are in the discussion, according to Hineman and other legislative leaders. They include everything from hikes in the tobacco and gas taxes to an income tax surcharge to reductions in the property tax break farmers get on cropland.

Reaching agreement on how much to cut, which taxes to increase and by how much won’t be easy.

But unlike recent sessions, when debate was stymied and lawmakers were pushed to the point of tears, it appears there will be an open discussion about how to achieve that balance.

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, said the massive influx of new lawmakers and resulting shake-up in the legislative leadership have created a more collegial atmosphere in the Statehouse.

“Oh yeah, this is a new world,” Concannon said. “The leadership now is willing to talk about things. They’re willing to have debates. Listen to all sides. They’re respectful of each other. It’s great.”

Great so far. But the hard work is just beginning.

Jim McLean is managing director of KCUR’s Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/new-kansas-legislature-budget-fix.

Collision causes injury on I-70

A collision on Wednesday morning on I-70 west caused an injury to a driver, according to a Kansas Turnpike Authority trooper’s report.

The collision was at 7:15 a.m. Wednesday, when freezing fog or frost on the ground reportedly made some highways slick.

A 2001 Pontiac Grand Prix was westbound on I-70 between the I-635 and Park Drive exits when it tried to pass a semi and lost control, the trooper’s report stated.

The Grand Prix left the roadway, struck the guardrail, then re-entered the roadway and struck the semi, according to the trooper’s report. The Grand Prix then came to rest on the south shoulder.

The driver of the Grand Prix, a 29-year-old woman from Arma, Kan., was injured and taken to a hospital, according to the trooper’s report.

The driver of the semi, a 50-year-old man from Clinton, Mo., was not injured, the trooper’s report stated.

Wagler’s 22 second-half points rally KCKCC to 67-63 win

KCKCC forward Brooklyn Wagler puts up a reverse layup that put the Blue Devils ahead to stay 62-61 in a 67-63 win over Washburn JV Wednesday. Wagler scored 22 of her game high 25 points and added 10 rebounds as the Blue Devils overcame deficits of 10 points. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Coach Joe McKinstry could not resist taking a light-hearted jab at his star forward.

“We’d be all right if No. 10 would play four quarters,” laughed the Kansas City Kansas Community College women’s basketball coach.

However, what he said in the waning moments of the first half of KCKCC’s come-from-behind 67-63 win over Washburn’s JV Wednesday night was far more telling.

“He told me what I needed to hear,” said sophomore Brooklyn Wagler. “He said to forget about it. He said to keep playing. That they were going to need me in the second half. That’s all I needed to hear.”

An all-tournament selection in KCKCC’s march to the national championship last season, Wagler was scoreless from the field (0-for-4) and just 3-of-6 from the free throw line as the Blue Devils trailed 39-32 at half.

Wagler’s second half, however, was a classic. She scored 11 of the Blue Devils first 13 points and 13 of 18 as KCKCC closed the third quarter deficit to 51-50 and set up a furious fourth quarter capped by Wagler’s game-winning field goal with 40.4 seconds remaining. For the game, she did not miss one of her eight second half shots, scored 22 of her game high 25 points and corralled nine of her 11 rebounds in her seventh double-double of the season.

“Before our first game of the new year, I challenged Brooklyn to step up her game,” McKinstry said. “We know what kind of player she is but with Brie (Tauai) being sidelined by injury, I knew we would really need Brooklyn to be at her best. I don’t think there’s any questions as to if she’s answered my challenge. She’s been phenomenal when we’ve really needed it most and that’s what great players do.”

Her help came from Millie Shade, who had 10 points off the bench, and nine points each from the guard duo of Kayla Horn and Valencia Scott, each of whom had key plays down the stretch. Ky’Ana French added six points and six rebounds and Aeriel Holiday five rebounds as KCKCC had a slight 35-34 rebound edge.

The Blue Devils never led until Wagler tied the contest with a 3-point play and Shade’s fast break layup put them ahead 57-55 with 6:20 to go. A rebound shot by Wagler and Horn’s acrobatic layup kept KCKCC in front 61-58 but Washburn went back ahead 61-60 and it took a reverse baseline layup by Wagler with 40.4 seconds left to give KCKCC the lead for good.

“It was a play we worked on today,” said assistant coach Chamissa Anderson. Scott then clinched the win with two free throws with 21.2 second left.

The game might have never been close had not McKinstry switched from a zone to a man-to-man defense in the second half. Washburn built leads of up to 10 points in the first half by making 9-of-14 three-point attempts.

Sydney Paialii gave the Lady Ichabods a 9-3 lead with three in the opening minutes and had four in the half; Madison Vargo came off the bench to drain five treys for the 39-32 halftime lead. However, the Ichabods managed just one more the second half when they shot just 33.3 percent after 53.6 percent the opening two quarters.

Now 12-5 but no longer nationally ranked, the Blue Devils open their home Region VI season Saturday when they play host to Brown Mackie in a 2-4 p.m. doubleheader. It will be Brown Mackie’s last appearance here as the college is dropping basketball after this season.

“We need to be more consistent with our effort and execution moving forward as our schedule is tough from here on out,” McKinstry said. “But no matter the opponents, getting three wins in three days is something to be proud.” Despite being short-handed, the Blue Devils started the week with wins over Southwestern Iowa and Hesston.

At just 5-7, KCKCC guard Kayla Horn soars high for a field goal in the Blue Devils’ come-from-behind 67-63 win over Washburn JV Wednesday. Horn finished with nine points, four rebounds and four assists. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)