Grand slam helps KCKCC split; Blue Devils home Thursday, Friday

Allison Kasick (KCKCC photo)

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College rebounded from its first softball loss of the season in impressive fashion Tuesday.

Blanked 5-0 by North Central in the first game of a doubleheader, the Blue Devils combined the 4-hit pitching of Shannon Greene with a 10-hit attack in an 11-1 5-inning win ended spectacularly by a grand slam home run by Allison Kasick.

The split sets up two more home doubleheaders this week – Maple Woods Thursday at 1 p.m. and Iowa Central Friday at 2 p.m. The Blue Devils will also host State Fair next Tuesday at 1 p.m. before going on the road for the first time March 2.

A freshman from McLouth, Greene gave up a run in the first on a single and double but allowed only two more hits the rest of the way, both with two out in the fourth inning.

“Shannon was very effective in spotting her pitches,” said KCKCC coach Kacy Tillery. “She struck out two, walked none and needed just 60 pitches, 44 of which were strikes.”

Kasick, a freshman designated hitter from Basehor-Linwood, opened the scoring in the first with a run-scoring single and ended the game with her one-out bases-loaded home run in the fifth. The grand slam came after the first seven hitters to come to the plate reached base. Shortstop Candice Jennings, also of Basehor-Linwood and the only Blue Devil to have more than one hit in the game, doubled in the inning while Mikaela Hoffart, Amy Grace-Wilson, Shannon Brown. Kaylynn Smith and McKenzie Hersh each singled before North Central could register an out.

Megan Sumonja pitched five shutout innings in the opener before North Central broke the 0-0 deadlock on a walk and a two-out double in the sixth and then added four runs on four hits in the seventh before reliever Megan Mason came on to get the final three outs.

Jennings also had two hits in the second game to raise her season’s batting average to .636. Hoffart doubled for the Blue Devils’ only extra base hit while Wilson and Natalie Cowan collected the other KCKCC hits.

In tax bill battle, 16 senators save Brownback’s plan

by Andy Marso, Kansas News Service

The five-year fight over Gov. Sam Brownback’s efforts to remake Kansas income tax code came to a head Wednesday, and 16 senators voted to let it continue.

With the governor’s signature fiscal accomplishment hanging by a thread, the Kansas Senate fell three votes short in an effort to override a Brownback veto hours after the House did so.

The legislation Brownback vetoed, House Bill 2178, seeks to end persistent budget shortfalls by undoing many of the income tax cuts he signed in 2012. The tax bill passed 22-18 last week in the Senate, but it needed five more votes to reach the veto override threshold and only gained two.

Senate President Susan Wagle and Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, both Republicans who opposed the tax bill, said they preferred to hold out for another budget solution.

“This isn’t the last train out of the station,” Denning said before he voted to sustain the governor’s veto.

The Legislature faces a deficit of more than $300 million in the current fiscal year that ends June 30. Many legislators have said they won’t entertain Brownback’s proposed one-time fix for that — liquidating a long-term investment fund — until they get a tax bill that addresses projected future deficits. That includes a gap of about $550 million next fiscal year.

Brownback’s 2012 bill exempted more than 300,000 business owners from paying any income tax on “non-wage” revenue. It also sliced individual income tax rates and eliminated one bracket.

“This isn’t the last train out of the station.”

At the time, Senate Republican leaders said Brownback told them it was just a negotiating point and they felt duped by his administration when the more conservative House unexpectedly passed it.

Rep. Tom Sawyer, a Democrat from Wichita, noted that history Wednesday.

“The plan that passed (in 2012) was not what anybody really wanted,” Sawyer said. “We’ve been talking about correcting that for years.”

The 2012 plan was more drastic than what Brownback wanted then, but he chose to sign it anyway and has been steadfast in his defense of it.

Whirlwind 24 hours

The Senate action came at the end of a whirlwind 24 hours in which Brownback vetoed HB 2178 and the House voted to override his veto.

Brownback announced his decision to veto the bill Tuesday night at the Kansas Chamber of Commerce’s annual dinner, sandwiching it between speeches by U.S. Reps. Kevin Yoder and Lynn Jenkins and business leaders.

“I won’t sign it; I will veto this bill,” Brownback said, as those sitting near the front of the crowd of hundreds at the dinner stood and cheered. “This is bad policy.”

The state chamber opposes the bill, as do the National Federation of Independent Businesses and the fiscal conservatism advocacy group Americans for Prosperity.

“I won’t sign it; I will veto this bill.”

Brownback said the tax cuts are spurring growth, as evidenced by increased filings of new businesses.

But that has not closed structural budget deficits that have led to cuts in social services and higher education, as well as repeated sweeps of one-time money from a highway construction fund.

The bill Brownback vetoed would have closed most of the gap starting next year by adding business owners back to the tax rolls, restoring the third income tax bracket and raising rates, although they would remain below pre-2012 levels.

Show of force

Hours after Brownback vetoed the bill, House members who supported the bill scraped together enough votes to overrule him.

It was a show of force by moderate Republicans who made gains in November by vowing to end the annual budget crises — even if it meant raising income tax rates and working with Democrats.

But it wasn’t easy.

Representatives sat one vote short for several minutes, listening to colleagues explain their votes. Then Rep. Clay Aurand, a Republican farmer from Belleville, switched to “aye” and the chamber erupted in cheers until House Speaker Pro Tem Scott Schwab gaveled it to silence.

Aurand said there was “a lot wrong” with the bill and he had hoped for a better alternative. But he said he saw no other opportunities to pass a bill that would narrow the budget deficit and create a more equitable tax code.

“I’m a supply-sider,” Aurand said. “But the most important thing about supply-side (economics) is getting the tax rate right. It’s not about raising or lowering taxes, it’s about getting it right. And in no case is zero the right amount for a certain segment when others are paying.”

After Aurand flipped, Rep. Blaine Finch also changed his vote, making the final tally 85-40, with 45 Republicans and 40 Democrats voting to override the veto.

What’s next?

After the Senate’s vote to sustain the veto, the path ahead for a budget is murky.

Brownback said he will work with House and Senate Republican leaders who voted against overriding the veto to tweak his budget plan into something more palatable for lawmakers.

But Denning called the governor’s plan “insulting” and said he didn’t even want to waste time on it.

The governor’s plan includes big increases in tobacco and alcohol taxes. It also suggests cashing in an annuity from a legal judgment against cigarette manufacturers in exchange for a lump sum.

Trading the annuity for quick cash wouldn’t provide a long-term budget fix, and Rep. Steven Johnson, a Republican from Assaria, said it would be a particularly bad idea in the long-term.

Johnson, who was praised Wednesday on the House floor for his work on HB 2178 as chairman of the House Taxation Committee, said he didn’t see the votes for that or for cuts to public education.

In short, he didn’t see the votes for any budget fix at the moment.

“Think of the path forward,” Johnson said. “What do we do next? How do we get this session wrapped up in a good way for Kansans?”

Andy Marso is a reporter for 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 @andymarso. 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/tax-bill-battle-16-senators-save-brownback-s-plan.

How they voted
According to the Kansas Legislature website, voting yes on overriding the veto were these House members from Wyandotte County: Reps. Tom Burroughs, Pam Curtis, Stan Frownfelter, Broderick Henderson, Louis Ruiz, Valdenia Winn, and Kathy Wolfe-Moore.

The Kansas Legislature website stated that two state senators from Wyandotte County, David Haley and Pat Pettey, Democrats, voted for the veto override. Sen. Steve Fitzgerald, R-5th Dist., representing western Wyandotte County and Leavenworth, voted against the veto override.

KCK tax preparer sentenced to prison

A Kansas City, Kan., tax return preparer was sentenced to two years and three months in prison in a federal tax case.

Antoine Dorsey, who owned and operated Day-1 Tax Service, a tax preparation business in Kansas City, was found guilty of preparing fraudulent tax returns, according to a spokesman for the U.S. Justice Department’s Tax Division, and U.S. Attorney Thomas Beall, Kansas District.

Court documents stated that Dorsey reported fictitious business income on his clients’ returns to qualify them for the earned income tax credit, and claim refunds to which they were not entitled. The Internal Revenue Service lost about $74,487 as a result, according to court documents.

In addition to the prison term imposed, Dorsey was ordered to serve one year of supervised release and to pay restitution in the amount of $88,467 including $74,487 to the IRS. On April 6, 2016, Dorsey pleaded guilty to aiding and assisting in the preparation of a fraudulent tax return.

Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart Goldberg and U.S. Attorney Beall commended special agents of IRS-Criminal Investigation, who conducted the investigation, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott C. Rask and Trial Attorney John T. Mulcahy of the Tax Division, who are prosecuting the case.