Kansas House approves tax increase, sends bill to Senate

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

The Kansas House approved a bill Thursday that would undo many of the state’s 2012 tax cuts to help balance the budget. The 76-48 vote sends the plan to the Senate for consideration.

While the bill had significantly more than the 63 votes needed to pass, it had received 83 votes during a preliminary test Wednesday. Those numbers are significant because 84 votes are needed to override a possible veto from Gov. Sam Brownback.

The measure would raise income tax rates, add a third income tax bracket and reinstate income taxes on hundreds of thousands of business owners that were exempted in 2012. It would raise taxes more than $1 billion in the coming years.

Rep. Steven Johnson, chairman of the House Tax Committee, said lawmakers must balance tax cuts and adequate funds for government services.

“It’s a return of some, not yet all, but some of the tax cut that we had,” said Johnson, an Assaria Republican. “I think we were directionally correct to lower tax rates in 2012. I do think we went farther than we could afford to go at that time.”

Johnson said the bill is a starting point and could be amended as it goes forward.

Kansas lawmakers have struggled to balance the budget since cutting taxes in 2012. They’re currently looking for ways to erase budget deficits projected to total more than $1 billion by the middle of 2019.

The House tax bill had support from lawmakers in both parties, including Democrat Rep. John Carmichael of Wichita, who said legislators need to get the state’s finances on solid ground.

“In the House of Representatives, there is a strong bipartisan coalition and commitment to try to fix this problem,” Carmichael said. “I’m willing to put my name on the line and vote yes even though it does represent an increase in taxes.”

But Rep. Trevor Jacobs, a Fort Scott Republican, said reinstating income taxes on business owners is bad economic policy.

“How can the state ask for prosperity when it cuts the vital roots of growth? The problem is not that people are taxed too little; the problem is that government spends too much,” Jacobs said.

Brownback has strongly defended the tax cuts, saying they are needed to boost the economy. On Wednesday he said that he would not sign the House tax plan into law if it made it to his desk.

“I am opposed to broad-based rate increases on income taxes. I won’t sign that,” Brownback said. “It’s going against the trend of everywhere in the country, if not in the world.”

The tax increase would not help with a budget shortfall in the fiscal year that ends in June. House lawmakers gave first-round approval Thursday to a bill that would dissolve a state investment fund to help fill that budget hole.

The Kansas Senate could debate the House-approved proposal this week.

On Thursday, senators considered another tax bill pushed by Democrats in the chamber that would have raised more revenue than the legislation approved by House lawmakers.

The Senate roundly rejected the bill on a 10-30 vote. Sen. Tom Holland, a Baldwin City Democrat, said that although the bill failed, it marked the start of a process.

“We’ve got to find a combination of revenue increases and cuts to get us out of this, and it’s going to take a couple cycles of going through this until we find that sweet spot,” Holland said.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/kansas-house-approves-tax-increase-sends-bill-senate.

KCKCC can clinch first title tie with win over Highland Saturday

Murray’s double-double helps Blue Devils hold off Brown Mackie 73-69 for 5th straight win

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Thanks to a workmanlike 73-69 win at Brown Mackie Wednesday, Kansas City Kansas Community College can clinch no worse than a tie for its first NJCAA Division in Region VI championship when the Blue Devils host Highland Saturday at 4 p.m.

The Blue Devils moved closer to their first title by holding off a late Brown Mackie rally to improve their Region VI record to 7-1, two games ahead of Highland (5-3) and 2½ ahead of both Fort Scott and Johnson County, both 5-4. The win, the Blue Devils’ fifth in a row, also kept KCKCC at the top of the Jayhawk race at 3-1 followed by Fort Scott (4-2) and Highland (3-2).

Saturday will be Sophomore Day for the Blue Devils and a chance to avenge their only regional loss 70-53 at Highland Jan. 25.

“Our philosophy is to split on the road and win all your games at home,” KCKCC coach Kelley Newton said. “We’re 3-1 on the road for which I’m very proud and now we have to take care of things at home.”

Jon Murray led the Blue Devils at Brown Mackie, scoring 24 points and grabbing 10 rebounds including game-clinching goals and rebounds in the closing seconds.

“We knew Murray was good,” Brown Mackie coach Bryson Flax said. “You’ve got to respect what he does. He’s efficient and rebounds well. I thought we’d do a little better job of not letting him catch the ball as easily as he did.”

A 6-9 sophomore from Macon, Mo., Murray had 18 points in the first half in a dual with Brown Mackie’s Tez Ivory, who had 16 of his game high 30 points in the first half.

“Jon was a big key in the first half,” Newton said. “He was very big in us leading 48-47.”

KCKCC also got big performances from Kellen Turner and Mike Lee. Tuner added 17 points including 4-of-8 3-pointers while Lee directed the offense with nine assists and just one turnover along with eight points and three rebounds.

KCKCC built its biggest lead at 68-58 with 6:39 remaining only to have the Lions make big late runs. The first came after Brown Mackie had closed to 68-67 with 1:53 to go. KCKCC sophomore Garrick McCuller responded, converting a 3-point play for a 71-67 edge. It was McCuller’s fourth field goal of the game without a miss.

Ivory got the Lions back to within two with 1:15 left but Donald Metoyer grabbed a huge offensive rebound with 45 seconds left and Murray followed 20 seconds later with a short jumper that pushed the lead to the final 73-69. The Larks twice missed 3-pointers in the closing seconds before Murray corralled the rebound that closed out his double-double.

“They hit the shots that you have to hit to win on the road,” Brown Mackie’s Flax said. “We got dominated in the paint, especially early, and they made some late plays. It deflated us a little bit.” One of the biggest plays came with 12:56 when on an in-bound play with one second left on the clock, Lane Hartley drilled a 3-pointer for a 62-53 KCKCC lead.”

Brown Mackie shot 55 percent from the field in scoring 47 points in the first half but managed only 22 points in the second half.

“We cut out some of their fast breaks and did a better job of limiting them to one shot in the second half although we got outrebounded 34-23,” Newton said. “But we also got some key scores. It was a good win because any road win is always important.”

Kansas law enforcement skeptical of Kobach immigration bills

by Andy Marso, Kansas News Service

Kansas legislators heard concerns from law enforcement groups Wednesday about two immigration bills promoted by Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

The bills seek to enlist state and local officers in efforts to enforce federal immigration law. But the Kansas Highway Patrol and the Kansas Sheriffs’ Association said they don’t have the resources to do that and they don’t want to be exposed to costly lawsuits if they wrongfully detain someone under the complex federal regulations.

Both groups said they weren’t consulted before the bills were introduced.

“It would be nice if folks sat down with us and said, ‘This is our proposal. How do we get there and how do we have law enforcement approval of this?’” said Sedgwick County Sheriff Jeff Easter. “It’s been just shoved down our throat, and then we have to come up here and testify.”

Kobach did not attend Wednesday’s hearing on the bills at the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee. One of his aides, Moriah Day, testified in his place.

Day said Kobach was in Washington, D.C., for the winter meeting of the National Association of Secretaries of State.

The bills in question had been enacted in other states and are effective in curbing illegal immigration, Day told committee members.

Penalties for sanctuary cities

Senate Bill 157 would require the Kansas Highway Patrol to enter into an agreement with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to essentially deputize some troopers to work on the department’s behalf in enforcing immigration law.

The highway patrol submitted written testimony saying there were several technical problems with the bill and, with the agency already short-staffed by 70 officers, diverting troopers to immigration enforcement would mean compromising on things the patrol does to keep roads safe.

Senate Bill 158 would remove all state funds from any city or county with “sanctuary” policies that shield immigrants from investigation by federal agents.

The Kansas Chamber of Commerce joined cities and counties in opposing the bill. Eric Stafford, a lobbyist for the Chamber, said its broadness made it difficult for municipalities to know how to comply.

“Just last week the secretary of homeland security was asked what the definition of a sanctuary city was, and he said he has no idea,” Stafford said. “If our guy in charge doesn’t know, maybe somebody in the state of Kansas does?”

Easter said the bill targets a handful of counties, including his, based on a list compiled by the Center for Immigration Studies, a think tank he called a “partisan website.” The counties were included because they don’t automatically comply with requests from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to detain individuals for an additional 48 hours after their scheduled release from custody to give agents time to investigate their immigration status.

Easter said such “detainers” have led to costly legal battles in other states, including civil rights lawsuits in Arizona’s Maricopa County.

“For two years we’ve been labeled a sanctuary county because there’s court rulings out there that would have got me sued,” Easter said, “and I don’t feel like that’s a good use of taxpayer money.”

Easter said this week that his office will honor ICE detainer requests if they’re accompanied by a probable cause affidavit.

Personal testimony

Wednesday’s hearing in a small Statehouse room was packed with people, most of them in opposition to the bills.

During the 90-minute hearing, the crowd heard emotional testimony from both sides.

A pair of 13-year-old Wichita girls, Lindsay Espinosa and Cynthia Bautista, testified that the bills would make people in Latino communities afraid to report crimes to police and split families like theirs with mixed immigration status.

Dennis Bixby said his 19-year-old daughter was killed in an auto collision in Basehor by a person who was in the country illegally and had been released from custody while awaiting a deportation hearing.

“I know you’re going to hear a lot of things about breaking up families today,” Bixby said. “Well, they broke up our family. She was our only child. There will be no grandchildren.”

Religious groups testified against the bills. Jarrett Meek, the pastor of an evangelical church in Kansas City, Kan., said that if the intent was to reduce crime, the measures were misguided, because crime has dropped as immigration to his area has increased.

“Immigrants are driving economic revitalization in our community,” Meek said. “It’s an exciting thing to happen and it’s an exciting place to live.”

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/term/kansas-news-service.