Kansas revenue picture improving gradually after repeal of Brownback tax cuts

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

The group of experts tasked with forecasting how much Kansas will collect in taxes raised their two-year estimate by $225 million after meeting Thursday to compare notes on the performance of key sectors of the state economy.

That’s better than the trend of downward revisions in recent years but not the robust increase that some lawmakers who voted to repeal Gov. Sam Brownback’s 2012 income tax cuts were hoping for.

“Obviously, this better than going the other way,” said Sen. Laura Kelly, of Topeka, the ranking Democrat on the Senate’s budget-writing committee.

But, Kelly said, it’s well short of what lawmakers will need to comply with yet another Kansas Supreme Court order to boost funding for public schools and to make a looming deferred payment to the state employee pension fund.

The message from Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican, was much the same.

“There’s not that much wiggle room,” Denning said, saying that years of revenue and budget problems have created “infinite demands” on what are still limited resources.

“We have many, many resource needs,” he said.

Those include restoring cuts to the state highway fund, from which lawmakers will continue to borrow through the remainder of this budget year and the next.

The higher estimate anticipates increases in sales and corporate tax receipts. The forecasting group made no change in its estimate for individual income taxes, preferring to wait and see what comes in from business owners exempted by Brownback’s tax plan who must resume paying taxes on their pass-through, or non-salaried, income.

If the estimates are on target the the state would have ending balances of $380 million in the current fiscal year and about $475 million the following year.

However, ending balances of that size would likely be tempting targets for lawmakers needing additional cash to increase funding for public schools, maintain state highways and shore up the state employee pension plan.

Mixed signals

Sam Williams, secretary of the Kansas Department of Revenue, said increasing sales and corporate tax collections are indications “of an improved economic climate taking root.”
There also are some warning signs in the data.

“There are certain sectors that are showing positive signs of growth. There are others, like the agriculture and energy sectors, that continue to struggle,” said Shawn Sullivan, Brownback’s budget director.

The struggles of those two key sectors of the Kansas economy are cause for concern, said Raney Gilliland, director of the Kansas Legislative Research Department.

“The value of Kansas crop production in 2017 is likely to be at its lowest level since 2009,” Gilliland said, noting that low commodity prices were depressing land values and making it harder for farmers to access operating capital.

Cautious projections

The picture is even bleaker for the oil and gas industry. Low prices and rapidly declining natural gas production in southwest Kansas are dramatically reducing severance tax revenues.

Collections that totaled $125.8 million as recently as 2014 will drop to $37.5 million next year and $30 million the year after, according to projections.

The forecast also anticipates a reduction in both personal income and the state’s gross domestic product.

The experts see a disconnect between the rising sales, income and corporate tax receipts that Williams said were signs of an improving economy and the factors depressing wages and the state’s economic output.

“I think that’s one of the reasons we are somewhat cautious in the projections,” Gilliland said.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. 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/kansas-revenue-picture-improving-gradually-after-repeal-brownback-tax-cuts.

Wyandotte County Veterans Day program to be Saturday

The 17th annual Wyandotte County Veterans Day Commemoration will take place at 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 4, at the Salvation Army Harbor Light Village, 6723 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.

The guest speaker for this year’s program will be Capt. David Thaxton of the Wyandotte County Sheriff’s Department, who is a former staff sergeant in the Kansas Army National Guard 2-137th Infantry, and served in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom.

This year, the Veterans Day program is presented by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 6401 of Wyandotte County. VFW Post 6401 and Post 11499 will present the colors at the event.

Jim Jenkins, chairman of the Veterans Day committee, said the program is free and open to the public. A free brunch also will be provided, he added. The brunch is donated by LePeep restaurant of Lenexa.

All U.S. veterans who are present will be recognized, he said. Campaign pins and veteran hat pins will be given to those who served in the major campaigns, with special recognition of veterans of Iraq, Afghanistan and Desert Storm campaigns.

Also part of the program will be the Piper High School Music in Motion, the Veteran’s History Project and commemorative displays.

Doors will open at 9:30 a.m. with the program beginning at 10 a.m.

Besides the VFW, partners and sponsors of the Wyandotte County Veterans Day Commemoration include the Kansas City, Kansas, Women’s Chamber, KCK Convention and Visitors Bureau, Salvation Army Harbor Light Village, Kansas City, Kansas, Public Library and Providence Medical Center.

Jenkins said the VFW Post 6401 also is involved in participating in Veterans Day programs in the Bonner Springs Public Schools, at other locations such as an assisted living center, and VFW Post 6401 plans to participate in the Veterans Day parade Nov. 11 at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

Homicide reported at 78th and I-70

Police are investigating a shooting on the road at 9:16 a.m. Friday, Nov. 3, at 78th and I-70 in Kansas City, Kansas. One person is dead, a police spokesman said. Northbound 78th Street from Riverview Avenue north to I-70 is currently closed for this investigation. (Staff photo)

Kansas City, Kansas, police are investigating a homicide at 9:16 a.m. Nov. 3 at 78th and I-70.

A police spokesman stated that officers responded and found a male victim deceased from apparent gunshot wounds. He was inside a car.

The spokesman stated that a preliminary investigation revealed the victim and suspect vehicles were at a red light in the area of 78th and Elizabeth. When they began traveling south on 78th, the suspect began shooting at the victims, the spokesman stated.

The victim fled south on 78th Street, but then wrecked into another vehicle south of I-70 after being shot, the spokesman said.

The suspects fled in an unknown direction, according to the spokesman.

A second individual in the victim’s car may have left the scene of the accident before officers arrived, and police are trying to identify that person, the spokesman said.

Anyone with information should call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.