Snow possible Friday night, Saturday

A winter storm is moving into the Wyandotte County area from Friday night to Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. (National Weather Service graphic)

As the winter weather advisory expired at 9 a.m. Thursday, Wyandotte County now is looking at weather in the mid-30s today, with snow possible on the weekend, according to the National Weather Service forecast.

On Friday afternoon, rain is likely, then changing to snow and rain around 7 p.m. and snow after 10 p.m., the weather service said.

Accumulating snow is expected Friday night through Saturday, according to the weather service.

Dangerously cold wind chills are also possible behind this system Saturday night into Sunday, the weather service said.

From 2 to 4 inches of snow is possible Friday evening through Saturday evening, according to the weather service. Wind gusts of 30 mph and blowing snow will be possible from 6 p.m. Friday through 6 p.m. Saturday, forecasters said, making travel difficult.

Areas of fog remained in Wyandotte County on Thursday morning, and may still be here through noon, according to the weather service.

Today’s high will be near 36 with a light and variable wind becoming north northwest around 5 mph, the weather service said.

Tonight, the low will be around 30, with a calm wind becoming east southeast 5 to 7 mph after midnight, according to the weather service.

Friday, there is a 70 percent chance of rain after 3 p.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 37 with an east southeast wind of 8 to 15 mph, gusting to 21 mph. Less than a tenth of an inch of rain is possible.

Friday night, there is a 90 percent chance of precipitation. Rain is possible before 7 p.m., followed by rain and snow between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m., then snow after 10 p.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 21 and it will be blustery, with a north wind of 14 to 21 mph, gusting as high as 31 mph. A new snow accumulation of 1 to 3 inches is possible.

Saturday, there is a 40 percent chance of snow before noon, the weather service said. The high will be near 23. It will be blustery, with a north wind of 14 to 20 mph, gusting as high as 30 mph.

Saturday night, it will be partly cloudy, with a low of 7, according to the weather service.

Sunday, it will be mostly sunny with a high near 24, the weather service said.

Sunday night, it will be mostly cloudy, with a low of 18, according to the weather service.

On Monday, Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, it will be partly sunny, with a high near 40, the weather service said.

Monday night, there is a 30 percent chance of snow after midnight, with a low of 24, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, there is a 30 percent chance of snow, with a high near 31, the weather service said.

Tuesday night, there is a 30 percent chance of snow, with a low of 15, according to the weather service.

Wednesday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 31, the weather service said.

Winter storm snowfall totals Friday night and Saturday could be from 2 to 3 inches. (National Weather Service graphic)
National Weather Service graphic
Dangerously cold temperatures will move into the area on the weekend. (National Weather Service graphic)
The high on Sunday afternoon will be near 24, The wind chill Sunday afternoon could be near 18 or 19 degrees. (National Weather Service graphic)

Gov. Kelly pledges to improve education, Medicaid expansion and foster care; GOP offers rebuttal

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly delivered her first State of the State speech on Wednesday night, flanked by Republicans House Speaker Ron Ryckman and Senate President Susan Wagle. (Photo by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service)

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

The cast of characters may be new, but the script taking shape at the outset of the Kansas Legislature’s 2019 session rings familiar.

The new governor — Democrat Laura Kelly — proposes a budget that pays for her priorities. It highlights things that she believes her election shows that voters also want. Republican legislative leaders respond with what amounts to, “Thanks, but we’ve got a better handle on what Kansans want.”

Such give-and-take is typical at the start of a session, but this year’s is sharper because Kelly is a Democrat and the leaders of the Legislature are virtually all conservative Republicans.

The sharpness of those differences is evident in the State of the State speech that Kelly delivered to lawmakers Wednesday and the Republican response given by Senate President Susan Wagle.

On school finance

Kelly called on lawmakers to fully fund the state’s public schools by complying with a Kansas Supreme Court order and boosting the funding package passed last year to cover inflation. It’s estimated that would cost an additional $364 million over the next four years.

● Kelly: “The days of doing the bare minimum to fund our schools are over. It stops now. We are going to properly our schools this year. And next year. And the year after that. Every year, every month, every day that I’m governor.”

● Wagle: “(Kelly) would have us surrender to the edict of an unelected Supreme Court spending even more than the $1 billion increase already approved for public education through the year 2023.”

On Medicaid expansion

The governor said the budget she’s proposing will “pave the way” for expanding KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, to cover an additional 150,000 low-income, disabled and elderly Kansans.

She argues that the rejection of expansion by former Republican governors Sam Brownback and Jeff Colyer cost the state billions and put rural hospitals at risk. So she would form a bipartisan working group next week to “finalize a path forward.”

● Kelly: “To date, our failure to act has cost Kansas over $3 billion in federal funding. That’s 3 billion of our taxpayer dollars we’ve sent to the federal government that has gone to benefit other states. It’s $3 billion that could have helped save Kansas lives, Kansas hospitals, and Kansas communities.”

● Wagle: “Governor Kelly has proposed expanding Medicaid under a broken Obamacare system while many Kansans are already suffering from skyrocketing premiums in the individual marketplace. Now is not the time to spend money we don’t have on programs we can’t afford.”

The Affordable Care Act, often referred to as Obamacare, requires the federal government to cover no less than 90 percent of a state’s expansion costs.

Competing priorities

One of the top priorities for Republicans is the return of what they’ve labeled “the federal windfall.” That money flowed into the state treasury after changes in the tax cut bill Congress passed in 2017.

GOP leaders appear determined to quickly restore tax deductions that some Kansans can no longer claim because of the federal changes. Not doing so, they say, would amount to a tax increase.

● Wagle: “The windfall from the Trump tax cuts belongs to Kansas taxpayers, not government. Gov. Kelly has vowed to fight the decoupling of federal and state tax deductions, but we are not backing down.”

Kelly isn’t spoiling for a fight. But she’s urging caution because of the bill’s estimated $90 million annual cost. She argues it would be more prudent to get a firmer grip on the state’s revenue situation before passing what she sees as a tax cut.

● Kelly: “We must be cautious, conservative and fiscally responsible. We must live within our means. Prioritize what matters most. Always look for ways to save. And always make sure our children come first.”

Kelly saved her strongest language for what she called the “reprehensible crisis” in the state’s foster care system. She pledged to restructure the Department of Children and Families to address chronic problems that resulted in the agency losing track of some children while failing to protect others from abuse. She called it a matter of “life and death.”

● Kelly: “In the last few years, nothing has made me more angry than the callous disregard some agency leaders demonstrated towards our vulnerable children and their families. The incompetence and lack of transparency we witnessed … put a spotlight on this reprehensible crisis. This is an emergency. These are our children in our communities facing abuse, neglect and worse.”

Kelly’s call for overhauling the foster care system brought both Democrats and Republicans to their feet in applause. Wagle and other GOP leaders say they’re willing to work with the governor to address the problems. But they warn that the money needed to fix them, when combined with Kelly’s other spending priorities, could put the state back in the red.

● Wagle: “The Republican majority in the Kansas Senate stands ready to work with our former Senate colleague, but not at the expense of Kansas families.”

And not if it means a tax increase.

Reminding lawmakers of the “breathtaking years of crisis” caused by Brownback’s income tax cuts, Kelly said she was elected to “rebuild our state.” But, she said, she has no intention of spending down the state’s recovering balances or breaking her campaign pledge to balance the budget without raising taxes.

Reconciling her priorities with those of the Republican-led Legislature, Kelly said, will require a kind of bipartisan cooperation that has recently been in short supply at the Statehouse.

● Kelly: “While the time for fingerpointing is over, we’re not off the hook for the long-term consequences of past policy decisions. If we are going to succeed, I need your help to protect both sides of the budget equation until our fiscal health stabilizes. As many of you have already said, we must show restraint. Because, ultimately, we do not know what lies ahead.”

Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for 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 to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/new-governor-kansas-same-partisan-tensions-legislature