Governor asks Congress for more assistance for states

Gov. Laura Kelly today testified before a House Committee, asking for more support for state and local governments from the federal government to deal with COVID-19’s economic effects.

“We will need significantly more support from our federal partners to protect our institutions from drastic and damaging cuts,” Gov. Kelly said in her testimony to the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services.

Gov. Kelly testified that Kansas was just getting back on its feet, recovering from the Brownback tax cut of 2012, when it was hit with the pandemic of 2020.

“This pandemic is different, and the fix isn’t as simple as just tightening our belt buckle,” she said. “Our federal partners must step in and help.

“I know firsthand that cutting local and state government funding will hamstring states’ ability to fight the pandemic and leave us more vulnerable to future crises.

“Severe budget cuts don’t create small government. They create failed government.

“Governments that can’t provide the essential services and investments this country was built on: good schools, stable infrastructure, a solid social safety net, and a robust economy,” Gov. Kelly said.

“We need the federal government to support states and support Kansans who are struggling,” she said.

“We need a coherent, top-down strategy that will reassure businesses and Americans that our government has a plan to keep our economy stable until a vaccine is available,” she said.

Also testifying before the House Committee were Govs. Michelle Lujan Grisham, New Mexico; Tim Walz, Minnesota; Lourdes “Lou” Leon Guerrero, Guam. Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of Amercan Action Forum, also testified.

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., released a statement after the hearing:

“I want to thank Governor Kelly for her leadership and for advocating on behalf of the needs of all Kansans today. It’s clear that Kansas needs emergency relief to avoid severe cuts to our public schools, roads, fire departments, public health agencies, and other essential services Kansans depend on. That would hurt our economy even more and make the damage last longer. Kansans have been down this road before.

“After going through the failed Brownback tax experiment, which devastated our budget, we know firsthand how harmful severe state budget cuts can be for our families and communities.

“This is a national emergency and it requires a national solution – states and local governments can’t be expected to address these challenges on their own. I will continue to push congressional leaders and the Administration to pass another coronavirus relief bill that includes aid to state and local governments. That legislation also needs to include support for workers and small businesses, widespread and rapid testing, and personal protective equipment so we can control this virus to save lives and save our economy. Other nations around the globe have done a much better job of controlling this virus – and we should expect nothing less from ours.”

Holtz-Eakin testified that the tax bases of state and local governments held up better than expected, and that this is now a low-wage worker recession. States are experiencing different conditions, based on their circumstances, according to Holtz-Eakin. The governments did better in the second quarter than the economy as a whole, according to Holtz-Eakin. The best help for them to get revenues is growth, according to Holtz-Eakin.

Turner High student named National Merit semifinalist

Brandon Hamilton, a student at Turner High School, has been named a semifinalist in the 2021 National Merit Scholarship Program.

Hamilton is the only student listed from a Wyandotte County school.

He is one of 16,000 semifinalists in the nation announced this week. The high school seniors will have the opportunity to continue in the competition for 7,600 National Merit Scholarships worth more than $30 million that will be offered next spring.

More than 90 percent of the semifinalists are expected to attain finalist standing, and more than half will win a National Merit Scholarship.

More than 1.5 million students took the 2019 Preliminary SAT-National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test as a junior.

The semifinalists are less than one percent of U.S. high school seniors. The number of semifinalists in a state is proportional to the state’s percentage of the national total of graduating seniors.

Letter to the editor

An open letter to Donald Trump from Democratic nominee Aaron Coleman of Kansas’ 37th District on ‘Loser’ Veterans:

Mr. President, with all due respect, our veterans have been attacked enough already by this country. My dad joined the Air Force in 1995 with no goal other than to serve his country. What he did not expect was just three years later he would be getting medically discharged, left permanently disabled — and forgotten by our country. My dad has been in the hospital for the last 25 days now, and is not in great health. While you may not care about him, I do. He might just be a political prop for you, but he’s a hero to me.

At this time, I’m calling on the President to do more for our veterans, stop making excuses and using them as political props and focus on the issues that affect veterans, which are homelessness, mental health issues and medical care that they’re not receiving at this time as well as disability and social security services for their service to our country. We owe them a great deal of respect and together as Kansas legislators we can and should begin the work of honoring their service by creating policies that directly positively address and impact our community’s heroes.

Disabled veterans like my father fought for us and made sacrifices for our country, It’s about time we fight to deliver the promises we made to them.

Aaron Coleman
Kansas City, Kansas