Davids backs legislation to support women business owners

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., and Rep. Claudia Tenney, R-N.Y., have jointly introduced the Women’s Business Centers Improvement Act.

The legislation would increase access to resources and opportunities for female entrepreneurs in Kansas and across the country, according to Rep. Davids.

The bill passed the last Congress with unanimous bipartisan support and is being reintroduced this session.

The Women’s Business Center program was established 30 years ago to help women entreprenuers succeed, and now boasts 150 locations throughout the United States. These centers serve over 150,000 business owners annually, including the Kansas City WBC located in Fairway, Kansas, which reached more than 800 clients last year.

WBCs provide a full range of counseling and technical training services for small businesses and are instrumental to businesses that are navigating the pandemic, according to Rep. Davids’ office.

“Women-owned businesses employ 9.4 million people nationwide and contribute $1.2 trillion to our economy each year, but throughout the pandemic, female entrepreneurs have been more likely to close their doors. By properly funding resources like Women’s Business Centers, we can increase access to vital counseling and training services that help set entrepreneurs up for success,” Rep. Davids said. “The Third District has an amazing entrepreneurial ecosystem, and I’m proud to introduce bipartisan legislation that will spur even further innovation and economic opportunity here at home.”

The Women’s Business Centers Improvement Act reauthorizes the WBC program for four years, increases the authorization level from $18 million annually to $31.5 million, and increases the cap on individual center grants for the first time since the program began. The bill also establishes an accreditation program run by the Association of Small Business Development Centers to ensure all WBCs provide excellent service and counseling.

The Kansas City WBC serves Kansas entrepreneurs through business trainings, workshops, counseling, and access to capital programs targeted at female business owners. Throughout the pandemic, they have adapted many of their programs to be virtual, relying on SBA funding and the CARES Act to continue to service the strong entrepreneurial ecosystem in Kansas. The Kansas City WBC shared its work with Congress during a House Small Business Committee hearing chaired by Davids in June.

“We are a small team at the Kansas City Women’s Business Center, but we serve a strong, vibrant community of entrepreneurs. Part of the reason we were able to serve over 800 clients and adapt our services during the pandemic last year is because of the support of champions like Representative Davids,” said Sherry Turner, executive director of the Kansas City Women’s Business Center. “This bill would significantly increase our funding, allowing us to reach more women across Kansas and offer more trainings and services to help them succeed and thrive—which has compound effects that lift up our entire local economy.”

  • Story from Rep. Sharice Davids’ office

Kelly, Legislature wrestling economic and political forces on $4 billion development project

WSU study: Expect $2.5B annual impact if manufacturing giant lands in Kansas

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The clock is ticking on consideration by the Kansas Legislature of an extraordinary economic development incentive plan recommended by Gov. Laura Kelly to improve prospects of landing a major manufacturer expected to inject $2.5 billion annually into the state’s economy.

Kansas survived a review process that began 10 months ago to become one of two state finalists for the project — no company name, yet — that a Wichita State University study showed could create thousands of jobs through corporate investment of $4 billion and a package of government incentives. It would deliver an estimated 4,000 direct jobs and have a total employment impact of 7,800 jobs tied to $440 million in annual labor income. There could be a temporary expansion of 16,500 jobs.

The manufacturing plant’s estimated output at full production — think of an operation consuming 3 million square feet of building space — would be $1.8 billion annually, according to modeling by WSU’s Center for Economic Development and Business Research.

Parts of the WSU report were redacted to conceal identity of the prospective company, but the document noted Kansas had an established business sector in the targeted manufacturing field with the second-highest concentration of employment and wages in the nation.

For those engaged in guess work, Kansas officials said the target of the competition wasn’t Boeing and the rival state wasn’t Missouri.

“We finally have a chance to not only catch up to our competitor states, but beat them and supercharge the rate of growth in our state by landing this whale of a project,” said David Toland, who serves as lieutenant governor and as secretary of the Kansas Department of Commerce.

The Kelly administration recommended the Legislature efficiently finish work this week on an economic incentive bill aiming financial support at companies making a minimum investment in Kansas of $1 billion over a five-year period. The Attracting Powerful Economic Expansion Act, or APEX, would feature comparable tax benefits for suppliers with $10 million or more in annual sales to the manufacturing giant.

“It’s a much larger opportunity than anything the state has seen in its history as far as it being a realistic possibility for the state to win it,” Toland said in an interview. “We’ve been encouraging a clean bill that moves swiftly and gets to the governor’s desk this week so we can put forth an offer that will beat our competitor.”

The state’s final bid would need to be submitted in the first week of February, Toland said, so the company could make a site selection later in the month.

Incentive bill on the clock

The legislation would offer the megaproject company a 15% investment tax credit, reimbursement of up to 10% of payroll costs for up to 10 years and a 100% sales tax exemption on construction materials. A separate 50% property tax incentive would be available to the manufacturing company and up to five of its supplier companies if participating in a foreign trade-zone program, assuming local governments consented.

In addition, up to 50% of new employee training and education costs up to $5 million annually would be reimbursed to both manufacturing and supplier companies.

The supplier companies would score a 15% investment tax credit, retain a maximum of 65% of payroll withholding tax for 10 years and also qualify for the training reimbursement as well as the partial property tax exemption and full sales tax exemption on construction.

The package crafted by the Kelly administration was introduced last week in the Senate Commerce Committee. It would target employers in advanced manufacturing, aerospace, logistics, food, agriculture and technical services. Hearings in the Senate committee revealed support for the bill from the politically influential Kansas Chamber and backing among local chambers of commerce.

Eric Stafford, the main lobbyist for the Kansas Chamber, said expansion of gross domestic product in Kansas had lagged competitor states for years. The state also has endured a decades-long decline in population as young adults moved to other states for better jobs, he said.

“Many of us have talked over and over and over about wanting to grow the state and wanting to attract investment,” he told members of the Kansas Senate. “You have a great opportunity to grow. Hopefully, this is a good catalyst of things to come in the future.”

Pointed comments from conservative lawmakers about the bill exposed reservations about writing a large check to lure the company to Kansas.

Sen. Virgil Peck, R-Havana, said he was concerned the Legislature was being pressured to vote on Senate Bill 347 abruptly. He couldn’t recall such a compressed timeline for major legislation in his 14-session career at the statehouse.

“Is there a program that would be too much for the Kansas Chamber?” said Sen. Mark Steffen, R-Hutchinson. “Or, are they all acceptable to the Chamber?”

Stafford said a key metric would be return on the investment made on behalf of taxpayers. The state’s existing economic development tools are effective, he said, but insufficient to compete with other states to attract businesses willing to drop billions of dollars on a production plant. In a perfect world the states, counties and cities wouldn’t be in a bidding war for jobs, he said.

“We don’t live in a perfect world,” Stafford said. “Until all 50 states agree to disarm … we need to have incentive packages available for economic development investment purposes that are attractive and competitive.”

‘An unfair advantage’

In the Capitol, election-year politics play a role in consideration of important legislation. There are questions about whether passage of the bill could be jeopardized by lawmakers unwilling to risk giving Kelly a re-election boost in November.

Instead of rejecting the bill outright, it’s also possible the House and Senate could bundle megaproject legislation with tax reforms the Democratic governor might find distasteful. A veto by Kelly could create an unbreakable logjam that failed to adhere to the company’s site-selection deadline.

Dave Trabert, representing the Kansas Policy Institute, said the organization opposed the Kelly administration’s economic development legislation because it would hand hundreds of millions of dollars to the megaproject and associated businesses. The subsidies would be unfair to other Kansas businesses, he said.

“A subsidized business can offer better prices and pay higher wages, which gives it an unfair advantage,” he said. “Subsidies are part of the reason Kansas has the highest effective tax rates on mature businesses.”

Trabert said local and state government had approved wave after wave of subsidies to Kansas businesses for years, but the state still trailed the nation on job creation and GDP. The bill would give the state Department of Commerce too much discretion and too little protection for taxpayers, he said.

“After two years of overbearance by government officials in their handling of the COVID situation,” Trabert said, “Kansans need a lot more protection and a lot less discretion from government.”

Trabert was the only person to register opposition to the bill during the Senate Commerce Committee’s hearing, while 16 economic development organizations endorsed the legislation.

Eric Brown, president of the Salina Area Chamber of Commerce, said movement of large companies to bring manufacturing capacity to Kansas from overseas could benefit existing manufacturing companies by avoiding supply problems that emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He said Salina would welcome the opportunity to be a potential partner location for suppliers trailing the megaproject.

“As the country looks to repatriate supply chain and manufacturing, it is imperative that the state of Kansas looks to position itself as a viable state to host these high-skilled and good paying jobs,” said John Jenks, director of policy for the Kansas City Area Chamber of Commerce. “The KC Chamber has been a staunch supporter of fiscally responsible and data-informed uses of incentives and believes this bill fits the model.”

Matthew Godinez, executive director of the 12-county Southeast Kansas Regional Planning Commission, said the organization supported the APEX legislation.

“APEX is a measure that strikes a reasonable balance between competitiveness, accountability, transparency and doing what is best for the economic future of Kansas,” he said

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/01/25/kelly-legislature-wrestling-economic-and-political-forces-on-4-billion-development-project/

Legislative auditors skeptical Prairiefire development can pay off $64.8M in bond debt

STAR bond success: $150M MLS stadium debt retired in less than seven years

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The Overland Park retail, office, hotel and residential development attached to the Prairiefire museum struggles to attract out-of-state tourists and could default on $64.8 million in bond debt issued through a state economic development program under scrutiny by the Legislature.

Auditors with the Legislature said their analysis of the PrairieFire project built with capital raised through issuance in 2012 of Sales Tax Revenue Bonds, or STAR bonds, indicated the project wasn’t generating enough sales tax revenue to repay debts in the required 20-year period. Originally, $64.9 million in bonds were issued for the project. Debt remaining to be paid: $64.8 million.

Auditors predicted it could take until 2046 or 2104 to produce sufficient sales tax revenue to retire the PrairieFire obligations held by the city of Overland Park.

“They are in danger of default,” said Andy Brienzo, of the Legislature’s audit division. “We can’t say that definitively. There is some additional development that is slated to happen.”

Bob North, general counsel with the Kansas Department of Commerce, said he didn’t share skepticism of auditors but also couldn’t guarantee success of Prairiefire, which includes a museum for traveling natural history exhibits. The commerce department has approved 19 STAR bond projects since the 1990s for Atchison, Garden City, Salina, Wichita, Topeka, Goddard, Manhattan and other cities.

He said museums, racetracks, sports facilities and other venues build with of $1.1 billion in bond proceeds were intended to raise the quality of life for benefit of Kansans and to attract tourists to the state. He said the objective of STAR bonds wasn’t simply generation of tax revenue.

“If they were, we’d take our money and build a bunch of Walmarts,” North said. “The goal of STAR bonds is to create attractions that are going to bring visitors to the state.”

The House and Senate commerce committees this week invited the Kansas Division of Legislative Post Audit to outline findings of a 2021 audit of STAR bond initiatives. Auditors discovered only three projects outside of the mega-development at Village West in Wyandotte County that fulfilled the objective of elevating tourism.

“STAR bonds are a very, very effective and strong economic development tool,” North said. “They’ve worked well in most instances. I’m not going to tell you every project is perfect.”

Rep. Kristey Williams, an Augusta Republican, said she was disappointed with the quality of information submitted to the state by STAR bond recipients.

“As we look at the annual reports that were submitted to the Department of Commerce,” she said, “some of it doesn’t give real data. It might say visitation went up 30%. Well, 30% from what number?”

Sen. Jeff Pittman, D-Leavenworth, said the assessment of STAR bonds by legislative auditors was “a particularly narrow evaluation.” It was based on estimates of out-of-state visitors and documentation of sales tax revenue but didn’t take into account other evidence of economic development such as the multiplier effect of those new businesses, he said.

“I have some issues with some of this,” Pittman said.

The latest STAR bond annual report submitted to the Legislature by the Department of Commerce pointed to success of Children’s Mercy Park where the Sporting Kansas City professional soccer team plays. It’s become one of the state’s top tourist destinations.

To build the MLS soccer complex, $150 million in STAR bonds were issued in 2010. That debt was paid off in less than seven years.

Jake Reid, president and chief executive officer of Sporting Kansas City, said the franchise derived significant benefit from the STAR bond law and the private-public partnership with the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and the state of Kansas.

“We’re the second-smallest market in our league, yet we often times consistently punch above our weight class in terms of on-field results as well as the business results,” Reid said. “On average, we drive over 600,000 per year through Children’s Mercy Park.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/01/22/legislative-auditors-skeptical-prairiefire-development-can-pay-off-64-8m-in-bond-debt/