School districts and some local governments to hold budget hearings in September

Although it’s September, local residents still don’t know whether their property taxes will be going up next year.

The annual budget exercise for local governments and school districts has been extended into September this year, with hearings being held throughout Wyandotte County on local budgets and exceeding the revenue neutral rate.

Proposed budgets have been published, and while the mill levies can be lowered before the final vote, the budgets cannot be raised above the amount published.

Taxpayers turned out to the Unified Government’s budget hearing on Aug. 22 and let commissioners know they wanted lower taxes. Some UG commissioners urged the residents also to turn out to budget hearings being held by school districts and other local governments.

Valuations generally increased throughout the county, meaning if local governments keep the same mill levy rate as last year, property tax bills will go up.

The proposed mill levy for Kansas City, Kansas, was 38.48 and the proposed mill levy for Wyandotte County was 39.33.

The UG Commission is not set to vote on its $431 million budget until Sept. 15, according to information from a recent UG meeting.

At recent budget meetings, there was some UG Commission support to lower the county mill levy by 2 mills. According to the UG, reducing the mill levy by 1 mill would save a resident $17.25 per year on a $150,000 residence. There were also presentations about urgent needs in the community. The “revenue neutral” rate, to get the expenditures to about the same amount as last year, would have been a 9-mill decrease from the proposed mill rate.

KCKCC budget

Three taxpayers took the commissioners’ advice and appeared at the Kansas City Kansas Community College budget hearing on Aug. 23.

Dr. Greg Mosier, KCKCC president, who recommended that the KCKCC board approve the proposed budget, said at the meeting that the college has been keeping the mill levy flat for six years in a row, even though there were additional expenses. The proposed college mill levy rate was 27.318.

According to the KCKCC budget, published in the Wyandotte Echo on Aug. 18, the proposed budgeted expenditures are $93.37 million for 2022-2023, compared to $85.09 million for 2021-2022 and $80.52 million for 2020-2021.

Beverly Watkins, a taxpayer, asked why the college was not meeting with the UG commissioners about tax rates. The commissioners have been talking about having a joint meeting.

According to Dr. Greg Mosier, KCKCC president, the UG, or combined city and county, made up 46 percent of the property tax bill, while there were five other entities that also had mill levies. The college was 16 percent of the tax bill.

Another taxpayer said he didn’t understand why the college was educating more people to get higher-paying jobs in Wyandotte County, when the people would just move out of Wyandotte County when they got the jobs.

Dr. Mosier said 60 percent of the students who graduate from community college stay in the local community. About 30 percent go on to four-year programs.

“Our goal is to educate them so they can stay in their homes,” he said. That would provide them with extra money, better vehicles, home improvement, the ability to purchase a better house and send their kids to school. Construction, automation and manufacturing programs offered by the college can help people make a career and stay in Wyandotte County, he said.

“The way to decrease tax rates is to create more taxpayers,” Dr. Mosier said at the budget hearing. Education will create more taxpayers and lessen the burden on others.

KCKCC is trying to make an investment downtown with a new campus, and that will result in other businesses wanting to come downtown, according to Dr. Mosier.

Linda Hoskins Sutton, a KCKCC board member, said she wanted people to realize the college is keeping the mill levy flat, not raising it. The reason taxes are going up is because appraisals of property went up, she said, but the college is not raising it.

Karl Schottler, a Shawnee, Kansas, resident who owns a business in Kansas City, Kansas, said that at the UG’s public hearing on the budget, people said they were losing their homes because they were being taxed out of them. He said if the college is not reducing the mill levy, then it is increasing people’s taxes.

During the hearing on Aug. 23, Dr. Mosier said Wyandotte County now has the second highest wages in the state, of all counties. The average wage in advanced manufacturing is $75,000 a year and in construction, $67,000 a year.

Those are two of several programs KCKCC wants to launch at its new downtown campus, he said.

Currently, about 70 percent of the high-paying jobs here are going to residents of other counties, he said.

“If we provide education and training to our residents, they can get jobs and keep it in the county,” he said. Even a slight increase in the number of jobs held by local residents would increase the income here by millions of dollars per year.

“As a community college we need to do everything we can to provide training for residents of Wyandotte County,” he said. “It really is an investment in our community.”

The college has already raised a substantial portion of the funds necessary, more than $30 million, for the downtown campus, and still needs additional investment, he said.

“Education is really an economic development tool,” he said.

A survey in 2017 found the college supported 2,800 jobs with a $182.3 million impact on the community, he said.

If they reduced the mill levy a half-mill, it would decrease funding $875,000, he said. If they decreased it 1 mill, it would decrease funding $1.749 million, he said.

If, for example, that meant they could not start a new high-voltage linemen training program, where graduates could make $60,000 a year, that $1.7 million would be quite a tradeoff for not being able to develop the program, he said.

If the college reduced the mill levy by around a half mill, it would save a homeowner of a $200,000 home about $14 a year or $1.18 a month, he said. That amount is not significant, but it makes a difference in the overall college budget, according to Dr. Mosier. If the college reduced the mill levy by a mill it would be a savings of about $28 a year, or $2.36 a month to the homeowner of a $200,000 home.

The KCKCC Board of Trustees voted to approve the budget as presented, after the budget hearing.

School districts and other local governments

Several budget hearings are scheduled in September for school districts and other local governments.

KCK schools

The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools’ budget proposes a mill levy of 49.650 for 2022-2023, compared to 49.656 for 2021-2022 and 49.650 for 2020-2021.

It is about a $98 million increase in the proposed expenditures from this year. The proposed expenditures for 2022-2023 are $577,902,471, compared to $479,700,548 in 2021-2022 and $418,823,424 in 2020-2021, according to the budget, presented at a recent meeting.

The KCKPS budget hearing is scheduled at 5:10 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 13, at the Central Office, 2010 N. 59th St., Kansas City, Kansas. There will be a public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral tax rate for the 2022-2023 year at 5 p.m. Sept. 13 at 2010 N. 59th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

Turner Public Schools

The Turner Public Schools will hold a public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral tax rate at 6:10 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 6, at 800 S. 55th St., Kansas City, Kansas. The Turner schools budget hearing will be at 6:15 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 6 at 800 S. 55th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

The Turner proposed budget for 2022-2023 is a mill levy of 55.143, compared to 54.318 for 2021-2022 and 53.908 for 2020-2021, according to the budget published in the Record News.

Proposed expenditures are $110.04 million for 2022-2023, as compared to $81.75 million for 2021-2022 and $75.95 million for 2020-2021.

Piper Public Schools

The Piper Public Schools will hold a public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral tax rate at 6 p.m. Monday, Sept. 12, at 4410 N. 107th St., Kansas City, Kansas. There will be a budget hearing at 6:05 p.m. Sept 12 at 4410 N. 107th.

The proposed 2022-2023 Piper schools budget has a 63.657 mill levy, compared to 57.795 in 2021-2022 and 57.208 in 2020-2021, according to the Piper budget, published in the Wyandotte Echo.

The total proposed expenditures for 2022-2023 for the Piper schools budget are $47.39 million, compared to $40.86 million in 2021-2022 and $38.73 million in 2020-2021.


Bonner Springs Public Schools

The Bonner Springs Public Schools will hold a budget hearing at 7:15 p.m. Sept. 6 at 2200 S. 138th St., Bonner Springs. A public hearing on exceeding the revenue neutral rate will be held at 7 p.m. Sept. 6 at 2200 S. 138th St., Bonner Springs.

The proposed 2022-2023 mill levy rate is 52.254, compared to 57.137 for 2021-2022 and 60.911 for 2020-2021, according to the budget, published in the Wyandotte Echo.

The total proposed expenditures for 2022-2023 are $54.49 million, compared to $48.97 million for 2021-2022 and $50.26 million for 2020-2021.

Bonner Springs city

A budget hearing for the city of Bonner Springs will be held at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 12 at City Hall, 200 E. 3rd St., Bonner Springs.

The proposed mill levy for 2022-2023 is 42.892 mills, compared to 42.892 mills in 2021-2022 and 38.328 mills in 2020-2021, according to the budget, published in the Wyandotte Echo.

The proposed expenditures were $30.03 million for 2022-2023, as compared to $22.23 million in 2021-2022 and $25.62 million in 2020-2021.

Edwardsville city

A public hearing on the budget for Edwardsville city will be held at 6 p.m. Sept. 12 at Edwardsville City Hall, 690 S. 4th St., Edwardsville.

The proposed mill levy for 2022-2023 is 42.844, compared to 42.298 for 20221-2022 and 43.298 for 2020-2021, according to the budget, published in the Wyandotte Echo.

The proposed expenditures for 2022-2023 are $12.28 million, as compared to $9.2 million in 2021-2022 and $9.36 million in 2020-2021.

See earlier story at https://wyandotteonline.com/ug-commission-overrides-mayors-veto-on-revenue-neutral-resolution-as-wyandotte-county-residents-plead-for-lower-taxes/.

More UG budget information is at https://www.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/finance/documents/budget/unified-government-2022-amended-2023-proposed-budget-document.pdf

Bonner Springs celebrates sunny Tiblow Days

The Bonner Springs Dazzlers dance team performed at the pavilion in Kelly Murphy Park after the Tiblow Days parade. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

The Bonner Springs-Edwardsville Chamber of Commerce celebrated all things Bonner this weekend at Tiblow Days, the annual end-of-summer festival in honor of Henry Tiblow, a Delaware Indian who operated a Kansas River ferry in the late 1800s on the future site of the town.

Saturday’s events included a pancake breakfast, 5K run, parade, car show, carnival and concert. The parade route was shortened from previous years, allowing the festival area to spread out and encourage more shopping in the downtown area, a key purpose of the event.

The Bonner Springs Fire Department showed off its rescue gear. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The Bonner Springs High School cheerleaders demonstrated a cheer routine they learned at an off-season camp. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The Koran Temple Shriners drove in the Tiblow Days parade. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Wyandotte County Sheriff Daniel Soptic waved to the crowd. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Carnival rides started at noon and ran into the evening. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Classic cars were on display at the Tiblow Days car show. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Riding on a parade float isn’t always as much fun as they say. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The Bonner Springs High School marching band had its first performance of the new school year. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Carnival rides started at noon and ran into the evening. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The Wyandotte County 4-H Horse Project rode in the parade. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Scenes from the 2022 Tiblow Days parade. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Candy was passed out to young parade-watchers. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Third District Congressional candidate Amanda Adkins talked to spectators along the parade route. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

A large American flag was flown from an even larger Wilkerson crane. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Costumed characters from the Kansas City Renaissance Festival, walked in the parade. The Festival starts next weekend in Bonner Springs. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Cub Scouts from Pack 3149 passed out candy on the route. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

Turkey-Bone & Full Count Band performed jazz and blues music. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The Bonner Springs High School girls’ wrestling team sponsored a float. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

 

The warm late-summer weather had parade-goers panting. (Photo copyright 2022 by Brian Turrel)

At the Croatian Festival

Tamburitza music was one of the features of the Croatian Festival held Saturday evening at St. John the Baptist Catholic parish, 708 N. 4th St., Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)

by William Crum

More than 200 people showed up at this year’s St. John the Baptist Catholic parish’s Croatian Festival on Saturday evening.

Among those attending the event were State Rep. Kathy Wolfe Moore, former UG Mayor David Alvey, Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree and Wyandotte County Judge Courtney Mikesic.

The event continues until 10 p.m. Saturday. It was a fundraiser for the parish.

At the Croatian Festival Saturday evening at St. John the Baptist Catholic parish, 708 N. 4th St., Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
At the Croatian Festival Saturday evening at St. John the Baptist Catholic parish, 708 N. 4th St., Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Delaney Cocke, Miley Cocke and Karolyn Tomasic at the St. John the Baptist Catholic parish Croatian Festival Saturday evening on Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
At the Croatian Festival Saturday evening at St. John the Baptist Catholic parish, 708 N. 4th St., Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)