Governor signs Kansas law allowing harsher penalties against child abusers

by Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Under a new Kansas law, those found guilty of child abuse will face harsher penalties in line with other severe crimes.

House Bill 2508, signed into law Monday by Gov. Laura Kelly, amends the Kansas Criminal Code’s severity levels for the crime of child abuse and allows for more specific sentencing based on the severity of abuse.

“We owe it to our children to hold abusers accountable and any crime against our most vulnerable should be met with adequate punishment,” Kelly said. “This bill provides the needed updates for prosecutors to ensure victims of child abuse are granted the same justice as victims of other serious crimes.”

The new law passed the House without opposition and only received two no votes in the Senate.

Under the law, penalties for child abuse range from a severity level 3 felony to a severity level 6 felony depending on the age of the child and the type of abuse inflicted.

Rep. Fred Patton, R-Topeka, touted the measure as a collaborative effort between law enforcement, prosecutors and other stakeholders to improve this area of the criminal justice system.

“The bill makes several key improvements to our justice system, including increasing penalties for those who cause harm to our most vulnerable Kansans, our children,” Patton said.

In addition to the amended child abuse penalties, the governor also approved laws allowing the consumption of alcohol on state fairgrounds and restricting lawsuit advertising practices. Also approved was a measure creating the Kansas Cotton Boll Weevil Program.

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Kansas lands deal for construction of $650 million, 500-job biomanufacturing facility

Gov. Kelly views economic development project as game changer

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Manhattan, Kansas — Gov. Laura Kelly spearheaded the announcement Monday of an agreement for construction of a $650 million, 500-employee manufacturing facility supporting development of vaccines to counter global biological threats.

The 500,000-square-foot Scorpion Biological Services facility in proximity to Kansas State University and the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility represented significant expansion of biopharmaceutical operations through parent company Heat Biologics of Morrisville, North Carolina. Manhattan and Kansas State beat out the other prominent bidder for the commercial plant — Iowa City and the University of Iowa.

“There is a strong demand for world-class biomanufacturing, which we expect will continue well into the future,” said David Halverson, president of Scorpion Biological. “Powered by an excellent Kansas workforce, we’re looking forward to rapidly growing and expanding Scorpion.”

Scorpion Biological, based in San Antonio, Texas, is expected to grow employment at the Manhattan facility to 500 within seven years. The company is finishing construction of a smaller clinical scale biologic manufacturing facility in San Antonio.

Gov. Kelly, who has touted her record in office in terms of economic development, said the Scorpion Biological project was a “game-changing facility that will have a massive positive impact in our state.”

“Being in the center of the country with quick access to either coast, there is no better state for Scorpion to locate in order to address potential threats to public health,” the governor said.

Scorpion Biological supports drug development from conception through clinical trials and commercial production in an effort to bring products to market faster and more reliably. A point of emphasis at Scorpion Biological is expanding reach of precision medicine for untreatable or treatment-resistant ailments.

The Kansas Department of Commerce said Scorpion Biological qualified for a package of state economic development incentives used to attract large employers the state.

“It’s absolutely critical that we, as a nation, increase our capacity for domestic production of these types of vaccines and we are extremely proud to see this work happen here in Kansas,” said David Toland, secretary of the Department of Commerce and the state’s lieutenant governor.

The project was a partnership with K-State, Kansas State University Innovation Partners, the city of Manhattan, Manhattan Chamber of Commerce, Pottawatomie County and the county’s economic development arm, Manhattan Area Technical College and several private companies.

The combination of a public research university and private-sector partners was important to the site selection decision, officials said.

“This facility represents the next stage in our evolution, enabling us to combine speed and agility with the full integration of discovery, development and manufacturing,” said Jeff Wolf, founder and chief executive officer of Heat Biologics.

Wolf also founded Seed-One Ventures, a firm focused on the formation and management of new biomedical companies; co-founder of Avigen, a NASDAQ-listed gene therapy company; co-founder of TyRx Pharma, focused on the development of biocompatible polymers; and co-founder of EluSys Therapeutics, a biodefense company concentrating on a medical countermeasure to anthrax exposure after a natural incident or intentional attack.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

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Kelly vetoes transgender sports ban, parental bill of rights touted by Republicans

Democrat rejects food stamp limitation, COVID-19 immunity bills

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed hot-button bills sought by Republicans to ban transgender females from sports, adopt an educational bill of rights for parents, raise the barrier to eligibility for food stamps and broaden COVID-19 lawsuit immunity for health providers.

The Democratic governor didn’t surprise anyone Friday by vetoing the four controversial bills. There was no shock GOP leadership in the Legislature pledged to seek overrides upon returning to Topeka on April 25. Override of a governor’s veto requires support from two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate.

Gov. Kelly, who is seeking re-election in November, offered an explanation for rejection of House Bill 2448, which would mandate able-bodied adults without dependents to work at least 30 hours per week or enroll in a job training program to be eligible for the federal food stamp program.

“Every Kansan feels the price of the pandemic-induced inflation at the pumps and at the grocery store. The cost of food alone is one of the most significant contributors to inflation overall,” Gov. Kelly said. “With the rising costs of these necessities, we should be helping people afford the basics. This bill would unnecessarily burden nearly 30,000 hard-working Kansans.”

Attorney General Derek Schmidt, the presumptive Republican nominee for governor, said Kelly’s veto of the food stamp legislation was a mistake because it required taxpayers to subsidize food purchases by people who choose not to work despite high demand from Kansas employers.

“Both because work gives dignity and because taxpayers deserve better, I would have signed this work requirement into law,” Schmidt said.

Senate President Ty Masterson, R-Andover, said the Legislature would prepare for votes to salvage the ban on transgender girls or women from participation in school or college sports programs as well as the education bill of rights requiring teachers to disclose all classroom materials to parents in advance of use and encourage parents to challenge library books they consider offensive.

“In recent months, the governor has been a chameleon, demonstrating election-year conversions in an attempt to fool Kansans into believing she shares their values,” Sen. Masterson said. “Rather than listening to parents and female athletes, her decision to veto the Parents’ Bill of Rights and the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act demonstrate she is still largely controlled by the hard left.”

Sen. Masterson said it was important to put into state law provisions of Senate Bill 160 limiting membership on girls or women teams to a person’s gender at birth. Allowing trans females to take part would create competitive advantages.

In addition, the Senate president said veto of the educational bill of rights applicable to K-12 public schools across Kansas outlined in Senate Bill 58 suggested the governor viewed “parents as the enemy.”

Sherri Schwanz, president of the Kansas-National Education Association, said the governor’s veto of the parents’ bill of rights prevented creation of an artificial barrier to communication between teachers and parents “for the purpose of opening schools to attacks by partisan operatives.”

“It protects our students from the attempt to make our classrooms ground zero in a culture war that seeks only to advance a partisan agenda,” Schwanz said. “We applaud Governor Kelly for using her veto pen.”

Gov. Kelly also vetoed Senate Bill 286 that extended health care providers immunity from civil liability in terms of the COVID-19 pandemic until January 2023. The shield addressing damages, fines and penalties for health care decisions related to the pandemic would be broadened to include people not employed by a medical facility or providing direct health care services.

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/2022/04/15/kelly-vetoes-transgender-sports-ban-parental-bill-of-rights-touted-by-republicans/