December tax collections in Kansas show growth

Total tax collections for December in Kansas were $890.3 million, a 7.8 percent increase over the monthly estimate, according to Gov. Laura Kelly.

It is also a 15.6 percent, or $120 million, growth over December 2020.

“Over the past three years my administration has taken steps to restore the Kansas economy, and that fiscal responsibility has paved the way to provide direct tax relief to Kansas taxpayers,” Gov. Kelly said. “That relief will come specifically through proposals like axing the food tax and offering a one-time $250 tax rebate for Kansas families.”

Individual income tax collections were $355.2 million. That is $35.2 million more than the estimate and $48.5 million, or 15.8%, more than the previous December.

Corporate income tax collections were $132.0 million, which is $22.0 million more than the estimate. That is 33.1%, or $32.8 million, more than the same month of the previous year.

Retail sales tax collections were $224.3 million for December. That is $4.3 million, or 2.0%, more than the estimate and 11.1%, or $22.4 million, more than December 2020.

Compensating use tax collections were $69.2 million. That is $2.2 million, or 3.3%, more than the estimate. Those collections are also $17.0 million, or 32.7%, more than the previous December.

According to figures from the Kansas Department of Revenue, retail sales tax revenue distributions in Wyandotte County for December 2021 were $2.77 million, a 21.9 percent increase from December 2020’s figure of $2.27 million.

For the calendar year 2021, retail sales tax revenue distributions increased 15 percent in Wyandotte County, from $25.59 million in 2020 to $29.42 million in 2021, according to KDOR figures.

Sales tax revenue distributions for Kansas City, Kansas, were $4.2 million for December 2021 as compared to $3.38 million in December 2020, according to KDOR figures, a 26.3 percent increase. For the calendar year of 2021, sales tax revenue distributions in Kansas City, Kansas, were $42.1 million, an increase of 11.8 percent over $37.6 million in 2020.

Statewide tax collection figures are at https://governor.kansas.gov/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/06_December_Revenue_FY2022_01-03-2022_Final.pdf.

Kansas organization seeks statewide removal of racist language from property documents

CAIR asks Gov. Kelly to take action, but Legislature also could step into fray

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The Kansas chapter of the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization is urging the governor to issue an executive order aimed at stripping discriminatory language from residential property documents.

Despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1948 and the federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 rendering racial restrictions unenforceable, documents created decades ago by homeowner associations or by individuals for filing with county governments in Kansas and other states include restrictions on renting, leasing or selling property to members of minority communities.

The Kansas chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations requested Gov. Laura Kelly issue an order permitting cities in Kansas to delete offensive language in property documents.

The request highlighted work in the Johnson County city of Roeland Park, which initiated a review of options for dealing with discriminatory text in plats, deeds and covenants on file with the recorder of deeds. For example, files on Roeland Park contained documents prohibiting residential lots from being in the hands of a person of color. The city discovered racially intolerant language in documents associated with six neighborhoods.

“It is unacceptable that racist, discriminatory language continues to be present in property documents,” said Moussa Elbayoumy, board chairman of Kansas chapter of CAIR.

Elbayoumy said Kelly should consider an executive order allowing for “swift removal of such content from property documents in Roeland Park and statewide.”

“Doing so would be a step toward ensuring equal housing opportunities for all citizens,” Elbayoumy said.

The governor’s office didn’t respond to a request for comment on a potential executive order, but an option would be for the Kansas Legislature to adopt a bill allowing a recorder of deeds to accept new documents deleting racial restrictions without incurring thousands of dollars in surveying or legal costs.

In 2021, Wyoming adopted a state law permitting homeowners to remove racially restrictive covenants from real estate deeds. In Virginia, the state enacted a statute to grant municipalities the power to repeal racist language.

CAIR’s stated mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam and empower American Muslims.

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/2022/01/02/kansas-organization-seeks-statewide-removal-of-racist-language-from-property-documents/

Kansas governor striving to fulfill campaign pledges amidst stubborn COVID-19 pandemic

Gov. Laura Kelly shares views on economy, education, health care, taxes

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Under normal circumstances, Democrat Laura Kelly’s summary of her term as governor would end with discussion of stabilizing the state budget, adopting a bipartisan transportation program, improving state aid to K-12 public education, reforming the troubled foster care system and moving the ball on economic development.

The past 21 months have been anything but ordinary as the dark menace of COVID-19 that descended in March 2020 has claimed lives of nearly 7,000, seriously sickened 16,800 and infected more than half a million Kansans. The pandemic exposed rifts between Kansans who eagerly rolled up a sleeve to receive vaccinations and those adamantly opposed to government prescribed shots. It created political division and litigation on wearing masks, closure of businesses, social distancing, mass gatherings and use of billions in federal relief dollars funneled to Kansas.

Kelly, who faces reelection in November 2022, said the role of a governor in these times was to juggle day-to-day decisions regarding COVID-19, for which she garnered praise and condemnation, and remain vigilant with fundamentals of running state government.

“There’s no doubt that COVID has really consumed a lot of focus, a lot of energy,” Kelly said in a Kansas Reflector interview. “Not just on the administration’s part, but the entire state. Every single citizen in the state of Kansas has been really impacted by this in some way, shape or form. Some people financially. Some people, obviously, health-wise. And, certainly, psychologically. It’s been a grueling time.”

Kelly said she concentrated on realistic state budgeting that left a cushion for the unexpected and on sustaining financial support of public schools. She supported implementation of a new long-term highway and infrastructure program, and worked to make good on highway plans defunded during the administration of Gov. Sam Brownback. She sought businesses development and pressed for job growth in rural areas of the state.

“I do that because I want to be able to fund our schools, our roads, foster care system and other essential services. The only way to do that without raising taxes is to expand your base. So that’s why we have been so aggressive in recruiting and retaining companies,” Kelly said.

The governor has failed to convince the Republican-led Legislature to expand eligibility for Medicaid health services to lower-income Kansans. She also endorsed legalization of medical marijuana, which passed the Kansas House but wasn’t voted on by the Kansas Senate.

In advance of the 2022 legislative session beginning in January, Kelly proposed elimination of the state’s 6.5% sales tax on groceries at cost of more than $450 million to $500 million annually. She also recommended a one-time $250 tax rebate for 1.2 million Kansans that would cost the treasury $445 million.

“Despite this year’s successes, we know there’s more work to do to grow our economy and support our families,” Kelly said. “Next year, we must axe the food tax to provide tax relief to every Kansas family, continue to fully fund our public schools, and pass Medicaid expansion to keep our people healthy and workforce strong. My administration will continue championing policies that move Kansas forward.”

Kelly said she wasn’t keen to impose artificial prohibitions on tax reform legislation that would tie the hands of government officials.

“It does not work. You don’t need something like that. You just need to approach budgeting revenues in a fiscally responsible way. Not an ideological point of view,” she said.

Kelly, who won her first election for Kansas Senate by less than 100 votes in 2004, defeated Republican candidate Kris Kobach in the 2018 campaign for governor. In that contest, she secured 47.8% of the vote. Kobach pulled in 43.3%. Three other candidates shared 9%. She declared in 2020 her intention to seek reelection as governor. She could face Republican Derek Schmidt, the state’s attorney general, in November 2022.

The governor said she wasn’t going to take a different approach to the job as she transitioned to an election year.

“I understand in an election year, generally, what happens in the Legislature has a little bit different flavor,” Kelly said. “We’re fully prepared for that. I will deal with it just like I have for the last, what, 18 years. I really don’t bear an ideological cross. I’m really here for good policy and to do what’s right for Kansas and for Kansans. I will just continue operating exactly that way.”

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/2021/12/27/kansas-governor-striving-to-fulfill-campaign-pledges-amidst-stubborn-covid-19-pandemic/