Legislators, governor agree to allocate $154 million in federal stimulus funding

Plan directs $100 million at economic expansion, $54 million to struggling students

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly and legislative leaders unanimously agreed Monday to dedicate $154 million in federal stimulus funding to support economic development with construction of commercial buildings and to improve resources available to low-income students struggling in school.

Members of the State Finance Council, which includes Republicans and Democrats from the Senate and House, adopted a recommendation to set aside $100 million for expansion of structures needed to expand or attract businesses and jobs. The council also directed $50 million at a new program of $1,000 per-child grants to be used by families in the way most useful to students struggling through the pandemic.

In addition, $4 million was approved to help school districts upgrade internet connections to high-speed broadband services.

The spending plan was recommended by a public-private board known as SPARK, or Strengthening People and Revitalizing Kansas. Two SPARK members raised sharp objections to the Kelly administration’s plan to support business and education, but were outvoted.

Lt. Gov. David Toland, who also serves as secretary at the Kansas Department of Commerce, said a shortage of commercial space existed in some areas of the state. No decisions have been made about which communities or businesses would receive the funding, he said.

“It will be a competitive pot of money that businesses, communities and others will apply to for their individual projects,” Toland said. “This fund would also support economic development infrastructure, including the extension of utilities to business and industrial sites.”

Houses Speaker Ron Ryckman, a Republican from Olathe, sought more details about how the state would decide which 50,000 students in Kansas received $1,000 grants for social and mental health services, tutoring, books, school supplies and other educational aids.

Ryckman estimated there were 250,000 students in Kansas receiving free or reduce lunch who might be eligible for learning recovery assistance.

“How are we going to pick 50,000 students?” Ryckman said. “How do we select those 50,000 parents or families?”

Kelly said established metrics tied to household income would be relied upon to identify eligible families, who would be responsible for applying for grants.

“The grants will be allocated for the lowest income folks, households at the beginning,” the governor said. “We open up the grant process. There is a deadline to apply for that. At the end of that deadline, if that income level had not applied for all of the grants to use up the $50 million, then we would open up to the next higher tier of income.”

She said the state’s COVID-19 recovery office would work on selecting a vendor that would provide families with an online portal to gain access to approved expenditures.

“We will put up the guardrails to ensure we don’t get scammed here and don’t overpay a vendor,” Kelly said.

The appropriation was drawn from about $1.6 billion in stimulus aid sent to Kansas by Congress. In the past, the State Finance Council agreed to spend $27 million for coronavirus testing, $30 million to enhance salaries of hard-to-fill state jobs and $50 million for compensation bonuses to nurses.

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/2022/01/10/legislators-governor-agree-to-allocate-154-million-in-federal-stimulus-funding/

Kansas doctors praise governor’s ‘bold action’ as COVID-19 infections continue to spike

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Kansas medical providers on Friday praised Gov. Laura Kelly for declaring a state of emergency and issuing executive orders to help confront an overwhelming surge in COVID-19 infections.

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer of the University of Kansas Health System, said the governor’s “bold action” will help hospitals address staffing shortages exacerbated by a multitude of breakthrough cases that are preventing staff from treating sick patients. He cautioned, however, that hospitals are prepared for the latest surge to get increasingly worse throughout the month of January.

The hope is that trends in the United States will mirror those in South Africa, where the number of new infections plunged after the country initially saw a dramatic increase in cases from the omicron variant.

“We don’t know that,” Stites said. “That’s just hope. That’s not reality yet. The reality is we’re seeing the highest number of new cases we’ve ever seen. We’re watching hospitalizations spike with the highest number of hospitalizations we’ve seen. What we next have to ask ourselves: What happens to deaths?”

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment reported 37 more deaths from COVID-19 between Wednesday and Friday, along with 97 new hospitalizations and a stunning 16,341 new cases.

Doctors who participated a virtual news conference hosted by KU Health repeatedly pushed back on narratives about the omicron variant producing less serious illness than previous strains of COVID-19. The problem is the omicron variant is far more contagious. Even if you’re half as likely to be hospitalized, Stites said, hospital counts will go up because so many more people are being infected at once.

Sam Antonios, chief clinical officer for the Wichita-based Ascension Via Christi Health, said a small fraction of a large number is still a large number.

“We hope that it ends up being a mild disease, but so far we haven’t seen that,” Antonios said.

Kim Megow, chief medical officer at HCA Midwest Health, which serves the Kansas City metro area, said the emergency declaration is necessary because “hope is not a strategy.” The organization’s modeling and forecasts include a lot of unknowns, Megow said, but indicate the current number of infections and hospitalizations could double before the surge peaks in early February.

“Is that going to be where we go? We don’t know,” Megow said. “It could be better. It could be worse.”

The governor’s executive orders allow hospitals and nursing homes to employ retirees and students to help with a number of tasks, including testing. Kelly has asked the Legislature, which opens a new session on Monday, to pass a law extending those orders through March. Otherwise, her emergency declaration expires in 15 days.

Legislative leaders met Friday to review her orders and offered support for preserving them.

“It seems like these provisions will help our hospitals in this temporary time of need, and we’re all supportive of that,” said House Speaker Ron Ryckman, an Olathe Republican.

During the news conference, Stites stressed the importance of wearing a mask to limit the spread of the virus and keep businesses and schools open. He urged political leaders to have the courage to support the use of masks.

Doctors also continued to encourage residents to get a free, safe and effective vaccine and booster shot. At the KU Health system, just eight of the 100 patients who are actively being treated for COVID-19 are fully vaccinated.

The enemy, Stites said, is not each other.

“The enemy is within, and it’s twofold,” Stites said. “First, it’s the virus, right? Because the virus is the enemy. And the second enemy is dishonesty. Because if we don’t tell the truth, and if we don’t just be open and honest about things, then we can’t have a conversation that allows us to take on the enemy within — SARS-CoV-2.

“So let’s remember that we’re on the same team and the real enemy in the room is this damn virus. And the way to beat it is by taking that seriously, and following the rules of infection control: Wear your mask, keep your distance, don’t go out if you’re sick, get vaccinated. We can win, but we can only win if we can stand together and not stand against each other.”

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/2022/01/07/kansas-doctors-praise-governors-bold-action-as-covid-19-infections-continue-to-spike/
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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/