Legislative audit places Kansas’ lonely reliance on STAR bonds under harsh spotlight

State approved $1.1 billion in economic development bonds to promote tourism

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The state’s $1.1 billion investment in special economic development bonds supporting museums, racetracks and other attractions produced only three outside of the mega-development at Village West in Wyandotte County that fulfilled the Kansas Department of Commerce’s primary objective of elevating tourism among long-distance or out-of-state visitors.

Analysis by the Kansas Legislature’s auditors, who responded to lawmakers’ skepticism that the STAR bond program didn’t work as advertised, indicated the Kansas Speedway and Topeka Heartland Park track attracted 20% of visitors from outside the state and 30% of visitors from more than 100 miles away in 2018 and 2019. The Hutchinson Underground Salt Mine met both metrics in 2019.

This study looked at 16 projects benefitting from Garden City to Derby and Atchison to Dodge City that host developments supported by diverting sales tax revenue to pay off the development bonds.

“Only three of 16 STAR bond attractions that we reviewed met commerce’s tourism-related program goals,” said Andy Brienzo, a principal auditor with the Legislature’s division of post audit. “We think generating tourism is really the primary purpose of the program. Critically, it’s what sets it apart from other economic development initiatives.”

Sen. Ethan Corson, a Prairie Village Democrat on the joint House and Senate audit committee, said the two tourism goals sounded like far-fetched measurements of success.

“I love that we’re setting ambitious goals,” he said, “but these just seem to be very, very ambitious to me. I’m worried that we’re setting a standard that we’re not ever realistically going to be able to meet.”

Break-even metrics

In a separate review of STAR bond viability presented Monday to a Legislature’s audit committee, analysts considered how long it might take for the state to recoup sales tax revenue surrendered to support the economic development projects of private businesses.

Auditors selected the Hutchinson salt mine, the Overland Park Prairie Fire Museum and the Wichita Sports Forum to test whether the financial impact of those projects measured up to the opportunity cost to the state giving up significant tax revenue to help repay the STAR bonds.

State taxpayers could expect to be made whole on the Hutchinson development at some point between 2057 and 2132, auditors said. The estimate was more promising for Prairie Fire, which could expect tax revenue to be made whole from 2046 to 2104. The sports forum might get there by 2030 or 2076.

“Good report,” said Rep. John Barker, a Republican from Abilene. “I don’t like the contents, but you did a good job.”

“Prairie Fire in 2104? That’s 83 years out. That’s a long way,” said Sen. Mike Thompson, a GOP legislator from Shawnee.

It was assumed by the state auditors that each of these bond issues for economic development would be paid off in the required 20-year period, but the long-range estimates in the audit report reflected estimates of how long it could take for the state to recoup sales tax revenue given up to pay off the bonds. For example, the Hutchinson salt mine’s bonds were paid off in 2013.

By November 2020, a dozen cities across Kansas had issued $1.1 billion in STAR bonds. Seventy-six percent or $668 million in state tax revenue had been relied upon the pay that bond debt. The remainder, or $204 million, has come from local sales or transient guest taxes.

Village West excluded

Auditors made the subjective decision to set aside the six attractions in Village West backed by $726 million in STAR bonds, because that commercial zone operates at a financial level unparalleled in terms of the other STAR bond districts.

Officials at the state Department of Commerce objected to carving out Village West’s projects from the break-even analysis because they have an enviable financial track record.

David Toland, the secretary of the commerce department and the state’s lieutenant governor, said the legislative audit of STAR bonds wasn’t “fair and balanced” because Village West provided more than $40 million in sales tax revenue to the state annually. The projects have been woven into billions of dollars in private investment and created tens of thousands of jobs.

“Village West’s record of improving both the economy and the general welfare of Wyandotte County and the state as a whole is beyond dispute,” Toland said. “In fact, the Village West project returns more state sales tax to the state general fund than the amount of sales tax ‘foregone’ by the state and applied to debt service for all other STAR bond projects across the state.”

Toland also said the evaluation of STAR bonds should have taken into account the program’s “general and economic welfare” to communities.

Bob North, the commerce department’s general counsel, said he questioned the decision by auditors to use unreliable tourism statistics provided by the company StreetLight Data. Counting visitors to tourist attractions might be as simple as counting purchased tickets or as difficult as determining how many thousands of people visited Village West over a weekend.

“There were assumptions made that we disagree with,” North said. “There are flaws and inadequacies in tracking visitorship.”

A new state law requires the Department of Commerce to take a greater role in business feasibility studies and to mandate developers prepare a plan for tracking visitors, he said.

Sen. Caryn Tyson, a Republican from Parker and a candidate for state treasurer, said the audit of STAR bonds demonstrated her concern about use of tax dollars for the program. She said Kansas was the only state deploying STAR bonds. Nevada used a similar program once, and the Illinois statute opening the door to STAR bond projects hasn’t been used.

“I don’t see why more states aren’t doing this,” Tyson said. “We’ve had it in place over 30 years now and we’re not seeing results from it.”

The Kansas Legislature authorized use of sales tax revenue for STAR bonds in 1993. In 1997 and 1998, the Legislature amended the statute to allow Wyandotte County to rely on STAR bonds for Village West and the Kansas Speedway. The law has been reauthorized through 2026.

Under Kansas law, revenue from sale of STAR bonds could be used to pay for property acquisition, site preparation and infrastructure costs. Once the bonds are paid off, the full amount of sales taxes from a STAR bond district would go to state and local governments.

Kansas Reflector stories, 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/2021/08/31/legislative-audit-places-kansas-lonely-reliance-on-star-bonds-under-harsh-spotlight/.

Why Kansas Democrats tell Republicans to ‘keep it transparent’ as they draw new political maps

by Abigail Censky and Daniel Wheaton, KCUR and Kansas News Service

Republicans will control the redistricting process in Kansas next year. Right now, they face an uphill battle to convince residents in the suburbs of Kansas City that they won’t gerrymander the maps to supercharge Republican power.

Overland Park, Kansas — Without a single new boundary line drawn for the congressional and legislative districts, Republicans running redistricting in Kansas find themselves under fire.

Democrats argue that 14 town halls scattered across the state came with too little advance notice — 10 days — while people who crammed into one of those meetings in Johnson County worried that the fix is in.

“It’s almost as if there was a plan to cheat,” said Stacey Knoell, an Olathe resident.

One of the most critical choices with the once-a-decade redrawing of political maps revolves around the state’s 3rd Congressional District in the Kansas City area. For the last quarter century, it’s toggled between Republican and Democrat. In 2018, Democrat Sharice Davids won the congressional seat.

Republicans want that seat back. By drawing the new congressional districts in a way that puts parts of Johnson or Wyandotte counties in other districts, for instance, they could make her re-election nearly impossible. And because they hold a firm grip on the Legislature, Republicans control redistricting.

On Thursday, Knoell and hundreds of other people crowded into an Overland Park community center to weigh in with state lawmakers after Democrats raised alarm bells that Republicans were attempting to freeze citizens out of the process.

The audience tilted heavily Democratic and pressed for a collective wish list. They demanded maps that grouped districts by communities, not something gerrymandered to consolidate power for one political party. They wanted Wyandotte and Johnson counties kept together in a way that kept Davids’ district essentially intact.

“Within the district’s boundaries lies the heart of the Kansas side of the KC metropolitan area,” said Ron Fugate. He wants the Kansas 3rd to remain in a single district and urged lawmakers to “keep it transparent.”

State Rep. Chris Croft, a Republican from Overland Park, chairs the Kansas House redistricting committee. He said that information is what lawmakers came to hear, said “but how realistic that is really depends upon the numbers.”

New numbers from the 2020 Census show a decline in rural populations across the state and an increase in the state’s population centers fueled by migration to the Kansas City metro area. Douglas, Leavenworth, Johnson and Wyandotte counties are all within the top five counties with the greatest population growth.

Kansas’ four congressional districts will need to have roughly 734,470 people each.

Since 2010, Johnson County and Wyandotte County have grown by more than 77,000 people, putting the counties central to the 3rd District roughly 44,000 people over the threshold. Wyandotte County votes heavily Democratic. Johnson County is more Republican, but it has a larger share of Democrats than most of Kansas. Both counties cannot remain entirely whole to meet redistricting requirements.

A change in how members of the military and college students are counted will also mean changes for state legislative districts. Populations in Douglas and Riley counties, home to two state universities and an Army base, increased because college students were counted in Lawrence and Manhattan rather than in their hometowns.

Kansas is one of 29 states across the country where the Legislature wields nearly total control over the redistricting process. Next year, when maps are redrawn to make the number of people in each district equal, Republicans will have an outsize influence on the process thanks to their fortified supermajority.

But they face an uphill battle to convince residents in the Kansas City area that they won’t gerrymander congressional or state legislative districts to supercharge Republican power in the state.

At the meetings in Kansas City, Kansas, and Overland Park any condemnation of former Senate President Susan Wagle’s pledge that “we can draw four Republican maps” sparked applause from the crowd. Sen. Rick Wilborn, A Republican from McPherson and chairman of the redistricting committee, said that Wagle is not driving the redistricting process.

“It’s unfortunate that statement was made,” he said. “But that’s all I have to say about it. I didn’t make the statement. No one on that committee made that statement.”

Wilborn and Croft previously drew the ire of Democrats by scheduling many of the meetings during the work day and all in a single week. Democrats say that limits participation to the mostly white retiree and middle-aged group that attended the Overland Park meeting. In 2011, the meetings were spread out over the course of four months.

Rep. Stephanie Clayton, another Overland Park Democrat, said her concerns about accessibility materialized in places like Garden City and Dodge City.

“You have a lot of working people, a lot of shift workers, who were not able to take advantage of that,” she said. “So that is not just an issue here in the Kansas City area, but also all over Kansas.”

House Speaker Ron Ryckman has said that additional virtual town halls may be held in the fall, but he has not yet provided any additional details.

Democrats like Clayton want more town hall meetings to be held after people have had time to review the census data that came out on Thursday — at least two meetings in the five most populous counties in the state.

“We need to have these meetings where people actually live,” Clayton said, “because cows don’t vote, people do. And we’ve got plenty of people here, especially in the Kansas City area.”

Abigail Censky is the political reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @AbigailCensky or email her at abigailcensky (at) kcur (dot) org.
TheKansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
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Kansans ask lawmakers to ‘put aside politics’ at launch of redistricting tour

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Manhattan, Kansas — Kansas residents unloaded frustrations with the GOP-led redistricting process on Monday as lawmakers launched a 14-stop, five-day blitz of town halls to gather public input into how political boundaries should be redrawn.

Republicans characterized the online streaming of public forums as “unprecedented transparency,” brushing aside complaints about the short advance notice of meetings and a compacted schedule with gathering times mostly during working hours.

The meetings also preempt the release of detailed information from the U.S. Census Bureau that serves as a basis for drawing congressional and legislative districts.

At the first stop, held at the Kansas State University student union in Manhattan, residents repeatedly asked a panel of Senate and House members to hold additional meetings later this year after census data can be reviewed.


They also asked lawmakers to keep the new district maps as similar as possible to current ones.

The majority party invited criticism of the redistricting process by announcing the meeting times after 6 p.m. on Friday, July 30, and by not consulting with Democrats on the schedule. Democrats fear the GOP will rely on its supermajority power in the Legislature to gerrymander districts and override Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto power.

Tucker Graff, a 33-year-old Manhattan resident, said he could attend the first town hall only because he is a nontraditional student who just finished an internship and hasn’t yet started his new job.

“I struggled to understand how we can recommend fair maps or what we think you should do before the census data is even released,” Graff said. “I don’t know why you’re having these meetings.”

He said he understands Kansas is a Republican state.

“The impulse is going to be, because we have a supermajority in the state Legislature, that we can just kind of ignore Governor’s Kelly’s veto and just push whatever maps we want,” Graff said. “But I hope we do make an effort to try to stay as bipartisan as we can to come up with maps that make everybody happy through the process.”

Sen. Rick Wilborn, a Republican from McPherson who serves as chairman for the redistricting panel, said in an interview after the meeting that complaints about transparency are “a false narrative.” Video of the meetings has never before been available online, he said, and there is no deadline for residents to provide written statements to the committee.

Wilborn said it was too early in the process to decide whether to hold additional meetings after the census data is available. The U.S. Census Bureau plans to provide a first look at the data on Thursday, and provide a more detailed database in September.

During the last redistricting process a decade ago, lawmakers spread the 14 meetings out over a four-month period. Wilborn said the one-week lineup this time was set for the convenience of lawmakers, and was preferable to “spreading it out and ruining two weeks.”

“This is a citizen Legislature,” Wilborn said. “Bear in mind a lot of us have careers and activities and vacations.”

Residents who can’t make it to a particular meeting can drive to another one or watch them online, Wilborn said.

During the public forum, Marsha Tannehill objected to Wilborn’s assertion that lawmakers were interested in transparency and bristled at the decision to schedule the meeting for 9 a.m. on a Monday.

“This is the most inconvenient time for people to be here,” Tannehill said. “It is not open and transparent, as you have just stated. If it was, there would be more meetings, and there would be many more opportunities for other citizens to be here. I think this was very inconvenient, and I think it was done, perhaps, purposefully.”

Martha Mather described herself as an average citizen and voter who doesn’t have detailed knowledge of how the redistricting will be done. But, she said, she is an American who is committed to doing the right thing for her neighbors.

“You are smart people,” Mather told the lawmakers. “You know what the right thing is to do. I ask you to put aside politics and do the right thing for everybody in Kansas and make sure there is fair representation. Yes, you have the power to have a very biased representation, but please think about the country and think about the citizens of Kansas. And don’t think about right and left. Think about right and wrong.”

Linda Uthoff, of the League of Women Voters of Manhattan and Riley County, asked lawmakers to develop guidelines and criteria for forming districts that result in fair maps. She asked them to end the practice of including party affiliation and incumbent addresses in the database used for redistricting.

Jim Swim, of Marysville, urged lawmakers to reunite Marshall County residents who currently are divided by congressional districts and Kansas Senate districts. People there don’t know who to call when issues within the community require attention at the state or federal level, Swim said.

“Dividing counties and municipalities should be avoided because this dilutes the voice and representation of these communities,” Swim said.

Judson Jones, a Pottawatomie County resident, complained that the meeting began without the Pledge of Allegiance. He said he doesn’t care where the lines are drawn. All the talk about nonpartisanship is wrong, he said.

“The winning party gets the opportunity to pick who and how they get represented,” Jones said. “Don’t consider a nonpartisan activity is going to be fair. It’s not going to be fair because the nonpartisanship gets put away when people walk out the door. Everybody knows that.”

John Nachtman, GOP chairman for Dickinson County, attended a public forum on redistricting for the first time just to see what goes on at one of these meetings. He dismissed concerns about the town hall schedule.

“Everybody ought to have a chance to go to one meeting,” Nachtman said. “Everybody can take time off. If they stretched it out too long, they’d be complaining it’s too slow.”

Redistricting town halls


9 a.m. Monday, Aug. 9
Kansas State University, Student Union Ballroom, 2nd Floor, 918 N. Martin Luther King Boulevard, Manhattan
1:30 p.m. Monday, Aug. 9
Kansas State University-Polytechnic, College Center Conference Room, 2310 Centennial Road, Salina
6 p.m. Monday, Aug. 9
Fort Hays State University, Memorial Union Room 212, 600 Park St., Hays
9 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 10
Colby Community College, Cultural Arts Center, 1255 South Range Ave., Colby
1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 10
Garden City Community College, Tedrow Student Center, Endowment Room, 801 Campus Drive, Garden City
6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 10
Dodge City Public Library, Lois Flanagan Room, 1001 N. 2nd Ave., Dodge City
9 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 11
Hutchinson Community College, Stringer Fine Arts Center, B.J. Warner Recital Hall, 600 E. 11th Ave., Hutchinson
1:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 11
Wichita State University, Metropolitan Complex, 5015 E. 29th St. N, Wichita
6 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 11
Neosho Community College, Student Union, Room 209, 800 W. 14th St., Chanute
9 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 12
Pittsburg Memorial Auditorium, 503 North Pine St., Pittsburg
1:45 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 12
Matt Ross Community Center, 8101 Marty St., Overland Park
6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 12
Kansas City Kansas Community College, Upper Level Jewell Hall, 7250 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas
9 a.m. Friday, Aug. 13
Riverfront Community Center, Riverview Room, 123 S. Esplanade St., Leavenworth
1:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 13
University of Kansas, Capitol Federal Hall, Room 1111, 1654 Naismith Drive, Lawrence

Kansas Reflector stories, https://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/2021/08/09/kansans-ask-lawmakers-to-put-aside-politics-at-launch-of-redistricting-tour/