Guest column: Kansas citizens deserve to know the whole story about education funding

by Jim Porter

We are consistently hearing from those political leaders who are resisting what many of us consider to be the adequate funding of education that schools are receiving more state support than ever and that support is increasing every year.

Typically they say that people need to know the facts. Well, that is part of the story and although not a false statement it is certainly deceptive. I will make an attempt to explain the part of the story that they are not telling.

Deception No. 1 – Special Education Services in many cases are provided by Cooperatives or Interlocals. Schools contract with these groups to provide quality services collectively that would be very difficult to provide individually. This is a very efficient way to provide those services. Until recently special education funds were sent directly to the Cooperative or Interlocal. However, a few years ago those funds were sent to the local public school and the school then sent those funds to the provider of services. This was lauded as an increase in public school funding, when in fact, it was the same amount but just laundered through the public schools. It did increase the budget of the public school but provided no additional funds to that district.

Deception No. 2 – Until recently the state contribution to the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System (KPERS) was sent directly to KPERS. Now the funds are transferred to the public school account and then transferred to KPERS on the same day. Again, this was lauded as an increase to public school funding even though it was the same amount of money with just an additional transfer from the state of Kansas to the school to KPERS.

Deception No. 3 – Until this year when we paid our property taxes to our counties the county sent the schools portion of those taxes to the proper school district. Now those funds are sent to the state and the state then sends those funds to the school. This looks like a tremendous increase in state funding for schools when, in fact, it is just a redistribution of funds from local to state.

These three deceptions amount to hundreds of millions of dollars that are being advertised as increases in school funding when they are only reclassifications of funds that were already being spent.

Some of our political leaders are proud of the fact that a benefit of the block grant is the schools will receive the same amount as they have in the past. However, because of inconsistent support for the past several years many schools are having to use fund balances to meet current needs. Those schools that do not have fund balances have to make cuts in services to kids to survive. Spending fund balances is like an individual using their savings account on their monthly expenses. Pretty soon the savings account is empty and the obligations continue. School districts are criticized for having fund balances but of the uncertainly of state support, which has become an increasing problem over the past few years, having those fund balances has become necessary for survival.

Keeping funding level sounds to some like a positive step, however, even though revenue may be level, expenses are not. Areas of increased expenses where school have no option include: Increased cost of insurance (property and casualty, health, etc.), supplies, utilities, increase in number of students, increase in severity of students with special needs among many others. If revenue remains level and costs increase the only option is to reduce services to children. Many schools have already reduced the school year, summer school, activities, elective options, field trips and other enrichment activities along with increasing class sizes among other things, and without additional support these reductions will continue to the detriment to the school children of Kansas.

Another deceptive statement is that Kansas has many thousand new businesses. With the current tax structure allowing many businesses to avoid Kansas Income tax completely I would like to propose an alternative theory. Thousands of Kansas businesses have changed their status so that they qualify under the tax plan and do not have to pay taxes. Those existing Kansas businesses are listed as new businesses even though they have just changed their status. The prediction was that there would be about 190,000 businesses in Kansas who would qualify for the income tax exemption; however, the real number is more like 330,000.

To make up the difference the tax burden is being placed on the property owner and the consumer. Sales taxes have increased. Sales tax is the most regressive tax available as the lower the income the larger percentage of income goes to pay the sales tax. Political subdivisions like cities, counties, school districts, etc. are having to respond in two ways. One is to continue to reduce valuable services and the other is to raise the mill levy. When you receive your tax statement and find that it has increased, that increase is made necessary because 330,000 businesses are getting a pass on the backs of property owners and consumers.

I would urge those political leaders who are bragging about the fact that the “Sun is shining in Kansas” to stop deceptive language and tell the whole story. There are many great things about living in Kansas but our citizens deserve to know the whole story.

Jim Porter, Fredonia, Kan., represents the 9th District, in southeastern Kansas, on the Kansas State Board of Education. He has served 47 years in public education, including 34 as a superintendent of schools.

Opinion: Doughnut shop déjà vu and double standards

Window on the West
by Mary Rupert

On Monday night, a proposal was presented at a Unified Government committee meeting for a fast-food restaurant and a doughnut shop to receive UG funding. It would be located near 18th and Metropolitan Avenue in the Argentine area of Kansas City, Kan.

The Unified Government Committee did not take action on the proposal at that time, however. Instead, commissioners started a discussion on what the policy should be on financing gaps in economic development projects. The project may come back before the commission sometime in the next few months.

Something about it all sounded familiar to me. A doughnut shop. Government funding. Health. What could I be remembering?

I’ll be the first to admit it sounds strange, a doughnut shop and fast-food restaurant getting a government grant, especially from Wyandotte County, which is trying to emphasize health. But it is not unprecedented.

I was present at the ribbon-cutting for Krispy Kreme doughnut shop in February 2015 at Wyandotte Plaza at 78th and State in Kansas City, Kan. The Schlagle High School band played. State officials were present.

The highest official was the lieutenant governor of Kansas, Dr. Jeff Colyer. Yes, a medical doctor welcomed a doughnut shop to Wyandotte County, in 2015. Also there were the Kansas secretary of state and Miss Kansas USA. I felt sorry for Miss Kansas USA since it was February and everyone was outdoors.

Really, I thought it was much ado about doughnuts. There were special circumstances — it was Krispy Kreme’s 1,000th shop opening and KCK was the center of a global doughnut celebration. And they have a really nice building.

There was a long line all around the Krispy Kreme drive-through that day. There were free doughnuts. And, our Wyandotte Daily Facebook page saw a huge sugar spike after we ran the story and photos, attesting to local interest.

The UG approved a community improvement district and a bond issue for the overall $28 million redevelopment project at the shopping center. Krispy Kreme is a separate building, but the project would not likely have been done without the renovation of the shopping center. I did not hear any big protest of fast-food and doughnuts when the Wyandotte Plaza Krispy Kreme was built.

Dignitaries including the lieutenant governor, Dr. Jeff Colyer, right, welcomed a new Krispy Kreme doughnut shop to Wyandotte Plaza, 78th and State, in Kansas City, Kan., in February 2015. (File photo by Mary Rupert)
Dignitaries including the lieutenant governor, Dr. Jeff Colyer, right, welcomed a new Krispy Kreme doughnut shop to Wyandotte Plaza, 78th and State, in Kansas City, Kan., in February 2015. (File photo by Mary Rupert)

Now that the Argentine area wants a doughnut shop – this one is a Dunkin’ Donuts, next to a Wendy’s and Pizza Hut – all sorts of red flags are being raised by commissioners and others in the UG.

It is a $3.3 million development that has already been awarded a federal grant of $1.2 million. The grant is to create 71 new jobs, most of them entry-level, in the Argentine area, according to Commissioner Ann Murguia. The developer is Ferguson Properties.

The project has a gap of $550,000, and that is the amount that is sought from a new UG gap fund approved in the last budget.

I think if the project is approved, first there should be a UG economic analysis of its finances. And the UG Commission needs to decide whether it wants to do this as a pilot project on a trial basis or whether it wants to set policies first on it. Commissioners also raised a question about whether they would want to fund a project that is so close to the Walmart Neighborhood Market project that still has a few pad sites available.

Whether the project is fast food or not should not be an issue, because it has never been an issue anywhere else in Wyandotte County, including not at Wyandotte Plaza last year. Maybe, if all fast-food places were banned in Wyandotte County, it might be reasonable to ban this one.

Commissioner Murguia has a commendable pattern of surveying her constituents and then trying to get what they want, and there is a lack of fast-food restaurants in the area. A couple of fast-food places are helpful when people travel from several miles away to go shopping and want to stop somewhere to grab a bite to eat.

I find it paternalistic that some people now are calling for scuttling the project just because it is a fast-food place. Who’s to say a person shouldn’t have one doughnut every other week or one hamburger every other Saturday? Lately, we have seen some other paternalistic legislation out of Topeka, dictating that people on Medicaid should be given less expensive medications, with legislators deciding that they know more than the patients’ own doctors.

Frankly, I would rather help mom-and-pop restaurants owned by people who live here before helping chains, and I would hope some future project helps local owners and operators. At the same time, if a chain fast-food place is what the residents of an area want, why not give it to them? The new fast-food places also help to address a lack of entry-level jobs in that area.

The UG is showing quite a double standard when it comes to projects located in Argentine compared to projects on the west side. Given some of the UG Commission’s past reactions to projects that Commissioner Murguia is in favor of, perhaps it would be good if developers start now to try to line up 110 private investors with $5,000 each, or 5,000 private investors with $110 each.

Otherwise, if this project is approved, there probably needs to be a rotation plan developed to build similar places in other districts on the east side.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

Letter to the editor: Woodlands

Dear editor,

Ethics complaint filed against Hal Walker and all who participated in these double standard shenanigans. Including the Mayor who needs to learn Roberts’ Rules of Order. This was an absolute charade in a bully pulpit. [“Woodlands permit unanimously approved” https://wyandotteonline.com/woodlands-permit-unanimously-approved/]
To: The Ethics Commission of UG and Ruth Benien: Double standards are noticeable even to the outsiders, many who used to deny the monopolies held by Wyandotte County political machines are now speaking out and stating basic fact. That when and if the people of Wyandotte County want something done there are “unusual” measures that must be overcome to get fair treatment and the lack of representation on the municipal level is obvious – They don’t even try to hide it. Double standards and smoke and mirrors, retaliation. The struggle is real! This was shameful!

I am filing this complaint as an ethical conundrum based upon the quote regarding a request and attempted obligation set upon a potential member of this community. “For a while on Thursday, the fate of the Woodlands seemed a little unclear. UG Commissioners grilled Beeler on a number of points, handling the real estate attorney in a way … that’s unusual for development-starved local governments in this metro area… Commissioner Hal Walker wanted to know if Beeler would commit to not appealing his property taxes like most of the big commercial property owners in western Wyandotte County do every year (Beeler declined that commitment).” [Quote from The Pitch]

So they want him to waive his rights to fair representation, due process and recourse, fair treatment and his rights to demand fair and appropriate taxation by ordinance in a county that is well known for adjustment, changing assessments, PILOTs and levies on its citizens while giving the bank to the outsiders.

The fact that this was even asked out loud is appalling and should be investigated. Many people in Wyandotte County pay their taxes in protest. It is our rights as Americans and apparent duty in Wyandotte County. That is unconstitutional…Tax manipulation and unfair taxation without representation, Misuse of power and God only knows what else. Is this extortion? These are the strong arm and bully antics of Wyandotte County machine politics and have no place in progressive leadership to better our community for everyone in a fair manner. How obviously biased could this be? Promise you won’t complain when we treat you unfairly like we have all the other businesses who complained? or we will not let you play. That was the question in the atmosphere of bully politics If it is not illegal it is certainly unethical. We should show the world that we are better than they think we are, not lower than what they ever thought. However, even our Ethics Commission seems to be bought off and none of the letters/complaints seem to accomplish anything except more of the same. Nonetheless…here it is.

This is exactly why the citizens of Wyandotte County live in fear of reprisal. This is what the leadership does to us, why should we expect any different? Yet I do! Complaint now filed.

Janice Witt, Fed up Citizen

To send a letter to the editor, email [email protected] and include your name and email address. No chain letters please. Keep letters short, please. Omit any name-calling and please stick to the issues. Opinions expressed in letters to the editor are the opinion of the writer and are not the opinion of the Wyandotte Daily.