Kelly recommending one-time $445 million tax rebate to 1.2 million Kansas taxpayers

Democrat enters re-election year with proposals for tax rebate, food sales tax reform

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly said the flow of state tax revenue was sufficient to propose Wednesday a $445 million tax rebate to Kansans who filed tax returns in the 2021 calendar year.

The Democratic governor said the recommendation would deliver a one-time $250 rebate to individual taxpayers. The 2022 Legislature, which is led by Republicans, would have to concur with her strategy.

“Thanks to our fiscal responsibility and record economic development success, we can return money to taxpayers and give every Kansas resident who filed taxes in 2021 a $250 rebate. These are significant savings for every family to be delivered by summer of 2022,” she said.

The governor, who will be seeking re-election next year to a second term as governor, previously recommended elimination of the state government’s 6.5% sales tax on groceries. Kansas has the nation’s highest sales tax on food, when local sales tax rates are factored.

Under the tax rebate proposal, Kelly said it would take the form of a non-taxable direct payment of $250 for every Kansas resident tax filer. Resident tax filers who filed as married and who filed jointly would be eligible for a $500 direct payment. All other filing types would be eligible for a $250 direct payment.

The Kelly administration estimated 1.2 million Kansas resident taxpayers would qualify for the tax rebate.

Kelly said the plan would have “no impact on the state’s ongoing ability to collect revenues that fund critical services.”

She said the tax refund proposal would be paid for with Kansas’ current budget surplus. The state has experienced income and sales tax revenue collections in excess of analysts’ projections. In addition, Kansas has benefitted from billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 and economic revitalization funding.

“Since 2019, my administration has carefully worked to get Kansas’ budget back on track after years of mismanagement,” Kelly said.

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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A Kansas commission says one step toward racial equity is to stop using Native Americans as mascots

The report offers dozens of other recommendations advocating for expanding tracking of demographic information, targeting use of COVID-19 relief funds and incentive programs to diversify workforces.

by Blaise Mesa, Kansas News Service and KCUR

A state commission asked by Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly to study the state’s racial equity called for ending the use of Native Americans as team mascots, getting vaccines to underserved populations and expanding Medicaid. It also called for a higher minimum wage.

The Commission on Racial Equity and Justice released its recommendations on Tuesday on child care, broadband access, racial equity and other factors related to the social determinants of health.

“My administration remains committed to working together to address inequities and improve the health and well-being of every Kansas community,” Kelly said in a statement.

The commission filed two reports previously, including recommended changes to policing last year.

Increase minimum wage

The report didn’t give a specific wage it’d like to see, but it said Kansas hasn’t adjusted its wage since 2009. Kansas and dozens of other states have kept their minimum wage in line with the federal minimum wage — $7.25 an hour. The minimum wage in about half the states runs $10 an hour or more.

Kansans working 40 hours a week 50 weeks a year will earn $14,500 per year, and the commission said increasing the wage will address labor shortages.

Remove Native American mascots

The commission called for the end to Native American mascots, imagery and names in schools and sports teams. It further called for schools to review anti-bullying and anti-discrimination policies to make them more culturally diverse, and have institutions collaborate with the Kansas Office of Native American Affairs and the Kansas Association for Native American Education to educate people on Native American representation.

Schools in Wichita and Shawnee Mission have already voted to remove such imagery from their facilities. The cost of removing Native American imaging can be expensive. Wichita schools in May learned in May new uniforms, painting over gym floors and changing band equipment could cost over $400,000.

Rethink the role of police in schools

The commission previously recommended schools explore alternatives to school resources officers, such as counselors. Those police school resources officers spend time in schools while class is in session.

The commission now recommends that those officers not “enforce rules or be used to discipline students.”

“If SROs are utilized in a school or school district, their role should be mentorship of students and enforcement of laws,” the report says.

Increase vaccine access

The commission said existing programs that allow for in-home calls should be used to provide vaccines to homebound individuals. Expanding vaccine access to communities of color and other impacted communities should also be the state’s priority, the report read.

Black and Native American Kansans are vaccinated at lower rates than white Kansans, the report says. Meanwhile, local health officials warn of a wave of COVID-19 cases now that the omicron variant has been confirmed in Kansas.
“We still have a lot of unvaccinated folks. We set ourselves up for danger,” University of Kansas Health System chief medical officer Steven Stites said Friday. “That danger is real. … It’s at our doorstep. … We are in trouble.”

Creating a new tax bracket

There are three tax brackets for state income taxes. Families who make over $60,000 per year that file jointly all pay the same rate. The commission called for a fourth tax bracket for joint-filing families that make over $100,000 a year.

The commissions said creating the new tax bracket will evenly divide the state’s tax burden.

Increase access to contraceptives

The commission said access to birth control should be expanded so it is easily accessible for people on private health insurance plans, health insurance provided through employers and on plans that are exempted from a contraceptive coverage requirement.

The report is at https://governor.kansas.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/CREJ-Report-December-2021_FINAL.pdf

Blaise Mesa reports on criminal justice and social services for the Kansas News Service in Topeka. You can follow him on Twitter @Blaise_Mesa or email him at [email protected].
The Kansas 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.

Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-12-21/a-kansas-commission-says-one-step-toward-racial-equity-is-to-stop-using-native-americans-as-mascots.

SPARK executive board earmarks $154 million for Kansas economic development, education

Package includes $1,000 voucher for 50,000 students falling behind during pandemic

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The SPARK executive board of state officials and business advisers agreed to move ahead Monday with allocation of federal funding for $100 million in commercial building infrastructure projects and $50 million in direct aid to children enduring educational setbacks in the COVID-19 pandemic.

The idea proposed by Lt. Gov. David Toland to the seven-member executive board featured development of grants to businesses and communities for expanding building infrastructure capable of attracting or retaining jobs in Kansas. In addition, Toland said the goal would be to provide a $1,000 voucher to low-income, high-need students particularly affected by loss of educational opportunities due to interruption of school.

In addition, the panel agreed to direct $4 million in state matching funds to assist school districts with installation of high-speed internet services.

“In our listening sessions we heard clear direction from Kansans on needs and opportunities,” Toland said. “We’ve got an imperative to try and act now.”

The package, which is drawn from federal relief funding made available to Kansas, must still be approved by the State Finance Council, which includes House and Senate leaders of both political parties and Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly. As it stands, Kansas has yet to allocate $1.1 billion of the $1.6 billion designated by Congress. In addition to $500 million set aside to bolster the state’s unemployment trust fund, the State Finance Council directed $50 million for bonuses to retain nurses, $30 million for salaries of hard-to-fill state jobs and $27 million to continue coronavirus testing through March 2022.

The proposals were endorsed by Senate President Ty Masterson, House Speaker Ron Ryckman, state Department of Administration secretary DeAngela Burns-Wallace, businessman Jon Rolph and Toland. Opposition among executive board members of SPARK, or Strengthening People and Revitalizing Kansas, was registered by businessmen Greg Orman and Bill Pickert.

Masterson and Ryckman requested additional details on how Kansas would determine recipients of individual learning-loss grants of $1,000 per child. Documents provided by the Kelly administration indicated about 50,000 students would be eligible for a program modeled after similar projects in Idaho and Oklahoma.

Under the proposal, parents would seek to qualify through an online portal and, if eligible, would be able to use the $1,000 to buy educational materials, computers, software, tutoring services or cover other approved educational expenses. The program would be structured to allocate the money on a first-come, first-served basis.

Burns-Wallace said the administrative cost of the educational initiative would be kept low, perhaps improving on the 5% cost incurred in Idaho. She said existing metrics for determining eligibility of Kansas students would be used, including guidelines relied upon by the Kansas Department of Education.

“I’m actually a big supporter of empowering parents,” said Masterson, a Republican from Andover and president of the Kansas Senate. “I think this is a step in that direction.”

Orman and Pickert voted against the proposed grants for commercial construction and the vouchers for needy students. Both said the business development grant idea didn’t include enough detail to properly evaluate.

Under the Kelly administration’s proposal, the Kansas Department of Commerce would review applications for support of speculative building developments, modernization of business park facilities and other infrastructure ideas. A lack of ready-to-lease building spaces in Kansas inhibits the state’s ability to accommodate business opportunities, Toland said.

“I’m a hard no on all of this,” said Orman, who was an independent candidate for governor in 2018, a race won by Kelly. “I’m just shocked we’d come out and say we want to do an economic development program to build empty buildings. The idea that the state is going to somehow renovate a bunch of old buildings for the private sector, in my mind, is cronyism at its best. We’re talking about corporate welfare here.”

Toland, the lieutenant governor as well as secretary of the Kansas Department of Commerce, said there was a shortage in Kansas of ready-to-occupy space for logistics and distribution companies and for advanced manufacturing businesses. He said investing federal funds in targeted ways would help build momentum in the state’s economy.

“We don’t have that space in most places in Kansas,” Toland said. “There is an acute shortage.”

Orman also faulted the recommendation to provide $1,000 to students who lacked the resources or support system to buffer themselves educationally when not at brick-and-mortar schools since the COVID-19 pandemic began in early 2020. He suggested the state should explore funding of summer school programs or special reading initiatives.

He alleged the education piece of the package appeared to be a bid for votes in the 2022 campaign cycle.

“We might as well send an absentee ballot with every $1,000 voucher that goes out,” Orman said. “It feels like we’re buying votes here and not actually focusing on the real problem. I understand the political appeal of sending $1,000 to a bunch of people.”

Pickert, who also voted against the package presented to the SPARK executive committee, said he wanted a comprehensive proposal for the education spending plan. He also said the Kansas idea was vastly bigger than the $7.5 million initiative in Oklahoma and $20 million project in Idaho.

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/2021/12/20/spark-executive-board-earmarks-154-million-for-kansas-economic-development-education/