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Trump’s Tax Plan Has Echoes Of The Kansas Tax Cut Experiment

By Jim McLean

Governor Brownback -photo by STEPHEN KORANDA

Members of Congress might want to familiarize themselves with the story of Kansas’ failed tax-cutting experiment as they begin deliberations on President Donald Trump’s tax-reform plan.

It could serve as a cautionary tale because some elements of the president’s updated proposal mirror pieces of the tax-cut plan that Republican Gov. Sam Brownback pushed through the state legislature in 2012, promising it would deliver a “shot of adrenaline” to the Kansas economy.

It didn’t. Instead, revenues crashed, forcing Brownback and lawmakers to resort to spending cuts, borrowing and accounting tricks to maintain a balanced budget.

So, Kansans reading headlines about the Trump tax cuts might be excused for having a déjà vu moment.

“Are you kidding me,” says University of Kansas political scientist Burdett Loomis. “I think it is pretty clear that the Kansas experiment was a failure.”

William Gale of the centrist Brookings Institution called the Kansas tax cuts “a lab test for how supply side tax cuts may work at the federal level.”

Not well, he concluded in a July blog post.

“The Brownback plan aimed to boost the Kansas economy, but instead led to sluggish growth, lower than expected revenues and brutal cuts to government programs,” Gale wrote.

‘Red-state experiment’

In his self-described “red-state experiment,” Brownback, who’s been nominated for a State Department post with the Trump Administration, slashed individual income tax rates and lowered to zero the tax on so-called pass-through business income, which usually comes from small businesses and partnerships.

In Kansas, business owners responded by restructuring their companies as limited liability corporations to avoid paying income taxes.

State revenues plummeted by hundreds of millions of dollars and continued to miss projections for several years

Like Brownback, Trump and GOP congressional leaders say lowering income and business taxes will spur investment and economic growth. Their plan would reduce the nation’s top income tax rate to 35 percent from 39.6 percent and lower the corporate tax to 20 percent from the current 35 percent.

Unlike the Kansas experiment, the president’s proposal wouldn’t exempt pass-through income but it would lower the rate that high-earning professionals in business partnerships pay to 25 percent.

“The promise [in Kansas] was that the tax cuts would generate so much economic growth that you wouldn’t really feel the revenue loss,” said Michael Leachman, director of state fiscal research at the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said. “The same sorts of promises are now being made at the federal level.”

Kansans felt it.

Spending cuts, borrowing

With state revenues in free fall, Brownback rejected calls to roll back parts of his signature tax cuts. Instead, he slashed university budgets, cancelled highway projects and convinced reluctant lawmakers to go along with a plan to borrow $1 billion to shore up the state’s public pension fund.

Angry voters responded in 2016 by ousting dozens of conservative Republicans who supported the tax cuts and replacing them with Democrats and moderate Republicans who promised to “fix the mess” in Topeka.

Led by a coalition of those newly elected lawmakers, the 2017 legislature ended the Brownback experiment by passing a $1.2 billion tax increase over his veto.

State Rep. Melissa Rooker, a moderate Republican who helped lead the rollback effort, took little satisfaction in the victory.

“It’s hard to celebrate because Kansas in such shambles,” Rooker said to the Wichita Eagle. “The magnitude of the problems that we have to correct is so great.”

The failure of the state’s tax-cutting experiment hasn’t dampened enthusiasm for Trump’s tax-reform proposal among Kansas’ all-Republican congressional delegation. All five of the state’s U.S. House members and both of its U.S. Senators have expressed support the president’s plan.

Statements posted to their websites this week make little mention of the array of proposed cuts for wealthy taxpayers. Instead, they tout the plan as a long-waited effort to simplify the tax code and deliver relief to middle-income Americans.

“Many Kansas families are living paycheck to paycheck and need tax relief,” said GOP Sen. Pat Roberts.

Congressman Roger Marshall, a first-term Republican whose district covers two-thirds of the state, said he “could not be more excited” to support the plan.

“This fairer, simpler system will be a huge relief for the working and middle class,” Marshall said, citing the proposal to double the standard deduction as an example.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks.

Fall turkey hunting season not your average season

KDWPT

PRATT – If you like a good challenge, want to test your hunting prowess, or just want to shake up your fall hunting plans, consider adding a fall turkey hunt to your list. Spring turkey hunts are hugely popular, and given the time of year, it’s no surprise – it’s the first hunting season of the year, temperatures are comfortable, and action is everywhere. But come fall, action-packed turkey hunts can still be had, that is, if hunters are up to the challenge.

Hunting techniques used in the spring can prove less effective later in the year. Unlike the spring when mating is top priority, during the fall season, turkeys are gathering into winter flocks and are focused on finding food. Therefore, fall hunting is often a matter of finding birds, scouting their feeding areas and setting up an ambush point.

A hunting technique common in southern states is to break up a flock of turkeys, sometimes using a dog to scatter the birds, then hiding quietly as the birds begin to re-group. Birds will make a “kee-kee-run” call to locate flock members, and the hunter can use this call to an advantage. One thing that doesn’t change from spring to fall is the fact that good camouflage and well-timed movements are still keys to success.

The 2017 fall turkey hunting season runs from Oct. 1 – Nov. 28 and opens back up again from Dec. 11 – Jan. 31, 2018.

Hunters may take one turkey during the fall season. Resident fall turkey permits are $27.50 for hunters 16 and older and $7.50 for hunters 15 and younger. Nonresident fall turkey permits are $52.50 for hunters 16 and older and $12.50 for youth 15 and younger. Fall turkey permits are available wherever licenses are sold and at ksoutdoors.com.

For information on turkey hunting regulations, legal equipment, unit maps and public hunting areas, reference the 2017 Kansas Hunting and Furharvesting Regulations Summary and 2017 Kansas Hunting Atlas, or visit ksoutdoors.com.

Kids Count: Child poverty in Kansas drops significantly

OFFICE OF GOV.

TOPEKA – Childhood poverty in Kansas is at the lowest level since 2004, according to the latest Kids Count report that uses data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

In the past five years, the number of Kansas children in poverty has decreased by 26 percent. Data also shows that 19 percent of children are living in poverty across the United States, compared to 14 percent in Kansas.

“When I became Governor of Kansas, my vision for the state included a reduction in childhood poverty, and that vision is being realized through effective welfare reforms and poverty-prevention programs,” said Governor Sam Brownback. “Approximately 99,000 Kansas children remain in poverty, so there is work left to do, but we are clearly heading in the right direction, and Kansas is leading other states to consider welfare reforms like ours, which encourage self-reliance and result in better outcomes for participants.”

According to the United States Census Bureau’s 2016 American Community Survey, released this month, Kansas is seeing its most dramatic decrease in childhood poverty. Last year’s report indicated 122,000 Kansas children were living in poverty. This year’s report indicates 23,000 fewer children in poverty.

In 2015, Governor Brownback signed into law the Kansas HOPE (Hope, Opportunity and Prosperity for Everyone) Act—the most comprehensive welfare reform in the nation that not only added permanency to existing work requirements, but also added additional provisions to strengthen the integrity of the welfare benefits system in Kansas. Additional reforms were added in 2016 to further self-reliance.
Since the passage of that legislation, state benefits programs, such as food, cash and child care assistance have increasingly incentivized employment over dependence, helping lift Kansans out of poverty.

“By encouraging work over reliance, we have broken the cycle of poverty for thousands of Kansans,” said Governor Sam Brownback. “Our policies are good for Kansas families, the economy and taxpayers.”

To learn more about the 2016 American Community Survey, visit www.census.gov or www.datacenter.kidscount.org. You can also use the United States Census Bureau’s FactFinder to do a state-by-state comparison at www.factfinder.census.gov.

Kansas woman dies after being set on fire; 3 officers also burned

The fire occurred the 1100 Block of west 11th in Baxter Springs, according to the Sheriff

CHEROKEE  COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities and the Kansas State Fire Marshal are investigating after a woman died when she was set on fire.

Just after 7a.m. Saturday, Sharon Horn, 65, of Baxter Springs, died at Springfield Hospital, according to a media release from the sheriff’s department.

Horn’s died from injuries after a man entered her home and began assaulting her, ultimately setting her and two Baxter Springs Police Officers on fire.

The suspect threw fuel the woman and two officers, catching them on fire, according to the sheriff’s department.

A third officer, along with the suspect, also sustained injuries during the incident, which occurred just before 1:30 a.m. Saturday morning.

The suspect and one Baxter Springs Police Officer continue to be hospitalized while the two other officers have since been treated and released.

Initially the call came in as a domestic disturbance, but investigators have since determined the victim and suspect were acquaintances, but not involved in a domestic relationship, according to the sheriff’s department.

 

Kansas struggles with issuing Real ID compliant licenses

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is about two months into issuing new driver’s licenses that comply with the federal Real ID Act, but some residents aren’t bringing the right documents.

Starting Oct. 1, 2020, residents who use their driver’s licenses to board domestic flights in the U.S. and enter some federal facilities such as military bases will need to have upgraded identification.

Kansas Department of Revenue’s driver’s license manager Breana Berroth told the Wichita Eagle that some residents looking to renew their licenses haven’t brought the proper documents.

Residents seeking to upgrade their licenses must show proof for their Social Security number and provide a birth certificate or U.S. passport. Those who’ve changed their name should also bring documents proving the legal name change.

New licenses cost $8.

Sheriff investigates death of missing Kansas woman

Nadezhda Pavlovna Gorchakova -photo Shawnee Co. Sheriff

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating the death of Kansas woman.

Just after 10:45a.m. Friday, the Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office located the body of 60-year-old Nadezhda Pavlovna Gorchakova, deceased, in the area of her residence near 69th and Stubbs Road, according to a media release.

There are no signs of foul play. Her family last had contact with her on Wednesday.

Anyone with additional information is asked to call the Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office at 785-251-2200 and ask to speak with Detective Kasl.

Kansas man hospitalized after truck flies off interstate ramp

Saturday morning crash in Sedgwick County- photo courtesy Dewayne Richard

SEDGWICK COUNTY — A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 7:30 a.m. Saturday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Toyota passenger vehicle driven by Nolan, Bryan R. Nolan, 58, Wichita, was southbound on Interstate 135 exiting to westbound U.S. 54.

The driver lost control of the vehicle and struck the guardrail. The vehicle went airborne, struck a concrete barrier wall on the street below, flipped end over end and came to rest on the street below the ramp.

Nolan was transported to a local hospital. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Police ask for help to locate Kansas carjacking suspect

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a car-jacking and continue to search for a suspect.

Just after 12:15p.m. Friday police responded to the 500 Block of SW Saline in Topeka after report of an aggravated robbery, according to a media release.

A suspect described as a white male, approximately 6-foot tall with a thin build, wearing a black t-shirt and carrying a handgun got into a victim’s vehicle parked in the alley. The suspect forced the victim out of the vehicle and drove away down sixth street, according to police.

Several hours later, police located the vehicle.
Anyone with information is asked to call police.

🎥 Kansas game warden frees buck deer from hammock

POTTAWATOMIE COUNTY — A Kansas Game Warden helped a young buck caught in a hammock in Pottawatomie County this week.

The job of a game warden involves a variety of responsibilities. According to this warden it was “just another day at the office” as he helped get this animal safely back in the woods where he belongs.

 

The video courtesy KDWP&T Game Wardens.

Negotiations For New Kansas Prison Taking Place In Private

The Kansas Department of Corrections is considering bids from companies to build a new prison at Lansing.
KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS

 STEPHEN KORANDA

Kansas corrections officials hope to have a contract signed before the end of the year to build a new state prison in Lansing. The negotiations over that prison contract have been taking place behind closed doors.

Several companies have submitted bids for the construction project. Mike Gaito of the Kansas Department of Corrections said Wednesday that the private negotiations, rather than open bidding, will mean a better plan.

“The theory is that you get a project that’s best for the state, not necessarily one that’s low bid,” he said during a legislative committee meeting at the Statehouse. “You evaluate it on what’s best for the state.”

State Sen. Marci Francisco, a Lawrence Democrat, has concerns about transparency and the speed of the process. She wants more oversight from lawmakers.

“This is a major step,” she said. “Because of the timing, I’d like to see the Legislature back in session when the final decisions are made.”

Corrections officials are considering whether to have a private contractor build the prison and lease it back to the state. A panel of lawmakers would have to approve the plan.

Some lawmakers have expressed concern that the department’s effort to clear the way for the demolition of a medium-security facility at Lansing has led to the “haphazard” movement of inmates throughout the system and recent unrest at prisons across the state.

“I’m convinced that it’s been the unplanned, rapid rotation of inmates from one facility to another that has created this chaos that we’re having in our correctional system right now,” state Sen. Laura Kelly, a Topeka Democrat, said earlier this month.

Related story: Some Kansas lawmakers convinced inmate transfers a factor in recent prison violence

Prisoners at a Norton facility rioted earlier this month, and several disturbances were reported this summer at the El Dorado facility.

Amid concerns about prison staffing shortages, Gov. Sam Brownback in August announced pay increases for corrections officers.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for KPR a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda.

🎥 Moran: Short-term FAA reauthorizations are missed opportunities for Kansas airports

OFFICE OF SEN. MORAN

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) – member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; member of the Aviation Operations, Safety and Security Subcommittee; and co-chair of the Senate Aerospace Caucus – today spoke on the Senate floor about Congress’ damaging practice of passing short-term, 11th hour extensions to the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) authority.

“Republicans and Democrats in both chambers of Congress have repeatedly found common ground, and consensus among the entire aviation community, on a wide range of issues impacting the FAA, such as strengthening the Contract Tower Program and streamlining aircraft certification processes,” said Sen. Moran. “Yet today we see that controversial proposals to privatize our air traffic control system have derailed our progress yet again. Short-term authorizations like this one fail to give our aviation community the certainty it needs to plan for improvements at our airports that will keep travelers safe or empower manufacturers to create jobs. We must end this dangerous habit.”

“Air traffic control privatization is about everyone except for the largest cities with the largest airports and the most numerous travelers,” continued Sen. Moran.

“So this is not about just Garden City, Kansas, or Manhattan, my hometown, or Hays, my former hometown. This is about Wichita, Topeka, it’s about Kansas City – all but the absolute largest airports would be damaged by the privatization of air traffic control. Privatization of the nation’s most complex air system is a solution without a problem that will ultimately create lots of problems.”

Sen. Moran’s floor remarks can be viewed below.

Background

  • Kansans have built three out of every four general aviation aircraft since the Wright Brothers’ first flight at Kitty Hawk, and today, over 40,000 Kansans make a living manufacturing, operating and servicing the world’s highest quality aircraft.
  • Last year, Sen. Moran voted in favor of the Senate’s FAA reform proposal and opposed the six-month extension that resulted after disagreement with the House.
  • Sen. Moran has been a vocal opponent of proposals to privatize our nation’s air traffic control system, advocating instead in favor of proposals to provide greater protections for the general aviation industry, small airports and all but the largest communities nationwide.

Wanted Kansas man jailed after chase during I-70 tanker crash

Jerry Hassler – Saline County Booking photo

SALINE COUNTY — While deputies were working a rollover accident that shut down portions of Interstate70 for about five hours on Thursday, a wanted man narrowly missed hitting ohttps://managewp.com/wp-admin/#add_postsne of the deputies on the scene, according to Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan.

Just after 9p.m., a 1996 Lexus driven by Jerry Hassler, 31, Salina, was westbound on Interstate 70 when he swerved around the patrol vehicle blocking the road near an overturned tanker carrying anhydrous ammonia, according to Soldan

Hassler then drove into the median and back off of the interstate. Deputies pursued Hassler to Diamond Drive where he ditched the vehicle. Ten minute later a deputy saw Hassler walk into a fast-food restaurant near the interstate and they arrested him.
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Hassler had an outstanding warrant from the Kansas Department of Corrections and a habitual violator who is no allowed to drive, according to Soldan.
Deputies booked Hassler into the Saline County Jail for reckless driving, failing to obey a lawful order, driving while a habitual violator and improper crossing on a laned roadway.
He has previous convictions for theft and drugs in McPherson and Saline County.

4 charged in shooting that killed 10-year-old Kansas girl

Sanders- photo Wyandotte County

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Four people have been charged with first-degree murder in connection to a drive-by shooting that killed a 10-year-old girl in eastern Kansas.

Two of suspects are jailed in Wyandotte County Detention Center. The district attorney’s office says another suspect is hospitalized and one suspect isn’t in custody.

Investigators say the girl, Machole Stewart, was killed in October 2014 when bullets from a passing vehicle ripped into a home she was visiting for a family gathering. Family members say Machole jumped up and ran because she was scared.

No one else was injured. Police say the intended target was a 19-year-old relative.

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