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Candidate for Lt. Gov. talks tax policy, education

By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

Jill Docking, running mate for Democratic gubernatorial candidate Paul Davis, visited Hays residents Sunday at Hays Arts Council.

Jill Docking
Jill Docking

Docking talked about her driving force for running for office for the first time since her 1996 campaign, when she ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate. Her opponent in that race, like the upcoming, was Gov. Sam Brownback.

“I don’t believe I’ve ever been so concerned as a Kansan about what’s going on in Kansas,” Docking said.

Docking served as a co-chairwoman of the Kansas Board of Regents from 2007-2010. She also currently serves as one of the co-chairs, with her husband, Tom, of the University of Kansas Capital Campaign. With her strong educational background, she talked about some of the education cuts Kansas schools have endured recently.

“Education is my passion,” Docking said. “I’ve become very concerned when I see over the next five or 10 years, a systematic defunding of education with Gov. Brownback’s experiment — and that’s going to go all the way from K-12 through higher education.”

She said tax reform is one of the bigger issues for the Davis-Docking ticket.

“We are focused on the experiment of Gov. Brownback and the effect that has on taxation for average Kansans,” Docking said. “It’s going to continually become more burdensome for middle-income working families, young families and senior citizens because the burden is going to be put on property tax and sales tax.

“I think it’s important for Kansans to know that there is a team of candidates out there who believe, as they believe, that the Kansas we love is business-friendly, but part of that is to support education and the workforce,” she added. “If we don’t have a strong quality of life here, businesses won’t move here.”

Docking, Wichita, is the wife of former Lt. Gov. Tom Docking, who served in office with former Gov. John Carlin.

For more on the Davis-Docking campaign, click HERE.

Libertarians have two candidates for Kansas governor

WICHITA (AP) — The Libertarian party will pick its candidate for governor at the party’s convention in Wichita on April 26.

libertarian umbehr mcalhaney

About 150 registered Libertarians will choose between Keen Umbehr and Tresa McAlhaney. Because Libertarians are not considered a major party in Kansas, they are prohibited from picking their candidate by ballot in a primary election in August.

Some Libertarians say having a primary election like Democrats and Republicans would improve their candidate’s chances for a good showing during the general election in November.

The Kansas City Star reported a political party in Kansas must get 5 percent of the vote in a governor’s race to be considered a major party. In 2010, the Libertarian candidate for governor got 2.6 percent of the vote.

Kansas to get $10.8M Medicaid bonus from feds

KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Kansas will get $10.8 million in additional Medicaid money from the federal government as a bonus for enrolling more children from low-income homes in state-federal health insurance programs.

The award was announced today by officials at the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid services. It is part of more than $307 million in bonuses to be paid out to 23 states.

State officials said they had not yet received the money but had been informed by CMS of the award.

“This bonus is a result of Kansas’ ongoing and strong efforts to identify and enroll eligible children in Medicaid and CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) health coverage,” said Miranda Steele, a spokesperson for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, the state’s lead Medicaid agency. “This would not be possible without the diligence and commitment from the state and many other organizations across Kansas who work directly with families to make sure they’re aware of our services.”

Steele said Kansas received the bonus because its enrollment of children exceeded a baseline number determined by the federal government in 2007. The state has qualified for a bonus in each of the past five years with sums ranging from about $1.2 million for fiscal 2009 to more than $12 million in fiscal 2012, according to federal reports.

About 200,000 children currently are covered by the state’s Medicaid and CHIP programs.

Kansas Small Business Forum wil be Tuesday in KCK

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — University of Kansas School of Business Dean Neeli Bendapudi will be one of the featured speakers at the Kansas Small Business Forum, scheduled for 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at Sporting Park in Kansas City.

The forum will include remarks by Gov. Sam Brownback and other state leaders and a panel discussion of business leaders highlighting how the Kansas business environment can help small businesses succeed, Kansas’ tax policy for small businesses and an update on the Kansas economy.

The forum also will include:
• Stan Ahlerich, executive director of the Governor’s Council of Economic Advisors
• Gary Allerheiligen, former president of the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants
• Commerce Secretary Pat George and Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan
• Ed Condon, senior portfolio manager, Sterneck Capital Management
• Sen. Jim Denning, vice president of business development, Discover Vision Centers, Leawood
• Mike Valentine, CEO, Netsmart Technologies, Overland Park
• Fred Willich, owner, Hi-Tech Interiors Inc., Manhattan
• Albert Balloqui, owner, Labor Max Staffing, Roeland Park

To register to attend the forum, visit KansasCommerce.com/Forum.

Fundraising reports begin to paint the picture

While some of us in the Statehouse/political clan are waiting for our blood alcohol content to drop below .08 percent after New Year’s Eve, all of us are waiting for Jan. 10.

That’s the day that candidates for state offices have to present to the Governmental Ethics Commission their reports on how much money they raised — and from whom — and what they have in their campaign accounts for the upcoming election.

That report, for better or worse, is New Year resolution No. 1 for those seeking statewide or Kansas House seats this year. (And, they tend to keep that resolution better than most of us … who generally just vow that we want to lose weight and give up on it before we Fed Ex ourselves smaller belts.)

The key is that Jan. 1 is the last day for receipt of campaign contributions from registered lobbyists, political action committees or unions—virtually everyone but friends and family — until sine die adjournment of the Legislature this spring.

So, that Jan. 10 report will be the first look we get at how successful candidates have been at raising significant amounts of money for the upcoming election. A big number shows that a candidate is really serious about this election business.

But recall, State Rep. Mike Peterson, D-Kansas City, spent $2,455 in election year 2012 to keep his seat, and Rep. Brenda Landwehr, R-Wichita, spent $77,663 in the last election cycle and lost.

What we may see is just how serious incumbents and announced challengers for House seats are about assembling the money they’ll need to at least start their campaigns. More will flow in from individuals, and after the session, lobbyists, political action committees, businesses and unions will make contributions…but what better way to show that you are serious than to have done groundwork in the off-election year?

For House members their tally may show spunk in preparing for the 2014 election season. Senators with comfortable four-year terms don’t run for reelection until 2016, so their numbers aren’t as politically important.

But the campaign finance reports are important for statewide office seekers. Gov. Sam Brownback had a little over $500,000 in his campaign account a year ago, and we’ll see Jan. 10 what he raised this year.

Democratic team House Minority Leader Paul Davis, D-Lawrence, and running mate Jill Docking, Wichita, just got into the race for governor this year, so the key will be what they have raised since the fall announcement of their candidacy. Four years ago, the 2010 Democratic candidate, Sen. Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City, hadn’t gotten into the race yet, and of course had no gubernatorial money on hand, so there isn’t a good comparison there.

But that Jan. 10 report will tell a story for the gubernatorial race ahead. A big number by Davis/Docking? It shows that Kansans with checkbooks are ready for a change…but just what does that number need to be? That’s the question. Brownback? Figure if he doesn’t have $1 million, he either wasn’t trying very hard…or presumes the 2014 election will take care of itself…

Syndicated by Hawver News Co. of Topeka, Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report. To learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit www.hawvernews.com.

Brownback faces high Cabinet turnover

Sam_Brownback_official_portraitTOPEKA (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback has seen an unusually high number of departures among his top leadership.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reported almost half of Brownback’s 11 permanent Cabinet secretary appointments will turn over in the first three years of his tenure. The percentage outpaces that of predecessors Kathleen Sebelius, a Democrat, and Bill Graves, a Republican.

Many other high-level appointed posts that pay approximately $100,000 a year also have been vacated. Those positions include Securities Commissioner Aaron Jack, information technology chief Jim Mann and Kansas Corporation Commission chairman Mark Sievers.

Brownback spokeswoman Sara Belfry said the turnover isn’t unusual compared to past governors, including Joan Finney. And Washburn University political science professor Bob Beatty said he saw little linking the departures.

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