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Kansas Advocacy Groups Push For Tax Increase To Fix Budget

Stephen Koranda
/
Kansas Public Radio
Duane Goossen, left, and Annie McKay at the Statehouse in Topeka.

Groups representing Kansas teachers, state workers, contractors and others are proposing a tax overhaul they say would solve the state’s budget problems. The plan would undo some tax cuts made in recent years by raising the top income tax rate. It would also reinstate income taxes on hundreds of thousands of businesses.

Former Kansas Budget Director Duane Goossen and others revealed the tax plan Wednesday in Topeka. He says the tax cuts have hurt the state’s ability to invest in needed services and the proposal would reverse that.

“It’s a plan that will stabilize state government across the board, so we can pay for things like a 50-year water plan, fully staffed mental health hospitals and Highway Patrol officers in all Kansas counties,” Goossen says.

The proposal would also raise the gas tax, but it would cut the sales tax rate on food to help low-income residents.

Annie McKay, with the group Kansas Action for Children, calls tax cuts pushed by Gov. Sam Brownback a mistake. She says fixing the state’s budget challenges won’t be “easy or politically convenient.”

“We have to go back and look at the changes that were made, the cost of those changes and balance those things back out. The cost of fixing the disaster from the Brownback tax plan is not small,” McKay says.

A spokeswoman for the governor, Melika Willoughby, calls the changes "tax-and-spend proposals." She says the plan would hurt middle-class Kansans.

“They are the receptionists, the nurses, the police officers and other members of the working middle class who work hard every day to put gas in their tank and money in their pockets to provide both for themselves and their families,” Willoughby says.

Kansas lawmakers have struggled to balance the budget since cutting income taxes starting in 2012. Kansas lawmakers face a budget shortfall approaching $350 million in the current fiscal year and an even larger shortfall the following year.

The tax proposals wouldn’t start generating revenue until next year, so they wouldn’t fix the state’s immediate budget shortfall. Goossen says lawmakers need to put a long-term solution in place before making short-term fixes for the current budget year.

Stephen Koranda is the managing editor of the Kansas News Service, based at KCUR. He has nearly 20 years of experience in public media as a reporter and editor.