Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Kansas likely facing tax hikes after schools ruling

Big increase expected to combat education deficit

- By JOHN HANNA

TOPEKA, Kan. — A big tax increase for Kansas appears inevitable as the state wrestles with budget problems that have left even Republican­s ready to roll back income tax cuts that are Gov. Sam Brownback’s biggest political legacy.

A Kansas Supreme Court ruling that the state isn’t spending enough money on its public schools only bolstered many lawmakers’ support for raising income taxes. The state’s highest court directed legislator­s to enact a new school funding law by June 30 without setting a spending target, though figures lawmakers are circulatin­g involve hundreds of millions of new dollars.

Democrats and moderate Republican­s at the Statehouse in Topeka already were looking at boosting income taxes to close projected budget shortfalls totaling more than $1 billion through June 2019. Last month, they pushed through a bill raising more than $1 billion over two years, only to see the conservati­ve GOP governor veto it. They’re preparing to try again with another income tax bill.

“This is absolutely a revenue problem that needs to be addressed, and it’s in the income-tax basket,” said state Rep. Melissa Rooker, a moderate Republican from the Kansas City suburbs that are home to some of the strongest advocates for rolling back Brownback’s policies.

Lawmakers’ course was largely set by elections last year. Voters frustrated with the budget problems ousted two dozen of the term-limited governor’s allies from the Legislatur­e. If GOP moderates and Democrats vote together, they have solid majorities in both the House and the Senate.

To preserve his signature tax income tax cuts, Brownback proposed raising cigarette and liquor taxes and boosting annual business filing fees, along with internal government borrowing and other accounting moves. After the court’s education funding ruling on Thursday, he responded by calling for school choice measures that would direct tax dollars to parents instead of public schools so that they could send their children to religious or other private schools if they wished.

“Success is not measured in dollars spent, but in higher student performanc­e,” he said.

Brownback still promotes personal income tax cuts enacted at his urging in 2012 and 2013 as a model pro-growth policy for other states and the U.S. government to emulate. He blames the state’s budget woes on slumps in agricultur­e and energy production.

Yet even fellow conservati­ves are breaking with the governor on some issues. Secretary of State Kris Kobach publicly criticized Brownback’s plan to increase business filing fees, saying it would make them the highest in the nation and leave Kansas less competitiv­e.

State Sen. Ty Masterson, a Wichita-area Republican, has argued for spending cuts and said the Supreme Court didn’t mandate new money for schools.

 ?? ORLIN WAGNER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, an advocated of reduced income taxes, speaks last year to the Legislatur­e in Topeka, Kan. Kansas’ highest court on Thursday ordered the state to increase its spending on public schools, likely meaning rolling back tax cuts.
ORLIN WAGNER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, an advocated of reduced income taxes, speaks last year to the Legislatur­e in Topeka, Kan. Kansas’ highest court on Thursday ordered the state to increase its spending on public schools, likely meaning rolling back tax cuts.

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