Kansas
What You Need to Know About STAR Bonds
The Kansas City Chiefs are in a unique position. With the current lease at the Truman Sports Complex expiring in 2031 and Jackson County voters overwhelmingly rejecting a 40-year extension of the three-eighths of a cent sales tax on April 2, could the Chiefs move from Kansas City, Missouri to Kansas City, Kansas? Momentum seems to be swinging toward the Kansas side of the state line after comments from Chiefs chairman and CEO Clark Hunt during the NFL Draft. Shortly after those remarks, renderings of a domed Kansas stadium made headlines.
The stadium renderings that were released are not affiliated with the Chiefs but were brought forth by Kansas City-based architecture firm Manica. This isn’t the first stadium design by Manica, which was behind the design of the Las Vegas Raiders’ Allegiant Stadium and has put forth renderings for new Tennessee Titans and Chicago Bears stadiums as well. While these new stadium designs aren’t classic like the nostalgic Soldier Field in Chicago or Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, the modern vibe and design is very pleasing to the eye. For the Kansas City design, the new stadium would include a glass ceiling that would keep extreme weather out of the stadium.
The renderings also show a mixed-use area outside of the stadium that would include hotels, dining options, a practice facility, green space, plenty of parking options and more. One thing the Chiefs (and the Kansas City Royals, for that matter) have never been able to capitalize on is building up commerce in the area surrounding the current stadiums at the Truman Sports Complex. This space would give the Chiefs ample opportunity to make additional revenue. A domed stadium would also be able to bring in huge national sporting events such as a Super Bowl for the NFL, an NCAA Final Four for college basketball, Wrestlemania for WWE, and more.
Why would Kansas be able to offer the Chiefs a new stadium and not need to ask its residents and taxpayers to help cover the costs like in Jackson County and Kansas City, Missouri? The Kansas legislature would like to offer up to 100% of the project in STAR bonds, which is unique and a change of direction from the typical 50% given to a project in Kansas.
What are STAR Bonds?
Sales Tax and Revenue (STAR) bonds are “a financing tool that allows Kansas municipalities to issue bonds to finance the development of major commercial, entertainment and tourism projects,” as described on kansascommerce.gov. A new stadium for the Chiefs and the surrounding mixed-use area would apply here. These bonds are paid off through sales revenue generated by the district. Currently, 6.5% of every dollar spent in the district would go toward paying off the bond. Every ticket bought, food and drink purchased, hotel room rented, merchandise acquired, etc., would be taxed just as it always would, but a percentage of that tax goes toward paying off the bond. Essentially, if you are going to a game or hanging out in the district and spending money there, you’d be helping pay off the bond. If you don’t care about sports or going to hang out in the area, your tax dollars would not go toward the project. STAR bonds helped finance the Kansas Speedway and Children’s Mercy Park where Sporting Kansas City of Major League Soccer plays.
It will be interesting to see how much money the Hunt family will want to put into the project themselves. They were willing to put $300 million of their own money toward renovations in the initial plan that Jackson County rejected. For a brand new stadium, there’s a chance the Hunts would put more equity into that type of move. The cost of building a new stadium would likely be between $2-$3 billion. According to The Kansas City Star, a $1 billion investment would be required to get the STAR bonds, but there is potential for the entire project to be funded through the bonds. That would be a best-case financial scenario for the Hunt family and would be hard to turn down.
The Kansas Legislature’s 2024 session ended on April 30 without the opportunity to hear the legislation on attracting sports teams to Kansas. There is anticipation that Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly will call a special session in two weeks to deal with another tax relief legislation that was not passed this past week. During this special session that could be called, the legislature would then have the opportunity to bring the legislation on sports teams to the table.
Missouri will most certainly try to retain both the Chiefs and Royals, but will the sour relationship with Jackson County along with a lack of interest from the Missouri State Legislature in giving money to Kansas City sports teams hold the state back? The clock is ticking, and if the Chiefs can’t get an answer from Missouri until 2025 at the earliest, it may be in their best interest to look where they are wanted and can get money now.
Read More: Chiefs Owner Clark Hunt Discusses Leaving Arrowhead Stadium After Failed Jackson County Tax Vote
Kansas
Suit challenges Kansas law that revoked trans people’s updated IDs
Rep. Abi Boatman gives her thoughts on transgender bathroom bill
Kansas Legislature overrode Gov. Kelly’s veto for transgender bathroom bans. Hear what this trans legislator has to say.
The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit challenging Kansas’ new sweeping anti-transgender law, the first in the nation to rescind previously issued IDs with updated gender markers.
Senate Bill 244 took effect Feb. 26 after the Republican supermajorities in the Kansas Legislature overrode a veto by Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly.
“This legislation is a direct attack on the dignity and humanity of transgender Kansans,” said Monica Bennett, the ACLU of Kansas’ legal director, in a statement. “It undermines our state’s strong constitutional protections against government overreach and persecution.”
The lawsuit was filed Feb. 26 in Douglas County District Court on behalf of two anonymous plaintiffs. The lawyers on the case are from the ACLU and Ballard Spahr LLP. They argue “that SB 244 violates the Kansas Constitution’s protections for personal autonomy, privacy, equality under the law, due process, and freedom of speech.”
The law prohibits transgender Kansans from changing the sex or gender marker on their driver’s license and birth certificates. It also immediately invalidated identification documents for more than 1,000 transgender Kansans who already had changes approved.
The law also bans transgender people from using bathrooms, locker rooms and similar facilities in government buildings that align with their gender identity. They must instead use the restroom corresponding to their sex assigned at birth. Additionally, the law bans gender-neutral bathrooms with more than one stall.
The law has various enforcement provisions, including allowing anyone to sue someone else who they think is transgender and suspected of using a restroom that is different from their sex assigned at birth.
Republican Attorney General Kris Kobach lobbied for lawmakers to explicitly ban gender marker changes after state courts allowed them to resume amid litigation over a predecessor law, Senate Bill 180. Lawmakers then added the bathroom bill provisions through a gut-and-go without a public hearing.
The state of Kansas, represented by Kobach, is a defendant in the case. Other defendants include agencies and agency leadership under the Kelly administration, including the Kansas Department of Revenue and Kansas Department of Administration.
Spokespeople for Kobach and Kelly did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The plaintiffs have filed a motion for a temporary restraining order and asked for a hearing on Feb. 27 “or as soon as possible.”
Jason Alatidd is a Statehouse reporter for The Topeka Capital-Journal. He can be reached by email at jalatidd@usatodayco.com. Follow him on X @Jason_Alatidd.
Kansas
Kansas Orders Trans Drivers to Surrender Licenses With One Day’s Notice
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The Kansas Division of Vehicles (DOV) has instructed transgender residents to surrender their updated driver’s licenses, as one of the nation’s most extreme anti-trans laws takes effect this week.
Trans Kansans received letters from the DOV on Wednesday informing them that licenses and other state ID papers that do not match a person’s assigned sex at birth are considered invalid and must be surrendered to the state effective immediately, ostensibly giving them less than 24 hours to make accommodations, according to multiple copies of the letter reviewed by the Kansas City Star.
“Please note that the Legislature did not include a grace period for updating credentials,” the letter read in part. “That means that once the law is officially enacted, your current credentials will be invalid immediately, and you may be subject to additional penalties if you are operating a vehicle without a valid credential.” Affected residents were “directed to surrender your current credential to the Kansas Division of Vehicles” and receive a new ID — at their own expense, as SB 244 did not provide state funding to cover the reversions, the Star noted.
The move comes as a result of Kansas’ SB 244, which became law on Thursday and instructs state agencies to reverse gender marker changes on official documents. Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed the legislation, but the Republican supermajority overrode her veto last week.
Kansas officially recognizes only “male” and “female” as recorded at birth as valid sexes, per a state law passed in 2023. About 1,700 people are expected to have their licenses invalidated as a result of the new law, according to a legislative analysis of SB 244 conducted by the state House. The law will also invalidate amended birth certificates that were issued with a corrected gender marker.
The LGBTQ Foundation of Kansas shared a copy of one letter on Instagram, with identifying information redacted. Representatives for the nonprofit noted that some Kansas counties will hold special elections next week, and trans residents without valid photo ID cards will not be able to cast a vote under existing state law.
At least three other states have passed laws banning gender marker changes on driver’s licenses, but Kansas is now the only U.S. state to require such previous changes be reverted, according to KCTV.
“The persecution is the point,” said Rep. Abi Boatman, Kansas’ only trans state legislator, in a statement to the Star on Wednesday. “It tells me that Kansas Republicans are interested in being on the vanguard of the culture war and in a race to the bottom,” she added in a comment to KCTV.
Kansas
Kansas City man charged with murder in fatal shooting of reported missing teenage girl
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – A Kansas City man has now been charged in the death of a teenage girl who was reported missing and found dead a day later from a gunshot.
Jackson County Prosecutor Melesa Johnson announced Wednesday that Eric R. Phillips II has been charged with first-degree murder, armed criminal action and abandoning a corpse, following the girl’s November 2025 death.
Elayjah Murray had been reported missing on Nov. 28, 2025. As investigators looked into her disappearance, the Independence Police Department’s Criminal Investigation Unit learned that she’d possibly been shot.
Multiple witnesses and surveillance footage helped detectives identify Phillips as the shooter. Court documents say he shot Murray multiple times while she was in the back of his car during the early morning hours of Nov. 28.
A day later, police with the Kansas City Missouri Police Department found Murray in Kansas City. Phillips’ cell phone pinged in the area where Murray’s body was located.
Phillips’ bond has been set at $350,000 cash only.
Johnson said Phillips was charged on Dec. 3, 2025, under seal. The case was unsealed Wednesday in an effort to help locate Phillips.
Copyright 2026 KCTV. All rights reserved.
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