Kansas
Kansas bill offers bonding to cover 75% of cost to build Chiefs, Royals stadiums in Kansas • Kansas Reflector

TOPEKA — Legislation to be presented Monday to Kansas lawmakers to lure the Kansas City Royals or Kansas City Chiefs across the state line would allow issuance of bonds to cover 75% of stadium projects with a minimum capital investment of $1 billion.
The STAR bonds would have a 30-year payback schedule, rather than the 20-year timeline for other state bonded projects. Current STAR bond law in Kansas limited financial support for economic development projects to 50% of the cost.
In addition to state revenue from sports gambling and lottery gaming, sales tax revenue from businesses in the respective sports stadium development districts would be earmarked to cover bond debt. In another unusual move, the bill would allow up to 100% of sales tax revenue on alcoholic liquor sales within a stadium district to be dedicated to paying off bonds.
A 40-page bill outlining details of the incentives was prepared for consideration during the special legislative session called by Gov. Laura Kelly for the purpose of resolving a stalemate on state tax reform. The session formally opens Tuesday, but committees devoted to business and tax issues will convene Monday.
The scramble in Kansas to pull together a bill supporting construction of Kansas stadiums for the Royals or Chiefs followed the April rejection by Jackson County, Missouri, voters of a sales tax measure that would have generated funding for a downtown baseball stadium for the Royals and financed renovations to Arrowhead Stadium where the football team plays. The teams are bound to existing stadium leases through 2031.
Kansas House and Senate commerce committee members are to meet 2:30 p.m. Monday at the Capitol to wade through the stadium bill. The bill draft could be amended by committees in either chamber. Legislative leaders expect the measure to be voted on Tuesday by the full House and Senate and, if approved, sent to the governor.
Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said Missouri would develop a “competitive” offer regarding the professional sports franchises if Kansas stepped forward with a package.
Big lobbying push
An army of lobbyists and other business interests have made informal presentations in recent weeks to any of the 165 Kansas legislators willing to talk about the STAR bond blueprint. Those conversations are expected to continue Monday night among lawmakers invited to a Lawrence steak house to hear from lobbyists, a Royals executive and representatives of organized labor.
Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson, R-Andover, and House Speaker Dan Hawkins, R-Wichita, reached out to owners of the Chiefs to see if they were open to consideration of “mutually beneficial opportunities.”
An organization called Scoop and Score was formed to pitch the border-war idea, but much of that organization’s marketing has been on behalf of a stadium for the Super Bowl champion Chiefs.
“Here in Kansas, we have the unique opportunity to solidify our region as the forever home of the Chiefs at no additional cost to Kansas taxpayers,” Scoop and Score’s social media post says. “We need every Chiefs fan in the state to contact their legislator and urge them to vote to keep the Chiefs in Kansas City.”
Americans for Prosperity in Kansas, however, has campaigned against the STAR bond concept. Legislators with constituents long distances from the Wyandotte County or Johnson County suburbs where the stadiums would likely be constructed have expressed doubts.
Two-stadium solution
The proposed STAR bond bill addressed one financial concern raised by skeptics of the attempt to raid Missouri for the Chiefs or Royals. The bill says bonds for stadium projects issued by the Kansas Development Finance Authority would be obligations of KDFA and “shall not constitute a debt of the state of Kansas within the meaning of … the constitution of the state of Kansas.”
“They are not full faith and credit bonds” and would be “payable solely from the sources identified in the STAR bonds financing act, namely incemental sales tax, alcohol tax and expanded lottery money,” said a briefing document summarizing the bill.
That provision would forbid general tax revenue flowing into the Kansas treasury to be called upon to pay holders of STAR bonds issued for the NFL or MBL stadium projects if one of the sports business districts failed to generate sufficient revenue in the future.
Reports of revenues filed with the Kansas Department of Revenue in connection to STAR bonds for sports stadiums “shall be kept confidential and if unlawfully disclosed would be subject to penalties.”
The bill would make permanent a one-year budget provisio approved by the 2024 Legislature that would dedicate lottery revenue above $71.4 million annually, excluding revenue from sports gambling, to the Attracting Professional Sports to Kansas Fund.
Some fine print
Under the bill prepared for consideration by the Legislature, the secretary of the Kansas Department of Commerce would have authority to enter into a STAR bond agreement with no more than two professional sports franchises. The bill proposed sports business districts would be established by June 30, 2025, but a council comprised top legislative leaders and the governor could extend the deadline for one year.
A final agreement with the Royals or Chiefs would have to be approved by the same bipartisan council of politicians, which is known as the Legislative Coordinating Council. The LCC would possess authority to approve or reject the deals whether the Legislature was in session or not. The agreement wouldn’t be considered a public record until the LCC by majority vote accepted an agreement.
The definition of “major professional sports complex” for purposes of the bill would be a stadium with more than 30,000 seats for holding National Football League and Major League Baseball contests as well as other events.
A memorandum summarizing the bill says franchises eligible for the incentives would be NFL or MLB teams located in “any state adjacent to Kansas.”
The Kansas bill would allow, but not require, local governments to dedicate tax revenue to the sports franchise developments for the Chiefs or Royals.

Kansas
Cause of fatal fire at Kansas motel under investigation

SMITH COUNTY—Authorities are investigating the cause of a fatal fire in Smith County.
Just after 5a.m. Tuesday, first responders were alerted to a fire at the Home on the Rang Lodging Motel on East Highway 36 in Smith Center, according to Sheriff Travis Conway.
First responders pulled a unresponsive person from the structure who was pronounced dead at the scene. The Smith County Sheriff’f office, investigators from the Kansas State Fire Marshal and a K9 from Sedgwick County Fire are working together to investigate. No foul play is suspected. Authorities have not released the name of the victim or a damage estimate.
Kansas
Kansas lawmakers push for law restricting sex offenders from schools

LIBERTY, Mo. — Schools in Kansas and Missouri differ in more ways than just the state line dividing them.
Kansas has never had a state law restricting certain sex offenders from being on school property.
In addition, Kansas doesn’t have residency restrictions.
Lawmakers in Kansas want that to change.
Senate Sub for HB 2164 passed the Kansas Senate by a vote of 37-3 on Thursday.
State of Kansas
The bill was proposed by Kansas Sen. Kellie Warren after parents in the Blue Valley School District made complaints about a registered sex offender being allowed to attend an elementary school dance in a chaperone role.
If the bill becomes law, it would be a felony offense for registered adult sex offenders convicted of crimes against minors to enter school property or attend certain school activities.
In Missouri, a registered sex offender convicted of certain crimes against a minor can’t be within 500 feet of school property and can’t live within 1,000 feet of a school.
The offenses include:
– Incest
– Endangering the welfare of a child in the first degree
– Use of a child in a sexual performance
– Promoting a sexual performance by a child
– Sexual exploitation of a minor
– Possession of child pornography
– Promoting child pornography
– Furnishing pornographic material to minors
The Clay County Sheriff’s Office Sex Offender Registration and Enforcement Unit oversees around 460 registered sex offenders.
Sarah Boyd, public relations manager for the Clay County Sheriff’s Office, said there are some special circumstances in their law that the Kansas House could consider while debating the bill.
”Missouri law does give the possibility for the school districts to grant exceptions, because, you know, everything is case-by-case, and everything that you see on a court paper may not represent the real circumstances of an incident. Not to say that we should just let all the sex offenders in the schools, but you know, there may be a chance someone’s child is really struggling, and we find a way to meet off-site to talk about it,” Boyd said.
Like most law enforcement agencies, Clay County Sheriff’s deputies conduct address verification checks, investigate complaints, and follow up with offenders who haven’t registered.

KSHB 41
The sheriff’s office also maintains strong partnerships with schools.
“Most of the schools in Clay County, when you come into the building, you have to present your driver’s license and they run that and it will show up if you are a sex offender,” Boyd said. “They contact us, we confirm that we’re then in touch with that sex offender. Say, ‘Hey, you cannot be at that school’”. Boyd said.
Boyd said their main challenge can be offenders without a home.
“One of the most difficult issues for the sex offender registration and enforcement unit is transients, so we have a lot of people on the registry who are homeless,” Boyd said. “That is hard to keep track of…of where they are. They have difficulty, you know, getting here to register. They can say they will live one place, but maybe that’s just for a couple weeks, and then they’re somewhere else.”
Kansas and Missouri could soon have laws that are common to both states.
“If there’s no enforcement, then there’s not a lot of incentive to comply,” Boyd said. “I think this legislation is a helpful tool for schools and for families to feel safer where they are. While the risk is low, it’s not zero.”
The bill had significant bipartisan support in the Senate and is in the House conference committee for a vote.
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KSHB 41 reporter Alyssa Jackson covers portions of Johnson County, including Overland Park, Prairie Village and Leawood. Share your story idea with Alyssa.
Kansas
Kansas Trooper Rescues Kidnapped 6-Year-Old Girl During Traffic Stop and Arrests 2 Men — See the Photos
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A 6-year-old girl, who was kidnapped over a month ago, has been found safe after a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper stopped two men on the road for a traffic violation.
The Kansas Highway Patrol (KHP) shared in a Facebook post on Saturday, March 22, that a trooper with their criminal interdiction unit conducted a traffic stop on an SUV finding two men in their 60s inside along with a little girl in the backseat.
KHP said that the driver of the car was discovered to have had a criminal history that included “homicide and numerous weapons violations over the years” and the passenger “had a warrant for his arrest from another state for kidnapping a 6-year-old girl just over a month prior.”
Kansas Highway Patrol Facebook
“After the trooper and a deputy from a local sheriff’s office quickly secured both the driver and passenger, the trooper safely removed the little girl from the vehicle,” KHP said in their post.
They shared that the 6-year-old — who was not identified — had been “coached” by one of the men to give “a false name and date of birth” in order to “keep the adult out of jail,” KHP said. Eventually, troopers were able to calm her down and get her to “tell him her real name.”
“She was the kidnapping victim, who had been with this suspect for over a month on the run,” KHP said. “Thankfully the girl was unharmed, and the men were taken into custody.”
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KHP provided two photos of the black SUV stopped on the side of a highway, including one that showed a man putting his hands above his head next to the vehicle. In a second photo, a little girl could be seen talking to a man right outside the car.
Kansas Highway Patrol Facebook
In an update on their initial post, the KHP thanked people “for the outpouring of support” for their division and for the trooper involved.” They wrote, “This is an incredible story that highlights the unpredictable nature of a trooper’s job and the real impact they can have on people’s lives.”
KHP also noted that it “received many requests for more details of the stop,” but were unable to “release any further details” in order to “protect the identity of the child and integrity of open cases.”
Authorities shared that they are continuing their investigation into the incident.
According to the Child Crime Prevention & Safety Center (CCPSC), a child goes missing or is abducted in the U.S. “every 40 seconds.” The CCPSC said that “approximately 840,000 children are reported missing each year.”
The AMBER Alert system is a notification system which alerts citizens in all 50 states in the U.S. of a missing child. According to its website, “1,221 children were successfully recovered through the AMBER Alert system” and “at least 195 children were rescued because of wireless emergency alerts,” as of December 6, 2024.
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