Kansas
Kansas needs a sports authority for Chiefs stadium. Will Olathe and Wyandotte County get a vote?
Kansas wants to create a sports authority to own the new Kansas City Chiefs stadium. Public rather than private ownership of the stadium will shield more than $1 billion from being collected as income taxes.
Kansas has agreed to finance 60% of $4 billion in stadium projects. Those projects include a 65,000-seat domed stadium in Kansas City, Kansas, and other developments near the Legends and in Olathe. Kansas will fund the stadium using sales tax and revenue bonds, or STAR bonds.
Those bonds take out debt that will be repaid with future sales tax dollars from inside a stadium district. A sports authority means the stadium will be publicly owned, which means the money collected to repay the bonds won’t be subject to income taxes. If the stadium was privately owned, the revenue being collected to repay the bonds would be subject to income taxes.
Supporters say creating the sports authority prevents the Chiefs from being taxed over $1 billion.
“It establishes the governance framework that allows this project to move from agreement to action, from vision to construction,” said Korb Maxwell, an attorney for the Kansas City Chiefs.
Here’s what else the board does:
Who is on the board?
The sports authority will have nine voting members. One member would be appointed by the Chiefs, one member appointed by the governor, one member appointed by the secretary from the Kansas Department of Commerce, and six members appointed by legislative leadership — including Democrats.
Board members must live in Kansas. It doesn’t require anyone on the board to live in the Kansas City area.
The mayors of Olathe and the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, are allowed to be on the board, but they are not voting members.
Some lawmakers in the joint meeting of the House and Senate commerce committees were concerned about that exclusion. Maxwell said the Chiefs want the authority’s board to be as small as possible, but the team will let the legislature adjust the size of the board as it sees fit.
The Jackson County Sports Complex Authority only has five members. Unlike its Missouri counterpart, the Kansas sports authority board may only be focused on the Chiefs stadium even though the Kansas Speedway and Children’s Mercy Park are nearby.
Officials from the Kansas Speedway would like to join the authority once they pay off their STAR bonds debt in 2027, but including other stadiums would exempt those locations from property taxes as long as they are on the board.
Aside from tax exemptions, why else is the board necessary?
Maxwell said the sports authority has two major functions, overseeing construction of the project and overseeing administration of a completed stadium. That includes bidding for Final Four games, Super Bowls and major concerts.
It also includes smaller events like high school football championships, maybe even high school soccer or wrestling tournaments, said Bill Faflick, executive director of the Kansas State High School Activities Association.
“Can you imagine even a sport like wrestling,” he said, “where we can bring 24 mats in under the dome … where they would be crowned a champion in the premier venue in the state of Kansas.”
Maxwell said this board will make sure the stadium stays in first-class condition. The Chiefs were already required to contribute at least $7 million annually in rent to a stadium maintenance fund.
Rachel Willis, with the Kansas Department of Commerce, said this board does create more transparency.
There will be meetings that are open to the public, agendas will be posted online, the authority will be subject to open records laws, it will get financial transparency audits, and there will be a sports authority website.
When will the Chiefs stadium be open?
The stadium will be ready for the start of the 2031 NFL season, the state said. It’ll be at the Legends near the Kansas Speedway.
Multiple speakers told lawmakers on Tuesday the stadium will bring in millions in economic impact to Kansas, even though economists say Kansas relied on inflated economic development projections.
The bill took its first step in the legislative process Tuesday. It still needs to pass through both the House and Senate before it heads to the governor’s desk.
This story was originally published by The Beacon, a fellow member of the KC Media Collective.
Kansas
Boeing makes $1 billion investment in Wichita facility
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — Boeing is making a billion-dollar investment in its Wichita location over the next three years, the company announced Monday.
Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said the investment will be used to upgrade facilities, expand employee training and strengthen the production system.
He said this will prepare the facility for a higher production rate, especially as Boeing tries to keep up with a record-high demand. The company is currently sitting on a backlog of 6,100 commercial planes, valued at $695 billion.
“It’s going to take the skills and capabilities of all of you to help us deliver on our record backlogs and meet the growing demand in aerospace,” Ortberg said. “And I know the 13,000 Wichita teammates are ready to deliver on that promise.”
There could be even more work coming to the facility. Reuters reported that Ortberg will be going to China with President Donald Trump and a few other leaders in the tech industry to talk about trade and investment opportunities.
Lt. Gov. David Toland said that more work at the company will help the Wichita economy and that it is up to the city to build up the workforce.
“We’ve got a company that’s put its money where its mouth is,” Toland said. “And as Kansans, as Wichitans, it’s on us now that we’re continuing to skill up our workforce, that we’re creating the talent pipeline that’s essential to allowing companies like Boeing to continue growing.”
Over the past several years, Wichita has invested in the aviation workforce. This includes expanding aviation education at WSU Tech and tapping students in WSU’s National Institute for Aviation Research to help with federal projects like the “Golden Dome” missile defense shield.
Last week, Boeing and WSU Tech announced a new partnership to build a workforce training center that will be a hub for Boeing’s Wichita workforce.
Sen. Jerry Moran hopes Boeing’s investments will ease concerns or caution surrounding the company’s return to Wichita and build on the city’s reputation in the aviation industry.
“You’ve heard me say that people come here and we convince them that this is the Air Capital of the World,” Moran said. “I don’t think we need any more convincing. This is now known. We are the Air Capital of the World.”
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Kansas
Detroit Tigers beat Kansas City Royals 6-3 to stop 5-game losing streak
Gage Workman came off the bench and hit his first major league homer, a two-run shot that sent the Detroit Tigers past the Kansas City Royals 6-3 on Sunday night to snap a five-game losing streak.
Matt Vierling had a two-run double and Riley Greene reached safely four times as the Tigers prevented a three-game sweep.
Called up hours earlier from Triple-A Toledo when Kerry Carpenter was placed on the 10-day injured list with a left shoulder sprain, Workman entered as a pinch hitter in the sixth inning.
Workman drove a 1-1 slider from Nick Mears (2-2) to right field to give Detroit a 5-3 lead.
Wenceel Pérez added an RBI single in the seventh.
Enmanuel De Jesus (2-0), the fourth of six Tigers pitchers, retired all seven batters he faced. Kenley Jansen struck out two in a perfect ninth for his 483rd career save and seventh this season.
Kansas City lost for only the third time in 10 games.
Hao-Yu Lee’s two-out RBI triple off the outstretched glove of Royals right fielder Jac Caglianone opened the scoring in the second. Zack Short walked and Vierling delivered a two-run double off the left-field wall to give the Tigers a 3-0 lead.
In the third, Kansas City greeted reliever Drew Anderson with three straight hits, scoring their first run on a hit-and-run, opposite-field single by Vinnie Pasquantino, and another on Carter Jensen’s sacrifice fly.
In the fourth, Caglianone doubled to left-center and scored the tying run on Maikel Garcia’s third hit, a two-out single to center.
Royals starter Noah Cameron exited after allowing a leadoff hit in the fifth on his 95th pitch. He allowed three runs and five hits with three walks and four strikeouts.
The top three Kansas City batters combined for seven of the team’s eight hits.
Greene has reached base safely in a career-best 21 consecutive games. In 27 games since April 11, he is batting .384 with 13 extra-base hits.
Up next
Tigers RHP Jack Flaherty (0-3, 5.56 ERA) faces Mets RHP Freddy Peralta (2-3, 3.12) on Tuesday night in New York.
Royals RHP Stephen Kolek (1-0, 4.50 ERA) pitches Tuesday in Chicago against White Sox RHP Erick Fedde (0-4, 3.79).
Kansas
Four teens hurt in southeast Kansas rollover – AOL
Four teens hurt in southeast Kansas rollover
WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) — Four teenagers are hurt after being in a rollover crash on Sunday.
The Kansas Highway Patrol said a 16-year-old girl was behind the wheel of a Jeep. She went off the road, hit a culvert and rolled.
The crash happened just after midnight near the intersection of North 150th and North streets, northeast of Girard.
Man dead after downtown Wichita shooting
Two 15-year-olds and a 13-year-old were passengers in the Jeep. All four teens were hurt and taken to the hospital after the crash.
The driver received suspected serious injuries, and the rest received suspected minor injuries.
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