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Kansas Lawmakers End 2017 Session Without Any Last-Minute Work

Stephen Koranda
/
KPR
House Speaker Ron Ryckman speaks to a staff member before opening the House session Monday.

Kansas lawmakers met briefly Monday for the ceremonial end of the legislative session. They considered overriding some vetoes issued by Gov. Sam Brownback, but ultimately took no action.

Republican Senate President Susan Wagle ended that chamber’s meeting quickly because she said some lawmakers were gone and overrides simply weren’t going to be possible.

“We already knew that any of the overrides would not have passed in the Senate," Wagle said. "I decided with the Republican leadership and the Democrat leadership that we would just gavel out."

Brownback struck down a budget item blocking his administration from changing Medicaid services for people with disabilities. He said his administration won’t make changes to the program without lawmaker approval. That took some wind out of the override efforts, said Democratic Sen. Laura Kelly.

“The need for an override didn’t seem that extreme because there were some pledges in that veto message. We just have to take the governor at his word,” Kelly said.

The 2017 legislative session came in at 114 days, which tied the 2015 session for the longest in state history.

After lawmakers ended the session, Brownback criticized their decisions. To tackle a budget deficit, lawmakers raised taxes by rolling back many of the 2012 tax cuts.

“This legislative session made history, but for all the wrong reasons,” Brownback said in a statement. “This session marks a drastic departure from fiscal restraint. I trust that future legislatures will return to a pro-growth orientation.”

Brownback called spending levels in the state budget “excessive” when he signed it into law, but he didn’t use his line item veto power to make spending reductions.

Lawmakers have struggled with the state budget since the 2012 tax cuts, which slashed income tax rates and eliminated income taxes for thousands of business owners. Republican House Majority Leader Don Hineman said those tax changes simply went too far.

“We’ve now adjusted and corrected that overreach," Hineman said. "That gives us an opportunity to go forward knowing that we have a more stable funding source."

There’s still uncertainty ahead as lawmakers wait for a ruling from the Kansas Supreme Court on the state’s school spending. Justices previously said Kansas wasn’t adequately funding schools. In response, lawmakers approved a new school funding formula that will add almost $300 million in aid over two years.

Next month, justices will hear arguments on whether the new funding system passes constitutional muster.

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.