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S&P Drops Kansas Credit Rating, Citing Ongoing Budget Issues

Stephen Koranda
/
KPR/File photo
Kanss Budget Director Shawn Sullivan says the drop in credit rating is more of a public-perception issue, but it won't significantly affect Kansas' ability to borrow money.

For the second time in two years, a major ratings agency downgraded Kansas' credit rating Tuesday because of the state's budget problems.

From the AP:  

S&P Global Ratings dropped its rating for Kansas to "AA-," from AA, three months after putting the state on a negative credit watch. S&P also dropped the state's credit rating in August 2014.

Kansas has struggled to balance its budget since Republican Gov. Sam Brownback successfully pushed the GOP-dominated Legislature to slash personal income taxes in 2012 and 2013 in an effort to stimulate the state's economy. Brownback blames continuing shortfalls in monthly tax collections on slumps in agriculture, energy production and aircraft manufacturing.

Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said the S&P report criticizes the state's ongoing diversion funds for highway projects to general government programs and says the state continues to underfund pensions for teachers and government workers.

Sullivan said he takes issues with both criticisms but acknowledged during an interview that Kansas must do more to bring spending and revenues in line with each other. He also said the state needs to build up cash reserves that have been depleted by shortfalls in tax collections.

"The administration doesn't want to keep continuing the cycle that we're in now," Sullivan told The Associated Press. "I feel like we need to fix this and put ourselves on a better financial footing."

Another major ratings agency, Moody's Investors Services, changed its credit outlook for Kansas in May to "negative" while affirming its rating of "Aa2." Moody's also downgraded Kansas' rating in 2014.

On S&P's scale, an AA rating still suggests that the holder's ability to meet its financial obligations is "very strong." Sullivan said while downgrades can increase the state's borrowing costs, the 2014 actions didn't and Kansas doesn't plan any major bond issues in the near future.

"I think it has more of a perception-public opinion effect more than anything else, more than a practical effect on our ability to borrow," Sullivan said.

Both S&P and Moody's have criticized Kansas for not bringing its revenues and spending into line with each other and its diversion of highway funds to paper over budget problems. Sullivan said it's unfair to see diverted highway dollars as a one-time source of funds to help balance the budget because the state has done it regularly for years.

He also took issue with the criticism of Kansas for underfunding its public pension system, which includes delaying nearly $96 million in payments otherwise due under the current budget. Sullivan noted that with funding improvements mandated in 2012, the state is spending significantly more on pensions than it did in the past.

"We're being punished for years and years and years of underfunding," he said.

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Carla Eckels is assistant news director and the host of Soulsations. Follow her on Twitter @Eckels.

To contact KMUW News or to send in a news tip, reach us at news@kmuw.org.

Carla Eckels is Director of Organizational Culture at KMUW. She produces and hosts the R&B and gospel show Soulsations and brings stories of race and culture to The Range with the monthly segment In the Mix. Carla was inducted into The Kansas African American Museum's Trailblazers Hall of Fame in 2020 for her work in broadcast/journalism.
The Associated Press is one of the largest and most trusted sources of independent newsgathering, supplying a steady stream of news to its members, international subscribers and commercial customers. AP is neither privately owned nor government-funded; instead, it's a not-for-profit news cooperative owned by its American newspaper and broadcast members.