Property Tax Relief – Senate and House Leaders, including the tax committee chairmen, met on Monday to lay the groundwork and coordinate moving on property tax reform. Two key initiatives were discussed: the Cap Assessment Protection (CAP) Amendment, SCR 1616, and a revenue cap proposal that would limit increases to no more than 3% without a vote of the people. Implementing both caps is designed to deliver taxpayer protection – shielding taxpayers from sudden, steep tax hikes; transparency – eliminating hidden tax increases that occur when property assessment values skyrocket even when mill rates stay flat or decline; predictability – giving families, farmers, and small business owners a reliable way to budget for future tax bills. 

The CAP Amendment is ready for debate on the Senate floor, and the House will begin committee work on a revenue limit measure. However, some special interest groups are working to kill the progress. Certain lobbyists claim SCR 1616 isn’t a “true” tax cut – a claim that ignores the amendment’s 2022 baseline value, which lowers the growth trajectory for everyone. Opponents of SCR 1616 are attempting to block your right to decide. Because it is a constitutional amendment, passage by the Legislature doesn’t change the law – it puts the decision in your hands at the ballot box. You should have the option to vote on the 3% or less Property Tax CAP Amendment. While the CAP Amendment and the revenue limit are still in the early stages of the legislative process, these proposals represent significant structural property tax protections.

Current law requires revenue neutral letters so that you’re notified of any increases and have an opportunity to be heard in a public meeting before the governing body increases your taxes, forcing transparency. This combined with the CAP Amendment and revenue limits, will have meaningful safeguards. Together, these measures would create one of the strongest systems in the country for protecting taxpayers from sudden and excessive property tax increases, while also increasing transparency and accountability in the process.

Kansas Supreme Court Nominating Commission secrecy will end if SB 299 becomes law. The bill bars any rule that blocks public access to its records. It requires disclosure of the commission’s files, including nominees’ names and hometowns, while keeping background‑checks and sensitive financial 

Unclaimed Cremated Remains could be released or respectfully disposed of after three years by a coroner if HB 2331 becomes law. It also sets special procedures for veterans’ remains, codifies current education requirements for licensed embalmers and funeral directors, and creates a felony for intentionally moving a body to conceal a death or another crime. The bill was amended again to allow all required continuing education hours for embalmers and funeral directors to be completed online, instead of requiring at least 3 hours of in-person training. That change has drawn concern from some funeral homes and is still to be decided. The bill passed unanimously and was returned to the House, which will decide whether to accept the Senate changes or call for a conference committee to negotiate the changes.

It is an honor and a privilege to serve as your 12th District State Senator.

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