Kansas Spending Beyond Budget Jumps, Increases Federal Control
Each year various adjustments push state spending above the approved budget, but in 2010 that extra spending took a big jump that will require even more spending in the future. Kansas spent $1.455 billion more than budgeted in 2010. The latest estimate says the state will spend $1.063 billion more than the $13.7 billion budgeted for 2011, a 7.8 percent increase. Much of the additional spending is money from previous years and increases in federal funding.

Huelskamp speaks at “Pain at the Pump” News Conference
Congressman Huelskamp (R-KS) joined his some of his Republican Study Committee colleagues for a news conference on the new "Consumer Relief for Pain at the Pump" Act. The proposed legislation, if passed, will repeal the President's "Permatorium' on America's Outer Continental Shelf resources; repeal the "Wild Lands Policy"; and provide immediate EPA regulatory relief.

CEOs: Kansas a so-so place to do business
While Texas is a great place to do business, Kansas is just OK, say CEOs who participated in a survey by ChiefExexutive.net. Both in 2010 and 2011, Kansas ranked 25th out of the 50 states. For the 2011 survey, 550 CEOs from across the country evaluated the states on a broad range of issues including regulations, tax policies, workforce quality, education resources, quality of living and infrastructure. Kansas got relatively high marks for areas like workforce quality and quality of living, but the state was middling when it came to taxation and regulation, the survey showed. Texas ranked first in the survey, followed by North Carolina, Florida, Tennessee and Georgia. California, meanwhile, ranked last.

Kobach appears on Lou Dobbs Show
Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach argues on Fox Business Channel’s “Lou Dobbs Show” that the President is only pandering and not pushing a major immigration initiative.

Huntington Votes Against Voter Fraud Bill
The Kansas Senate on Wednesday rejected for a second time proposals to give the Kansas Secretary of State prosecutorial power to fight voter fraud.

On Wednesday, though, state Sen. Steve Abrams, an Arkansas City Republican offered a proposal to again add the prosecutorial power to the new law and also to require new voters in Kansas to show proof of U.S. citizenship when they first register to vote, beginning July 1, 2012. “The last thing we want to do is make changes…..,” said state Sen. Terrie Huntington, a Fairway Republican.

Overland Park Regional Med Center Expanding
Overland Park Regional Medical Center will start work on a $121 million expansion this year, the latest in a string of health care projects that have helped sustain the construction industry during recent lean economic times. Hospital officials said Thursday the 215,291-square-foot addition to their campus at 10500 Quivira Road will include a 72-bed tower for private medical and surgical acute care; critical care; and orthopedic, neuroscience and trauma patients.

Baby receives pat-down at Kansas City airport
A photo posted on Twitter of a baby receiving a pat-down at Kansas City International Airport is the latest in a number of recent highly publicized incidents of airport security screenings involving young children.

Wichita Spends $350K on Park Sculpture
Yesterday the Wichita City Council voted four to three to spend $350,000 on a large sculpture at WaterWalk in downtown Wichita. The fact that the sculpture will be paid for with tax increment financing funds was used as an argument for proceeding with the expense, as the money is already allocated and can’t be used outside the TIF district.

Brownback Names Roeland Park Mayor to Lead State Hispanic Panel
Mayor Adrienne Foster has been appointed to a new post by Kansas Governor Sam Brownback. Here’s the release:?Governor Sam Brownback announced his selection of Adrienne Foster to serve as executive director to the Kansas Hispanic and Latino-American Affairs Commission (KHLAAC). Foster currently serves as Mayor of Roeland Park.

Kansas Debt Clock

The Kansas “Drudge” Meadowlark
Click here to get an update on current news and information in Kansas courtesy the Kansas Meadowlark website.

The Times Public Service: Registered Sex Offenders
As a public service to the residents of Northeast Johnson County the Times offers Family Watchdog as a web generator to view if an offender lives near you.




Decreased Tobacco Taxes Not a Surprise
By Currie Myers, The Shawnee Mission Times

Just last week the Kansas Legislature seemed shocked at the unforeseen decline in the dollars collected by the state regarding tobacco taxes. The fund — generally referred to as CIF — gets its money from tobacco settlement payments, which Kansas and 45 other states negotiated in 1998 with four major tobacco companies, the so-called Master Settlement Agreement, or MSA.

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Gas Price Hypocrisy
By Currie Myers, The Shawnee Mission Times

In 2006 the Democrats and the media screamed bloody murder over the high price of gas. When Barack Obama was inaugurated, the average gas price was $1.87 a gallon. Now that the price has more than doubled, what are the Democrats and the administration saying now?

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Huelskamp and Pompeo Sends Navy DOMA Letter
By Currie Myers, The Shawnee Mission Times

Late Friday, a group of 62 House members, including Kansas Congressmen Mike Pompeo and Tim Huelskamp, sent a joint letter to the Secretary of the Navy, asking how the military is suddenly "exempt from federal law."

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JOCO’s Green Public Works Buildings
By Currie Myers, Shawnee Mission Times

In another new round of “Green” energy spending on public buildings, Johnson County will break ground on its two newest green buildings. The new buildings will be part o the Public Works Department's complex in west Olathe after more than two years in planning.

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Kansas Senate Watch Releases Information on Sen. Owens
By Currie Myers, Shawnee Mission Times

The Kansas Senate Watch powered by the Kansas Federalist E-News has releases another update regarding the voting records of Kansas Senators. The most recent update was information on Senator Tim Owens (R-Overland Park).

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Property Rights Reform Passes Both Houses
By Currie Myers, Shawnee Mission Times

Property owners received a big victory this week in the Kansas Legislature. The SB 150 conference committee bill was just approved by the house 104 to 17 and the senate 31 to 6. It is on to the governor for his signature.

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Editorial: Editorial: Illegal Immigration Is No Laughing Matter
Via Heritage’s Morning Bell

The White House correspondents’ dinner might have been two weeks ago, but President Barack Obama continued his comedy routine yesterday in El Paso, Texas, only this time Donald Trump wasn’t the butt of the jokes. Instead, during a speech on immigration, the president mocked Republicans at large, the rule of law, and any American who takes the defense of our nation seriously.

Respectfully, Mr. President, illegal immigration and border security are no laughing matter.

But to the president, they apparently are, especially when it provides fodder for a purely political speech, delivered amid a round of campaign fundraisers in the Lone Star State. After claiming that his administration has “gone above and beyond” Republicans’ calls for immigration reform (which he hasn’t), Obama launched into an all-out assault on the GOP:

We have gone above and beyond what was requested by the very Republicans who said they supported broader reform as long as we got serious about enforcement. All the stuff they asked for, we’ve done. But even though we’ve answered these concerns, I gotta say I suspect there are still going to be some who are trying to move the goal posts on us one more time.

You know, they said we needed to triple the Border Patrol. Or now they’re going to say we need to quadruple the Border Patrol. Or they’ll want a higher fence. Maybe they’ll need a moat. Maybe they’ll want alligators in the moat.”

And if that weren’t enough to prove just how political the speech was, the White House went so far as to include catcalls from the audience on the official transcript from the speech, including, “We love you!,” “Tear it down!,” “They’re racist!,” 53 mentions of the audience’s applause and nine mentions of laughter. We get it, Mr. President — you played to your crowd quite well.

This isn’t a question of racism, the goal posts haven’t moved, and a moat is not what’s needed. In case the president hasn’t noticed, the 1,896-mile Rio Grande, arid deserts, treacherous mountain ranges, Border Patrol and hundreds of miles of fence haven’t been enough. And though the president claimed, “The fence is now basically complete,” a February 2011 GAO report shows that Border Patrol does not have control of the border.

Maybe, amid all the applause, the president hasn’t noticed that millions of illegal immigrants now live in the United States, and our laws aren’t being enforced. And when Arizona attempted to enforce the law since the federal government would not, the Obama Justice Department sued to stop it. Rather than offer effective solutions to the illegal immigration problem, Obama’s response was to ridicule those seeking to enforce the law and offer amnesty for others to curry their political favor. He even dredged up the DREAM Act, a mini-amnesty in sheep’s clothing, which fell flat on its face in Congress. That’s par for the course with this president, who continues to place politics before policy as a matter of routine. The Heritage Foundation’s Jena McNeill explains:

An amnesty would cost taxpayers millions, if not billions of dollars—at a time where debt is at its ceiling and budgets are busted. It would also reward those who broke the law and came to the U.S. illegally over those who came to the U.S. the legal way.

Solving the problem, though, isn’t the president’s goal. Cynically winning Hispanic votes is his end game. Heritage’s Israel Ortega writes:

It’s obvious that political calculations are driving the President’s push for immigration reform in light of his all-time-low support among Hispanics. President Obama’s advisors remain convinced that immigration reform will guarantee their support, despite polling that indicates that unemployment and education are issues that keep most Hispanics up at night.

Unfortunately President Obama continues to believe that Hispanics are single-issue voters who will reward him for his stump speeches on immigration.

America faces a real illegal immigration problem. It also faces an unemployment problem, a spending problem, an entitlements problem and a national security problem.

On immigration, the right solution is making a real commitment to border security, workplace and immigration enforcement, a temporary worker program and visa reforms to get employers the employees they need. On all of the above, the solution starts with a president who is willing to lead and get down to business — but not the business of taking cheap shots to score points in the political arena.

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