Sent: Friday, 17 July 2026 16:49:19
To: mcre13@gmail.com <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: A Doctor's Note - Senator Marshall's Weekly Newsletter
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Title: A Hurtful Comment, a Quick Deep Dive, and Thoughts on Public Service in Topeka
I do need help. I am so arrogant. I am so arrogant that I thought I could change Topeka. I thought I could change Topeka due to my arrogance. And I’m going to need a lot of help to get people to actually change Topeka.
Today, while reviewing some old memories and posts, one comment stood out. Kristen Anderson White wrote on Facebook: “God help us if anyone ever takes you seriously. You need help!”
It was directed at me, and honestly, it hurt. I’ve spent decades in Topeka real estate, founding MCRE, LLC, working on developments, and running for Shawnee County Commissioner and Mayor because I believe our community deserves better—more transparent processes, shovel-ready projects, accountability for taxpayer dollars, and economic growth that gives our kids and grandkids reasons to stay and build here. Showing up at meetings, drafting proposals, studying drainage and zoning details, and putting my name on the ballot isn’t easy. It means sticking your neck out in public.
So I did what anyone would do after seeing a comment like that: I researched who Kristen Anderson White is. If she’s out there minding her own business as a kind person contributing positively, that’s great. I don’t hate her for a single post. But the disconnect between the comment and her actual record is striking.
Kristen is a lifelong Topekan, Topeka West High School Class of 1972 graduate, and Kansas State University art education alum. She built a career as an artist, designer, and entrepreneur. For years she and her husband Bob White ran Gallery Classic, a retail store focused on Belgian antiques, home décor, and art. They purchased the building around 1999 and operated it successfully until selling the property in 2011. She championed re-purposed and reclaimed pieces—promoting sustainable decorating well before it was trendy.
She also founded White x White, a wholesale home décor company importing quality Belgian-style furniture and antiques for retailers across the country. She made regular sourcing trips to Belgium with Bob, bringing distinctive European influences back to Topeka. She’s a mother, stepmother, grandmother (“Kiki” to her grands), and a breast cancer survivor who was diagnosed at age 40 in 1994, treated successfully, and has remained cancer-free. She’s active in local history groups like Topeka History Geeks, helping preserve and share our community’s stories.
That’s a solid, positive track record of building businesses, creating, and staying involved locally for decades.
Which raises the question: Why the hateful tone? Why tell someone actively trying to serve the public that they “need help” and shouldn’t be taken seriously?
It doesn’t seem in character with the rest of her life. But that’s the thing about online comments. It’s easy—and safer—to fire off a zinger from the couch or a dark basement. No need to study the issues, attend the meetings, file the paperwork, or put your own record on the line. Running for office, advocating for reform, and showing up publicly means facing criticism, scrutiny, and yes, mean-spirited posts. It’s not for everyone. Some prefer the comfort of the sidelines.
I get it. Local development, incentives, zoning, and city leadership spark strong feelings. Reasonable people can disagree. But dismissing the person rather than engaging the ideas doesn’t help Topeka move forward.
Topeka needs more people willing to stick their necks out—not fewer. Whether you agree with my positions or not, the work is about results: better deals for taxpayers, infrastructure readiness, and consistent rules for everyone. I’ll keep showing up, researching, and pushing for positive change—arrogant as that may be.
To Kristen and anyone else: If you have substantive critiques of the policies or proposals, I’m happy to discuss them. Let’s keep the conversation focused on ideas and data instead of personal attacks. Our community deserves that.
Henry McClure
Definition of “Qualified Data Center” (New Section 1(g)):
“Qualified data center” means one or more buildings that are constructed, reconstructed, enlarged, remodeled or leased to house a group of networked computer servers in this state to centralize the storage, management and dissemination of data and information pertaining to a particular business, taxonomy or body of knowledge and such buildings are connected to each other by fiber and associated equipment required for operating a fiber transmission network between data center buildings and internet points for the purpose of providing redundancy and resiliency for the data center services provided in each building.
Core Qualification (New Section 2(a)):
A qualified firm that makes an investment in eligible data center costs in a qualified data center of at least $250,000,000 in the aggregate by the fifth year of operations and creates and maintains at least 20 new jobs at the qualified data center within two calendar years after the commencement of operations shall receive a sales tax exemption...
Electricity Rate Prohibition (amended K.S.A. 66-101j):
A customer shall not be eligible for the discount authorized by this section for any new or expanded facility that is a qualified data center as defined in section 1, and amendments thereto.
Water Conservation Commitment (Section 2(b)(5)): The firm must commit to practices that will conserve, reuse and replace water, including (but not limited to) efficient fixtures, rainwater harvesting, recirculation, reclaimed water use, and watershed restoration support.
Clawback / Cure (Section 2(c)): 120-day cure period after written notice of breach. If not cured, Commerce can require repayment of all or part of the sales tax exemption received, terminate the exemption, or suspend it.
| State | Main Incentive | Min Investment | Min Jobs | Duration | Power Discount Allowed? | Security Review? | Notes / Strength vs KS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kansas | 100% state + local sales tax | $250M | 20 | 20 years | No | Yes (KIFC) | Strongest security + ratepayer protection |
| Missouri | 100% state + local sales tax | $25M (new) / $5M (expand) | 10 (new) / 5 (expand) | Up to 15 years | Yes (local deals common) | No | Much lower thresholds; heavy local Chapter 100 property tax abatements (often 90%+ for 20+ years) |
| Iowa | Sales tax exemption or refund | $200M (full) or $1M–$10M (partial) | Varies | 10–15 years (recently limited) | Yes | No | Lower bar; also property tax exemption starting 2027 |
| Nebraska | Sales tax exemption on equipment + construction materials | $3M–$37M+ (tiered) | 30+ or maintain employment | Multi-year | Yes | No | Flexible tiers via Advantage/ImagiNE programs |
| Oklahoma | Sales tax exemption on equipment/machinery (and sometimes power for certain NAICS) | None specific | None specific | Ongoing | Partial | No | Broad computer services exemption |
| Colorado | Proposed/debated 20–30 year sales tax exemption (HB26-1030 style) | Varies | Varies | 20–30 years | Yes | No | Not as mature; fiscal pushback ongoing |
Takeaway: Kansas has the highest investment threshold ($250M) and the strongest ratepayer and security protections. Missouri is currently the most aggressive competitor in the KC metro with much lower bars and huge local property tax deals. Iowa and Nebraska are also active but less “hyperscale-focused.”
Here’s clean, professional language you (or a city/county attorney) can adapt for Topeka, Shawnee County, or any Kansas jurisdiction. It is designed to work with SB 98 while giving locals real control.
Section X.XX – Data Centers and Related Facilities
A. Definition. “Data Center” means a facility whose primary purpose is the storage, management, processing, and dissemination of digital data, including but not limited to facilities that would qualify as a “qualified data center” under K.S.A. 2025 Supp. 74-50,331 et seq. (SB 98).
B. Zoning Districts. Data Centers shall be permitted only in the following districts as a Conditional Use or Special Use Permit: [I-2 Heavy Industrial / PUD / specific overlay]. They are prohibited in all residential, agricultural, commercial, and mixed-use districts unless specifically rezoned after public hearing.
C. Additional Requirements for Conditional/Special Use Approval:
1. Minimum lot size of 40 acres (or as determined by City/County).
2. Minimum setbacks of 500 feet from any residential zoning district or dwelling, and 200 feet from any public right-of-way.
3. Noise, vibration, light, and dust standards stricter than general industrial (e.g., no more than 55 dBA at property line, zero detectable off-site vibration).
4. Water Conservation Plan approved by [City Water / County] that demonstrates net-zero or better impact on local aquifers and surface water (air-cooled or closed-loop preferred).
5. Written will-serve letters from the electric utility and water provider confirming capacity without adverse impact on existing customers.
6. Landscape and screening plan that fully conceals the facility from public view within 5 years.
7. Decommissioning bond or escrow in an amount sufficient to restore the site.
8. Community Benefits Agreement (optional but strongly preferred) addressing local hiring, road improvements, and annual payments in lieu of taxes.
D. Interaction with State Incentives. Approval of a Conditional Use Permit does not constitute endorsement for any state incentive under SB 98. The governing body may condition approval on the applicant agreeing not to seek, or to waive, any local portion of the SB 98 sales tax exemption, or on additional local performance guarantees.
E. Temporary Moratorium Authority. The governing body may by resolution impose a temporary moratorium of up to 12 months on new applications for Data Centers while studying impacts.This language has already been used (in pieces) in places like Independence, Spring Hill, and Topeka’s recent discussions.
Current Status (as of July 16, 2026):
Under SB 98 Rules:
Local Leverage Points:
Bottom line on Compass: It is a real prospect but currently stalled by the City’s 12-month pause and rising local opposition. It is a classic “test case” of SB 98 — state incentives are ready and waiting, but local land-use control is still the decisive gate.
Quick Summary
SB 98 created the Kansas Data Center Sales Tax Exemption Program. It offers a 20-year 100% state and local sales and use tax exemption on construction, equipment, and related costs for large-scale data centers that invest at least $250 million and create at least 20 new full-time Kansas-resident jobs.
Key strings attached:
It is the state’s main tool to attract hyperscale and large data centers while trying to protect ratepayers and national security interests.
SB 98 (Chapter 124 of the 2025 Session Laws) was designed to make Kansas competitive in the national race for AI and cloud data center investment.
It does three main things:
The bill amends K.S.A. 79-3606 (sales tax exemptions) by adding new subsection (xxxx) and amends K.S.A. 66-101j (electric utility economic development rates) to carve data centers out of the discount program.
To qualify, a firm must:
| Requirement | Details | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Investment | ≥ $250 million in eligible data center costs | By end of 5th year of operations |
| Job Creation | ≥ 20 new full-time jobs filled by Kansas residents | Within 2 years of commencement of operations |
| Electricity | Signed 10-year purchase agreement with the local retail electric utility | Required in the Incentive Agreement |
| Water | Comprehensive water conservation/reuse plan | Required for approval |
| Security Review | Full KIFC review + Fusion Center Oversight Board approval | Before any incentive is awarded |
| Construction Start | Must begin construction within 10 years of the agreement (or earlier as negotiated) | Per Incentive Agreement |
| Other | Registered & in good standing with Kansas SOS; project capital not from federally sanctioned entities | Ongoing |
The exemption period is 20 years from commencement of operations (or as certified).
100% exemption from state and local sales and use tax on:
It does not cover electricity, construction tools/machinery of the contractor, or general administrative equipment.
Electricity Rate Ban (the most important “protection”) Public utilities cannot grant data centers the economic-development rate discounts available to other large industrial customers under K.S.A. 66-101j. This was intentional — Kansas lawmakers wanted the tax break but did not want residential ratepayers subsidizing cheap power for data centers.
KIFC Security Review Before Commerce can approve the incentive, the Kansas Intelligence Fusion Center evaluates:
The Fusion Center Oversight Board can approve, require modifications, or deny. This is a national-security gate that most states do not have.
Water Conservation Applicants must submit a plan that typically includes recirculation, rainwater harvesting, reclaimed water, efficient cooling, etc. Air-cooled or closed-loop systems are strongly preferred by communities.
Applications are accepted year-round.
SB 98 is a deliberate, carefully structured invitation to large data centers. Kansas opened the door with a generous tax exemption while building in two major guardrails (no power discounts + mandatory intelligence review).
The horse is out of the barn at the state level. Whether individual projects succeed now depends almost entirely on local zoning, politics, water availability, and community resistance.