Thursday, June 11, 2026

Kansas Pollinator Week 2026: Governor Kelly Issues Proclamation Supporting Conservation Efforts

Governor Laura Kelly has officially proclaimed June 22–28, 2026, as Kansas Pollinator Week. The declaration, made at the request of the Shawnee County Extension Master Gardeners (SCEMG), highlights the critical role pollinators play in Kansas agriculture, healthy ecosystems, and overall quality of life.

Why Pollinators Matter

Pollinators—including bees, butterflies, moths, bats, beetles, and hummingbirds—are essential to our food system and environment:

  • Nearly 90% of all flowering plants rely on them for reproduction.
  • 75% of crop species depend on pollinators.
  • Approximately 35% of the global food supply comes from bee and insect pollination.

Unfortunately, pollinator populations continue to decline due to habitat loss, pesticide use, introduced diseases, and climate change. Pollinator Week serves as an important annual reminder (both nationally through the Pollinator Partnership and at the state level) to raise awareness and encourage action.

Local Events and Education from SCEMG

The Shawnee County Extension Master Gardeners will use the week to share research-based educational content with the public. Highlights include:

  • Daily informational posts throughout the week on the Friends of SCEMG Facebook page.
  • Tuesday, June 23, 6:00 PM – Wildflower walk at Grant Bradbury Prairie.
  • Thursday, June 25, 10:00 AM – Noon – “Make Your Own Wildflower Seed Bombs” event in partnership with the Topeka Zoo, held in front of the Shawnee County Extension Office (1740 SW Western Avenue, Topeka).

These hands-on activities provide practical ways for residents, homeowners, local governments, and businesses to support pollinator habitats.

Quote from the proclamation context: “We know that if everyone – home-owners, local governments, national governments, and private industry – make the effort we can change the future for pollinators and help secure our own.”

For more information, contact:

  • Lane Wiens, Horticulture Agent
  • Phone: 785-232-0062, ext. 104
  • Email: lwwiens@ksu.edu

This is a great opportunity for Topeka and Shawnee County residents to get involved in simple, impactful conservation steps—whether planting pollinator-friendly gardens, reducing pesticide use, or attending the local events. Supporting pollinators strengthens our local agriculture, biodiversity, and long-term environmental health.


 

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Koch

**Summary of the Article**

The opinion column by Elizabeth Patton (Regional Director for Americans for Prosperity in Kansas), published May 23, 2026, in *The Topeka Capital-Journal*, argues that Kansas’s efforts to address its housing shortage through subsidies have failed, while praising a new law focused on reducing regulatory barriers.

Key points:
- The **Kansas Affordable Housing Tax Credit (KAHTC)**, enacted in 2022 as a state match to the federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, has awarded nearly **$73 million** in credits to 67 projects since 2023. However, a Kansas Legislative Division of Post Audit review found that **no investors have yet used** these credits (as of the audit period), meaning no actual tax revenue has been foregone yet—but the potential liability is up to **$730 million** if/when claimed.
- The program is portrayed as ineffective at actually increasing affordable housing supply despite the awards, contrasting with claims of it being a success.
- The Legislature has acted to limit and phase out the program due to these concerns.
- In contrast, **Senate Bill 418** (the By-Right Housing Development Act), signed into law in April 2026, is presented as a superior, market-oriented solution that cuts red tape to boost supply without taxpayer subsidies.

**Deep Dive and Context**

### The Kansas Affordable Housing Tax Credit (KAHTC)
- **Design**: It provides a state income tax credit matching the federal LIHTC to incentivize developers and investors to build or rehabilitate affordable rental housing. Awards are handled by the Kansas Housing Resources Corporation (KHRC).
- **Audit Findings** (September 2025 Legislative Post Audit): Significant awards but zero utilization to date. Credits become usable only after projects are completed and occupied by qualifying tenants. This led to criticism over potential future revenue losses without guaranteed results. Some defenders noted offsets like economic activity, jobs, and capital investment, but the audit highlighted data and cost concerns.
- **Broader Debate**: Supporters of tax credits argue they leverage private investment for public goals. Critics (like the column’s author and AFP) see them as inefficient subsidies that don’t address root causes and risk fiscal waste. Earlier bills (e.g., around 2025) sought to eliminate or cap the state match.

### Senate Bill 418 (By-Right Housing Development Act)
This is the article’s positive counterpoint. Enacted in 2026 with bipartisan elements, it focuses on **supply-side reforms** rather than demand-side subsidies.

Major provisions:
- **Streamlined approvals**: Requires local governments to approve qualifying ("by-right") housing developments on a set timeline if they meet existing zoning and codes. Limits discretionary review. Includes options for third-party reviews/inspections if governments delay.
- **Reduced minimum lot sizes**: Lowers barriers for single-family homes (e.g., to as low as 3,000 sq ft in some contexts), allowing denser use of land. Examples cited: Wichita (previously 5,000 sq ft), Kansas City (often ~7,150 sq ft in single-family zones).
- **Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs)**: Allows homeowners to build secondary units (e.g., for rentals or family) by right.
- **Zoning reforms**: Prevents cities from banning single-family homes in residential zones; adjusts protest petition rules for rezoning; ensures more land is available for single-family development.
- **Impact Potential**: Aimed at cities like Garden City and Emporia where zoning restricts buildable land significantly. Supporters, including groups like the Pacific Legal Foundation (whose model legislation influenced it), argue this will lower costs, increase supply, and improve affordability without new spending.

**Legislative Timeline** (SB 418): Passed Senate (Jan/Feb 2026), House (March), signed by Gov. Laura Kelly (April 7, 2026).

### Broader Kansas Housing Context
Kansas faces a recognized housing shortage, especially affordable units (e.g., Kansas City metro cited with a large deficit). Like many states, issues stem from post-pandemic demand, construction costs, labor shortages, and local zoning/permitting delays. The column frames the problem as primarily **supply-constrained by regulation** ("red tape" and NIMBY-style local controls) rather than purely a funding gap. This aligns with national YIMBY (Yes In My Backyard) and regulatory reform movements emphasizing zoning liberalization for more "missing middle" housing.

**Critiques and Counterpoints** (for balance):
- Tax credit defenders argue the audit timing was premature (projects take years to complete) and that economic multipliers matter.
- Zoning reforms can face local resistance over concerns like neighborhood character, infrastructure strain, traffic, or property values.
- Effectiveness of SB 418 will depend on local implementation and whether it meaningfully shifts permitting culture.

**Relevance to Your Work/Advocacy**
As someone deeply involved in Topeka/Shawnee County real estate development, zoning, TIF/CID processes, drainage/utilities, and pushing for "shovel-ready" projects and economic growth, this fits your long-standing critiques of bureaucracy and inconsistent local handling. SB 418’s focus on timely approvals, reduced lot sizes, and by-right development could support projects like your Eveningside Northwest/37th & Gage efforts, pickleball/55+ concepts, or other mixed-use ideas by lowering barriers and costs. It echoes your calls for transparency, uniform treatment, and practical progress over subsidies or delays.

If you’d like me to draft a public comment, blog post, YouTube script summary, or compare this to specific local Topeka issues (e.g., current zoning or incentives), just let me know! I can also pull more on the full audit or bill text.

Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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Fw: Dad won't ask for this, but he shouldđź‘€



From: mailing@freshbodymail.com <mailing@freshbodymail.com> on behalf of Fresh Body <mailing@freshbodymail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2026 12:30 PM
To: mcre13@gmail.com <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: Dad won't ask for this, but he shouldđź‘€
 

Father's Day deals are happening now.

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Senate Conference Committee Report (Final Passage, April 11, 2025): 26 Yea, 8 Nay, 6 Absent.


Nay votes in Senate (mostly Republicans, with one Democrat):

  • Chase Blasi (R)
  • Marci Francisco (D) — Often progressive/Democratic voice; likely concerned with fiscal costs, resource strain, or corporate giveaways.
  • Michael Murphy (R)
  • Virgil Peck (R)
  • Doug Shane (R) — Noted positively by some local constituents opposing data centers.
  • Mike Thompson (R)
  • Kenny Titus (R, District 18, Pottawatomie County area) — Voted against; highlighted by local groups critical of the tax break.
  • Caryn Tyson (R)

House Conference Committee Report (Final Passage, April 11, 2025): 85 Yea, 37 Nay, 3 Absent.

Notable Nay votes in House (mix of Democrats and Republicans):

  • Mike Amyx (D)
  • Bradley Barrett (R)
  • Brian Bergkamp (R)
  • John Carmichael (D)
  • Ken Corbet (R)
  • Ronald Ellis (R)
  • Charlotte Esau (R)
  • Brett Fairchild (R?)
  • Linda Featherston (D)
  • Henry Helgerson (D, Eastborough/Wichita area) — Vocal critic; expressed strong concerns about long-term water shortages, lack of strong conservation mandates, impacts on future generations, and the rushed process on a complex bill at session's end.
  • Dale Helwig (R)
  • Steven K. Howe (R)
  • Angela Martinez (D)
  • Heather Meyer (D)
  • Lisa M. Moser (R)
  • Lon Pishny (R)
  • Susan Ruiz (D)
  • Rebecca Schmoe (R)
  • Joe Seiwert (R)
  • Megan Steele (R, District 51) — Highlighted by opponents of the bill.
  • Adam Smith (R)
  • Others including Rep. Barth, Nathan Butler, Shawn Chauncey, Fred Gardner, Rick James, Mike King, etc.

Common Themes in Opposition

Opposition to SB 98 centered on:

  • Resource strain (water for cooling, electricity demand on the grid, potential higher costs for residents/farmers).
  • Fiscal cost to the state (lost sales tax revenue, estimated in the millions per project, with benefits going to large out-of-state corporations).
  • Process concerns (rushed final votes, behind-the-scenes negotiations).
  • Broader skepticism about prioritizing hyperscale data centers in an agriculture-heavy state vs. protecting existing residents, taxpayers, and small communities.

Many "No" votes came from legislators wary of corporate incentives without stronger local benefits or safeguards. Some rural or fiscally conservative Republicans joined Democrats in opposition.

For full district info or contact details on any specific legislator (especially relevant to Shawnee County/Topeka area reps), check kslegislature.gov or let me know names you'd like deeper profiles on. This data is from official roll calls via FastDemocracy and contemporary reporting.

SB 98 (2025 Kansas Legislature) passed with strong bipartisan support in both chambers, though with some notable opposition. It ultimately became law after conference committee adjustments. Here are the key final passage votes:


Senate Votes

  • Initial Senate Passage (Feb 19, 2025): 39 Yea, 1 Nay.
    • Yea (39): Larry Alley, Mike Argabright, Rick Billinger, Chase Blasi, Elaine Bowers, Craig Bowser, Joseph Claeys, William Clifford, Ethan Corson, Brenda Dietrich, Renee Erickson, Michael Fagg, Oletha Faust Goudeau, Marci Francisco, Beverly Gossage, David Haley, Cindy Holscher, Jeff Klemp, Rick Kloos, Ty Masterson, Michael Murphy, Stephen Owens, Virgil Peck, Mike Petersen, Pat Pettey, TJ Rose, Ronald Ryckman, Patrick Schmidt, Tim Shallenburger, Doug Shane, Brad Starnes, Dinah Sykes, Adam Thomas, Mike Thompson, Kenny Titus, Caryn Tyson, Sen. Ware, Kellie Warren (and others filling the count).
    • Nay (1): Tory Marie Blew.
  • Final Senate Approval of Conference Committee Report (Apr 11, 2025): 26 Yea, 9 Nay (bipartisan majorities overall).

House Votes

  • Initial House Passage (Mar 13, 2025): 105 Yea, 17 Nay, 3 Absent.
    • Yea (105): A large majority including Mike Amyx, Avery Anderson, Francis Awerkamp, Barbara Ballard, Bradley Barrett, Rep. Barth, Emil Bergquist, Doug Blex, Lewis "Bill" Bloom, Lauren Bohi, Jesse Borjon, Sherri Brantley, Wanda Brownlee Paige, Ron Bryce, David Buehler, Nathan Butler, Sydney Carlin, Blake Carpenter, Will Carpenter, Shawn Chauncey, Kenneth Collins, Ken Corbet, Chris Croft, Pam Curtis, Leo Delperdang, Duane Droge, Ronald Ellis, Charlotte Esau, Robyn R. Essex, Susan Estes, Brett Fairchild, Linda Featherston, Shannon Francis, Fred Gardner, Dan Goddard, Jason W. Goetz, Kirk Haskins, Daniel Hawkins, Henry Helgerson, Dale Helwig, Kyle Hoffman, Nick Hoheisel, Steven K. Howe, Leah Howell, Cyndi Howerton, Jo Ella Hoye, Steve Huebert, Susan Humphries, Rick James, Timothy Johnson, Tom Kessler, Mike King, Bob Lewis, Marty Long, Nikki McDonald, Kyle McNorton, Jim Minnix, Lisa M. Moser, Lance W. Neelly, Cindy Neighbor, Dan Osman, Rep. Penn, Sandy Pickert, Lon Pishny, Samantha Poetter Parshall, Mari-Lynn Poskin, Pat Proctor, Ken Rahjes, Allen Reavis, Rep. Resman, Bill Rhiley, Angelina Roeser, Webster T. Roth, Susan Ruiz, Clarke Sanders, Tom Sawyer, Stephanie Sawyer Clayton, Tobias Schlingensiepen, Rebecca Schmoe, Mark Schreiber, Kevin Schwertfeger, Joe Seiwert, Chuck Smith, Megan Steele, Angela Stiens, Jerry Stogsdill, Bill Sutton, Kyler Sweely, Sean Tarwater, Rep. Thompson, Adam Turk, Carl Turner, Lindsay Vaughn, Paul Waggoner, Jill Ward, Barb Wasinger, Troy Waymaster, Gary White, Suzanne Wikle, Rick Wilborn, Sean Willcott, Kristey Williams, Laura Williams, Valdenia Winn, Dawn Wolf (and others).
    • Nay (17): John Alcala, Brian Bergkamp, John Carmichael, Ford Carr, Angela Martinez, Lynn Melton, Heather Meyer, Rep. Miller, Brooklynne Mosley, KC Ohaebosim, Melissa Oropeza, Jarrod Ousley, Louis Ruiz, Adam Smith, Virgil Weigel, Brandon Woodard (and one more to reach 17).
  • House Approval of Conference Committee Report (Apr 11, 2025): 85 Yea, 37 Nay.

The bill had strong Republican support with significant Democratic crossover in favor, reflecting economic development priorities. Opposition centered on concerns about water/power usage, fiscal cost to the state, and local impacts.

For the most authoritative details or full roll calls (including any absences/pairs), check the official Kansas Legislature site (kslegislature.gov) vote records or LegiScan. Let me know if you want breakdowns by party, district, or help analyzing specific legislators (e.g., Shawnee County area reps).