The Insider Handout Hall of Fame: Board Members’ Companies Cashing In on JEDO/GO Topeka Taxpayer Funds
These are the folks sitting on GTP, GO Topeka, or Chamber boards while their employers quietly sip from the public trough. No coincidence—just the same old Topeka playbook: steer economic development policy, then watch your company score the incentives. All on our dime, while the population stays flat and the city scrambles for $15 million.
Beth Easter – Chamber Chair (2026) – Security Benefit Beth Easter, the 2026 Chamber Chair and a high-level exec at Security Benefit, watched her company pocket a sweet $605,000 grant in 2025 through JEDO and GO Topeka. This was for “Project Whisper,” a $34.1 million expansion promising 55 new jobs. As a board insider helping shape GTP’s entire economic agenda, she’s in the perfect spot to green-light big-player retention deals like this one. Why chase broad-based growth when you can just keep subsidizing the chamber’s favorite financial firms?
Marne Craver – Elected Director (2026, Visit Topeka/GTP board) – Mars Wrigley Confectionery Marne Craver, serving as an Elected Director on the Visit Topeka and GTP boards, reps Mars Wrigley—a global candy giant that’s been treated like royalty by JEDO for years. They’ve pulled in up to $30 million+ in past incentives, including multi-million-dollar handouts tied to their $450 million plant upgrade in 2023. No brand-new grants in 2025–2026, but the ongoing “business retention” funds keep rolling in. Craver sits on the board while her employer enjoys taxpayer-backed perks. Why bother attracting new companies when you can just keep pampering the old ones?
Jennifer Owen – Chair-Elect (2026); Elected Director – Hotel Topeka at City Center Jennifer Owen, Chair-Elect for 2026 and an Elected Director, owns or reps Hotel Topeka at City Center. Her property benefits from indirect tourism incentives funneled through Visit Topeka (a GTP arm), with the hotel sector pulling in roughly $1 million+ annually in sales-tax-funded marketing, event subsidies, and downtown revitalization dollars. It’s not a single blockbuster grant like Reser’s, but it’s steady chamber-network cash keeping hospitality afloat—perfect for an insider who helps set the tourism agenda.
Nancy Burkhardt – Treasurer (2026); Elected Director – The University of Kansas Health System St. Francis Campus Nancy Burkhardt, Treasurer for 2026 and an Elected Director, represents The University of Kansas Health System St. Francis Campus. They’ve tapped healthcare retention grants—around $500,000 in the 2020s for expansions—and continue to benefit from JEDO-funded workforce development and talent attraction programs. Burkhardt handles the board’s money side while her employer scores public dollars for “health sector growth.” Indirect? Sure. Real taxpayer help? Absolutely.
John B. Dicus – Immediate Past Chair (2026) – Capitol Federal Savings Bank John B. Dicus, Immediate Past Chair for 2026 and CEO of Capitol Federal Savings Bank, has a long history with incentives—think site development grants for branch expansions in the 2010s. No direct 2025–2026 grants popped up, but the real juice is indirect: his bank profits handsomely from financing JEDO-backed projects (real estate loans for places like the Link Innovation Center). Board influence meets banking upside—classic ecosystem cronyism where public investments quietly fatten the insider’s bottom line.
On Reser's Specifically: No Direct Board Rep, But Chamber Ties Run Deep

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