Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Policy and finance today.

**Summary:** This is a recording of the City of Topeka, Kansas **Policy & Finance Committee Meeting** held on June 3, 2026 (starting around 1:30 PM). It was a relatively short, routine local government committee session (~41 minutes) chaired by Council Member Marcus Miller (District 6), with Council Members David Banks (District 4) and Michelle Bradberry (District 7) participating.

The meeting covered consent items, several ordinances and policy discussions, staff presentations, and public comment. Key topics included redistricting processes, building code fee amendments, economic development incentives, backyard chicken/rooster regulations, and procedural follow-ups from a citizen review committee. No major controversies erupted, and the tone was collaborative and procedural. The meeting adjourned after public comments.

### Agenda Highlights & Timestamps (from video description)
- **0:00** — Call to Order & Attendance
- **0:58** — Consent Agenda (approval of prior minutes)
- **1:39** — Charter Ordinance on Redistricting Commissions
- **4:14** — Ordinance on Redistricting Commission
- **4:30** — Ordinance amending TMC Chapter 14 (Building Code fees)
- **7:50** — Community Impact Measures for City Economic Development Incentives
- **30:05** — Citizen Government Review Committee Recommendation - Follow Up Procedures
- **36:02** — Chicken and Rooster Ownership
- **39:29** — Public Comment
- **~41:00** — Adjournment

### Deep Dive on Key Items

**1. Redistricting Commissions (Charter Ordinance & Related Ordinance)**  
Staff (Brandy Roy Bachmann from the Legal Department) explained recommendations from the prior Citizen Government Review Committee. Changes included:
- Adding an at-large elector appointed by the Topeka Municipal Court judge to serve as chairperson.
- Guidance on how the commission draws district boundaries (e.g., avoiding certain considerations for fairness).

This aims to improve independence and transparency in the redistricting process after census data. The items moved forward procedurally with committee support.

**2. Building Code Amendments (TMC Chapter 14, Section 14.20.060(i), Subsection 109 Fees)**  
A routine update to adjust fees for building permits or related services. These adjustments help cover administrative costs for the city’s inspection and permitting processes. It passed without noted opposition.

**3. Community Impact Measures for Economic Development Incentives**  
This involved discussion on evaluating and requiring measurable community benefits (e.g., jobs, local investment, equity impacts) when the city offers tax abatements, grants, or other incentives to businesses. It reflects growing emphasis on accountability in local economic development—ensuring public dollars deliver tangible returns. The conversation lasted notably longer, indicating it was a substantive policy topic.

**4. Chicken & Rooster Ownership Ordinance (Item 5C)**  
A lighter but engaging topic. The committee discussed regulating backyard poultry in city limits. Council members noted significant public feedback (some supportive of urban farming/homesteading, others concerned about noise, odors, pests, or property values). Jokes about "ruffling feathers" lightened the mood. No final decision was detailed in snippets, but it was framed as ongoing community engagement.

**5. Citizen Government Review Committee Follow-Up**  
Procedural discussion on how to handle and implement recommendations from this citizen advisory group for better governance transparency and processes.

**6. Public Comment**  
Standard opportunity for residents to address the committee near the end.

### Overall Context
This committee handles policy development and financial oversight before items potentially go to the full Topeka City Council. Meetings like this are where detailed work happens on ordinances that affect daily life (zoning, fees, animals, development). The June 3 session was efficient, with staff presentations and member dialogue focused on practical governance rather than partisan debate.

Topeka (population ~125k) is a mid-sized Midwest city dealing with typical issues: balancing growth/incentives, updating codes, and responding to resident input on livability topics like urban chickens.

If you want a more detailed breakdown of any specific section, quotes from speakers, or follow-up on outcomes (e.g., what the full council did later), let me know—I can dig further. The video is publicly available on the City of Topeka’s YouTube channel for full viewing.

Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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