KANSAS CITIES, COUNTIES DECEPTIVELY CLAIM TO HOLD THE LINE ON RAISING
PROPERTY TAXES
Kansas Policy Institute urges lawmakers to revisit transparency legislation vetoed by
Governor Kelly last year
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jan. 8 - In its 2021 budget report, Douglas County says, "Acknowledging that COVID-19 has had
a significant economic impact for many, the mill levy remains flat…." But a 4.8% property tax
hike in this year's budget is not mentioned.
“Taxpayers deserve better. Douglas County points out their mill levy remains flat. But that
doesn’t mean they aren’t raising property taxes. This is the epitome of the Kansas property tax
honesty gap. Local officials speak only of mill rate changes but ignore the backdoor increase
from valuation changes on property,” Says Dave Trabert, CEO of Kansas Policy Institute.
The Johnson County budget book touts a
1.7% reduction in the mill rate, but there's
a 4.3% property tax increase within in the
445-page document.
Kansas Policy Institute calls this disparity
the property tax honesty gap.
“This is a 6% honesty gap. Elected officials
are pretending taxes are going down 1.7%
when it's really a 4.3% increase. And these
are not isolated incidents,” Trabert says.
Local officials all across Kansas are telling
voters they are 'holding the line' on
property taxes. But KPI’s analysis of 50 of
the largest cities and counties show an
average property tax increase of almost 4%
coming this year. Which is four times the
inflation rate.
“Kansans are struggling to make ends meet more than ever right now. We need local elected
officials to commit to transparency.”
The adjacent table lists the most egregious examples, starting with the city of Overland Park at
8.8%. The city of Lenexa is a close second, at 8.3%.
Six other local units are imposing more than a 5% increase, including Prairie Village (6%),
Leavenworth County (6.4%), Miami County (5.9%), Pittsburg and Wichita (5.4%), and Olathe
(5.1%)
Truth in Taxation legislation closes the honesty gap
Last year, the Kansas Legislature overwhelmingly passed Truth in Taxation legislation to close
the honesty gap.
But city and county officials opposed it, so Governor Kelly saved them from
having to be honest and vetoed the bill on the last day of the session, with no opportunity to
override.
Utah and Tennessee have had Truth in Taxation laws in effect for more than three decades,
which have proven to keep taxes lower. For example, Utah's effective property tax rate
dropped by 7.5% between 2000 and 2018, while the tax rate increased by 22% in Kansas.
Under the Kansas bill, local elected officials must vote on the entire property tax increase they
impose, regardless of whether the increase results from valuation changes or mill rate changes.
Each year, mill rates would be automatically reduced to a 'revenue-neutral' level that produces
the same property tax revenue to each city and county as they collected the year before.
“If they want to raise the revenue-neutral mill rate, they must notify taxpayers of their intent
and hold public Truth in Taxation hearings to accept taxpayer input. Afterward, they must vote
on the entire tax increase they decide to impose. This is one of the most important issues
Kansans are facing right now. They want to be heard. Our legislatures and Governor need to
listen,”
Trabert says.
Kanas Policy Institute is calling for the Legislature to take the Truth in Taxation legislation up
again this year and put it on Governor Kelly's desk early in the session with plenty of time to
override her inevitable veto
#ms @MS @Advocate