FRONTENAC, Kan. —
Yet another effort is in the works in the state Legislature to bring to a vote a bill that would make it easier to open a casino and reopen a dog track in Southeast Kansas.
Last week, Sen. Pete Brungardt, R-Salina, offered the measure in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee, which he chairs.
Rep. Bob Grant, D-Frontenac, and Rep. Doug Gatewood, D-Columbus, are the main sponsors of the bill. It would reduce the minimum investment required for managers of state-owned casinos in Cherokee or Crawford counties from $225 million to $100 million, and reduce a required “privilege fee” from $25 million to $11 million.
It also would reduce the state’s share of slot machine revenues at Camptown Dog Track in Frontenac from 40 percent to 22 percent.
The new effort comes after an effort to vote the bill out of the committee fell 20 votes short last month.
Grant has said he will keep trying to get the bill passed until the session ends. He said it may be a long shot, but it shouldn’t be, because the bill would provide jobs.
“All we’re trying to do is make the casino and Camptown viable,” Grant said.
He acknowledged that time in the session is running short.
“I know we’re here this week and probably next week,” he said. “I don’t think we’re going to get everything done.”
House Speaker Mike O’Neal, R-Hutchinson, has resisted changing the state gambling law.
Gov. Sam Brownback didn’t indicate whether he would veto the measure if it were to gain legislative approval.
“I really wanted them to wait for another year, because they just are such politically potent issues,” Brownback said last week.
Grant said the gambling bill may not be important to Brownback, but it is important to his and Gatewood’s constituents, and to the Southeast Kansas economy.
“We’re touting jobs,” Gatewood said. “That’s what the Brownback administration has been touting. I’m hoping it provides lots of jobs. We’ll make it work like Dodge City, Mulvane and Kansas City have done. Hopefully it will provide jobs, jobs, jobs.”
Gatewood said the next step would be debate in the committee, which must vote the bill onto the Senate floor.
“The only way I see it happening is to insert the Senate bill into a House bill that deals with the same subject, and vote it out of the Senate,” Gatewood said.
He said that in the House, he or any other member can make a motion to concur; approval of such a motion would prevent the bill from being amended.
“That’s the most we can get done,” Gatewood said. “I don’t think it would get a fair hearing in the House, but there are procedural moves we can take.
“It’s the only chance we’re going to have.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS contributed to this report.
Revenue potential
OFFICIALS HAVE ESTIMATED that a casino and dog track with slot machines in Southeast Kansas would generate state revenue of $15.4 million annually by 2015.
Local News
Kansas lawmakers try hand at Kansas casino bill again
- Local News
-
-
Civil War committee honors sacrifice of soldiers ambushed at Rader Farm
Dozens of local residents gathered Saturday at the Rader Farm on the 150th anniversary of the massacre of 15 soldiers of the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry and three white soldiers from the 2nd Kansas Volunteer Artillery Battery by guerrilla Confederate forces.
-
Summer classes scheduled for Joplin, MSSU
Summer classes for Joplin Schools have been scheduled for Monday, June 3, through Friday, June 28.
-
Mike Pound: No cure for ‘worst parent ever syndrome’
I may be the worst parent ever. The reason I say that is because our 15-year-old daughter, Emma, suggested that was the case the other day when I was driving her home from school.
-
Wally Kennedy: Ye Olde King Pizza to open by September
Let’s start at the beginning. Earlier this year, Brian and Tracy Myers, of Joplin, signed a licensing agreement to bring a Ye Olde King Pizza to Joplin. This style of pizza was the forerunner for what eventually would become Joplin’s signature pizza restaurant, Pizza by Stout. That restaurant at 2101 S. Range Line Road was destroyed by the May 2011 tornado.
-
Registration continues for Get Fit TRYathlon in Pittsburg
On average, it costs more than $600 to match one child with an adult volunteer in the Crawford County Big Brothers Big Sisters program. Four years ago, the Get Fit TRYathlon was born as a fundraiser for the program, and it has been gaining momentum, organizers say.
-
Council to consider condemnation measures for widening projects
The Joplin City Council on Monday night will consider ordinances for proposed condemnation proceedings on five pieces of property that are needed for three street widening projects.
-
Andra Bryan Stefanoni: The story of two engines that could
It’s hard not to be enamored by trains if you grew up where I did. Pittsburg is crisscrossed by rail lines, as are many Southeast Kansas towns that were built on the backs of coal miners.
-
Jo Ellis: Mudslinging can be fun when it’s in the hands of kids
CARTHAGE, Mo. — It’s slick. It’s sticky. It’s goopy. It’s soupy. It’s Mudstock 2013, and it’s going to be so much fun for kids. But hold on. Carthage police Chief Greg Dagnan said Mudstock isn’t just for kids. “Adults go through it all the time, and they have just as much fun,” he said, adding, “I think.”
-
FACES OF RECOVERY: 176,869 volunteers help put Joplin together again
They initially came in droves, pouring into Joplin by the thousands during the months following the May 2011 tornado to clear debris, clean up damaged homes and businesses and distribute donations of food, water, clothing and other necessities.
-
VIDEO: Nearly 2,300 take part in second Joplin Memorial Run
Having just cruised across the line to finish in first place in the Joplin Memorial Run’s half-marathon, Andrew Webb paused for a moment to catch his breath and take it all in.
- More Local News Headlines
-



