Politics & Government
Kansas Senate Rejects Attempt To Force Expiration Of Stateβs COVID-19 Disaster Declaration
Chamber advances bill extending emergency footing through March.

January 14, 2021

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TOPEKA β Republican Sen. Dennis Pyle failed to gain traction for an amendment Thursday allowing the stateβs COVID-19 emergency disaster declaration to expire Jan. 26 rather than extend it through March while lawmakers worked on an overhaul of the governorβs authority in the crisis.
βDrive out into the counties,β said Pyle, of Hiawatha in northeast Kansas. βTalk to people. There are people who want to keep it in place. Iβll agree. My polling is 80% are ready for it to end. Iβve asked waitresses. Iβve asked health care workers. Iβve asked farmers. Iβve asked business entities. They want the freedom to continue practicing health care based on their education and the sources they go to and trust. I want freedom put back in place so we can freely go about our lives.β
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The Senate overwhelmingly rejected Pyleβs bill-killing amendment and advanced the measure extending the emergency management law applicable to Gov. Laura Kelly on a voice vote. The House is working on a comparable bill that would give the Legislature time to piece together reform of Kansasβ law on disaster management.
Much of the Senate bill would reflect the governing approach replied upon for the past seven months. However, the Senate bill would change state law to prevent the governor from issuing an order inhibiting operations of any religious, civic, business or commercial activity, whether for-profit or not-for-profit. Under the current emergency statute, the governor could unilaterally close a business for 15 days.
The bill also would extend use of telemedicine services, waive liabilities for some businesses, allow continuation of to-go alcohol sales and give the State Finance Council, a panel that includes Kelly and legislative leadership, oversight of the governorβs actions if the Legislature adjourns.
Senate President Ty Masterson, the Andover Republican, objected to Pyleβs amendment because derailing Senate Bill 14 meant the state would revert to pre-pandemic law. Rejection of the extension running to March 31 would lift restrictions on the governor put in place by lawmakers during the special session in June, he said. Thatβs when lawmakers modernized the state statute created decades ago to deal with localized emergencies of floods, fires or tornadoes rather than a statewide pandemic that has now killed more than 3,350 Kansans.
βIf things drop there would be a new emergency with all new expanded powers,β Masterson said. βThe power to close your church or business. We would actually be empowering the executive.β
Pyle disagreed with Masterson, arguing Kelly wouldnβt be able to renew her disaster declaration. He said an opinion issued by Attorney General Derek Schmidt indicated signing of a new overarching declaration by the governor could be challenged in court.
βPeople have learned there are certain rights that you have that are God-given no governor, president, governmental entity should be able to take away or trample on,β Pyle said.
Skeptics of Pyleβs amendment questioned whether demise of the stateβs emergency declaration could jeopardize flow of hundreds of millions of dollars in federal disaster funding to Kansas. In response, Pyle said it was wrong for Kansas politicians to sustain restrictions on personal freedom simply to score a mountain of cash.
Sen. Rob Olson, an Olathe Republican, said it was time for Kansas to reopen the economy and allow people to live as they wanted despite coronavirus pandemic. Itβs unfair for state or county officials to restrict operation of certain businesses while allowing other companies to operate without limits, he said.
βItβs time to get this economy back open. A bunch of these counties should be wide open. They should have never been closed down,β Olson said. βWhen the federal money runs out, the PPP loans, weβre going to have a bunch of broken businesses and an economy thatβs destroyed.β
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