A transformer exploded around 10:45 a.m. Wednesday, July 1, at the Quindaro Power Plant, according to the Board of Public Utilities spokesman.
A fire in connection with the transformer explosion is now out, said David Mehlhaff, BPU spokesman. Because the transformer exploded a little distance from the Quindaro Power Plant, there was no damage to the power plant itself, he added. The power plant is at 3601 N. 12th, Kansas City, Kan.
The explosion knocked out power to more than 600 customers, the spokesman said. There were no injuries, Mehlhaff said.
The 69 KV transformer that exploded also took out three of the 161 KV transmission lines, Mehlhaff stated.
Safety of the employees and community is the top priority of the BPU, he said.
More than 600 customers were without power, including Fairfax industries such as Owens Corning and General Motors. The GM plant is currently on a changeover this week and is not running this week.
Mehlhaff said electrical operation crews are working to isolate these issues and get power restored to customers as soon as possible.
Four vehicles were involved in an accident on I-635 southbound, just north of I-35 in Wyandotte County, at 7:46 a.m. June 30, according to a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s report.
As a GMC Acadia and a Mazda utility vehicle applied the brakes for traffic, another driver attempted to change lanes to the left in front of a Volvo passenger car, the report stated.
The driver of the Volvo swerved to avoid that other vehicle and rear-ended the GMC Acadia, according to the report, pushing it forward into the Mazda utility vehicle. The other driver that tried to change lanes did not come into contact with any of the vehicles, according to the report.
The driver of the Volvo, a 25-year-old woman from Springfield, Mont., was not injured, according to the trooper’s report. A passenger in the Volvo, a 55-year-old woman, had a possible injury and was taken to a Kansas City, Kan., hospital.
The driver of the Acadia, a 52-year-old man from Shawnee, Kan., had a possible injury and was taken to a hospital in Overland Park.
The driver of the Mazda utility vehicle, a 40-year-old man from Kansas City, Mo., was not injured, according to the report.
by Jim McLean, KHI News Service
State tax receipts for June totaled $22.5 million less than expected, the Kansas Department of Revenue reported Tuesday.
Both individual income tax and sales tax receipts failed to meet projections.
Kansas Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan tried to put the numbers in a positive light, saying that overall tax receipts were $69.9 million higher than the previous year and “were less than 1 percent below estimates” for the current budget year.
But Jordan didn’t mention the fact that the official estimate for the 2015 fiscal year, which ended Tuesday, was lowered in April by $87.5 million. Absent that adjustment, tax revenues would have missed the mark by a much wider margin.
State revenue has plummeted since income tax cuts championed by Gov. Sam Brownback were approved in 2012. In the fiscal year that preceded those cuts, the state took in $6.4 billion in tax revenue. This year, collections would have totaled approximately $700 million less even if they had met projections.
The budget problems created by the revenue shortfalls forced the longest legislative session in state history. Lawmakers struggled to address a projected $400 million deficit in fiscal year 2016, which runs from July 1 of this year to June 30, 2016.
In the session’s final days, Brownback pleaded with members of the Legislature’s Republican majority to pass a $384 million tax increase.
“You can assess blame a lot of ways and in a lot of places, and I’ll accept my share of it,” Brownback said then at a rare joint gathering of House and Senate Republicans. “But we are where we are. The state’s watching us. The country’s watching us. You’ve got solutions in front of you.”
Lawmakers narrowly passed the tax package, which consisted largely of increases in sales and tobacco taxes, on the final day of the session. But it won’t generate enough revenue to fully balance the budget. Brownback will have to order additional spending cuts at some point during the budget year.
Last week, the State Financial Council, which includes the governor and legislative leaders, approved a record $840 million certificate of indebtedness to help ease cash-flow problems as the state transitions from one fiscal year to the next. Such certificates essentially allow the state to borrow from itself, to tap into “idle funds.” But those loans must be paid back by the end of the fiscal year.
Anthony Hensley, the top Democrat in the Kansas Senate, blamed the state’s ongoing budget problems on “incompetence and mismanagement.”
“Governor Brownback and the Republican Legislature are responsible for the longest session in history, the largest tax increase in history and, now, the largest certificate of indebtedness in history,” Hensley told the Topeka Capital-Journal.
The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.
– See more at http://www.khi.org/news/article/kansas-tax-collections-fall-short-once-again#sthash.PN2Js7Oe.dpuf