Kansas Senate supports elimination of state, local food sales tax

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TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate voted to remove all state and local sales taxes on food next year, in a last-minute reversal of an earlier proposal to curtail sales tax reductions for unhealthy food. 

Senators voted to eliminate the food sales tax Thursday during a Senate debate, advancing an amended version of Senate Bill 248 by a 22-16 vote. The original form of the bill would have rolled back tax relief on food, except for food deemed healthy by legislators. 

Senate President Ty Masterson originally proposed the legislation as a way to pay for other tax cuts. The idea was to leave the food sales tax partly in place, which is currently set to be fully eliminated in 2025, so that the state could afford a massive flat tax proposal, one that would benefit Kansas’ wealthiest residents. 

But senators on both sides of the aisle voted to change the bill and eliminate the food sales tax, despite concern that getting rid of the local food sales tax would hurt local economies. 

Proponents of the change said the elimination would help Kansans statewide and do more good than Gov. Laura Kelly’s “ax the tax,” plan, which originally proposed the gradual elimination of the state food sales tax.

Sen. Virgil Peck, a Havana Republican, said getting rid of both taxes would bring in revenue from other states and create widespread, positive change. 

“We swing a big ax, we’re not going to have just a little hatchet,” Peck said. “We gotta swing a big ax that takes two hands.” 

The financial effect of the revised bill is unknown.

Kansas Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kansas Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Sherman Smith for questions: info@kansasreflector.com. Follow Kansas Reflector on Facebook and Twitter.

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