Acta Kansas

Kansas politics, elections, and public affairs

Bill Tracker

Track legislation in the Kansas Senate and House · AI summaries powered by local LLM

1483 Total Bills · 600 Senate · 883 House · 390 Passed · 1483 AI Summarized
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SB12SenateIntroducedJan 16, 2025

Requiring each member of a municipal governing body whose district territory includes land being acquired to approve the exercise of eminent domain for such acquisition when such land is to be used for a recreational project.

This bill requires municipal governing body members whose districts include land being acquired for a recreational project to approve the use of eminent domain.

Tim Shallenburger
HB2026HouseIntroducedJan 15, 2025

Requiring all persons to be 18 years of age to be eligible to give consent for marriage and eliminating exceptions to such requirement.

This bill would raise the minimum age of consent for marriage from 16 to 18 years old. This means that anyone under 18 cannot get married, regardless of circumstances.

Stephanie Clayton
HB2019HouseIntroducedJan 15, 2025

Authorizing the board of county commissioners to appoint a person to fill a vacancy in a county-elected office when no candidate runs for such office.

This bill allows county commissioners to appoint someone to fill a vacant county office if no one runs for it. This means that if a county office is left empty because nobody ran for it, the county commissioners can choose who should take over.

No sponsors listed
SB11SenateIntroducedJan 15, 2025

Requiring the state 911 board to establish requirements for 911 telecommunicators to receive training and continuous education in telecommunicator-cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

This bill requires the state's 911 board to establish training and continuous education requirements for 911 telecommunicators on cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). This means that 911 operators will need to learn how to perform CPR correctly.

No sponsors listed
HB2014HouseIntroducedJan 14, 2025

Providing property tax exemptions for certain personal property including watercraft, marine equipment, off-road vehicles, motorized bicycles and certain trailers.

This bill proposes exempting certain personal property from property taxes. This includes watercraft, marine equipment, off-road vehicles, motorized bicycles, and some trailers.

No sponsors listed
HB2008HouseIntroducedJan 13, 2025

Modifying the definition of security officer to include certain juvenile corrections officer positions for purposes of the KPERS correctional employees group.

This bill changes the definition of a security officer to include certain jobs at juvenile corrections facilities. This affects employees who work at these facilities and are part of the Kansas Public Employees Retirement System (KPERS).

David Buehler, Lance Neelly, Pat Proctor +1 more
HB2006HouseIntroducedJan 12, 2025

Providing membership in the KP&F retirement system for certain security officers of the department of corrections and allowing certain service credit purchases of previous KPERS security officer service for purposes of KP&F retirement benefits.

This bill allows certain security officers at the Kansas Department of Corrections to join the KP&F retirement system. It also lets them purchase service credit for previous work as KPERS security officers to boost their KP&F retirement benefits.

Lance Neelly, Timothy Johnson, David Buehler +1 more
HB2003HouseIntroducedJan 12, 2025

Establishing the EV energy equity road repair tax act (EVEERRT act) and providing for a road repair tax on electricity distributed from a public charging station for electric vehicles.

This bill proposes a new tax on electricity used by electric vehicles at public charging stations. The revenue generated would go towards road repair efforts.

Bill Rhiley
HB2002HouseIntroducedJan 12, 2025

Requiring the department of health and environment to audit hospital compliance with the lay caregiver act and report the results of such audit to the legislature.

This bill requires the Kansas Department of Health and Environment to audit hospitals' compliance with a law that allows lay caregivers to visit patients. The department will then report its findings to the state legislature.

No sponsors listed
HB2001HouseIntroducedJan 12, 2025

Continuing the reimbursement from the taxpayer notification costs fund for printing and postage costs of county clerks through calendar year 2029.

This bill continues a program that reimburses county clerks for printing and postage costs related to taxpayer notifications through 2029.

Brett Fairchild, Bill Rhiley, Rui Xu
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