Legislature business aid bills draw county attention
The Kansan
The Kansas Legislature recently passed a pair of bills for business relief for COVID-19 concerns both of which will involve counties providing funds to businesses who were, in the words of the Legislature, harmed by health orders.
How those bills will ultimately affect county governments is unclear and if the bills will be come law is also unclear. We have lots of questions about this bill. First we need to wait and see if the governor vetoes this bill or not, said Anthony Swartzendruber, county administrator for Harvey County.
Both bills require counties to set aside funds for reimbursements, whether that be from general fund or from federal COVID-19 funds allocated to each county. It is unclear if the legslative action is in compliance with guidance from the U.S. treasury concerning those federal funds.
To Kansas businesses hurt by COVID-19 orders, here s what compensation might come your way Titus Wu, Topeka Capital-Journal
Throughout the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, businesses were financially hurt, with many losing major profit or even permanently closing.
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Kansas GOP lawmakers this year have repeatedly vowed to help those business owners, especially with the state facing potential lawsuits. To quite a few, this promise was more than doing right but also laying the blame on COVID-19 orders from the governor and local government for hurting the economy. The levels of the government that interceded in our economy with marginal to nonexistent scientific data, said Sen. Mark Steffen, R-Hutchinson. They got to feel pain. They got to feel pushed back on this.
Kansas may compensate businesses hurt by COVID-19 — or face lawsuits wellingtondailynews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wellingtondailynews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.