Tag: WichitaLiberty.TV

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Cost of Kansas schools, government schools, and understanding Kansas school outcomes

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Cost of Kansas schools, government schools, and understanding Kansas school outcomes

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Is it true that some Kansas schoolchildren have no hope of attending a private school? What’s wrong with government schools? Then a talk on “Rethinking Education Tomorrow Starts with Understanding Outcomes Today.” View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 122, broadcast June 19, 2016.

    The talk by Dave Trabert is located at youtu.be/4h_bM6QPKeI. If it does not play, please click here.

    Shownotes

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Confusion about corruption in Wichita, regulation in Wichita, and the lowly pencil

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Confusion about corruption in Wichita, regulation in Wichita, and the lowly pencil

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Citizen activists were concerned about unleashing a corrupting influence in Wichita City Hall, but they didn’t know it’s already there. Then, the regulatory landscape in Wichita. Finally, what can a pencil teach us about how the world works? View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 121, broadcast June 12, 2016.

    Shownotes

  • Regulation in Wichita, a ‘labyrinth of city processes’

    Regulation in Wichita, a ‘labyrinth of city processes’

    Wichita offers special regulatory treatment for special circumstances, widening the gulf between the haves and have-nots.

    The Wichita Eagle reports that part of what the City of Wichita is offering to Cargill as an inducement to stay in Wichita is regulatory relief.1 In particular:

    The city has offered smaller incentives to Cargill as well, including an ombudsman.

    [Wichita assistant city manager and director of development Scot] Rigby called the ombudsman something of a project manager.

    “They’ll just call one person,” Rigby said of Cargill’s dealings with the city. “It’s a way to eliminate … a business trying to figure out, how do I get through the labyrinth of city processes?”

    Rigby said the city has done this with other companies, such as Spirit AeroSystems and JR Custom Metal Products, and would do it for any company with an expansion or project that needs streamlining.

    He said the city also is committed to work with the state and the Greater Wichita Partnership to create a talent recruitment position that could help Cargill and other companies recruit employees at all levels.

    The city has said it would offer a 15-day turnaround instead of the customary 30 days for plan review and permits, along with a 50 percent reduction in plan review, utility and building permit fees.

    Let me repeat the highlights:

    labyrinth of city processes

    streamlining

    15-day turnaround instead of the customary 30 days

    50 percent reduction in … fees

    All of this is an explicit admission that City of Wichita regulations are burdensome. If not, why would the city devote time and expense to helping Cargill obtain relief from these regulations?

    Further: Why do we have these regulations? If the purpose of the regulations is to protect people from harm, how can we relax or streamline them for the benefit of a few companies? Wouldn’t that expose people to the harm the regulations purportedly prevent?

    What’s even worse is this: Cargill is a large company with — presumably — fleets of bureaucrats and lawyers trained to deal with burdensome government regulation. These costs can be spread across a large company. Meaning that Cargill can afford to overcome burdensome regulations.

    What about the small companies that don’t have fleets of bureaucrats and lawyers? That can’t spread the costs of burdensome regulation across a large volume of business? What will the city do for these companies? This is especially important because the spirit of entrepreneurship the city wants to cultivate is most commonly found in small, young, companies. The type without fleets of bureaucrats and lawyers.

    Well, the city says it would do for any company what it is doing for Cargill.

    Except: How are companies supposed to know to ask for regulatory relief, streamlining, and a discount on fees?

    And is it equitable to offer special companies special regulatory relief when it is not readily available for all?

    Business Perceptions of the Economic Impact of State and Local Government Regulation coverLast year Kansas Policy Institute, in collaboration with the Hugo Wall School of Public Affairs at Wichita State University produced a report titled “Business Perceptions of the Economic Impact of State and Local Government Regulations.”2 On the city’s offer of special treatment to one company, KPI Vice President and Policy Director James Franko commented:

    This bears out one of the key findings from a paper we did with WSU’s Hugo Wall School: Companies want transparency and simplicity in the local regulatory environment. Businesses are not as concerned about the regulation themselves as they are in navigating what the city admits is a “labyrinth” of regulations and processes.

    The regulatory process should be simplified for all businesses, not just a few. Hopefully there is a realization that an “ombudsman,” or better yet a transparent, straightforward regulatory regime, should be available to anyone wanting to start or grow a business in Wichita.

    Instead of the city offering regulatory relief on an as-needed, as-requested basis, why not simplify and streamline regulation for everyone? That seems to make a lot of sense. But if you were a city politician or bureaucrat, this isn’t in your best interest. If regulations are burdensome, and you — as a bureaucrat or officeholder — can offer relief, then you have power. You become important. You have the ability to grant favors and make people feel special.

    But if regulations were streamlined and reformed for everyone as the city will do for Cargill, then bureaucrats and politicians would not be so powerful and important. But the people would be more free and prosperous. Think about that trade off.

    An interview with James Franko of Kansas Policy Institute on the topic of regulation is on WichitaLiberty.TV here.


    Notes

    1. Rengers, Carrie. City offers Cargill tax abatement, parking garage financing. Wichita Eagle, June 6, 2016. Available at www.kansas.com/news/business/article82076122.html.
    2. Kansas Policy Institute. Business Perceptions of the Economic Impact of State and Local Government Regulations. Available at kansaspolicy.org/businesses-welcome-transparent-accessible-accountable-state-local-regulations/.
  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Charter schools in Kansas, and a victory for speech and association

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Charter schools in Kansas, and a victory for speech and association

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Kansas has essentially no charter schools. Here’s why we need them. AFP Foundation scores a victory for free speech and association. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 120, broadcast June 5, 2016.

    Shownotes

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: John Chisholm on entrepreneurship

    WichitaLiberty.TV: John Chisholm on entrepreneurship

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Author John Chisholm talks about entrepreneurship, regulation, economics, and education. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 119, broadcast May 8, 2016.

    Shownotes

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Keen Umbehr

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Keen Umbehr

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Keen Umbehr is an attorney from Alma. Besides setting a precedent protecting free speech in the United States Supreme Court, he’s an advocate for criminal justice reform and a former candidate for governor. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 118, broadcast May 1, 2016.

    Shownotes

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Trump and the Wichita Eagle, property rights and blight, teachers union, and capitalism

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Trump and the Wichita Eagle, property rights and blight, teachers union, and capitalism

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Was it “Trump” or “Bernie” that incited a fight, and how does the Wichita Eagle opine? Economic development in Wichita. Blight and property rights. Teachers unions. Explaining capitalism. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 117, broadcast April 24, 2016.

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Radio talk show host Andy Hooser

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Radio talk show host Andy Hooser

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Andy Hooser of KQAM’s The Voice of Reason joins Bob Weeks to discuss presidential and Kansas politics. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 116, broadcast April 17, 2016.

    The Voice of Reason’s Facebook page is here.

  • WichitaLiberty.TV: Markets or government, legislative malpractice, and education reform

    WichitaLiberty.TV: Markets or government, legislative malpractice, and education reform

    In this episode of WichitaLiberty.TV: Do corporations prefer markets or big government? Legislative malpractice in Kansas. Education reform, or lack thereof. View below, or click here to view at YouTube. Episode 115, broadcast April 3, 2016.