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    You are at:Home»State News»Kansas joins Missouri in shaky truce in conflict over jobs

    Kansas joins Missouri in shaky truce in conflict over jobs

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    By KMAN Staff on August 2, 2019 State News
    In this Thursday, June 13, 2019 photo, Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly discusses budget issues during an Associated Press interview in her Statehouse office in Topeka, Kansas. Kelly says one of her goals in her first year as governor was building up the state's cash reserves so that the state has an extra cushion in future years. (AP Photo/John Hanna)

    TOPEKA — Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly has signed an executive order aimed at ending a long-standing “border war” with Missouri over existing jobs in the Kansas City area.

    But the order that Kelly issued Friday suggests the truce may be shaky.

    Kelly’s order pledges that Kansas won’t use economic development incentives to lure existing jobs across the border in the Kansas City area. Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed a law in June pledging the same for his state.

    Kelly’s order notes that local governments in Missouri still can offer more generous incentives than those in Kansas and says she might rescind her order if they don’t stop.

    The nonprofit Hall Foundation estimates the states have used $335 million in incentives since 2011 to move more than 12,000 existing jobs in the area.

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