KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) – On Wednesday, one Kansas lawmaker shared that ‘time’s up’ for the Kansas City Royals to possibly move to Kansas, despite Kansas law allowing for more time.
What led to this
During a special session in June 2024, the Kansas Legislature passed a bill to use Sales Tax and Revenue Bonds, also known as STAR Bonds, to lure a professional sports team to the state.
They were looking to bring the Chiefs or Royals, or both, to Kansas. Last week, the Chiefs made the announcement that the team will be in Wyandotte County by 2031.
When the bill became law, it gave the teams a deadline of June 30, 2025, to have an agreement worked out.
On July 7, 2025, the Legislative Coordinating Council held a meeting and decided to extend that deadline by one year, June 30, 2026, which is allowed by the state law.
During that meeting, the LCC decided to set an arbitrary deadline of Jan. 1, 2026. This means they won’t hear any further proposals by either team after then.
What the law says
The state law says the deadline for the STAR Bond deal can be extended by one year. That makes June 30, 2026, the deadline by state law.
But the law also says the state cannot enter into an agreement with a team unless it is voted on and approved by the LCC.
The LCC could reverse its decision, but so far, nothing points to show that will happen.
Soon-to-be Chair of the LCC and Speaker of the House Dan Hawkins shared a statement on Wednesday regarding the matter.
“Time’s up- as I’ve said before, today is the deadline for STAR Bond proposals. With the 2026 Legislative Session just around the corner, our focus has to stay on the priorities that matter most-lowering the cost of living and cutting waste, fraud, and abuse in the state budget. There’s a lot of work ahead and House Republicans are ready to get to work
KCTV5 Investigates reached out to all the other LCC members as well as the Governor and Kansas Department of Commerce regarding this January deadline, but has not heard back.
KCTV5 also reached out to the Royals to see if any next steps can be shared and is waiting to hear back.
Jackson County Executive Phil LeVota shared over the phone that the County is continuing conversations with the team in the new year.
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