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Kansas governor tries to keep COVID state of emergency alive

Laura Kelly
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TOPEKA, Kan. — Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly is trying to persuade deeply skeptical Republican lawmakers to extend Kansas' state of emergency for the coronavirus pandemic, arguing that it's still necessary for vaccinations and some testing for COVID-19.

Eight leaders of the GOP-controlled Legislature, six of them Republicans, were meeting Tuesday to consider whether to extend a state of emergency that's been in place since early March 2020. A law enacted in late March requires the legislative leaders to sign off on an extension, and if top Republicans reject Kelly's request, the state of emergency will expire by day's end.

Kelly told reporters last week that she wants the state of emergency to continue at least through the end of August. She sent top lawmakers a letter Friday outlining a plan for winding down emergency operations and letting seven executive orders expire.

The governor told legislative leaders that she would keep only two executive orders in place, one mandating that state-licensed nursing homes test their residents and staff regularly for COVID-19, and another granting temporary permission for physicians' assistants, nurses, pharmacists and other medical personnel to give COVID-19 vaccinations. She said extending the state of emergency will help with mobile vaccine clinics, particularly for children aged 12 to 17, and with the distribution of personal protective equipment.

"Without a disaster declaration in place, these priorities and objectives cannot be effectively accomplished," her letter said.

Kelly asked lawmakers to approve a 30-day extension, through July 15, the maximum allowed at one time by law. Top lawmakers refused late last month to give Kelly the maximum extension and Republicans signaled that they did not plan to grant another one.

House Majority Leader Dan Hawkins, a Wichita Republican, said Monday that Kelly has had weeks to figure out how to manage the distribution of vaccines and protective equipment and to continue testing at nursing homes. He said with new cases having dropped, the state no longer faces an emergency, and its residents are ready to move on.

"Quite frankly, I think she would keep asking for extensions is she could get them," Hawkins. "I don't think she ever wants to - it doesn't seem like, ever wants to - shut this thing down, so it's going to take us to do it."

COVID-19 immunizations have declined since early April, from a peak average of 29,380 shots a day for the first seven days of that month, to 5,523 for the seven days ending Monday, according to state Department of Health and Environment data.

The department said 43.3% of the state's 2.9 million residents or about 1.26 million people had received at least one of two vaccine shots as of Monday. The state still had nearly 584,000 unused vaccine doses after asking for only 10.2% of its federal allocation last week.