
By: Baya Burgess
Kansas Reflector
TOPEKA â Democratic gubernatorial candidate Curt Skoog promised voters six weeks before the August primary that if elected he would prioritize healthcare access and economic development in rural Kansas.
Skoog, the mayor of Overland Park, appealed to Democratic voters on Wednesday with his âTHRIVE Kansasâ plan represented by a âTâ for thriving communities, âHâ for health, âRâ for rural roots, âIâ for innovation, âVâ for voting and âEâ for everyone.
Skoogâs agenda for healthcare includes expanding access to Medicaid and incentivizing medical professionals to live and work in rural areas of the state. His prescription for rural Kansas involves sustainable farming, business development and equitable public education funding.
âWe will prioritize policies that increase attainable housing, deliver high-quality public schools, improve access to healthcare, increase opportunity for jobs and business creation and address affordability and lower property taxes,â Skoogâs plan says.
Skoog unexpectedly joined the gubernatorial race June 1, filing hours before the deadline. He joined two other Johnson County candidates in the Democratic primary, state Sens. Ethan Corson, of Fairway, and Cindy Holscher, of Overland Park, who announced their candidacies last year.
On the campaign trail, Holscher called for a statewide suspension of data center construction in an op-ed published Tuesday by the Wichita Eagle. She said she initially supported the developments.
âBut now that weâre learning how these companies are draining and contaminating our water supply, driving up our electricity costs and ignoring our communitiesâ voices,â she said. âItâs time to press the pause button.â
Holscher said she encountered comparable opposition to data centers during campaign stops in Kansas towns and cities.
âAlmost everywhere, the people I talk to are increasingly worried about massive data center developments in their backyards,â she said in the column. âAnd I mean massive: the new âhyper scaleâ data center in De Soto is planned to cover 1.14 million square feet â thatâs 20 football fields.â
Holscher also claimed that âbig tech billionaires and the politicians enabling themâ continue pushing expansion of data centers despite public concerns.
Skoog said in a statement to Kansas Reflector he doesnât want to stop construction of data centers. He said he wants to make sure investments are made in support of industrial growth and water preservation.
âWe canât look at water or data centers in isolation,â Skoog said. âIt is not only for computing, but for fresh, clean drinking water for our families and ample water supplies for our agricultural and ranching sector, the energy sector and other industry. All must be weighed.â
Meanwhile, Corson made a pitch to voters when he announced a nearly $1 million TV campaign.
The first of his TV ads began airing in the Wichita and Kansas City markets on Tuesday. In the commercial, he said he fought for Medicaid expansion and abortion rights as a state senator.
âIâm running for governor because the fights arenât over,â he said. âIâll stand up to (President Donald) Trump, ICE or anyone who comes for our freedoms or our state.â
In the baseball-themed ad, Corson reminisced about playing youth and college baseball. Standing on a field, holding a baseball and wearing a Kansas City Royals shirt, he promised to âfight for Kansas every single day.â
In Skoogâs lengthy policy agenda, he vowed to lower property taxes. The Kansas Legislature failed to reach agreement this session on a bill delivering statewide property tax relief.
Skoog said Overland Park imposes the lowest property tax rate in the state. The League of Municipalities Tax Rate Book ranks the city as having the lowest mill levy tax rate in Kansas, his campaign said.
âOverland Park is thriving today,â Skoog said, âbecause we actively engage and listen to residents and stakeholders, confront tough issues and build consensus among different perspectives. We donât spend time on culture wars or legislative bickering.â




