
Continue the one-eighth-cent sales tax that funds economic development on the East Side, at the same rate.
Shall the City of Kansas City be authorized to renew a sales tax authorized by Section 67.1305 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri for a period of 10 years at a rate of 1/8% to be used for funding economic development projects within the area bounded by 9th Street on the north; Gregory Boulevard on the south; The Paseo on the west; and Indiana Avenue on the east, which may include the retirement of debt under previously authorized bonded indebtedness or to repay bonds not yet issued? This sales tax would continue the existing sales tax authorized by Section 67.1305 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri and scheduled to expire on September 30, 2027.
For generations, Kansas City's East Side was left out of the development boom that reshaped downtown, the Plaza, and the suburbs. Banks and private capital routinely passed it by, so good projects stalled for lack of that last piece of financing. In 2017 voters created a dedicated tool to change that: a one-eighth-cent sales tax that pools local dollars to fund economic development inside a defined Central City district. That authorization is now scheduled to expire on September 30, 2027.
Question 3 renews the existing one-eighth-cent (1/8%) Central City Economic Development sales tax for another 10 years, at the same rate, under Section 67.1305 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri. The money funds economic-development projects inside the district bounded by 9th Street on the north, Gregory Boulevard on the south, The Paseo on the west, and Indiana Avenue on the east. A citizen CCED Sales Tax Board reviews developer applications and recommends projects to the City Council, with the program now administered by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City for tighter oversight and steadier funding rounds.
This is the primary dedicated funding stream for reinvestment in Kansas City's historically disinvested urban core. Since 2017 it has put more than $88 million into 58 projects and generates roughly $10 million a year, financing jobs, small and locally owned businesses, early-childhood facilities, housing, and neighborhood revitalization that private capital alone has not delivered. If the renewal fails, the tax simply expires after September 30, 2027, and the East Side loses its only sales-tax-funded development engine.
A YES vote keeps the sales tax exactly where it is, at the same one-eighth-cent rate, for 10 more years. Shoppers see no increase, because this renews a tax that is already in place rather than creating a new one. It keeps roughly $10 million a year flowing into East Side jobs, businesses, and neighborhoods instead of letting the program lapse in 2027.
2017
Kansas City voters approve the one-eighth-cent Central City Economic Development sales tax
2017 to 2026
More than $88 million directed into 58 East Side projects
September 2025
CCED administration transitions to the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City (EDCKC)
May 2026
City Council places the 10-year renewal on the August 4 ballot
August 4, 2026
Voters decide the renewal (Question 3)
September 30, 2027
Current authorization expires if the renewal does not pass
KD Academy, a 24-hour early-learning facility on Prospect Avenue (developer said it likely would not have been possible without CCED support)
One Nine Vine, a mixed-use development with 80 residential units and seven retail spaces
Zhou B Art Center and a new hotel project near 18th and Vine, among CCED-backed developments (per Startland News)
This is a renewal of an existing tax, not a new one. The one-eighth-cent (1/8%) sales tax has been collected inside the Central City district since 2017. A YES vote keeps that rate exactly the same for 10 more years, so shoppers see no increase at the register. It is not a no-tax measure: if voters reject it, the levy simply expires after September 30, 2027, and the dedicated East Side development fund goes away. Unlike the water and sewer questions on the same ballot, this is a sales tax, not a bond, so it is not repaid from utility fees or property taxes.
How the financing works
Renewal of an existing 1/8-percent (one-eighth-cent) local sales tax authorized under Section 67.1305 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri. It is collected on retail sales within the Central City district and pooled into a dedicated economic-development fund. It is not a bond and not a property tax. A Central City Economic Development (CCED) Sales Tax Board reviews developer applications and recommends projects to the City Council; as of September 2025 the program is administered by the Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City (EDCKC). The ballot language also allows proceeds to retire debt on previously authorized bonds or to repay bonds not yet issued.
Always confirm the final wording and official question order on your authenticated sample ballot from the Kansas City Election Board.
Vote on or before August 4, 2026. Polls are open 6:00 AM to 7:00 PM.