Author

Allison Kite is a data reporter for The Missouri Independent and Kansas Reflector, with a focus on energy, the environment and agriculture. A graduate of the University of Kansas, she previously covered City Hall for The Kansas City Star, as well as state government in both Topeka and Jefferson City.
‘I have to go out and beg’: Residents grapple with utility costs as shutoffs resume
By: Allison Kite - May 21, 2021
Utilites in Kansas and Missouri, including Evergy, resumed shutting off non-paying customers' power after a moratorium during the pandemic.
Missouri eases rules for building CAFOs despite outcry about potential pollution
By: Allison Kite - May 18, 2021
Missouri regulators on Tuesday eased the rules governing design of massive industrial hog facilities in a move critics claim was meant to help one controversial facility. The state’s Clean Water Commission voted 5-1 to narrow the definition of groundwater in the state’s rules governing construction of “concentrated animal feeding operations” — dense animal raising facilities […]
Missouri lawmakers vote to end EPA-mandated emissions testing near St. Louis
By: Allison Kite - May 14, 2021
With just hours left in their 2021 session, Missouri lawmakers passed legislation removing several St. Louis area counties from a federally-mandated emissions inspection program, potentially putting millions of dollars in federal funds at risk. But unlike earlier versions of the legislation, proponents won more support by including a clawback: If the federal government imposes sanctions […]
Bill to speed Evergy, Ameren’s move to clean energy wins Missouri legislative approval
By: Allison Kite - May 13, 2021
Legislation that would allow Missouri utility companies to speed their transition to renewable energy is on its way to Gov. Mike Parson’s desk just a day before the General Assembly’s session ends. The Missouri House voted 146-1 Thursday in favor of a policy — also adopted earlier this year in Kansas — that would allow […]
As KC battled to keep residency requirement for cops, councilwoman pushed repeal
By: Allison Kite and Tessa Weinberg - May 13, 2021
As Kansas City officials were working to block a legislative effort to repeal the city’s residency requirement for police officers, the council’s lone conservative member had other ideas. Councilwoman Heather Hall traveled to Jefferson City last week with the Northland Regional Chamber of Commerce, where she met with lawmakers over dinner and meetings at the […]
Anti-Grain Belt legislation could come before Missouri Senate as legislative session wraps
By: Allison Kite - May 12, 2021
Legislation that would effectively kill the proposed Grain Belt Express transmission line could come up on the floor of the Missouri Senate in the waning days of the legislative session — even though the Senate’s own version of the bill is stuck in committee. Grain Belt, a high-voltage transmission line proposed by Chicago-based Invenergy, would carry […]
Evergy earnings shot up following February cold snap that forced blackouts
By: Allison Kite - May 6, 2021
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Evergy more than doubled its earnings in the first quarter compared to the beginning of 2020, largely due to the profits it made on sky-high wholesale energy prices during a February cold snap that forced it to cut off power to thousands of customers across the region. The utility, which serves […]
Missouri bill targeting DNR clears House committee, still faces uncertain future
By: Allison Kite - May 6, 2021
A Missouri House committee advanced a sweeping bill environmentalists say would hamper the state’s ability to enforce clean air and water laws. But several amendment votes could undermine the bill’s prospects in the Senate. The House Emerging Issues Committee voted 7-4 Wednesday in favor of a bill that places various limitations on Missouri’s environmental regulators […]
Less pollution, lower bills: Missouri, Kansas move ahead on utility securitization
By: Allison Kite - May 5, 2021
Utility providers across Kansas and Missouri may soon be able to retire coal-fired power plants faster as the energy sector accelerates its transition to renewable energy sources. Kansas already passed legislation that allows companies to shutter coal plants, which release considerable amounts of carbon dioxide, without the financial hit that would otherwise come from closing […]
Evergy to shutter Kansas coal plant, speed transition to renewable energy
By: Allison Kite - April 30, 2021
Evergy, an electric supplier to about 600,000 customers in western Missouri, will retire its coal power plant in Lawrence, Kansas, by the end of 2023, the company announced on Friday. The utility revealed its plan to regulators in a filing with the Missouri Public Service Commission. The “integrated resource plan” lays out Evergy’s next few years […]
EPA investigation finds Missouri out of compliance with federal civil rights rules
By: Allison Kite - April 29, 2021
Federal officials are investigating whether Missouri environmental regulators violated the civil rights of St. Louis residents by issuing an air pollution control permit to a fuel transport business located near predominantly Black neighborhoods. Already, investigators with the Environmental Protection Agency have found the Missouri Department of Natural Resources is out of compliance with regulations requiring […]
Schmitt joins Republican AGs taking aim at ‘social cost of carbon’ emissions
By: Allison Kite - April 27, 2021
The attorneys general in Missouri and Kansas have joined their Republican counterparts in 20 states demanding that the federal government not consider the social cost of carbon emissions when determining whether to approve new natural gas pipelines. Eric Schmitt of Missouri and Derek Schmidt of Kansas filed comments with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Monday […]