Source: http://www.ksrevisor.org/statutes/ksa_ch4.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-26 00:44:00+00:00

Document:
4-101 Number of members of legislature.
4-104 Election of representatives by districts.
4-137 Attachment of territory to district.
4-3,733 Attachment of territory to district.
1968 Senate Bill 495 establishing senatorial districts in Kansas was declared constitutionally invalid (Long v. Docking, U.S. District Court Civil Action No. W-3220, filed February 23, 1968) and Senate Bill 495 was subsequently repealed by the 1968 Legislature (L. 1968, ch. 119, § 1). Senate Bill 716 (1968) also was held to be an invalid apportionment of the Senate by the U.S. District Court of Kansas (See Long v. Docking, Civil Action No. W-3220, filed March 28, 1968). However, in an opinion dated April 1, 1968, the attorney general advised the secretary of state that steps should be taken to provide for the selection of the state board of education members from districts described in section 2 of 1968 Senate Bill No. 723 (see 25-1908), as determined by reference to SB 716. SB 716 was printed in the 1968-71 supplements as 4-401 et seq. In 1972 the U.S. District Court of Kansas established the state board of education districts based on the senatorial districts established by that court in 1972. (See Anderson v. Docking, Civil Action No. W-3220, decree filed April 20, 1972.) In 1973, the legislature established new districts for the state board of education (see 25-1910 and 25-1911).
The senatorial districts established by Long v. Docking, et al., Civil Action No. W-3220 and filed March 28, 1968, were printed in the 1968-71 supplements under 4-444, but this decree was vacated and new senatorial districts established (see Anderson v. Docking, Civil Action No. W-3220) in a partial decree of the U.S. District Court of Kansas dated March 31, 1972, with the final decree entered on April 7, 1972.
4-4,453 Attachment of territory to district.
4-526 State board of education member districts.

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