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Reaching the correct Kansas government office requires identifying the appropriate agency, providing sufficient context for the inquiry, and using the communication channel designated for that agency's function. This page describes how to structure inquiries directed to Kansas state government reference resources, what information to include, and what response timelines are standard across public sector channels.


What to Include in Your Message

Effective inquiries to Kansas government offices follow a structured format. Incomplete submissions are the primary cause of delayed or unresolved responses. The following breakdown covers the minimum required elements for a substantive inquiry:

  1. Subject classification — Identify the specific agency, department, or function the inquiry concerns. Kansas operates 16 executive branch agencies under the Governor's Office, each with distinct jurisdictions. Specifying the correct agency (e.g., Kansas Department of Revenue, Kansas Department of Labor, or Kansas Department of Health and Environment) eliminates routing delays.

  2. Geographic scope — Kansas has 105 counties. For county-level matters, name the specific county. Inquiries involving Johnson County or Sedgwick County route differently than those involving Finney County or Ford County.

  3. Statutory or regulatory reference — When the inquiry involves a specific law, rule, or proceeding, cite the Kansas Statute Annotated (K.S.A.) chapter, article, or K.A.R. title if known. This is required for open records requests submitted under the Kansas Open Records Act (KORA), K.S.A. 45-215 et seq.

  4. Nature of the request — Distinguish between 4 standard inquiry types: informational requests, public records requests, regulatory complaints, and service access inquiries. Each type routes to a different functional unit within most agencies.

  5. Contact information — Full legal name, mailing address, and a daytime phone number or email address. Anonymous inquiries are not processed under KORA.


Response Expectations

Kansas executive agencies are subject to response timelines established by statute and agency policy. Under KORA, agencies must respond to public records requests within 3 business days of receipt, either by providing the records, denying the request with written justification, or issuing a written notice that more time is required.

General informational inquiries directed to agency public affairs units typically receive acknowledgment within 5 business days. Regulatory complaints routed to enforcement divisions — such as those handled by the Kansas Insurance Commissioner or the Kansas Bureau of Investigation — carry separate processing timelines that vary by matter type and complexity.

Judicial inquiries directed to the Kansas Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, or any of the 31 district courts follow Kansas Supreme Court Rules governing public access to court records and are not subject to KORA response timelines.

Legislative inquiries directed to the Kansas Legislative Branch route through individual legislative offices. The Kansas Legislature operates 2 chambers — the Senate and the House of Representatives — and response timelines are not governed by a uniform statutory standard.


Additional Contact Options

Kansas government agencies maintain multiple contact channels. The appropriate channel depends on the inquiry type:


How to Reach This Office

This reference resource covers Kansas state government structure, agency functions, constitutional framework, and county-level government profiles. Inquiries about the content published here — including corrections to factual information, requests for additional agency coverage, or questions about specific pages — should include the page URL or section title, the nature of the correction or request, and a return contact address.

Submissions without a return contact address are retained for editorial review but cannot receive a direct response. Corrections involving statutory citations, agency jurisdiction boundaries, or K.S.A. chapter references receive priority review, as accuracy in those areas directly affects the reliability of the reference material covering topics such as the Kansas Constitution, the Kansas State Budget Process, and Kansas Elections and Voting.

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