Kansas Department of Administration: State Operations and Procurement

The Kansas Department of Administration (KDA) serves as the central management and support agency for Kansas state government, overseeing procurement, facilities, personnel transactions, and fiscal operations across executive branch agencies. Its authority derives from Kansas Statutes Annotated Chapter 75, which establishes the department's organizational structure and statutory mandate. The department functions as the operational backbone of the executive branch, coordinating services that individual agencies cannot efficiently self-administer. For a broader orientation to how this department fits within the full executive structure, see the Kansas Government Authority index.


Definition and scope

The Kansas Department of Administration is a cabinet-level executive agency headquartered in Topeka, Kansas. The department operates under the direction of a Secretary appointed by the Governor, subject to Kansas Senate confirmation (K.S.A. 75-3702). Its statutory authority spans six primary functional areas:

  1. State Procurement — Centralized purchasing of goods and services on behalf of executive branch agencies under the Kansas Purchasing Act (K.S.A. 75-3739 et seq.)
  2. Facilities Management — Ownership, maintenance, and capital project management for state-owned buildings, including the Kansas State Capitol complex
  3. Personnel Services — Classified service administration, position classification, and compliance with the Kansas Civil Service Act (K.S.A. 75-2925 et seq.)
  4. Accounts and Reports — Central accounting, payroll processing, and financial reporting for state agencies
  5. Information Technology — Consolidated IT infrastructure and cybersecurity coordination for state networks
  6. Printing and Mail — Central document production and interagency mail distribution

The Kansas Department of Administration does not exercise authority over the Kansas Legislature, Kansas Judicial Branch agencies, or constitutionally independent offices such as the Kansas Attorney General, Kansas Secretary of State, or Kansas State Treasurer, each of which manages its own administrative and procurement functions independently.

Scope and coverage limitations: KDA authority applies exclusively to Kansas executive branch agencies operating under the Governor's direct administrative chain. Federal agencies operating within Kansas, tribal government entities, municipalities, counties, school districts, and special districts fall outside KDA procurement and personnel jurisdiction. County governments such as Sedgwick County and Johnson County maintain independent procurement frameworks governed by county resolutions and applicable Kansas statutes, not KDA regulations.


How it works

Procurement operations represent the highest-volume function of the department. The Division of Purchases administers the state's central procurement portal, through which vendors register and agencies submit requisitions. Contracts exceeding $50,000 in value require a competitive solicitation process — either an Invitation for Bid (IFB) for commodity purchases or a Request for Proposals (RFP) for complex services (K.S.A. 75-3739). Emergency purchases bypassing competitive solicitation require written justification and post-award reporting to the Division of Purchases.

The department maintains a statewide Procurement Negotiating Committee authorized to negotiate master contracts — known as "mandatory-use contracts" — that all executive branch agencies must use when procuring designated commodity categories. Examples include copier equipment, office supplies, and telecommunications services.

Facilities and real property management operates through the Office of Facilities and Property Management (OFPM). OFPM controls approximately 4 million square feet of state-owned building space, including 21 buildings on the Topeka Capitol Complex. Capital improvement projects above $100,000 require KDA review and coordination with the Kansas Division of the Budget.

Personnel services distinguish between classified and unclassified positions. Classified positions fall under the Kansas Civil Service Act with defined pay grades set through the statewide Position Classification Plan. Unclassified positions — including agency heads, legal counsel, and certain professional roles — are exempt from civil service protections and are not subject to KDA classification authority.

Accounts and Reports operates the Statewide Management, Accounting and Reporting Tool (SMART), the enterprise resource planning system used by executive branch agencies for accounting, payroll, and procurement transaction processing. SMART integrates with the Kansas state budget process managed by the Division of the Budget.


Common scenarios

Agencies and vendors encounter KDA operations in the following recurring circumstances:

IFB vs. RFP — a structural contrast: An IFB is awarded solely on price to the lowest responsive, responsible bidder and is appropriate when specifications are fully defined in advance. An RFP evaluates vendor proposals on multiple weighted criteria — including technical approach, qualifications, and price — and is used when the state requires professional judgment in vendor selection rather than a pure price comparison.


Decision boundaries

The boundaries of KDA authority determine when agencies must use centralized services versus when independent action is permitted:

Understanding which threshold, contract category, or funding source applies determines which KDA process — or which alternative process — governs a given transaction.


References