Ban on pit bulls to be discussed at UG committee meeting tonight

The Kansas City, Kan., ban on pit bulls is one of the topics on tonight’s Unified Government Standing Committee meeting agenda.

A proposed change to the animal ordinance would remove the ban on pit bulls here. Currently, residents may not own a pit bull.

The Public Works and Safety Committee meeting is at 5 p.m. Monday at City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kan.

Besides removing the pit bull ban, also under discussion are increasing the number of animals at residences, and adopting a trap, neuter and release policy. After discussion at the committee level, the issue would go to the full UG Commission for a vote.

UG Commissioner Ann Murguia said today that comments on her Facebook page had been running in favor of lifting the pit bull ban. She anticipated a crowd at the 5 p.m. meeting today.

There is currently a movement to lift the ban on the pit bull breed, since some experts now think that it is the upbringing of the animal, not the breed, that causes an animal to be vicious. One resident who has worked with animals throughout his life said that most of the time, if a dog is brought up with a gentle training, that is what it will respond to, while if they are brought up rough and taught to be mean, that’s the way they will be.

Other cities also have considered changes to their animal ordinances. Bonner Springs lifted its pit bull ban in January 2014, while Roeland Park is considering a change.

An online petition currently has more than 400 signatures asking Kansas City, Kan., to remove its pit bull ban.

Kansas City, Kan., has several incidents in its history involving pit bulls and their owners.

– In March 2013, the FBI and law enforcement authorities cracked down on a dog fighting operation in Kansas City, Kan.

According to a U.S. attorney’s news release at the time, two Kansas City, Kan., men were charged in connection with buying, selling, delivering or transporting animals to participate in an animal fighting venture. The two owned up to 60 dogs, mostly pit bulls, that they trained and took to dog fights. They kept the dogs at a farm in Missouri and also at their residences in Kansas City, Kan., where they trained them. They took them to fights in Dallas and other places, according to the authorities.

According to the U.S. attorney’s news release at the time, one of the men had a treadmill at his residence in Kansas City, Kan., where he would place a harness on dogs and chain the harness to the treadmill for several hours at a time. The treadmill had a plywood box to keep the dog on the treadmill. He also put weights on the dogs to strengthen them and provided caged live chickens in front of the treadmill as bait, according to the authorities.

– A pit bull attack was reported by a resident on North 10th Street in September 2013. A resident suffered several injuries after being bitten by a pit bull while she was walking.

– In July 2006, Jimmie Mae McConnell, age 70, was working in her garden at her home in Kansas City, Kan., when she was attacked by dogs that were being cared for by her next door neighbor. McConnell was severely mauled, and she died of a heart attack as a result of the dog attack. The dogs were not purebred pit bulls, but were predominantly of the American Staffordshire Terrier and Bull Terrier breeds.

Local homeless program selected to join national campaign

Wyandotte Homeless Services Coalition and the Wyandotte County Continuum of Care has been selected, along with 68 other U.S. communities, to participate in Zero: 2016, a national campaign to end veteran and chronic homelessness in the next two years.

The campaign is spearheaded by Community Solutions, a national nonprofit based in New York City. The organization said it would work intensively with WHSC to meet the federal goals set by President Obama to end veteran homelessness by December 2015 and chronic homelessness by December 2016.

The initiative is a rigorous follow up to the group’s successful 100,000 Homes Campaign, which announced in June that it had helped communities house 105,000 chronically homeless Americans in under four years.

“I am excited that these different networks are joining forces to continue combating homelessness on our streets” said Kansas City, Kan., Mayor Mark Holland. “Our veterans have served our country with honor and the fact that some are homeless, living on our streets is unacceptable. I’m confident in the vision of these groups and know they will make a measureable impact on the homeless in our community by 2016.”

“The WHSC is thrilled to be selected for this campaign” said Amy Thomas, WHSC coordinator. “We as a community are already striving to get all homeless individuals and families housed and this campaign will help push us to a ZERO number quicker and more effectively as we use evidence based tools and practices with prioritization strategies to drive the work we do.”

“Chronic and veteran homelessness are urgent, solvable problems,” said Zero: 2016 director Beth Sandor. “These communities represent a potential tipping point. If they can show that getting to zero is possible, we think it will become untenable for other communities not to follow suit. Zero: 2016 is about bringing shared accountability to this work. Participants are making a public commitment to get to zero on time, and they are going to use that commitment to drive measurable progress.”

Recently, the Department of Housing and Urban Development released a report showing that on a single night in January, Wyandotte County had 10 veterans and 26 people experiencing chronic homelessness on its streets. Those numbers represent a 73 percent decrease in veteran homelessness and a 92 percent increase in chronic homelessness since 2010. Local officials said they are committed to reducing those numbers to zero.

The report also showed that communities selected to join Zero: 2016 account for a combined 31,669 chronically homeless Americans and 16,218 homeless veterans. Community Solutions said it estimates an overlap of 10,000-12,000 between these two populations.

Opening Doors, the federal plan to end homelessness in America, calls for communities to end veteran homelessness by the end of 2015 and to end chronic homelessness one year later.

The 69 communities selected for Zero: 2016 represent 31 different states and the District of Columbia. Among them are 50 communities who also participated in the 100,000 Homes Campaign and 19 new communities. Combined, the group represents the joint, public commitment of 234 housing authorities, local government entities, nonprofit organizations, and community agencies.

Sandor said Community Solutions would work with communities to accelerate their housing efforts through four focus areas: closing the research-to-practice gap, real-time data and performance management, local systems redesign, and local team and leadership development. Community Solutions will provide hands-on coaching and data tools, and will curate a national peer-to-peer learning network to accelerate innovation across communities.

Sandor added that communities would focus narrowly on data and performance management for the first 90 days of the initiative with a goal of developing clear targets for the total number of housing placements needed locally to end chronic and veteran homelessness on the federal timetable. This number will consider projected inflow and other key factors. Each community will use this number to determine the monthly housing placement rate it will need to meet in order to succeed.

Communities will learn real-time performance improvement techniques drawn from healthcare, manufacturing and other sectors to reach these ambitious monthly goals.

Zero: 2016 will dovetail with other large-scale initiatives working to help communities end homelessness, including the 25 Cities Initiative, led by the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Mayor’s Challenge to End Homelessness, championed by First Lady Michelle Obama. Many communities selected to join Zero: 2016 are also participating in one or both of these initiatives, and Community Solutions has coordinated extensively with VA and other federal agencies to ensure that all three initiatives complement each other as well as possible.

Mayor Mark Holland has signed the Mayor’s Challenge to End Homelessness, and supports the WHSC in their work to end veteran and chronic homelessness, according to a news release. In support of National Hunger and Homelessness Awareness Week, the WHSC held a community breakfast last week. Items were collected to assist the homeless veterans in Wyandotte County. Items included razors, soap, shampoo, conditioner, combs, toothpaste, toothbrushes, Q-tips, and full or queen size new or gently used bed sheets.

Book sale scheduled Nov. 20-22

The Friends of the Bonner Library quarterly book sale is scheduled for Nov. 20, 21 and 22.

Thursday’s hours are from 4:30 – 7:30 p.m. and on Friday and Saturday the sale will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The sale is held in the storm shelter area on the bottom level of the library and can be accessed from the parking lot at the rear of the building. The library is located at 201 N. Nettleton, Bonner Springs.

Along with fiction by many favorite authors, there is a wide selection of western, science fiction, and romance. Non-fiction categories have something for everyone, pet lovers, military, political science and history buffs, sports, business, education, religion, home and garden and cooking as well as volumes that defy being categorized.

A fun area will be the picking corner where book lovers can fill a bag of paperbacks or children’s books for a nominal cost.

All profits are used to enhance the library and the many programs it provides to all ages.