Election turnout might be average so far

by Mary Rupert

Election turnout was about 12 percent around 4 p.m., according to Election Commissioner Bruce Newby.

He said total average turnout for an election is around 15 percent, so turnout today may reach that level with still three hours left to vote.

Polls are open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 7, throughout Wyandotte County for the general election. Voters need to bring their photo identification to the polls. For information on where to vote, visit www.wycovotes.org.

Newby said he had received some complaints from voters today about campaign signs.

He said a deputy has been assigned today to enforce a law that prohibits signs closer than 250 feet to a polling place. That is 250 feet from the door of the polling place to the sign.

While a lot of people think they can “guesstimate” 250 feet, a lot of them have been wrong today, he said. The sheriff’s deputy is measuring sign distance with a tape measure in some cases. For example, one sign was measured after a complaint at the polling place at Open Door Baptist Church, near 103rd Terrace and Leavenworth Road, and was found to be 263 feet away from the entrance, which was legal, he said.

There was another complaint about a sign that was near Risen Lamb Church polling place near 53rd and Metropolitan, he added.

Today’s enforcement only concerns the distance of the sign from the polling place, he added, as that issue is covered by the election laws. The deputy was not assigned to enforce any other provisions in local ordinances concerning signs in the right of way, since that was not in the election law, he added.

For a list of candidates in the election, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/voters-to-go-to-polls-tuesday/.

KCKCC to hold Workplace Kansas City Job Fair

by Kelly Rogge

Looking for a job? Then mark your calendars for the 2015 Workplace-Kansas City Job Fair at Kansas City Kansas Community College.

The fair is from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. April 15 in the KCKCC Field House, 7250 State Ave. The fair opens at 9 a.m. for military veterans. The event is free and open to the public.

The list of employers includes:
• Advanta Clean
• Aerotek
• Alenco Inc.
• All Team Staffing
• AT-Tech Staffing
• Argosy Casino
• Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad
• Burns & McDonnell
• C&C Group
• Country Club Bank
• Economic Opportunity Foundation, Inc.
• Fastenal
• FedEx Ground
• Gear for Sports
• Great Wolf Lodge
• Hollywood Casino
• Integrity Home Care
• Kansas City, Kan., Board of Public Utilities
• Keller Williams Realty
• KCKCC-AAUW
• Diamond Partners Inc.
• Kellogg’s
• Landry’s T-Rex Café
• Long Motor Corp.
• Marriott Overland Park
• Mosaic
• Mutual of Omaha
• North Kansas City Hospital
• Paces
• Pipefitters Training Center
• Primerica
• Providence Medical Center/St. John Hospital
• PSI USA
• Randstad
• Sourceright
• AT&T
• Sam’s Club
• Schlitterbahn
• Sheraton & Westin Kansas City @ Crown Center
• Swope Health Services
• The Forum at Overland Park
• The University of Kansas Hospital
• Truman Medical Center
• UPS
• Woodley Building Maintenance
• Workforce Partnership / Mobile Unit
• Wyandotte County Unified Government
• Unified Government – Police Department
• Unified Government – Fire Department

Participants should dress professionally and have resumes on hand to give to potential employers. In addition, they will have the opportunity to visit with all of the area companies attending as well as fill out job applications. The job fair is sponsored by Workforce, Career and Entrepreneurship Center at KCKCC.

For more information on the job fair, call 913-288-7644.

Kelly Rogge is the public information supervisor at Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Piper students restoring ‘Piper Woods’

Students at Piper High School are restoring the “Piper Woods,” an area near Piper High School that was once used for an outdoor classroom.

The Piper High School 20/20 Leadership Program students are starting the project this year and hope to complete it by May of 2016, said Cole Oakland, a junior at Piper who is working on community outreach with the 20/20 Leadership program.

Located between the high school and elementary school, the Piper Woods area was dedicated in 2003 and initially used as an outdoor classroom, but it has not been kept up since 2005, he said.

The Piper Woods was dedicated to former Piper teacher Sandy McMahon Young, whose name is engraved on a sundial there, he said. The conference room at the new Patricia Diane Kane Community Center also is named for Sandy Young.

Young taught second and fifth grades in the Piper schools for 16 years, and after resigning her teaching position, ran and was elected to the Piper School Board. She died in 2002 from cancer. She was a Piper High School graduate, and also had degrees from Kansas State University and Emporia State University.

The group would like to restore the area so it can be used as an outdoor classroom again and as a place for the community to use, Oakland said. A bridge goes through a patch of woods and ends at an open classroom area, he said.

Piper 20/20 Leadership program plans to clean up the trash and debris at the site, he said, and to make it usable again. There are plans to make a community garden there, he added.

Oakland said about 15 Piper students are participating in the Piper 20/20 Leadership program.

The Piper Woods project may have a big community volunteer event this summer, he added.