KCKCC becomes smoke and tobacco free

by Kelly Rogge

Students, faculty and staff will notice a big change as they return to Kansas City Kansas Community College this semester. KCKCC is now 100 percent smoke and tobacco free.

“There has been a desire to go tobacco free that dates back seven to nine years,” said Rob Crane, director of wellness and fitness at KCKCC. “More recently in the last three years has it been considered and moved ahead to become a reality.”

According to the Smoke and Tobacco-Free Campus Policy, which went into effect Aug. 1, KCKCC prohibits “smoking and the use of all forms of tobacco products and/or electronic cigarettes on college property.”

The policy goes on to say that smoking means “any inhaling, exhaling, burning or the carrying any lighted cigar, cigarette, clove, bidis, kreteks, cigarillos, hookahs or any other tobacco product in any manner or form.” Chewing tobacco and snuff is also prohibited.

The policy affects the Main Campus, the Thomas R. Burke Technical Education Center, the Pioneer Career Center in Leavenworth and any other KCKCC building, parking lot, hotel room provided by the college, college vehicle and residence halls, among other locations. For a complete list of all properties affected and for more information on the policy, visit http://kckcc.edu/footer/education-equity.

“If you are a smoker, then quitting is the single most important thing you can do to improve your health and those that are around you. There is a large list of ailments and diseases associated with the different types of tobacco use,” Crane said. “There is the primary smoke that a smoker inhales, there’s second hand smoke that is exhaled, and then there is the lesser known third hand or tertiary smoke, which is the off gassing of second-hand smoke from clothing, upholstery and carpet as an example.”

Crane said another benefit to making KCKCC smoke free is the amount of litter cigarette smoking causes. Cigarette butts are the most common type of litter in the United States and are considered toxic waste. The chemicals in the filter leach out into the environment into the waterways and storm drainage.

“So this affects all aquatic life and any animal that comes into contact with a cigarette butt on the ground as well as young children who don’t know any better and pick it up off the ground,” he said. “Therefore a greener and environmentally friendly community is created without the use of all forms of tobacco. Vaping is the new thing and even though some say it’s just vapor, the vapor consists of liquid nicotine and other dangerous chemicals.”

In addition, KCKCC’s Smoke and Tobacco-Free policy falls right in line with the Healthy Communities Wyandotte campaign. Started about five years ago by former Mayor Joe Reardon, the goal of the campaign is to improve the overall health and wellness of Wyandotte County residents.

“KCKCC is a higher educational institution, and it is important to model good behavior for our students and employees,” Crane said. “More and more companies-corporations are going tobacco free so it is important to send our students out into the work place with this type of expectation. With the rise in cost of our health care system, it has been the easiest target to help modify behaviors to reduce current and future costs associated with tobacco use.”

To help students, faculty and staff quit smoking, KCKCC is offering a smoking cessation program through the Respiratory Therapy Department. For more information, contact Tammie Jones, assistant professor-clinical coordinator in respiratory therapy, at 913-288-7197 or by email at [email protected] for times and availability.

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

Lane and ramp closure begins at I-435 and Parallel

This map provided by KDOT shows a detour route for lane and ramp work being done at I-435 and Parallel. (KDOT map)
This map provided by KDOT shows a detour route for lane and ramp work being done at I-435 and Parallel. (KDOT map)

Northbound I-435 to eastbound Parallel Parkway exit ramp and the eastbound Parallel Parkway right lane under the I-435 bridges in Kansas City, Kan., will be closed for pavement work beginning Monday morning, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

These closures are needed to allow the project contractor, Clarkson Construction, to build a turn lane at the bottom of the ramp that will serve the new auto mall located on the southeast corner of the interchange, a KDOT spokesman said.

The pavement reconstruction work will continue around-the-clock for 30 days, and the lane and ramp is scheduled to reopen to all traffic in mid-September, weather permitting, the KDOT spokesman said.

Advance message boards will alert drivers to the lane and ramp closures. A marked detour will be provided for the ramp closure. Northbound I-435 to eastbound Parallel Parkway ramp traffic will detour on northbound I-435 to eastbound K-5-Leavenworth Road to southbound 99th Street to access eastbound Parallel Parkway.

Drivers should expect delays during the lane and ramp closures and must use alternate routes, according to KDOT. Traffic will be directed through the project work zone via signs, cones and barricades.

Updated daily traffic information for this project and for the entire Kansas City Metro Area can be viewed online at www.ksdot.org/kcmetro/laneclose.asp.

The Kansas Department of Transportation and the Kansas Turnpike Authority urge all motorists to be alert, obey the warning signs, and slow down when approaching and driving through the project work zone.

Storms ahead, forecasters say

There is a marginal risk of severe weather today in the Kansas City area. (National Weather Service graphic)
There is a marginal risk of severe weather today in the Kansas City area. (National Weather Service graphic)

Showers and storms will return to the region starting today with a marginal threat of severe storms in the Kansas City area, according to the National Weather Service.

The main threat with any strong storms today will be hail and locally gusty winds along with torrential rain, the weather service said.

Monday’s forecast includes a 30 percent chance of rain and storms mainly after 4 p.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 89.

Monday night, expect a 40 percent chance of showers and storms, with a low of 72, according to the weather service.

Strong to severe storms will be possible Tuesday afternoon and night through early Wednesday morning as a cold front moves through the region, the weather service said.

Tuesday, the chance of rain increases to 60 percent, the weather service said, and the high will be near 80.

The greatest chance for storms will also correspond with the greatest chance for severe weather, which will be the evening and overnight hours of Tuesday as the front moves through, according to the weather service.

Primary threats will once again be straight line winds and large hail, the weather service said. Torrential rain may also accompany these storms which might lead to flash flooding.

On Wednesday morning there will be a 30 percent chance of rain, according to the weather service.

This round of storms may be over by Wednesday night.

A cold front moving through Tuesday will provide  the focus for shear and instability to generate severe weather, according to the National Weather Service. (National Weather Service graphic)
A cold front moving through Tuesday will provide the focus for shear and instability to generate severe weather, according to the National Weather Service. (National Weather Service graphic)

Storms return this week, while temperatures are like those of early fall. (National Weather Service graphic)
Storms return this week, while temperatures are like those of early fall. (National Weather Service graphic)