Job Fair to be at KCKCC-TEC Center today

More than 70 employers and organizations will have booths at U.S. Rep. Kevin Yoder’s 3rd District Job Fair and Resource Expo on Friday, Dec. 11, at Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Technical Education Center at 65th and State Avenue, Kansas City, Kan.

The job fair will help bring about face-to-face meetings between those seeking employment and local business owners who are currently hiring, according to a spokesman. It will include a special morning hour exclusively for veterans.

The job fair will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Dec. 11. The first hour, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., will be exclusively for veterans.

Job seekers are asked to dress for success and bring several copies of their resume. There is no registration or fee required to attend the event.

The job fair will be held at KCKCC’s Dr. Thomas R. Burke Technical Education Center, 6565 State Ave., Kansas City, Kan.

Exhibitors and those who are hiring need to register in advance at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/congressman-kevin-yoder-jobs-fair-tickets-19551107890.

Those who have signed up to have a booth include:
Aerotek
Alenco
Alere eScreen
Alliance Home Health Care, Inc.
American Academy of Family Physicians
Argosy Casino Hotel & Spa
AT&T
Baker University
Best Choice Therapy Services Inc.
BNSF Railway
COF Training Services
Columbia College-Kansas City
Commerce Bank
CRTechnical Staffing, Inc.
CSM Bakery Solutions
Culinary Cornerstones
DeVry University
Drywall Systems, Inc.
Express Employment Professionals
FedEx Ground
Ferrellgas
First Student
Freightquote
Fry-Wagner Moving & Storage
G4S Secure Solutions USA
Garmin
Goodwill Western Missouri & Eastern Kansas
HDR, Inc.
Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway
Home Instead Senior Care
IMKO Workforce Solutions – Shawnee
Installation Technologies Inc
Integrity Home Care and Hospice
Johnson County Sheriff’s Office
Kansas City Area Transportation Authority (KCATA)
Kansas City Board of Public Utilities
Kansas City Power & Light
Kansas City Steak Company
Kansas State University Olathe Campus
KCKCC
LabCorp
Lansing Correctional Facility
LegalShield
Leisure Terrace
Liquid Education/Keypath Education
McDonald’s The Savage Group
McLane Foodservice
New York Life
Ottawa University
PACES
Providence Medical Center
QPS Employment Group
Quintiles
Sears
Serco
Smithfield Packaged Meats
SPX
Strategic Staffing Specialists, Inc.
Sunrise Growers, Inc.
The Healthcare Resort of Kansas City
The Healthcare Resort of Shawnee Mission
The University of Kansas Hospital
TOP Resources
Union Pacific Railroad
UPS
Volt Workforce Solutions
Waffle House
Whelan Event Services
Whelan Security
Workforce Partnership
YRC Freight

$133 million bond issue approved for BPU air quality systems

A $133 million bond issue for Board of Public Utilities’ air quality control systems was approved at the Unified Government Commission meeting Dec. 10.

The air quality controls at the BPU Nearman plant will cost the average BPU customer an increase of $1.18 a month starting in 2016, BPU officials said.

While the UG Commission two years ago approved or authorized up to $250 million for the financing of air quality control systems with the existing plants, the project was done in two phases, and this is the second phase, according to officials. The BPU board unanimously approved the second phase of the bond sale on Dec. 2, 2015.

Lew Levin, UG chief financial officer, said the project funding would not exceed $125 million, and the true interest cost would not exceed 4.6 percent. He said the 30-year financing would have a fee of .53 percent, less than one percent, for the underwriters.

BPU General Manager Don Gray said originally this phase was to have cost $140 million, but it is coming in ahead of schedule and under the estimate. Now $125 million remains to complete the project.

“This is a savings to the community of $15 million,” Gray said.

The BPU is putting in air quality controls at the 235-megawatt Nearman plant, he said. The BPU is responding to federal mandates concerning air quality, as are other utilities in the area that are making substantial investments in air quality systems for their plants, he said. The Environmental Protection Agency has mandated that all utilities comply with new air quality control standards, Merucry and Air Toxics Standards, to reduce sulfur dioxide compounds, mercury and particulates in the air, he said.

This work should be completed by February of 2017, Gray said.

The BPU decided to invest in air quality controls in the Nearman plant because it still has more than 30 years of useful life, and because the coal price is stable when it is compared to natural gas prices, he said. Also, coal can easily be stored on site, which is not the case with natural gas, he added.

Having coal along with the other fuels, including natural gas, hydro, wind and landfill gas, keeps the generation of electricity diversified, he said. The BPU will maintain better control of its generating costs, he added.

Gray said it is a favorable time to be in the bond market, and it supports energy reliability for the community.

The project was split into phases to spread the costs out, reducing costs to customers, so they would not hit at one time, according to Gray.

The construction site was developed starting last November, and in May, contractors, who are all union contractors, started installing piles and foundations, he said. They have begun erecting structural steel. The air quality control equipment is expected to start in November 2016, with testing of equipment until February 2017.

The cost of the air quality control system will be passed directly to the BPU customers through an environmental surcharge (ESC), Gray said. During 2016, monthly bills for the average residential customer will increase $1.18 a month. In 2017, the ESC is estimated to increase $2.25 a month for residential customers, he said. This is based on 858 kilowatt hours as an average residential usage amount.

In 2018 there will be another similar increase to customers’ bills to pay for air quality controls, to continue to spread the costs as much as possible and lessen the effect on the community, Gray said.

When federal or state regulations come out, the BPU has no control over what the EPA or state directs, so the BPU board decided to pass the cost directly to consumers, he added.

This bond issue for BPU air quality controls was just one of several bond issues approved Dec. 10.

Also approved Dec. 10 were Public Building Commission bond issues to refinance the BPU headquarters building at 540 Minnesota Ave., at $7.25 million; as well as financing of bonds up to $750,000 for the Cricket Wireless Amphitheater in Bonner Springs; and the acquisition of real estate at 800 and 810 Ann Ave. with bonds in the amount of $1.83 million for the construction and furnishing of the UG’s medical clinic.

Committee puts off investigation of alleged DCF gay adoption bias

Legislators cite need to develop broader audit of foster care system, plan for January vote

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

The Legislative Post Audit Committee voted Thursday to delay considering an audit into allegations of bias at the Kansas Department for Children and Families against adoptions by same-sex couples.

The panel of legislators instead voted to create a subcommittee that will develop a proposal for a broader investigation of the state’s foster care and adoption system that will be ready for an up-or-down vote in January.

“When we do it, we have to do it right,” said Rep. Peggy Mast, a Republican from Emporia. “It should be comprehensive.”

Mast added, “It looks like it’s a system that needs to be fixed.”

The same committee rejected a broader audit of DCF requested by two Democrats in July.

One of those Democrats, Rep. Jim Ward of Wichita, was back Thursday before the committee to renew that request, while adding one focused on investigating whether DCF is attempting to steer children away from adoptive parents in same-sex relationships.

DCF officials have repeatedly said they have no formal policy to take sexual orientation into account when making recommendations for foster care or adoption.

But Ward presented the committee with a list of 21 attorneys and social workers who believe a pattern of discrimination can be proven if those with evidence are provided the anonymity of an audit.

Ward said confidentiality clauses in cases involving children are good policy but have prevented those attorneys and social workers from publicly airing their concerns about anti-gay bias and DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore.

“If you were to open an audit, I think you would find out from people who were in the room when this happened that the (DCF) secretary said, ‘We are going to begin to screen applications to find out if they’re homosexual,’” Ward said. “That she went to a staff meeting and discouraged adoptions by gay and lesbians, and when asked by a professional who’d been in the department for years why she would do this, she said, ‘We’re doing things differently now.’”

Ward said he was OK with developing a broader audit, as long as the question of bias against same-sex couples is part of it.

“The frustrating thing is we wait yet again, and nothing changes,” Ward said. “There’s no questions being asked (of DCF) — there’s questions about the questions to ask.”

Ward’s request comes after media reports on custody cases involving same-sex couples. In one case, DCF removed a baby from the home of lesbian foster parents in Wichita and recommended the child be placed with some half-siblings who lived in a 2,200-square-foot Topeka home with more than a dozen children in it.

The owners of the home, Topeka City Councilman Jonathan Schumm and his wife, were charged last month with child abuse.

Ward also cited a Johnson County case in which a judge said DCF officials conducted a “witch hunt” against another lesbian couple. The judge’s sealed decision includes emails among DCF officials in which they cite the potential adoptive mother’s sexual orientation as something to note and seek more information about the percentage of out-of-home foster care placements going to same-sex couples.

Ward, an attorney, said he also knows of a case in which a grandmother was denied custody because she was in a same-sex relationship.

Republicans on the committee said they had other concerns about DCF, including the “warehousing” of foster children in some homes and the rising number of out-of-home foster care placements.

“I’m a little bit concerned that if we look at only what’s in this scope statement, then that comes back and whatever that audit covers we move on and we don’t look at the other areas, that I think are equally or maybe even more important,” said Sen. Jeff Longbine, a Republican from Emporia.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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