United Way of Wyandotte County celebrates local companies and volunteers

by Rynn Day, United Way of Wyandotte County

There was a festive spirit Thursday, May 12, inside the Vox Theatre in Kansas City, Kan., during United Way of Wyandotte County’s annual campaign celebration event.

More than 230 people gathered to celebrate the local companies and volunteers that raised funds throughout the 2015/2016 fiscal year campaign.

“We were so excited to honor all the people that make our work possible,” Wendell Maddox, president and chief executive officer of United Way of Wyandotte County, said. “Without the support of our volunteers and our local companies that run workplace campaigns we would not be able to raise the funds that support over 50 programs in Wyandotte County.”

The campaign’s projected total is $2,017,380, and there are still campaign dollars coming in, according to officials.

Guests enjoyed food and beverages while emcee Mary Pulley, Fox 4 news anchor and UWWC board member, announced the campaign’s accomplishments. Local companies honored included: Kellogg Company, Berkel and Co., Providence Medical Center, First Legends Bank, Geiger Ready Mix, Rental City, Glazier, L.G. Barcus, Community First Bank, and Garsite. UWWC also honored two of their nonprofit partner agencies that saw an increase in their workplace campaign; Mental Health America of the Heartland and El Centro Inc.

“We were thrilled to have several new local companies support UWWC through workplace campaigns,” Cindy Cash, UWWC resource development director, said. “That commitment shows that our community understands the need for the programs UWWC funds and the community partnerships it makes possible.”

One of those partnerships was highlighted through the current volunteer campaign chair, Bill Johnson, a Board of Public Utilities employee and UWWC board member. Johnson addressed the crowd thanking local companies for their commitment to Wyandotte County.

“I really enjoyed working with companies and folks I’ve met through BPU in a way that benefits our community,” Johnson said.

Johnson also introduced the new 2016-2017 volunteer campaign chair, Sheriff Don Ash. Sheriff Ash received a roar of applause as he committed over the next year to work hard to raise even more funds to support human services programming in Wyandotte County.

To find out more about United Way of Wyandotte County visit www.unitedway-wyco.org.

Current and new volunteer campaign chair’s Bill Johnson of the Board of Public Utilities and Sheriff Don Ash with Chief John Paul Jones of the Kansas City, Kan., Fire Department. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County).
Current and new volunteer campaign chair’s Bill Johnson of the Board of Public Utilities and Sheriff Don Ash with Chief John Paul Jones of the Kansas City, Kan., Fire Department. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County).

George Noonan and Karole Bradford of Duchesne Clinic, Cathy Harding, chief executive officer of  Wyandotte Health Foundation, Randy Nyp, UWWC board member and chief executive officer of Providence Medical Center, Irene Caudillo, chief executive officer of El Centro Inc., and Kansas City, Kan., Public Schools board member, and Lacy Ward Jr., Foundation director, KCKCC. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)
George Noonan and Karole Bradford of Duchesne Clinic, Cathy Harding, chief executive officer of Wyandotte Health Foundation, Randy Nyp, UWWC board member and chief executive officer of Providence Medical Center, Irene Caudillo, chief executive officer of El Centro Inc., and Kansas City, Kan., Public Schools board member, and Lacy Ward Jr., Foundation director, KCKCC. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)

Eric McTye, UWWC board member and Edward Jones, places a bid in the silent auction at UWWC’s annual campaign celebration. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)
Eric McTye, UWWC board member and Edward Jones, places a bid in the silent auction at UWWC’s annual campaign celebration. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)

Event emcee Mary Pulley, Fox 4 News anchor and UWWC board member, announced campaign accomplishments at the United Way of Wyandotte County’s annual campaign celebration event. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)
Event emcee Mary Pulley, Fox 4 News anchor and UWWC board member, announced campaign accomplishments at the United Way of Wyandotte County’s annual campaign celebration event. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)

Judi Rodman, UWWC board member and executive director, PACES, Angela Dunn, senior director, PACES, Mary Pulley, UWWC board member and Fox 4 News anchor. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)
Judi Rodman, UWWC board member and executive director, PACES, Angela Dunn, senior director, PACES, Mary Pulley, UWWC board member and Fox 4 News anchor. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)

Current UWWC volunteer campaign chair, Bill Johnson of the Board of Public Utilities, and new volunteer campaign chair Sheriff Don Ash at the United Way of Wyandotte County’s annual campaign celebration event. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)
Current UWWC volunteer campaign chair, Bill Johnson of the Board of Public Utilities, and new volunteer campaign chair Sheriff Don Ash at the United Way of Wyandotte County’s annual campaign celebration event. (Photo from United Way of Wyandotte County)

Firefighters plan fundraiser to help detective’s family

Kansas City, Kan., firefighters, Local 64, and the Kansas City, Kan., Fire Department are planning a fundraiser for Detective Brad Lancaster’s family.

The fundraiser will be similar to the “fill the boot” effort conducted by firefighters on street corners during Labor Day weekend.

Area Price Choppers in the area also conducted a fundraising effort for the slain detective’s family. They announced online that they raised $45,213 through a memorial fund at area Price Choppers for the detective’s family. The stores will contribute $2,500 more to the family, according to the announcement.

In addition, there is a memorial fund established for the family at the Greater KC Public Safety Credit Union locations, and also at Kansas City, Kan., police headquarters.

Lawmakers with Brownback ties could be in for rough time on campaign trail

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

The 2016 election could be a tough one for some Kansas lawmakers hoping to return to the Statehouse.

Polls, editorials and reader comments on news websites indicate that voters are paying attention to what’s happening in Topeka, and many don’t like what they’re seeing.

They’re frustrated by the inability of Gov. Sam Brownback and legislators to solve persistent budget problems that have triggered a downgrade in the state’s credit rating, delayed major highway projects and forced cuts in university budgets and reimbursements to health care providers who participate in KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program.

Some Kansas voters are also embarrassed. The budget problems and culture-war debates over welfare restrictions, guns and a dress code for women working in or visiting the Statehouse have made the state a popular punching bag for comedians and television talk show hosts.

The level of dissatisfaction was reflected in a poll released last week that ranked Brownback the least popular governor in the nation. The Morning Consult poll, for which 66,000 voters nationwide and 650 in Kansas were surveyed, showed Brownback with a 26 percent job approval rating, six percentage points below Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican who has come under withering criticism for his handling of the water crisis in Flint.

The Brownback effect

Practically, the poll numbers may not mean much to Brownback, who won a narrow re-election victory two years ago and isn’t on the 2016 ballot. But they could signal trouble for legislative incumbents who supported the 2012 income tax cuts, which many believe are largely responsible for the budget mess.

Sen. Forrest Knox, a conservative Republican from Altoona, recently was on the receiving end of some voter anger. At a “listening tour” stop in Gridley, a small ranching and farming community in southeast Kansas, he was peppered with questions about the budget problems and his support of the tax cuts.

Jim Ochs, a rancher and retired public school principal, listened politely as Knox talked about the spending cuts and bookkeeping “gimmicks” being used to patch holes in the budget created by continuing revenue shortfalls.

Several minutes in, Ochs interrupted.

“The people of Kansas are dissatisfied with our governor, and we’re not happy with what’s going on,” he said. “We’re angry and I think you’re sensing that.”

When Knox attempted to respond, Ochs cut him off.

“I don’t want to hear it,” he said. “Let me vent and maybe I’ll leave here feeling better.”

After the meeting, Ochs, a lifelong Republican, said he wanted Knox to understand why he was upset about the tax cuts, the persistent budget problems and what he called the “attack on public education.”

“I don’t understand why our legislators aren’t listening,” he said. “They seem to be getting different feedback from these meetings than what I hear when I talk to people. Truthfully, I haven’t talked to one person who believes that Governor Brownback is doing a good job. I’m not exaggerating.”

Voters at recent legislative briefings in Topeka and Overland Park expressed similar concerns.

“At some point it’s going to get bad enough that, yeah, we’ll throw the bums out,” said Jim Frost, a moderate Republican who attended a legislative coffee at the Johnson County Library in Overland Park the Saturday after lawmakers adjourned without balancing the budget.

Jan Mach, a Topeka Democrat who attended a legislative event at the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library, said she was “beyond angry” about the income tax cuts and the damage the resulting revenue declines are doing to public schools and universities. Mach scoffed at Brownback’s claim that the tax cuts will jump-start the Kansas economy if given time to work.

“What business or corporation would move to Kansas just on the basis of low taxes when there is crumbling infrastructure and poor schools?” she asked.

Statehouse shake-up

In an interview after the Gridley meeting, Knox agreed that voters seem more agitated this year. If that persists, he said, it could threaten the majorities that conservative Republicans now hold in both the House and Senate.

“That is the question before us,” Knox said. “The people of Kansas will decide the direction we go: Whether we continue down (the path of) reining in the unsustainable growth in state government, making our state attractive to business, or whether we go back to a faith in government and thinking that we can grow government and solve all of our problems.”

Bruce Givens, of El Dorado, an assistant director of the Butler County Special Education Cooperative, has filed to run against Knox in the Republican primary.

Despite the grilling he got in Gridley, Knox said he doesn’t think that voters will punish him for supporting both the 2012 income tax cuts and large increases in sales and tobacco taxes passed in the final hours of the marathon 2015 session.

“If we can communicate reality and the truth — we being the conservative side — I think we’re fine,” Knox said. “I think my average constituent is solid with my point of view.”

Rep. Stephanie Clayton, a moderate Republican from Overland Park, said she wants end to the dysfunctional politics that has put the state in an unwelcome national spotlight

Clayton, one of several moderate Republicans who bested conservative challengers in the 2014 primary, said Kansas did better when it was considered a boring but stable and safe place to live, work and raise a family.

“If I could make a whole campaign theme, I’d say, ‘Let’s return to boring,’” she said. “It’s not really going to get people out to the polls. But honestly, we need to stay off the news. We need to stay in the black. We need government to be just so functional that it rolls along without you guys even knowing that we’re there.”

Noting that a coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans almost had the votes to reject the budget proposed by Brownback and legislative leaders, Clayton said changes in a handful of seats could shift the balance of power in the Legislature.

What’s on your mind this election year?

KHI News Service, KCUR, KMUW, Kansas Public Radio and High Plains Public Radio are collaborating to cover Kansas elections in 2016.
We want to know what Kansans are most concerned about in a crucial voting year. To share your thoughts, visit
https://www.publicinsightnetwork.org/source/en/insight/4bc7a00d5385.
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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