Wyandotte County students named to dean’s list at Washburn

Several Wyandotte County students were named to the dean’s list for the fall semester at Washburn University, Topeka.

Students on the list must be enrolled in 12 hours of graded credits and earn a semester grade point average of 3.4 to 3.99.

Students on the list from Wyandotte County included:

From Bonner Springs: Tiffany Benedick, Emily Vitt and Rebecca Weimer.

From Kansas City, Kan.: Madelin Hayes, Halie Horn, Alex Shriver, Sarina Smith, Wesley Tabor and Laura Wiseman.

Promising KCKCC baseball team opens home season Friday

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

If numbers are an indicator, pitching should be a strength when Kansas City Kansas Community College opens the 2017 baseball season Friday.

When healthy, the Blue Devils’ roster boasts 15 pitchers as KCKCC is the host of Maple Woods in the home opener Friday at 3 p.m. before beginning a six-game spring road trip to Texas Feb. 17-20.

The pitching question mark, however, is experience. Only one starter returns from Matt Goldbeck’s first season as head coach, a 41-20 season that included a third place finish behind Jayhawk Conference champion Neosho County and Region VI champion and World Series qualifier Cowley College.

“We had a chance going into the final weekend,” Goldbeck said.

In addition to losing the bulk of the starting pitching staff, the Blue Devils lost a quartet of middle of the lineup hitters who accounted for 44 home runs and 245 runs-batted-in (more than half of KCKCC’s 478 RBI’s for the season).

“We lost a lot of power from the middle of the order so we’re going to have to be a little more mobile this season, more bunting and hit-and-run to put pressure on the defense,” Goldbeck said. “However, I think we’ve upgraded ourselves on the mound with more depth and top end guys.”

Jake Purl, a 6-3 right-hander from Park Hill, returns to anchor the starting rotation. Purl led the Blue Devil mound staff last year with a 9-3 record. He’ll likely be followed by Chad Cox (4-1), who appeared in a 16 games in relief last year, and southpaw Shae Stephens, a transfer from Cowley via Mill Valley

The fourth and fifth starters will come from a quartet of sophomores Cam Bednar of St. James Academy and Corey Cowan of Turner and freshmen Max Storch of Olathe South and Cole Gacke of Liberty. Luke Ostenson, a redshirt freshman from Shawnee Heights, will be the closer.

Middle relief will come from a corps of sophomores Jarret Cronin, a transfer from Indian Hills; Colton Kenagy (Gower, Mo.), Gunner Vestal (Piper) and Elijah Baig (St. Joe Benton) and freshmen Allan Brown from Olathe Northwest; Jake Bartshe of Liberty North and Julian Rivera of Kissimmee, Fla.

Experience, however, will be a plus on the infield where the Blue Devils return three starters, catcher Drew Holtgrieve of St. Charles, Mo., and the up-the-middle duo of shortstop Albert Woodard and second baseman Easton Fortuna. Holtgrieve hit .347 with six home runs and 49 RBI in a dual role catching and serving as designated hitter. He’ll be backed by Adam North, a freshman from Shawnee Mission South.

Woodward hit .314 with 38 RBI and Fortuna .342 with 21 RBI and provided the Blue Devils with solid middle of the infield defense. Woodward also stole 14 bases.

“The fastest player in Kansas,” said Goldbeck after Woodward won a 60-yard dash in a state-wide tryout camp.

They’ll be joined on the corners by freshman Brandon Still of Springdale, Ark., at first and sophomore Zack Mahoney of Bishop Miege at third. Mahoney played in 46 games last season, hitting .273 with 23 RBI. They’ll be backed up by freshmen Rider Harris of Blue Valley, Van Oswald of Truman, Brigham Mooney of Blue Springs South and sophomore Alex Phillips, a first baseman and designated hitter who transferred from Northwest Oklahoma.

Chase Redick, a sophomore from Shawnee Mission North who hit .362 with 36 RBI last season, will get the starting nod in right field with swift Blue Springs freshman Tyler Pittman in center. The starter in left will come from a corps of sophomore Ty Bradshaw of Winnetonka and freshmen Josh Schumacher of Aurora, Colo., Dade Wheeler of St. Joe Benton and Rorey Combs of Truman. Bradshaw hit .441 in 20 games last season.

“You can make a case for all four of them,” Goldbeck said. They are joined by sophomore Tyler Mars of Mill Valley, who is also a candidate at first and designated hitter.

Defensively, the Blue Devils could be outstanding with veterans Woodard, Fortuna and Mahoney on the infield, Holtgrieve behind the plate and Redick in right with the speedy Pittman in center.

“Pittman has game-changing speed,” Goldbeck said. But as usual, it will come down to pitching. “More of a strength than last year; we have quality arms at the top and depth-wise throughout the whole staff.”

Goldbeck will again be assisted by former Blue Devil standout Bill Sharp, who is in his eighth year on the staff; Lendsey Thomson, second season; and first year coaches Dean Long, Zane Mapes and Ryne McDonald.

The Jayhawk Conference again will be loaded headed by Cowley, the team the Blue Devils open the conference season against Thursday, March 2. Neosho, Johnson County and Allen are among the other expected powers in a conference that ranks among the nation’s best. Each team will play a 36-game schedule with doubleheaders against the same foe each Thursday and Saturday.

Kansas City Kansas Community College
2017 Baseball Schedule

Feb. 10 MAPLE WOODS (1), Home 3 p.m.
Feb. 17 Richland (1), Dallas, TX 2 p.m.
Feb. 18 Eastfield, Ft. Worth, TX. Noon
Feb. 19 Richland, Dallas, TX. 1 p.m.
Feb. 20 Richland (1), Dallas, TX. Noon
Feb. 25 NORTH IOWA AREA, Home 1 p.m.
Feb. 26 NORTH IOWA AREA, Home 1 p.m.
Feb. 28 BAKER JV (1), Home 2 p.m.
March 2 COWLEY*, Home 1 p.m.
March 4 Cowley*, Away 1 p.m.
March 7 State Fair (1), Sedalia, MO. 2 p.m.
March 9 Coffeyville*, Away 1 p.m.
March 11 COFFEYVILLE*, Home 1 p.m.
March 14 Maple Woods (1), Away 2 p.m.
March 16 INDEPENDENCE*, Home 1 p.m.
March 18 Independence*, Away 1 p.m.
March 21 LONGVIEW (1), Home 2 p.m.
March 23 Labette*, Away 1 p.m.
March 25 LABETTE*, Home 1 p.m.
March 27 SAINT MARY (1), Home 3 p.m.
March 30 HIGHLAND*, Home 1 p.m.
April 1 Highland*, Away 1 p.m.
April 6 ALLEN COUNTY*, Home 1 p.m.
April 8 Allen County*, Away 1 p.m.
April 11 STATE FAIR (1), Home 2 p.m.
April 13 Fort Scott*, Away 1 p.m.
April 15 FORT SCOTT*, Home 1 p.m.
April 18 Longview, Lee’s Summit, MO. 2 p.m.
April 20 Neosho County*, Away 1 p.m.
April 22 NEOSHO COUNTY*, Home 1 p.m.
April 24 Baker JV (1), Baldwin, KS. 2 p.m.
April 27 JOHNSON COUNTY*, Home 1 p.m.
April 29 Johnson County*, Away 1 p.m.
May 2 MAPLE WOODS (1), Home 2 p.m.
May 5-6 First round Region VI playoffs TBA
May 11-16 Region VI Superregional TBA
May 26 NJCAA World Series

Kansas Senate Committee advances bill repealing business tax exemption

by Stephen Koranda and Meg Wingerter, Kansas News Service

A Senate committee advanced a bill Tuesday that would repeal an income tax exemption for more than 300,000 business owners. The bill, which could go before the full Senate on Thursday, also would increase income tax rates overall.

Sen. Julia Lynn, an Olathe Republican, said she supported the measure because the Legislature needs to make some progress on tax issues.

“This is a situation that has been floundering for four years,” she said. “Although it might not be the best bill that’s put forward, it’s the beginning of a process.”

The bill would raise almost $300 million in taxes next fiscal year, but it appears that wouldn’t be enough to eliminate a budget deficit.

Sen. Marci Francisco, a Lawrence Democrat, opposed the bill, saying legislators can’t know if it raises enough revenue because they haven’t finalized a budget yet.

“I’d rather say, ‘What do we as a Legislature believe are the appropriate expenditures? How do we raise those funds to balance that budget?’” she said.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback already has voiced opposition to the bill, saying it would hurt “job creators” and families. He pushed for the tax cuts in 2012 and has strongly defended them.

‘Strong opposition’ to tobacco securitization

Among members of a House budget committee, the only debate Monday about selling Kansas’ share of a tobacco lawsuit was how strongly to say they oppose it.

Brownback’s proposed budget would “securitize” the state’s share of a legal settlement with large tobacco companies, which have to compensate states for the costs of smoking.

Kansas puts most of its tobacco money into the Children’s Initiatives Fund to pay for education and health programs aimed at children up to age 5. Lawmakers have periodically taken money from the fund to plug budget holes, however.

Selling bonds backed by the tobacco money would secure a large upfront payment, but Kansas would have to divert some or all of its future funds from the settlement to repay investors who purchased the bonds. That would require lawmakers to find money in the state general fund to support children’s programs — or cut them.

Legislators on the House Social Services Budget Committee took up the question of securitizing the tobacco funds Monday, but their debate largely consisted of whether they should tell other legislative committees they were “concerned,” “opposed” or “adamantly opposed” to the idea. They settled on noting “strong opposition.”

Rep. Stephanie Clayton, an Overland Park Republican and vice chairwoman of the committee, said it was important to send the message that a state budget relying on tobacco securitization won’t go far in the House.

“We’re signaling to them: Have fun with this on the floor,” she said.

Back into the red?

If other lawmakers agree with the committee members, the governor’s budget proposal may need serious modifications. It includes $265 million in one-time revenue from securitization in the fiscal year starting July 1 and another $265 million the following fiscal year.

Removing that much money without replacing it would push the state back into the red in the coming fiscal year and cut the expected ending balance roughly in half in fiscal year 2019.

Annie McKay, president and CEO of Kansas Action for Children, said securitizing the tobacco funds would leave children’s programs vulnerable to budget cuts as they compete with other priorities.

“We all know what’s happened in terms of the state’s finances,” she said.

Melika Willoughby, communications director for Brownback’s office, said in a Tuesday email that securitization actually would protect children’s programs in Kansas.

“The securitization option could help the Legislature avoid cuts to other government services while still fully funding all of the children’s programs for the next two years,” she said.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service. Meg Wingerter is a reporter for KCUR’s Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas.

See more at
http://kcur.org/post/kansas-senate-committee-advances-bill-repealing-business-tax-exemption.