UG Commission to meet Thursday

The Unified Government Commission will meet Thursday, Feb. 2, to consider passing bond sales resolutions and the grant process for the Hollywood Casino-Schlitterbahn community grant funds.

Also on Thursday’s agenda are a cooperation agreement with the Mid-America Regional Council on funding Operation Green Light Traffic Controls System; and support for the efforts of the Greater Kansas City Coalition to end homelessness.

Also to be presented Thursday are a report of UG Commission travel and community event expenditures.

The 7 p.m. meeting Feb. 2 will be in the Commission Chambers, lobby level, City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kan.

Also scheduled Thursday is a UG Commission special session at 5 p.m. in the fifth floor conference room at City Hall, 701 N. 7th St.

The commission will hear a presentation about innovation. Afterward, the commission will move to the ninth floor conference room for an executive, closed, session on land acquisition, according to the meeting notice.

Labette women hold off KCKCC to stay unbeaten in Region VI

At 5-11, KCKCC forward Brie Tauai ducks between Labette’s 6-1 Paige Kidwell and 6-1 Janae Barnes (2) for two of her game high 17 points in the Lady Blue Devils’ 77-67 loss Wednesday. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC
Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Lady Blue Devils shot just as well as unbeaten Labette and rebounded better but it wasn’t enough to overcome a lopsided setback in turnovers Wednesday.

Turning 26 turnovers into a rash of field goals, the No. 12 ranked Lady Cardinals ran their Region VI record to 4-0 and overall record to 20-3 with a 77-67 win. The loss dropped KCKCC to 3-2 in regional play and 15-7 overall heading into a 2 p.m. clash Saturday with second place and No. 5 ranked Johnson County in Overland Park.

Labette stung the Blue Devils with the most first quarter points given up in taking a 24-17 lead and extended it to 45-32 at halftime. It should have been a knockout blow but the Blue Devils won the second half battle 35-32 and closed to within eight points on several occasions.

“We did a lot of really good things against a very talented team,” KCKCC coach Joe McKinstry said. “I was really pleased with our effort and felt like we competed for four quarters, which has been an issue for us this season. But it hurts to lose a game to a ranked opponent when you didn’t make them earn it. Our turnovers have been a problem and tonight it was extremely detrimental to the outcome. We also missed way too many shots around the basket and free throws (10 misses in 23 attempts).”

Brie Tauai came off the KCKCC bench to lead the Blue Devils in scoring with 17 points while Millie Shade added 14 and Brooklyn Wagler 13. At 5-11 KCKCC’s tallest starter, Shade had eight rebounds, Ky’Ana French seven, Tauai six and Wagler five as the Blue Devils had a 42-39 rebound edge against a Labette team that started four players 6-foot or taller.

KCKCC stayed with the Cardinals shooting-wise the first half, hitting 50 percent to Labette’s 51.6 percent but could not overcome 17 turnovers in falling behind 45-32. The Blue Devils closed to 50-42 early in the second half but missed a pair of wide open layups before Labette ran off nine straight points and then held on by keeping the lead at eight points or more.

“I told our team to hold their heads high when we leave the locker room and if anything, they should be able to see that with a few adjustments in our play, we are a very good team that can compete with anyone,” McKinstry said.

Campus concealed carry debate continues after Senate Committee setback

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Opponents of allowing guns on university campuses are not giving up their fight despite a setback this week in a Kansas Senate committee.

State law says Kansas colleges and universities must allow concealed weapons on campus starting in July. Bills in the House and Senate would exempt higher education institutions from the law, allowing them to continue banning guns on campus.

A Senate committee voted Tuesday not to advance the bill to the full chamber. Just a day later, the House Federal and State Affairs Committee had a public hearing on a similar measure.

Rabbi Moti Rieber, of the group Kansas Interfaith Action, believes approval by the Kansas House could boost the bill’s chances in the Senate.

“We think that if the bill gets to the House floor, it’ll pass,” Rieber said Wednesday. “It would give the bill momentum to come out of the House with a strong majority, which I think we would get.”

University of Kansas professor Ron Barrett told the House committee that guns should not be allowed on campuses. He says many university labs contain chemicals that could cause an explosion — or worse — if they’re struck by an errant bullet.

“Some universities even store more dangerous materials, like tens of thousands of gallons of poisonous, carcinogenic flammables right in the middle of campus,” Barrett said.

But for Emporia State University student Megan Hilbish and others who support concealed carry, the issue comes down to constitutional rights, which they say don’t end on a college campus.

“We want to be able to conceal carry on college campuses to be able to defend ourselves and feel more safe and secure, especially with the inadequate security measures that colleges have now,” Hilbish said.

The overflow hearing Wednesday appeared to be dominated by supporters of changing the law, but Kathleen Wade, president of the Kansas State Rifle Association, said that didn’t tell the whole story. She said the group has supporters who aren’t able to attend events like the hearing.

“We will fight this until the last minute, until the last vote is counted,” Wade said.

Travis Couture-Lovelady, a former Republican Kansas legislator who now works for the National Rifle Association, said the group has been mobilizing supporters to contact lawmakers with emails and phone calls.

“We’re OK with discussion. We feel confident in our arguments and confident in the people of Kansas, that this is the direction they want to go,” Couture-Lovelady said.

Rep. John Barker, an Abilene Republican and chairman of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said he wants to give members of the committee time to consider all the comments before taking any action on the bill.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/campus-concealed-carry-debate-continues-after-senate-committee-setback.