UG committee discusses ways to address littering from food pantry clients

Food pantry workers and volunteers turned out for a Unified Government committee meeting tonight to talk about a large number of food pantries serving the area.

Unified Government Commissioner Ann Brandau-Murguia had brought the issue to the UG Commission, saying that although she supports efforts to feed the needy, there were problems created with littering and traffic in the Argentine area. She added she was only addressing the issue as it related to the 3rd District.

In some cases, Murguia said people are coming to Argentine from outside of the area, and the community facilities were not designed to handle great amounts of traffic from it. The food pantries can’t be set up in a way to solve one problem and instead create other problems, she said.

UG Planning Director Rob Richardson showed a map that depicted most food pantries’ locations were in the eastern part of Kansas City, Kansas. He had a list of 21 food pantries serving the city, but Murguia said there were about five in Argentine, and some were not on the list. She said that some of the food pantries in Argentine were doing well and not creating problems, but some others had resulted in traffic jams and littering in neighborhoods.

Although the UG Administration and Human Services agenda stated that possible zoning restrictions would be discussed, there was no support at the meeting for zoning restrictions. Richardson said because many of the pantries were associated with churches or schools, zoning restrictions wouldn’t apply to them. The UG can control the rules at its own community centers and parks, and zoning isn’t applicable there, he added.

UG commissioners on the committee said they didn’t want to put restrictions on the food pantries, but they supported the food pantries sitting down and working together to address issues such as traffic and littering.

Representatives of food pantries in the community said some of the food pantries here have organized to make sure they don’t duplicate their efforts and have had meetings.

Beth Low-Smith, vice president of policy for KC Healthy Kids, said food insecurity affects 18 percent of Wyandotte County residents and 25 percent of Wyandotte County children, which is higher than the state average. Pantries are trying to help those who don’t qualify for food assistance, she said. Sixty-eight percent of the food pantries in the state are operated in religious organizations, she added. Many don’t have paid staff, and many of the volunteers are over age 60. Often, they don’t have the resources to relocate, she said.

If the food pantries were restricted, many would simply close, she said. Currently, at the federal budget level, programs such as Meals on Wheels could be eliminated. Low-Smith said she was concerned with the growing attacks on food programs, and that this is “not the time to make it more difficult for pantries to operate.”

It would make more sense to work with individual food pantries to resolve any problems than to pass restrictions on them, she said.

Janice Witt, who operates the nonprofit Reola Grant Center, which has a food pantry on Leavenworth Road, said when the UG funding was eliminated some years ago for Meals on Wheels, she tried to deliver meals herself to the homebound seniors in the program.

Witt said her concern was for everyone in the community who is hungry. She added that malnutrition leads to problems with behavior and problems in schools.

“These are the faces of hunger,” Witt said, introducing the committee to people attending the meeting who received food from the Reola Grant Center.

About litter in the neighborhoods, Witt suggested to the committee, “If there’s a problem and you see it, fix it.”

One of the persons attending the meeting who volunteers at the Reola Grant Center and had received food there described how the center set up appointments to avoid the traffic jams of their early days.

“We are the face of the people who need to use pantries,” she said. While her husband has a good job, making $20 an hour, they need assistance from a food pantry, she said. They have three children, and they had medical problems in their family, but their income was too much for food stamps, she added.

Commissioners Melissa Bynum and Jane Philbrook were against legislating anything to regulate the food pantries, and they were in favor of the groups coming together to coordinate plans on their own.

Commissioner Mike Kane agreed that there was a large level of need in the community. Although the state may be saying it has unemployment under control, it doesn’t, according to Kane, as many people have run out of unemployment funds, are not being counted as unemployed and are now relying on food pantries. He was not in favor of more regulations, but he supported food pantries sitting down and working out the issues.

He said it’s possible that people are coming to the Argentine area from other parts of the city because they are embarrassed to seek help in their own areas, and they don’t want other people to know they had to ask for food.

The issue Monday night was somewhat reminiscent of one that former mayor Carol Marinovich brought up in the 1990s about littering around a church food kitchen near Strawberry Hill. The issue was resolved when the food kitchen moved in 1997 to a nearby location, with the help of a federal grant coordinated by then-Sen. Bob Dole.

Legislative newsletter from Rep. Pam Curtis, D-32nd Dist.

Rep. Pam Curtis

by Rep. Pam Curtis

It was a very busy week as committee work continues as well as consideration of bills on the floor of the Kansas House. We had a special treat on Friday as former Sen. Richard Gannon joined us to play his traditional bagpipes in honor of St. Patrick’s Day.

Thursday was a day of environmental advocacy and outreach,Wealth Day, at the Capitol. Over 200 people joined together under the dome to discuss Kansas Wealth, water, energy, air, land, transportation, and health. It was my pleasure to participate in the Wealth program and speak about the importance of air.

On Friday I joined other members of the House Elections Committee for a presentation and tour at the Shawnee County Election Commission Office. I appreciated the opportunity for this very informative and interesting hands-on discussion of election administration, processes, and new equipment.

Thank you to everyone that visited me this week at the Capitol. It is a special honor to serve as your state representative. I both value and need your input on the various issues facing state government. Please feel free to contact me with your comments and questions. My office address is Room 452-S, Kansas Statehouse, 300 SW 10th, Topeka, KS 66612. You can reach me at 785-296-7430 or call the legislative hotline at 1-800-432-3924 to leave a message for me. Additionally, you can email me at pam.curtis@house.ks.gov.

This week in the House
Several bills passed through the Kansas House this week. Below is a list detailing some of these bills.

Wildfire Relief Bill: HB 2387, An act concerning sales and compensating use tax; exemption for repairing, rebuilding or replacing certain property destroyed by wildfires.

Tax: HB 2162, An act concerning sales taxation; relating to time for payment of tax.

Ad Astra Rural Jobs Act: HB 2168, An act concerning rural economic development; enacting the ad astra rural jobs act which would provide tax incentives for investment companies that finance business projects that bring jobs to rural areas in Kansas.

Health: SB 32, An act relating to mental health care; medical student and resident loan assistance; medical student loan agreements; practice commitment agreements; providing for agreements for the practice of psychiatry; establishing the psychiatry medical loan repayment fund and the rural health bridging psychiatry fund; concerning mental healthcare facilities.

Campaign Finance: Sub HB 2223, An act concerning campaign finance reports for members of the legislature and reports by lobbyists; dealing with civil penalties for late filing of such reports.

“SkyNet” Bill: On Friday the House debated Sub HB 2331: Kansas Information Technology Enterprise. I fully support the cybersecurity portion of the bill but another bill was added to HB 2331 to create a cabinet level agency transferring all executive branch agencies IT spending and personnel to the new “KITE” agency. While I agree in concept to the centralization of IT services, with a lack of a roadmap for the implementation, clarity on which employees will be impacted and assurances that centralizing services will protect uniformity and access to IT services, more work needs to be done before moving this measure forward. Sub HB 2331 will be up for final action on the House Floor when we return on Monday, March 20th.

State of the Judiciary
On Wednesday, the Kansas Supreme Court justices and the Kansas Court of Appeals judges appeared at the Capitol building to give the State of the Judiciary on the House floor.

Chief Justice Lawton Nuss addressed both the House and Senate, speaking on the troubles facing the courts and their employees, raising awareness of the court’s proposal to raise their budget. This is the first time the Supreme Court has appeared at the Capitol to give the State of the Judiciary since 2012. Due to prior tension with a conservative-dominated legislature, the address has been held at the Judicial Center the last few years. The new House Speaker, Ron Ryckman, re-extended the invitation to the House floor this year.

Resolution for Olathe shooting
On Thursday, the Kansas House adopted a resolution honoring the life of Srinivas Kuchibhotla and recognizing a united community and state. The resolution condemned the recent shooting in Olathe: “These evil acts do not define us, and they will not divide us.”

The surviving victims of the shooting stood in front of the House chamber to be honored as the resolution was adopted.

Women’s History Month
March is Women’s History Month. It’s a time to reflect on women’s contributions to history and to the present, the inaugural holiday beginning in the United States in 1987. Join us this month in standing with and celebrating women in Kansas, across the nation, and the across the world. Read more about Women’s History Month at http://womenshistorymonth.gov/.

In addition to my newsletter, I am working to keep constituents more informed via Facebook and Twitter, so be sure to follow me at: https://www.facebook.com/PamCurtisKCK/ and https://twitter.com/pcurtiskck
You can also follow the legislative session online at: www.kslegislature.org.

UG committee to discuss zoning restrictions on food pantries tonight

A Unified Government Committee tonight is scheduled to discuss food bank density and possible zoning restrictions for food pantries.

The item is on the agenda for the UG Administration and Human Services Committee meeting tonight. The AHS Committee will meet after the Public Works and Safety Committee, which begins at 5 p.m. on the fifth floor of City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Several other items also are on the committee agenda.

The Public Works committee meeting is scheduled to have a discussion of the SOAR initiative on mowing, debris clean-up and boarding of vacant structure.

The agendas are online at www.wycokck.org.