KCKCC culinary arts dominates at SkillsUSA state competition

by Kelly Rogge, KCKCC

The Culinary Arts Program at Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Dr. Thomas R. Burke Technical Education Center has been on fire this year, and not just in the kitchen.

So when KCKCC attended the Skills USA State competition in April, the results were no different leading the KCKCC contingency on the road to nationals.

“Our students put in three to six hours every day to practice for all of these competitions. We knew that the students were ready for the competitions and would be a contender for a medal, hopefully a gold,” said Chef Cheryl Runnebaum, assistant professor of culinary arts at KCKCC-TEC. “Sometimes, we still have to ‘pinch ourselves’ to insure we are not dreaming. This type of success does not happen by luck; but by shear practice, dedication, determination and passion for the field.”

In addition to the Gold Medal KCKCC received at the ACF High School Team competition at Johnson County Community College in February, student Will Bowles received a Gold Medal at the Regional NAACP High School Culinary Arts Competition. He is traveling to the national competition in Baltimore, Md., later this summer – a first for KCKCC.

To close the year, KCKCC culinary arts brought home five gold medals from the Kansas SkillsUSA competition, sweeping all but one of the culinary arts categories. In total, KCKCC is sending 15 students to the SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference June 19 to 23 in Louisville, Ky.

SkillsUSA is a career and technical student organization in the United States geared toward those enrolled in programs for skilled, technical and service occupations. The organization serves more than 300,000 students and instructors each year at the high school and post-secondary level. It also gives industry leaders an opportunity to mentor and recruit students into positions that are high in demand.

Students who wish to compete in SkillsUSA can do so at the local, state and national level. Categories range from culinary, building maintenance and automotive service technology to basic health care skills, collision repair technology, entrepreneurship and job skill demonstration. The idea is to give students the opportunity to compete in real world, hands-on situations. First place winners at the state level move onto the national competition.

“SkillsUSA is an outstanding organization that focuses on making leaders in the various industries/trades and prepare students/members for the real world,” Runnebaum said. “These competitions are just one aspect of SkillsUSA. They host numerous conferences and workshops at the local, state and national level throughout the year. These conferences focuses on the different pillars of SkillsUSA with the ultimate goal of preparing students for the workforce.”

State SkillsUSA Results
Gold (National Qualifier)
• Nancy Mascote – Commercial Baking (HS)
• Stephen Craft – Commercial Baking (PS)
• Megan Sixta – Cosmetology (PS)
• Daniel Tapia-Silva – Culinary Arts (PS)
• Armando Miranda – Culinary Arts (HS)
• Cassandra Puletapuai – Extemporaneous Speaking (PS)
• Christopher Rasa – Major Appliance (HS)
• Raymond Forbes – Major Appliance (PS)
• Melanie Saunders – Nail Care (HS)
• Madison Martinez – Nail Care (HS) (Model)
• Alejandra Lee – Nail Care (HS)
• Becky Pulliam – Nail Care (PS) (Model)
• Ben Smith – Plumbing (PS)
• Christina Balora – Restaurant Service (PS)
• Jasmine Hargrove – Job Skill Demo A (PCC-PS)***

Silver
• Tara Mendenhall – Commercial Baking (HS)
• Fabiola Aguilar – Cosmetology (HS)
• Megan Hadley – First Aid/CPR (PCC-HS)
• Abigail Hopkins – Health Knowledge Bowl (PCC-HS)
• Britten Hout – Health Knowledge Bowl (PCC-HS)
• Savannah Lake – Health Knowledge Bowl (PCC-HS)
• Taylor Schmitt – Health Knowledge Bowl (PCC-HS)
• Joseph Deblois – Major Appliance (PCC-HS)
• Noah Deherrera – Major Appliance (PCC-PS)
• Precious Edgar – Nail Care (PS)
• Tia Gladney – Nail Care (PS) (Model)
• Adelaide Clendinen – Restaurant Services (PS)
• Kayla Eagles – Welding Fabrication (PS)
• Colton Hagge – Welding Fabrication (PS)
• Blaine Hedlund – Welding Fabrication (PS)

Bronze
• Kayden McCrary – Commercial Baking (HS)
• Narda Cabral-Beltran – Cosmetology (PS)
• Dustin Scott – Collision Repair Technology (PS)
• Ariana Sanchez-Ruiz – Criminal Justice (PS)
• William La Pee – Job Skill Demo A (PCC-HS)
• Mitchell White – Major Appliance (PS)
• Diana Valenzuela-Silva – Nail Care (PS)
• Evelin Ortiz – Nail Care (PS) Model)
• Nicholas Minarsky – Restaurant Services (PCC-HS)
** (HS) – High School
** (PS) – Post-Secondary
*** Silver medalist, but is going to nationals because the Gold Medal winner declined the invitation.

For more information on SkillsUSA, contact Jake Carmack at [email protected] or call 913-288-7858.

T-Bones win in 14 innings over Wichita

Teammates rushed to congratulate Patrick Brady after he drove in the game-winning run in the bottom of the 14th inning. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)

by William Crum

A five-hour, 14-inning game ended with a T-Bones’ win on Tuesday night at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas City, Kansas.

The T-Bones beat the Wichita Wingnuts, 7-6, when Patrick Brady hit a single to drive in the final run in the 14th inning.

The game opened with a two-run home run by the T-Bones’ Zach Walters in the first inning.

Another home run was scored by Leo Vargas of the T-Bones. The T-Bones’ designated hitter Kevin Keyes hit a home run as well.

The T-Bones’ Eddie Newton doubled and then scored on a hit from Keyes to make the score 5-0.

Wichita went on the scoreboard with Brent Clevlen singling to score a run in the seventh and the score was T-Bones 5, Wichita 1. Wichita scored two more runs and it was 5-3.

Two more runs came in for Wichita in the ninth inning. The game was tied and went into extra innings.

T.J. Mittlestaedt with the Wichita Wingnuts got a home run in the top of the 11th inning to take the lead. The T-Bones came back to score one in the bottom of the 11th on a sacrifice fly.

In the 14th inning, Brady hit a single to score Keyes and the T-Bones won.

The next T-Bones’ game is at 11:05 a.m. Wednesday against Wichita, at CommunityAmerica Ballpark in Kansas City, Kansas. It is the final game of the series with Wichita. For tickets, call 913-328-5618 or go to the Providence Medical Center Box Office.

Second baseman Zach Walters trotted around third after hitting a two-run home run in the first inning. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
Starter Chris Perry gave the T-Bones 5 2/3 scoreless innings, striking out 10. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
Catcher Leo Rojas hit a home run in the second inning to put the T-Bones ahead 3-0. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
Designated hitter Kevin Keyes hit a home run in the third inning to put the T-Bones ahead 4-0. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
The grounds crew put in a late night, dragging the field after the 13th inning. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
Marcus Lemon tried to score in the 14th inning, but was thrown out at home. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
T-Bones third baseman Marcus Lemon played catch with members of an area youth baseball team before the game. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)
Sizzle clowned around with members of an area youth baseball team before the game. (Photo copyright 2017 by Brian Turrel)

Kansas school funding bill expands tax credits for private tuition program

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

A school finance bill headed to Gov. Sam Brownback’s desk would expand a program that funds private school tuition through tax credits.

Lawmakers passed the changes Monday. The provisions were just one portion of a much larger bill that primarily establishes a new system for funding Kansas public schools.

During floor debates and in caucus meetings, some moderate Republicans and Democrats opposed folding in the tax credits. Conservatives reaffirmed their stance that the credits help children from low-income families access school options already available to their peers from higher-income backgrounds.

“I certainly know a lot of people that do not have that same choice, that do not have that same opportunity that some of us can provide,” Wichita Republican Rep. Brenda Landwehr said.

The program allows corporations to donate money for private school scholarships and in return deduct 70 percent of the value of those gifts from certain types of tax liability. Restrictions in the program target the scholarship money for low-income children within the attendance zones of certain public schools with low scores on standardized tests.

Unless Brownback vetoes the measure, this year’s changes will mark the second time the Legislature has expanded the controversial program, which began in January 2015.

Since its inception, lawmakers have tweaked it to let Wichita Catholic schools — which fund their schools through parishioner tithing instead of tuition — participate. Northeast Kansas Catholic schools, which charge tuition, were already able to join.

This year’s potential changes would allow private individuals, instead of just businesses, to donate to the program and claim the 70 percent tax credit.

Rep. Ed Trimmer, a Winfield Democrat, decried the move in Monday’s House debate. He suggested the state can’t afford a dent in tax receipts, despite a $500,000 individual giving limit on the new provision. The total program is capped at a maximum of $10 million tax credits per year.

“LLCs now that would lose their tax-free status could claim a 70 percent tax break with the deduction,” he said. “So in other words, you’re losing revenue and it could very well get to the $10 million.”

He was referring to the potential that owners of more than 300,000 small businesses and farms in Kansas that have enjoyed tax exemptions in recent years could soon see an end to that and tap into the tax credit.

The Legislature has twice sent tax plans to Brownback this session repealing the LLC exemption, though the governor vetoed both.

Other potential changes to the tax credit program this year include requiring that participating private schools be accredited by 2020. Lack of accreditation requirements under current law have been a focal point for the initiative’s critics.

But participating private schools would not need to be accredited by the state of Kansas, as public schools and many private schools — including Catholic schools — currently are. Instead, they could seek credentials through any of a list of private organizations that the state already recognizes for other, narrower purposes.

The bill also unfreezes the list of public school attendance zones where students can qualify for the scholarships to switch to private schools. The current list is based on standardized testing data from the era of No Child Left Behind, a federal law that graded schools heavily on math and reading scores.

The bill would allow the state board to develop a different method for identifying 100 low-performing public schools where children from low-income families would be eligible to seek scholarships for private schools instead.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ. 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/kansas-school-funding-bill-expands-tax-credits-private-tuition-program#stream/0.