Fairfax group to meet June 8

The Fairfax Industrial Association will meet for lunch at 11:15 a.m. Thursday, June 8, at CertainTeed, 3000 Chrysler Road, Kansas City, Kansas.

The guest speaker will be Diane O’Bryne of Competitive Resources, on the topic, “Speaking the 4 Languages of Business.”

The cost of the lunch is $20 for members and $25 for nonmembers.

Reservations are required by 3 p.m. Tuesday, June 6, to [email protected].

Kansas lawmakers look to the past to find a way forward with school funding formula

by Sam Zeff, Kansas Public Radio, Kansas News Service

The Kansas Legislature isn’t close to coming up with a school funding formula.

However, lawmakers are working with a bill that looks a lot like the formula they scrapped in 2015 for block grants.

That bill, and the struggle this session to write it, is not just back to the future, but back 25 years to the future. That’s when another school funding suit bogged down the session.

When the history of Kansas school finance lawsuits is written — whenever that may be — two names will loom large. And they’re not governors, attorneys general or legislative bigwigs.

The first name is Judge Terry Bullock.

Many Kansans have never heard of Bullock, who served 30 years on the Shawnee County District Court. But his rulings are, essentially, the law.

Bullock was a player in three school funding cases starting in 1991. “So I’ve had quite a lot of exposure to these kinds of pieces of litigation,” Bullock said.

The other name is Alan Rupe, a lawyer, who is still in the game.

Rupe has been suing Kansas for nearly 30 years over school funding and is right in the middle of the ongoing Gannon case that is currently tugging at negotiations in the statehouse. He said it reminds him of the 1991 suit, Mock v. Kansas, when Bullock called all the parties into a conference in the state Supreme Court chambers.

“I can remember that session because, I think, it was supposed to start at 10 o’clock and Governor (Joan) Finney and then Attorney General Bob Stephan remained in the hallway because neither wanted to enter the room before the other one did,” he said.

Finally, Rupe said, one of them came to their senses, and Bullock set the group, which included lawyers and legislative leaders, to work.

“I reminded them that everybody in the case — everybody, including me — was being paid by the state,” Bullock said. “It seemed to me if we could get this case resolved in a reasonable manner that it would be a wise thing for the public and a good thing for the schoolchildren.”

In a few hours, the group agreed to form a task force to come up with a new school funding plan. That led to lawmakers passing a school funding formula in 1992 that changed the way Kansas funds public schools.

That ended the Mock case, but it didn’t end the lawsuits.

In 1999, the state was sued in a case called Montoy v. Kansas. The plaintiffs argued the state wasn’t spending nearly enough money to fund education adequately and equitably.

The Montoy case resulted in the lawmakers agreeing to put in an additional $755 million for public schools between 2005 and 2009.

But as the economy soured, the Legislature reneged on the deal and actually cut funding in 2009.

Rupe said these past few legislative sessions are like going back in time.

“It feels like Montoy when the … Kansas Legislature adopted a formula (in 2005) that did not pass Supreme Court muster and we went into a special session, went on the cusp of a constitutional meltdown,” Rupe said.

Constitutional meltdown. Special session. Sound familiar?

This year’s House bill would provide extra money for students who are poor, English language learners or live a long way from school, among other things. A Senate plan would do the same thing.

Rupe said it’s basically the same formula hammered out after the Mock case 25 years ago.

Bullock said it’s hard to watch history repeat itself.

“So it’s frustrating for me, of course, but more importantly, I think, for the families and the children who watch some districts have all the funds needed,” Bullock said. “Some of the districts in my cases had so little that they couldn’t buy classroom textbooks. They didn’t have pencils and paper. And yet other schools, for example, had a full-size Olympic swimming pool for the recreation time for the children.”

Rupe said he also is frustrated. Gone is the attitude of everyone — legislators to lawyers to state leaders — rolling up their sleeves to negotiate school funding. “I don’t think you could get that group into one room,” he said.

“I don’t think that there is a room that would hold those folks in a fashion where people could work through the issues.”

The days of working together, Rupe said, seem to be over.

Sam Zeff covers education for KCUR and the Kansas News Service and is co-host of the political podcast Statehouse Blend Kansas. Follow him on Twitter @SamZeff. 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-lawmakers-look-past-find-way-forward-school-funding-formula.

Sporting KC to play Minnesota United on Saturday in KCK

After playing four of the previous five matches away from home, Sporting Kansas City will return to Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kansas, on Saturday to play host to Minnesota United FC at 4 p.m. in a nationally televised showdown on ESPN and ESPN Deportes.

The Western Conference clash will also air live on Sports Radio 810 WHB (English) and La Grande 1340 AM (Spanish), while the Sporting KC Uphoria mobile app will provide live updates.

With heavier traffic anticipated in the Village West area due to Rockfest at the Kansas Speedway, ticket holders are encouraged to arrive early to Children’s Mercy Park on Saturday. The first 10,000 fans through the stadium gates will receive free sunglasses courtesy of match sponsor Mark One Electric.

Sporting Kansas City slipped to second place in the Western Conference standings after stumbling to a 1-0 defeat at the Colorado Rapids last Saturday. Manager Peter Vermes’ men took their second straight loss and their third in five games despite outshooting the Rapids 25-6 and enjoying a 73-percent share of possession.

Last weekend’s frustrating setback allowed the Houston Dynamo to vault atop the West – one point ahead of Sporting KC – with a rampant 5-1 victory over Real Salt Lake on Wednesday. Sporting Kansas City will have reason for optimism, however, as they kick off the month of June in their home fortress.

Sporting Kansas City hasn’t lost an MLS match at Children’s Mercy Park in more than a year. The club’s 15-game home unbeaten run is an all-time club record and the longest active streak in MLS, consisting of 12 wins, three draws and nine shutouts. Vermes’ side was particularly dominant at home in April and May, outscoring opponents 11-1 en route to four victories.

Currently occupying ninth place in the Western Conference, expansion side Minnesota United FC has shown marked improvement since early April. The Loons endured an atrocious start to 2017, leaking 18 goals through their first four matches while taking just a point during the month of March.

Head coach Adrian Heath’s men have gone 4-4-1 since then, outscoring teams 13-12 during a stretch that included a 2-0 win over Sporting Kansas City on May 7 at TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.

Rookie Abu Danladi and leading scorer Christian Ramirez bagged first-half goals when the sides met for their inaugural regular season meeting four weeks ago.

The 26-year-old Ramirez has relished his debut MLS campaign, ranking third on the league charts with eight goals behind only Chicago’s Nemanja Nikolic (11) and Houston’s Erick “Cubo” Torres (10). Ramirez has scored in three of his last four appearances, including the game-winner in Minnesota’s 1-0 home triumph against Orlando City SC last Saturday.

Minnesota’s upswing will be put to the ultimate test on Saturday, as the Loons seek their first-ever MLS away win against a Sporting Kansas City side that hasn’t lost a league game at home since May 27, 2016.

The Loons are 0-4-2 on their travels with 19 goals allowed, but have managed to score twice an impressive four away fixtures.

Both teams will have several players unavailable Saturday due to suspension, injury or international duty. Graham Zusi has joined the U.S. Men’s National Team for World Cup qualifying and is set to miss his first match of the season, while Erik Palmer-Brown continues to captain the U.S. U-20s at the FIFA U-20 World Cup in Korea Republic.

Roger Espinoza will serve a one-game red card suspension on Saturday before joining the Honduras Men’s National Team next week. Sporting KC defender Kevin Ellis (thigh) and striker Diego Rubio (ACL) are out injured, and forward Dom Dwyer remains day-to-day with knee inflammation.

The Loons, meanwhile, will be without influential holding midfielder Sam Cronin after he was suspended one game by the MLS Disciplinary Committee on Tuesday for a serious foul play in Minnesota’s win over Orlando last weekend.

Dynamic midfielder Johan Venegas (two goals, three assists) has joined Costa Rica for World Cup qualifying, while Danladi (groin), Thomas de Villardi (Achilles) and Bernardo Anor (lower leg) will miss through injury.

– Story from Sporting KC