Halloween events planned throughout community

Halloween events are taking place throughout Kansas City, Kansas, and the Bonner Springs area this week and next week.

Following is a list of some of the Halloween events here that we have heard of, listed by date:

• The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Library is planning Halloween parties at the different branches. The Main Kansas City, Kansas, Public Library at 625 Minnesota Ave., has a party at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 25; the South branch at 3104 Strong Ave. at 5 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26; the West Wyandotte Library at 1737 N. 82nd has a Halloween event at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26; and the Turner Community Library at 831 S. 55th has a Halloween event at 6 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28. For more information, visit www.kckpl.org and click on “Events.”

• The 5th annual Boo Bash is planned Saturday, Oct. 28, at the Bonner Springs City Library, 201 N. Nettleton Ave., Bonner Springs. The event, for all ages, is from noon to 2 p.m. A disc jockey will play “terrifying” tunes, scary stories will be told by the fireplace, pumpkin decorating, games and candy, are part of the events. Those attending may wear costumes. Signup is not needed.

• A Halloween party for area children will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28, at Eisenhower Recreation Center, 2901 N. 72nd. The event is sponsored by the Unified Government Parks and Recreation Department, Leavenworth Road Association and Multiply Church. Activities, games, treats and trick-or-treating at tables will take place. There will be treats and hot dogs. For more information, call the Leavenworth Road Association office, 913-788-3988 or email [email protected].

• Grinter Chapel United Methodist Church, 7819 Swartz Road, Kansas City, Kansas will hold its annual Trunk or Treat event from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 29.

• A Halloween trick-or-treat event is planned from 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 31, at the Alcott Arts Center, 180 S. 18th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Volunteers will decorate the lawn of the center, and children may trick-or-treat. There will be face painting and a cartoonist. It is a free event.

For more information about the events, contact the sponsoring organizations. To send in your event in Wyandotte County, email [email protected]. Be sure to include your name and contact information.

Sporting KC travels to Houston Thursday for Knockout Round of playoffs

Bitter rivals will lock horns for the third time in two weeks when No. 5-seed Sporting Kansas City (12-9-13, 49 points) visits the No. 4-seed Houston Dynamo in the Western Conference Knockout Round of the Audi 2017 MLS Cup Playoffs on Thursday.

Live coverage of the single-elimination showdown at BBVA Compass Stadium begins at 8:30 p.m. on FOX Sports Kansas City, FOX Sports Midwest, FOX Sports GO and UniMas, while local radio broadcasts will air on Sports Radio 810 WHB (English) and La Grande 1340 AM (Spanish).

Sporting KC and Houston have already dueled twice this month, settling for a scoreless draw on Oct. 15 at Children’s Mercy Park four days after the Dynamo earned a 2-1 comeback victory at BBVA Compass Stadium.

The first meeting of 2017 also unfolded in Houston, as Sporting KC used goals from Ike Opara and Gerso to prevail 2-0 in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Round of 16 before eventually lifting the tournament title on Sept. 20.

Thursday marks the fifth year these rivals have met in the MLS Cup Playoffs, with Houston holding a 3-2-1 advantage in the overall postseason series.

The Dynamo triumphed in single-elimination conference championships in 2007 and 2011, then won 2-1 on aggregate in the 2012 Eastern Conference Semifinals.

Manager Peter Vermes’ men exacted revenge in the 2013 Eastern Conference Finals, claiming a 2-1 aggregate victory a fortnight prior to lifting the 2013 MLS Cup on home soil.

Both teams are seeking their first postseason win in four years, albeit under different circumstances.

Sporting KC has suffered three straight one-and-done road losses in the Knockout Round and will hope its seventh consecutive playoff appearance exorcises the demons of recent heartbreaks against the New York Red Bulls (2014), Portland Timbers (2015) and Seattle Sounders FC (2016).

The Dynamo, meanwhile, are poised for their first playoff match since falling 2-1 in the decisive second leg of the Eastern Conference Championship at Children’s Mercy Park on Nov. 23, 2013.

While form can prove fickle in an unpredictable, parity-stricken competition such as the MLS Cup Playoffs, Houston enters Thursday on an undeniable uptick. Head coach Wilmer Cabrera’s side is unbeaten in six matches – the longest active streak among the six Western Conference playoff contenders – including a 3-0 hammering of the Chicago Fire in Sunday’s regular-season finale.

On the opposite sideline, Sporting KC has gone 1-3-2 since hoisting the U.S. Open Cup title and took a 2-1 loss at Real Salt Lake in Sunday’s curtain-closer.

The winner of Thursday’s matchup – which will go to 30 minutes of extra time if tied after regulation and penalty kicks if still deadlocked-will advance to face the Portland Timbers or Seattle Sounders FC in the two-legged Western Conference Semifinals.

The other Western Conference Knockout Round fixture pits No. 3 Vancouver Whitecaps FC against No. 6 San Jose Earthquakes on Wednesday. The top-seeded Timbers will face the lowest-seeded Western Conference team that advances, while No. 2 Seattle will be matched against the highest-seeded Western Conference team that advances.

Anchored by center backs Matt Besler and Ike Opara, Sporting KC has pieced together one of the best defensive regular seasons in league history.

The club conceded just 29 goals through 34 matches, posting a 0.85 goals against average that ranks fifth-lowest on the all-time MLS charts. Right back Graham Zusi has contributed valuably along the backline while also serving as an attacking weapon: his eight MLS assists lead the team and his 59 chances created were the most ever by an MLS defender in a single regular season.

A balanced Sporting KC attack saw Gerso earn Sporting KC Golden Boot honors with 10 goals in all competitions, with Diego Rubio adding seven and Latif Blessing and Daniel Salloi tallying six each. Vermes’ side will hope to bring a clinical scoring touch to Houston, as Sporting KC’s 10 road goals were the second-fewest in MLS this year.

No Western Conference team logged a better home record this season than Houston’s 12-1-4 mark at BBVA Compass Stadium.

The proverbial fortress has seen Cabrera’s men outscore opponents 43-17, thanks in large part to the potent attacking corps. Houston was the only club in 2017 to have three players score 10 or more league goals, as Erick “Cubo” Torres led the way with 14 goals followed by 10 each from Alberth Elis and Mauro Manotas.

In-form goalkeeper Tyler Deric and MLS clearances leader Adolfo Machado lead a defense that has posted two straight shutouts heading into the playoffs.

MLS Goalkeeper of the Year contender Tim Melia remains sidelined with a hamstring injury, opening the door for Sporting KC’s Andrew Dykstra to make his fourth straight start. On the opposite sideline, veteran Dynamo defender A.J. DeLaGarza will miss out after sustaining a torn ACL in Sunday’s win over Chicago.

– Story from Sporting KC

Officials in Douglas County seek changes in Kansas’ review of saltwater injection wells

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

The governments of Douglas County and Lawrence are calling for changes to Kansas regulations amid an energy company’s proposal to pump wastewater into wells in rural Eudora.

Among their concerns, the local officials argue that the public deserves a 60-day protest period — twice as long as the current allowance — when companies seek to operate such wells in or near their communities.

Douglas County Commissioner Nancy Thellman said the goal is “good public process.”
In its current format, she said, “the process itself is really weighted against the ability of the citizens to be heard.”

The county and city say a longer public comment period would better suit the schedules of city and county commissioners, so that they can study any potential effects and discuss them during their public meetings.

Local governments don’t have authority to block applications by oil and gas companies to build and operate fluid injection wells within their boundaries — that power rests with the Kansas Corporation Commission. But, like members of the public, they can view application materials and file letters of protest.

Douglas County Administrator Craig Weinaug said the county wants more time and information to determine whether a proposal by Florida-based Midstates Energy Operating LLC to operate two wells poses any risks for water contamination or earthquakes.

“We think that as government officials we have an obligation to make sure when something like this is done, it’s done in a way that it protects the public,” Weinaug said. “So we are asking, ‘What has the Corporation Commission done to make those determinations?’ And once we get an answer on what they have done, we’d like a chance to question it, add additional information, so we can decide whether they’ve done a good job in protecting our interests.”

Public concern

In the latest example of growing public interest in saltwater injection, Lawrence and Douglas County officials sent a joint letter last week to the KCC.

Saltwater injection consists of pouring — with or without pressurization — brine down a well either to dispose of it or to assist in extracting oil and gas. The saltwater is wastewater that is itself churned up in the course of oil or gas production and can contain chemicals.

A spike in earthquakes in Oklahoma and south-central Kansas in recent years has fueled public concerns about saltwater injection because geophysicists have pinned a rise in seismic activity on saltwater disposal wells.

In some parts of that region, operators can inject upwards of 15,000 barrels of brine into each well per day. Since 2009, thousands of temblors with a magnitude of 2.7 or higher — meaning quakes strong enough to be felt by people — have struck the region.

The permits sought by Midstates Energy in Douglas County are for extraction rather than disposal wells, according to documents filed with the KCC. The company is seeking to inject 100 barrels of brine per day into the two wells to assist in oil or gas production.

Bruce Presgrave, a USGS supervisory geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, said it’s impossible to know whether a proposed saltwater injection site will cause earthquakes. In some places, higher-volume wells don’t cause quakes, while lower-volume wells in other locations do.

“There’s no magic formula that works everywhere,” Presgrave said. “That’s part of the problem.”

However, higher volumes correlate with higher risk of seismicity. The USGS also says saltwater wells used for disposal purposes are more likely to cause earthquakes than their extraction-related counterparts.

Local geological characteristics, such as proximity to fault lines, also play a role. Overall, most saltwater injection wells are not linked to earthquakes.

Presgrave said there is “a growing body of evidence” that state regulators and oil companies can reduce impact by monitoring wells and adjusting or cutting off injection as needed — though the extent to which states and companies do this can vary.

“With some care, this can be worked with, and the hazard can be mitigated,” he said, “and still achieve the economic issue of being able to get the oil out and do something with the fluid.”

Flint Hills well approved

In recent months, residents of the Flint Hills fought plans for a saltwater disposal well near the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve.

They failed to block a bid from Quail Oil and Gas for a permit, but their effort grew into a broader campaign to engage the public in monitoring and protesting any new applications that companies file for saltwater injection in their region.

The protestors also are lobbying legislators for changes to state law, arguing that the state’s current regulatory framework doesn’t require the KCC to factor in seismicity risks when reviewing well applications.

In its September decision allowing the Flint Hills well to proceed, the KCC concluded protestors hadn’t proven any “immediate danger” to public health, safety or welfare.

But the protestors argue Kansas should take a more proactive stance. They fear faulty wells or unscrupulous dumping could contaminate local freshwater and argue that Kansas failed to rein in saltwater disposal in south-central parts of the state until earthquakes had become a frequent occurrence. In recent years, the KCC has capped daily injection volumes in parts of that region.

Midstates Energy notice

On Oct. 9, Midstates Energy published notices in the Lawrence Journal-World to meet legal requirements for informing the public of its plans. Its applications are still pending with the KCC.

The notices said residents had 15 days to file any protests against the company’s two wells, setting an Oct. 24 deadline.

On Friday a KCC spokeswoman said the company’s notice was incorrect, because the legal public comment period should be 30 days. The agency is contacting Midstates to let the company know it will need to redo the public notification process.

State regulations require companies planning injection activities to publish a notice in the county’s designated newspaper, in addition to notifying the local landowner and any well operators or owners of mineral rights within half a mile.

Midstates didn’t return a call seeking comment. The Florida company registered in Kansas in September, according to filings with the Kansas Secretary of State’s Office.

In addition to Midstates’ pending applications for Douglas County wells, records on the Kansas Geological Survey website indicate the company received permits this month to drill three injection wells in Franklin County, south of Douglas County.

Thellman said Douglas County’s decision to contact the KCC about the two wells there came amid calls and emails from constituents worried about the environmental risks.

“Certainly the word has spread — word of mouth, social media, environmental organizations,” she said. “I continue to get lots of emails and phone calls. It’s gotten quite a bit of attention.”

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio 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/officials-douglas-county-seek-changes-kansas-review-saltwater-injection-wells.