Victim of fatal accident at 34th and State identified

The victim of a fatal accident on Jan. 7 in the 3400 block of State Avenue has been identified, according to police.

The victim was Tommie L. Baker, 44. He was a resident of Kansas City, Kansas, police stated.

The accident occurred around 4:08 p.m. Jan. 7. An initial investigation found that a black sport utility vehicle was occupied by two males traveling eastbound on State Avenue and turning northbound onto North 34th Street, police stated.

A tan pickup truck traveling westbound on State collided with the black SUV. The driver died at the scene and a passenger was taken to a hospital in critical condition, according to police. The passenger is still in critical condition, the police spokesman stated.

The accident is under investigation by the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Traffic Support Unit – Critical Collision Response Team.

Kansas faced with money problems, and questions about who’s in charge

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Lawmakers arrived in Topeka Monday with monumental money problems facing the state and an executive branch stuck in a confusing transition.

It’s the start of a roughly 90-day session in which they, once again, must juggle the state’s checkbook to meet multiple pressing needs. That includes an ultimatum from the Kansas Supreme Court to find more tax dollars for schools.

It’s a tough job made that much harder by unusual political circumstances.

A lame-duck governor made even less relevant by his desire to jump to a job in the Trump administration as soon as the U.S. Senate can muster the votes to confirm him. A lieutenant governor chomping at the bit to take over. And a herd of wannabe governors inside and outside the Statehouse sure to criticize every move.

Thinking his confirmation was imminent last fall, Gov. Sam Brownback started sharing budget preparation duties with Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer. That created confusion over who was calling the shots — the existing governor or the one in waiting. And that forced Brownback to reassert himself.

He, not Colyer, will give the annual State of the State address to a joint session of the legislature on Tuesday. And he, not Colyer, will lay out the administration’s plan for addressing the court ruling that once again declared the state’s funding of public schools unconstitutionally low.

“This is the governor’s response,” Brownback said in an interview last week. “I’m the governor.”

But how much influence the governor commands remains an open question. Multiple polls in the last couple of years consistently ranked him among the nation’s least popular governors.

That, coupled with the fact that he is widely seen as having one foot out the door, has eroded his influence, said University of Kansas political scientist Burdett Loomis.

“He’s been a non-factor,” Loomis said.

Brownback’s ebbing power was glaring at the end of the 2017 session, when lawmakers overpowered him to pass a bill that rolled back the income tax cuts he championed in 2012. The revolt was led by a group of Democrats and moderate Republicans elected in 2016 on a promise to fix the budget mess in Topeka.

A lack of leadership at the top makes the job of a part-time legislature harder, said House Minority Leader Jim Ward.

“It makes it much, much more difficult to get to a resolution,” said Ward, a Democratic candidate for governor.

Perhaps nothing looks harder to fix than school financing. The court demands could require another $600 million, even as the state searches for a way to pay back money borrowed from its employee pension fund.

Republican leaders have said their members have no appetite for another tax increase. But heading into an election year makes service cuts — to education, highways and the like — just as unsavory.

Tough choices, made tougher by the leadership questions that loom large as lawmakers begin their work.

Jim McLean is managing director of 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 him on Twitter @jmcleanks. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

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KCKCC women home Thursday with tough Jayhawk season looming

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Just three games separate Kansas City Kansas Community College from the start of what shapes up as the deepest and most difficult Region VI Division II women’s basketball race in history.

Three Jayhawk Conference teams are ranked among the Top 11 teams in the nation in Division II and it was four before losses to four Top 20 teams dropped the Lady Blue Devils out of the nation’s elite.

The fine-tuning for the Blue Devils begins Thursday when KCKCC is host of Ottawa University junior varsity at 6 p.m. (previously announced as a 7 p.m. start).

Road games at Saint Mary junior varsity next Tuesday and William Penn junior varsity on Thursday wrap up non-conference play. Jayhawk play will begin Wednesday, Jan. 24, at arch-rival Johnson County.

Unbeaten Highland (16-0) is ranked No. 7, Johnson County (12-4) No. 9 and Labette (12-1) No. 11 in the latest NJCAA Division II national rankings while the Blue Devils are just outside the Top 20 at No. 22. More impressive, the conference has had teams in the NJCAA championship game in each of the last four seasons. Highland finished second in 2014, JCCC won in 2015, KCKCC took the 2016 national title and JCCC finished runnerup this past spring.

Playing 17 games before the holiday break, the demanding schedule caught up with the freshman-dominated Blue Devils, who have lost three of their last four games. At 13-4, all four losses have been to nationally ranked teams – No. 11 Wabash Valley in Division I and No. 14 North Arkansas, No. 15 North Central Missouri and No. 17 Des Moines Area in Division II. On the plus side, the Blue Devils hold wins over both North Ark and North Central.

With only two sophomores, veteran guard Alix Wilson and Tampa transfer Ally Lollis, freshmen have provided 93 percent of the Blue Devils’ scoring and 94 percent of the rebounding this season.

“For a very young and inexperienced team to have 13 victories at this point is great,” KCKCC coach Joe McKinstry said. “We are still learning a lot but it’s always best to keep moving forward and learning while still getting W’s. However, I think our group knows that we could have a couple of more victories had we handled a couple of situations better. But that’s how this game goes.”

Three Blue Devils are averaging in double figures and four rank among the top five in offense in the division. At 5-9, scoring leader Kisi Young ranks fourth in conference scoring (15.5), first in field goal accuracy (60.5 percent) and third in rebounds (9.1); 6-0 Nija Collier leads the conference in rebounding (10.4) and is averaging a double-double with 11.5 points game; and 6-1 Lillie Moore is averaging 10.5 points and is fifth in field goal percentage (.540). Ashley Daniels, a 5-7 guard from Schlagle, is fourth in 3-point shooting percentage (.404).

The balance runs deep with six other Blue Devils averaging four points or more per game. Piper guard Miya Ford is fourth at 7.7 followed by oft-injured Caroline Hoppock (6.5), Daniels (6.1), Tee Martin (5.7), Camryn Swanson (5.4) and Alix Wilson (4.4). Caitlyn Stewart leads in assists with 4.2 followed by Young (2.6) and Martin (2.4).

“A tough road ahead,” McKinstry said. “Just three games before the 10-game conference-region season begins. As usual our conference is extremely talented and we will be in a battle night in and night out. But I’m excited to see how our team attacks what lies ahead. I think we have the capability to be in the hunt if we can build on what we’ve done to this point.”

After opening league play at JCCC Jan. 24, the Blue Devils are home for four of their next five conference games starting with Hesston on Saturday, Jan. 27.