Lady Sabres win 64-57 at Schlagle

Sumner senior Elizabeth Vaughn (30) dribbled the ball looking for an opening in the Schlagle defense. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)

by Brian Turrel

The Sumner Lady Sabres took possession of the 2018 Kansas City – Atchison League championship with a 64-57 win at Schlagle High School on Friday evening.

Sumner held an early lead, tallying the first 9 points and up 14-8 after the first quarter. The Lady Sabres got defensive stops by denying entry passes to the Schlagle offense, and they picked up open shots in transition.

In the second quarter, Schlagle sophomore Ishante Suttington fired up the offense by repeatedly getting to the rim with her dribble. In transition off missed Sumner shots, Suttington was difficult to stop at full speed. Sumner hit only 1 of 10 second-quarter free throws to let Schlagle close within 1 point by halftime.

Schlagle continued to rely on dribble penetration in the second half, finding little success in outside shooting or entry passes inside. Sumner got the outside shots in the third quarter, picking up two three-pointers and three straight free throws by Olivia Garvin. Sumner ended the third quarter up 51-38.

Sumner spent much of the fourth quarter at the line as Schlagle fouled to extend the game. The tactic helped to narrow the gap as Sumner continued to struggle at the line. Schlagle’s Kenaja Green hit three baskets in the quarter, but the Lady Stallions were still down by 7 when the final buzzer sounded.

Sumner’s Mya Allen led her team in scoring with 23 points and a strong inside presence. Garvin added 12 points and Elizabeth Vaughn 10. Sumner left points at the free throw line, hitting 16 of 40 for the game. For Schlagle, Suttington led the way with 30 points, and Camille Evans scored 13.

Sumner ends the conference season undefeated at 10-0 to win the conference crown. The Lady Sabres’ overall season record is 12-5. Schlagle ends the season 8-2 in conference, both losses to the Lady Sabres. Both teams will participate in KSHSAA post-season play next weekend, and final brackets and schedules will be announced soon.

The 2018 Lady Sabres posed together after their win. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner sophomore Ayreona Carter put up a shot near the basket. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Schlagle senior Jazmine Bilberry, center, was celebrated along with seniors from other winter sports after the game. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner junior Mya Allen (45) went for a layup over the defense of Schlagle sophomore Camille Evans (1). (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Schlagle sophomore Ishante Suttington (23) took a short-range jumper in the lane. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
A fan of Schlagle senior Tatyana Ramsey rooted for her during the game. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner senior Crystal Glinsey secured a defensive rebound. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Camille Evans went for a layup. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)
Sumner senior Elizabeth Vaughn (30) looked for a teammate on the right wing. (Photo copyright 2018 by Brian Turrel)

Saturday activities

Knitting class planned
A Shepherd’s Center knitting class is planned from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Feb. 24, at the West Wyandotte Library, Conference Room C, 1737 N. 82nd, Kansas City, Kansas.

Children’s dental information offered
National Children’s Dental Health Month will be celebrated with activities that encourage good oral hygiene at a program Saturday, Feb. 24, at the Main Kansas City, Kansas, Public Library, 625 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. The program will be from 1 to 2 p.m. in the craft room. Snacks that promote strong teeth will be served. Educational materials come from the National Education Association’s Read Across America and partners at the American Dental Association. The program is for ages 18 and under. Registration is not required.

Painting class offered
The Paint the Masters class will meet from 1 to 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24, at the West Wyandotte Library craft room, 1737 N. 82nd, Kansas City, Kansas. The class for children and teens on Saturday will discuss the one-line abstract design of Paul Klee.

American GI Forum to present history program
The American GI Forum will present an educational and historical program from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24, at the South Branch Library, Conference Room B, 3104 Strong Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. “East L.A. Marine: The Untold Story of Guy Gabaldon,” a film, will be presented. Gabaldon captured more than 1,500 prisoners during the battle of Saipan in the summer of 1944.

Boy Scout chili supper planned
Boy Scout Troop 5 and Cub Scout Pack 3005 will hold a chili supper to raise money to help Scouts attend summer camp. The chili supper will be from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24, at Trinity Community Church, 51st and Parallel Parkway. All-you-can-eat chili and vegetable beef soup will be available, for $10 for adults and $4 for ages 3 to 12. To-go service is available.

Friends of Yates to hold 38th annual Black Men and Women of Distinction Awards Ceremony Saturday
In honor of Black History Month, Friends of Yates, Inc., has invited the community to celebrate the accomplishments of African American community leaders. The 38th Annual Black Men and Women of Distinction Awards Ceremony will be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 25, at Friends of Yates 1418 Garfield Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. Several persons will be honored, including Dr. Carol Horton-Henley and Daryl Horton, with the Donald D. Sewing Service Award. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, visit https://wyandotteonline.com/friends-of-yates-inc-to-hold-its-38th-annual-black-men-and-women-of-distinction-award-ceremony-on-feb-25/.

Kansas school finance consultant fields questions, will deliver report later

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

Even before releasing their results, consultants hired to guide Kansas lawmakers to a school funding plan that meets legal muster endured a grilling on Friday.

How, wondered lawmakers, would the consultants reach their conclusions on how much money school districts need to help students succeed academically? Why do the consultants seem to be excluding the overhead, non-classroom expenses of running schools from their study? And what about criticism of work they’d done in other states?

The details are as important as the stakes are high. Lawmakers inch closer by the day to a deadline for fixing school funding after the Kansas Supreme Court ruled the state isn’t spending enough on education.

School districts want the legislature to pump hundreds of millions of dollars in new money into schools — drawn from a budget already strained in recent years by tumbling revenue.

But lawmakers are waiting to see what the consultants say. The study is due in mid-March.

On Friday, lawmakers got their first peek at the methods behind what will be the first significant analysis of school spending they have commissioned in more than a decade.

Past studies concluded Kansas spends too little on its schools. Those results have factored into several court rulings over the past decade and a half that found public education underfunded to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a year.

So the Republican-controlled legislature hired consultants. Lori Taylor is an economist at Texas A&M University’s Bush School of Government and Public Service who researches school finance. WestEd is a nonprofit education consultancy. Together, they inked a $245,000 contract with the Kansas Legislature late last month to produce the new study.

Taylor and WestEd faced a barrage of questions Friday from lawmakers about the nitty gritty of their work. How, for instance, would they calculate a school district’s per pupil spending and factor in the costs of early childhood education?

Republican Rep. Melissa Rooker, a key player in trying to find a legislative solution to school finance, wondered why some out-of-classroom costs would be excluded from calculations of what schools spend to get academic results.

“We have districts that are having to cannibalize their general operating funds in order to cover the cost of transporting students,” she said.

Taylor said the study will take such situations into account.

The analysis will look at what different school districts spend and what academic outcomes — such as high-school graduation and college continuation rates — they get for that money.

Lawmakers will be under pressure to absorb the reports results and turn around a new school finance law quickly. The report is due March 15, leaving just a month and a half to craft a bill, debate and pass it, get the governor to sign it, and have lawyers at Attorney General Derek Schmidt’s office prepare legal briefs defending it.

Lawyers for the state wanted lawmakers to pass a bill by early March because they were concerned there would not be enough time otherwise to finish the legal briefs defending the legislation before the Kansas Supreme Court’s April 30 deadline.

Taylor started Friday by defending her research chops after a memo made the rounds in the Legislature criticizing her work.

As reported in the Topeka Capital-Journal, a cost analysis Taylor did more than a decade ago amid a Texas school finance fight came under fire from a judge ruling on a school finance lawsuit there. Taylor’s analysis supported the idea that Texas was spending more than needed on education.

“I strongly disagree with the judge’s conclusion that our numbers were implausible,” she said. “If anything we overestimated the costs.”

The Kansas Supreme Court has said it wants to see in-depth reasoning behind the Legislature’s decisions. Last spring lawmakers and the state tried to show their work with a four-page statistical analysis that the court deemed to be cursory and methodologically questionable.
That pushed lawmakers to commission a more in-depth study this year.

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 the original post.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/kansas-school-finance-consultant-fields-questions-will-deliver-report-later.