Faith news

To send in items for the Faith News, email information to [email protected]. Please include your name and contact information. In the event of inclement weather, contact the church or organization to see if the event is still being held.

All Saints Catholic Church, 8th and Vermont, Kansas City, Kansas, will celebrate Polski Day on Saturday, May 5. A Polka Mass featuring the Good Shepherd Choir will be held at 4 p.m. May 5 at All Saints Church. The event also includes a Polski Day parade at 11 a.m. May 5 from 12th and Central, east to 8th Street, then to Vermont, ending at the church. Polish music, food and entertainment are scheduled on the church grounds. The event celebrates Polish heritage and raises funds for the church. For more information, see www.polskiday.com.

Christ the King Catholic Church plans a Community Blood Center blood drive from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, May 14, in the church basement, 3024 N. 53rd, Kansas City, Kansas. To schedule a donation, visit www.esavealifenow.org or call 816-753-4040.

Parkway Baptist Church, 12320 Parallel Parkway, Kansas City, Kansas, plans a Community Blood Center blood drive from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. June 25 in the church classrooms. To schedule a donation, visit www.esavealifenow.org or call 816-753-4040.

Volunteers are needed for Samaritan’s Purse’s project, Operation Christmas Child. In this program, led by the Rev. Franklin Graham, volunteers fill shoeboxes with toys, school supplies and hygiene items. The shoeboxes are given to needy children. Operation Christmas Child has delivered more than 157 million gift-filled shoeboxes to children in more than 160 countries since 1993. This year, the local Kansas City, Kansas West Area Team hopes to collect 15,782 shoebox gifts to contribute to the 2018 global goal of reaching more than 11 million children in need. Shannon Zaring leads the local Kansas City, Kansas, West Area Team for Operation Christmas Child. To learn more about joining the Kansas City, Kansas West Area Team Area Team or to apply for leadership opportunities, visit samaritanspurse.org/volunteerwithOCC.

Members of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 1300 N. 18th St., Kansas City, Kan., will observe the sixth Sunday in the Easter season at 10 a.m. May 6.

Wyandotte United Methodist Church, 7901 Oakland Ave., Kansas City, Kansas, plans a Community Blood Center blood drive from 2:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. June 19 in the church Fellowship Hall. To schedule a donation, visit www.esavealifenow.org or call 816-753-4040.

Send Faith News items to [email protected]. Please include your contact information.

Kansas House OKs $80 million more on schools it meant to approve earlier

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

Kansas senators will return Monday to find a school finance fix waiting on their desks, hammered out in the House over the weekend.

The bill undoes an $80 million error inserted last-minute into this year’s school funding bill.

“The overwhelming majority of our body wanted to make sure those funds were allowed to be given to the districts,” House Speaker Ron Ryckman said after the measure passed 92 to 27. “It’s in the Senate’s hands now.”

Lawmakers passed the school funding bill earlier this month to meet a Kansas Supreme Court order that found current school spending insufficient and unfair to poorer school districts.

Lawmakers thought their bill would gradually add in more than $530 million to annual school spending over the next several years. Only when the dust of a dramatic weekend of political wrangling had settled did they discover that the true effect was less than that.

Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer signed the bill but urged lawmakers to fix it, and many legislators were on board with that message. They face a May 7 deadline to show the court their work — and to possibly put an end to seven years of litigation.

Democrats repeated their attempt from earlier this month to go beyond $530 million, which they say isn’t enough. (The plaintiffs in the court case agree.)

Rep. Jerry Stogsdill proposed adding around $300 million, an amendment that the body shot down. If it seems like a lot, Stogsdill said afterward, it’s only because the state has neglected school finance for seven years.

“Somebody has to be the adults in the room and make up for that neglect,” he said. “We wouldn’t be in this position if those Republican conservative legislators and the Republican conservative governor had done their constitutional duty and supported our public schools.”

Some conservative Republicans voted against the $80 million fix, and 20 signed a statement calling the legislation passed Saturday a reversal of important policy.

“This is not a good way to legislate,” they said.

The $80 million error arose when lawmakers voted earlier this month to count as state aid certain money that schools raise by taxing local property owners.

The House’s fix walks that back, thereby upsetting some conservatives. It still asserts the money should be considered state funding and the Supreme Court should count it that way. But it doesn’t fold the amount into the state’s basic per-pupil aid.

The latter was a change in math from previous practice that led to the $80 million funding decrease by inadvertently displacing state dollars that lawmakers intended schools to receive.

Getting the Senate to sign off on the plan won’t necessarily be easy. Some conservative Republicans don’t like the change. The original school finance bill passed with the bare minimum number of votes amid a filibuster by conservative Republicans there.

Sen. Ty Masterson decried the bill in a statement Saturday, accusing the House of “shell game tactics” and of using a procedural move that will prevent senators from proposing amendments to its work.

That’s “the exact same tactic used to ram the flawed bill through the process earlier this month,” Masteron said.

Mark Tallman, a lobbyist for the Kansas Association of School Boards, said the House’s proposal does seem to resolve the $80 million error, but it remains unclear what the Kansas Supreme Court will make of the $530 million infusion.

“It’s still a very open question as to whether this will be enough,” he said. “It’s certainly a substantial improvement over last year.”

Last year the Legislature approved a two-year phase-in of about $300 million for schools.

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-house-oks-80-million-more-schools-it-meant-ok-earlier-dares-senate-not.

K-State wins Sunflower Showdown in women’s rowing at Wyandotte County Lake

There were some screams of joy when K-State was awarded the Sunflower Showdown trophy for women’s rowing today at Wyandotte County Lake, Kansas City, Kansas. The University of Kansas has won the trophy for the past few years. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

A long drought was reversed today as K-State won the Sunflower Showdown trophy for women’s rowing at Wyandotte County Lake.

K-State won four events and the University of Kansas won one event today in the competition between rivals. Bright sunny skies with temperatures in the 60s made for comfortable conditions.

Cheers went up from the K-State section when K-State won. Hundreds of people, including many parents and friends, attended the rowing contest.

One K-State supporter, David Lund of Wichita, said he was there to see his daughter compete. He has also followed the rowing team to Sacramento and San Diego, California, he said. He’s planning a tailgate party when they travel to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, for the Big 12 championship May 12-13, he said.

“It’s the third year for my daughter, and it’s the first time they won (the Sunflower Showdown) since we’ve been involved,” Lund said.

Gerard Kleinsmith, another K-State supporter, came from St. Marys, Kansas, to see this competition. He said most of the people there were parents and families of team members.

Race results:
1st Eight: KU, 6:21.7; K-State, 6:25.35.
2nd Eight: K-State, 6:28.2; KU, 6:40.88.
Varsity Four: K-State, 7:06.9; KU, 7:14.72.
Second Four: K-State, 7:33.2; KU, 7:41.47.
Third Varsity Eighth: K-State, 6:42.3; KU, 6:49.57; KU, 7:30.57.

Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
The Leavenworth Road Association staffed a concessions booth Saturday at the Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Rowing action from Saturday’s Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Results board at the Sunflower Showdown Saturday at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo)
Fans got together for a photo after the Sunflower Showdown. (Staff photo)
The K-State rowing team jogged before the start of the Sunflower Showdown at Wyandotte County Lake. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)