Superintendent finalist meets public

Dr. Jayson Strickland, one of two finalists for Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools superintendent, met with the public on Wednesday evening at the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools Central Office, 2010 N. 59th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Dr. Strickland currently is deputy superintendent for KCKPS. The other candidate is Dr. Charles Foust, chief school performance officer for Union County Public Schools, Monroe, North Carolina. (Staff photo)

by Mary Rupert

One of two finalists for Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools superintendent, Dr. Jayson Strickland, talked about his background and his positions on issues on Wednesday evening at a meet-and-greet event with the public.

Another meet-and-greet is scheduled tonight at the Central Office, 2010 N. 59th St., Kansas City, Kansas. It is open to the public. Dr. Charles Foust, the other finalist, from Union County Public Schools in Monroe, North Carolina, will meet the public from 5 to 6 p.m. tonight.

“I am a product of this community,” Dr. Strickland told the audience Wednesday at the meet-and-greet event. He said he cares about the community, the school district and the young people.

Dr. Strickland is a former principal, as well as former assistant superintendent of teaching and learning for the district from 2010 to 2012, former assistant superintendent of secondary schools for the district from 2012 to 2017, and deputy superintendent since the summer of 2017.

Dr. Strickland talked about working at his father’s day care business when he was a child, and also talked about working at different schools in the district. He said he had good relationships in the community, and that would make it easier to partner with the community.

He said he had unique qualifications, including experience in working with the district’s Diploma+ program. He said he has seen how the program has grown to this point, and it is a critical point for the program. He also said he had contacts necessary to continue helping the program, giving young people access to jobs in the community.

He also said he was in favor of the district doing better academically, improving test scores and academics.

Dr. Strickland said he believes Diploma+ is the right direction for the district.

“It equips our students with more than that high school diploma,” he said. The students are more marketable with Diploma+, universities will recruit students, and Diploma+ can evolve into a program involving small businesses in the city, he added.

Dr. Strickland also said he believes he could work well with the school board and staff. He also supported the district’s efforts to seek more funds from the state through the school finance litigation. Several other topics were also discussed.

A large crowd attended a meet-and-greet session on Wednesday evening at the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools’ Central Office, 2010 N. 59th St. (Staff photo)

T-Bones sweep Goldeyes

Zach Walters stayed hot, carrying the Kansas City T-Bones to their third straight win, taking out the Winnipeg Goldeyes Wednesday night, 6-3, at Shaw Park in Winnipeg.

Behind a solid outing by starting pitcher Lucas Irvine (3-0), Walters powered the T-Bones offense, going 2-4 with three RBIs and two runs scored, including a key home run to lead Kansas City to the club’s first ever sweep of the Goldeyes at home. It was also only the second time that Kansas City has swept Winnipeg.

In the top of the second, Zach Walters continued his impressive month of June by hitting a hard-hit single to left field.

Dexter Kjerstad followed with a single of his own, advancing Walters to third. Tucker Pennell put Kansas City on the board with an RBI 5-3 put out that scored Walters. The T-Bones offense looked aggressive in the second inning, taking an early 1-0 lead in Winnipeg.

Reggie Abercrombie erased the T-Bones early lead, leading off the bottom of the second with a solo homerun to tie the game.

An impressive offense display in the third gave the T-Bones a commanding three-run lead. Keith Curcio lead of the inning with single to right field. Nick Torres advanced Curcio to third, hitting a crucial two-out single and putting Walters at the plate. Walters took charge, hitting a three-run homerun, putting the T-Bones up 4-1.

The Goldeyes rallied in the sixth inning, cutting the Kansas City lead to one. Dave Sappelt hit an RBI double, scoring Matt McCann from second and Tucker Nathans from first, cutting the lead to 4-3. Lucas Irvine worked out of tough jam with the tying run at third and one out to keep the T-Bones in front.

Kansas City quickly responded with two RBI doubles in the seventh from Dylan Tice and Nick Torres to put Kansas City on top 6-3, ending Winnipeg’s late rally.

Shutout seventh, eighth and ninth innings by relievers Hunter Adkins, Francisco Gracesqui and Carlos Diaz secured the victory for Kansas City. Diaz picks up his team-leading third save of the season for Kansas City, pitching a scoreless ninth inning.

Irvine was the winning pitcher, throwing sixth innings, allowing three earned runs on six hits. Kevin McGovern (2-3) was the losing pitcher for Winnipeg, allowing eight hits, six earned runs in five innings pitched.

The T-Bones improve to (18-13), quietly fighting their way back into in the South Division title run and a season-high five games above .500. The Goldeyes lost their third straight game to Kansas City, falling to (16-15) on the season.

Kansas City will enjoy an off-day Thursday and then head home to open a three-game series with the Cleburne Railroaders and the first of a six-game homestand at T-Bones Stadium Friday night at 7:05 p.m.

Individual tickets, season, group, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium or at www.tbonesbaseball.com . Call the box office at 913-328-5618. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

Residents turn out for funeral procession for deputies

A funeral procession for two slain deputies, Theresa King and Patrick Rohrer, was on State Avenue and I-35 today. Residents near 80th and State Avenue turned out in the rain to pay their respects to the slain deputies. (Staff photo)
A funeral procession for two slain deputies, Theresa King and Patrick Rohrer, was on State Avenue and I-35 today. Residents near 80th and State Avenue turned out to pay their respects to the slain deputies. (Staff photo)
A funeral procession for two slain deputies, Theresa King and Patrick Rohrer, was on State Avenue and I-35. Residents near 80th and State Avenue turned out in the rain to pay their respects to the slain deputies. Cars also pulled over. (Staff photo)
Firefighters and police officers paid their respects to two slain deputies along the funeral procession route today. These were near 80th and State Avenue. (Staff photo)
Firefighters and police officers paid their respects to two slain deputies along the funeral procession route today. These were near 80th and State Avenue. (Staff photo)
The funeral procession today for two slain deputies was led by motorcycle officers. (Staff photo)