Village West Rotary announces 2018-2019 scholarship awardees

The Village West Rotary Club has announced the 2018-2019 Scholarship Program awardees.

These scholarships are designed to help current full-time college or tech school students to stay in school and complete their education.

The club is giving four $1,000 scholarships to Wyandotte County high school graduates currently enrolled full-time in college or tech school.

This year’s awardees:

• DaTasha Carlock, currently attending Pittsburg State University and a graduate of Sumner Academy.
• Skylar Russell, currently attending Wichita State University and a graduate of Turner High School.
• Katherine Sullivan, currently attending Newman College and a graduate of Piper High School.
• Thian UK, currently attending Donnelly College and a graduate of Wyandotte High School.

Applicants submitted an application, their grade transcripts and an essay on why they needed this scholarship.

The applications were reviewed by six Rotary Club members and the choices made on the total scores. Money for the scholarships was raised through club fundraising events and a grant from the Rotary District grant program.

“The scholarship program is one of our club’s main community projects. Securing the funds to stay in college is a big job and we hope this scholarship helps this year’s four awardees stay in school and work towards their career dream,” stated Ben McAnany, 2018-2019 Village West Rotary Club president.

Village West Rotary meets at Famous Dave’s BBQ restaurant in The Legends. Their meeting dates, speakers and events can be found on their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Village-West-Rotary-141750512535417/.

Legislative update from Rep. Pam Curtis, D-32nd Dist.

Guest column

Rep. Pam Curtis

by State Rep. Pam Curtis

The 2019 legislative session commenced on Monday, Jan. 14, and is off to a fast pace.

The Legislature has several major issues to address this year, and we are ready to get to work on finding commonsense, bipartisan solutions. Kansas works better when we work together.

The first week of the legislative session brought many Kansans to the Capitol to share information, ideas and to celebrate the beginning of a new legislative session and a new administration.

OnTuesday the halls of the Statehouse filled with Kansans for the annual “People’s Agenda.” It was wonderful to see so many from Wyandotte County participating in this event as well as the many other events happening at the Capitol this past week.

It is a special honor to serve as your state representative. I value and appreciate your input on issues facing state government. Feel free to contact me with your comments and questions. My office address is Room 452-S, 300 SW 10th, Topeka, Kansas, 66612. You can reach me at 785-296-7430 or call the legislative hotline at 1-800-432-3924 to leave a message for me. You can also e-mail me at pam.curtis@house.ks.gov.

Inauguration of Gov. Laura Kelly


On Monday, Jan. 14, former State Sen. Laura Kelly was sworn in as the 48th governor of Kansas. Despite the freezing weather, a crowd gathered around the south steps of the Statehouse to witness the ceremony held beneath banners reading “Equality,” “Education” and “Opportunity.”

Gov. Kelly’s inauguration makes Kansas a historic state, the only state to have elected three female Democratic governors. Her swearing-in followed those of Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers, Attorney General Derek Schmidt, Secretary of State Scott Schwab, Insurance Commissioner Vicki Schmidt, and State Treasurer Jake LaTurner.

That same evening, the inaugural ball was attended by more than 2,300 people at the Kansas Expocenter.

First day of the 2019 session

On Monday afternoon, the Kansas Legislature kicked off the 2019 session at 2:00pm. Returning members and newly elected officials were sworn-in during the first day on the House floor. The Kansas House has 125 representatives. The House Democratic Caucus is made up of 41 representatives.

Kansas House Democrats are ready to get to work this session to help resolve issues facing Kansans. The state works better when we work together.

2019 state of the state address


The annual state of the state address was delivered by newly-inaugurated Gov. Laura Kelly on Wednesday, Jan. 16.

Gov. Kelly gave a strong speech stressing the need for bipartisanship in order to achieve prosperity for all Kansans. She vowed to present a balanced budget without raising taxes.

Throughout the speech, four key priorities were thematic: fully funding Kansas schools to end the cycle of litigation, supporting rural communities, expanding Medicaid, and fixing our broken foster care system.

We must bring our school funding formula to constitutional muster and provide a quality education for every Kansas child, no matter their zip code. We all need to ensure that we are positioning our children to thrive in a changing economy, which means modern classrooms and modern technologies.

Developing infrastructure, declining rural populations, and addressing the needs of agribusiness are among a few of the priorities outlined in Gov. Kelly’s state of the state speech, and will be priorities for the House Rural Revitalization Committee.


Expanding Medicaid is one of the top shared priorities across Kansas, as research has shown that 77 percent of Kansans favor expansion. Thirty percent of our state’s hospitals are considered financially vulnerable, especially in rural communities. Expanding Medicaid would mean that more than 150,000 Kansans currently without health insurance would have coverage.

Our foster care system is in crisis and requires immediate action. House Democrats are ready to continue working towards a better system alongside Gov. Kelly to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our state’s most vulnerable children.

2019 budget


On Thursday, Budget Director Larry Campbell (retained from the previous administration) presented the governor’s budget to a joint session of the House Appropriations and Senate Ways and Means Committees. The governor’s budget priorities are to achieve structural balance, rebuild the state’s savings, and reduce the state’s debt.

Highlights from the governor’s budget:
• Restoring school funding as recommended by the Kansas State Board of Education.
• Funding for 55 additional child welfare positions to help diffuse extremely high caseloads and protect our state’s most vulnerable children.
• Investing in our infrastructure and phasing out the practice of raiding “The Bank of KDOT.”
• Increased funding to help keep our communities safe. Adding $3 million in funding for Kansas corrections officers.
• In order to ensure state employee salaries, remain competitive and with inflation, the governor recommends a 2.5 percent base pay increase
• A re-amortization of KPERS to make state retirement contributions more realistic and sustainable over time.

Resources


My Legislative Facebook Page, https://www.facebook.com/PamCurtisKCK.

My Twitter Account, https://twitter.com/pcurtiskck

My Website, https://www.curtisforkck.com/

Kansas Legislature Website, http://kslegislature.org/

Five things to watch as new governor tries to fix Kansas child welfare

by Madeline Fox, Kansas News Service

Kansas’ new governor wants to fix the state’s foster care. Fast.

Laura Kelly isn’t the first governor to highlight a crisis in child welfare, or to inject cash into the Department for Children and Families.

Expectations run high for Kelly, who sat on a task force examining the child welfare system for more than a year. She’s made fixing foster care a high priority — it was one of just three topics she homed in on in her recent State of the State address.

But she’s hemmed in by some of the approaches she’s been handed, such as new grants to manage child welfare that she called “essentially no-bid contracts” and a lawsuit alleging Kansas rendered some of its foster children “effectively homeless.”

Here are five things to watch as Kelly works to make her mark in child welfare:

1) The high number of kids in the system

There were 7,300 kids in foster care in Kansas at the end of December. That’s an increase of more than 40 percent since 2012. The stress of so many kids in the system is straining mental health services, social worker caseloads and the state’s overall ability to adequately provide beds for the children in its custody.

Two main factors drive the increase: more kids in, and more time to get them out.

To help address the first, Kelly’s asked for money from the Legislature to fund more child abuse investigator positions and to draw down federal money for services that keep struggling families safely together.

Kelly wants money for about 26 new investigators.

Laura Howard, Kelly’s new head of the Department for Children and Families, said social workers field two or three times the recommended number of cases in some parts of the state. That makes it harder for investigators to catch problems or to take the time to connect families to community resources that could allow kids to stay in their home.

“Turnover is always an issue,” Howard said. “But it’s really been higher and more exacerbated in the last few years with those extensively high caseloads.”

Kelly also wants Kansas to put up more money for a federal matching program geared at keeping families out of the foster care system in the first place.

After DCF requested $4 million in state funds to go toward the Families First Prevention Services Act, child welfare advocates wrote an open letter asking for $30 million. Kelly isn’t going that far, but she has upped the Families First request to $7.4 million in this year’s budget and nearly $10 million next year.

Christie Appelhanz, who leads the organization that drafted the open letter, said that’s a start.

“We’re definitely headed in the right direction,” she said. “We’re not where we think we need to be just yet.”

Even if things improve on the front end, bringing down the number of overall kids in care will require getting kids out of the system and into permanent homes more quickly.

2) Whether DCF can recruit and retain enough social workers

Lawmakers are already skeptical DCF can find enough social workers to fill investigative jobs. Last year, DCF rolled back social work licensing requirements for some of its investigative positions. Officials said they had too many vacancies and not enough social workers to fill them.

Howard said she hasn’t looked yet at how the agency will fill 26 positions. But Becky Fast, head of the Kansas chapter of the National Association of Social Workers, said Kansas’ number of social work graduates and licensed social workers grows every year. It’s just a matter of convincing them to work for an agency experiencing a very public crisis.

“When I speak at colleges across the state, at least half the bachelor students raise their hands and want to work with children and families,” said Fast. “But they want to work in a system where they receive training, support and supervision.”

3) Who’s going to manage Kansas foster care moving forward

In November, then-DCF secretary Gina Meier-Hummel announced grants to five companies to manage foster care and family preservation.

The grants were awarded through a different process than the contract system that’s dictated Kansas child welfare since the state privatized foster care in the 1990s. State contracts go through the Department of Administration, but the new grants were scored and awarded directly through DCF.

When Kelly announced Howard as her pick to run DCF, Kelly also said she was putting those grants on hold.

Advocates have also raised concerns about one of the family preservation providers, Eckerd Connects It’s has drawn headlines over its foster care management in Florida that echo Kansas’ problems — kids sleeping in offices or moved night-to-night, kids skipping school, children harmed while in state custody.

With the current contracts set to run out at the end of June, Kelly and Howard don’t have much time to decide how to move forward with foster care. Howard said she doesn’t know yet what the agency will do about the grants, but she’s been carefully reviewing them.

4) What happens with the class-action lawsuit alleging Kansas violated its foster kids’ civil rights

In November, three organizations filed a class-action lawsuit contending Kansas violates foster children’s civil rights by moving them too often, adding to their trauma and restricting their access to necessary mental health treatment.

Some of the children described in the suit were moved more than 100 times during their stints in foster care, often from one one-night placement to the next.

The organizations sued then-governor Jeff Colyer and the then-heads of DCF, the Department for Aging and Disability Services and the Department of Health and Environment. With the governor’s office and the agencies turned over to new leadership, the lawsuit will soon transfer to Kelly, Howard and KDHE interim secretary Lee Norman.

The organizations suing aren’t asking for a payout. Their lawsuit calls for the agencies to fix gaps in mental health services and the churning of kids through short-term homes.

With the lawsuit landing in her lap, Kelly is under legal and political pressure to deliver the foster care fixes she’s called for.

5) What the numbers do — and don’t — tell us about whether foster care is improving

Although the number of kids sleeping in contractors’ offices has dropped substantially since its peak last spring — as of December, DCF officials said there had been no kids spending their nights in offices for months — advocates want to make sure improvements in one area aren’t leading to problems in another.

Appelhanz pointed to the lawsuit’s allegation of back-to-back single-night placements as one reason to be wary of better numbers.

“No one wants kids sleeping in offices,” said Appelhanz. “But moving them from sleeping in offices to repeated one-night placements? That’s not a win.”

Howard said she’ll also be measuring success based on the overall number of kids in care and whether they’re getting to permanent homes in a timely manner. She’s also trying to bring DCF up to federal standards for child welfare — standards by which the agency has previously fallen short.

Madeline Fox 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 @maddycfox.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/watch-these-things-new-governor-tries-fix-kansas-child-welfare.