Donnelly College plans groundbreaking on Thursday

An architect’s drawing of the new academic and administrative building at Donnelly College in Kansas City, Kansas.

Donnelly College, 608 N. 18th St., Kansas City, Kansas, plans a groundbreaking for its new academic and administrative building at 11 a.m. Thursday, May 2.

The college will build the 72,000-square-foot building to replace existing facilities, including the former Providence Hospital building, on its campus. The former Providence building will remain until the completion of the new academic building.

In the first phase, a Community Event Center was completed in 2013. The second phase was the renovation of Marian Hall in 2017, where the college’s nursing program is housed.

The third phase includes a two-level Donnelly parking garage to the west of Bishop Ward High School and to the north of Donnelly College, to be completed in June 2019.

The three-story academic and administrative building will be built on the current Donnelly parking lot on the east part of the property, near 18th Street, and will be completed in August 2020.

Donnelly College is an independent, coeducational, Catholic institution founded by the Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica and sponsored by the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas. Donnelly College was established in 1949 to meet the needs of urban immigrants and the working class. Today it is known as the most diverse college in the Midwest, according to U.S. News and World Report.

More information about the Donnelly building campaign is at www.campaignfordonnelly.com.

Legends Applebee’s to reopen Thursday afternoon after remodeling

The Legends Applebee’s restaurant, 1700 Village West Parkway, is scheduled to reopen at 4 p.m. Thursday, May 2, after remodeling.

According to a spokesman, the restaurant has been closed since Sunday night for renovations.

The renovations will have new design features and a mural that will depict the Kansas City, Kansas, neighborhood, according to the spokesman.

There will be new wall art focusing on the local community, as well as a new mural in the works. An artist from the InterUrban ArtHouse is designing the mural, which will be unveiled at a later date, probably in early summer, according to the spokesman.

Local contractor GC Strategies is painting the interior, redoing ceilings, flooring and light fixtures at tables.

The restaurant also will have new chairs, tabletops, barstools, and reupholstered booths. The exterior also will be repainted.

To celebrate the renovations, Applebee’s will offer $1 draft beers on all domestic and craft selections beginning at 4 p.m. May 2 and lasting for seven days, through May 9. The restaurant also will offer $1 margaritas during May, and all-you-can-eat boneless buffalo wings for $11.99 each day for a limited time.

According to the spokesman, Applebee’s also is renovating some of its other restaurants in the Kansas City area.

Kansas Medicaid expansion fails to get a vote, but supporters threaten budget to force one

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Supporters of expanding Medicaid in Kansas proved Wednesday they’ve got the votes in the Legislature — if they can get a vote.

But they lacked enough lawmakers on their side to bypass Republican leadership and force that vote.

At stake is whether the state would spend about $50 million a year in money from Kansas taxpayers to draw more than $900 million from federal taxpayers to cover another 130,000 low-income people with Medicaid.

The proposal anchored Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s campaign for office last year. It’s widely supported by Democrats in the Legislature — and a significant number of Republicans. It passed the Kansas House in March.

But it’s been bottled up in a Senate committee ever since.

On Wednesday, expansion supporters in the Senate failed to pry the bill loose. They needed 24 votes to prevail on the procedural motion. They got 23.

Sen. Barbara Bollier, a former Republican who switched the Democratic Party before the start of the session, said the refusal by Republican leaders to allow a vote on expansion “is abhorrent to me and should be to the entire state.”

“Kansans have lost today,” she said.

Republican leaders resisting the push all but said they’d let a vote go through next year — but only after they’re convinced the state can afford the cost and if the coverage would only go to people without private coverage and who are willing to work.

“I’m doing what I think is the right thing,” said Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning said.

Denning and Senate President Susan Wagle won’t clear the way for an up-or-down vote until they get that compromise.

Still, those determined to continue the fight found some reason for encouragement. They demonstrated they have more than the 21 votes needed to pass the governor’s expansion bill if they can somehow force a vote. If.

With the session in its final weeks, that’s going to be difficult. Wagle and Denning appear steadfast.

To demonstrate his willingness to ready a compromise bill for lawmakers to consider next year, Denning didn’t take a position on the procedural motion.

“I vote ‘pass’ because I’m not saying no, I’m saying this policy isn’t ready,” Denning said in explaining his vote to colleagues.

Legislative supporters of expansion say there’s no reason to wait. The governor’s expansion bill, they say, is similar to one that passed in 2017 but was vetoed by Republican then-Gov. Sam Brownback.

“It’s too important to wait another year,” said Rep. Brett Parker, an Overland Park Republican. “It’s not a new policy, we don’t need more time to study it.”

Parker is part of a coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans in the House threatening to block passage of a budget until Senate leaders relent and allow a vote on expansion.

“Everything is on the table,” he said. “Every procedural tool whether it’s the budget or anything else in the rulebook is in play.”

In recent weeks, advocacy organizations pushing for expansion have also tried to turn up the heat by sending volunteers door-to-door in Denning’s and Wagle’s districts.

Janet Stanley, a Wichita nurse, said Wagle is entitled to her position on expansion but shouldn’t be allowed to prevent others from representing their constituents.

“It greatly upsets me,” Stanley said. “We have representatives who we have sent to represent us and they should be allowed to vote on this issue.”

Kelly, who made expansion one of the central issues of her campaign, is also frustrated.

“A few members of the Senate leadership should not be allowed to block an initiative that will save lives, save money and that 77 percent of Kansans support,” Kelly said recently, referring to one of several recent polls on the issue.

Expansion would extend Medicaid eligibility to Kansans making less than 138 percent of the federal poverty line, about $35,000 a year for a family of four.

Jim McLean is the senior correspondent 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 him on Twitter @jmcleanks.
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/kansas-medicaid-expansion-fails-get-vote-supporters-threaten-budget-force-one.