More than 50 indicted after federal drug investigation in Manhattan

After an 18-year-old student at Kansas State University died in 2017 of a fentanyl drug overdose, federal authorities launched a large-scale investigation that led to the indictment of more than 50 people, the U.S. attorney said Wednesday.

“Fentanyl and heroin are a deadly combination,” U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said. “Our goal is to save lives by disrupting the pipelines bringing these and other poisons to the city (of) Manhattan.”

An indictment filed last week and unveiled Wednesday alleged the student got the drugs from a drug trafficking organization made up of five conspirators who are among 54 defendants whose names appear in one of 13 grand jury indictments.

In addition to heroin and fentanyl, other drugs that traffickers are accused of distributing include ecstasy, marijuana, methamphetamine and hydrocodone.

Law enforcement officers called the investigation Operation Chicago Connection, based on the fact that in 2016 investigators began to hear talk on the streets of Manhattan, Kansas, about traffickers who some sources called “the Chicago Boys.” In the following months, investigators worked to get a clearer picture of what was going on. What they learned was that some traffickers were making regular trips to Chicago to bring back heroin, fentanyl and other drugs.

Law enforcement officers were out in force Tuesday, serving arrest warrants and search warrants in Manhattan as part of a federal takedown that was one of the largest in state history. Defendants were scheduled to begin making initial appearances in federal court in Topeka Wednesday.

Kansas sees a path to prosperity by getting more kids into child care and preschool

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

Coffeyville, Kansas — Preschool was a logistical boon for Delice Downing and an educational bonanza for her son, Adrian.

The head volleyball coach and director of student life at Coffeyville Community College had ruled out day care when she heard the price: Several hundred dollars a week.

Then Adrian reached preschool age. Coffeyville offers something most Kansas communities don’t: Free attendance at a preschool with room for nearly all kids in town whose parents want it.

About 200 children ages 3 and 4 attend the school district’s Early Learning Center either half or full-day.

“I’m a coach. It’s impossible — we travel all the time,” she said. “So having him here these past two years has helped. … I know that he’s in good hands. He is safe.”

Quality options that keep kids safe and nurtured run in short supply in Kansas — and often break the bank. A run-of-the-mill day care can cost more than college. Preschools like Coffeyville’s require staff, space and money that many districts don’t have.

State officials want a solution.

Better access to child care and preschool would help more parents balance work and family, they say, maintain steady incomes and learn parenting skills. Kids would get the extra nurturing that strengthens their academics in the short-term and cuts crime and poverty down the road.

Some communities have forged ahead by splicing together school and Head Start funds, child care subsidies, grants, and gifts from philanthropists and local businesses. How many towns and cities can find similar paths?

Cornelia Stevens leads The Opportunity Project in Wichita, or TOP. It serves 600 mostly low-income kids ages 1 through 5, largely for free.

“If you don’t have a safe place to take your child, you can’t work,” Stevens said. “And that’s a reality.”

Yet even TOP, one of the state’s most celebrated models for increasing early childhood education, can’t serve all the families that need it.

“We actually have conversations almost annually about, ‘OK, do we expand?’” Stevens said. “We’re trying to make sure first that we can really provide the level of support that’s needed to serve the children and families.”

Quality versus ‘nothingness’

During his two years at preschool, Adrian blossomed from a shy, quiet toddler into a talkative 5-year-old toting books home from the mini library and bubbling with stories for mom about teacher praise for his excellent napping skills.

“He says, ’Mom, I’m the best sleeper,’” Downing chuckles. “I said, ‘OK, that’s good, son!’”

By the time he finished last May, Adrian had begun learning “sight words,” common written vocabulary.

“It’s a blessing,” Downing said. “It’s just been awesome.”

Coffeyville preschoolers learn how to open milk cartons and pick up lunch trays. At storytime, they explain to their teachers what words like “author” and “illustrator” mean.

At playtime, pouting and fits over who gets which toy dissipate when kids tick through their list of options with teachers. They can ask to trade toys, or to share. They can ask to use it next time.

“Is it OK to be angry?” teacher Aleisha Weimer prompted her 3- and 4-year-olds last May. “Yeah,” several replied. “We can’t scream,” one little boy added.

This is what early childhood researchers like to see: Teachers who “scaffold,” helping children connect mental dots without doing all the work for them.

Don’t underestimate how much these social and emotional lessons pay off for academics, fellow teacher Lianakay Wilson said.

“If you’re mad, you’re not going to want to sit down and listen to a teacher talk ’one, two, threes’ and ‘A, B, Cs,’” she said. “You’re stuck on whatever you’re mad about.”

To critics who say early childhood risks becoming too academic, the founder of the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University says the opposite remains true. Most facilities fall short of giving kids the stimulating surroundings where they thrive best.

“What we see is vast hours of nothingness,” Steven Barnett said. “Playtime that’s not engaged.”

Sure, children can spend a morning happily stacking blocks, he says. But they flex more social, analytical and vocabulary muscles if they chat with teachers about what they’re building, how and why.

Happy children, healthy brains

A stressed-out early life can hinder healthy brain development, researchers at Harvard say.

Maybe there’s violence at home or crime down the street. No decent grocery stores or doctor’s offices around. Mom and Dad live paycheck to paycheck. An eviction notice shows up on the door.

Good child care and preschool can boost baby brains even in tough conditions. Home-visit programs hone parenting knowhow to reinforce the effect.

But libertarians wary of ever-bigger and more costly government remain skeptical. They point to disappointing results in some studies that check preschoolers years later for academic gains, and call others unrigorous. The picture remains too fuzzy, they argue, to pour major public money into broad access to early childhood education.

The U.S. Department of Education’s What Works Clearinghouse reviewed 40 studies on Head Start and tossed out 39 for falling short of its research standards.

But longitudinal studies have shown ample returns that transform people’s lives.

A famed Ypsilanti, Michigan, preschool project from the 1960s continues to spark fresh research and inspire interest from a new generation of academics still scrutinizing the lives of participants who are now in their mid-50s, and even the lives of their now-adult children.

“This program has helped in lifting multiple generations out of poverty — for sure,” said Ganesh Karapakula, a doctoral student in economics at Yale University who co-authored recent papers on the topic with Nobel laureate James Heckman at the University of Chicago Center for the Economics of Human Development.

The pair applied a “worst-case scenario” statistical analysis to see whether flaws in the Ypsilanti experiment — including small sample size and possible randomization errors — would explain away remarkable long-term outcomes that range from reductions in violent crime to more stable marriages and healthier bodies.

It didn’t.

“I did not expect that we would find these results,” Karapakula said. “That they would survive the worst-case analyses.”

Earlier this year, the Learning Policy Institute released a review of the most rigorous studies on early childhood programs. Overall, they showed benefits for early reading, math skills and more. Cost-benefit analyses consistently find preschool pays off.

Savings can come in the form of kids not repeating grades or needing special education. Or they finish high school, go to college. They stay out of jail and pour bigger paychecks better lives for their kids.

Policymakers should move past the question of whether early childhood programs work, the institute says, and focus instead on the difference between good and bad ones.

Supply, demand and more demand

Last year, Kansas scored a $4.4 million federal grant to pin down the state’s early childhood needs and chase down ideas for increasing quality and access.

Officials from four state agencies that deal with early childhood health and education fanned out to hear from parents and others at scores of townhall-like meetings.

Over and over, parents and businesses described a dearth of options, or a fragmented patchwork of public programs that are difficult to navigate and stigmatized.

Tallies from the Rutgers institute suggest about one in 10 Kansas 3-year-olds get spots at public preschools, and about half of 4-year-olds do.

By contrast, Oklahoma serves slightly more of its 3-year-olds, and offers universal preschool for 4-year-olds.

Don’t expect Kansas to follow that recipe — and not just because of the money it would take. Child advocacy groups and state officials worry a state-funded statewide preschool program would sink day care centers that make ends meet by watching over babies and young kids.

Infant care could become harder to find, they fear, in a state where most counties already lack enough day care spots to serve kids whose parents work.

If not the Oklahoma way, then what?

Melissa Rooker made a name for herself spearheading efforts in the legislature to increase funding for public schools. Now she heads the Kansas Children’s Cabinet.

“We can’t depend on an answer coming entirely from the state budget or federal budget,” she said. “The idea is to embrace what we call ‘the mixed-delivery system.’”

Kansas aims to have a draft strategic plan in October, followed by more public meetings and a finalized list of recommendations by the end of the year.

What to expect? Officials want to blur the line between day care and education by promoting best practices for early learning wherever adults work with babies and kids.

“It doesn’t matter where,” Rooker said. “Every single environment that they are in is a learning environment.”

Though state-funded universal preschool is off the table, the plan could call for more funding, streamlined regulations, tweaks to statutes or program eligibility. It could highlight towns that raised money locally and coaxed matches out of foundations and businesses.

Scrutinizing how the state administers its myriad public early childhood programs and funding sources would reflect a national movement along similar lines.

Funders each set their own rules that can flummox parents and school districts alike. For preschools that mix and match, it can mean extra safety inspections or keeping at least a few kids on waitlists at all times, even when their goal is not to.

The Bipartisan Policy Center ranks Kansas one of the worst states in the country at integrating early childhood programs and other measures meant to improve options for families.

And child advocates have long faulted the state for questionable use of tobacco settlement dollars, welfare funding and other pots of money meant to help families. That’s ranged from leaving federal resources untapped to diverting family aid to plug state budget holes.

This month Kansas canceled a contract with a private company that it says spent welfare dollars flagged for childhood literacy on its owners instead.

Still, reviewing and streamlining programs may only get Kansas so far.

“People somehow think that there’s a lot of duplication … and that if we somehow blended and braided, we could serve more kids better,” he said. Maybe it could serve kids better, but serve much more of them? “That’s just wrong.”

For now, if Kansas doesn’t have the money to expand early childhood education significantly, he suggests focusing on communities with the most at stake. They offer the biggest bang for the buck.

In other words, don’t just tie help to low family incomes and spread limited dollars thin across Kansas. That leaves elementary schools without enough better-prepared children to revamp kindergartens and later grades. Preschoolers can end up rehashing what they’ve learned, and losing their gains.

Aim instead for critical masses of kindergarten-ready tykes in the poorest neighborhoods.

“It makes sense,” Barnett said. “Where are the highest concentrations of poverty? Let’s just knock them off (the list) one at a time as we can.”

Celia Llopis-Jepsen reports on consumer health and education for the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @Celia_LJ or email her at celia (at) kcur (dot) org. The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on the health and well-being of Kansans, their communities and civic life.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/post/kansas-sees-path-prosperity-getting-more-kids-child-care-and-preschool

T-Bones explode for 16 runs in Texas

by G.M. Vaughan

On a night when most T-Bones fans were not only cheering on their home team from the metro, they were also likely crossing their fingers for a Sioux Falls win over Sioux City and a Lincoln win over Cleburne to help their chances in the race for the wild-card spot in the playoffs.

Fans got their wish with a T-Bones win of 16-1, while Sioux Falls fell to Sioux City, and Cleburne lost at Lincoln. The T-Bones remain in the playoff race.

The first inning started favorably—with a stand-up double for Shawn O’Malley. Daniel Nava quickly followed suit, hitting another double, driving in Daniel Nava, and the T-Bones took an early lead in the first inning, 1-0.

The second inning proved to be trouble for AirHogs pitcher Cui Enting, who had allowed six hits and five runs by the end of the inning. Danny Mars and Carrizales both reached first on singles, and an RBI single by Ramsey Romano brought home Danny Mars, increasing the T-Bones lead to 2-0.

A Dylan Tice base hit drove in Carrizales, and the T-Bones were in business, 3-0, in the second. Shawn O’Malley added to the T-Bones total with his 40th RBI of the season, driving in Romano and making it 4-0—all KC.

Stewart Ijames followed with a single, the T-Bones’ 8th hit of the night off Enting, loading the bases. Enting walked Daniel Nava, which brought home Tice. Then a sacrifice fly long shot by Casey Gillaspie allowed O’Malley to score, and the T-Bones ended the inning with a 6-0 commanding lead.

The fourth inning looked much like the second, with hit after hit by the T-Bones. An infield single for Dylan Tice got KC on base in the fourth. O’Malley reached base on a fielder’s choice, and Stewart Ijames blasted a triple to right field, scoring Tice and making it 7-0.

A base hit by Nava that followed made it 8-0, KC. Gillaspie managed another hit, making the AirHogs bullpen get busy. But before Enting was removed, Correa hit a standup double that brought in Nava, giving KC a commanding lead, 9-0. A Danny Mars putout scored Gillaspie, and Corrizales advanced to first on another single, followed quickly by a single by Romano that scored both Correa and Corrizales, making the score 12-0, and prompting the exit of Enting and the entrance of Jia Hong on the mound for the AirHogs.

Perrin walked the leadoff batter, Justin Byrd, raising the hopes of the AirHogs as Li Ning, who was 2-for-2 for the night, reached base. Junpeng also reached first on a fielder’s choice, giving life to the AirHogs offense. Na Chuang had an RBI single that scored Justin Byrd, making the score 12-1, KC.

Perrin walked Li Ning to start the bottom of the sixth. Trevor Simms reached base next after hitting a single—the third AirHogs hit of the night.

Na Chuang sliced a ball to the corner that looked foul, but it was called fair, resulting in a stand-up double that scored Li Ning and Simms, making the score 12-3, KC; however, in an unusual move, the umpires reversed the call, returning the AirHogs to base and keeping the score 12-1.

Singles by Tice, O’Malley, Ijames, and Nava led to a 23-hit total night by the seventh inning, bringing the score to 13-1. Austin Biggar earned his first professional RBI on a hit-by-a-pitch by Jia Hong and a walk for Corrizales brought home Ijames, making it 15-1.

The final run of the night was scored by former AirHogs player Stewart Ijames who hit a home run, his fifth hit of the night, making the final score 16-1, Kansas City.

The winning pitcher was Perrin (7-1), and the losing pitcher was Enting, (0-2).

The T-Bones will look to sweep the series at 7:05 p.m. Thursday night as the two teams face off in the final matchup of the year at AirHogs stadium in Grand Prairie, Texas. Pitching for the T-Bones will be T.J. House (7-9) who will face Travis Ballew (1-11) for the AirHogs. The game will be on the T-Bones Broadcast Network, http://mixlr.com/t-bones-baseball/.

The T-Bones remain very much alive in the playoff hunt. Wednesday night Sioux City (55-40) beat Sioux Falls 9-1 and pulled into a first-place tie with Cleburne (55-40) who lost 9-8 in 12 innings at Lincoln. KC trails both clubs by one game with five to play, four of which are against Sioux City at T-Bones Stadium starting Friday night.

The T-Bones return for the final home stand of the season at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium Friday night at 7:05 p.m. against Sioux City. Tickets to all T-Bones home games are on sale online or by calling 913-328-5618 or by visiting the Saint Luke’s Box Office between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Group ticket sales are also on sale.

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