KCKCC volleyball at home to face No. 3 ranked JCCC Wednesday

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s young volleyball team finally gets to play a home game Wednesday. But that doesn’t make things any easier.

After giving No. 1 ranked Coffeyville a couple of early scares in a 3-0 loss at Coffeyville Monday night, the Blue Devils open their home season against No. 3 ranked Johnson County (8-2) Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.

The Blue Devils pushed Coffeyville’s defending national champions to the wire in the first two sets, losing 25-23, 25-23 before the Red Ravens pulled away in the third match with a 25-15 win. It was the 11th straight for the unbeaten Red Ravens

Meanwhile, KCKCC fell to 6-5 overall and 0-2 in Jayhawk Conference play with all 11 contests played on the road or at neutral sites. One of seven Jayhawk teams ranked in the Top 20 nationally, KCKCC entered play this week ranked No. 20.

“I was very pleased with our performances in the first two sets,” KCKCC coach Mary Bruno-Ballou said. “Both came down to a couple of points and a point or two difference in each and we walk away with wins. Our service pressure put us in great situations to be successful and as a group, we have flashes of blocking brilliance.

“Four of our five losses have been at the hands of Top 20 nationally ranked teams so we’re competing with the best teams in the country. We just need to be better disciplined and find ways to win.”

State revenue collections $2.9 million above estimate for August

The state’s August collections were slightly above estimates with total tax collections at $497.2 million; $2.9 million or 0.59 percent more than the estimate, according to a news release recently from the Kansas Department of Revenue.

Those collections are also $2.8 million more than the same month in fiscal year 2019, officials said.

Statewide retail sales tax collections were $205.3 million; up 3.67 percent from the $198 million estimate. Compensating use tax collections came in at $32.6 million; $2.4 million below the estimate.

Individual income tax collections were $231.3 million. This is $6.3 million, or 2.78 percent, more than the estimate and $10.5 million more than August 2018, according to the revenue officials. Corporate income tax collections were $6.6 million; $5.4 million below the estimate.

“We continue to hold steady with the estimates,” Mark Burghart, revenue secretary, said. “I’m encouraged by both the improved sales tax collections and the stability of individual tax collections as we have now finished the second month of the fiscal year.”

Wyandotte County judge to hear a case with Kansas Supreme Court

Wyandotte County District Judge Constance Alvey is scheduled to sit with the Kansas Supreme Court on Sept. 12.

Judge Alvey was appointed to hear one case on the court’s Sept. 12 summary calendar, according to a news release from the Kansas courts. She will join the Supreme Court justices in their decision drafting.

“I am pleased that District Judge Alvey is taking time from her duties in the 29th Judicial District to sit with the Supreme Court,” Chief Justice Lawton Nuss said. “It’s a great help to our court, and we look forward to her contributions in deliberating and eventually deciding this case.”

Alvey was elected a judge in 2008 in the 29th Judicial District, which is composed of Wyandotte County.

“I am honored to be asked to sit with the Supreme Court,” Alvey said. “I am looking forward to seeing how another level of the law is conducted, since I have been working in some aspect of the law since I was 15 years old and have never tired of my love for the law and learning more.”

Alvey was in high school when she started working as a filing clerk in a law office. She became a district court file clerk and legal secretary, then studied to become a court reporter. She was a certified court reporter for Wyandotte County District Court.

Alvey said she then decided to return to college. She received a bachelor’s degree in accounting from Rockhurst University and a law degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law while working as a freelance court reporter. She then worked as a lawyer in the 29th Judicial District’s court trustee’s office and later as a prosecutor in Kansas and Missouri.

“My path to becoming a judge was because of my love for the law,” Alvey said.

When a case does not present a new question of law, and oral argument is deemed neither helpful to the court nor essential to a fair hearing of the appeal, it is placed on the summary calendar. These cases are deemed submitted without oral argument.

The case Alvey will deliberate is State vs. Aaron Robert Brown, a petition for review from Cowley County. A jury convicted Brown of involuntary manslaughter although jurors were not instructed on that crime. The district judge changed the verdict to voluntary manslaughter and sentenced Brown. Brown appealed the conviction. The Kansas Court of Appeals ruled that the district court’s revision was a reversible error and remanded for a new trial on attempted voluntary manslaughter. The Kansas Court of Appeals affirmed his convictions for criminal possession of a firearm and aggravated assault. The state then asked the Supreme Court to review the Court of Appeals finding on revising the verdict. Brown is representing himself in the case, where the question is now whether the district court properly entered a conviction against Brown for attempted voluntary manslaughter.