Homicide on Barnett under investigation

A homicide in the 3400 block of Barnett Avenue is under investigation, according to police

Police responded to the 3400 block of Barnett on a shooting call about 7:47 p.m. Thursday, June 4, and found a shooting victim, according to a spokesman for the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department.

The victim, a male, was deceased and had an apparent gunshot wound, the spokesman stated.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Division is investigating. Anyone with information is asked to call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.

Cleaver, Davids discuss heartbreak, outrage over killing of George Floyd

U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver II, D-Missouri, tonight said that he had never before seen the level of disruption that has been seen over the George Floyd incident in the United States. U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., said it looks like conversations have started over the issues.

“I think the conversations are going to be hard,” Rep. Davids said. “It’s going to be hard for everybody.”

The two representatives made their remarks during Rep. Davids’ “Virtual Conversation on Justice and Equity” Thursday evening on social media.

Rep. Cleaver is a pastor and also a former mayor of Kansas City, Missouri. He said the nation has been on the edge of racial conflict for the past 300 years, although it has not been as visible in the “in-between times” as it is now.

“We’re really in between state involvement, federal involvement and municipal involvement,” Rep. Cleaver said. Kansas City, Missouri, he said, is in a unique position of the police being placed under state control. The action was taken many years ago because of mob influence, he said.

George Floyd, who died after an incident in Minneapolis, would be dead even if he had been in Kansas City with the police controlled by the state, Rep. Cleaver said, because of training and policy manuals. Techniques such as choking or putting a knee on a person’s neck are a throwback to slavery, according to Rep. Cleaver, and originally grew out of an incorrect belief that blacks did not suffer as much as others.

The sight of a Minneapolis police officer with his knee on Floyd’s neck, not listening or not believing his “I can’t breathe” pleas, created an outrage in the public, according to Rep. Cleaver.

“But if you peel back that outrage, you will find pain,” Rep. Cleaver said. “The pain is that after 300 years the federal bogeyman called race comes out of its grave and haunts us again, and keeps coming out and coming out regularly since 1865.”

He has never seen this level of reaction, and he grew up in a Jim Crow era in Texas, he added, and worked in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, learning about justice and injustice. He has never seen this level of demonstrations all over the country, he said.

It has been exacerbated by politicians that prevented people from coming together, he said.

“We’re in a bad spot right now, but we’ll come out of it,” Rep. Cleaver said.

Rep. Davids said she appreciated the insight of looking past the anger, and seeing pain.

“There’s a lot of deep wounds in this country that we haven’t seen healed in the long history we’ve got in this country,” she said.

Rep. Davids said she also has been concerned about the COVID-19 pandemic and the disproportionate impact on the black community and communities of color.

“We’ve got a confluence like never before,” Rep. Cleaver said.

More than 100,000 Americans died of the novel coronavirus, he said. The economy was affected as a result with 30 million people filing for unemployment. Production has dropped, and there is unrest all over the country.

“The only thing we don’t have yet are the locusts and the frogs that hit Egypt,” Rep. Cleaver said.

There are unemployed parents, unemployed kids, no money in the household, teens can’t get jobs to earn money for school clothing, and it’s a bad situation, he said.

“Right now we have this confluence, and one of the things we absolutely must do, I think, is to begin to pass legislation that will mitigate some of these issues, make life a little bit easier,” Rep. Cleaver said.

Legislation will reduce some of the problems, but there are other problems that cannot be reduced by money, he added. There is a bad past on the issue of race and they can’t legislate it away, he said.

“I think we forget what has happened, and start making new mistakes,” he said. “The world’s flagship democracy is looking as if it’s falling apart.”

Some of the rest of the world now are feeling sorry for the United States, he added.

“There’s a need for leadership right now like we’ve never had before,” Rep. Cleaver said. “People who will stand up and speak the truth.”

At the same time, that truth has not entered into a lot of people and there needs to be compassion with people who are struggling, he added.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do in this country,” Rep. Cleaver said. “I’m not ready to give up.”

“We can’t allow ourselves to become despondent and timid right now,” he said. “This is when the country needs people who are visionary and can see beyond race.”

“This could be considered the great awakening for this country, when people say, I’m not going to go back,” he said.

Rep. Cleaver noted that people involved in demonstrations and protests are a diverse group of people. There is a movement toward change and it ought to be exciting for everybody who loves this country, he said.

Rep. Davids said she was often asked if she wanted to be a voice for different topics and communities. But she said her job as an elected official was to listen, because the communities have a voice, they just have been ignored for so long.

People are expressing fear for wanting to walk down the street and not be killed, she said, and to know that so many elected officials have not been listening to folks and believing the reality of their experience of what happens when they walk outside their house.

“No, we’re not there yet,” she said. She appreciated that Congress is more diverse now. “We still have so much work to do.”

Rep. Cleaver said people should understand that anarchists are infiltrating peaceful, patriotic protests.

He said he was on the Homeland Security committee, and has learned through unclassified information from there that there are anarchists whose goal in life is disrupting the United States, and they have shown up in Ferguson, Missouri, and other places in the past. He said he was told by the Justice Department that authorities had identified anarchists from other states, who were there to disrupt and cause problems.

Also, he said there are some social media posts, such as on Facebook, that have been posted by Iranians, Saudi Arabians, Russians and Chinese in an attempt to further disrupt this country.

One way to change is for every human being to understand they can contribute to a better nation, according to Rep. Cleaver. “We are not meant to be at war with one another,” he said.

To view more of this virtual conversation, visit https://www.facebook.com/RepDavids/videos/300453827634551/

Governor poised to trade some emergency powers to keep her COVID orders

Gov. Laura Kelly would still be able to unilaterally delay deadlines for things such as filing taxes or renewing drivers licenses, but legislators would need to approve extensions of disaster declarations or new orders.

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Topeka, Kansas — A deal forged by the governor and legislative leaders extends the Kansas disaster declaration in response to the coronavirus through September, for now ending what’s become a partisan conflict.

The bill lets Gov. Laura Kelly keep some of her powers to respond to the coronavirus, like delaying deadlines for things such as filing taxes or renewing drivers licenses. The plan gives legislators more control over extending the disaster declaration and reviewing new orders.

“A compromise position. A position that still allows the governor to operate,” Republican Rep. Fred Patton told the House this week. “But we also wanted to have legislative oversight.”

Some Republicans had objected to the Democratic governor closing businesses and banning large gatherings statewide this spring, even though the virus so far hasn’t been widespread in some rural counties.

The bill was passed by the House on Wednesday night, with the Senate following suit Thursday. Kelly is expected to sign the bill, which extends her disaster declaration until Sept. 15 (further extensions are possible) and preserves her executive orders for everything from letting nurses handle more patient care to allowing restaurants to sell alcohol to go.

As the rare special session began, Kelly signaled she’d support the compromise because it provides “the framework our state needs as we continue on the path to recovery.”

“There are parts of this bill that I do not support,” Kelly said in a statement. “However, my priority is and will always be the interests of Kansans first.”

She compromised on her ability to close businesses or ban large gatherings until after Sept. 15. Lawmakers said it will give the governor a chance to respond if cases surge as businesses and other facilities reopen.

“It’s before any potential second wave, we hope, any second wave would come,” Patton said.

Already, Kelly conceded such restrictions to counties last month, turning her reopening plan into recommendations. That came after lawmakers passed a bill restricting her during a nearly 24-hour-long single-day veto session. Kelly vetoed that bill.

Legislative leaders said the new plan was born in a bipartisan meeting that Kelly invited them to after the veto.

“We came to a realization very quickly that our policy differences weren’t that large,” Republican Senate Vice President Jeff Longbine told a Senate committee.

The bill is similar in some ways to the previous plan Kelly vetoed, but gives joint oversight of the $1.25 billion in federal coronavirus response funding. Initially, full authority to spend that money rested with Kelly’s office, and the bill she vetoed would have given authority fully to lawmakers.

Now, a panel made up of the governor and legislative leaders will make final decisions on federal aid. That same panel could approve additional extensions to the disaster declaration, and would need to OK future business closures of more than 15 days.

Kelly was the first governor in the country to close schools statewide for the rest of the academic year to control the spread of the virus. This bill wouldn’t let her do that again without approval of the State Board of Education.

There was some complaint about the process, after the legislation was rushed to the House floor before many lawmakers could study it. In a Senate committee, any amendments were discouraged to speed up approving the plan.

“Everybody wants to go home,” Republican Sen. Dennis Pyle said after he offered an amendment that was rejected. “I’m so sick of hearing that.”

Protections for business and flexibility for counties

How to deal with local governments has been one of the biggest divides between the governor and lawmakers. Kelly’s orders banning large gatherings and closing businesses applied to all counties, which lawmakers tried to take away.

The new bill puts some requirements on local governments that want to sidestep her orders — they can approve rules that are less restrictive than the state, but must consult with the local health officer to make sure restrictions aren’t needed to protect public health in the county.

It also gives Kansas businesses some liability protections if people get sick or if the company sells coronavirus-related protective equipment that turns out to be faulty. There are restrictions, as the protective equipment must have been ordered by the state. Businesses would be protected from claims over coronavirus infections if they’re taking recommended precautions.

The governor’s chief of staff said Kelly supports protections for health care providers so they aren’t liable for things like procedures that had to be delayed because of the coronavirus. Otherwise, Kelly is only accepting the liability protections as part of the compromise.

“This is probably the part of the bill that the governor has the most hesitation over,” Chief of Staff Will Lawrence told a committee.

Democrats in the House called the liability protections unnecessary and unsuccessfully tried to amend them.

Republican Rep. Kellie Warren said businesses need the protection from lawsuits as they reopen.

“If these businesses are exposed to what I would say in some instances would be frivolous lawsuits,” she said, “it’s just the process of defending those lawsuits that will bankrupt our businesses.”

Medicaid and court nominee stumble

While the coronavirus bill was the main focus of the special session, Democrats in the House did make a last-ditch effort to expand Medicaid. They pointed to the spike in unemployment during the pandemic and said expanding health care coverage to thousands more Kansans was critical.

“When they lost their job, they lost their health care,” Democratic Rep. Jim Ward argued on the House floor. “Medicaid expansion would help them.”

As in past attempts, the chamber’s rules blocked the consideration of expansion and there weren’t enough votes to override the rules.

In addition, lawmakers didn’t take any action to tackle a budget deficit next fiscal year topping $600 million. That could mean the governor will make unilateral budget cuts or legislators take on the deficit when they return in January.

In the Senate, lawmakers rejected the governor’s nominee for a seat on the Court of Appeals. Some senators criticized Carl Folsom, an attorney from Lawrence, for spending most of his career as a public defender and questioned whether he’d be fair on the bench.

“The nominee donated to Governor Kelly’s campaign, which is indicative of his political ideology,” Republican Senate President Susan Wagle said.

That drew a sharp response from Kelly, who said senators were rejecting a highly qualified nominee for political reasons.

“The partisanship being inserted into this process is just wrong,” she said, “and it breaks with long-standing Kansas tradition of keeping politics out of the courts.”

Stephen Koranda is the Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy. 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/news/2020-06-04/kansas-governor-poised-to-trade-some-emergency-powers-to-keep-her-covid-orders.