College students to take saliva tests for COVID-19

The Unified Government COVID-19 webpage at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday reported 5,346 cumulative cases in Wyandotte County, an increase of 45 reported since Monday. There was one more death reported since Monday, a cumulative total of 108. (From UG COVID-19 website)

When college students return to campus this fall at the University of Kansas, there will be some changes.

One of the changes will be mass testing of all students. According to a news conference Tuesday morning at the University of Kansas Health System, students will return to campus in stages.

Chris Wilson, vice president of system integration and innovation at the health system, said students are moving back to campus housing by appointments, moving in their belongings, and then returning home.

Once home, they will take a free self-administered saliva test and send it in for testing, he said. If they don’t have COVID-19, they can then go back to campus and attend their classes.

According to Wilson, KU has about 200 rooms, in Naismith Hall, where students will go if they test positive and can’t go home.

KU is hoping to avoid the fate of the University of North Carolina, which opened school and had to call off in-person classes a week later, changing to online classes, because of COVID-19 cases.

Testing at KU is through Clinical Reference Laboratory. Robert Thompson, chief executive officer of the laboratory, said the saliva test recently received FDA approval.

Currently, he believes his company can handle 20,000 saliva tests a day, and they will be increasing capacity, with a goal of 50,000 by the end of September.

According to Thompson, saliva home tests may be available at home in the future, and possibly with a home kit that gives test results.

Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control at the KU Health System, reported there were 25 COVID-19 patients in the hospital Tuesday morning, compared to 28 on Monday. Ten patients were in the intensive care unit, on less than Monday, and six were on ventilators.

The Unified Government COVID-19 webpage at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday reported 5,346 cumulative cases in Wyandotte County, an increase of 45 reported since Monday. There was one more death reported since Monday, a cumulative total of 108.

Free testing offered

Free COVID-19 testing is planned from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 19, at Zotung Christian Church, 5010 Parallel Parkway, Kansas City, Kansas, through Vibrant Health and the Health Equity Task Force.

Free testing also is offered from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Unified Government Health Department parking lot at 6th and Ann, Kansas City, Kansas. For more information, call 311.

For more information on who may be tested and what to bring, visit https://wyandotte-county-covid-19-hub-unifiedgov.hub.arcgis.com/pages/what-to-do-if-you-think-you-have-covid-19.

The KU doctors’ news conference is online at https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital.

The UG Health Department sports order is online at https://alpha.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/health/documents/covid/08132020localhealthofficerorderregardingsports.pdf.

The Wyandotte County school start order is online at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information.

Wyandotte County is under a mandatory mask order and is in Phase 3 of the state’s reopening plan. For more information, residents may visit the UG COVID-19 website at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information or call 311 for more information.

The CDC’s COVID-19 web page is at https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html.

Several highway projects planned this week

Several highway projects are planned this week in the area. (KDOT map)

Highway repairs, construction and maintenance project continue this week in Wyandotte County, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

Westbound I-70, from Mill Street Bridge to the west and eastbound and westbound I-670 :scheduled from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. Monday to Thursday and and 7 p.m. to 8 a.m. Friday and Saturday, Aug. 10, through Monday, Aug. 31, will be single and double lane closures.

Northbound I-635 to westbound I-70, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 20, ramp closure for drain repair.

I-635 pavement patching and overlay, between Foster and BNSF railroad bridge, and from 43rd Street bridge to K-5 junction, 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. Monday to Friday and 7 p.m. to 8 a.m. Saturday to Sunday. Ramps will be intermittently closed. Work began June 15 and completion date is Nov. 20.
Ramp closures include: 10 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 12 to 5 a.m. Friday, Aug. 21:
• Southbound I-635 at Leavenworth Road,
• Southbound I-635 at 38th Street,
• Southbound I-635 at Parallel Parkway

Ramp closures include: 10 p.m. Monday, Aug. 17, to 5 a.m. Tuesday, Aug. 25:
• Southbound I-35 to southbound I-635,
• Southbound I-635 to northbound and southbound I-35,
• Southbound ramps at Swartz Road, Metropolitan Avenue, Shawnee Drive, Merriam Drive and northbound I-35 to northbound I-635

Reconfiguration of the Turner Diagonal interchange in Wyandotte County:

A new diverging diamond interchange to be built, scheduled to reopen in November.

Eastbound I-70 truck staging area is open to trucks, while the westbound I-70 truck staging area is closed.

The following ramps are currently closed until Sept. 8. The ramps include:
• Ramp from eastbound I-70 to southbound Turner Diagonal,
• Ramp from eastbound I-70 to northbound Turner Diagonal,
• Ramp from northbound Turner Diagonal to westbound I-70,
• Ramp from southbound Turner Diagonal to westbound I-70.
• Ramp from southbound Turner Diagonal to eastbound I-70,
• Ramp from northbound Turner Diagonal to eastbound I-70,
• Ramp from westbound I-70 to southbound Turner Diagonal,
• Ramp from westbound I-70 to northbound College Parkway,
• Turner Diagonal from State Avenue to Riverview Avenue.

Lewis and Clark Viaduct bridge replacement

Westbound I-70 will be closed at Broadway Boulevard in Missouri in the northwest corner of the downtown loop to 3rd Street in Kansas City, Kansas, for bridge replacement.

Eastbound I-70 will be closed for girder unloading, from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. on a date to be determined. Eastbound I-70 will be closed intermittently from 15 to 20 minutes over the three-hour period.
• Eastbound I-70 on the ramps at Washington Avenue, Minnesota Avenue and Fairfax Trafficway, ramps will be closed.
• Ramps from 5th St, Beardsley Road, Independence Avenue at Delaware Avenue and I-35 to westbound I-70 (in Missouri) will be closed.
• Ramps from westbound I-70 to Minnesota Avenue, Washington Boulevard, and Fairfax Trafficway will be closed.

43rd Street bridge repair


Northbound and southbound I-635 traffic will be restricted to two lanes at 43rd Street for bridge repairs.

• Concrete barrier will be used across the bridge for the duration of this project. Work began on June 19 and the completion date for this project is expected to be Nov. 20.
• Northbound on-ramp from westbound State Avenue will be closed for the duration of the project.

Railyard bridge repair


Northbound and southbound I-635 traffic will be restricted to two lanes at the railyard bridges just south of K-32 (Kansas Avenue).

• Concrete barrier will be used across the north abutments of the bridges for the duration of the project.
• Work began on July 6, and the completion date is expected to be Nov. 20. Northbound off-ramp to K-32 (Kansas Avenue) and southbound on-ramp from K-32 (Kansas Avenue) will both be closed for the duration of the project.

A KDOT spokesman urged all motorists to be alert and obey the warning signs when approaching and driving through a highway work zone.  To stay aware of all road construction projects across Kansas go to www.kandrive.org or call 5-1-1. Drive safely and always wear your seat belt, the spokesman urged.

If using mail ballots, vote early for general election

Wyandotte County Election Commissioner Bruce Newby said today that anyone who is using a mail ballot for the general election, Nov. 3, should try to return the ballot early by mail.

Thirty-eight percent of those who voted in the Aug. 4 primary election voted by mail ballots, Newby said.

There were a total of 23,781 votes cast, with 9,071 voting by mail, he said. There were 11,616 ballots requested.

He said the 38 percent of all votes cast, as well as the rate of return, were both “extraordinary.”

In the general election, Wyandotte County residents may again vote by mail, in person on Election Day, or in advance at three selected polling places on designated days.

Residents may be weighing their decisions on how to vote in the general election, given that disruptions in the postal service have been discussed recently at the national level. An announcement was made in the past day from the postal service that any action that could slow the election, such as decommissioning mail sorting machines would be halted.

Newby said mail ballots for the general election can either be mailed back or returned in person. If they are returned in person, they have to be brought on Election Day to the Election Office at 850 State or to a polling place by 7 p.m. Nov. 3, he said. If they are returned by mail, state law says the ballot must be postmarked by Election Day and must be received by the Election Office by Friday after the election, he said.

“The critical thing is making sure the post office puts the postmark on the ballot,” he said.

While the state law says ballots must be postmarked by Election Day, Newby cautioned voters not to wait until the deadline. He said it was better to get their mail ballots early and vote early.

Typically, the Postal Service takes three to five days to deliver the mail here. So, those who vote by mail should not wait too long to ask for a ballot, and not wait too long to send it back, according to the election commissioner.

The application period for voting by mail for the general election began July 1, he said. Registered voters may apply now for the advance mail ballots, he said. The ballots will be mailed to voters closer to the election. The deadline for applying for a ballot is Oct. 27.

“If you wait ‘til Oct. 27 you run the risk of not getting a ballot,” Newby said. Plus, it’s virtually impossible to return it on time, unless you take it to the Election Office or polls in person, he added.

“People that wait until the deadline are taking the risk their vote won’t happen,” he said.

But, if voters do procrastinate and wait until the last minute, if they haven’t received a mail ballot by Friday before the election, they should consider voting early in person at one of the satellite sites, Newby said. The sites include the Election Office, Eisenhower Recreation Center and Amayo Argentine Recreation Center, open on some selected days before the election. The satellite centers are open on the Saturday before the election, and also, the Election Office is open for advance voting on Monday morning before the election.

Newby said a voter may vote in person even if the voter has been sent a ballot by mail. Their in-person vote will be a provisional ballot, he said. Each provisional vote is verified, and the Election Office will make sure the person has not already voted the mail ballot, he added.

In the primary election, the Election Office received four late ballots in the mail, he said. They arrived after the Friday deadline. The last one arrived on Wednesday, Aug. 12. The four ballots did not count.

The Election Office also had some ballots that were returned to them by the post office, for mail that was undeliverable or the person had moved, he said.

“We had four returned that were votes from deceased people,” Newby said. They didn’t count. “We don’t let dead people vote in Wyandotte County.”

The deadline to register to vote before the general election is Oct. 13. Party affiliation is not required for this election.

With the COVID-19 pandemic safety is a primary reason to consider voting by mail. In Wyandotte County, there are many people in the at-risk population and it is common sense to vote by mail so they’re not exposed to crowds on Election Day, he said.

Those who forget to mail it, can drop off the mail ballot at a polling place on Election Day, he added. That’s a risk, though, for people who filled out their ballot early, didn’t mail it and forgot to drop it off that day.

“If you vote by mail, get your ballot early, vote in the comfort of your home and return it in plenty of time to get it in,” he said.

For more information about the election, including voter registration information, visit the Election Office website at www.wycovotes.org, or call the office at 913-573-8500, or email [email protected].

Applications for an advance (mail-in) ballot are online at https://static1.squarespace.com/static/56606b47e4b0b9403ad6ff96/t/5c703309e5e5f09473494200/1550856969456/AV1wc_Mail_2018.pdf.

To find out if you are registered to vote and your polling place, visit https://myvoteinfo.voteks.org/voterview.