Student count declines this year in KCK district

The number of students counted in elementary, middle and high schools on Sept. 21 was down by 837 students this fall, compared to last year, according to a report to the Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education on Sept. 22.

When the pre-kindergarten and alternative students were added to the total, the Kansas City, Kansas, school district was down by 1,238 students compared to a year ago, according to the report.

School district officials said although they were not sure of the cause of the declining numbers, they discovered that some students had moved. The district is in remote learning only for the first nine weeks of the school year.

The September student count is used to determine the school district’s funding per student.

School personnel were still trying to reach students who were in school last year, according to Dr. Kimberly Shaw, the district’s instructional improvement officer.

Whether they have moved or not, the district isn’t sure where the students are, she said at the school board meeting. Many home visits have been made, and school personnel have contacted the students’ emergency contact numbers from last school year, trying to make sure students have access to education, she said.

Principals and staff at the schools have been trying to reach students, including making visits in person, she said.

“Some have documented the home is vacant,” she added. They are trying to locate where the student is to make sure they have access to education, wherever they are, she said. Sometimes they knock on the neighbors’ doors to find out where the family went, but there are only so many steps they can take, she said.

Bridgette DeSmet, the district’s coordinator of federal programs, said teachers have been making calls to get in touch with students, and several employees have been going house-to-house.

“They came across some eviction notices on the doors,” DeSmet said at the board meeting. Some students apparently have moved to different cities or states during the pandemic, she said.

Students must have at least one meaningful daily connection with a local teacher, by phone, or interactive video conference, to be counted this year, in remote learning, according to DeSmet. Students who are logging onto their internet classes are being counted. However, some of the students were having trouble connecting to the internet, according to district officials.

The board took action on Tuesday night intended to solve the internet connectivity issues, including an agreement with Spectrum to provide connectivity to more than 6,000 student homes, and a program allowing students with connectivity problems to use school buildings for an hour or two a day to download their assignments. The schools are contacting students with known internet problems for appointments to use the school buildings. The Spectrum internet connectivity program for homes is being paid for with CARES Act funding.

More about the student count

The largest decrease in the student count was at the elementary school level, down 707 students since last year, according to the report. The student count report was made during a six-hour Sept. 22 school board meeting.

Middle schools saw a decrease of 242 students, while high schools saw an increase of 112 students, according to the report.

Pre-kindergarten numbers were down 386, while alternative school numbers were down 15, according to the report.

When including the pre-kindergarten and alternative students, the number was 1,238 students less than fall of 2019, according to the report. Last year’s total was 23,123 and this year’s is 21,885.

Schools submit a count of students in late September every year to the state Department of Education. According to information presented at previous meetings, school districts would have several days this year to count students, because of COVID-19.

Josh Mathiasmeier, director of nutritional services, reported that free and reduced cost meal applications are still being processed, and that the district was down about 3,000 meal applications and down about 2,000 free student meal participants this year. They have been calling families on a list to make sure the students have the opportunity to participate.

Wyandotte County usually sees 1,400 to 1,500 evictions a year

In Kansas, there is a moratorium on evictions, as an executive order is in place from the governor, in effect through Jan. 26 of next year, unless rescinded (https://governor.kansas.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/EO-20-64-Executed.pdf).

At the Unified Government Administration and Human Services Committee meeting on Sept. 14, a UG researcher reported that there are typically about 1,400 to 1,500 evictions per year in Wyandotte County. They did not have figures yet for evictions during 2020.

The UG researchers were analyzing data to try to predict where more evictions might occur. There is a possibility of CARES Act funding being used to assist persons facing evictions because of loss of jobs from COVID-19.

According to UG staff, resources available might include Kansas Legal Services to find out legal rights; Kansas Housing Resources Corp., tenant-based rental assistance; and HUD, tools for landlords and tenants affected by COVID-19.

How the coronavirus altered the Kansas Congressional race between Rep. Davids and Adkins

Incumbent U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., left, faces a challenge from Amanda Adkins, right, Republican nominee. (Candidate photos)

by Aviva Okeson-Haberman, Kansas News Service

The 3rd District has some of the highest rates of COVID-19 in the state, and candidates are confronting the pandemic on the campaign trail and in their policy priorities.

With about six weeks before the election, you might see Republican Amanda Adkins’ team out knocking on doors in Johnson, Wyandotte or Miami counties. Democratic U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids’ outreach efforts in her re-election bid are virtual.

It’s just one sign of the differences between the two candidates in Kansas’ 3rd Congressional District when it comes to how they say they would respond to economic and health effects of the coronavirus.

Nationally, the economy and the coronavirus rank as the most important issues for registered voters in the presidential race, according to a September Kaiser Family Foundation poll. Those issues could also play a role in the 3rd District, which has two of the three counties in Kansas with the most confirmed COVID-19 cases.

‘Where politics meets my life’

As schools throughout the 3rd District started the year virtually, some parents pushed back, arguing a return to in-person activities would be best for their kids’ mental and educational well-being.

Rachel Faagutu showed up to a late August rally outside the Blue Valley School District headquarters. She stepped away from her job in March so she could help her three kids with online schooling, guiding them through algebra and geometry homework.

“That was really rough for our family,” Faagutu said. “We had to make some massive shifts and, you know, I’m sure my kids love having me around, but I’m sure they would much rather be with their friends at school.”

It was the first time she’d ever participated in a rally.

“I’m not really doing much in politics,” Faagutu said. “And so this is … where politics meets my life. And I think that’s why it will definitely affect where I vote and how I vote in November.”

Faagutu, a Republican, supports Adkins and is among many who have been energized by reopening protests.

“It’s awakened the people to go, ‘Hold on’ — whether at a local level, at a congressional district level, a state level, national level, we need to take back our voice,” Blue Valley parent Paul Schmidt said.

For independent voter Steven Tucker, the pandemic has brought out the worst parts of both parties.

“Everybody’s hurting. And nobody seems to really care,” Tucker said. “… there’s much weeping and gnashing of teeth don’t get me wrong, but substantial changes to fix it have been lacking.”

He voted for Davids in 2018 and said he will likely vote for her again. But he wants to see a clear strategy — from anyone in government — for addressing the pandemic, a representative that is “willing to speak truth to power.”

“I got to say I was slightly disappointed (in Davids). She kind of just fell in line,” Tucker said. “I was hoping for somebody a little more fiery, then again, Amanda Adkins is about as exciting as a cold bowl of oatmeal.”

What should Congress do?

Adkins and Davids differ sharply on how Congress should respond to the pandemic’s health and economic fallout. Adkins wants to see a payroll tax holiday to help jump-start the economy and supported the first package of COVID-19 federal aid, but she thinks any additional help should take into account the rising federal debt.

“We’re now at $26 plus trillion dollars in debt, which equates to about $214,000 per taxpayer,” Adkins said. “I don’t know about you, but for me, like that bothers me in terms of the future for my own kids.”

Adkins doesn’t support another $600 federal increase to unemployment benefits after it ended in July, and calls President Donald Trump’s executive order providing a $300 weekly boost an “acceptable middle ground for the near term.”

“The focus needs to be on incentivizing work and getting people back to work, less on unemployment,” Adkins said.

Davids, meanwhile, ties economic revival to how the country has and will handle the virus.

“We can’t have a healthy economy without healthy people,” Davids said. “And so one of the top things that we need to be doing from the congressional perspective is making sure that we’re continuing to push for a national testing strategy.”

Davids wants to see aid to state and local governments, additional unemployment benefits and housing assistance included in any additional relief package. She voted against a $3 trillion House proposal in May that included those measures, citing that the bill didn’t have bipartisan support.

She also took issue with the bill’s inclusion of a number of Democratic priorities —like a measure that allowed banks to serve cannabis businesses — that didn’t relate to the virus.

“Those types of provisions are things that we should be pushing for, but not necessarily in a coronavirus relief package,” Davids said.

On the trail

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director says wearing a mask is the “best defense” to getting the pandemic under control, and there’s been no flashpoint over masks in this race: Both Adkins and Davids wear them.

Adkins has about 30 volunteers out knocking on doors every week, her campaign said. After someone at Adkins’ in-person primary-results watch party tested positive for the coronavirus, Adkins’ family quarantined.

“I, myself, because I am around people, choose to test every couple of weeks just to make sure that I’m continuously healthy because that’s part of my commitment to others as a candidate,” Adkins said.

Davids’ primary night event was virtual and her campaign doesn’t have people out canvassing. Instead, they’re relying on phone calls and texts to connect with voters. Because Davids has a fundraising advantage and is running a district that didn’t go for Trump in 2016, University of Kansas political science professor Patrick Miller said she can afford not to go door-to-door.

“If this were truly a top-tier congressional race I would say … she might be making a fatal error by not going out and trying to meet those voters,” Miller said.

Wyandotte County Democratic Central Committee Chairman Jacques Barber said the pandemic is certainly reshaping how people vote. Kansas voters have until Oct. 27 to request an advance ballot by mail.

“We’re encouraging people to vote by mail and to get those ballots in as early as possible,” Barber said.

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio. It’s 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/news/2020-09-23/how-the-coronavirus-altered-the-kansas-congressional-race-between-rep-davids-and-adkins.

KCK man indicted on drug, gun charges

Antonio Wright, 33, Kansas City, Kansas, has been charged with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon, one count of possession with intent to distribute cocaine and one count of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

The crimes are alleged to have occurred May 10, in Johnson County.

If convicted, he could face penalties of up to 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000 on the firearm charge and up to 20 years and a fine up to $1 million on each of the drug charges, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives investigated. Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle McFarlane is prosecuting.