Two dead in shooting on North 31st

Two persons were dead after a shooting at 9:56 p.m. Sept. 4 in the 1800 block of North 31st Street, according to police.

The two individuals apparently were shooting at each other, according to police.

When officers arrived, they saw two victims in an alley east of 31st Street, the spokesman stated.

A man in his late 50s was dead at the scene and a man in his late 20s was rushed to a hospital, police stated. At about 1:50 a.m. Sept. 5, the second man died from his injuries, police stated.

According to the early investigation, there were only two individuals involved in the incident, the spokesman stated.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Major Case Unit is investigating. Anyone with information is asked to call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS, police stated.

Doctors advise masks and distancing for Labor Day

Wyandotte County reported an increase of 48 cases from Thursday to Friday, with a cumulative total of 6,080. There was no change in the number of deaths, which remained at a cumulative 117. (From UG COVID-19 webpage)
The seven-day rolling average of positive cases in Wyandotte County has been trending downward. (From UG COVID-19 webpage)
Cases in Wyandotte County spiked in mid-July, around two weeks after the Fourth of July. Then the case rates started to decline. (From UG COVID-19 webpage)

With the Labor Day holiday weekend here, doctors at the University of Kansas Health System were reminding residents to wear masks and socially distance this weekend.

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at KU Health System, said he knew there would be a lot of big gatherings and weddings this weekend, and that people should continue wearing masks and socially distancing.

Any place people are congregating together, particularly with alcohol, they tend to lose inhibitions, he said. Sometimes they don’t wear masks, the distance is shrinking and the virus is spreading, he said.

Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control, said there is good evidence that physical distancing and masking works in reducing the risk for getting COVID-19.

Dr. Stites said some counties with colleges and universities have been showing increases, including the University of Kansas, Kansas State University, Fort Hays State University and Benedictine College.

Mask-wearing doesn’t need to be political, he said. It needs to be a thoughtful discussion, he added.

Dr. Hawkinson said people should be aware of the risk that they may be putting on other people by going places without a mask.

Dr. Christi Bartlett, a palliative medicine physician from the health system, discussed caring for those who were intensive care with COVID-19. They have taken on a role of helping with communication with the families, she said. They are helping with end-of-life care and making sure people are feeling cared for, she added.

Dr. Bartlett also explained the recent CDC report that COVID-19 was the only cause of death for 6 percent of the COVID-19 deaths. She said a death certificate often lists a few different causes leading to the actual death, and it was unusual for a certificate to have only one cause of death. She viewed certificates with COVID-19 as the only cause to be incomplete. Usually they list other factors that the patient was experiencing, she said.

While a lot of people were hopeful that only 6 percent died of COVID-19, what it means to Dr. Bartlett was that the death certificates were probably not filled out completely and correctly.

The University of Kansas Health System reported 18 acute COVID-19 patients on Friday morning, five fewer than Thursday, according to Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of infection prevention and control. Seven patients were in the intensive care unit, an increase of one, and two were on ventilators, a decrease of one. Patients’ ages were from the 30s through the 80s. There were four other recovering patients on ventilators, but not in the acute phase. According to the doctors, there were 16 deaths in August and one so far in September at KU Health System.

Wyandotte County reported an increase of 48 cases from Thursday to Friday, with a cumulative total of 6,080. There was no change in the number of deaths, which remained at a cumulative 117.

Kansas reported an increase of 1,280 COVID-19 cases on Friday, for a cumulative total of 45,220 cases, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment statistics. There were 23 additional deaths reported, for a cumulative total of 481, according to the KDHE. There were 542 outbreaks reported, with 182 of them active.

According to KDHE, Johnson County reported 8,695 cases; Sedgwick County, 7,550; Ford County, 2,395; Shawnee County, 2,305; Finney County, 1,811; Leavenworth County, 1,750; Douglas County, 1,480; Seward County, 1,324; Riley County, 951; Lyon County, 861; Reno County, 850; Crawford County, 766; Ellis County, 532; Butler County, 520; Salina County, 494; Geary County, 326; Harvey County, 308; Cherokee County, 300; Franklin County, 271; Cowley County, 270; Barton County, 262; Montgomery County, 262; Pawnee County, 249;Miami County, 245; Jackson County (Kansas), 213; McPherson County, 204; Atchison County, 202.

To see the KU doctors’ news conference, visit https://www.facebook.com/kuhospital/videos/258786988453359.


The UG COVID-19 webpage is at https://alpha.wycokck.org/Coronavirus-COVID-19-Information.

The KC Region COVID-19 Hub dashboard is at http://marc-gis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/1c93961075454558b3bf0dfad014feae.


The Unified Government Health Department is collecting input on people’s experiences getting tested for COVID-19 in Wyandotte County. The survey is on the UG website at https://us.openforms.com/Form/ea97a450-3d74-4d86-8d1f-6e340d55cf7c.

The UG Health Department new school and sports guidance is online at https://alpha.wycokck.org/files/assets/public/health/documents/covid/09042020fallsportsrecommendations.pdf.
A previous UG 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.

Health Department issues new guidelines for schools and sports

The Unified Government Health Department issued some new guidelines for schools and sports on Friday.

The new recommendations include cohorting for students who engage in group activities outside of Wyandotte County. There is also guidance for non-school sports and activities, including private clubs.

UG Health Department staff members have discussed the guidelines with representatives of the local school districts, according to a spokesman. The guidelines are intended to promote COVID-19 safety during in-person learning while student athletes and other activities groups continue to compete outside of Wyandotte County, the spokesman stated.

This guidance applies to group activities in which students engage in practice, events, or competitions outside Wyandotte County (for example, – sports play or practice sanctioned by their school, private club, or other activity involving close contact that may put participants at higher risk for COVID-19), according to the Health Department officials.

The recommendations included staying together in one cohort while the student is playing school team sports. For example, during the school day a student could stay together with teammates in a classroom, with a coach as the instructor. There are other recommendations, as well.

Districts respond

In Wyandotte County, there have been different approaches to sports this fall. The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools suspended all fall KSHSAA sports in order to keep students safe and reduce exposure to COVID-19. The Piper school district had scheduled away football games for the season, including a game tonight at Ottawa.

The school boards will make the decisions for each district on returning to sports.

Edwin Birch, a spokesman for the Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools, said they haven’t discussed the new recommendations yet and will review them when they return from the Labor Day holiday break on Tuesday. The Kansas City, Kansas district has already decided to have virtual classes for the first nine weeks of school.

The Piper school district, according to Jenny Hurley, a spokesman, has reviewed the guidance released this afternoon.

“Our current procedures, including cohorting students and activity-based cohorts are directly in line with the recommendations issued today,” Hurley said in the statement. “We will continue to work closely with parents of those students participating in activities outside of school, such as club sports teams, if they wish to move their students from hybrid to remote learning based on the recommendation of the Wyandotte County Health Department.”

Dr. Jason Dandoy, Turner superintendent of schools, also had a statement:
“Turner USD 202 appreciates guidance from the Wyandotte County Health Department. Our current student cohorts were built based on activities and instructional content preferences of students,” Dr. Dandoy stated. “We will continue to review our student cohorts to ensure that groups have as little contact as possible. We are excited to welcome students back to a safe learning environment next week.”

More details about the new recommendations

The new recommendations for fall activities, from the Health Department:

• Maintain cohorts for the fall semester
A “cohort” is a group of students and a limited number of faculty/staff that remain together for classroom instruction and school activities, without intermingling with students, teachers, and staff from other cohorts. It is best practice for students to stay in one cohort throughout the fall semester. Doing so reduces the mixing of students, and thus, the potential spread of COVID-19 should an outbreak of the virus occur (that is, – if one cohort has a case of COVID-19, the other cohorts are at lower risk).

• Cohort activity groups together for classroom instruction (for example, – a sports team also has class together) or consider remote learning
The UGPHD strongly recommends student activity group cohorting for both sports and in-person academic programming. If this cannot be achieved, the UGPHD strongly recommends remote learning for students participating in Out-of-County activities.

• Have activity coaches act as teachers/instructors for their activity cohorts
An “activity cohort” is a group of students who practice and participate in the same sport or activity, who attend school together and are then grouped in classrooms with their teammates. These cohort classrooms should involve activity coaches as teachers/instructors. If this cannot be achieved, the UGPHD strongly recommends remote learning for students participating in out-of-county activities.

• Allow students learning remotely to return to regular school cohorts after the activity season
It is best practice for those students to remain in a remote learning environment as long as they are participating in the club, extracurricular, or non-school sponsored restricted sports activities. They should only be allowed back into regular school learning cohorts after their season has ended, and 14 days have passed since they last participated in practices or competition.

Recommendations for non-school activities, such as private clubs:

• Opt into remote learning options
Remote learning modalities are strongly encouraged for students who engage in any club, extracurricular, or non-school sponsored activities currently restricted within Wyandotte County as an alternate option to activity cohorts. For those students, the UGPHD strongly encourages remote learning programs offered by that district.

“Our top priority in Wyandotte County is to allow our children to learn safely in an in-person environment,” said Dr. Allen Greiner, chief medical officer with the Unified Government, in a news release. “But we recognize that some parents want to allow their student-athletes to continue to compete outside of Wyandotte County. Today’s recommendations are our best effort to maintain safe in-person learning for the majority of students, while also creating a pathway for student-athletes to continue with both their education and their athletic pursuits.”

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment this week reported 1,328 new COVID-19 cases between Monday and Wednesday. That brings the total number of cases in Kansas to 43,490, including 15 sports clusters responsible for causing 119 cases.

On Aug. 24, KDHE reported that statewide, there were 34 new cases reported in the 0-9 year old age group and 79 new cases statewide in the 10-17 age group. That KDHE data showed that, at that time, the 10-17 year old age group in Wyandotte County was testing positive at 18.1 percent, which was significantly higher than neighboring Johnson County, where youth 10-17 were testing positive at a rate of 6.81 percent. Several cases of COVID-19 in children have been traced to participation in youth sports.

“KDHE has tracked 10 COVID-19 clusters in Kansas that were related to youth sports this summer, including one current cluster of five people associated with a Kansas City, Kansas volleyball team,” explained Dr. Erin Corriveau, deputy medical officer with the Unified Government. “We recognize that said-athletes want to play and compete, and their parents want that for them. We feel that if this new guidance is followed by schools and student-athletes who are competing outside of Wyandotte County, we can further ensure a safe in-person learning environment for all children within Wyandotte County schools.”

According to Health Department officials, the recommendations are intended to accomplish three objectives:
• Prevent a spike in positive COVID-19 cases due to exposure through certain sports and other activities in which it is difficult to maintain social distancing and/or wear masks the whole time
• Provide consistent guidance for all non-professional sports at all levels, and
• Reduce the possibility of more restrictive future measures

Janell Friesen, a spokesman for the Health Department, said they already were encouraging cohorting by classrooms, so that students who are attending classes in person are not going from classroom to classroom. This takes it a step further, she said. Athletes who attend away games and come back to classrooms could put a large number of students at risk and possibly shut down a school, so that’s why there is a recommendation for the athletes to stay together in one classroom.

Different schools will have different set-ups for how they are handling instruction, she added. Some districts have mostly remote instruction, while others are planning in-person instruction. Some have a combination of the methods.

The community is reminded to limit social interaction wherever possible, maintain 6 feet of social distancing, and to wear a mask at all times when in public, according to Health Department officials. By working together, everyone can limit the number of new positive COVID-19 cases in Wyandotte County, according to the officials.

Testing is available for individuals who live or work in Wyandotte County if they are experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 or have been in close contact (within six feet for at least 10 minutes) with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19. Testing is available at multiple community locations, including the Public Health Department at 619 Ann Ave., and through weekly “pop-up” sites coordinated by the Wyandotte County Health Equity Task Force. To find the latest testing sites and schedules, visit wycokck.org/COVID-19.

For additional data and resources on COVID-19 in Wyandotte County, visit wycokck.org/COVID-19 or call 3-1-1.