Heat index could reach 96 today

The heat index could approach 100 on Saturday. (National Weather Service graphic)
Sunday’s heat index also approaches the century mark. (National Weather Service graphic)
Wyandotte County is on the edge of a storm system expected to move into the area on Saturday. (National Weather Service graphic)

The heat index could reach a high of 96 today, as the temperatures rise to 92, according to the National Weather Service forecast.

Temperatures are escalating, with Saturday’s heat index reaching 100, the weather service said.

Strong to severe storms are possible Saturday night into Sunday in the region, according to the weather service.

Wyandotte County is on the edge of this storm system, and there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday night to Sunday. Up to three-quarters of an inch of rain is possible in the two days.

Today, it will be sunny with a high near 92 and heat index as high as 96, the weather service said. There will be a south southwest wind of 8 to 10 mph.

Tonight, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 74 and a south wind of 7 to 10 mph, according to the weather service.

Saturday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 95 and a heat index as high as 100, the weather service said. A south wind of 9 to 15 mph will gust as high as 22 mph.

Saturday night, there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1 a.m., then showers and possibly a thunderstorm between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m., then showers and thunderstorms likely after 4 a.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 74 with a south wind of 10 to 14 mph. Between a quarter and half-inch of rain is possible.

Sunday, there is a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 7 a.m., the weather service said. The high will be near 93 with a south southwest wind of 10 to 14 mph, gusting as high as 21 mph. Between a tenth and quarter-inch of rain is possible.

Sunday night, there is a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1 a.m., with a low of 76, according to the weather service.

Monday, it will be sunny and hot, with a high near 97, the weather service said.

Monday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 77, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 96, the weather service said.

Tuesday night, there is a 40 percent chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 1 a.m., according to the weather service. The low will be around 76.

Wednesday, there is a 30 percent chance of showers, with a high near 94, the weather service said.

Wednesday night, there is a 30 percent chance of showers, with a low of 72, according to the weather service.

Thursday, it will be sunny, with a high near 92, the weather service said.

UG Commission passes mask mandate

A modified mask mandate was approved in an 8-2 vote Thursday night by the Unified Government Commission.

Commissioner Mike Kane, 5th District, proposed a “carve-out” for the resolution, with the mask mandate not applying to schools, and also not applying to the cities of Bonner Springs and Edwardsville.

The “carve-out” version passed 8-2, with Commissioners Christian Ramirez and Harold Johnson voting against it. The two commissioners supported not carving out the schools and other cities from the resolution. Ramirez and Johnson were in favor of a more extensive mask mandate.

With the “carve-out,” the local school boards and other cities will make the decision about masks for their own districts and cities.

The mask mandate is contained in a local health order and will require wearing a mask indoors in public spaces for vaccinated and unvaccinated persons who are age 5 and older, for a six-week time period. It goes into effect upon approval by the commission, according to the resolution.

According to UG Health Department officials, this mask mandate aligns with the newest CDC guidance from July 27 that counties with substantial or high transmission require masks for vaccinated and unvaccinated people.

A rather raucous crowd in the City Hall lobby spoke out against the mask mandate in person, cheering each other loudly, during the public hearing.

Speaking in favor of the mask mandate were several persons who made their comments remotely on Zoom.

Daran Duffy, who came in last in the primary for mayor on Tuesday night, said, “The thing is, we don’t need you guys telling us how to live.”

Mary Gerlt, a Libertarian who lost the Tuesday night primary election contest for the Board of Public Utilities, told the commission that this was really not their role as a government, to cheers from the lobby.

“Everyone is responsible for themselves, for their personal health,” Gerlt said.

Ned Kelley, a Libertarian who ran unsuccessfully for office in the primary, said about the doctors’ presentation, “They want you to be more scared.”

“Live free or die!” John Burns shouted.

A woman who identified herself only as Mamie, with no last name, commented on Zoom, “Can everybody in the public lobby calm down? We’re going to take care of everything, but at the same time, calm down.

“If we want to keep our families safe, wear a mask, get the shot, calm down,” she said.

The Rev. Tony Carter, pastor of Salem Baptist Church, was in favor of the mask mandate.

“The fact is, we’re all in this together,” he said. “What affects me affects you.”

Although they don’t live in the same houses, when someone makes a choice not to wear a mask or get vaccinated, it isn’t good for everyone, according to Carter. He said he was concerned about his grandchild who was too young to get a vaccine, and favors the mask mandate because of her.

Broderick Crawford also supported the mask mandate, “because I want to protect my family.”

“We need to stop the spread,” Crawford said. “The way we stop the spread is to mask and vaccinate.”

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer at the University of Kansas Health System, spoke by a video link at the meeting. The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce had asked the UG Commission to delay their vote until after a hospitals’ presentation Friday morning, but Mayor David Alvey said the UG had already delayed the vote one week, after last week’s UG meeting, and they didn’t want to delay it more.

Instead, Dr. Stites made a presentation at the UG meeting.

The hospitals in Greater Kansas City are filling up, and need the community’s help to stop the spread of COVID-19 and the Delta variant, Dr. Stites said.

At this time, the hospitals are struggling to take care of their own patients, those with and without COVID, he said.

New positive cases of COVID-19 have risen dramatically in the past few weeks. The KU Health staff is seeing a rise in COVID-19, also, with more than 100 employees currently out with COVID or out while waiting test results. That is with a vaccination rate of about 75 percent for hospital staff, according to Dr. Stites.

“We’re in much more trouble now than last fall,” Dr. Stites said. The Delta variant spreads more, and spreads more quickly, also.

The community held the curve down last year by wearing masks, and Dr. Stites recommended masks again, along with vaccinations. Vaccinations take a few weeks to a month to take effect, so masks are needed now, until more people get vaccinated.

Dr. Stites asked for the community’s help. Without it, people who have heart attacks or strokes may have to wait in the hallway to find a bed for 10 to 15 minutes, which could be a serious risk.

“We have to all take care of each other,” Dr. Stites said.

In that one-week delay of the UG Commission’s vote, the COVID numbers got worse in Wyandotte County.

Last week, 512 Wyandotte County residents became sick with COVID, and three died from COVID, said Juliann van Liew, UG Health Department director.

Vaccine rates here remain low, around 35 percent.

Dr. Allen Greiner, chief health officer for Wyandotte County, said Wyandotte County is in a high transmission area and it is following CDC guidelines on masking in indoor spaces.

To see the UG Commission meeting on YouTube, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CNFKCArmT3Y

Decisive 4-1 victory over LAFC puts Sporting KC in first place

Sporting Kansas City (10-4-3, 33 points) vaulted to the summit of the Western Conference with a 4-1 victory over LAFC (6-6-5, 23 points) on Wednesday night at Banc of California Stadium in Los Angeles.

Alan Pulido, Luis Martins and Daniel Salloi struck during a dazzling first-half display before Gadi Kinda added a fourth goal in the second half as Sporting drew level on points with Seattle Sounders FC and claimed first place by virtue of the wins tiebreaker.

LAFC salvaged a late consolation goal through Danny Musovski but sustained its heaviest home defeat in the club’s four-year history.

Wednesday’s result gave manager Peter Vermes his 200th coaching win for Sporting in all competitions as his team improved to 4-1-0 on the West Coast this season.

Boasting a league-best five road victories in 2021, Sporting will look to continue its winning ways Saturday when it visits the fourth-place Colorado Rapids (8-4-3, 27 points) in a compelling Western Conference clash at 8 p.m. Supporters can catch the action live on Bally Sports Kansas City Plus, Bally Sports Midwest Plus, BallySports.com and the Bally Sports app as well as Sports Radio 810 WHB and La Grande 1340 AM.

With his team kickstarting a busy run of six matches in 18 days, Vermes made two changes to the starting lineup from Saturday’s 2-1 home loss to FC Dallas. Midfielder Ilie Sanchez stepped in for Roger Espinoza and Pulido — returning to the club after a monthlong Concacaf Gold Cup stint with the Mexico Men’s National Team — replaced captain Johnny Russell.

In the 20th minute, right back Graham Zusi sent a thumping long ball over the top for Khiry Shelton to chase. LAFC goalkeeper Tomas Romero raced off his line in an attempt to punch clear, but Shelton beat him to it and suffered a full body blow from Romero in the process.

Pulido scooped up the loose ball and calmly slotted past retreating defender Tristan Blackmon and into the empty net, notching his seventh goal of the season and his second against LAFC after scoring in Sporting’s 2-1 home win on June 26.

High on momentum, Sporting landed another haymaker in the 28th minute when Martins bagged his first career MLS goal. The left back ignited the scoring play with a probing run into the central channel before spreading it left to Daniel Salloi, who was announced as an MLS All-Star on Wednesday afternoon.

The 25-year-old juked his way down the left endline and pulled a pass back for Martins, who tucked an excellent finish into the right corner. Sporting KC Academy products have now scored or assisted in 12 straight MLS matches dating back to May 16.

A stunning first half saw Sporting reach dreamland in the 36th minute with a strike from the red-hot Salloi.

Zusi embarked on an overlapping run down the right wing, received a pass from Shelton and fizzed a low cross to Salloi, whose first-touch bullet nestled just inside the near post with pinpoint precision. Zusi now has assists in three straight regular season matches for the first time since August 2012, while Salloi leads MLS with 15 combined goals (10) and primary assists (five).

The teams traded chances on the cusp of intermission, with LAFC wingback Raheem Edwards smashing a shot off the post and Pulido curling inches wide from 20 yards after settling a pass from Kinda.

Sporting’s 3-0 advantage at halftime marked the fifth time ever that the club has scored three goals in the first half of a regular season road game. Furthermore, LAFC faced its first three-goal halftime deficit in club history, having entered MLS as an expansion side in 2018.

After suffering a series of fatal Sporting blows, LAFC were eager to atone after the restart. Kim Moon-Hwan did well to set up Diego Rossi in the 51st minute, but the reigning MLS Golden Boot winner lifted his open shot over the crossbar. Shortly thereafter, Jose Cifuentes drilled a venomous blast marginally wide from 20 yards.

Any impetus LAFC gained at the start of the second half was promptly extinguished near the hour mark as Sporting expanded its lead. Zusi was afforded space on the right flank and delivered an inch-perfect cross into the penalty area, where Kinda floated between a pair of LAFC defenders to nod an excellent header past the helpless Romero for his fourth goal of the campaign.

Zusi tabbed his 70th career regular season assist on the play as Sporting became the first LAFC opponent to score four goals in a road match at Banc of California Stadium.

The hosts endured further frustration in the 74th minute. After Sporting defender Nicolas Isimat-Mirin performed an acrobatic clearance off a teasing cross, 2019 MLS MVP Carlos Vela unleashed a bicycle kick that screamed inches high. Vela, who entered the night with goals in four straight games, spurned another opportunity in the dying embers by dragging a left-footed effort wide at close range.

After their first 16 shot attempts failed to test Sporting goalkeeper Tim Melia, LAFC finally put one on target in the 82nd minute as Musovski ran onto Diego Palacios’ through ball and slotted low to make the score 4-1. Musovski could have added to his total in the 89th minute, chesting down a diagonal pass from Mamadou Fall only to see his lobbed shot float a foot over the woodwork.

LAFC thought it had won a penalty kick in second-half stoppage time when referee Alan Kelly pointed to the spot after Andreu Fontas tripped Fall on the edge of the box. VAR intervened, however, and deemed the foul to have taken place outside of the penalty area. Vela’s ensuing free kick missed the target.

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