UG committees to meet tonight

The Armourdale area master plan update, a county-wide mobility plan, and Land Bank items are on the agenda for tonight’s Unified Government Neighborhood and Community Development Committee meeting tonight.

The meeting will begin at 5 p.m. Monday, Sept. 13. It will be followed by the Economic Development and Finance Committee meeting.

On the agenda for the EDF Committee meeting is an amendment to the development agreement for Village West Apartments III; an amendment to the Kaw River Bridge development agreement; and a review of retiree health care benefits liability from the Other Post-Employment Benefits trust.

On the NCD agenda are several Land Bank applications, including:

New construction – single family home
– Ryan Barr, one home, 607 Douglas Ave., 611 Douglas Ave.
– Habitat for Humanity of Kansas City, one home, 2735 Roswell.
– Rudolfo Mesa, one home, 646 Seminary St.
– Derek Covington, four homes, 2608 Hallock St., 2604 Hallock St., 2526 N. 6th St, and 2529 N. 6th St.

New construction – multi-family
– Bryan and Michelle Williams, 10-15 units, 922 N. 47th Terrace.
– Chris Solutions Construction LLC, 3 units, 1735 S. 22nd St.

New construction – garages
– Robert Moreno, 1210 Waverly Ave., 1214 Waverly Ave.
– Elvis Rodriguez, 709 Garfield Ave.
– Jesus Leyva, 919 Cleveland Ave.

New construction – commercial
– City Oil Co. Inc., 2080 Darby Ave., 2074 Darby Ave.
– Argentine Neighborhood Development Association, 3119 Strong Ave. building, 1419 S. 32nd St, parking.
– Centro De Avivamiento Casa De Dios, 1001 Minnesota Ave., 1005 Minnesota Ave., 1007 Minnesota Ave.
– Jaime Ruiz, 1129 Osage Ave., 1130 Pennsylvania Ave.

Property transfers
– CHWC, 822 Everett Ave., 824 Everett Ave., 836 Everett Ave., 840 Everett Ave., 842 Everett Ave., 844 H Everett Ave., 846 Everett Ave., 825 Oakland Ave., 831 Oakland Ave., 833 Oakland Ave.
– USD 500 (Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools), 823 New Jersey Ave., 820 Freeman Ave.
– Unified Government, 2450 S. 14th St., 2441 S. 14th St.

Yard extensions
– Walter Linares, 4414 Parallel Parkway.
– Alex and Laura Sanchez, 3451 R N. 39th St.
– David Patton, 2523 N. 38th St.
1030 Quindaro Blvd.

The committee meetings will be on Zoom, and also accessible by telephone. They will be on UGTV cable television and YouTube.

To connect by Zoom, visit https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84839039879?pwd=Z0Zna0hQOXlheWZ2SDhxcUFzdUdOUT09.

The passcode is 543597. The webinar ID is 848 3903 9879.

To connect by telephone, call toll free 877-853-5257 or 888-475-4499.

Temperatures in high 80s today

Photo by Mary Rupert

Between 1 and 2 inches of rain are possible on Tuesday night and Wednesday. (National Weather Service grpahic)

Temperatures will rise to the high 80s today in Wyandotte County, with winds gusting up to 29 mph, according to the National Weather Service forecast.

On Tuesday afternoon and evening, there will be a chance of thunderstorms, the weather service said. Look for the showers to intensify around 7 to 9 p.m.

A few strong borderline severe storms could pose a hail risk with the first storms in the evening, according to the weather service.

Recent dry conditions should make the risk of flooding less likely, the weather service said.

Today, it will be sunny, with a high near 89 and a south southwest wind of 11 to 16 mph, gusting as high as 29 mph, the weather service said.

Tonight, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 73 and a south wind of 11 to 14 mph, gusting as high as 28 mph, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, there is a 30 percent chance of precipitation, mostly after 1 p.m. The high will be near 85 with a southwest wind of 6 to 13 mph, gusting as high as 26 mph. Less than a tenth of an inch of rain is in the forecast.

Tuesday night, there is a 70 percent chance of showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 1 a.m., then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1 a.m., according to the weather service. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. The low will be around 64 with a northwest wind around 6 mph becoming calm in the evening. Between 1 and 2 inches of rain are possible.

Wednesday, there is a 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, with a high near 80, the weather service said. A calm wind will become east around 6 mph in the morning.

Wednesday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 65, according to the weather service.

Thursday, it will be sunny, with a high near 85, the weather service said.

Thursday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 67, according to the weather service.

Friday, it will be sunny, with a high near 87, the weather service said.

Friday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 68, according to the weather service.

Saturday, it will be sunny, with a high near 88, the weather service said.

Saturday night, it will be clear, with a low of 70, according to the weather service.

Sunday, it will be sunny, with a high near 89, the weather service said.

‘We demand better’: KU students, faculty call on administrators to mandate COVID-19 vaccines

by Lucy Peterson, Kansas Reflector

Lawrence — University of Kansas students, faculty and staff members called on administrators to mandate vaccines on campus during a rally Sunday, expressing concerns about the ongoing surge of the delta variant of COVID-19.

Nearly 40 people gathered at the university’s Wescoe Beach to push back on the administration’s reluctance to mandate a COVID-19 vaccine for individuals on campus this year. The rally was held by the Vaccinate KU coalition, which formed this summer with a Change.org petition urging KU to require vaccines. The petition has garnered 1,118 signatures since it was posted on July 18.

Vaccinate KU presented a list of 11 recommendations to the chiefs of staff for KU chancellor Douglas Girod and provost Barbara Bichelmeyer at the start of the school year, said the coalition’s founder, Sophie Kunin, a senior at KU. Kunin scheduled the Vaccinate KU rally in the shadow of Strong Hall, where Girod, Bichelmeyer and other administrators have offices, because none of the recommendations was implemented.

“The university needs to recognize that by not taking on this list of safety precautions, they’re putting KU and the Lawrence community at risk,” Kunin said at the rally. “Today is a day to recognize other perspectives and to discuss what we need to do at KU to keep our community safe. This rally is about the safety of everyone.”

The recommendations made to KU include requiring masks on campus until 80% of students are vaccinated, implementing social distancing requirements on campus and creating an office for contact tracing.

Despite several schools across the country who have mandated vaccines on campus, such as the University of Indiana and the California State Universities system, KU has not required vaccines on campus because “state law limits our ability to require vaccination or proof of vaccination,” said KU spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, responding to an inquiry for this story via email.

The state statute Barcomb-Peterson cited prohibits state buildings from requiring a COVID-19 “vaccination passport” for entrance.

KU requires all students to have a measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine before arriving on campus and requires all students living in university housing to have a meningitis vaccine before moving in.

Advocates for an on-campus COVID-19 vaccine mandate included professors, graduate teaching assistants and students who are worried of contracting the coronavirus in classrooms. Many who spoke urged KU to push against the Legislature to protect the KU community and surrounding Lawrence community.

“Suing the state for the ability to mandate a vaccine could save KU, would save lives, and it won’t put any target on our back as an institution that wasn’t already there,” said Elise Higgins, a doctoral candidate in the Department for Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies at KU. “Vaccine mandates can lower COVID rates, and if our Legislature won’t protect us, you can at least try to do it yourselves.”

Professors and students shared stories of fear as they and those in their classrooms began contracting the coronavirus in the 2020-2021 school year, but were unable to know the extent to which the spread occurred because of a state statute barring KU from conducting its own contact tracing.

Since Aug. 1, 2020, a total of 1,824 people at KU have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to KU’s COVID-19 dashboard. In the week of Sept. 2, a dozen people on campus tested positive for the coronavirus.

Andrew Kustodowicz, president of the Graduate Teaching Assistant Coalition, said professors and GTAs were forced to return to in-person learning, despite the GTA union’s formal request to require vaccinations before returning to the classroom.

“I think what’s really unfortunate is that KU’s administration has kind of weaponized the overwhelming majority of people’s desires to be back on campus,” Kustodowicz said. “GTAs, while we did excellent work on Zoom, ultimately, we want to be in the classroom. But when KU said, ‘You will be in the classroom, there will be no vaccine mandate and you cannot choose to protect yourself,’ that became an unacceptable working condition.”

GTAC called a meeting as part of its ongoing contract negotiations with KU where members asked for flexibility in how they could safely instruct classes if vaccines weren’t required, Kustodowicz said. KU denied a request to choose how classes would be conducted, he said.

Student body president Niya McAdoo said the Student Senate office has had informal talks about on-campus vaccine mandates, and she and her administration are prioritizing protecting students’ livelihoods.

“People are still dying every day from COVID. We’re not out of the pandemic,” McAdoo said at the rally. “Obviously, vaccination has helped, but it hasn’t solved the issue 100%, so we have to continue to work together to show up for each other and show up for the greater community. If we don’t do it, a lot of other people won’t do it for us.”

Although the Pfizer-BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine received full approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Aug. 23, Barcomb-Peterson said KU is still unable to mandate vaccinations. No universities in Kansas have moved to require vaccines for its students, faculty and staff.

KU rescinded its mask mandate on May 27 after recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said vaccinated individuals no longer needed to wear masks. On Aug. 6, KU said it would again require masks for the 2021-2022 school year because of a surge in the highly contagious delta variant forcing the CDC to revise its mask recommendations.

Naomi Madu, a senior from Abuja, Nigeria, studying strategic communication, said her family members have little access to vaccines in Nigeria. Only 2.3% of people in Nigeria have been vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the World Health Organization.

“I don’t know how to explain to (my family) that the country with the most vaccines in the world has the least regard for human life,” Madu said at the rally. “There’s no reason for us to still be here, and it’s unbelievably reckless that this university has adopted a ‘wait and see’ approach while new variants continue to ravage marginalized communities in this country.”

To urge students to get vaccinated, KU is offering prizes for students who upload their vaccination cards to their Watkins Health Center patient portal. Prizes include a full semester’s tuition, $5,000 in cash, $1,000 in dining dollars and a free campus parking pass.

“If we are capable of grasping the gravity of this situation we’re in,” Madu said, “our educators and administrators should be able to grasp that as well, and I hope they understand that our lives are worth more than $230,000 in prize money.”

Kansas Reflector stories, kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/09/12/we-demand-better-ku-students-faculty-call-on-administrators-to-mandate-covid-19-vaccines/