Work taking place on I-635 and K-5 interchange

A bridge deck replacement project is underway on the northbound I-635 bridge over northbound K-5 and the southbound I-635 to southbound K-5 ramp bridge. (KDOT map)

A bridge deck replacement project on the northbound I-635 bridge over northbound K-5 and the southbound I-635 to southbound K-5 ramp bridge, in Wyandotte County, began Oct. 1, with lane closures scheduled to begin Oct. 7, weather permitting.

To assist motorists during rush hours, the Kansas Department of Transportation project will take place Monday to Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. , a KDOT spokesman stated.

The project, which also includes lane widening work along the inside shoulder of southbound I-635, will be shut down for the winter from Dec. 10 to March 12, 2022, but may resume sooner if there is favorable weather, according to KDOT.

Northbound and southbound I-635 and northbound K-5 traffic will have lane closures and during designated periods of work, the southbound I-635 exit ramp to southbound K-5 will be closed, according to a spokesman.

Crossovers to direct traffic may be constructed during the fall portion of the project.

When work resumes in March 2022, northbound K-5 will be closed to traffic and a crossover will be constructed to carry one lane of traffic from northbound I-635 onto southbound I-635, according to the KDOT spokesman. One lane of traffic will remain on northbound I-635.

In March 2022, the I-635 exit ramp to southbound K-5 will be closed for the remainder of the project, the spokesman stated.

Traffic will be controlled using digital message boards, road signs, concrete safety barriers and traffic cones.

Miles Excavating Inc. of Basehor, is the contractor for the $2.5 million project, which is expected to be completed by December 2022.

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. Motorists are encouraged to drive safely and always wear their seat belts, the spokesman stated.

Republicans see Kansas governor’s order creating child advocate as ‘slap in the face’

by Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly’s independent action to establish an Office of the Child Advocate a day ahead of the inaugural meeting of a child welfare oversight committee didn’t impress Republican members of the panel.

Sen. Richard Hilderbrand, a Galena Republican who serves as chairman of the committee, called the governor’s decision to bypass legislators through executive order a “slap in the face.”

“Don’t get me wrong, the Office of the Child Advocate is a needed position, a position that has been needed for a long time,” Hilderbrand said at the start of Tuesday’s meeting. “I just find it very, very troublesome that the governor decided on the eve of the first meeting of this committee, which one of our tasks was to look at this, they decide to issue an executive order forming it.”

The Democratic governor on Monday announced she was forming the office and relocating divisions of two state agencies under the authority of the Department of Administration. Her allies in the Legislature praised the move after years in which efforts to install a child advocate failed to gain interest or got tied up in political wrangling, as was the case in the 2021 session.

“Everybody is in agreement here that we needed this office,” said Rep. Jarrod Ousley, D-Merriam. “This office is going to be good for the kids. I applaud the governor’s efforts by taking the reins and establishing this office now and not wasting any more time letting it get caught up in politics.”

Ousley for five years has pursued legislation to establish a child advocate to field complaints about the Kansas foster care system and investigate them. He secured bipartisan support for a House bill this past session that would have had the advocate report directly to the Legislature, but House leadership killed the bill before it received a vote.

The Senate passed a competing plan that would have placed the office under Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican trying to unseat Kelly as governor in next year’s elections.

Child advocates opposed the politically charged Senate plan but have long pushed for more accountability of the privatized foster care system administered by the Department for Children and Families.

Republicans complained that Kelly’s executive order allows the governor to choose a child advocate without legislative approval. They also questioned whether the decision to relocate positions through an executive order is constitutional. Those moves typically require the governor to propose a reorganization, which the Legislature has to approve.

By placing the new office within the governor’s administration, said Sen. Molly Baumgardner, R-Louisburg, the governor is merely shifting complaints from one department to another.

“We will learn about harms and dangers and failures of the system when our reporters call us and say, ‘Would you please comment on this?’”
Baumgardner said. “We’re not going to find out this from the office of child advocacy. We’re not going to find out from the secretary of DCF.”

Democrats praised the governor for establishing the office after years of legislative inaction.

“Can we take some joy in the fact that what has been established will help save lives of children?” said Sen. Cindy Holscher, D-Overland Park. “To me, that’s a very big deal. That’s a huge victory for the kids in our state. We’ve been waiting. The kids have been waiting. Advocates have been waiting for years for something like this to be established.”

Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, D-Wichita, pointed to the recent death of a 17-year-old who died in police custody. The boy had been placed in a foster home by Saint Francis Ministries, the state’s largest foster care provider.

When the foster father called Saint Francis about the boy’s erratic behavior, Faust-Goudeau said, he was told it would be two hours before someone could help. Instead, he was taken into custody by police and died after an altercation at a juvenile detention facility.

“Had that foster dad been able to talk to someone directly right away, that young man may still be alive,” Faust-Goudeau said.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.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/2021/10/05/republicans-see-kansas-governors-order-creating-child-advocate-as-slap-in-the-face/.

BPU’s Bill Johnson named one of KC’s 250 most powerful business leaders

Bill Johnson

Bill Johnson, general manager of the Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities, was named to Ingram’s Magazine’s annual list of the 250 most powerful business leaders in the Greater Kansas City region.

Each year, the magazine identifies the most influential executives out of the 2.8 million persons in the metropolitan area, recognizing them as “power brokers who lead organizations that are attaining measurable levels of success and growth … while elevating the entire region’s commercial success, vibrancy and quality of life.”

Under Johnson’s leadership, the BPU continues to be recognized as one of the top municipal utilities in the nation.

As detailed in the September 2021 issue of Ingram’s Magazine, Johnson shared the challenges of operating the public utility during the pandemic, including decreased revenues and increases on the costs of commonly used supplies, which forced the utility to suspend or cut back a significant number of capital improvement projects.

He added a key component throughout the COVID pandemic has been and continues to be the safety of BPU employees and the customers BPU serves.

Johnson is a past president of Kansas Municipal Utilities and a current board member of the United Way of Greater Kansas City, as well as past board member of the Boys and Girls Club. Johnson is a member of the American Public Power Association, the Rocky Mountain Electric League and the American Water Works Association, and past president of the Kansas-Missouri chapter of the American Association of Blacks in Energy.

Among his career achievement awards, he has received the “Black Achievers Award” from the Southern Christian Leadership Council and the “Black Man of Distinction Award” from the Friends of Yates. Most recently Johnson was named a recipient of the “2020 Industry Leadership Award” from RMEL and the 2021 “Mark Crisson Leadership and Managerial Excellence Award” from APPA.

The Ingram’s 250 story is online at https://www.omagdigital.com/publication/?m=54501&i=722206&p=2&ver=html5.

  • Story from BPU