UG administrator Bach to retire Jan. 6

Doug Bach (File photo from July 2019)

Unified Government Administrator Doug Bach has announced his retirement, effective Jan. 6.

UG public information officer Krystal McFeders confirmed the announcement this morning. McFeders said she was surprised by the announcement today.

Bach has served as county administrator since March 2014 and has 31 total years of employment with the Unified Government and the city of Kansas City, Kansas.

Ashley Hand, UG director of strategic communications, said she had not heard yet who will be named to be the interim UG administrator starting Jan. 6. Some of the appointment process may be governed by the UG’s charter, she said.

The UG’s current assistant county administrators include Emerick Cross, Melissa Sieben, Alan Howze and Bridgette Cobbins.

Before being appointed county administrator, Bach served as deputy county administrator from 2003 to 2014, and previously served in leadership roles with the UG and the city of Kansas City, Kansas, including the departments of finance, community development and procurement, as well as with the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department and county administration.

“I am honored to have served with the many hardworking, talented individuals across the Unified Government,” Bach said in a news release. “Together, we have tackled many challenges and are now well-positioned to rebound from this pandemic stronger than ever.”

Bach is credited with directing multiple major economic development projects that have brought in hundreds of millions of dollars into the area, stabilized the local economy during a downturn while creating new jobs. He has worked to eliminate debt obligations as an organization ensure future fiscal sustainability and guided the UG through its COVID-19 response.

According to the UG charter, the county administrator is the chief administrative officer of the UG. The county administrator is appointed and dismissed by the mayor with the consent of the UG Commission, the charter stated. The administrator reports directly to the mayor and is subject to an annual review.

Hand said Mayor Tyrone Garner would have no comment. Also, two UG commissioners did not comment.

Weather turns cold today

Clouds moved through Wyandotte County on Tuesday. (Photo by Steve Rupert)
The high temperatures on Saturday, New Year’s Day, will be below freezing. (National Weather Service graphic)
The low will be in the single digits on Saturday night and Sunday morning. (National Weather Service graphic)
There is a 61 percent chance that the Kansas City metropolitan area will get an inch of snow or more on Friday night, New Year’s Eve, through Saturday. (National Weather Service graphic)

Temperatures will reach a high of only 37 today, as a cloud cover is moving into the region from the southwest, according to the National Weather Service.

Some light snow may be possible north of the Kansas City area, with a slight chance for light freezing drizzle in central and north central areas of the state. However, there is no precipitation in the forecast for the Kansas City metropolitan area today.

Temperatures will warm to the mid-40s on Thursday and low 50s on Friday before turning colder on Friday night, New Year’s Eve, the weather service said. The coldest temperatures of the season so far will arrive.

Rain, snow and freezing rain is possible New Year’s Eve, with a low in the teens, according to the weather service.

On Saturday, New Year’s Day, there is a chance of snow, with a high of 19, the weather service said.

Today, it will be mostly cloudy, with a high near 37, the weather service said. An east northeast wind of 6 to 10 mph will gust as high as 20 mph.

Tonight, it will be mostly cloudy, with a low around 25, according to the weather service. A northeast wind of around 6 mph will become calm in the evening.

Thursday, it will be mostly cloudy, then gradually sunny, with a high near 45, the weather service said. A calm wind will become south southwest 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.

Thursday night, it will be partly cloudy, with a low of 34 and a south wind of 6 mph, according to the weather service.

Friday, it will be partly sunny, with a high near 52, the weather service said. A south wind of 6 to 8 mph will become north in the afternoon.

Friday night, New Year’s Eve, there is an 80 percent chance of rain, snow and freezing rain before midnight, then snow, possibly mixed with freezing rain, according to the weather service. The low will be around 17. Between a quarter and half-inch of precipitation is possible.

Saturday, New Year’s Day, there is a 40 percent chance of snow, the weather service said. It will be mostly cloudy, with a high near 19.

Saturday night, it will be mostly cloudy, with a low of 2, according to the weather service.

Sunday, it will be sunny, with a high of 28, according to the weather service.

Sunday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 18, according to the weather service.

Monday, it will be sunny, with a high near 43, the weather service said.

Monday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 29, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, it will be mostly sunny, with a high near 47, the weather service said.

For more weather information, see www.weather.gov.

Overworked former Kansas teacher has ‘nothing left to give’ public schools and she’s not alone

Generally, teachers will ‘gut it out for the kids’ until the end of the year. But a notably different tenor this fall has some Kansas educators speaking out against what they say is a toxic environment.

by Suzanne Perez, Kansas News Service and KMUW

Wichita, Kansas — Kelly Kluthe is one of those rock-star science teachers schools need.

She landed an innovative teaching grant at Olathe West High. She speaks at national conferences about ways to make science lessons fun. She mentored new teachers through the University of Kansas Center for STEM Learning and the UKanTeach program, where she got her start.


She’s been teaching for a decade. Loves science, kids, public education.

And she just quit.

“While I love and believe in education for every student despite their circumstances, public schools as a system don’t love their teachers back,” Kluthe posted on Twitter recently.

“The working conditions have always been challenging, but they became downright unsustainable since the start of the pandemic,” she tweeted. “We’re overworked, undervalued, and constantly under attack from people who have no idea what the hell they’re talking about.”

Kluthe is leaving Crossroads Preparatory Academy, a public charter school in Kansas City, Missouri, for Notre Dame de Sion Grade School, a private Catholic school known for its small classes and college-prep trajectory.

That tweet about her mid-year departure drew thousands of responses from teachers across the country, many of whom say they’re burned out, depressed and disillusioned.

They point to struggles over teaching in-person and remote students simultaneously, filling in for peers during substitute shortages and feeling the pressure to make up for lost learning time. What’s more, they’re caught in the middle of controversial mask mandates, debates over critical race theory and challenges to books in school libraries.

Steve Case, a former teacher and professor who ran the University of Kansas’ now-defunct UKanTeach program, says schools should prepare for a mass exodus of teachers in coming months.

“I’m very, very afraid of a collapsing system here,” he said. “We will see a very large number of teachers who leave teaching altogether and don’t come back.”

Case, who taught Kluthe at KU, said mid-year resignations that were once rare are becoming more common. Generally, teachers will “gut it out for the kids” until the end of the year, he said. But a notably different tenor this fall has some Kansas teachers speaking out against what they say is a toxic environment.

During a recent meeting of the Blue Valley school board, veteran teacher Dianne O’Bryan urged communities to ease up on the negativity or risk losing more teachers.

“For those angry, highly critical, accusatory parents in our district, please know that you’re a major contributing factor to teachers leaving,” O’Bryan said. “You have a choice to be angry, but we also have a choice to leave.”

Kluthe, 31, said in an interview that she didn’t intend to resign mid-year, but the stresses of teaching started to affect her physical and mental health.

“I was getting anxiety almost every single work night, just dreading coming to work,” she said. “I was starting to resent the students for behavior issues … when I know a lot of those things are outside of their control. It was just not a healthy place for me to be.”

On Twitter, she wrote: “I’m exhausted. I’m burnt out. I have nothing left to give. I need to step away and take care of myself for a bit.”

Her private-school job comes with less pay but also less pressure, Kluthe said — about 10 students per class instead of 23 or more. She also pointed to more planning time, a tight-knit school community and the “freedom to be creative and follow my passions.” She’ll teach fourth- and fifth-grade science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM, classes, mentor peers and write a new social justice curriculum.

“I want to retire (as) a teacher,” she said, “but I need a school that will love me as much as I love my work.”

Case, the retired professor, said Kluthe’s comments echo a growing frustration among teachers “who have not had a voice” in discussions around education.

“It’s like, yeah, we’re talking about it. We know all this stuff,” he said. “But nobody’s doing anything about it, and that’s where hope gets lost.”

Suzanne Perez reports on education for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @SuzPerezICT.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
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/2021-12-22/overworked-former-kansas-teacher-has-nothing-left-to-give-public-schools-and-shes-not-alone