Appointment, stormwater fees on Thursday night UG agenda

The appointment of an interim Unified Government administrator and proposed changes to stormwater fees are on the agenda for the 7 p.m. UG Commission meeting Thursday.

The Unified Government Commission will meet at 5 and 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 6.

UG Administrator Doug Bach recently announced his retirement, effective Jan. 6. The interim administrator position is on the agenda.

The proposed stormwater rate options are a tiered rate structure, and an individually calculated rate structure.

There also is a 5 p.m. special session on Thursday. On the agenda for the 5 p.m. meeting are an update on the legislative agenda, a COVID-19 update and a presentation on stormwater rates.

Also on the 7 p.m. agenda are a number of planning and zoning items, including:

• A resolution to extend the moratorium on enforcement of pre-existing murals prohibited within certain zoning districts.

• A resolution to extend some sections of the code of ordinances in conjunction with COVID-19 emergency ordinances passed previously by the UG Commission.

• 7331 Holliday Drive, change of zone from single-family and planned non-retail business districts to planned limited business district for a single-family residence and accessory structures.

• 230 S. 65th St., change of zone from single-family district to planned commercial district to convert a warehouse to a skate park-skate school, Ride 4 Ever Skate Park.

• 4461 Eaton St., change of zone from single-family district to townhouse district to bring the existing nonconforming triplex into compliance.

• 3159 Orville Ave., change of zone from single-family district to traditional neighborhood design district for an existing nonconforming three-unit residential building.

• 3740 N. 35th St., change of zone from single-family district to agriculture district for agricultural uses.

• 1150 N. 38th St., change of zone from single-family district to planned nonretail business district to split office from cemetery property.

• 4403 Rainbow Blvd., change of zone from single-family district to townhouse district for a 17-unit building for Friendship Inn for family members and guests of patients at the University of Kansas Health System.

• 7512 Leavenworth Road, change of zone from limited business district to commercial district to accommodate a used car dealership with light repair and maintenance.

• 4108 Adams St., change of zone from single-family district to two-family district for two living units.

• 2000 S. 49th St., change of zone from single-family district to agriculture district for agricultural purposes.

• 1625 S. 86th St., change of zone, previously approved to MP-3, to revise the hours of operation condition of approval, Bettis Asphalt and Construction.

• 4621 Swartz Road, special use permit to keep about 50 chickens.

• 749 Locust St., special use permit for a short-term rental.

• 401 N. 6th St., special use permit for a drinking establishment with live entertainment in a record store, Manor Records.

• 4403 Rainbow Blvd., special use permit for a 17-unit building for Friendship Inn for family members and guests of patients at the University of Kansas Health Systems.

• 812 S. 12th St., renewal of a special use permit for a restaurant and drinking establishment with live entertainment.

• 4108 Adams St., special use permit for a short-term rental.

• 7512 Leavenworth Road, special use permit to accommodate a used car dealership with light repair and maintenance.

• 2601 Ridge Ave., special use permit for a group home program with gardens and greenhouse for training (Shalom House) and office and gardening space for New Roots program, Catholic Charities of Northeast Kansas.

• 4600 Parkview Ave., vacation of right-of-way.

• 1801 S. 14th St., preliminary and final plan review for BPU water Argentine reservoir reconstruction, BPU.

• 7331 Holliday Drive, master plan amendment from low density residential to neighborhood commercial, Crossroad Trucking.

• 230 S. 65th St., master plan amendment fro low density residential to community commercial, Ride 4 Ever Skate Park.

• 4461 Eaton St., master plan amendment from single-family residential to general urban.

• 4403 Rainbow Blvd., master plan amendment from urban mixed use to general urban, Friendship Inn.

• 4108 Adams St., master p lan amendment from single family to general urban.

• 1150 N. 38th St., master plan amendment from public-semi-public to community commercial.

• 3159 Orville Ave., master plan amendment from urban density to mixed use.

• 3600 Rainbow Blvd., ordinance rezoning property from planned apartment district to planned high-rise apartment district.

• 2211 N. 13th St., ordinance rezoning property from nonretail business district to planned two-family district.

• 8537 State Ave., ordinance authorizing special use permit for liquor sales in conjunction with a convenience store and gas station.

• 221 S. 22nd St., ordinance authorizing special use permit for continuation of a dog day care.

Also on the 7 p.m. agenda:

• The nomination of Lynn Melton to the Law Enforcement Advisory Board, submitted by Commissioner Tom Burroughs.

• Adoption of the proposed UG legislative agenda for the 2022 state legislative session.

The 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. meetings will be on UGTV cable television and on YouTube. The public also may watch the meetings from the City Hall lobby.

The meeting can be accessed through Zoom at https://us02web.zoom.us/s/89319207660?pwd=eW5JTldLK25pZEV3WUtuS1RpZXpvQT09.

The meeting passcode is 308958.
The webinar ID: 893 1920 7660

The toll-free telephone numbers: 877-853-5257 or 888-475-4499.

KCK student named to dean’s list

Martha Wolf of Kansas City, Kansas, was recently named to the Dean’s List for the fall 2021 semester at the University of Evansville. Wolf is studying actuarial science.

A total of over 630 students were named to the UE Dean’s List. To receive this honor, a student must have carried a full academic load of 12 hours or more and have earned a grade point average of 3.5 or above.

Founded in 1854, the University of Evansville is located in Evansville, Indiana.

Voting rights tops U.S. Senate agenda as Jan. 6 anniversary nears

by Ariana Figueroa, Kansas Reflector

Washington — U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Tuesday stressed that Democrats are prepared to change Senate rules to pass voting rights legislation — and linked the move to the attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump.

“The election subversion efforts we’re seeing all across the country today are a direct continuation of Jan. 6,” he said at a press conference, referring to Republican state lawmakers who back legislation that imposes stricter voting requirements on their states, following Trump’s defeat. Congress is preparing to mark the one-year anniversary of the Capitol attack on Thursday with speeches and ceremonies.

Schumer’s comments came even as Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia said earlier in the day that he was opposed to Senate rule changes unless they were bipartisan. Manchin is a key vote for advancement of voting legislation in the evenly divided Senate.

Manchin told reporters that it’s his preference to work with Republicans to come to a bipartisan agreement rather than change Senate rules.

“Being open to a rules change that would create a new direction, it’s very, very difficult,” Manchin said, according to Capitol Hill pool reports.

However, Schumer said that for months Democrats tried to negotiate with Republicans, but he said that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said that “it’s a bottom line, no one should cooperate on voting rights.”

On the Senate floor, McConnell argued that because the 2020 presidential election had the highest voter turnout, “our democracy is not in crisis.”

“There are senators on both sides who understand that any supposedly limited ‘carve out’ would bring the whole house crashing down,” he said.

Senate Republicans have blocked debate in the Senate on voting rights three times.

“So there is not going to be any kind of bipartisan action, we know that,” Schumer said. “Our caucus is now engaged in active discussions about how we can restore the Senate.”

Schumer also suggested that Manchin is continuing to negotiate on changes in the filibuster.

“There are certain things he won’t go for, but there are certain things he’s talking about,” Schumer said. “Hopefully we can get 50 of us to come to an agreement.”

Current filibuster rules require a 60-vote threshold to advance and pass legislation, rather than a simple majority, and with an evenly divided Senate, Democrats need all of their members on board.

Democratic Sens. Raphael Warnock of Georgia, Jeff Merkley of Oregon, Alex Padilla of California and Senate Rules Committee Chairwoman Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota joined the press conference. Schumer said that Democrats will have a debate on changing rules by Jan. 17, which is also Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Schumer added that Democrats are working to get Democratic Sen. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Manchin to agree to some type of filibuster carve out specifically to pass voting rights legislation.

Warnock said that Congress is running out of time to pass meaningful voting rights legislation.

“Let me be very clear,” Warnock said. “The elections are still run by the state. We’re just trying to provide a federal baseline that says everybody ought to have access, every American has to have access to the ballot.”

He said in his home state of Georgia, there is currently an effort in the state legislature to eliminate absentee ballot drop boxes in the entire state.

“It’s very clear what the Republican party is up to,” Warnock said. “They are trying to make it harder for some people to vote … and I predict that over the next few days you’re going to hear the same Republicans give a lot of lip service to bipartisanship.”

The Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law found that from Jan. 1 to Dec. 7 of 2021, at least 19 states passed 34 laws restricting voting access.

“There are solutions to this alarming and unprecedented attack on our democracy,” according to the center. “Congress has the power to take bold action now to protect American voters from the kinds of restrictions enacted this year and the looming threats to voters and elections that may be imposed in 2022 and beyond.”

Sinema has made it clear that under no circumstances will she change her position about carving out filibuster changes to advance any voting rights legislation.

“As she has throughout her time in the U.S. House and Senate, Senator Sinema also continues to support the Senate’s 60-vote threshold, to protect the country from repeated radical reversals in federal policy which would cement uncertainty, deepen divisions, and further erode Americans’ confidence in our government,” her office wrote in a statement, the same one she made in December in response to questions about her position on the filibuster.

Schumer did not specify which voting rights legislation Democrats would try to pass, but several pieces have been introduced.

One that Senate Democrats worked on with Manchin is called the Freedom to Vote act, which would establish Election Day as a national holiday and set minimum standards that each state must have for elections, such as two weeks of early voting and an option for same-day voter registration.

Another piece of legislation, the John Lewis Voting Rights and Advancement Act, would bolster the Voting Rights Act by establishing a new formula to require all 50 states to get special permission from the Justice Department before making any changes to voting laws or putting in place new voting requirements.

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/2022/01/04/voting-rights-tops-u-s-senate-agenda-as-jan-6-anniversary-nears/