Governor visits mobile food pantry in KCK

Gov. Laura Kelly, right, visited a mobile food pantry at the Mercy and Truth Medical Mission in Kansas City, Kansas, on Tuesday, helping to bag and distribute food. (Photo from Gov. Kelly’s office)

The Church of the Resurrection’s mobile food pantry served a record at the Mercy and Truth Medical Mission location in Kansas City, Kansas — 59 families.

On Tuesday, with Gov. Laura Kelly, Chiefs tight end Noah Gray, and others, they celebrated the end of “Love Your Neighbor” month.

Gov. Laura Kelly helped bag and distribute the food along with volunteers from the Church of the Resurrection.

The governor also toured the clinic and delivered remarks about the importance of eliminating the state’s food tax. This proposal will lower the grocery bill and put money back in the pockets of Kansas families, according to the governor. With this event, the FoodMobile hit a record in number of families served. On average, 40 families receive aid through the mobile pantry at every stop. 

“Between the high food sales tax and the pandemic-induced inflation that has raised prices on all kinds of goods, it’s no surprise Kansans are struggling,” Gov. Laura Kelly said.  “For far too long, Kansans have been paying more for groceries than anyone else in other states. The sales tax on food is bad for families, local grocers and farmers, and our economy. It’s time we Axe the Food Tax.”

A conversation at Tuesday’s event that stood out to Anne Rauth:
During the event, a woman came up and said, “You made my day today.”


“Tell me more,” I said.


She went on to tell me that she has stage four cancer and had been asking the KC Chiefs for an opportunity to meet one of their players. “You made my dream a reality today,” she said.


I introduced her to the governor today and told her part of her story. This woman is able to get treatment for her cancer because she is on Medicaid. She told me that her husband doesn’t have insurance, so I told her that we’d help her husband.

And this is loving your neighbor.

  • Information from Anne Rauth, Mercy and Truth Medical Mission, and from Gov. Kelly’s office
Gov. Laura Kelly, second from left, visited a mobile food pantry at the Mercy and Truth Medical Mission in Kansas City, Kansas, on Tuesday. She helped bag and distribute food. (Photo from Gov. Kelly’s office)
Gov. Laura Kelly helped prepare and distribute food at a mobile food pantry Tuesday at the Mercy and Truth Medical Mission in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo from Gov. Kelly’s office)
Gov. Laura Kelly spoke at the food distribution event on Tuesday at Mercy and Truth Medical Mission in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo from Gov. Kelly’s office)
Volunteers from the Church of the Resurrection and staff from Mercy and Truth Medical Mission posed for a picture with Gov. Laura Kelly. (Photo from Gov. Kelly’s office)

Faith leaders and educators urge lawmakers to reject bills undermining Kansas schools

by Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — A coalition of Kansas faith leaders and education advocates are calling on lawmakers to reject legislation currently being drafted to ban or restrict teaching about U.S. racial history.

More than 50 people gathered Tuesday on the first floor of the Capitol in Topeka to rally against what they considered a concerted effort to dismantle diversity and inclusion initiatives at Kansas public schools. One such measure would establish a parental bill of rights, creating a series of transparency checks to ensure parents have knowledge of all material made available in school.

House Bill 2662 also compromises the affirmative defense for schools and educators if somebody charges them with promoting material harmful to minors. The House K-12 Education Budget Committee is set for a hearing on the measure Wednesday.

“This conversation about race or critical theory, whatever the right is calling it, is being used as an excuse to undermine support for public schools,” said Rabbi Moti Rieber, executive director for Kansas Interfaith Action. “We need to reach out to kids from across different spectrums, bring them into the conversation and to center the experience of people not often centered in our history books.”

A handful of faith leaders, equal rights advocates and teachers joined Rieber to describe their view of the Kansas Legislature’s approach to education. The consensus was that careless laws are putting teachers in the crosshairs of angry parents and pushing some out of the field entirely.

Across the country, a discussion surrounding critical race theory — an academic framework analyzing the role of systemic racism in American society — has led to the passing of laws against its inclusion in curriculum, which advocates argue is a thinly veiled attack on all diversity policies.
Members of the state board of education and local school boards have stated that critical race theory is not part of any Kansas curriculum.

Chloe Chaffin, a Washburn University student studying secondary English education, said she has always wanted to be a teacher. Stories of harassment over curriculum choices are the only thing holding her back and other young, aspiring teachers she has engaged with often feel similarly, she said.

“As I talk to my professors and students in my program, I often hear that our class sizes in the education program are getting smaller and smaller, that they aren’t able convince enough students to go into the profession, and I believe that bills such as these passing their way through the Legislature are a reason why,” Chaffin said.

Michael Rebne, a public school teacher and Roeland Park city council member, said some legislators in the building were trying to villainize the teaching profession and that these efforts would hamper students’ chances for an equitable future.

“We need to help our students get to the children of this country in order to understand why it is so important to continue to fight for democracy and freedom,” Rebne said. “We’re here to tell the right-wing legislators inside this building that we will not carry their ignorance, racism and fear into our schools.”

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/2022/02/15/faith-leaders-and-educators-urge-lawmakers-to-reject-bills-undermining-kansas-schools/