UG committees to meet today

The Unified Government Public Works and Safety Committee will meet at 5 p.m. Monday, March 28, followed by the Administration and Human Services Committee meeting.

The Public Works and Safety Committee agenda includes:

• Approval for project prioritization for grant submissions, including raising safe streets and roads for megaprojects as priorities, energy efficiency and conservation block grant and Infra grants.

• A revised grant for the bi-state sustainable reinvestment corridor.

• A request for approval to apply for a federal intersection safety grant through the Kansas Department of Transportation for fiscal years 2025-2026 with a 10 percent local match.

• An ordinance to amend speed regulations against racing on the highways, including violations for spectators at races or events.

• Approval for open burn updates.

• A resolution extending the state of local health emergency for COVID-19 in Wyandotte County, through July 1.

• A request to approve a local match of funds to move forward with the bi-state sustainable reinvestment corridor grant application.

Items on the Administration and Human Services Committee agenda include:

• A proposal for a remote worker policy, for nonessential personnel.

• An update on the fiscal impact of the minimum wage at $18 per hour for UG staff, potential issues and union implications.

• An update from the county appraiser’s office.

The meeting will be on Zoom at https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86146154785?pwd=Q3dQQ1Y0VDFTNHRBbEgzWFNGREpoUT09.

Also, the public may view the meeting from the lobby of City Hall, 701 N. 7th St.

The agendas are online at https://www.wycokck.org/Departments/Clerks-Office/Agendas-Minutes.

For more information about how to participate in a meeting, visit https://www.wycokck.org/Departments/Clerks-Office/Engage-in-Public-Commission-Meeting.

More information is at https://www.wycokck.org/Engage-With-Us/Calendar-of-Events/Standing-Committee-Meeting-PWS-and-AH.

Davids: GOP’s gerrymander of 3rd District map a gambit to thwart will of voters

Lawsuit challenges shift of Wyandotte County voters to rural 1st District

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The Republican-led Kansas Legislature voted to take a cleaver to the congressional district served by Democratic U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids and replace the top half of culturally diverse Wyandotte County with people more apt to favor a GOP candidate.

The move to shift extra Republicans to the district was anticipated and protested at town hall meeting across the state and, predictably, became grist for pending legal challenge claiming it was improper to fracture communities of interest in Wyandotte County. GOP lawmakers, over Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto, placed urban streets of Kansas City, Kansas, in the same congressional district as Dodge City, Salina, Hays and Garden City.

Rep. Davids, who has served the 3rd District since 2019, combined life as an attorney and mixed martial artist before getting into politics. She told the Kansas Reflector podcast that she had a longstanding dislike for gerrymandering.

“Before I even ever thought about running for Congress, I have cared about this kind of issue,” she said. “Whether it’s a state Legislature or a member of Congress … electeds shouldn’t be deciding who is going to get elected. The communities — the people, the voters — should be deciding who their elected officials are.”

The new map of Kansas’ four congressional districts is in limbo, but if affirmed by the courts a path for Davids’ re-election would be more rocky. The road to victory would be smoother for presumed Republican nominee Amanda Adkins, who lost the 2020 race against Davids and worked previously as a campaign manager for former U.S. Sen. and Gov. Sam Brownback.

Adkins’ campaign has emphasized national importance placed on the 3rd District race as Democrats try to hold their narrow majority in the House and Republicans attempt to return to power in the chamber. She said Cook Political Report rated a Davids-Adkins showdown a toss-up.

“Make no mistake,” Adkins said in a fundraising appeal, “our race will decide who has the majority in Congress next year, and we can’t let Democrats go unchecked for two more years.”

Rep. Davids was at the White House in mid-March when President Joe Biden signed the bipartisan Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2022. The law provides federal funding to organizations that serve victims of domestic abuse and sexual violence. During the COVID-19 pandemic, she said, the incidence of such violence escalated.

Davids, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin, said the legislation enhanced prevention efforts, including on college campuses, and added tools to hold perpetrators accountable. It will deliver more resources for rural, LGBTQ and tribal communities, she said.

“It really addresses some of the jurisdictional issues that tribes face when trying to keep keep folks safe in their tribal communities, particularly for when things happen with someone who’s not native, who’s not from the community,” she said.

Davids said the federal government had a role to play in addressing possession of “ghost” or unregistered firearms, including the weapon used in the March shooting by an Olathe East High School student of a school administrator and school resource officer.

“It’s really upsetting and heartbreaking that we even have a situation where kids and teachers and folks who work in schools even have to ever worry about these kinds of issues,” Rep. Davids said.

Davids said state and federal officials should drive good policy designed to get untraceable weapons out of circulation. Demand for these firearms is greatest among people who can’t walk into a gun store and pass a background check. The Congress, she said, could move ahead with legislation closing loopholes in federal law on firearm possession.

She said the U.S. House and U.S. Senate have worked on versions of the America Competes Act, which would revitalize the country’s research, innovation and manufacturing sectors to expand domestic manufacturing. It is a piece to the economic puzzle along with major infrastructure and budget bills signed by Biden.

“When you’re looking at bringing manufacturing home, domestically, all of these things are going to be able to work together. At least for an infrastructure nerd .. it’s kind of a cool series of bills to see coming across,” Rep. Davids said.

Rep. Davids also endorsed legislation requiring members of the U.S. House and U.S. Senate to place personal investments into a blind trust to reduce use of insider information by lawmakers. It’s been alleged members of Congress relied on early warnings of COVID-19 to alter investment portfolios.

“Regardless of whether or not any laws at that time were broken, it was clearly inappropriate, at a minimum. People need to be able to trust that we’re here to serve in the public interest.”

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/2022/03/28/davids-gops-gerrymander-of-3rd-district-map-a-gambit-to-thwart-will-of-voters/.