KCK school board changes policy on masks to individual building rule

The Kansas City, Kansas, school board on Tuesday night adopted a policy that would require masks at a school building if COVID case numbers are over 5 percent at individual school buildings.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education on Tuesday night, April 26, changed its mask policy, adopting a new policy that would take effect if COVID case numbers are over 5 percent at individual school buildings.

The vote was 4-3 to approve the new policy.

Tiffany Lewis, the district’s director of health services, presented two options to the board.


The first option was to use community levels of COVID-19, and follow the most conservative recommendation from the KDHE, UG Health Department or CDC, based on the latest data.

The second option was to look at each building in the district, and if COVID-related absences exceed 5 percent, then the building would return to mask requirements and would need to drop below the threshold before moving to optional masking. The board adopted this option, which would affect only individual buildings and not the entire district.

The motion to adopt the second option was made by Board President Randy Lopez. Voting no were board members Wanda Brownlee Paige, Rachel Russell and Dr. Valdenia Winn.

The school district already tracks COVID numbers in its buildings, according to Lewis, using a software program. When students call in sick, information is transferred to a nurse, who does a follow-up call and determines if it is COVID-related.

Lewis said when they look at data, they usually go with the most conservative approach, and that the board previously has gone with the most conservative recommendation from health offiials.

She said advice from the health experts at the local and state health departments was to provide some way for the district to go back to masking if the situation warranted it in the future.

Yolanda Clark, board vice president, said her yes vote speaks for not only physical, but also mental health and educational health.

Voting no on the issue, Paige said her vote has always been supporting public health.

Russell said her vote was always based on the response of the community.

Dr. Winn said she was concerned that if the district or county is in the “red” zone, at high risk, this doesn’t cross over with option 2. With option 2, if the community is at high risk but the case numbers at the individual school are under 5 percent, then the students and staff would not have to wear masks.

According to district officials, a survey was taken, including responses from parents and staff.

Forty percent favored continuing with the current mask policy; 50 percent were against it; and 10 percent were unsure, according to Lewis.

Forty-one percent of those surveyed were parents or guardians; 50 percent were school district staff; and 11 percent were both parents and district staff.

Lewis said the majority of parents was in favor of changing the mask requirement, while the majority of staff was in favor of keeping the mask requirement.

Last Monday, the board’s older policy, tied to CDC, KDHE and Unified Government Health Department numbers, determined that masks would now be optional in the district’s schools, because Wyandotte County dropped to “low” on the CDC’s county risk map. That change in the procedures was more like option 1, according to Lewis, and option 2 will be entirely new for the district.

COVID case numbers have dropped in Wyandotte County, and COVID hospitalizations also are currently low in the county.

Legislature deflects Democrats’ maneuvering on clergy reporting mandate, food sales tax

GOP majorities reject attempts to pull reform measures out of committee

by Tim Carpenter and Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Democratic Sen. Tom Holland found little support for a motion Tuesday to bring to the full Senate a resolution stuck in committee that would require religious leaders in Kansas to become mandatory reporters of suspected child abuse or neglect.

Holland, of Baldwin City, found no interest among the Republican supermajority to overrule GOP Senate leadership’s view that the “Stop Protecting Pedophile Priests Amendment” didn’t merit consideration. Holland’s motion, which required 24 votes for approval, failed 10-24.

“For far, far too long the Kansas Legislature has looked the other way while pedophile priests, pastors and other religious leaders of faith sexually assaulted Kansas children,” Holland said.

His proposed amendment to the Kansas Constitution would make ordained ministers of religion mandatory reporters along with educators, law enforcement officers and others. His amendment contained no exclusion for communications with individuals during a religious confession of sinfulness.

Holland’s proposal in Senate Concurrent Resolution 1624 was introduced in March, but the Senate Judiciary Committee had taken no action on the measure.

If his motion had drawn support from 24 of the 40 senators, the underlying amendment would have become available for consideration by the full Senate. To make it to statewide ballots, two-thirds of Senate members and two-thirds of House members would have had to vote for it.

In the House, Rep. Jim Gartner, D-Topeka, was author of a comparable unsuccessful motion that would have brought to the House floor a bill repealing the state’s 6.5% sales tax on groceries. Kansas has the nation’s second-highest food sales tax in the nation, and pressure has been building to devote a portion of the state’s tax revenue surplus to reducing or eliminating the food sales tax on groceries.

Gartner invoked a rule triggering the vote on his motion to withdraw House Bill 2487 from the House Taxation Committee. He needed 70 votes to pull it off. The motion was rejected 48-74, with 10 Republicans joining all 38 Democrats in support of Gartner’s idea of breathing life into the bill.

“The majority party struck down direct, immediate tax relief to families,” said House Minority Leader Tom Sawyer, a Wichita Democrat. “We will work with them to keep pressing for a 0% state food tax. We can afford it, Kansans need it, and it’s our job. We’re not finished trying to axe the food tax yet.”

Rep. Dave Baker, a Council Grove Republican who voted for the motion, said the higher food sales tax in Kansas was incentive for shoppers to go to grocery stores in Missouri, where the food sales tax is 1.2%.

“I’m telling you they’re getting crushed in Kansas City,” he said. “It has turned into a weekend adventure for all those people to go over there and shop in Missouri.”

GOP leaders in the Legislature have weighed the possibility of phasing out state portion of food sales tax over three years, but have been cool to giving Kelly a policy victory amid her campaign for re-election.

During a House Republican caucus prior to voting on Gartner’s motion, House Speaker Ron Ryckman of Olathe said this procedural move was an attempt to divide the party.

Rep. Brenda Landwehr, R-Wichita, warned colleagues not to burn through excess cash on hand because when the money evaporated the requests for more spending would remain.

“You’re not gonna want to cut these budgets. What do you think your schools are gonna say?” Landwher said. “I have never and I will not under any circumstances vote for a tax increase because you act irresponsibly.”

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/2022/04/26/kansas-democrats-invoke-special-rules-to-force-votes-on-food-sales-tax-child-abuse-bills/.

Community budget conversation scheduled Wednesday

The Unified Government will hold a community budget conversation at 6 p.m. Wednesday, April 27, at the Beatrice Lee Community Center, 1310 N. 10th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

It is the second of three community budget conversations that are planned.

The in-person meeting will include food, snacks and youth activities.

Residents interested in attending the community conversations may RSVP at DotteTalk: Community Conversations, https://www.wycokck.org/Engage-With-Us/Calendar-of-Events/Dotte-Talk-Budget-Conversations.

The third community conversation will be held from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday, April 30, at the Eisenhower Community Center, 2901 N. 72nd St., Kansas City, Kansas.

In addition to the three community conversations, the UG has introduced a new budget simulator, encouraging residents to create their own budget models with an online interactive tool. Residents may share their budget models with the UG.

The UG budget simulator is online at https://wycokck.budgetsimulator.com/.

– Information from UG