Subfreezing temperatures in today’s forecast

Cold wind chills Friday morning, with a cold day ahead. (National Weather Service graphic)

The wind chill was 6 degrees at 9 a.m. Friday in Wyandotte County, according to the National Weather Service.

Temperatures were well below normal at 19 degrees, the weather service said.

Today’s high will be near 28, according to the weather service. At tonight’s Mayor’s Holiday Tree Lighting Ceremony at KCK City Hall, starting at 4 p.m., temperatures will reach 26 degrees at 4 p.m. and will be about 23 degrees at 7 p.m., according to the weather service forecast.

Seasonable temperatures should return next week with highs in the 40s on Sunday and 50s by Monday, the weather service said.

Thanksgiving Day temperatures could be in the high 30s or low 40s with low rain chances, according to the weather service.

Today, it will be sunny, with a high near 28, the weather service said. A west northwest wind of 7 to 11 mph will gust as high as 21 mph.

Tonight, it will be clear, with a low around 20, according to the weather service. A southwest wind will be 5 to 13 mph with gusts as high as 24 mph.

Saturday, it will be sunny, with a high near 33, the weather service said. A northwest wind of 8 to 16 mph will gust as high as 25 mph.

Saturday night, it will be clear, with a low of 19 and a north northwest wind around 6 mph becoming calm, according to the weather service.

Sunday, it will be sunny, with a high near 47, the weather service said. A south southwest wind of 6 to 14 mph will gust as high as 24 mph.

Sunday night, it will be clear, with a low of 32, according to the weather service.

Monday, it will be sunny, with a high near 52, the weather service said.

Monday night, it will be mostly clear, with a low of 33, according to the weather service.

Tuesday, it will be sunny, with a high near 54, the weather service said.

Tuesday night, it will be partly cloudy with a low of 34, according to the weather service.

Wednesday, there is a chance of sprinkles, with partly sunny skies and a high near 53, the weather service said.

Wednesday night, it will be mostly cloudy, with a low of 35, according to the weather service.

On Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, it will be partly sunny, with a high near 37, the weather service said.

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

Mayor’s Downtown Holiday Lighting Festival to be Friday evening in KCK

(Graphic from UG)

Mayor Tyrone A. Garner along with the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, are holding the 2022 Mayor’s Downtown Holiday Lighting Festival from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18, at City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

Mayor Garner said at the Thursday night UG Commission meeting that this is the first time since COVID started that this festival will be brought back in person. Some variations were held in the past, with drive-throughs.

Residents are invited to this free community event that will bring holiday cheer and fun along with goodie bags given out to the first 1,000 children from Mayor Garner and Santa and Mrs. Claus.

See and hear amazing local performers and school choirs along with free holiday crafts, face painting, games and special guests. The year’s holiday festival will also feature local food trucks as well as 10 local businesses and organizations that will be set up in the front City Hall Plaza area.

Free parking for this event will be in lots, upper E, 3, and C.

The Santa line begins at 4 p.m. and the tree lighting is at 6:30 p.m.

  • Information from Unified Government

DA gets commitment for $1.7 million for digitizing past files in relation to review of Golubski cases

District Attorney Mark Dupree tonight got the Unified Government Commission’s approval for $1.7 million to digitize old DA case files to review past cases that former detective Roger Golubski was involved in.

Dupree said his goal was to bring more transparency, accountability and justice to acknowledge the mistakes of the past, correct them and ensure never to repeat them. The digitizing would make sure they could see every case former detective Golubski had been involved with to review it. They are proposing to digitize 60 to 70 years of files, about 4,000 boxes of paper files, Dupree said.

In September 2022 Golubski was indicted by the federal government on six counts, and in November he was indicted with an additional six counts, according to Dupree. There have been calls for the DA to review all of Golubski’s cases.

Golubski worked most of his life for the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department, then some later years for Edwardsville Police Department. He was with KCKPD from 1975 to 2010. After retiring there, he was with Edwardsville PD from 2010 to 2016, Dupree said.

The $1.7 million will allow these cases to be digitized, and they would be searchable by name, according to Dupree.

Dupree made his request with the backdrop of a Rally for Justice conducted downtown today, coordinated by Team Roc and the Midwest Innocence Project.

While the UG Commission gave its approval, there was quite a bit of discussion about how to get the money. It was not budgeted, and state law requires funds that are spent have to be budgeted in a line item, according to UG attorneys. It apparently would be illegal to spend the money without budgeting it first. It was a challenge to get the money right away, as Dupree requested.

UG commissioners did not want to take the money from the ARPA Subcommittee’s recommendations, which have been made and were on the agenda Thursday night for approval. The cities of Edwardsville and Bonner Springs, though, made requests Thursday night that the county’s ARPA funds include something for their cities.

The digitized case files could be used for other investigations by the district attorney’s office, but they will not be made available to the public, according to Dupree.

Dupree said since 2018 the DA’s office has been reviewing Golubski’s cases through its conviction and integrity unit, those cases that his name was on, but now they cannot handle it case by case but have to do an electronic search to find the rest of the cases. The old paper files are stacked up in boxes in the former city jail, without much identification on them.

He said he had asked for the funding for digitizing these files in 2018. While he got some money from the UG, he did not get all the funds required for the digitizing project.

While UG commissioners were in complete support of funding this project on Thursday night, they were upset that the matter had not already been taken care of earlier.

Commissioner Brian McKiernan said he was disappointed the commission had not revisited this digital funding issue for four years, and now it is one big jump.

Commissioner Angela Markley said their job was to manage the city budget. Commissioners did not have advance warning about it.

“This came onto the agenda 10 minutes after we started,” she said. Her initial reaction was to wait and work out the financing for it, with advice from the UG’s budgeting staff.

Dupree said he had a conversation and request about the agenda a month ago. It had been taken off the agenda and then the mayor put him back on the agenda. It was not a last-minute request, according to Dupree.

In answer to Commissioner Bynum’s question, budget director Reginald Lindsey said the county side budget has $13 million in it at the moment. But they have started making other commitments for it, such as bringing sheriff’s personnel pay up to the level of police pay.

The county’s fund balance is about 16 percent right now, according to Lindsey.

There was a brief flare-up toward the end of Dupree’s presentation when Commissioner Kane said Dupree had been “extremely pushy” with his request. Dupree disagreed with being labeled pushy.

Later Dupree thanked all commissioners, including Kane, and said he had tried to communicate with them earlier.

UG acting chief financial officer Debbie Jonscher said that staff will be working to present a plan for financing this project, possibly to be presented within the next week.

To view more details from this meeting, visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2jJIjr8I_Qw.