Free bus rides offered to polls on Tuesday, Election Day

RideKC routes will offer free fares all day on Nov. 6 to make it easier for citizens to vote.

“Exercising the right to vote is so important that we want to make it as easy as possible to get to the polls,” KCATA President and CEO Robbie Makinen said. “We are grateful to our regional transit partners in Johnson County, Independence and KCK for agreeing to again make this a truly regional transit initiative.”

On Election Day, fares on all RideKC bus routes serving Kansas City, Johnson County, Wyandotte County and Independence will be free. KCATA, Johnson County and Independence paratransit will also be free to ride.

Wyandotte County election information is available at Wyandotte County Election Office, http://www.wycokck.org/election/. Information also is available at Vote Kansas, http://www.voteks.org/.

Customers can plan their travel early. For help planning your trip, call 816-221-0660 and be ready to provide the starting address and the address of the polling place you will be traveling to. Customers can also plan a trip with Google Transit trip planner, available on the home page of RideKC.org. The Regional Call Center is also open weekdays from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.

What’s at stake in Tuesday’s governor election

by Amy Jeffries, Kansas News Service

We’ve nearly arrived at a pivotal moment — the election that will determine whether Kansas continues rightward, returns to its traditional center, or starts down a new path.

My Fellow Kansans, http://www.kcur.org/programs/my-fellow-kansans, a podcast from the Kansas News Service, has been charting how Kansas got here and what’s at stake in Tuesday’s voting.

Nearly 30 years ago, the anti-abortion protests of the 1991 Summer of Mercy in Wichita energized conservatives and paved the way for the rise of Sam Brownback. As a U.S. senator, Brownback embodied the Christian right. But as governor, tax cuts headlined his red state agenda.

In 2018, the Republican nominee for governor, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, has declared his anti-abortion convictions, promised to double down on tax cuts and added immigration control to his “full-throttle” conservative mantle.

“He’s like a Trump man. He’s strong, he’s courageous, he will do what he says he’s going to do,” said Kobach supporter Paula Carr.

Kobach calls the Democrat in the race, state Sen. Laura Kelly, a “liberal.” Kelly categorically rejects that label. Yes, she steadfastly supports abortion rights and Medicaid expansion. She voted to end Brownback’s tax cut experiment. But she’s also voted for tax cuts during her time in the statehouse. And she sees herself as a consensus builder like famous Kansas pragmatists of both parties.

Kelly is relying on crossover support, and she’s got that from former Republican Gov. Bill Graves, “I have a pretty good grasp of the type of person she is,” Graves said. “And, knowing what the job entails … she just undoubtedly to me is … the individual we ought to put in that position.”

“When anything is going to happen in this country, it happens first in Kansas.”

Independent Greg Orman often repeats that 1922 quote from William Allen White — the Emporia Gazette editor known in his day as the “Sage of the Heartland.”

Orman, along with another independent on the ballot, Rick Kloos, argues that the current political system is broken. He wants Kansans to reclaim the state’s pioneering reputation by diverting from their allegiance to Republicans and Democrats.

My Fellow Kansans is a production of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR in Kansas City, KMUW in Wichita, Kansas Public Radio in Lawrence, and High Plains Public Radio in Garden City. The podcast is written and reported by Jim McLean, edited by Amy Jeffries, and mixed by Matthew Long-Middleton.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://www.kcur.org/post/my-fellow-kansans-pick-governor-add-history.

Early voting continues Monday morning

Early voting continues from 8 a.m. to noon Monday, Nov. 5, at the Election Office, 850 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.

The Election Office at 850 State Ave. will be the only site open for early voting on Monday in Wyandotte County.

On Tuesday, Election Day, Nov. 6, polls will be open from 7 a.m.to 7 p.m. throughout Wyandotte County. Voters should go to their assigned polling place on Tuesday.

Voters should bring a driver’s license or other approved ID to vote.

To view your ballot, go to www.wycovotes.org and click on the Quick Link “What’s on my ballot?” on the bottom right.

A voters’ guide is at https://wyandotteonline.com/general-election-voters-guide/.

Another good voter information website is the League of Women Voters’ Vote 411 at https://www.vote411.org/.

For more election information, visit the website of the Election Office at http://wycovotes.org/.

The Wyandotte County Election Office phone number is 913-573-8500, and its email is [email protected].