No shortage of debates and meetings tonight

There are plenty of debates and meetings to choose to watch online or on television tonight.

Presidential debate

The presidential debate is at 8 p.m. Central time in Nashville, Tennessee, and will be carried on NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox and CNN. NBC’s Kristen Walker is the moderator.

U.S. Senate debate scheduled tonight

Democratic candidate Barbara Bollier and Republican candidate Roger Marshall will debate at 6:30 p.m. tonight, with a program looking at the debate from 7 to 8 p.m. in Wichita. The debate information is on KMUW’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/KMUW89/ and at https://www.kcur.org/election-2020. Live coverage begins at 6:30 p.m.

Davids, Adkins plan Zoom debate for 3rd District

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., and Republican challenger Amanda Adkins are planning a Zoom debate at 5:30 p.m. Oct. 22, according to the Adkins campaign. The hosts of the online debate will be the NAACP of Olathe, Overland Park and Leawood, the Heartland Black Chamber of Commerce, with the Olathe Latino Coalition and the Johnson County Latina Leadership Network. KMBC.com will carry the debate, as well as the Adkins campaign Facebook page at www.facebook.com/AmandaAdkins2020/posts/382103513169643. See more at https://www.facebook.com/events/1004193050098075/?acontext=%7B%22event_action_history%22%3A[%7B%22mechanism%22%3A%22search_results%22%2C%22surface%22%3A%22search%22%7D]%7D.

Wyandotte County commissioner plans Town Hall meeting tonight

It’s not a debate, but Unified Government Commissioner Harold Johnson plans his annual Town Hall meeting from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. tonight on Zoom. The “State of the 4th District” meeting will be carried by UGTV on cable television, and also will be on the UG’s Facebook page. Several community leaders, including Mayor David Alvey and commissioners, are planning to be on the virtual town hall meeting. There will be updates about happenings in the 4th District. For more information, visit https://www.wycokck.org/Home/News-Slider-Data/Small-Set-One/State-of-the-4th-District-Virtual-Town-Hall.aspx.

Kansas announces short-line rail improvement projects

Thirteen short-line railroad projects were announced Tuesday, totaling $5 million in grants.

Gov. Laura Kelly and Kansas Transportation Secretary Julie Lorenz announced the 13 recipients. In all, 15 miles of track will be built.

Four projects were awarded to short-line railroads and nine projects were awarded to shippers. The program is a 70-30 matching grant, with the state providing 70 percent, and the applicants, 30 percent.

The governorsaid at the news conference that the short-line improvement projects were a major request from rural communities in the state.

The funding for the program is through the state’s bipartisan Eisenhower Legacy Transportation Program.

Adding short-line rail improvements will provide solutions for several problems, according to Lorenz. It will be another choice for shippers, especially in rural areas, and will take some of the heavy truck traffic off the state’s roads, according to Lorenz. For some grain elevators, the short-line railroad is the only method of transportation available, according to Lorenz.

There were no Wyandotte County locations in the grant awards, but Johnson County is listed at $256,163 for major rehabilitation of New Century Air Center Railroad. The awards were mostly in rural areas.

Lorenz said Kansas has another $100 million of railroad projects planned across the state.

Family, church advocate for fair treatment in case of 11-year-old KCK girl who was assaulted

An alleged racially motivated assault on an 11-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, girl is at the center of a controversy over fair treatment by the judicial system.

The 11-year-old girl was at an apartment complex visiting friends in Shawnee, Kansas, on Aug. 28 when a 12-year-old boy called her and her friends racist epithets. Then the boy threatened the girls with a knife, and later used a steel pole to hit the 11-year-old girl on the head, according to reports. The girl in the case is black, while the boy is white.

The girl was unconscious for three minutes and had to go to the hospital, where she had eight stitches in her mouth, according to reports. She had a concussion and had to spend the night at the hospital.

Pastor Terry Bradshaw Jr. of the Empowerment Temple in Kansas City, Kansas, said he’s known the girl for years, and she is a “sweet girl, excellent student, loving, bold and honest. All she said was ‘My black is beautiful’ and ‘Black Lives Matter,’” he said.

Right now the 12-year-old boy in the case is on house arrest, he said. The boy used hate speech and racist epithets, then physically attacked her, he said. According to Pastor Bradshaw, house arrest is a cushion that many other juveniles don’t receive after committing a violent crime.

Pastor Bradshaw pointed out that he has seen many minority youth here who were picked up immediately after a similar incident and were sent to a juvenile center to await a trial. He is asking that the boy in this case be sent to a juvenile center to await a hearing, and he is also asking that the boy be charged with a hate crime.

“Right now people are pretty upset and tired, exhausted, ready for change, and this is just a further confirmation that equality must happen for the black community,” Bradshaw said. “We are ready to fully pursue justice, to fully pursue equality. It is time for real change to happen.”

Often in America, there are two sets of rules for blacks and whites, especially those riddled by poverty, he said. Many times blacks are treated as less than human.

“We just want the same rights, we want equal justice,” he said.

“What happened is further confirmation that racism and bigotry is running rampant in our community,” Bradshaw said. “We must have no tolerance for racism and bigotry. We must extinguish hate.”

There must be equality and change and justice across the board, no matter who it is, Bradshaw said. He added the parents of the boy should take a great level of responsibility and be held accountable, also.

“All I want is justice for my daughter,” the girl’s mother said in a statement. “She didn’t do anything to provoke this boy. Clearly, he needs help, and we want to make sure he gets the help he needs. The hate needs to stop, and we can all do our part to end it by having talks with our children about racism.”

The family and their attorney are monitoring the case, which is in Johnson County, to make sure justice is done, according to the statement.