KCK school board looks at corrections cadet program, names Facility Committee

The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Education considered a corrections cadet program and named Facility Committee members at its Dec. 6 meeting.

The corrections cadet program would be an agreement with the Unified Government, according to Dr. Danira Fernandez-Flores, the district’s director of Diploma Plus. No action was taken at the Tuesday meeting on the program.

Students would work and train in the Wyandotte County Sheriff’s Department, being paid $15 an hour under the program, according to Dr. Fernandez-Flores.

They would be seniors in high school and there would be no specific grade point average required of them, she said. The students would be on track to graduate, with credits ready to go, be able to pass a written test, physical test and an interview with the sheriff, she said.

The district is letting students know who have corrections and ROTC pathways through their facilitators, she said. If students are not already in that pathway, they could still apply if they express an interest in law enforcement, she said.

The district has reached out to students interested in law enforcement who left their names at a district college employment fair. Interested students may contact the facilitators at their schools, she said.

Currently the limit is 10 students per semester, Dr. Fernandez-Flores said.

Students in the program would wear uniforms, according to the plan. Some school board members were concerned about whether the students would be allowed to have dreadlocks and facial hair.

Board member Rachel Russell questioned a 95 percent attendance rate required, almost perfect attendance. Dr. Fernandez-Flores said she would get more information on the questions. The program would come back to a later board meeting for further discussion.

School district Facility Committee forming

The district Facility Committee named its members at the Dec. 6 board meeting.

Rachel Russell, chair of the committee, said there has been some discussion about making sure different geographic areas and groups in the school district are included in the committee. She also wanted to make sure Latinx, Latino, Hispanic and YouthVoice individuals were represented. The school district’s attorney cautioned not to place any formal restrictions on these positions, to avoid excluding other groups. None of the positions should be held open for a specific group.

The board approved six individuals for the committee, and there are another three board members serving on it.

Russell plans to add four more positions to the committee, to be considered at the next meeting.

The committee may eventually reach 14 or 15 members, she said.

Board President Randy Lopez said that around 50 percent of the district is Latino, and to not have any Latino representation on this committee would not be good.

The Facility Committee will be interviewing firms that will develop a facility master plan for the school district. The committee will make a recommendation to the board on the firm to select, and the board will select the firm, according to district officials. Interviews are being conducted Dec. 14.

Facility Committee community members and the board members who nominated them, according to a school district spokesman, include:


• Alan Howze, Unified Government assistant county administrator or designated UG parks and recreation representative, recommended by Rachel Russell;
• Nicole Douglas-Price, recommended by Yolanda Clark;
• Rita Walker, recommended by Dr. Valdenia Winn;
• Fred Tresvan, recommended by Wanda Brownlee Paige;
• Preston Portley, recommended by Janey Humphries;
• Sally Murguia, recommended by Randy Lopez.


Also on the Facility Committee are three board members:
• Rachel Russell, chair of the Facility Committee;
• Dr. Valdenia Winn, board representative;
• Janey Humprhies, board representative.

Santa to visit Grinter House on Saturday

Santa Claus will visit the Grinter House from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10.

The free event will include a photo opportunity with Santa Claus, a small goodie bag, refreshments and music by the Kansas City Kansas Community College jazz ensemble, Luck 20.

Parents may bring their cameras to take a photo of their children with Santa Claus.

Those attending may view the Grinter House museum, 1420 S. 78th, Kansas City, Kansas, which has been decorated for the holidays.

The Grinter Place Friends are sponsoring the event.

New and gently used children’s books are being collected to donate to the Kiwanis Club of Kansas City West’s book drive to stock the little libraries inside the Wyandotte County Court House and to share with students at Stony Point South Elementary.

House tours will be available. A special tour by a site administrator will have a small charge, but general viewing of the decorated home is free. There is no charge to visit with Santa Claus.

Grinter products will be available for sale, with cash and checks accepted.

Grinter House, 1420 S. 78th St., also will have a Christmas open house from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 8, and Friday, Dec. 9. The event is free and open to the public. Those attending may view the decorations, take holiday photos, enjoy refreshments and shop Grinter products.

Special Christmas tours are ongoing on Saturdays and Sundays through Christmas Eve and have a limit of eight persons. Refreshments are served.

For more information, visit https://www.facebook.com/GrinterPlaceFriendsInc.

Kansas House Republicans push message of GOP unity, plan on wielding veto override

House Republicans say they plan on having good working relationship with House Democrats

by Rachel Mipro, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Kansas House Republicans outnumber Democrats by a large majority and are planning to fight Gov. Laura Kelly on legislation when they feel it’s necessary.

House Democrats say they’ll use a strategy of brain over brawn.

In the House, Republicans outnumber Democrats 85-40, retaining enough seats during the November election to keep a GOP supermajority locked in place. With the majority of seats held by Republicans, the GOP has enough votes to override any of Kelly’s vetoes.

During Monday’s vote on House leadership, which occurs after every two-year election cycle, House Democrats and Republicans nominated candidates for leadership and gave speeches about their plans for the next two years.

Republican House Majority Leader Dan Hawkins, R-Wichita, who won nomination for the position again, said the GOP would try to find common ground with Democrats when possible. Hawkins said the GOP would be looking at tax relief, education issues and election integrity. He expects a power struggle with Kelly over some of the legislation, as has happened in the past.

“Certainly we will try to pass what we can and she’s going to veto probably quite a bit of what we do,” Hawkins said. “And we’ll try to override it like we have in the past. That’s not changing. We’ve had four years with Gov. Kelly, we’ve got four more, and I’m sure we will work really hard to override any veto she brings.”

A few rooms over, the House Democratic caucus acknowledged that they were unlikely to get legislation past the GOP supermajority.

Rep. Vic Miller, D-Topeka, who was selected as minority leader, said the party would make up for their lack of seats through intelligence. House Democrats are prioritizing issues of Medicaid expansion, marijuana legalization and reproductive health care rights in the upcoming legislative session.

Miller and Hawkins both said they hoped to have a cordial working relationship, with Hawkins offering to have weekly meetings with Miller.

“I know we’re going to have philosophical differences, no doubt about that, but that doesn’t have to be bitter,” Miller said.

Hawkins said he had a good working relationship with the former minority leader, Rep. Tom Sawyer, and planned to maintain the relationship with Miller.

“I’m not saying that we’re going to agree on everything, which we won’t,” Hawkins said. “Fundamentally we’re quite a ways apart, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t sit down and talk. And even when we disagree, we can talk through the situations and part in a friendly manner.”

While Hawkins said he plans on maintaining good communication with House Democrats, he said he didn’t anticipate the House would find any political middle ground. Hawkins said he expects a shift further to the right in upcoming legislation.

“I don’t think the House is going to come to the center. Just look at what the election was, I would say our body, if anything, moved a little bit further to the right. So I think you’re going to see conservative proposals consistently come out,” Hawkins said.

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/2022/12/06/kansas-house-republicans-push-message-of-gop-unity-plan-on-wielding-veto-override/