With school out, need for food assistance growing this month

Janice Witt, center, and Kim Ghafari-Naraghi, left, raised funds for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)
Janice Witt, center, and Kim Ghafari-Naraghi, left, raised funds for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)

Window on the West
by Mary Rupert
School’s out and that means a lot more requests for food assistance at the Reola Grant Center at 6640 State Ave. in Kansas City, Kan.

“Today alone our numbers doubled,” said Janice Witt, who operates the center. “The kids are going to be home now, and I have to try and figure out ways to feed them for the summer.”

She is part of a large and varied effort in Wyandotte County to feed the needy.

A completely separate effort, a large summer feeding program, opened today that serves breakfast and lunch at 40 sites in Wyandotte County, including schools and some non-school sites, this summer. For a list of those sites visit www.kckps.org/index.php/summer-menus. There also are meal sites in Turner. The Bonner Springs schools have summer meals programs at Bonner Springs Elementary and Edwardsville Community Center. Children can eat for free at these sites. For more information on these summer meals programs, call 211.

Witt noted that there are some children who either can’t get transportation to a lunch site or whose parents choose not to have them attend one. Several food pantries operating in Wyandotte County try to provide groceries to families each month.

The grocery expenses in some households just doubled or tripled when kids got out of school, Witt said. The Reola Grant Center operates by appointment in a building at the Victory Dodge dealership on State Avenue and the Victory Ford dealership in Bonner Springs. Besides the auto dealership, supporters include many small businesses and individuals in Wyandotte County, Witt said. Ussery Body Shop is one of the oldest supporters, she added.

“We’re just really, really grateful to our community helping us support this,” she said.

“We’re very fortunate in that Victory and Ussery have given us funds,” she said. Victory, both the Dodge location on State and the Ford location in Bonner Springs, has been very generous, giving funding to increase the amount of food the pantry can buy, she added. The center is getting referrals from other food pantries, from state assistance agencies, and from residents who call to make appointments to 913-948-4040.

The Reola Grant Center recently became an independent organization, and is now not affiliated with Civitan, she added. It is now an independent not-for-profit 501(c ) 3 organization, she added. While the Wyandotte County Civitan Club no longer is in operation, two other Civitan groups here, the Civitan Orchids and the Civitan Heartland Helpers are still in existence under the Civitan umbrella.

“We plan on growing bigger and better,” Witt said about the Reola Grant Center. It was the plan all along for the center to expand and become independent in order to help local people, she said. She said her original mission in bringing Civitan to Wyandotte County was to work on local goals, and local goals are why the Reola Grant Center became independent. With Civitan it was a 501 (c ) 4 organization, she added. The change will allow 100 percent of donations to the group to be tax deductible, she added.

As part of its effort to raise money for the food pantry, the center held a fundraiser, Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show, May 16 at Wyandotte County Lake Park. This event was sponsored by Ussery Body Shop and Dealer F/X, she said. All proceeds went for food for the food pantry.

Ussery is one of the long-time supporters of the food pantry. Others include DeGoler Pharmacy, UPS Store, Little Joe’s Asphalt, Van Fleet Excavating, and Smitty’s Heating and Cooling, she said.

Witt said she would like the Reola Grant Center, named for her mother, to offer a thrift store again one day. One day there will be a family development center where people can transition from unemployed to back to work, assisting with education, clothing and vehicles, she hopes. But the everyday needs for increased food assistance are getting most of her attention now.

She envisions a place where the community says to everyone, “There’s room at our table for you. … Let’s get you on your feet. We’ve taken next steps to get that started.”

She added she wouldn’t be able to do anything at all without all the volunteers and small businesses helping.

The assistance from Victory Dodge and Ford has been great, she said. “If I tell you he is a superhero, I mean it,” Witt said about Eric Gentry, who stepped forward to offer the food pantry space at the auto dealership. And, he and other people who work there have been very generous with donations to keep the food pantry going, according to Witt.

The people who are now seeking assistance are generally working-class folks and senior citizens, not the traditional poor, Witt said. Sometimes they have just recently been out of work.

At Easter, the Reola Grant Center fed more than 650 families, she said. From March 1 to April 6, the center provided an estimated 16,372 meals, she added.

Witt said on the average a family of five that comes to the food pantry may get six cans of corn, green beans and other vegetables, a box of stuffing, sweet potato, peas, 12 cans of soup, 40 pounds of meat and five to seven loaves of bread. At an average of 20 pounds of food per family members, a family of five would receive a minimum of 100 pounds of food. Fresh vegetables that people donate from their gardens is not included in this estimate. The Reola Grant Center accepts donated garden produce.

This amount of food is expected to last the family for an entire month. Witt tries to show people how to stretch the food over several days. For example, she will tell them that making ham and beans will stretch the ham into several meals instead of using it all up in one meal on sandwiches.

Witt said she is currently working with Victory Dodge on bringing a free dental day to Victory Dodge and Victory Ford sometime in June, on a date to be announced later. She added that appointments would be required.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

Janice Witt, center, and Kim Ghafari-Naraghi, left, raised funds for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)
Janice Witt, center, and Kim Ghafari-Naraghi, left, raised funds for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)

An antique Chevrolet was on display at the  Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)
An antique Chevrolet was on display at the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)

An antique Ford was on display at a fundraiser for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)
An antique Ford was on display at a fundraiser for the Reola Grant Center on May 16 at the Feeding the Family Bike and Car Show at Wyandotte County Lake Park, Kansas City, Kan. (Photo by Michelle Deckard/No Nonsense Photography)

Legislative newsletter from Rep. Pam Curtis, D-32nd Dist.

Rep. Pam Curtis
Rep. Pam Curtis

The Legislature is in overtime and is now on day 96 of what should have been a 90-day session.

Neither the House nor the Senate has been able to come to an agreement on how to fix the state’s looming budget deficit and unfortunately Gov. Brownback and Republican leadership in both chambers have decided to take a passive role in the process rather than working to come up with common sense solutions for the issues facing our state.

It remains an incredible honor to represent our community in the Kansas House of Representatives. While the Legislature is in session, I do my best to stay in touch and keep you informed by email, and I spend countless hours every week helping my constituents solve problems. If I can be of service to you or anyone you know call my office at 785-296-7371 or email me at [email protected]

Taxes
Both the House and Senate are in the process of considering revenue packages to fund the $406 million budget shortfall caused by the governor’s failed economic experiment.

The Senate tax committee passed a tax plan, which may be debated by the full Senate sometime this week. If it passes, the plan will come to the House for deliberation.

The Senate’s plan, as it stands now, raises taxes by over $1.6 billion in three years by:
• Suspending the tax break on some businesses, and replacing it with a tax credit if they hire employees
• Decreasing the food sales tax to 6.0% but raising all other sales to 6.5%
• Raising the gas tax by $0.05 cents per gallon
• Eliminating or reducing income-tax deductions, including the personal property taxes and home mortgage interest deductions
• Taxing cigarettes an additional $0.50 per pack
• Taxing other tobacco products at a higher rate
• Granting an amnesty tax period where individuals can pay their back taxes without penalty
• Freezing income tax breaks
• Lowering taxes on new vehicles to spur additional sales, thus generating more in taxes.

Although members in the House tax committee met all week, they could not come to an agreement on how to fund the budget. They will begin meeting again early next week, and will hopefully develop a plan that will then be debated by the entire House of Representatives for consideration.

Several lawmakers in both chambers have proposed a number of tax increases to help the state make ends meet including increasing sales taxes, raising property taxes, taxing certain kinds of income, and taxing gas, tobacco, and alcohol at higher rates.

One Republican lawmaker in the House has also proposed removing the sales tax exemption on public construction projects, meaning school districts, county and city governments, state agencies and some hospitals would have to begin paying sales tax on new construction projects. I am opposed to this measure because it is essentially the state taxing itself and would increase the cost of building projects and potentially increase taxes, prevent some projects from moving forward and have a negative impact on jobs.

As proposals continue to be introduced, I will consider any plan that is fair, equitable, and sustainable and puts the needs of Kansas’ families first.

Budget
The House and Senate conference committee is nearing a compromise on the final budget, and as it stands now will require more than $380 million in new taxes to fund the 2016 fiscal year. If an agreement cannot be reached on taxes, cuts will be necessary to balance the budget.

The committee was able to reach a final agreement on the state’s judicial budget this week. The appropriations bill includes a component that forces the court’s hand into ruling a certain way on a case involving the state in order to receive funding. The Legislature it is essentially extorting the court into ruling in favor of the state, which is not good government.

Changes to local elections
Although there was little progress made on the budget this week, the House voted to move local elections for offices like school board and municipal officials from the spring to November of odd-numbered years.

I voted no. Our local school boards and city governments have opposed the issue, citing that it creates unnecessary challenges. Newly elected officials would take office in January, meaning their terms would start in the middle of a fiscal year where they were not part of the budgeting process.

Kobach prosecutorial powers
The House narrowly approved legislation that grants authority to the secretary of state to criminally prosecute voter fraud. The bill, which was approved by the Senate earlier in the session, will now go to the governor’s office where he is expected to sign it into law. I voted no because it impedes on local control by allowing the secretary of state to over step locally elected county and district attorneys in the prosecuting process.

I am also concerned about another provision in the bill that will allow gifts of $3 or less to be given to voters. Under current state statute, it is illegal and considered election bribery to distribute items of tangible monetary value. Changing the law sets a dangerous precedent, and potentially exposes the democratic process to corruption. To voters $3 might seem not seem like much, but it is a matter of principle – there is no price on democracy and votes should never be bought.

Agreement reached on Uber
The governor signed a bill on Friday that the House and Senate approved earlier this week that puts into law a compromise reached between the state and Uber. The agreement:
• Requires Uber drivers to purchase comprehensive and collision insurance if their car is under the lien.
• Requires background checks, and prohibits Uber from hiring drivers whose backgrounds includes conviction of certain crimes.

This legislation replaces previous legislation that the governor vetoed, but the Legislature voted to override because it protected consumers.

Legislative update from Rep. Stan Frownfelter, D-37th Dist.

Rep. Stan Frownfelter
Rep. Stan Frownfelter

Legislative session passes 90 days
The legislature has passed the 90th day of the session, and neither the House nor the Senate have come to an agreement on how to fill the state’s budget deficit. Gov. Brownback and Republican leadership in both chambers have taken passive roles in the process, and as a result the session will continue into next week. Every day the legislature is in session passed the 90th day cost the state more than $40,000.

Tax plan rejected by House

The House focused most of its attention this week on revenue proposals to fill the state’s budget shortfall caused by the governor’s irresponsible tax plan. The House Tax Committee explored several options for generating revenue including:
• Raising taxes on cigarettes from $0.79 to $1.54 a pack
• Enacting a 2.7 percent to 4.6 percent tax on businesses
• Increasing the gas tax from $0.24 to $0.29 a gallon
• Increasing sales tax to 7.15 percent.

Ultimately the House committee passed a bill that raises more than $1 billion over the three years by:
• Reducing sales tax on groceries from 6.15 percent to 5.90 percent, and raising taxes on all other sales to 6.85 percent.
• Eliminating or reducing nearly all of the state’s eligible itemized tax deductions.
• Enacting a 45 day tax amnesty period, where individuals can pay back taxes without penalties.
• Dropping the bottom tax bracket’s income tax rate from 2.70 percent to 2.55 percent.

The proposal came to the House floor on Friday, where it was quickly defeated by members of both parties. I opposed the tax plan because it cobbles together indiscriminate and regressive tax increases to subsidize the governor’s failed economic experiment.

The House Tax Committee will go back to the drawing board on Monday, and is likely to reconsider some of the taxes they have previously passed over. As the process moves forward, I will consider proposals that are responsible, equitable, and sustainable and puts the needs of middle classes and working families first.

No progress on the budget
There has not been any additional progress on the budget this week, as lawmakers are waiting on a revenue package to pass before taking further action. The state cannot spend more than it takes in, so if the legislature passes a tax plan that does not fully fund the budget as proposed, there will have to be cuts.