Piper results

KSHSAA has awarded Piper High School the sportsmanship excellence award at the 2014 state basketball tournament.

The girls basketball team showed great sportsmanship on the court all three games and the fans came in force to do the same.

Piper High School – baseball vs. Lansing

– V lost 2-5

– JV won 13-3 (5 innings)

 

Piper High School– soccer vs. Basehor-Linwood

– V 5-0

– goals by Woolley (3), Gunnels (2), & Ferguson shut-out

– JV won 2-0

– goals by Wallace, Brownell, and Trzok shut-out

 

Piper High School– softball vs. Lansing

– V won 1st game 10-0, 2nd game TBA

– JV won 1st game 15-2, 2nd game TBA

– Information from Doug Key, Piper athletic director

 

Miller graduates from basic training

Luke Miller

Air National Guard Airman Luke A. Miller graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio, Texas.

The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills.

Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force.

Miller earned distinction as an honor graduate. He is the son of Peggy Miller of Kansas City, Kan. The airman is a 2012 graduate of Piper High School, Kansas City, Kan.

 

Legislative update from Sen. Steve Fitzgerald

Sen. Steve Fitzgerald, R-5th Dist.

Some school funding facts:

-Schools are allowed to levy up to eight mills of property tax to fund their capital outlay needs. They include purchases like: buses, building repair, furniture, certain equipment.

-Local Option Budgets can raise money locally for schools through property taxes. -Schools collecting at 81.2 percent or more for LOBs receive no equalization; schools collecting less than 81.2 percent receive equalization money from the state general fund or SGF.

-Equalization is a process that sets out to equalize the difference in money collected between school districts.

– Richer school districts collect more taxes from a 1 mill levy than poorer school districts. Equalization difference is made up by the state giving districts collecting less tax revenue money out of the state general fund or SGF to make up the difference.

A sales tax holiday for Kansas?

A House committee narrowly approved a bill last week to allow Kansas to hold a sales tax holiday similar to the one currently held in Missouri prior to the start of the school year in August.

HB 2607 would allow sales tax exemptions on school supplies, including clothing, computers and peripheral devices and computer software.

The first holiday would occur in 2015.

The measure was being considered by the House Taxation Committee and now moves to the full House for action.

The holiday would occur on the first Thursday in August at 12:01 a.m. and end at midnight on the following Sunday.

The bill would exempt all sales of any article of clothing having a taxable value of $300 or less; all back-to-school supplies not to exceed $100 per purchase; all computer software with a taxable value of $300 or less; and all personal computers or computer peripheral devices not to exceed $2,000.

While this would save consumers money, the state and local government would lose revenue.

The Department of Revenue estimates the holiday would decrease state revenues by $5.47 million in FY 2015.

This bill also is estimated to decrease local revenues by $1.37 million in FY 2015.

Student financial knowledge

How much do students know about balancing a checkbook or making a household budget or even getting a car loan?

It’s called financial literacy and the Kansas House wants to make sure students have a lot better knowledge of the subject.

HB 2475 was approved by the House Wednesday March 19 and would require school districts to add more personal financial literacy to the curriculum at all grade levels within the existing mathematics curriculum or other appropriate subjects.

It also would require training in a firm professional handshake, an amendment added to the bill on the floor of the House.

The bill passed 110 to 12.

House approves compromise autism bill

A compromise bill that would provide health insurance coverage to Kansas children with autism was approved Friday, March 21 by the Kansas House.

Coverage would be subject to the following limitations: 1,300 hours per calendar year beginning with ASD diagnosis and no later than age five for any covered individual for the first four years following diagnosis. And then, 520 hours per calendar year for covered individuals less than 12 years of age. T

he bill, HB 2744, was the product of lengthy negotiations with the state’s health insurance industry. The vote was 114 to 3. The measure now moves to the Senate for consideration.

Drug testing for teachers, school employees

The Senate approved a bill Wednesday March 19 requiring school districts to conduct drug screening, drug and alcohol treatment, fingerprinting, and background checks for various school district employees.

Senate Bill 335 would require the board of education of each public school district to adopt policies and procedures for a drug screening program.

The screening program would be based on reasonable suspicion of illegal drug use by any employee.

An amendment added to the bill on the floor of the Senate would require drug screening for member of the Legislature as well.

Any school employee who tested positive for the illegal use of drugs would be permitted to request that the specimen be tested in an additional facility, in which case the employee would be required to pay the cost of the additional screening.

It would prohibit any action taken against an employee as a result of a positive drug test unless the employee has tested positive during two consecutive screenings of the same specimen.

However, a school district would be permitted to take disciplinary action against an employee if the employee initially tests positive and does not request a second screening.

Senate would end mortgage fee

The Kansas Senate approved Senate Bill 298 last week designed to eliminate the Kansas mortgage registration fee over a five-year period.

The measure passed on a 26 to 12 vote.

The fee currently costs real estate buyers seeking financing through local institutions $47 million each year.

The fee puts home and business buyers who have to finance their purchases at an unfair disadvantage to cash buyers who don’t use traditional mortgages, as well as those using Farm Credit services.

The measure will now be considered by the Kansas House of Representatives.