Rain in forecast for rest of week

National Weather Service graphic

Thunderstorms are in the forecast for the rest of the week, according to the National Weather Service.

None of them is expected to be severe.

Wednesday’s forecast is a 20 percent chance of showers and storms after 3 p.m. Skies will be partly sunny today, with a high near 85.

Wednesday night, there is a 40 percent chance of showers and storms. The low will be 69. Less than a tenth of an inch of rain is expected.

On Thursday, expect a 40 percent chance of showers and storms. Most of the day will be mostly sunny with a high near 87. Rainfall amounts may total between a tenth and a quarter of an inch.

Thursday night, the forecast is partly cloudy skies with a low of 70.

Friday, storms and showers are still in the forecast. A 30 percent chance of rain is predicted. Skies will be mostly sunny most of the day, with a high of 86.

Friday night’s forecast is partly cloudy with a low of 72.

Saturday’s forecast is partly cloudy with a high near 87. Saturday night, there is a 30 percent chance of rain.

Sunday, there is finally a break from rain. The forecast for Sunday is partly sunny with a high of 87. Sunday night, the forecast is partly cloudy and a low of 74.

Monday, temperatures start climbing back up to close to the 90s, as a high of 89 and mostly sunny skies are predicted. Monday night, there is a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms.

Eighteen permits for single-family homes issued in May

Permits for new single-family home starts in Kansas City, Kan., were down slightly in May, according to Unified Government statistics.

Sixty-nine new single-family home permits were issued from January to May 2014 as compared to 75 from January to May 2013, a slight drop of six. It was a slighter drop than January-April 2014, which was down 26 percent from January-April 2013.

The value of the home permits issued, $12.5 million, was up 6 percent in January to May 2014 as compared to January to May 2013.

According to the Greater Kansas City Home Builders Association May statistics, 15 of the new home permits issued in May were in Kansas City, Kan., while three were in Bonner Springs.

Johnson County, Kan., including 14 cities, had the highest number of single-family building permits issued in May, at 153, according to GKC-HBA statistics. Jackson County, Mo., had the second highest number of new home permits in May, at 69.

According to the GKC-HBA, although the market is continuing to improve, the numbers in the Kansas City metropolitan area were a little short of April’s.

While residential building permits have not yet regained the levels established during the past 35 years, May extended the levels achieved during the past year, a GKC-HBA spokesman stated.

In the metropolitan area, the year-to-date total for 2014 is 1,685 single-family permits, while in May, there were 381 single-family permits in the metropolitan area, according to GKC-HBA statistics. May was a decrease of 60 permits from April, but the year-to-date total is a 4 percent increase over 2013.

Multi-family permits are up by 200 in the metropolitan area for the first five months of the year. Wyandotte County did not record any new multi-family permits in May.

Jail adds video visitation program

Sheriff Donald Ash announced today that the Wyandotte County Detention Center is launching a new inmate video visitation program.

Currently in operation, the new HomeWAV system will allow family members and friends to schedule and conduct video visits with jail inmates using any suitable computer connected to the Internet, a spokesman said. The new visitation system will be available 24 hours a day seven days a week.

“Video visitation is the wave of the future for correctional facility visiting,” Ash said.

The Wyandotte County Detention Center has installed nine HomeWAV visitation stations—consisting of a telephone handset, keypad, webcam, PC, and video monitor—in day rooms for the inmates. The new visitation system gives the jail complete control of visits at all times with live monitoring, recording of all calls, and database access to visitation records.

HomeWAV is the first video visitation system in the state that allows family and friends to enjoy direct real-time video visits with an inmate from the comfort of their own home. For visitors the process works just like a phone call except that a computer or Smart Phone with a webcam and Internet access is required. The cost to the visitor is 50 cents per minute—typically less than a collect phone call. And unlike other visitation systems, since no jail personnel are involved in connecting the visit there is no need to schedule visits in advance.

Sheriff Ash said there is no cost to the jail or to taxpayers for the equipment, or installation, and maintenance is covered at no charge for the life of the contract. In fact, the system is expected to greatly reduce overall personnel costs for the jail by making the visitation process simpler and safer for all involved, he noted.

Sheriff Ash stated that after extensive testing and evaluation, the HomeWAV system was selected for its all-embracing features and ease of use.

“The new system presents tremendous advantages in time and cost savings, as well as contributing to increased safety and security for our facility,” he said.

“Let’s face it — visiting a loved one in an institutional environment, with the inherent security requirements, can be an unpleasant experience for anyone, especially children,” he said. “With this new system, family members are spared the expense, inconvenience, and emotional distress of coming into the jail to visit.”

The visitation system was developed by HomeWAV, LLC, a Virginia based company. “Our patent-pending technology is the most innovative and advanced web-based visitation system of its kind and the only one with no direct or indirect costs to the facility,” said HomeWAV founder and CEO Gary Humphries.

HomeWAV has facilities in 19 states under contract, according to Humphries. It was designed with guidance from jail administrators, with the facilities’ needs and operation uppermost in mind, rather than trying to make jails operate around the requirements of the visitation system, a spokesman said.

Since its launch in January 2012, Virginia-based HomeWAV has successfully managed more than hundreds of thousands of calls, tens of thousands of video messages and 1 million visitation minutes in 38 HomeWAV facilities in operation today, with facility personnel and users rating it highly for ease of use, reliability, and security. The system is being marketed nationwide to municipal, state and federal correctional facilities.

Story from Wyandotte County Sheriff’s Department