We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Report: Kansas making it harder for needy families to get help

By MIKE SHIELDS
KHI News Service

A report released today by a Johnson County group takes aim at the Kansas Department for Children and Families saying the agency should do more with federal block grant dollars to help combat the state’s growing poverty rate instead of adopting policies that make the assistance harder for needy families to get.

“Every time I look around, this administration is doing something to make it harder for people who are struggling economically to survive and I think this report captures some of that,” said Tawny Stottlemire, executive director of the Kansas Association of Community Action Programs.

The report, which was published by United Community Services of Johnson County, is titled: “Kansas Could Do More for Poor Families with Children.” It is the group’s analysis and critique of how the state has been spending the federal aid it receives through the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program or TANF.

Each year for the past several, Kansas has received a set amount of federal TANF dollars as a block grant with relatively few restrictions for how the money is spent. The annual total has been $101.9 million.

The report, based in part on budget figures collected from the Kansas Legislature’s research arm, found that the number of people served by the program has dropped dramatically in the past three years from a high monthly average of 38,963 in fiscal 2011 to 21,887 in fiscal 2013.
Policy changes

The drop coincides with policy changes by the administration of Gov. Sam Brownback that tightened eligibility for the program and established various penalties for failure to comply with the new guidelines.

As the number of people served has dropped, state use of the block grant to fund other social services or initiatives that historically would have been paid for from the state general fund has grown. For example, Brownback officials have earmarked $9 million in TANF dollars for Kansas Reading Roadmap, a program aimed at boosting fourth grade reading scores. When Brownback ran for governor in 2010 one of his campaign pledges was to improve fourth grade reading levels.

Officials have said Reading Roadmap meets federal guidelines for using TANF dollars because the money will go to after-school programs to improve literacy, which in turn will lead to lower incidence of teen pregnancy. Reducing teen pregnancy is one of the federally sanctioned uses for TANF dollars.

Officials at United Community Services of Johnson County and other anti-poverty groups said the TANF grant would be better spent on “core” needs of families temporarily on hard times. They say the essentials are: child care subsidies so parents can work, money so they can pay bills, and help with job training or placement.

According to the report, spending in each of those categories of aid is going down even as poverty in the state is on the rise.

But Brownback officials have said they fear the welfare programs foster dependence on government and have been ineffective reducing poverty.

They also have said the drop in the number of people enrolled in the program was the result of people choosing not to comply with the agency’s stiffer work or job search requirements.
‘Self-sufficiency’

“DCF has strengthened policies in recent years to encourage self-sufficiency,” said DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore in recent letter sent to the state’s news organizations.

“Employment is the most effective way out of poverty. The number of individuals enrolled in the TANF cash assistance program is a reflection of individuals choosing not to work in order to meet the requirements. Children have not been kicked off the cash and food assistance programs. The decline in numbers is related to adults and the decisions they have made.”

That view that the aid programs foster dependence is starkly at odds with the community groups that work with the poor, Stottlemire said.

“Our position is that the safety net programs do exactly what they’re supposed to do,” she said, “which is help people in hard times.

“Another thing that really annoys me about this administration is that it continues to push the concept that the only thing people need to do is get a job. But when we don’t have jobs that are paying wages sufficient to help people meet their basic needs, then getting a job isn’t the only answer; 45 percent of the people we see come through our doors are working people, someone in the household is employed.”

Karen Wulfkuhle, executive director of United Community Services of Johnson County, said the data her group got from the state showed that the average number of months people received TANF aid was 14 months, “so for many people who turn to TANF it is indeed for a temporary period when they’re experiencing difficulties.”

Stottlemire said national studies and accounts she hears from local agency case managers also indicate that most people using the TANF programs are, in fact, in temporary need of assistance rather than the chronically poor. And after the 2008 recession, there was a new dimension to the problem.

“Many of the people coming through the doors after the recession were people who had never been in poverty before,” she said. “Our folks had to gear up to deal not only with the practical side of getting assistance to people but the psychological side.”
Hoping to spark discussion

Wulfkuhle said United Community Services typically develops planning recommendations and reports specific to Johnson County but has occasionally taken on statewide policies when they seem to result in significant local consequences.

She said the group published the report hoping it would spark discussion about the state’s current policies and priorities.

“I think it suggests we need to look at the kind of strategies that are in place and the support for families to find and keep employment,” she said. “People who turn to the state often have significant barriers to employment. My question would be: Are we really doing enough to help them find employment and sustain employment. Rather than suggest that people don’t want to work..see how can we use TANF programs to help them address those challenges and barriers to employment.”

DCF officials said the agency has been partnering with the Department of Commerce on employment services in ways that are more effective and cheaper than previously used and plans to expand job services sometime in the future, but did not say when.

“Previously, DCF worked with a number of contractors for employment services, investing more money, but not seeing the results,” said agency spokesperson Theresa Freed in an email. “We’ve found working with Commerce is a much more effective targeted use of TANF funds. We have launched several employment-related programs on a limited basis and we anticipate the expansion of those programs. The TANF reserve funds will allow for the expansion. Examples of these programs include JAG, Connections to Success and others.”

Freed said while agency officials “disagree with some of the claims and conclusions,” in the UCS report, “we believe some of the suggestions have merit and we would welcome additional input from United Community Services of Johnson County on how we can work together in the future.”

Kansas began fiscal 2014 on July 1 with $48.7 million in its TANF reserve fund.

Hays student named to exclusive society

BATON ROUGE, La. — The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi announce Angela Moore, Hays, recently was initiated into Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest and most selective collegiate honor society for all academic disciplines. Moore was initiated at The University of Kansas.

Moore is among approximately 32,000 students, faculty, professional staff and alumni to be initiated into Phi Kappa Phi each year. Membership is by invitation and requires nomination and approval by a chapter. Only the top 10 percent of seniors and 7.5 percent of juniors, having at least 72 semester hours, are eligible for membership. Graduate students in the top 10 percent of the number of candidates for graduate degrees may also qualify, as do faculty, professional staff, and alumni who have achieved scholarly distinction.

Founded in 1897 at the University of Maine and headquartered in Baton Rouge, La., Phi Kappa Phi is the nation’s oldest and most selective all-discipline honor society. The Society has chapters on more than 300 college and university campuses in North America and the Philippines. Its mission is “To recognize and promote academic excellence in all fields of higher education and to engage the community of scholars in service to others.”

Let’s celebrate, protect our basic rights

By GENE POLICINSKI
Inside the First Amendment

‘Tis the season to be jolly and of good will, right?

Responding to holiday cheer with a well-voiced “Bah” or “Humbug?”

Well, it’s our right under the First Amendment to speak and write in ways that are naughty or nice. Let’s stick with that seasonal theme as we move from the Christmas season into resolutions and forecasts for the New Year, and consider the past year and what’s ahead.

For both this year and next, the controversy over the National Security Agency and its electronic surveillance programs will be the “gift that keeps on giving.”

With regular revelations of top-secret details, and a federal district court decision just days ago declaring some elements of the NSA programs unconstitutional, the top story of 2013 in the area of privacy, press and individual rights most likely will be the top story for at least the first sixth months of 2014.

A presidential advisory board examining NSA policies recommended on Dec. 17 that the agency be blocked from storing massive amounts of data on Americans’ telephone records, and that court orders be required to conduct individual searches. But officials charged with preventing terror attacks said such restrictions will seriously slow efforts to prevent such attacks. And on Dec. 19, veteran national security writer Walter Pincus of The Washington Post wrote that “the vast majority” of 1.7 million classified documents that former NSA contractor Edward Snowden took with him in fleeing the U.S. have not yet been “leaked.”

Free press advocates supporting a federal shield law – protecting journalists from being compelled in court to disclose sources – got an early present from President Obama. In June, responded to a controversy over Justice Department seizures of press telephone records of The Associated Press, and phone and e-mail records of a Fox News correspondent by throwing administration support behind the bill. In 2010, following disclosure of U.S. secret cables and reports by the group Wikileaks, Obama opposed a similar bill.

Still, the Grinch that is Congress pushed any chance of opening that gift to a free press into the New Year, as the Free Flow of Information Act languished in the Senate in December – though some forecast a floor vote on the bill as early as January.
News photographers reporting on the President ended the year battling administration policies they say freeze out news media lenses in favor of the official White House camera. At a Dec. 17 meeting between top news media representatives and White House Press Secretary Jay Carney and agreed to continue talks in January about access for photo journalists to President Obama’s public events and appearances.

Not much under the First Amendment holiday tree for Freedom of Information (FOI) advocates – who see little in the way of major changes in laws to encourage “transparency” in government, but also continued problems in getting open access to officials who can interpret or explain policies, or parse increasing amounts of raw data available on government Web sites.

And then there’s an issue highlighted by – but not limited to – the NSA disclosures: The huge amount of data about us held by “third-parties” – private companies ranging from retailers to phone companies to internet providers. Not subject to FOI laws like government data bases, but vulnerable to government subpoenas or secret agreements with agencies, these information icebergs sail along like their real-world counterparts – with much of their bulk generally out of sight. Santa may reside in a toyshop at the North Pole, but deeps details of our daily routines live in these private sanctorums-in-cyberspace.

FoxNews.com reporter Jana Winter got the best gift of all – freedom – on Dec. 10 from the New York state Court of Appeals. It ruled she did not have to comply with a subpoena that would have forced her to choose in a Colorado court between going to jail and revealing confidential sources. The New York court said Winter was protected by that state’s “absolute” shield law – and not subject to Colorado’s significantly weaker law – from having to identify the sources of a story about a revealing notebook kept by accused Aurora, Colo., movie theater gunman James Holmes.

As we head into 2014, ultimately the best gift we can present to ourselves is continued vigilance about our First Amendment rights. And with that thought, to all a good night.

Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and senior vice president of the Institute’s First Amendment Center. He can be reached at [email protected].

Work session addresses water conservation

hays ks logo linearNew rebates for water-saving toilets and urinals will be discussed by Hays city commissioners during their work session tonight.

According to Assistant City Manager Paul Briseno, the city’s 2014 budget includes $100,000 in rebates to Hays residents and business owners who install low-flow toilets.

For the first time, rebates will be offered to Hays water customers who install urinals of at least an 88 percent efficiency rating.  Urinals are designed to use less water than toilets, and the city has earmarked $40,000 for urinal rebates.

Bernie Kitten, utilities director, will update commissioners about the ongoing drought, now in its third year, and water supplies for the city of Hays.

The work session begins at 6:30 p.m. in Hays City Hall.

The complete agenda is available on the city website.

 

Special County Commission meeting will focus on bids (UPDATE)

Ellis Co courthouseBy JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The Ellis County Commission has scheduled a special meeting for Thursday afternoon at 4:00 at the Commission meeting room to discuss and consider the bids for the EMS/Rural Fire Building and Administrative Center.

The bidding process opened Tuesday for the remodeling project at the Administrative Center at 718 Main and Wednesday the county started taking bids on the EMS/Rural Fire Building.

—–

In a quick decision Thursday, the Ellis County Commission rejected all bids for the two projects. Stay tuned to Hays Post for details.

Public invited to free Christmas feast

Free Christmas Dinner 2012 4By JOHN SIMMONDS
Hays Post

The public is invited to a free holiday meal.  The 5th Annual Community Christmas Dinner is being held on Christmas Day, December 25th, at the VFW in Hays, located at 22nd & Vine.  Dinner coordinator Brittany Lang told Hays Post the meal will begin at 12:30.  She said the dinner is paid for each year by donations received at the previous year’s meal and is put on with the help of numerous volunteers.

Last year, around 375 people were served.  This year they are prepared to serve at least 450 meals. Volunteers assist with cooking, serving, preparing deserts such as pie, cookies and fruit salads, and delivering meals to those who aren’t able to attend.

Lang said the meal is free to everyone regardless of their background or their beliefs, though there will be a living nativity at the event.

“The purpose of the dinner is to celebrate the true meaning of Christmas, which is the birth of Jesus,” Lang said. “But it’s also to bring the community together so they can have a Christmas meal.”


Anyone wishing to have a meal delivered, to volunteer serving the dinner, or volunteer to provide a dessert can call Brittany Lang (785)-259-3766 or email [email protected].

“Thank you to the VFW for allowing us to hold this event there, and also for giving their time and preparing the meal for us.  They give a lot of their Christmas day to help out with this,” Lang added.  “Also, thank you to the volunteers because without them, this dinner wouldn’t be possible.”

KU School of Law censured over master’s program

LAWRENCE (AP) — The dean of the University of Kansas School of Law said the American Bar Association censured the school and fined it $50,000 over a procedural error it committed while introducing a new master’s degree program.

Dean of Law Stephen Mazza said in a news release Thursday that when the law school launched a new master’s of law degree in 2012, officials mistakenly believed it fell within the scope of an existing master’s program. That would mean the new program didn’t need the ABA’s approval. The bar association’s acquiescence process allows it to ensure secondary degree programs do not interfere with law schools’ approved programs.

The school eventually discovered the error and received ABA acquiescence. Mazza said the censure does not question the substance or quality of the master’s program.

Living Nativity will be Friday

Screen Shot 2013-12-19 at 11.23.33 AM

A youth group made up of youngsters from Trinity Lutheran Church and First Presbyterian Church will present a living Nativity from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday.

The Luth-terian Youth Group event will be at First Presbyterian, 2900 Hall.

The group will seek hot chocolate and cookies during the Nativity to raise fund for upcoming mission trips.

For more information, call (785) 625-2847.

Hill City native tapped as assistant ag secretary

kda worcester
Jake Worcester, KDA Assistant Secretary

TOPEKA — Hill City native Jake Worcester has been hired as an assistant secretary of the Kansas Department of Agriculture.

Acting Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey made the announcement today in a news release.

Worcester is a graduate of Kansas State University with a degree in agricultural economics.  He served as KSU student body president and was a Kansas FFA officer while a student at Hill City High School.

Most recently, Worcester worked as vice president for Peak Solutions USA, a leadership and management consulting firm specializing in agriculture and manufacturing industries.  He also served as the first full-time executive director for the Kansas FFA Foundation and the director of development for the K-State School of Leadership Studies.

Worcester and his wife live in Fort Collins, Colo., and will relocate to Manhattan in the spring.

Christmas shopping safety tips (VIDEO)

bags in car trunkBY BECKY KISER

Hays Post

This weekend is the final rush for many people to finish their Christmas gift shopping.

It’s also an opportune time for thieves to take advantage of distracted shoppers in stores and parking lots, resulting in a not so merry Christmas.

Hays Police Department Investigator Jeff Ridgway has some safety tips to remember:

Once you get all those gift packages home, Ridgway recommends keeping them out of view from house windows to lessen the temptation of thieves.  As always, “keep your windows and doors locked and the garage door down for safety year-round,” reminds Ridgway.

Regents approve social media policy

twitterTOPEKA, Kan.(AP) — A new Kansas Board of Regents policy gives university leaders more authority to remove staff and faculty over comments made on social media.

The regents approved the policies Wednesday, the first of their kind by the organization that governs Kansas’ system of universities, community colleges and technical schools.

The policy was in response to a tweet made this fall by University of Kansas journalism professor David Guth regarding a shooting at the Washington Navy Yard. Guth tweeted comments hostile toward the National Rifle Association and their opposition to gun control.

The policy allows higher education officials to remove staff or faculty who post comments that incite violence or disrupt the learning environment.

 

Kansas earthquake, oil production might be related

LAWRENCE (AP) — The Kansas Geological Society is investigating whether a recent earthquake in southern Kansas might have been caused by oil production in the area.

But KGS interim director Rex Buchanan said it might be hard to ever determine if the 3.8 earthquake Monday near Caldwell was man-made or caused by natural forces.

Buchanan said there is no evidence yet to suggest hydraulic fracturing caused the quake. He says it’s more common for minor quakes near oil production sites to be caused by the disposal of salt water waste. In Kansas, the salt water waste is disposed of in deep wells.

The Lawrence Journal-World reported the Kansas Corporation Commission, which regulates oil and gas production in the state, is also investigating the issue.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File