GEARY COUNTY — A Former USD 473 Chapman assistant girls basketball and track coach Mark Snider, 27, Abilene, has been sentenced to 5-years in prison for convictions on two counts of Sexual Exploitation of a Child, according to the Geary County Attorney’s office.
Snider had entered into a plea agreement in Geary County District Court.
In April 2016, Snider resigned his coaching position. He was later arrested in Abilene following a three-week investigation on 5 counts of Electronic Solicitation and 5 counts of Attempted Sexual Exploitation of a Child Under 16.
Following a column in the Salina Central High School newspaper that discussed racism as “not a big deal and that “people should get over it,” USD 305 issued an apology and promised an investigation.
“The investigation referred to involves the District’s role in maintaining an educational environment that supports all students in the classroom, school activities and projects. Many questions have surfaced over the past few days and present all of us with an opportunity for growth and reflection,” according a statement on the school web site.
“As a District we recognize the student publication rights established by our laws and hold the work of our student journalists in high regard. The Pylon has a long tradition at Central High School that will continue to be supported by Salina USD 305.
Central High School is moving forward to engage and unify students, staff and community in healthy discussion about important, sensitive subjects. Thank you for your understanding and support as we work through this together.”
WABAUNSEE COUNTY — A Kansas man died in an accident just before 3:30p.m. Monday in Wabaunsee County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 GMC Suburban 1500 driven by Richard A. Nance Jr., 65, Eskridge, was west bound at 13201 K4 Highway.
The vehicle left the roadway to the right, struck a legally parked vehicle, went airborne, overturned and landed on its roof.
Nance was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Frontier Forensics. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
RENO COUNTY—A Kansas teen arrested for last week’s hit-and-run accident in Hutchinson made his first court appearance Monday.
Taylor Lukone, 19, is jailed on suspicion of attempted second-degree murder.
Just after 1a.m. September 21, police reported they learned that a man was unconscious on the side of the roadway in the 1200 Block of E 4th Avenue in Hutchinson.
According to statements made in court Monday, Lukone was driving to get cigarettes and spotted 51-year-old Jose L. Lopez riding his bicycle. Lukone got angry over the way Lopez had supposedly treated others and intentionally struck him. He then left the scene. His car was found by police at a residence on East 6th Street in Hutchinson. Lukone claimed it had been stolen but later changed his story.
The victim remains in critical condition at a Wichita hospital.
Lukone is jailed on a $100,000 bond and will be back in court next week for the formal reading of charges.
Hays USD 489 enrollment is down slightly compared to 2016.
The official state enrollment is taken on the Sept. 20. Hays’ enrollment was 3,047 students this year compared to 3,070 in 2016.
Shanna Dinkel, assistant superintendent, said the enrollment drop was expected based on early enrollment data. She said the drop was spread across the district’s elementary schools.
The enrollment figures are important because they are plugged into a state formula to determine funding. This year the bulk of the funding will be based on last year’s enrollment numbers, but this year’s numbers will be used to determine funding for special weighting, including at-risk money.
Hope Pantry
Members of Tigers in Service gave a presentation to the board on its “Make a Difference” project that benefits the USD 489 Hope Pantry. The pantry helps USD 489 families with food, clothing and hygiene items.
Fort Hays State Tiger fans attending the FHSU vs. Emporia football game at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 28 are invited to bring one or more items (non-perishable food, new clothing, hygiene products) or consider making a monetary donation to the Hope Pantry.
Collection sites will be located at entry gates to Lewis Field Stadium. Those who contribute will receive a drawing ticket for an exclusive Tiger Tailgate Package, including a reserved tailgating spot for the 2018 football season along with a cooler and other tailgate gear.
The prize package will be given away at halftime. A few lucky attendees will be selected to participate in a halftime activity, bringing further awareness to the cause.
Collection boxes will also be located at the Robbins Center, One Tiger Place; inside the Memorial Union (near Starbucks), 600 Park St.; and Golden Belt Bank, 1101 E. 27th St., from Oct. 16 to Nov. 3.
The district reopened negotiations with the Hays NEA to discuss health insurance. The board previously voted to change its health care provider from the state plan that is administered by Blue Cross Blue Shield to one administered by Aetna.
The decision was made after Blue Cross Blue Shield increased the district’s premiums by $1.4 million over two years.
Superintendent John Thissen said the negotiating teams are meeting soon to hash out insurance details.
In other business, the board:
• Heard a report on the district’s STAR special education rooms
Democratic candidate for Kansas governor Joshua Svaty made his last stop in a 105-county tour of the state today with stops in Ellis County.
Among his meetings with voters was a question-and-answer session at the Fort Hays State University union.
At 37, Svaty has had a substantial career in politics and government. He spent seven years as a state representative for the Ellsworth area. He then served two years as Kansas Secretary of Agriculture under the Parkinson administration. He worked for Environmental Protection Agency for two years. He also runs a farm in Ellsworth County and most recently has been on the staff of The Land Institute.
During his time in Topeka, he championed the use of wind energy in the state, he supported in-state tuition for children of undocumented Kansans and fought against an amendment to the Kansas Constitution that would have made marriage between a man and a woman.
Svaty described why he decided to run for governor.
“I began being worried about our state around four years ago, thinking that it was heading in the wrong direction. Over the last few years especially, I felt our state was reaching a point where our state was at a fork in the road, and it could really go either direction. I said enough is enough.”
Svaty said he wants to get the state back on track and adequately fund state agencies that have been drained of resources and qualified employees.
“The state is in a little trouble right now, and it is affecting basically every level of state government. No. 1 is reinstating this concept of civility that we have lost in the last six and a half years, which affects everything. …” he said.
College students are not entering the teaching profession, which they worry will not be a long-term profession, he said. Businesses will not locate in the state if they are worried about the long-term revenue health of the state. They don’t want to be in a state that is swinging wildly up and down, Svaty said
He said he felt confident the oil and gas and ag industries in the state would bounce back, but that could take a couple of years.
He said he supported the reduction or elimination of the sales tax on food, which he said he thought was regressive.
Because of the deep cuts in funding for state agencies and unsure funding for KPERS, the state has lost some of its best and brightest from state agency staffs.
“Government is only as good as the people we have engaged in those agencies. These are people who sometimes have their master’s and PhD’s running or being a part of state agencies. In the last seven years, I have seen in some cases a trickle and in some cases it has been a waterfall of these people moving out of state government.”
Svaty said the public has seen these staff problems directly in state corrections with issues at Norton and El Dorado state prisons.
“Much of that can be boiled down to if you are paying someone $13.50 an hour to do what is a very hard job, which is a corrections employees, then they are probably not going to stay in that job very long,” he said
One student asked Svaty about what he would do about higher education funding if he were to become governor.
Svaty said when the state does not have money to fund higher education, it pushes the burden of finance on the universities, and they have little alternative than to increase tuition. The state needs to get its financial house in order so it can fund higher education.
Svaty said he worries about funding his own children’s education. His wife is pregnant and due with their fourth child.
“I think we are pushing at the boundary of what an affordable higher education would look and feel like,” he said. “As a parent who has three kids almost four, I’m being told I need to save $150,000 to send each kid to college. That’s insanity. There is no way we can possibly get to that.”
Yet research indicates a college education is the best way to be upwardly mobile, he said.
Svaty said there was a time between 2012 to 2015 when a priority was not placed on higher education. In fact members of the Legislature were doing things that were harmful to higher education.
He said colleges are not only important to students, but they are economic engines to communities where they are located and an important generator of federal research dollars.
Although he can’t speak for the Supreme Court, he thought the court might come back and request another $100 million to $200 million in school funding. However, he hoped the court would allow the state to increase that funding over a couple of years.
Svaty, who is a dry-land farmer, also talked about the need to manage water usage in Kansas, especially western Kansas.
“I also think efficiencies can be found,” he said, “and moving everyone in that direction not only helps preserve the aquifer, it also makes our farming systems more efficient. It should save money too, which everybody wants to do.”
SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas woman for battery and other charges.
According to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester, a domestic dispute started between Roxy Lawson and her husband at the Salina Speedway late Friday night. The fight continued at their residence in the 1400 block of Pawnee in Salina.
Police were notified after Lawson threw two bricks at her husband and bit him when he attempted to restrain her. When police attempted to place her in custody, she allegedly bit and kicked them, according to Forrester.
She was brought to the Saline County Jail and booked for domestic battery, domestic assault, battery on a law enforcement office and interference with law enforcement.
Lawson was said to be intoxicated during the incident, according to Forrester.
KANSAS CITY (AP) — A suburban Kansas City man has been charged with driving while intoxicated in a deadly crash.
Twenty-eight-year-old Steven Ontiveros was arrested after the crash happened around 2:10 a.m. Sunday in Lee’s Summit and later charged. Ontiveros, who is from Lee’s Summit, is being held on $100,000 bond. A police spokesman said it wasn’t known whether Ontiveros has an attorney.
Police said in a news release that the preliminary investigation indicates that Ontiveros ran a red light on Missouri 291 and crashed into the passenger side of a car that was crossing the highway. The car’s driver, 41-year-old Christopher Coffelt, of Lee’s Summit, was taken to a hospital, where he later died.
Click below to listen to Tiger Talk with “Voice of the Tigers” Gerard Wellbrock and Fort Hays State head football coach Chris Brown as they review Saturday afternoon’s win over Northeastern State and take a look ahead at this Saturday’s game in St. Charles, Mo. against Lindenwood.
Tiger Talk airs on Monday evening at 6 p.m. on Tiger Radio Mix-103.
WICHITAS, Kan. (AP) — Business, civic and state leaders says Kansas needs to quickly address a severe shortage of employees with the skills needed to fill jobs in technical industries.
The latest available data from the Kansas Department of Labor says the state had 45,000 job vacancies in 2016 — more than the entire population of Hutchinson.
Companies such as Spirit AeroSystems or Textron Aviation might have to consider moving jobs elsewhere if more skilled workers can’t be found.
Spirit AeroSystems vice president Justin Welner says 40 percent of the more than 10,000 workers in Wichita will be eligible to retire in five years.
The officials are pushing the state to consider several steps, including more technical education and better-targeted tax incentives.
Darryn L. Rodenberg, age 44, passed away on Friday, September 22, 2017 at his home in Scott County, Kansas. He was born on April 7, 1973 in Scott City, Kansas, the son of Darrell Lee Rodenberg and Melodee Mia Appel. A resident of Scott County Kansas since 2002 moving from Liberal, Kansas, he was a computer repairman.
He was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church in Scott City, Kansas.
Survivors include:
Daughter Elizabeth Soodsma of Dodge City, Kansas
Father Darrell L. Rodenberg of Scott County, Kansas
Mother Melodee Ramey of May, Oklahoma
Three Brothers Dustin Rodenberg of Ulysses, Kansas
James Pope of Topeka, Kansas
Roy Newman of Wichita, Kansas
Three Sisters Shannon Palsgrove of Woodword, Oklahoma
Mistie Selfridge of Scott City, Kansas
Tabby Banks of Muskogee, Oklahoma
Numerous Nieces & Nephews
Memorial services will be held on Wednesday, October 4, 2017 at 2:00 p.m. At Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas.
Memorials may be made to Darryn L. Rodenberg Memorial Fund in care of Price & Sons Funeral Homes.