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Hays USD 489 works with foundation to install buzz-in security systems

A security notice at Hays Middle School directs visitors to ring a doorbell so someone in the school’s office can let them in.
By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Hays USD 489 is completing upgrades this summer on its security systems at all district schools.

A new buzz-in system will be in place by the beginning of the school year.

When a visitor or parent comes to a school during school hours, they will have to ring a doorbell at the front entrance. This will alert staff in the office who will ask the person who they are and their business at the school. The school staff will be able to observe the front door from cameras in the office.

The person will be buzzed in and will need to check in at the office.

Although some schools in the district have already installed buzz-in systems, not all of them have.

The front doors of schools will be unlocked as normal when children are coming and letting out for the day.

“It is that press in the whole nation of trying to be as safe as you possibly can,” Superintendent John Thissen said. “You turn on the TV and see ugly things have happened even in small communities. We are just trying to be in line with the safest procedures you can do.”

Some of the district schools’ offices do not have a direct line of sight to the front doors of the buildings. One example of this is at Lincoln Elementary School.

“Unless someone is really looking at the monitor, they would have free rein of the building,” Thissen said. “At least now through the day while kids are in school, someone in the office should have accountability of everybody who walks in that building.”

Thissen said the security upgrades not only protect against a terrorist, but can protect children and staff from issues with non-custodial parents.

Thissen said the district will not be on the cutting edge, but is catching up to what other districts have been doing for years.

The estimated cost for the project will be $50,000. The USD 489 Foundation for Educational Excellence has slated a dinner and auction for Nov. 3. The proceeds from that auction will go toward reimbursing the district as much as possible for the buzz-in system. The foundation has set a goal of $50,000 in hopes covering the complete cost of the project.

The district has also received $57,700 from the state toward a $250,000 project to upgrade all of the interior locks in the district. The district will have to match the $57,000 with money from the general or capital outlay funds. The district had asked for $125,000. However, Thissen said he was thrilled to have received what it did with so many districts vying for limited money — $5 million.

See related story: Kansas to give out $5M in security funds to schools

The lock system will be standardized with master keys for administrators and more limited access for teachers. Hundreds of locks, including classroom door locks and some padlocks would be changed.

Some of the district’s buildings are so old that non-secure doors such as closets still have skeleton key locks. Other locks are worn out. The new key system requires keys that can’t be replicated at a standard key replacement station.

The district is also issuing new ID/key cards. The cards will be color-coded by building. Although the district eliminates key code access to cards when staff leave the district, the staff IDs have not been updated in years.

The district would also like to make the high school more secure by renovating its main entrance so all visitors would be funneled through the school’s office. That project won’t be finished this summer, but it could be finished before the end of the school year, Thissen said. This project would cost an additional $30,000 to $50,000. Ultimately, Thissen said having all schools with this type of entrance would be preferred.

Long term, the district would like to devote funds to upgrading security cameras, most of which are 15 to 20 years old. Some newer camera systems have the option of allowing police to have direct internet access to the camera feeds.

Thissen said, unfortunately, he believes all schools will be dealing with security issues and investments for many years to come.

Foundation dinner and auction
The Foundation is accepting donations for its silent auction, is seeking businesses sponsors and selling advertising for the auction catalog.

Sponsorships start at $250. Ads are $25 for a business card size ad, $50 for a half page and $100 for a full page.

Tickets will be $75 per person or $500 for table of eight and will go on sale Sept. 1. The Unrein Building, which is were the dinner will be conducted, holds a maximum of 500 people for this type of event. You may purchase raffle tickets at the time you purchase event tickets. You do not need to be present to win. The raffle prizes have yet to be announced.

Tickets can be purchased at the superintendent’s office at Rockwell Administration Center, 323 W. 12th, or by phone at 785-623-2400.

The dinner will be at the Unrein Building at the Ellis County Fairgrounds. Doors will open at 4 p.m. for a preview party. Elvis entertainer Frank Werth and The Vibrations will be the evening’s entertainment. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m. Alcoholic beverages and snacks are included in the price of a ticket. The silent auction booths will begin closing at 6 p.m. and the live auction will begin at 7 p.m. USD 489 nutrition services will serve an evening snack of cinnamon rolls and juice at the conclusion of the live auction.

Volunteers are needed for the auction. People will be needed to set up the silent auction, as cashiers, bar tenders, runners, silent auction booth workers, raffle ticket sellers and for the cleanup crew.

“Probably the most important thing is what the auction proceeds will go to,” Sarah Wasinger, foundation board member, said. “We decided to do something that would impact all of the schools in the district.”

For more information on the dinner and auction, contact Wasinger at the superintendent’s office at 623-2400 or by email at [email protected].

KDA food safety resources now available in Chinese

KDA Boil Water Advisory in Chinese

KDA 

MANHATTAN — In an effort to expand educational service to retail food establishments, the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s food safety and lodging program (KDA-FSL) has translated 46 “Focus on Food Safety” fact sheets into Chinese.

KDA-FSL provides many food safety educational materials for consumers, food workers, and the food industry as part of their mission to help ensure a safe food supply, promote public health and safety, and provide consumer protection. Language barriers can inhibit compliance with the Kansas Food Code, and inspectors have needed additional training tools to help overcome these language barriers.

The “Focus on Food Safety” fact sheets are a valuable resource for retail establishments, like restaurants and grocery stores, and are provided during and after inspections as instructional assistance to staff when a restaurant’s procedures are not in compliance. Several years ago, KDA-FSL translated the fact sheets into Spanish, which has served as a useful tool for food safety operators across the state.

The Chinese translations were made possible through a partnership with the K-State Confucius Institute and its associate director, Shijun Yan, who has also served in an advisory capacity as KDA-FSL works to expand educational materials. In addition to the translations, the K-State Confucius Institute has partnered with KDA-FSL to provide Chinese culinary classes throughout the state, with an emphasis on food safety, as well as Focus on Food Safety seminars with Chinese translation which will be held in Manhattan on August 27 and in Overland Park on August 29.

The “Focus on Food Safety” fact sheets can be found in Chinese, Spanish and English atagriculture.ks.gov/FSLeducation, along with a variety of other food safety educational materials. For more information about food safety in Kansas, contact the food safety and lodging program at 785-564-6767 or at [email protected].

Driver hospitalized after Russell County pickup crash

RUSSELL COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident just before 6:30p.m. Saturday in Russell County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Ford Ranger driven by Leonard L. Hejny, 66, Gorham, was northbound on 177th Street seven miles west of U.S. 281.

The pickup entered the east ditch, traveled through a KDOT fence, continued north over the eastbound lanes, landed in the median, traveled across the westbound lanes and hit a guardrail.

Hejny was transported to Wesley Medical Center. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP

Ex-Kansas youth pastor admits to sex with 15-year-old

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former Wichita youth pastor has pleaded guilty to having sex with a 15-year-old girl while he worked at Word of Life Church.

Walker -photo Sedgwick County

48-year-old Chauncey Walker also served as a teacher and girls soccer coach at Word of Life when the abuse happened between 2012 and 2013. Investigators say he had sex with the girl at his home, his car, different hotels and in the church’s youth building.

Walker pleaded guilty Friday to aggravated indecent liberties with a child and aggravated indecent solicitation of a child. In exchange, other felony counts were dropped.

He’s expected to get nearly 8 years in prison when he’s sentenced Aug. 9, but a judge could sentence him to up to nearly 24 years.

The victim in Walker’s case has filed a lawsuit against the church and its senior minister, seeking damages of more than $575,000.

Kansas woman denied new judge in double murder re-trial

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas woman whose convictions in the 2002 shooting deaths of her ex-husband and his fiancee were overturned has lost her bid to have her trial judge removed from the case.

Dana Chandler -photo Shawnee County

A judge on Friday denied the request by Dana Chandler to remove Shawnee County Judge Nancy Parrish from future court hearings in Chandler’s case. Shawnee County Judge Teresa Watson issued an order saying Chandler’s request fell short of warranting appointment of a new judge.

Parrish presided over Chandler’s double murder trial and sentenced her to 100 years in prison for the 2002 killings of Michael Sisco and Karen Harkness.

But the Kansas Supreme Court in April overturned Chandler’s convictions, saying Shawnee County prosecutors falsely claimed that Sisco had taken out a protection from abuse order against Chandler before the killings.

Woman hospitalized after jeep rolls on I-70

GOVE COUNTY— One person was injured in an accident just before 12:30p.m. Saturday in Gove County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2016 Jeep Liberty driven by Danielle N. Preyer, 27, Columbia, MO., was westbound on Interstate 70 just west of the Grinnell exit.

The jeep dropped off the left side of the highway into median. The driver over corrected to the right. The jeep traveled over the KDOT fence and rolled.

Preyer was transported to the Logan County Hospital. She was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas officers mourn unexpected death of K-9

TOPEKA, Kan. – The Topeka Police Department is mourning the loss of one of our Police Service Dogs.

Officer Miller and Benson -photo courtesy Topeka Police

On July 7 Officer Josh Miller went to check on his K-9 partner Benson who was in his kennel, when he found him unresponsive. Officer Miller immediately attempted CPR and took him to an emergency veterinarian, but he died, according to media release.

He was then taken to K-State for a necropsy. TPD received the results from the necropsy and the cause of death has been ruled inconclusive.

Benson joined the department earlier this year and was assigned to K-9 Officer Miller. The two had just received certification to work the street a few weeks prior to Benson’s passing. We are asking the community to please keep Officer Miller in your thoughts during this difficult time.

Kansas woman dies in Utah motorcycle crash

DUCHESNE COUNTY, UT — Three people including a Kansas woman died in an accident just after 10:30a.m. Thursday in Duchesne County Utah.

The Utah Department of Public safety reported a group of motorcycles were northbound on SR 35 five mile west of Hanna. Two motorcycles struck one motorcycle that went down.

First responders at the accident scene-photo courtesy Utah Highway Patrol

Judith Murray, 53,  Wichita, died in the crash. She was a passenger on a motorcycle driven by Jason Murry, 50, Wichita.

He was hospitalized with critical injuries, according to the Utah Department of Public Safety.

Anthony M. Cooper, 69, Hitchcock, TX. and John Kwiatkowski, 62, Conroe, TX., also died in the crash.

All four were wearing helmets, according to the UDPS.

First Kansas Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Conference this fall

KDC

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Commerce, KANSASWORKS, Kansas Department for Children and Families, and the Kansas Board of Regents are currently planning the first annual Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Conference in Kansas. This conference will aim to enhance and improve workforce development solutions in the state. The conference is scheduled for October 8-9, 2018 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Wichita.

This engaging and interactive conference will afford an opportunity for employers, educators, economic development professionals, and community leaders to come together with state and local officials to discuss the unique challenges of meeting the growing workforce needs in the state.

The keynote speaker for the 2018 conference will be Dr. Michael Wooten, Acting Assistant Secretary & Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Colleges with the U.S. Department of Education – Office of Career, Technical and Adult Education. Dr. Wooten provides leadership, direction and management for over $2 billion in initiatives supporting career and technical education, adult education, correctional and re-entry education and community colleges.

The conference will be organized into four unique tracks:

  • Developing the Future Workforce
  • Developing a Talent Pipeline
  • Engaging Business Resources
  • Enhancing Career Pathways

Session topics including Recruiting and Retaining Talent, Future Workforce Skills, The Gig Economy, Generations in the Workplace, and many more.

“Our Kansas economy is very diverse and ever-evolving, requiring our state and education leaders to consider how best to develop a workforce with the skills required by employers,” said Mike Beene, Director of Employment Services at the Kansas Department of Commerce. “The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Conference will not only be a great opportunity to hear from national and state thought-leaders on how workforce needs are being addressed across the country and state, but also participate in a constructive dialogue among Kansans on how to successfully overcome talent recruitment and development challenges.”

The cost to register for the two-day conference is $100 and can be completed online at KansasCommerce.gov. The website will also include the full conference schedule, speaker biographies and hotel information as they become available.

Two democratic socialists rally voters in Kansas

KANSAS CITY, Kansas (AP) — The new face of an emerging democratic socialist movement joined its patriarch in the most unlikely place Friday, calling on Kansans unhappy with the direction of the country to get off the sidelines in a pivotal Republican-held congressional district.

“We know that people in Kansas, just like everywhere else in this country, just like families in the Bronx, just want a fair shake,” Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the surprise winner in a New York House primary last month, told a frenetic crowd of more than 3,000 in a Kansas suburb of Kansas City.

Headlining a rally with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Ocasio-Cortez sought to infuse the final weeks of Democrat Brent Welder’s congressional primary campaign with the enthusiasm that lifted her over 20-year Democratic incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley last month.

In an election year defined by energized Democratic voters seeking to send President Donald Trump a message, Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez were betting they could stir up liberals in places where the left rarely competes.

The 28-year-old Latina from New York and the 76-year-old Jewish senator from Vermont struck a stark contrast in the hotel ballroom, though they reflected the range of people in the racially and ethnically mixed crowd, weighted toward millennials but including gray-haired activists and parents with children.

Their combined messages sought to unite not just the diverse group in the hall, but restless liberals around the country.

“Whether you live in Kansas or Vermont or New York City, you want your children to have a decent life,” Sanders said. “And yes, we have differences. But despite these huge differences, we have a hell of a lot more in common.”

Kansas, where Trump won by more than 20 percentage points in 2016, would seem inhospitable for a duo championing strikingly progressive positions such as universal, single-payer health care and government-paid tuition to public college.

But Democrats see reasons for hope in a campaign year in which progressive candidates have won competitive primaries in GOP-leaning districts in suburban Philadelphia, metropolitan Omaha and Orange County, California, this year.

Thirty-two-year-old registered nurse Kristen Burroughs said she’d grown tired of feeling locked out of representation in Kansas.

“I wasn’t sure when I’d have the chance to vote for someone this liberal in Kansas,” Burroughs said, referring to Welder, a Sanders campaign activist and labor lawyer.

Kansas’ 3rd District, where Welder is competing, represented by four-term Republican Rep. Kevin Yoder, is on Democrats’ target list as they aim to seize the GOP-controlled House in November. Nationally, the party must pick up at least 23 Republican-held seats to claim the House majority, and they are focusing on 25 districts where Clinton won, or Trump won narrowly.

Democrats have been shut out of statewide and congressional races in Kansas since 2010.


 

 Earlier Friday, Ocasio-Cortez and Sanders headlined a rally in Wichita for Democrat James Thompson, a civil rights lawyer running in Kansas’ 4th District. He also was an activist for Sanders’ 2016 presidential campaign.

Sherri Lower, a 67-year-old retired emergency medical technician, showed up at the Wichita rally wearing a t-shirt that read: “We Care. We Vote. Do You?”

“This is the most important year we’ve ever had, and Thompson is one of our main guys,” Lower said. “I want Democrats to go out and vote.”

But Democrats have higher hopes in the 3rd District, one of only a handful Democrat Hillary Clinton won in the general election and Sanders won in the presidential nominating caucuses.

Republicans in the 3rd District outnumber their Democratic counterparts by more than 50,000, while unaffiliated voters also edge Democrats. Republicans outnumber Democrats by 2-to-1 in the 4th District.

Liberals argue that they are not just convincing moderate Democrats or disaffected Republicans but also engaging new primary voters, as Ocasio-Cortez did in New York this summer and as Sanders did in his insurgent 2016 presidential campaign.

While the Kansas campaign swing created a lot of buzz, Republicans were skeptical it would help Democrats make inroads in a conservative state.

State Rep. Tom Cox, a moderate Kansas City-area Republican, said there are pockets of liberal Democrats in the Kansas City suburbs but questioned whether Sanders’ message will resonate more broadly. He said Democrats tend to be split between liberals and moderates, with some union members and supporters holding conservative views on social issues.

“Even our Democrats around here are not socialist democrats,” he said. “If someone would describe the 3rd District, I would say center right.”

Leading candidates in the Democratic primary for governor have said their party must rebuild its brand in rural, heavily GOP areas. And despite surging energy among lefist Democrats in the Trump era, it was unclear if there were enough votes in the 3rd District for a liberal Democrat to win.

Before Yoder won in 2010, it had been held for 12 years by centrist Democrat Dennis Moore, who relied on moderate Republicans during his tenure.

Yet Sanders and his brand of liberalism have proved popular. He won more than two-thirds of the votes in the state’s 2016 presidential caucuses, surpassing Barack Obama’s 2008 vote total.

And Ocasio-Cortez said it can be done in Kansas by broadening the electorate to include previously less active voters, rather than trying to convert moderates.

“It is going to take every single person in this room knocking on 10, 50, 100 doors apiece,” she said. “So, if you have never knocked on a door before, I am talking to you.”

 

Maxine Lena Diederich

Maxine Lena Diederich, age 79, of Hays, Kansas passed away July 18, 2018 in Hays. She was born November 27, 1938 in Damar, KS to Victor and Cecilia (Benoit) Simoneau. On June 24, 1961 she married Carl Francis Diederich in Damar, Kansas. He preceded her in death June 5, 1999.

Maxine was a registered Nurse for over 30 years. Her career included the Norton County Hospital in Norton, Kansas, Logan Manor, Logan, Kansas and St. Anthony Hospital in Hays as well as also working with the ambulance service in Logan. She was also a long time volunteer for the Hays Community Assistance Center. She was a member of the Daughters of Isabella and Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Hays.

She is survived by two sons, Dave Diederich of Manhattan, KS and John Diederich and wife Cindy of Wamego, KS; two daughters, Debra Honeyman and husband Mark of Auburn, KS and Chris Gottschalk and husband Kevin of Hays; two brothers, Jed Simoneau and wife Rose of Cody, WY and Dennis Simoneau of Denver, CO; four sisters, Eileen Pekarek and husband Larry of Topeka, KS, Jeanice Diederich of Amarillo, TX, Phyllis Simoneau of Denver and Angie Steele of Denver; seven grandchildren, Kyle and wife Jessi, Kurtis and wife Delana, Kelsee and husband Gary, Kaylor, Madison, Mallory and Mason as well as three great grandchildren, Kaden, Aubrey and Klaire.

She was preceded in death by her parents; a son, Randy Diederich; and five brothers, Alcid, Marvin, Ronald, Jerome and Clifford Simoneau.

Funeral services will be 10 AM Tuesday, July 24, 2018 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church 1805 Vine, Hays, KS. Burial will follow in St. Joseph Cemetery, Hays.

Visitation will be Monday, July 23, 2018 from 4 PM – 8 PM and Tuesday 9 AM – 9:30 AM; both at Brock’s Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine, Hays, KS 67601.

A Daughters of Isabella rosary will be Monday at 6:45 PM followed by a parish vigil service all at the funeral chapel in Hays.

Memorial contributions are suggested to TMP-Marian High School or the IHMC Building Fund.

Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or by email at [email protected].

NW Kansas woman dies in farm accident

RAWLINS COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 4p.m. Friday in Rawlins County

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported Sandra L. Antholz, 79, McDonald was trying to pin up the wings of the a Sunflower Plow Sweep two miles north and three miles east of McDonald.

Carl William Antholz, 84, McDonald, was driving a tractor and unable to see her.

The sweep struck Sandra as Carl was trying to move the tractor.

She was pronounced dead at the scene and transported Knodel Funeral Home.

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