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Foggy start, sunny Tuesday afternoon

Tuesday Areas of fog before 10am. Areas of freezing fog before 11am. Otherwise, mostly sunny, with a high near 42. West southwest wind 5 to 8 mph.

Tuesday Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 20. West southwest wind 5 to 7 mph becoming north after midnight.

Wednesday Mostly cloudy, with a high near 35. North northeast wind around 6 mph becoming east in the afternoon.

Wednesday NightMostly cloudy, with a low around 23. East wind 5 to 8 mph becoming west northwest after midnight.

ThursdaySunny, with a high near 43.

Thursday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 26.

FridayA slight chance of snow before 11am, then a chance of rain and snow between 11am and 2pm, then a chance of snow after 2pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 35. Chance of precipitation is 50%.

Hays USD 489 sells Washington to low-income housing developer

By CRISTINA JANNEY

Hays Post

At its meeting Monday, the Hays USD 489 school board approved the sale of the former Washington school to Overland Park Group for $500,000.

OPG hopes to renovate the building into low-income apartments.

The district has purchased the Oak Park Medical Complex on 13th Street and is remodeling it for use by Early Childhood Connections, which is currently in the Washington building at 305 Main.

OPG is the owner of the Stonepost Apartments in Hays. Matt Gillam, OPG vice president of development, said his company has been looking at Hays for further low-income housing development for some time. Stonepost currently has a waiting list of 80 people.

The contract with OPG stipulates only $5,000 down for the property and a 365-day window in which to close. The contract is also contingent on the company being able to secure low-income housing tax credits for the property.

OPG will also be applying for historical status for the former school, which was built in 1926.  The company hopes to receive additional historic preservation funding.

The property sits in a Neighborhood Revitalization District as well. It would go back on the tax roles, but it would qualify for a rebate on taxes for the increase in the value of the property for 10 years.

The district will be able to continue to use the building until the contract is finalized.

Application for 2019 low-income tax credits is in February, so Gillam said he needed to know from the board Monday if the contract was going to be approved.

Board member Lance Bickle said he thought the sale might be a good idea, but he was concerned about the short time frame in which to make a decision.

Board member Mike Walker echoed these concerns.

“I have a concern about the time frame, and I wish down payment was more than $5,000, but I am in favor of the project. I think you did a good of presenting it, and you have a good track record,” Walker said.

Board member Paul Adams was also concerned about the small down payment and potential delay in closing the contract. However, he said he appreciated OPG was going to preserve the historic nature of the building and acknowledged additional affordable housing was needed in the community.

Sophia Rose Young pointed to a report earlier in the evening that indicated about a third of students at Wilson Elementary received free and reduced-cost lunches. She said low-income housing would serve the district’s student population.

Turn-Key Properties also made an offer to purchase the property with the hopes of turning the former school into apartments. However, their offer was $200,000. No one from Turn-Key was present at the meeting Monday night.

The board approve the contract on a split vote, 5-1-1 with Bickle voting against and Greg Schwartz abstaining.

Monarchs outlast Ellis to advance to MCL tournament semifinals

Jackson Schulte hit back-to-back fourth quarter threes and the Monarchs made just enough free throws down the stretch as TMP-Marian held off the Railroaders 54-53 Monday in Ellis in the quarter finals of the MCL tournament.

Bill Meagher postgame interview

TMP opened the game on a 7-2 run and built a seven-point lead after back-to-back field goals from Jared Mayers. Mayers recorded his second straight double-figure game with 15 points.

The Monarchs largest lead of the game came at nine, twice in the second quarter, the final time at 26-17. TMP lead by five, 28-23 at halftime.

With just under four minutes to play in the third quarter the Monarchs had built a 34-29 lead after a pair of Ryan Karlin free throws.

But Ellis outscored TMP 10-4 over the final 3:45 of the third quarter to take their first lead of the game at 39-38.

Two minutes into the fourth quarter the Railers took a 44-41 lead on a Brady Frickey three pointer but TMP’s Jackson Schulte hit back-to-back threes to give the Monarchs a three-point lead at 47-44.

It was a lead the Monarchs were never relinquish on their way to the 54-53 win. Ellis made it close with a potential game-winner by the Railers Brady Frickey missing a jump shot as time expired that would have gave Ellis the win.

TMP had two finish in double-figures led by Jackson Schulte’s 16, a new career-high for him. Mayers added 15.

Ellis had three players finish in double-figures with Brady Frickey scoring a game-high 19.

TMP improves to 7-4 with the win and will take on Hill City on Friday in the MCL tournament semifinals after they defeated Oakley 48-33 Monday.

Ellis drops to 5-3 on the season.

Game highlights

In the other quarterfinal games Monday Phillipsburg beat Norton 53-38 and Plainville beat Trego 51-36.

SW Kan. teacher still in jail after accused of sex with student

SEWARD COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas teacher for an alleged sex crime.

On Sunday at the request of school administration, police initiated an investigation into allegations that a teacher at the Liberal High School had sexual relations with an 18-year-old student, according to Police Captain Robert Rogers.

The investigation concluded that the incident had occurred Saturday at an address in the 1200 block of W. 10th Street in Liberal.

Police arrested the 25-year-old female teacher, according to Rogers.  An affidavit was forwarded to the Seward County Attorney’s Office seeking the charge of unlawful sexual relations.  The teacher has resigned her position.

Police did not release her name.  A bond had not been set and late Monday she was still in custody, according to Rogers.

Man who ran over Kansas police officer sentenced

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 33-year-old man who ran over a Wichita police officer nearly two years ago has been sentenced to more than 28 years in prison.

Terrazas -photo Sedgwick Co.

Justin Terrazas was sentenced Monday to 28.4 years, which will run consecutive to an 11-year sentence in a separate case from Ellsworth County.

Prosecutors say Terrazas ran over officer Brian Arterburn while fleeing in a stolen vehicle in February 2017 as Arterburn placed spike strips on a road in south Wichita.

Arterburn, a 25-year police veteran, spent nearly 10 months in hospitals in Colorado and Texas. He returned to Wichita in November 2017 and took a medical retirement from the police department last year.

Terrazas was on probation in Ellsworth County for introducing contraband into a correctional facility when he ran over Arterburn.

2 dead after crash with a semi driven by NW Kansas man

MEADE COUNTY — Two people died in an accident just after 10:30a.m. Monday in Meade County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2014 Toyota Siena driven by Dana W. House, 73, Goodyear, AZ., was westbound in the outside lane on U.S. 54 just east of the Kansas 23 Junction in Meade.

The vehicle crossed into the inside lane and then into the inside eastbound lane and collided with a 2016 Peterbilt semi driven by Ben E. Kelley, 44, Grainfield.

House was pronounced dead at the scene. A passenger Cynthia J. House, 72, Goodyear, AZ., was transported to the hospital in Meade where she died.

Kelley was not injured. All three were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Filing: Kansas military school failed to supervise cadets

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas military school failed to adequately supervise cadets entrusted to its care and intentionally inflicted emotional distress in 2014 on a bullied 11-year-old student who had been physically tied together with his harasser in public as punishment, according to an arbitration award made public Monday.

Shortly thereafter, the boy was allegedly raped and sodomized by his harasser in a dorm room at St. John’s Military School in Salina, the court filing said.

A $369,175 arbitration award last month against St. John’s Military School and its endowment fund was made public on Monday when the family’s attorney, Dan Zmijewski, filed a procedural motion in the federal case seeking a court order confirming it. Zmijewski represents the Tennessee father of the bullied boy. The initial complaint listed the boy’s age as 12, but the family’s attorney and arbitrator both noted the boy was 11 at the time of the alleged assault.

School officials and the school’s attorneys did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

The arbitration award, dated Dec. 17, followed a four-day hearing in September.

The private boarding school for grades 6 to 12 draws boys from around the country as it touts its ability to develop academic and leadership skills in a military environment. Tuition is $34,100 a year, according to its website.

Arbitrator John Phillips of the American Arbitration Association found St. John’s school was suffering from decreasing enrollment and did little review of applicants to determine their own safety or the safety of other students.

The alleged perpetrator, another student who now lives in Washington state, had a troubled childhood that raised a substantial question as to whether he should have been admitted to the boarding school, according to the ruling.

Shortly after arriving at St. John’s, he was observed bullying other students and demanding that they call him “master.” The 11-year-old student was one student that he bullied extensively, and on one occasion “adult supervision” at the school decided to tie them together and leave them in a public area within the school, the court filing said.

“Not only was it an unconventional way to discipline boys that age but the boarding school’s own expert testified that it resulted in humiliation of both boys and made things only worse” for the boy who was the object of the other student’s bullying, the arbitrator wrote in his findings.

The bullied boy did not tell anyone he was sexually assaulted until more than a year later. A therapist attributed the boy’s post-traumatic stress disorder to the sexual assault, saying he will likely need treatment the rest of his life, according to the arbitration ruling.

The arbitrator noted that the school acknowledged there was “some sort of unfortunate incident,” but did not concede that a nonconsensual sexual assault necessarily occurred.

No criminal charges were ever filed in the case, which Zmijewski attributed to the fact that the rape was not immediately reported or investigated. A complaint was later made to state child welfare officials who determined the charges were unsubstantiated without even interviewing his client, Zmijewski said.

The arbitrator also faulted the school for moving an aggressive, threatening student across the hall from a student who was known to have psychological issues.

In his finding of negligence, the arbitrator also faulted the school for its lack of documentation or investigation and for its decision to allow the aggressive cadet to remain a student for the remainder of the school year. But the arbitrator did not find the conduct or failure to provide appropriate care was so outrageous or egregious as to warrant punitive damages.

Genabeba (Geneva) Pauda

Genabeba (Geneva) Pauda, age 84, of Ulysses, Kansas, died Sunday, January 13, 2019, at Bob Wilson Memorial Hospital in Ulysses, Kansas. She was born January 3, 1935, in Waco, Texas, the daughter of Avelino and Maria (Salas) Felan.

Geneva grew up in Texas and moved to Ulysses in 1972. On October 28, 1949, she married Marcelino B. Pauda, Sr. in Clovis, New Mexico. Geneva enjoyed sewing, quilting, cooking, and gardening. She most enjoyed her time spent with family. Geneva was a member of Mary, Queen of Peace Catholic Church.

Geneva is survived by her sons, Jesse Joe Pauda of Lubbock, Texas, Louie Pauda and wife Olga of Ulysses, Joe Luis Pauda of Ulysses, Angel Pauda and wife Ronda of Ulysses, Albert Pauda of Jetmore, Bill Pauda and wife LaRisa of Liberal, and Sammy Pauda and wife Michelle of Ulysses; daughters, Geneva Ramos, Irene Sosa, and Irma Pando all of Ulysses; 54 grandchildren, 124 great-grandchildren and 27 great-great-grandchildren.

Geneva is preceded in death by her parents; husband, Marcelino Sr.; sons, Robert and Mark; daughter, Dominga Esquivel; grandchildren, Katie Pauda, Toni Pauda, and great-grandchildren, Ezre Chavez, Lacy Chavez, Sadie Chavez, and Seriah Rae Garcia.

Vigil and Rosary service will be Wednesday, January 16, 2019, at 7:30 PM at Garnand Funeral Home Chapel in Ulysses. Funeral mass will be Thursday, January 17, 2019, at 2:00 PM at Mary, Queen of Peace Catholic Church with Reverend Peter Fernandez officiating. Interment will follow at Ulysses Cemetery. Visitation will be Wednesday, January 16, 2019, from 10:00 AM until service time at Garnand Funeral Home Chapel. Memorial contributions may be given to the Down Syndrome Society of Wichita in care of Garnand Funeral Home, 405 W. Grant Ave, Ulysses, KS 67880.

Shirley Jean Miller

Larned – Shirley Jean Miller, 89, passed away January 11, 2019 in Minden, Nebraska.

She was born November 11, 1929 in Wichita, KS, the daughter of Ivan Rhea and Mary V. Walker Detrich. A longtime area resident, she was co-owner of Miller Tire in Norton, KS and was the City Clerk in Radium, KS.

She was a member of the First Christian Church in Larned and the Radium Senior Center.

On April 26, 1949, she married Ralph W. Miller in McPherson. He passed away December 19,1996.

Survivors include: two daughters, Monica Miller, Minden, NE, and Marla Farber, Great Bend, KS, a son, Monte Miller (Tasha), Richland Hills, Texas; half brother, Norman Detrich, Mio, MI; two sisters, Mable Hammond, Wichita, KS and Helen Deliere, Simi Valley, CA and six grandchildren, Jason Miller (Dee), Lyons, KS, Amie Miller-Rush (Rusty), Ellinwood, KS, Sara Miller (Matt Hodges), Ellinwood, KS, Charles Miller, Paris, Kentucky, Logan Farber (Patrice), St. Peters, MO and Meagan Barnett, (Jacob), Great Bend, KS, and twelve great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, a daughter, Mona Miller, two brothers, Robert Detrich and William Detrich and two sisters, Bonnie Kipple and Bette Herman.

Funeral will be at 10 a.m. Friday, January 18, 2019 at Beckwith Mortuary, Larned, with Robert Sallee presiding. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday with family present from 5:30 – 7 p.m. at Beckwith Mortuary. Burial will be in Point View Cemetery, Radium, KS.

Memorials may be given to the Point View Cemetery, Radium, KS, in care of Beckwith Mortuary, Box 477 Larned, KS 67550. Condolences may be left at www.beckwithmortuary.com.

FHSU’s Legette selected as MIAA Women’s Basketball Athlete of the Week

Legette Leads Tigers To Two Home Wins

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The MIAA announced its women’s basketball athlete of the week award. Fort Hays State’s Tatyana Legette was tabbed with this week’s award. It is the second time this season she has received the conference’s weekly honor.

Legette helped the Tigers defend their home court with a pair of victories last week after averaging 17.5 points, seven rebounds, and four assists. She scored 17 points alongside seven rebounds and four blocks in a win over Northeastern State. Legette tallied 18 points, seven rebounds, six assists, three steals and two blocks in a victory against Central Oklahoma on Saturday, January 12.

Courtesy MIAA

Additional funding will keep WIC going into March in Kan.

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has received additional federal funds from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to keep the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) operational into March, during the Federal Government shutdown. KDHE received an additional $1,421,255 for food purchases and $889,645 for Nutrition Services and Administration. These funds now allow Kansas to purchase foods until Mar. 4 and keep staff operational until Mar. 13.

“This is good news for the WIC program in Kansas,” said David Thomason, director of the Nutrition and WIC Services Section in the KDHE Bureau of Family Health. “There is a great deal of uncertainty during the shutdown, so this news will help to communicate that the WIC program is secure into March. We will continue to share any other news about this program in the meantime.”

The USDA continues to monitor state WIC programs and is working to ensure that programs remain operational. States were instructed to contact the USDA prior to implementing any changes to the program that would curtail operations or in any way limit or restrict access to the program and its benefits.

— KDHE

Hays school board to consider sale of Washington school

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

The Hays USD 489 school board is set to vote on the sale of the former Washington School building at its meeting Monday night.

The district has purchased the Oak Park Medical Complex on 13th Street and is remodeling it for use by Early Childhood Connections, which is currently in the Washington building at 305 Main.

Overland Property Group Land Development has offered $500,000 to purchase the property. The company hopes to use the property to develop affordable housing.

The company also built Stonepost Apartments in Hays.

Matt Gillam, OPG vice president of development, told the school board in December the company would like to renovate the school, which opened in 1926, using federal low income housing tax credits administered by the Kansas Housing Resource Corporation.

If tax credits cannot be secured for the renovation, OPG will likely tear down the building.

OPG has developed other historical properties in the region. The company renovated the former Lee Hardware buildings into lofts in Salina and the Tabor Grand Hotel in Leadville, Colo.

The school district plans to complete the Oak Park Medical Complex renovations by June 30.

Best case scenario, construction would start at Washington school at the end of 2019 and into the first quarter of 2020, Gilliam said.

Computer study

The school district has completed a semester-long study on the use of Chromebooks. The study was requested by members of the school board.

Select classes at O’Loughlin, Hay Middle School and the Learning Center were involved in the study.

The schools used some software in the pilot study that would require additional fees if the Chromebooks were rolled out district-wide.

Teachers found having keyboards was an advantage, especially when the students were answering essay questions.

However, elementary teachers noted issues have occurred with annotating PDFs and having pages for notes, diagramming, graphic organizers and drawing pictures.

Middle school teachers provided some of the following feedback:

• Lack of world-facing camera complicated many learning goals.

• Using Office365 accounts was clunky, and added steps are frequent. Process is derailed due to constant prompting to integrate with Google Drive.

• Concern was expressed over the loss of instructional time due to device limitations.

Middle school students in the study were surveyed about the Chromebooks, and the majority said they preferred using the iPads. However, they liked having a keyboard for typing. They also said the Chromebook’s ability to access and submit files in Canvas was frustrating and time consuming.

The study concluded, “Many hurdles were encountered over the course of the semester. Several can be overcome, but at a large annual cost incurred by the district.”

Concern was also expressed about the number of professional hours that would be lost if the district converted to Chromebooks — 323 professional learning hours at an average of $40 per hour.

Fees

The school board will hear a report on summer school and driver’s education fees. Staff is recommending reducing driver’s education fees by $50 and keeping the summer school fees the same.

In other business, the board will:

• Vote on the 2017-18 audit report
• Vote on Hays High School curriculum changes
• Discuss the superintendent evaluation

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