TOPEKA — A recent bill requiring a $500 annual stipend for teachers to buy supplies was introduced to the House Education Committee during a hearing on Monday.
Rep. Cheryl Helmer
“Why do teachers have to spend their own money to educate our children?” Rep. Cheryl Helmer (R-Mulvane) said during her introduction of the bill. “Teachers struggle on their salary. We are losing teachers every day because of behavior, societal problems, student debt and better job opportunities. Let’s take this burden away from them.”
House Bill 2233 would affect about 34,700 teachers and was met with strong opposition during the committee meeting. The estimated annual cost of the bill is around $17,350,000 and would come from the 286 school districts across the state instead of the state’s general fund.
On average teachers in the state of Kansas make $50,531 and rank 42nd in teacher salary, according to the 2017 rankings and estimates report from NEA.
“In a small school, where I retired from, it would cost us pretty close to around $40,000,” Jerry Henn, former Wellsville superintendent, said on behalf of the Kansas School Superintendents Association.
The bill stated that stipend money must only be spent on educational materials that are “intended to be fully used within the current school year,” This excludes the purchasing of products intended for multiple-year use as well as any food products.
“This bill provides little support for the innovative and creative teacher,” said Mark Desetti, Director of Legislative and Political Advocacy for the Kansas National Education Association, in his testimony.
The bill also met opposition from the Kansas Association of School Boards and other education-focused entities.
“We would like to file this bill under the category of best intentions,” Desetti said. “Unfortunately, we believe the idea behind this bill needs to be explored more deliberately.”
The committee will vote on HB 2233 on Thursday, Feb. 21.
Grant Heiman is a University of Kansas junior from Wichita majoring in journalism.
HODGEMAN COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident just after 12:30p.m. Tuesday in Hodgeman County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Peterbilt semi driven by Fraire Moises Espino, 61, Garden City, was eastbound on Kansas 156 seventeen miles west of the U.S. 283- Kansas 47 junction.
The semi traveled left of center and collided on the driver’s side of a westbound 2019 Peterbilt semi driven by James A. Depping, 54, Juniata, Nebraska.
Depping was transported to the hospital in Garden City. Espino was not injured. Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
Yuchen Wang-Boswell of China with her husband, Korby Boswell, on the FHSU campus. The couple met as students.
By CRISTINA JANNEY Hays Post
FHSU student Yuchen Wang-Boswell wanted to go home to visit her family during the summer of 2017, but President Donald Trump was in his first year in office, and the new administration was coming down hard on immigration with his newly instated travel ban.
Wang-Boswell was in the country legally on a student visa, but with nationalist sentiments running high, Fort Hays State University’s international student office advised Wang to stay in the States.
Wang-Boswell went three years between visits with her parents. She has since married an American and is embroiled in what she admits will likely be a prolonged and expensive process of applying for permanent residency in the United States.
She said she did not think Americans understood the complexity of the U.S. visa and immigration system or what it means to students or immigrants like herself.
Wang, who will graduate in May, said she thinks the perceived change in attitude toward foreigners in the United States has resulted in fewer students deciding to study in the United States.
Carol Solko-Olliff, FHSU director of international student services, said although FHSU has not seen a significant decrease in international student enrollment, nationwide universities are reporting a dip in international student enrollment. Some are attributing the decrease to election of President Trump.
Nationally, international student enrollment in the U.S. dropped by 6.6 percent during the 2017-18 school year, and universities and colleges reported further declines as of the fall of 2018.
The university can help international students prepare their VISA applications, but it has no control over whether those visas are granted. Solko-Olliff said the university has also seen an increase in the number of student visas that have been declined since Trump took office.
Kingsley Udenze, a FHSU student from Nigeria, is a graduate student in cyber security.
Both Wang-Boswell and Kingsley Udenze of Nigeria, were approved for their visas on their first attempts. However, Udenze said of the 20 people ahead of him the day he interviewed for his visa at the U.S. consulate, all 20 were denied. One friend applied five times for a student visa before he was accepted.
Only a fraction of the FHSU’s on-campus student body is international students — 4.5 percent. Most of the university’s international students come from China, but the college has 32 countries represented on campus.
The school’s cross-border program has an enrollment of about 3,500 students in China. The university also has international students who take courses online. Solko-Olliff said she predicted the number of international students taking online courses will increase.
“Some of the immigration rhetoric is for the border and people who are coming across who aren’t documented, and so sometimes I think our international students who are documented get blurred into that conversation,” Solko-Olliff said.
Wang-Boswell said although she encountered many friendly people in Hays, she had also experienced stereotypes.
“The other thing I personally feel people think about foreigners is ‘You are an immigrant. You don’t have value.’ They underestimate your value and abilities. They think you are poor and uneducated that is why you escaped your original country to come to the states,” she said.
The international students Hays Post spoke to said choosing to study at FHSU was highly influenced by the quality of the programs at the university.
Udenze, who is pursing a a degree in cyber security, said his program of study is not offered in Nigeria, yet he sees it as an emerging industry in his country. He said he appreciated FHSU’s efforts to make him feel at home on campus.
Affordability, cost of living and safety were other factors that led the students to choose to study at FHSU.
Despite a dip in international student attendance in the U.S., the number of FHSU domestic students wishing to study abroad has remained strong, Solk0-Olliff said. Just as the United States has become more selective in issuing visas for international students, U.S. students wishing to study internationally are seeing more stringent requirements for their visas, Solk0-Olliff said.
She said she thinks this has arisen from a heightened concern globally over terror threats. Students, as well as visiting faculty and researchers, are monitoring closely by the government. Information on the students and faculty are entered into a federal database.
Solko-Olliff said she thought it is unfortunate international students are having more difficulty coming to the United States to study because of the benefits they receive from the experience and what they offer to their fellow FHSU students and the Hays community.
“I think our campus is open and embraces international students. Obviously in a community, they bring cultural diversity to our campus and to our classrooms,” she said. “We are very rural, and it is very important for our domestic students to have that interaction with people from other backgrounds and countries and cultures. That is part of that liberal arts education.”
International students also engage residents in the Hays community through speaking engagements and visits to schools and community groups.
“I think they are ambassadors for their countries so we can learn more about misconceptions that Americans have, for instance about China or South Korea, about different countries. Then it helps our students to learn America is not that bad of a place.
“I think that exchange and interaction people have is so important to dispelling misconceptions, which is why it is disheartening students are having a difficult time coming to the U.S. to learn more about America but also educationally. When they go back to their countries and they are in government or leadership, they can rely back on their experience in the U.S., which hopefully was positive, and hopefully make change in their countries.”
Not only is the visa process time-consuming and complex, but it also can be expensive. Students also have to consider travel and living expenses once they are in the United States to study.
“They come to the U.S. They are coming for either two years or four years depending if they are undergraduate or graduate. They have two suitcases, so they can’t bring everything with them. They bring what they can and then they are going to buy the other things they need. Aside from the vast cultural diversity they bring to campuses, they bring a large economic impact to communities and, quite honestly, to the state of Kansas because they have to buy things when they come here.”
A round-trip ticket home to Nigeria costs about $3,000. As a result, Udenze hasn’t been home since he started his program at FHSU. He missed his sister’s wedding, the birth of her baby, and his brother’s wedding.
Wang-Boswell had not intended to stay in U.S. when she applied to study aboard. She intended to return to China, but after three years of dating, her husband, a classmate, he popped the question.
Wang-Boswell is set to graduate from FHSU in May. She said people assumed after she married, she automatically became a U.S. citizen. This is not the case. There are many steps she has to take. First, she has to apply to change her status from a student to a permanent resident, an application that could be denied.
The application packets is several inches thick and she and her husband, Korby, have hired an immigration attorney to help with the application process. She said she and her husband both have graduate degrees, but they still find the application difficult to understand. She said she feels lucky she and her husband have the means to pay the application fees and for an attorney.
“Think about those people who have limited resources and limited education or who do not have money, and they have to leave their original country and move to the States for their own safety. How are they going to get it done?” she said.
Her decision to remain in the United States with her husband has been a difficult one for her family in China. She is her parents’ only child. She also will be facing more time away from her parents as she can’t leave the country during the residency application process.
“I think my mom is pretty chill and flexible about it,” she said. “I remember one year after I studied here, she said, ‘I think you are happier and you are doing what you want to do,’ which is awesome. But my dad was closed-minded. At the beginning, it was hard for him to understand. He was, ‘Why? What is the point? You are far away from home. We can’t take care of you. You can’t see us regularly.’ I think eventually they understood, and now are happy for me, and they think I am happy, and I am valued.”
Susan Marie Aldridge, age 64, from Russell, Kansas died Saturday, February 16, 2019, at the Wilson Care and Rehabilitation Center, Wilson, Kansas.
She was born July 27, 1954, in Hays, Kansas to Cecil E. and Patricia ‘Patty” (Koerner) Hashenberger. She married Michael A. Aldridge Sr. on July 5, 1974 at Golden, Colorado.
She worked in housekeeper for the Holiday Inn and Hampton Inn both in Hays and the Super 8 Motel in Russell. She grew up in Catharine, Kansas, was a 1973 graduate of Hays High School, a member of the Hays Eastern Star No. 228 and lived in Russell for a number of years. In 2017, she moved to the care center in Wilson.
Survivors include her husband, Michael A. Aldridge Sr., of the home; two sons, Michael A. Aldridge Jr. and wife Alicia, Benkelman, NE; Cecil T. Aldridge, Russell, KS; one daughter, Cathy “Catherine” S. Eledge and husband, Tony, Waldo, KS; one brother, Cecil Jr Hashenberger, Andover, KS; four sisters, Sandy Braun and husband, James, Brighton, CO; Kris Delimont and husband, Rany, Victoria, KS, Linda Schmidt, Agra, KS; Karen Schebler, Davenport, Iowa; ten grandchildren and one great grandchild on the way.
She was preceded in death by her parents.
Services are 11:00 A.M. Monday, February 25, 2019, at Clines-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601. Inurnment will be at St. Catherine Cemetery, Catharine, Kansas.
The family will receive friends from 10:00 to 11:00 A.M. Monday, at the mortuary. The family suggests memorial to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 2901 Canal Blvd., Hays, Kansas 67601.
Condolences can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or can be sent via e-mail to [email protected].
Bobby Lee Feck, 75, passed away February 17, 2019 at the University of Kansas Health System, Great Bend Campus. He was born July 27, 1943 at Great Bend to Sydney J. & Loretta Ann (Doeden) Feck. He married Shirley Surface, Nov. 23, 1963 at Kansas City, Missouri. She survives.
A lifetime Ellinwood resident, Bobby worked in construction and was a heavy equipment operator. He loved hot rods and dune buggies, along with camping, fishing and hunting. He also enjoyed working in the yard and wood crafts. He especially enjoyed being with his family and loved his grandchildren.
Survivors include, his wife, Shirley of the home; four sons, Yancy Allen Feck and his wife Michelle of Great Bend, David Wayne Feck and his wife Diane of Clarksville, TN, Monte Ray Feck and his wife Lori of Winfield and Shannon Lee Feck and his wife Samantha of Eureka; one daughter, Cynthia Renea Patterson and her husband Keith of Great Bend; two sisters, Vivian Link and her husband Glenn of Chase and Angie Cook and her husband Jerry of Boise, ID; 14 grandchildren, Wyatt, Shania, Tyler, Austin, Shaylee, Michael, Tegan, Tyrece, Blake, Kloey, Skylar, Cierra, Garrett and Alicia; and 1 great-grandchild, Aiden.
Visitation will be held from 1:00 to 9:00 p.m., Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2019, at Bryant Funeral Home, with family present from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Funeral Service will be held at 10:00 a.m., Thursday, Feb. 21, 2019, at Bryant Funeral Home, with Pastor Tim Singleton presiding. Interment will follow at the Hilltop Cemetery, Raymond. Memorials are suggested to the Ronald McDonald House or Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, in care of Bryant Funeral Home.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The failing Payless ShoeSource chain will honor gift cards and store credit until March 11 as the company liquidates all operations.
The Topeka, Kansas, company, which filed for bankruptcy protection this week, will allow returns and exchanges of non-final sale items through the end of this month for goods bought before Feb. 17.
Payless said Wednesday that it received court approval to support the orderly closing of about 2,500 stores in the U.S., Puerto Rico and Canada, as well as its e-commerce business. It also received authorization to pay employee wages and benefits, as well as claims from critical vendors.
Retail operations outside of North America, including company-owned stores in Latin America, are separate entities and are not included in the bankruptcy filing.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A former treasurer has been sentenced for stealing from the Jewish Federation of Lincoln.
Federal prosecutors say Jennifer Rosenblatt, of Overland Park, Kansas, was sentenced Tuesday in Lincoln to six months in a residential re-entry center and six months of home confinement. She also was ordered to pay nearly $107,000 in restitution.
Prosecutors say Rosenblatt, formerly of Lincoln, was treasurer of the federation from 2009 through June 2016. They say Rosenblatt made payments to her personal credit card accounts from funds in the federation’s bank accounts.
WICHITA – AAA Kansas announced today that 41 law enforcement agencies – comprising 30 police departments and 11 sheriff’s offices – throughout the state are being honored with AAA Kansas Community Traffic Safety Awards for their 2018 work to keep roadways in their cities and counties safe through a variety of initiatives and programs.
The awards have been presented annually since 2011 by AAA Kansas to community law enforcement agencies for their efforts to successfully and cost-effectively improve local traffic safety. The agencies are scored and recognized for their efforts in multiple categories, including education, emergency medical response, enforcement and engineering.
“Our police departments and sheriff’s offices in Kansas do an excellent job in keeping motorists, cyclists and pedestrians safe in their communities,” said Shawn Steward, Public Affairs Manager for AAA Kansas. “We salute these 41 law enforcement partners for their commitment, hard work and, in many cases, creative community engagement, in delivering effective and successful traffic safety programs.”
The winning law enforcement agencies will be recognized by AAA Kansas with award plaques in their communities. The honored agencies and their award levels are as follows:
Agency
2018 Award Level
Andover Police Department
Platinum
Arkansas City Police Department
Platinum
Barton County Sheriff’s Office
Bronze
Bonner Springs Police Department
Platinum
Brown County Sheriff’s Office
Platinum
Caney Police Department
Platinum
Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office
Platinum
Cloud County Sheriff’s Office
Gold
Coffeyville Police Department
Silver
Dodge City Police Department
Platinum
El Dorado Police Department
Platinum
Fort Scott Police Department
Platinum
Franklin County Sheriff’s Office
Bronze
Gardner Police Department
Silver
Hays Police Department
Platinum
Hiawatha Police Department
Platinum
Horton Police Department
Platinum
Johnson County Sheriff’s Office
Bronze
Kansas City Kansas Police Department
Gold
Leawood Police Department
Platinum
Lenexa Police Department
Platinum
Linn County Sheriff’s Office
Silver
Lyon County Sheriff’s Office
Platinum
McPherson Police Department
Silver
Miami County Sheriff’s Office
Gold
Mission Police Department
Platinum
Olathe Police Department
Gold
Osawatomie Police Department
Platinum
Overland Park Police Department
Gold
Parsons Police Department
Platinum
Pittsburg Police Department
Platinum
Roeland Park Police Department
Platinum
Salina Police Department
Platinum
Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office
Silver
Seneca Police Department
Platinum
Shawnee Police Department
Gold
Spring Hill Police Department
Platinum
Wellsville Police Department
Silver
Westwood Police Department
Platinum
Wichita Police Department
Gold
Wyandotte County Sheriff’s Office
Gold
Six Kansas law enforcement agencies have earned a AAA Kansas Community Traffic Safety Award in each of the eight years the awards have been given: Andover Police Department, Arkansas City Police Department, Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office, Olathe Police Department, Pittsburg Police Department and Shawnee Police Department.
AAA provides automotive, travel, and insurance services to 59 million members nationwide and nearly 346,000 members in Kansas. AAA advocates for the safety and mobility of its members and has been committed to outstanding road service for more than 100 years. AAA is a non-stock, non-profit corporation working on behalf of motorists, who can now map a route, find local gas prices, discover discounts, book a hotel, and track their roadside assistance service with the AAA Mobile app (AAA.com/mobile) for iPhone, iPad and Android. For more information, visit www.AAA.com.
Fort Hays State University’s Forsyth Library will feature guest speaker Angela Bates, executive director of the Nicodemus Historical Society and Museum, from 12:30 to 1:30 on Wednesday, Feb. 27 in the Forsyth Library South Study Area.
Bates will present “Nicodemus, KS: A Story of Black Migration to Western Kansas,” a story about migration to and from Nicodemus in the late 1800’s.
Each year, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History announces a Black History month theme to focus the attention of the public and explore historical issues of importance to those of African descent.
The theme selected for 2019 is Black Migrations which highlights the movement of freed slaves to new geographical regions and social realities. In the early 20th century, black migration patterns often included a move from the south to the Midwest region.
Nicodemus, located 54 miles from FHSU’s campus, is a National Historic Site under the U.S. National Park Service. Settled in the free state of Kansas in 1877, Nicodemus is the oldest and only remaining all-black settlement west of the Mississippi.
Bates, a descendant of original Nicodemus homesteaders, worked to get Nicodemus designated a National Historic Site and serves as a speaker for the Kansas Humanities Speakers Bureau.
As I walked my legislative district last year, one of the subjects people would ask me about is school security. My response was that we need to approach school security in several different ways, including implementing an anonymous student supporting system; installing classroom panic buttons; supporting mental health services; and creating a single point of entry/exit for school buildings.
Last Session, House Republicans put forward an initiative to keep the children of Kansas safe and secure at school that was signed into law in May 2018 . The Safe and Secure Schools Act requires the State Board of Education to work with other agencies to develop statewide standards for safety and craft security plans for each school district in the state. Since its enactment, the Kansas State Department of Education (KSDE) and the State Board of Education have worked on creating, refining, and adopting standards.
They also have looked through the funding requests from 156 USDs, as a total of $5 million was allocated in FY 2019 to help schools make their buildings more secure. The districts requested a total of $13 million in improvements, but unfortunately, the Governor recommended defunding this program entirely in her proposed budget for FY 20. I believe this is a step in the wrong direction.
For more info1mation on this subject go to the website KSDE created for schools to get more information on the Safe and Secure Schools initiative: https://www.ksde.org/Kansas-SafeSchools. The website provides a listing of the 9 adopted standards, free online courses, planning documents, and other resources to consult.