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Hays USD 489 seeking input on name of new ECC complex

USD 489

The USD 489 Board of Education is seeking feedback from our community to help assist in the naming of the new Early Childhood Connections facility that will be located at the newly renovated Oak Park Medical Complex.

Programs that will be held at this new facility include:

  • Early Head Start Ages Birth to Three
  • Head Start Ages Three to Five
  • Tuition-Based Preschool
  • Parents-As-Teachers
  • Early Childhood Special Education
  • Four-Year Old At-Risk Program

Please submit your suggestions for the name of this facility to Sarah Wasinger at [email protected] or by calling 785-623-2400, ext. 112, no later than Friday, June 7.  The Board of Education will discuss the suggested names at the June 17 board meeting.

Thank you for your assistance in naming this exciting facility.

Filing Deadline for fall election is Monday

Time is running out for candidates interested in running for office in the fall election to file the necessary paperwork.

The deadline to file for the upcoming city, school, improvement district and extension election is Monday, June 3 at 12 p.m.

Ellis County Election Officer Donna Maskus said there is a $20 dollar filing and paperwork that has to be filled out and turned in at the Clerk’s Office at 718 Main St. in Hays.

A link to the filing packets and a list of candidates who have already filed for election can be found HERE.

You can also see a list of candidates below.

 

2019 CITY/SCHOOL OFFICE CANDIDATE FILINGS
Ellis City Mayor (1 Position)

 

David R McDaniel
Ellis City Treasurer (1 Position) Faith Ann Scheck
Ellis City Council Member (3 Positions) Samuel Nicholas Polifka

John A Walz

Kellie M Crnkovich

Hays City Commissioner ( 3 Positions)

Top 2 candidates 4-year term

Top 3 candidates 2-year term

 

Mason R. Ruder

Michael K Berges

Ron Mellick

Henry Schwaller

Schoenchen City Mayor  
Schoenchen City Council Member (5 Positions)  
Victoria City Mayor (1 Position) John Schulte
Victoria City Council Member (2 Positions)

 

Dustin Schumacher

Erica Dinges

USD 388 School Board (4 Positions)

 

Brian Shannon

Randy S Honas

John A Walz

Marty Hollern

USD 432 School Board (4 Positions)

 

Don R Pruitt

Jacque Schmidt

Tammy Lichter

USD 489 School Board (4 Positions)

 

Luke Oborny

Tammy Wellbrock

Lori Ann Hertel

Alex Herman

Big Creek Improvement District (3 Positions) Duane F Kuhn

Joe Deckman

Deborah Allen

Larry D Leiker

Munjor Improvement District (3 Positions)  
Prairie Acres Improvement District (3 Positions)  
Suburban Estates Improvement District (3 Positions)
Extension Council (2 Positions)

 

Allen P Roth

Tatum Sprague Kinsey

   

Now That’s Rural: Heather Horton, Toast

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development

“Toast of the town.” That would be quite a title. Today we’ll learn about a culinary entrepreneur who is helping her town in the food business. She operates a cake decorating enterprise and, soon, will open a new restaurant with the name of Toast.

Last week we met Heather Horton and learned about her involvement in the revitalization of the historic downtown in Pittsburg, Kansas. She is also the owner of these growing small businesses.

In 2017, USDA Rural Development awarded a grant to help build markets for local foods in southeast Kansas. That project is led by Heather Morgan, director of engagement and community development for K-State’s Technology Development Institute. She identified Heather Horton as an example of excellence in local foods entrepreneurship.

As a child, Heather had helped her parents in their family restaurant. In later years, her mother started making wedding cakes and Heather helped her decorate them.

After Heather graduated from Pittsburg State in commercial art, she decided to offer the wedding cakes as a business. In 2007, she and her husband Roger bought a building in downtown Pittsburg, renovated it, and opened for business in 2009.

The business is known as Sweet Designs Cakery. It was more than a bakery, it was a cakery. Heather specializes in designing and producing beautiful cakes for all occasions. Based on the photos on her website, these cakes can only be described as works of art. Roger joined the business in 2010. In recent years, Heather also taught culinary arts at Pittsburg High School through Fort Scott Community College.

Heather and Roger had the idea for another enterprise: A restaurant that could utilize locally-grown foods. They located a site for it in downtown Pittsburg, just a half-block from Sweet Designs Cakery. Then they needed to find a name for this new restaurant. Heather found inspiration in her childhood memories of eating toasted bread.

“I’ve loved toast since childhood,” Heather said. They chose Toast as the name of the new restaurant. Their trial runs include open-faced sandwiches and other items. Roger is test-baking artisan bread which will be offered at the new restaurant, but the menu is even more than that.

“It will be a fast casual restaurant with a full range of artistically crafted foods with a healthy twist,” Heather said. “We can offer a limitless combination of deliciousness. We’ll have beverages too, and toast has multiple meanings.”

“We’re going to try to use locally-grown food as much as possible, which means sourcing from multiple farmers,” Heather said. She has been working hard at identifying suppliers and doing some test cooking. “I’ll mostly be trying to buy up any excess produce that isn’t sold at farmers markets. That’s a win-win for us all and cuts back on waste.”

Through the USDA Rural Development grant, Heather Morgan put out a call for local growers to connect with the new restaurant. Heather Horton now has an extensive list of growers for a large variety of different products.

“For example, I have an egg lady, and I have one grower specifically for garlic,” Heather said. That seems like a pretty specific niche, but that’s the product on which that grower wants to concentrate. The restaurant will utilize fruits and vegetables from a variety of sources, including Heather’s mother.

“She’s always supportive and loves to garden,” Heather said about her mom. “She’ll supply me with fresh herbs and produce.”

Heather’s suppliers come from Pittsburg and around the region, including nearby rural communities such as Erie, population 1,150; Weir, population 686; and Mulberry, population 520 people. Now, that’s rural.

The new restaurant is expected to open in late summer of 2019. “I’m excited about the possibilities,” Heather said.

Toast of the town. That would be a wonderful title. In the case of this young entrepreneur, Toast will be her town’s newest restaurant. We commend Heather and Roger Horton for making a difference by promoting local foods. To them, I think we should raise a toast.

And there’s more. Southeast Kansas also is a source of tree nuts. We’ll learn about that next week.

Local FFA members earn Ford Trucks/Built Ford Tough Scholarships

MANHATTAN, Kan. — Local FFA members were among the 60 Kansas students awarded $1,000 Ford Trucks/Built Ford Tough Scholarships during the third session of the 91st Kansas FFA Convention, May 29–31, 2019, on the Kansas State University campus.

The Built Ford Tough FFA Scholarship Program recognizes FFA members’ talents and accomplishments while encouraging their future academic achievements.

“We appreciate this financial support from Ford Truck/Built Ford Tough which will further these students’ educational goals,” said Michael Dowd, Kansas FFA State Vice President. “We’re proud to recognize these students for their commitment to FFA and the leadership they display in their chapters and communities.”

This year’s recipients are from: Abilene — Megan Anguiano and Rylie Volkman; Altoona-Midway — Clement Huffman and Ridge Pracht; Beloit — Breanna Schroeder; Buhler — Joseph Forbes and Cale McCabe; Burlington — Clay Rolf; Central Heights — Bryce Sommer; Centralia — Matthew Stallbaumer; Centre — Grace Knepp; Chapman — Reagan Dalke; Cheney — Makenzie Cox; Cheylin — Mary-Hannah Frisbie; Clay Center — Katherine Sleichter; Columbus — Kandace Inman; Haven — Kimberly Achilles and Hayden Peirce; Hays — Marie Reveles; Hillsboro — Cheyenne Bernhardt; Holton — Danni Klahr; Horton — Josie Santos; Hoxie — Katie Geerdes and Sean Robben; Iola— Jacob Eyster and Kendra Sprague; Kingman — Riley Krehbiel; Labette County— Margaret Billman; Louisburg — Adelaide Katzer; Manhattan — Elise Jackson; Minneapolis — Corey Nichols; Paola — Halle Schindler; Pleasant Ridge — Norman Highfill; Prairie View — Kenzie McAtee; Renwick — Catherine Bergkamp; Republic County — Anna Pachta; Rock Creek — Hannah Fouts; Sabetha — Morganne Kruse; Saint Francis — Echoe Lennox; Salina Central — Kaitlyn Elder; Sedan — J.W. Wells; Skyline — Adeline Bricker; Southwestern Heights — Aracely Acosta; Spring Hill — Samantha LeBlanc; Stafford — Caleb Hildebrand.

Photos may be available upon request depending on student availability. Go to flickr.com/ksffa for photos or email [email protected] for assistance.

Ellis County Public Works changing to summer hours

Ellis County Public Works
The Ellis County Public Works Department is announcing a change in our hours of operation for the summer of 2019.

A 4 (four) days per week, 10 (ten) hours per day work schedule will be implemented for Road & Bridge and Noxious Weed departments beginning Monday, June 03, 2019 and continuing to Thursday, August 29, 2019.

During the duration of this summer schedule our work days will be from Monday through Thursday each week and our work day will commence at 7:00 a.m. and end at 5:30 p.m.

The one exception will be the work week of July 1st to July 5th in which case the work week shall be 5 (five) days at 8 (eight) hours per day (8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) due to the July 4th holiday that will be observed on Thursday, July 04, 2019.

Please direct any questions to the Ellis County Public Works Department at (785)-628-9455.

10 Years After Dr. Tiller’s Murder, Kansas’ Abortion Rules Could Take Another Turn

Exactly 10 years ago, on May 31, 2009, an anti-abortion zealot gunned down ob/gyn and reproductive rights advocate George Tiller as he was distributing literature in the foyer of his Wichita church.

His murder marked the culmination of 18 years of militant anti-abortion protests that began with massive demonstrations in Wichita in June 1991. Protestors blockaded abortion clinics for weeks during the “Summer of Mercy,” police made more than 2,600 arrests and a judge ordered U.S. marshals to keep the gates of Tiller’s clinic open.

“That horrible event,” Woody added, referring to Tiller’s assassination, “there had definitely been a lot of violent talk leading up to it.”

Dr. George Tiller was killed by an anti-abortion activist on May 31, 2009.
CREDIT COURTESY OF TRUST WOMEN FOUNDATION

Because Tiller was one of the few doctors in the nation who performed third-trimester abortions, he drew patients from all over the country and even from abroad. That put him in the crosshairs of abortion opponents, who called him “Killer Tiller” and bombed his Wichita clinic. In 1993, an anti-abortion activist shot him in both arms, although Tiller went back to work the next day.

Because Kansas is now one of the most restrictive states in the country when it comes to abortion access, it’s often forgotten that it used to be one of the most liberal.

“We certainly saw an uptick in anti-choice legislation after the Summer of Mercy,” said Julie Burkhart, a protégé of Tiller and founder and CEO of Trust Women in Wichita, an abortion clinic and reproductive rights organization. “Before, Kansas virtually had no restrictions on the books. You started to see a more punitive state government afterward.”

In fact, in 1973 — the year the U.S. Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade — more abortions were performed in Kansas than in Missouri, Arkansas Iowa, Nebraska and Oklahoma combined.

“Kansas, historically, had been liberal on personal rights,” Woody said. “Didn’t want the government interfering in people’s personal business. I think Kansas has been that way for a long time and this (abortion) became an exception.”

But the pendulum may be swinging back. A landmark decision by the Kansas Supreme Court last month could spell the undoing of many of Kansas’ abortion requirements.

Current restrictions

The tide began to turn with the Summer of Mercy, which set the stage for the state’s political realignment.

Kansas has since banned abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, unless the life of the mother is endangered or her health is severely compromised. Public funding can only be used for abortion in cases of rape, incest, or where the woman’s life is at risk. 

The enactment of a host of further restrictions on doctors and clinics have left all but Johnson and Sedgwick counties without an abortion provider:

  • Abortion providers must have admitting privileges at a nearby hospital and their facilities must meet some of the same physical standards as ambulatory surgery centers.
  • Doctors are prohibited from administering drug-induced abortions remotely through telemedicine.

Abortion providers also must make specific disclosures to their patients, including:

  • Informing patients that an abortion will “terminate the life of a whole, separate and unique human being” and that fetuses feel pain.
  • Informing patients of their credentials, any disciplinary actions meted out against them and whether they have malpractice insurance. Those disclosures must be provided at least 24 hours before an abortion and printed on white paper in black 12-point, Times New Roman font.

Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat elected in November, vetoed another disclosure requirement Kansas lawmakers passed this year. That would have forced abortion providers to tell women that a drug-induced abortion can be reversed.  

Women, too, face requirements to get an abortion in Kansas:

  • State-directed counseling
  • A 24-hour waiting period
  • Fetal ultrasound
  • Dual parental consent for minors

The linchpin?

Notably, there’s one other restriction on Kansas’ books that may, in time, prove to be the undoing of the state’s stringent abortion regimen.

In 2015, Kansas became the first state to pass a law prohibiting the common second-trimester abortion procedure known as “dilation and evacuation” — or what abortion opponents describe as “dismemberment abortions.” Then-Gov. Sam Brownback, a Republican and vehement abortion opponent, signed the bill, which was viewed as a triumph by abortion rights opponents.

The law was immediately challenged by two Overland Park physicians, Herbert Hodes and his daughter, Traci Nauser, who operate one of four abortion clinics in the state. A lower court blocked the law from taking effect and in January 2016, the Kansas Court of Appeals upheld that decision. The state then took the case up to the Kansas Supreme Court.

Kansas argued that federal case law allowed it “to voice its profound respect for life and human dignity” by regulating or even limiting some abortion methods “that society finds inhumane and objectionable when safe alternatives exist.”

Hodes and Nauser countered that the law intruded on the doctor-patient relationship and that alternatives to the dilation and evacuation (D&E) procedure were invasive and medically unnecessary.

That set the stage for the Kansas Supreme Court to hand down one of the most momentous decisions in its 150-plus-year history.

On April 26, the high court struck down the D&E restriction, ruling that a woman’s right to abortion is rooted in the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights.

For that reason, the court said, abortion restrictions must withstand “strict scrutiny.” The court sent the D&E law back to the lower court to determine if it meets that test.

“At the heart of [Section 1 of the Kansas Bill of Rights] is the principle that individuals should be free to make choices about how to conduct their own lives, or, in other words, to exercise personal autonomy,” the court pronounced in its sweeping decision. “Few decisions impact our lives more than those about issues that affect one’s physical health, family formation, and family life.”

The decision was hugely consequential for two reasons. First, it meant that even if Roe v. Wade is overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court, the right to abortion in Kansas will remain intact. And second, because laws limiting abortion access will now be subject to strict scrutiny — meaning the state must show they’re “narrowly tailored to promote” a “compelling interest” — the state’s abortion laws are almost certain to face new court challenges.

In fact, a pending court challenge to the state’s ban on telemedicine abortions was bolstered by the Supreme Court’s ruling; the attorney general’s office last week had no choice but to withdraw its argument that women have no right to an abortion under the state constitution.  

“The court now has the opportunity to rule taking the Supreme Court opinion into consideration,” Burkhart, whose Trust Women clinic challenged the law. “So I think what we’re looking at is seeing how this case unfolds and developing our strategy in terms of the other punitive laws that are on the books.”

But Burkhart said she’s not resting easy.

Abortion rights opponents have vowed to push to amend the state constitution to undo the Kansas Supreme Court holding.

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor in conjunction with the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.

Sunny, warm Saturday, chance of storms late

Today
Sunny, with a high near 84. West southwest wind 6 to 9 mph becoming north northeast in the afternoon.
Tonight
Scattered showers and thunderstorms after 1am. Increasing clouds, with a low around 61. Northeast wind 8 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
Sunday
Isolated showers and thunderstorms before 10am. Partly sunny, with a high near 79. East southeast wind 8 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Sunday Night
Scattered showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. East southeast wind 8 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%.
Monday
Scattered showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 78. South southeast wind 9 to 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
Monday Night
Scattered showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
Tuesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 84.
Tuesday Night
Scattered showers and thunderstorms before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
Wednesday
Scattered showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 82. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
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