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Hays USD 489 volunteers question bond strategy, timeline

Feb. 10 Bond volenteer meetingBy JAMES BELL
Hays Post

At what was supposed to be an organizing meeting for campaign volunteers Wednesday night to support an upcoming Hays USD 489 bond issue, attendees instead quickly turned the meeting into a vibrant discussion about the timing and overall community support for the measure.

After a brief recap of how the proposed $94 million bond issue would address facilities issues throughout the district, about 20 attendees began questioning administration and Board of Education members about how the volunteers would proceed, when there is little information about how the community feels about the measure.

“It looks like this thing is going backwards,” said Chapman Rackaway, Fort Hays State University professor of political science, arguing surveys would allow the committee to know what information needs to be addressed before they begin the campaign. “You could make your pitch so much easier.”

Lance Bickle, board member, responded to the suggestion by saying there was not enough time to complete a survey.

“Then I would change your time frame,” Rackaway said.

Rackaway argued the dangers of pushing a bond that is not likely to succeed.

“If you don’t go about it the right way, it will be 10 years again before you can bring this up,” he said.

“You’ve got a real image issue in the city of Hays,” Rackaway said. “I hear it from people I talk with and so I think you need to be cognizant of that and very sensitive to the fact where it’s not just something that you go out there and say ‘Hays High needs this, Roosevelt needs this.’ We all know that. We are engaged and active. But when you are trying to sell this to people that are marginally engaged, how you do that is a very strategic process.”

He argued that rushing into the bond without support could be “a recipe for a disaster.”

After the group heard those ideas, the group began a larger discussion about the timing of the bond election.

During a special election, an estimated 15 percent turnout can be expected, Rackaway said, noting those voters likely wil lbe the most engaged — strongly for or strongly against.

Zach Snethen of HTK Architects, who has guided the board on a bond election time table, disagreed, saying in his experience bond elections have fared better as standalone election, as they may get drowned out in a larger political election.

But the room split on which was a better scenario.

“I tend to agree that we’ll have more voter turnout,” said volunteer Mary Karst, “instead of just those hard-headed Germans that will come and vote because they don’t want it. We’ll have a better turnout during the presidential election.

The use of a sales tax to fund the bond also became a topic of discussion for the group.

“The state trajectory on sales tax is going significantly higher because of the glide path to zero, so we’re fighting that as well,” Rackaway said. “The people are seeing a double- or triple-whammy with their sales taxes, which is exactly why the city commission is reticent to let this go on there.”

He also warned the group that having the city commission working against the bond could further hamper the district’s efforts.

But even with the discussion of timing, the group seemed to want to push forward with the education piece of the bond campaign.

However, the group agreed the lack of a timeline will hamper efforts moving forward. Previous schedules had been pushed back due to the need to collect petition signatures for the sales tax election. The timeline from HTK is only relevant if an end date is set and, with the sales tax question in place, a specific timeline is difficult to pin down.

“The problem is we have a timeline but not an end date,” said Jennifer Taget, volunteer.

“I’d say that’s priority No. 1,” said Lynette Armstrong, volunteer.

Superintendent Dean Katt agreed.

“We need to come up with a timeline. … If we’re not looking at a June election, we would need to determine when that election would be and work back from that,” he said.

While the need to collect information about the public’s perception and a specific timeline was debated, pushing the bond back would cause others problems — including the continued need to repair serious facilities issues and a higher cost for the bond.

“Right now I have three kids in the district. Two don’t have tornado shelters,” said Sarah Rankin, board member, who said safety issues in the district are too important to push back. “I don’t want to go another year without secure entrances.”

The cost of the bond would also be higher if it were to be pushed into next year.

“Even in 2017, the finance figures are going to be totally different,” Katt said.

Snethen also said waiting another year would increase costs 3 percent to 4 percent.

The current June election timeline, if sales tax are to be used to help fund the bond, only works if the required signatures are collected, and the board believes there is a higher chance of the issue passing with a sales tax question attached.

So far, about 250 signatures have been collected according to Sarah Wasinger, USD 489 board clerk and public information officer. The goal is to collect the required 10 percent of registered voters by the end of next week, in order to keep a June 6 election feasible.

The Board of Education will meet again on Monday at 6:30 p.m.  in the Toepfer Board Room in the Rockwell Administration Center, 323 W. 12th.

 

Midwest Energy more than doubles Kan. wind energy purchases

Midwest EnergyMWE

Hays-based Midwest Energy has signed a purchased power agreement with Westar Energy of Topeka for 57 megawatts of wind energy from the Kingman Wind Energy Center, scheduled for completion by early 2017.

“This agreement provides both economic and environmental benefits,” said Earnie Lehman, president and general manager at Midwest Energy. “It allows us to use more Kansas renewable resources to meet the needs of our Kansas customer-owners,” Lehman continued. Financial details of the agreement were not disclosed.

The Kingman agreement will bring Midwest Energy’s total wind energy supply to 106

Smoky Hills wind farm in Lincoln County, Kan.
Smoky Hills wind farm in Lincoln County, Kan.

megawatts. Midwest Energy purchases 49 megawatts of wind under contract from the Smoky Hill Wind Farm in Lincoln County, Kan.

Considering Midwest’s 2015 retail peak load of 316 megawatts and the expected availability of energy from the wind farm, “this means that by 2017, more than a quarter of our customer-owner’s energy will be coming from Kansas wind,” Lehman said.

Midwest Energy is a customer-owned cooperative serving 50,000 electric and 42,000 natural gas customers in 40 central and western Kansas counties. A leader in renewable energy, Midwest Energy was among the first Kansas utilities to begin purchasing wind-generated electricity in 2001. It became the first utility in Kansas to offer a community solar option, building a one megawatt solar array in Colby, Kan., in 2015.

Hays USD 489 bond election volunteer meeting set for Wednesday

By JAMES BELL
Hays Post

At 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Toepfer Board Room of the Rockwell Administration Center, 323 W. 12th, volunteers will again meet to continue organizing a campaign supporting the upcoming Hays USD 489 bond election.

The bond would be used to fund an estimated $94 million plan to upgrade facilities throughout the district.

Anyone interested in volunteering has been asked by the district to attend the meeting.

Five committees have been set up for the campaign in an effort to continue spreading information about the bond and works in conjunction with information sessions set up by the district administration. The committees work to advocate for the bond issue, a necessity for the election as Board of Education members and administration cannot advocate, only inform voters on the details of the bond issue.

The five committees that are being organized have different purposes, but generally work to support the bond issue. The district describes the committee as follows:

  • The Fundraising Committee will help identify the budget for the campaign and solicit donations.
  • The Public Relations Committee will help brand the bond issue, provide materials for the website and social media outlets, and hold community events.
  • The Voter Participation Committee will assist others in registering to vote and encourage voter responsiveness.
  • The Speakers Bureau Committee will seek opportunities to make public presentations to organizations and serve as an advocate in support of the bond.
  • The Volunteer Committee will help generate volunteers to organize general educational materials for the bond election, as well as help the other committees if and where possible.

Anyone interested in volunteering can call Sarah Wasinger at 785-623-2400, Ext. 112, or by email at [email protected].

USD 489 superintendent Katt to leave his post in June

Dean Katt
Dean Katt, USD 489 superintendent

By JAMES BELL
Hays Post

USD 489 Superintendent Dean Katt has announced his intention to leave the Hays school district at the end of the school year.

Katt plans to accept a job with the Independence, Mo., school district in human resources, pending Independence Board of Education’s approval Tuesday night.

“I plan to … work here through the end of June,” Katt said. “Hays has been very good to me. It’s been the most rewarding job I’ve ever had. It’s the best job I’ve ever had, but also the hardest.”

Katt took the position as interim superintendent in September 2013, following the retirement of Will Roth.

During his tenure, the district has worked toward a bond election that is likely to occur this fall and corrected years of a mismanaged district budget, inheriting a budget crisis he called “self-inflicted” in his first month on the job.

“A lot needed done, and I think we did a pretty good job with a great team of people working here,” Katt said.

Katt spent a portion of his youth in Ellis and is a graduate of Fort Hays State University. After teaching in Deerfield and serving as principal in Holcomb, he also has worked as superintendent in Scott City and Ottawa.

Domino’s gets ready for big move Monday night


                                              Video by Cooper Slough
By James Bell
Hays Post

It’s a staple of college life, and in a college town like Hays, pizza delivery has a hard time not being popular. Now that popularity is being reflected in a major upgrade for Domino’s, 2505 Vine St., as they transition tonight, Feb. 8, from their former location at 501 Vine St.

Construction plans for the new Domino's Pizza location at 2505 Vine St.
Construction plans for the new Domino’s Pizza location at 2505 Vine St.

Not only will the location be more convenient, it will bring some changes to the restaurant that are not typically associated with the 56-year-old pizza franchise.

“The new store will feature a 4,000 square foot pizza theater design which allows flexibility for a number of elements otherwise unheard of when it comes to the ‘traditional’ Domino’s store. Highlights include a comfortable lobby, open-area viewing of the food preparation process and the ability to track carryout orders electronically on a lobby screen,” according to a press release for the opening of the new location.

The new location will also feature big screen TVs, mobile charging stations and free Wi-Fi.

“We are so excited to offer our customers an even better, more interactive experience,” said Jeff Maddox, owner of the Hays franchise. “Now customers can actually watch and track their pizza being made, each step of the way.”

Maddox currently owns five locations throughout Kansas and has a long history with the company, working with Domino’s Pizza since 1987.

Daniel Brown, longtime Hays resident, currently serves as general manager in the Hays location after working through the ranks the last few years. He has visited the new site frequently during the construction and is excited to get moved into the new store and offer expanded services that will be provided in the new space, including full-service dining.

“We’re gonna have a little bit of service at first and then play it by ear,” Brown said. “The first few weeks…we’ll actually have people come to the table, take their order, just like a sit-down restaurant.”

If that feature proves favorable to diners, it may become permanent in the location.

While the new location will be ready for food service, the store plans to go through a soft-opening, allowing staff to learn the flow of the new location.

“We’re just going to quietly move,” Brown said. A grand opening is planned for around the first of March.

“We’ll actually open (the old) store until 10 p.m., then we will shut it down and everything, the food and (operational equipment) will be moved that night. Tuesday morning at 10 a.m., this (new) store will open.”

The move should make the location more prominent in town, and Brown is hopeful residents that have traditionally chosen other pizza options in Hays, will give Domino’s a chance to show how much things have changed.

“Even in that location I get a lot of people saying I don’t eat there, because of where it is at,” he said.

Domino's Pizza stock has soared after a re-inventing of the brand in late 2009.
     Domino’s Pizza stock has soared after a re-inventing of the brand in late 2009.

Locally, the move is a big change and fits with the overall Domino’s Pizza company’s process of reinventing itself in the last few years.

Domino’s Pizza launched a massive overhaul of the business in late 2009, known as the “Oh Yes We Did” campaign, which reworked the entire system. Since then the company has almost doubled its net income and stock prices in the company have soared from trading under $3 before the launch to trading around $110 today.

Since the ownership change a few years ago of the Hays location, and the re-launch of the brand, Brown said sales have been trending up and the new location is likely to help bring even more traffic to the restaurant.

Hays USD 489 makes sales tax petition available for signatures

Hays Post

In a letter sent out last week, the Hays USD 489 administration shared information about a petition that would allow a vote to be held concerning a Hays sales tax, which would be used to help pay a potential bond issue.

That petition is available to sign at each of the district’s schools and the Rockwell Administration Center, 323 W. 12th St. The petitions can be signed at the front desk of each school or at the Board Clerk’s office in the Rockwell Center.

The letter sent follows:

Dear Parent, Guardian, and USD 489 Staff, USD 489 is preparing for a $94,035,000 bond issue election this spring. The district would like to give voters the option to choose how the bond issue would be funded. The petition is attached to this email and will be available at all of your home schools in the front office to sign if you so choose.

By signing this petition, you will be allowing voters to decide if they want to help pay for the proposed bond issue with sales tax revenues and an increase to the mill levy. If the sales tax question passes, USD 489 would take over the half-cent sales tax that voters are currently paying for Ellis County’s improvements to county facilities. The county tax will sunset in October of 2018. USD 489 would benefit from that half-cent at the expiration of the county tax.

If approved, the half-cent sales tax would expire after ten years. If the bond issue does not pass, but the sales tax question passes, the sales tax would not be imposed. It is contingent upon a successful bond issue election being approved by voters.

The County Clerk’s office will have to verify all signatures. We are hoping to collect at least 1,600 signatures by February 19, 2016. If you are a registered voter that lives within city limits, you are eligible to sign this petition. If you have questions regarding the petition or whether or not you are a registered voter, please call Sarah Wasinger at 785-623-2400. Thank you for considering signing this petition.

Sincerely,

Sarah Wasinger
USD 489 Board Clerk

First USD 489 bond issue town hall brings small crowd, vibrant discussion

By JAMES BELL
Hays Post

The first of several town hall meetings presenting the public with information about an upcoming bond election brought a small crowd Thursday night at O’Loughlin Elementary School.

After an hour-long presentation, Superintendent Dean Katt fielded a handful of questions, centering mostly on how the district will continue informing the public about the bond.

“We have volunteer committees. We just starting setting those up,” Katt said, noting the administration and the Board of Education cannot advocate for the bond – only provide information. “We can give facts and figures. We’ll have a mailer that we just finished that we’ll mail out to everybody that’s in USD 489.”

“But that’s where the volunteer committees become critical, that’s why we’re trying to form those committees,” said Sarah Rankin, board member. “We’ve heard that successful bond campaigns take as many as 100 active volunteers to get the word out and sell this.”

USD 489 Superintendent Dean Katt speaks with an audience at the first bond issue town hall meeting at O'Loughlin Elementary School
USD 489 Superintendent Dean Katt speaks with an audience at the first bond issue town hall meeting at O’Loughlin Elementary School

She encouraged people at the meeting to have anyone interested – or if they knew anyone interested – to volunteer.

“We don’t have anywhere near enough volunteers yet, but we have a very good group started,” Katt said.

In an effort to continue attracting volunteers, another meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the USD 489 board office. But getting volunteers is only the first step — fundraising will also be vital if the bond is to pass.

As district funds cannot be used to advocate for the bond, the fundraising will be required to foot the bill for what Katt is calling the “vote yes” campaign.

The USD 489 Foundation will fund advertising and marketing efforts.

Even with a properly funded volunteer effort, Katt warned getting the bond to pass could still be a struggle.

“I think it’s always difficult to pass a bond, especially in this day and age. It gets harder all the time,” he said.

The administration believes the difficulty getting the bond passed, however, is a challenge that cannot wait.

“Ninty-four million seems like a lot of money, and it is a lot of money, but the facilities needs committee said these are not wants, these are needs. It’s necessary, it’s time, it’s the things we need to do to put our district in the position to move forward in the next 25 to 30 years,” said Mark Hauptman, assistant superintendent for special services.

He also informed meeting attendees how they can help the chance of the bond passing.

“I think what we all need to do, because not everybody comes to these meetings, if all you know is $94 million, that’s a lot of money. So all of us, when we get the opportunity to talk to friends or family, need to share the facts that we have.”Hauptman said. “I think when they do hear the needs, most people understand.”

The next information session will be at 6:30 p.m. Monday at Early Childhood Connections, 305 Main.

EHS Snowball Royalty candidates announced

Ellis HSSubmitted

ELLIS–The annual KAY Snowball Dance will be on Saturday, February 13.

Promenade will be at the Ellis Good Samaritan Nursing Home from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Pictures start at 7:30 p.m. and the dance begins at 8:00 p.m. Crowning for Snowball Royalty will be at approximately 10:00 p.m.

EHS 2016 Snowball Royalty candidates (Click to enlarge)
EHS 2016 Snowball Royalty candidates

The Ellis High School Snowball Royalty 2016 candidates are:

Back Row (L-R): Bryce Younger (SO), son of Bobby & Toni Younger; Dalton Hensley (JR), son of Kent & Shelly Hensley; Dakota Sproul (SR), son of Chad & Jennifer Sproul; Derek Pfeifer (JR), son of David & LuAnn Pfeifer; Brendon Brenner (SR), son of Lance & Michelle Brenner; Easton Smith (JR), son of Chris & Gina Smith; Geoffrey Soneson (SO), son of Rob & Donna Soneson; Keyston Moeder (SR), son of Jim Moeder and Melanie Moeder; and Dawson Sproul (SO), son of Chad & Jennifer Sproul.

Middle Row (L-R): Haley Reiter (SO), daughter of Allan & Lisa Reiter; Paige Molstad (SR), daughter of David & Susan Molstad and the late Christin Molstad; Kaitlyn Lindberg (FR); daughter of Glyn & Marian Lindberg; Brianna Rohr (SR), daughter of Doug & Terri Rohr; Skylar Gottschalk (SR), daughter of Loran & Tammy Gottschalk; and Brittany Bollig (JR), daughter of Mike & Jessica Bollig.

Front Row (L-R): Marissa Lindberg (FR), daughter of Glyn & Marian Lindberg; Allie Frickey (JR), daughter of Brad & Stacy Frickey; Jessica Gamez (JR), daughter of Domingo & Martha Gamez; Kyrsten Frickey (SO), daughter of Brian & Michelle Frickey; Abby Burton (SO), daughter of Amy & Corey Burton; and Cassie Waldschmidt (FR); daughter of Pete & Sandy Waldschmidt.

NW Kansas legislators oppose school consolidation proposal

3 shot
Rep. Ken Rahjes, Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer and Rep. Sue Boldra answer questions about education in Kansas during the HACC Legislative Coffee in Hays.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Opponents of a measure that would consolidate school districts have expressed their opinions in a Kansas House committee meeting.

House Bill 2504 would require 98 of Kansas’ 105 counties to have one unified school district per county.

The three area lawmakers who participated in this week’s Hays Area Chamber of Commerce legislative coffee believe the issue will never come to the House floor.

“I don’t think we want this much contention on this kind of an issue in a year where we’re working to fill a budget hole,” said Rep. Sue Boldra, R-Hays. “Reasonable people, and especially people in education and people in rural Kansas, understand that these kinds of things aren’t going to work.”

The
The current school districts in Kansas (Click to enlarge)

“There aren’t enough hours in the day to pass this,” quipped Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer, R-Grinnell. “I know a lot of rural legislators are going to fight that.”

Tom Benoit, a Palco USD 269 board member and a member of a coalition of rural districts called Schools for Quality Education, said at Wednesday’s House committee meeting in Topeka that any consolidation should be local patrons’ decision.

Rep. Ken Rahjes, R-Agra, a former school board member, agrees. In Hays Saturday, he said he’s gotten a lot of email from concerned teachers, school board members and others.

“We do need to have those conversations about (improving) education,” Rahjes insisted.

“But it still goes back to local control. If there’s an issue, go to your local school board. If you’re concerned taxes are too high, they’re spending too much, you have to talk to them, instead of banging through the media or sending out letters instead of truly having a conversation.

“We can’t just say ‘so and so was wrong and so and so was right.’  There’s probably somewhere in the middle where we’re both probably right.  That’s one of the things that is missing today and I guess I can say that because I’m the new guy.

“I haven’t been jaded enough to say ‘no, I don’t agree with you so I’m not going to talk to you about anything.’ How in the world do you get anything done that way?  That’s not governing, that’s not legislating. That’s playing…games and we really can’t do that any more.

“This is an election year so there are a lot of these things that are stoking the fires,” Rahjes continued. “Find out who’s introducing the bills and why.  Is it because someone wants to be in the media? Is it because they’re trying to do something? Are they trying hard to look better in the eyes of certain people?”

In Ellis County, the proposed realignment would move Ellis USD 388 and Victoria USD 432 into Hays USD 489.

districts realigned
The proposed realignment of school districts (Click to enlarge)

The bill’s author, Rep. John Bradford, (R-Lansing) says Kansas residents are receiving incorrect information, making them believe the bill would close schools. Bradford defended his bill, saying it wouldn’t result what patrons of rural and small districts fear.  He says it would not affect teachers, sell school buses, change school district boundaries, kill any school mascots, affect any students or football teams and wouldn’t increase the time students ride school buses.

Kansas’ seven most populous counties would be allowed to have multiple districts if each has more than 1,500 students.

 

Design process for wastewater treatment reconstruction discussed

Stan Christopher, HDR Engineering, presented three options
Stan Christopher, HDR Engineering, presented three options to Hays city commissioners for the wastewater treatment process design.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

A short work session for Hays City Commissioners Thursday night involved just one agenda topic for discussion–the wastewater treatment process design selection.

City staff and CDM Smith, the project design-builder, evaluated three options and recommended one for the rebuilding of the wastewater treatment plant.

“This has been a good process,” said City Manager Toby Dougherty. “There’s been a lot of people busting their butts the last month in the background. The meeting we had Thursday afternoon had 15 to 20 people in the room and another 12 to 15 on the conference call.

“This is a big project.”

The Hays WWTP was built in 1953. The $27.6 million upgrade, which must meet stricter effluent discharge requirements by July 2018, is being financed by the city’s State Revolving Fund loan from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

The first two options are more of a traditional biological process; the third option is a membrane bioreactor process. After significant evaluation, the 5-stage oxidation ditch with final clarifiers and denitrification filters is the recommended process.

wastewater treament plant design process costs
(Click to enlarge)

Stan Christopher, HDR Engineering, explained  the process is slightly more expensive than the other two, but has much lower operating costs and is a simpler unit to operate.

Following Christopher’s review, commissioners agreed to move the item to next week’s commission meeting for a vote.

Commissioners also called for a 20 minute executive session, for the commission only, to discuss personnel issues. No action was taken.

First USD 489 bond issue town hall set for tonight

By James Bell
Hays Post

The first of several town hall meetings, aimed at sharing information about the upcoming USD 489 bond election, is set for 6:30 p.m. tonight at O’Loughlin Elementary School, 1401 Hall St.

The meeting will include a presentation from district administration and a tour of the facility to show attendees building needs that would be addressed by the bond.

“The outline of the meetings is to do the tour, do an overall bond election update of the dollar amount, where it goes, what each building would get and then come back and focus on that building’s needs,”said Dean Katt, superintendent, in an earlier interview. “The main focus, obviously, in every building that we look at is security and safety, two of the big issues that we have and have a great need to do a better job for our kids.”

While the meetings are designed to give residents the opportunity to ask questions, Katt also encourages anyone with questions to contact the district.

Meetings for groups or business are also being offered and can also be arranged by calling (785) 623-2400, Ext. 112, or by email at [email protected].

In preparation for the meetings, the administration has made presentation materials  available on the USD 489 website, which can be viewed at https://www.usd489.com/?p=5174.

 

 

Snow days perfect for sleds and snow forts

Faith Fondoble throws a snowball at her brother Dominic, while he works on his snow fort.
Faith Fondoble throws a snowball at her brother Dominic, while he works on his snow fort.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Students in Hays USD 489 are enjoying a second snow day, with classes canceled Tuesday and Wednesday.

Siblings Faith, 11, and Dominic Fondoble, 7, were taking advantage of the time off and the 7.5 inches of wet snow late Tuesday morning.

Dominic, a first-grade student at Roosevelt Elementary School, decided to build a snow fort in their front yard. Faith, a Hays Middle School 6th grader, decided a snowball fight was a better idea.

Dominic said he had discovered the blue plastic bucket he most recently used during a trip to the beach and decided to use it to form the snow into bricks for the walls of his snow fort.

Other youngsters took their sleds to the snow sled hill in Hickock Park, 26th and Donald Dr.

sled 2sled 3

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