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Yale student from Ellis honors his teacher with award

Alyssa Dawson, EHS English and drama teacher, has been honored by the Yale Educator Recognition Program.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

ELLIS — A simple question, “Has your son considered applying to Harvard or Yale or Princeton?” and a little bit of encouragement from one special teacher has opened up a grand adventure for one Ellis High School graduate.

Alyssa Dawson, EHS English and drama teacher, dared to suggest this dream to her student Lane Fischer. Not only was Fischer admitted to Yale on scholarship, but he nominated Dawson for the Yale Educator Recognition Program. 

Ellis High School teacher Alyssa Dawson with student Lane Fischer. Fischer is a freshman at Yale and nominated his former teacher, Dawson, for a teaching award.

Fischer is the only EHS student to attend an Ivy League school, and Dawson is the only teacher from Kansas this year to be recognized through the Yale Educator Program.

To get this story started, you have to go back a bit.

Dawson did not attend an Ivy League school. She received her bachelor’s degree at Sterling College, her master’s degree at K-State and her teaching certification through FHSU.

Dawson comes from a long line of teachers. Her mother and her father were both teachers in Macksville, and her grandfather was a professor of education at Sterling College. Her master’s degree from K-State is in English. As she was teaching expository writing class at K-State to earn here way through her grad program as a GTA, she saw a gap between what high school English teachers were teaching and what writing skills students needed in college.

K-12 focuses on grammar and creative writing, she said, whereas college students are expected to do a lot of expository writing.

She also said she fell in love with teaching at K-State. She said her department put a lot value on ensuring their GTAs were good teachers. She had considered entering the media field upon graduation, but instead opted to take a job in Ellis in 2011 and entered the FHSU Transition to Teaching program to earn her teaching accreditation.

“I’ve made this job into my dream job. I have made it what I would like it to be and what I want to do,” she said.

She said she loves teaching writing.

“I feel any student can learn to become a better writer. It is not just a talent that you have, but it is a skill to be honed,” she said.

Dawson loves to write, so she was looking for a grad classes that would boost her skills. A friend told her Harvard offers online extension classes that were “super fun” and only cost $200. She signed up for a Poetry in America class. She eventually took four classes for 20 graduate hours in English through Harvard.

“I said, ‘This feels great. This is good.’ It’s a little intellectual pursuit. … I got all of this fantastic feedback on my writing. I was filling in gaps in my knowledge on poetry. I was giving my students new skills to try out and enjoy and because the classes were also offered to undergraduates, I encouraged my students who wanted a liberal arts or humanities credit to take this with me.”

Fischer and a couple of other students signed up for the class too.

“This was all part of Lane’s journey alongside of me,” she said. “He was becoming a better writer, and I was learning how to help him become a better writer. He was taking the class beside me. We were talking about the class and poetry. He was realizing he could belong at a place like Yale, and I was realizing that a place like Yale is not some random elite place that only certain people can go.”

Dawson had Lane as a student starting his freshmen year in her theater and forensics classes. He competed in speaking events in forensics on a team that would go on to win three state titles. Dawson subsequently had  Fischer in her junior and senior English classes.

Ivy league was not necessarily the first thing that came to her mind when Fischer entered her classroom.

“What you think as a teacher is, ‘Wow. This kid is a really good speaker or this kid is a really good writer or he’s great on the stage,’ ” Dawson said. “I remember thinking that immediately his freshmen year — how interesting he was on the stage and what a great speaker he was and what a great thinker and kind kid he was.”

The previous year, one of Dawson’s students was admitted to the Stanford.

Because Fischer had a forensics teammate who had success with his top-tier college application, known as the Common application, Fischer decided he would apply as well.

She asked Fischer’s mom at parent-teacher conferences where Fischer was planning to attend college, and she said K-State.

When Dawson suggested Fischer shoot for an Ivy League admission, his mother was a bit shocked.

“This is not something we have considered,” his mother said.

Dawson told Fischer’s mom, “I think he would think it would be an adventure to apply, and I think he might enjoy the writing that they require. If worse comes to worst, he goes to K-State and he’s happy. If not, why not shoot for the moon.”

Lane was on board. He came to school the next day and was ready to start writing admission essays.

Coming from a rural family, Yale’s community housing system appealed to Fischer, so he selected Yale as his early admission choice.

Dawson and Fischer talked over his application essays as he was writing them.

“I would say, ‘They are not just looking for smart kids. You’re smart. You know you’re smart. They want genuine. They want authentic kids. That is going to be what sets you apart,” she said.

One application question asked what class would you teach at Yale and why. Fischer said he would teach Kindness and Civility in the 21st Century.

“That is a really good indicator of the kid he is — soft-spoken but a leader — compassionate but not afraid to speak his mind. I could see clearly as he was applying those qualities were going to get him in,” Dawson said.

This is not Dawson’s first teaching award. Dawson was a semi-finalist for the Kansas Teacher of the Year Award last school year. However, she said being recognized by Yale was special because she was nominated by a student.

“To me, it’s a really kind outpouring of gratitude from a student,” Dawson said.

Dawson has not ended her connection with the Ivy league. This summer, she received a recruiting email from Harvard to teach in an online pilot class for high school students. She accepted and is teaching 40 students through the Harvard program.

🎥 Expansion, not retirement, for longtime Hays Coldwell Banker owner

Patty Stull recently sold her Coldwell Banker franchise to independent real estate agent Robert Readle. Stull will continue listing and selling real estate as she’s done the past 36 years.

Readle buys Stull’s Coldwell Banker corporation, which will now have two Hays locations

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Coldwell Banker now has two locations in Hays.

Patty Stull has been owner/broker of Coldwell Banker Executive Realty in downtown Hays for nearly 36 years.

Stull sold her Coldwell Corp. on Sept. 24 to independent real estate agent Robert Readle. New Coldwell Banker signage — outdoors and indoors — will soon be installed at Readle’s office on the corner of 22nd and Vine streets.

Stull, 72, is not retiring. She will still list and sell real estate from her office at 1001 Main.

“For a long time, I’ve known I don’t have a successor,” Stull said. Her three daughters are grown and working their own jobs, with no interest in taking over their mom’s business.

She wanted to find someone to become the new owner who “has passion and great care for the clients, has good ethics, is reliable and accountable.”

Robert Readle Real Estate will become a second Coldwell Banker location at 22nd and Vine.

Stull says she found all that in her 38-year-old competitor, Robert Readle, when she approached him with her idea of selling her franchise to him.

Stull will mentor Readle, who appreciates the opportunities and support Coldwell Banker offers. It’s the largest franchise real estate company in the country.

“Being independent for so long (since 2014), we’ve really had to learn the nuts and bolts of the business. It’ll be pretty liberating to have that kind of backing behind us,” Readle said, “and we’re really looking forward to what it’s going to do for all of our agents.”

Readle considers Stull “a titan, one of the best in town. I really admire the work that she does.”

He reinforced their shared values and passion for the industry.

Coldwell Banker signage will soon go up on Robert Readle’s building at 22nd and Vine.

“A good Realtor loves working with people and helping them achieve their goals,” agreed Readle, who also has a background in finance.

“Of course, there’s a business side. You have to run an office, maintain files, follow regulations. When Patty and I are doing that at the same time, it’s kind of redundant. Now that we’re working together, she gets to put that on my desk now,” he said with a smile.

“My location at 1001 Main is intact and I’m not going anywhere,” Stull promises. “It was very hard to let go … but I’ve been smiling every day.”

Stull’s office in downtown Hays

The partnership creates the largest real estate company in Hays with 20 agents.

The company was started in 1967 by broker/owner/builder Robert Finch who bought the Coldwell Banker franchise in 1982. Stull purchased it in 1984.

25-year-old hospitalized after Jeep hydroplanes on I-70

ELLIS COUNTY — A 25-year-old northwest Kansas woman was hospitalized after a single-vehicle accident at approximately 8:30 a.m. Tuesday.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, a 2016 Jeep Cherokee driven by Skylar A. Stephen, Phillipsburg, was eastbound on Interstate 70 in eastern Ellis County when the vehicle hydroplaned. The driver lost control, spun through the media and westbound lanes of traffic before coming to rest in the north ditch.

Stephen was transported to Hays Medical Center for treatment of possible injury. She was wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

HPD Activity Report Sept. 27-30

The Hays Police Department responded to 1 animal call and conducted 26 traffic stops Fri., Sept. 27, 2019, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Theft (general)–1000 block E 41st St, Hays; 4 PM; 11:59 PM
Driving Under the Influence–7th and Fort, Hays; 1:47 AM; 1:50 AM
Burglary/vehicle–1300 block Eisenhower Rd, Hays; 9/26 6 PM; 9/27 6:15 AM
Burglary/vehicle–1200 block Felten Dr, Hays; 9/26 11:30 PM; 9/27 1:15 AM
Juvenile Complaint–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 9:08 AM
Burglary/vehicle–1300 block Schwaller Ave, Hays; 12 AM; 7 AM
Bicycle – Lost,Found,Stolen–500 block W 6th St, Hays; 10:21 AM
Welfare Check–1300 block W 27th St, Hays; 11:06 AM
Civil Transport–1300 block Kansas Highway 264, Larned; 11:47 AM
Harassment (All Other)–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 12:34 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–100 block E 13th St, Hays; 1:12 PM
Welfare Check–100 block Ash St, Hays; 1:22 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–800 block E 8th St, Hays; 2:32 PM
Theft (general)–400 block W 13th St, Hays; 3 PM
Phone/Mail Scam–1000 block W 27th St, Hays; 3:12 PM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–100 block of 43rd St, Hays; 3:07 PM
Unwanted Person–300 block W 33rd St, Hays; 3:44 PM
Found/Lost Property–1300 block Main St, Hays; 6:10 PM
Drug Offenses–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 4:47 PM
Burglary/vehicle–2700 block Ash St, Hays; 9/26 7:31 PM; 7:56 PM
Civil Dispute–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 8:21 PM
Welfare Check–1300 block Vine St, Hays; 9:56 PM
Suicidal Subject–1700 block Dechant Rd, Hays; 10:34 PM
Underage Possession of CMB/LIQ–400 block W 7th St, Hays; 11:32 PM
Driving Under the Influence–2200 block Vine St, Hays; 11:46 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 3 animal calls and conducted 25 traffic stops Sat., Sept. 28, 2019, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Driving Under the Influence–400 block W 7th St, Hays; 12:59 AM
Disturbance – General–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 1:45 AM
Driving Under the Influence–100 block E 13th St, Hays; 2 AM
Driving Under the Influence–700 block E 8th St, Hays; 2:35 AM
Disturbance – Noise–200 block Pershing Ct, Hays; 2:55 AM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–1700 block Ash St, Hays; 4:43 AM
Drug Offenses–400 block E 22nd St, Hays; 7:27 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–400 block E 22nd St, Hays; 8:45 AM
Harassment, Telephone/FAX–400 block E 5th St, Hays; 11:06 AM
Welfare Check–100 block E 6th St, Hays; 11:22 AM
Phone/Mail Scam–400 block E 5th St, Hays; 11:31 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–300 block W 8th St, Hays; 11:51 AM
MV Accident-Personal Injury–700 block Ash St, Hays; 12:43 PM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–Hays; 1:30 PM
Animal Call–1300 block Douglas Dr, Hays; 2:16 PM
Found/Lost Property–400 block Pine St, Hays; 2:18 PM
Found/Lost Property–2900 block Vine St, Hays; 2:38 PM
Burglary/residence–400 block Riley St, Hays; 3:04 PM
Shoplifting–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 2 AM; 4:38 PM
Found/Lost Property–Hays; 5:04 PM
Animal Call–500 block W 24th St, Hays; 6:11 PM
Disturbance – Noise–300 block W 7th St, Hays; 10:59 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 5 animal calls and conducted 13 traffic stops Sun., Sept. 29, 2019, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Driving Under the Influence–6th and Elm, Hays; 1:53 AM
Water Use Violation–1000 block W 27th St, Hays; 2:27 AM
Suspicious Activity–22nd St and Canterbury Dr, Hays; 3:48 AM
Driving Under the Influence–1300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:09 AM
Found/Lost Property–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 8:49 AM
Burglary/vehicle–1400 block E 19th St, Hays; 11:53 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–1700 block Felten Dr, Hays; 12:20 PM
Criminal Damage to Property–1300 block Western Plains Dr, Hays; 12:38 PM
Disturbance – General–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 1:26 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–1100 block Drum Ave, Hays; 2:11 PM
Animal Call–1700 block Agnes Dr, Hays; 2:35 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–200 block E 6th St, Hays; 2:54 PM
Search Warrant–2800 block Grant Ave, Hays; 3:14 PM
Animal At Large–2000 block 40 Hwy, Ellis County; 4:39 PM
Criminal Trespass–600 block E 7th St, Hays; 4:41 PM
Suspicious Activity–3400 block Vine St, Hays; 5:15 PM; 5:30 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–100 block W 17th St, Hays; 6:31 PM
Assist – Other (not MV)–300 block W 16th St, Hays; 6:45 PM
Traffic/Driving Complaint–W 27th St, Hays; 7:26 PM

The Hays Police Department responded to 12 animal calls and conducted 18 traffic stops Mon., Sept. 30, 2019, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Mental Health Call–3200 block Vine St, Hays; 1:38 AM
Animal At Large–400 block Ash St, Hays; 8:03 AM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 11:05 AM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 11:05 AM
Suspicious Person–2200 block Vine St, Hays; 12 PM; 12:31 PM
Driving Under the Influence–3200 block Vine St, Hays; 12:08 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–500 block W 23rd St, Hays; 12:46 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–2500 block Pine St, Hays; 2:10 PM
Disorderly Conduct–100 block Main St, Hays; 7:07 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–1500 block E 20th St, Hays; 8:03 PM
Criminal Trespass–2700 block Epworth St, Hays; 10:15 PM; 10:31 PM

Thomas County site of two new wind projects

THOMAS COUNTY – Residents, business leaders, and government officials joined ENGIE North America September 26 to mark the grand opening of the Solomon Forks Wind Project, as well as to celebrate the East Fork Wind Project scheduled to become operational in the spring of 2020.

Both projects are located in Thomas County, near the city of Colby, in northwest Kansas and together represent $650 million of investment.

ENGIE is proud to serve T-Mobile US, Inc., Target Corp., Brown-Forman, and Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty through these projects.

With 105 wind turbines capable of producing 276 MW of clean energy, Solomon Forks is currently the largest wind farm in ENGIE North America’s portfolio.

Now in commercial operation, the project will generate significant benefits to the local area for years to come, with lease payments to landowners under land easements, local jobs to operate and maintain the facility, purchases of local goods and services, donations to Colby Unified School District No. 315, and a scholarship fund established by Solomon Forks with Colby Community College.

The East Fork wind project, meanwhile, also has substantial generation capacity at 196 MW from 72 turbines.

Similar to Solomon Forks, the East Fork project is enabling new economic and educational opportunities to the local area, with lease payments to landowners under land easements, local job creation during construction and commercial operation, purchases of local goods and services, donations to local schools, a scholarship fund established by East Fork with Colby Community College, and annual PILOT (payments in lieu of taxes) payments to Thomas County.

“ENGIE, Target, T-Mobile, Brown-Forman, and Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty now know what we have known in Kansas for years – our resources, whether they be our farm ground, our transportation infrastructure, our wind in this case, or most importantly the communities and people of Kansas – are second to none. I applaud ENGIE, Target, T-Mobile, Brown-Forman, and Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty for the success of these projects, ENGIE’s investment in the local community college, and what all this means for Thomas County and all of Kansas,” said Kansas Speaker of the House Ron Ryckman.

“It’s entirely fitting to celebrate the power of wind here in Kansas, a state whose name stems from the Native American word that means ‘south wind,’” said Colby Mayor Gary Adrian. “For businesses and cities, we need to look at the future as an opportunity not a challenge. I’d like to thank ENGIE for the economic and clean energy engine it has become for our community here in Kansas today and for the future.”

“We’re thrilled to become a part of the community here in Kansas and want to thank all who have gathered with ENGIE today for your support,” said Gwenaëlle Avice-Huet, President and CEO, ENGIE North America and Executive Vice President in charge of ENGIE’s Global Renewable Business Line. “We’re proud to make clean, renewable energy a positive catalyst for our customers in their sustainability goals and to enable new economic and educational opportunities within Thomas County.”

Both the Solomon Forks and East Fork projects reinforce ENGIE’s strategy to lead the zero-carbon transition for companies and local authorities. They contribute to ENGIE’s rapid expansion in renewables, with an ambition to build approximately 9,000 MW of new renewable energy projects from 2019-2021 globally, including 2,500 MW of new renewable capacity in North America. The company has an additional 10,000 MW of wind and solar projects in its broader development pipeline in the U.S. and Canada.

About ENGIE North America

ENGIE North America Inc. offers a range of capabilities in the United States and Canada to help customers decarbonize, decentralize, and digitalize their operations. These include comprehensive services to help customers run their facilities more efficiently and optimize energy and other resource use and expense; clean power generation; energy storage; and retail energy supply that includes renewable, demand response, and on-bill financing options. Nearly 100% of the company’s power generation portfolio is low carbon or renewable. Globally, ENGIE is the largest independent power producer and a leading energy efficiency services provider in the world, employing 160,000 people. For more information on ENGIE North America, please visit our Instagram, LinkedIn, Twitter, or Facebook pages or www.engie-na.com.

– SUBMITTED –

HCT sets auditions for ‘Fruitcakes’

Mix together a batch of fruitcakes, three dozen Christmas trees, 10,000 outdoor Christmas lights, a chicken pox epidemic, two southern spinsters, an estranged old man, a lost cat named Tutti Frutti and a Christmas hog named Buster and you’ve got the recipe for a fun-filled and touching evening of holiday cheer.

Hays Community Theatre needs actors age 8 to adult. Roles for at least 21 actors plus more. They also need stage crew and lighting crew people!

DIRECTOR’S NOTE: HCT WILL BE PERFORMING THIS SHOW AT 12TH ST. AUDITORIUM IN HAYS ON DEC 6, 7, 8 AND AT THE GRAINFIELD OPERA HOUSE ON DECEMBER 14, 2019. YOU MUST BE ABLE TO BE IN ALL PERFORMANCES.

Ellis man pleads guilty to second-degree murder in February shooting

Thompson / HPD

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

An Ellis man pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the shooting death of a Hays man in February.

Ryan Paul Thompson faces more than 23 years in prison after pleading guilty Monday to shooting 26-year-old Diego Gallaway on Feb. 27 in the 2700 block of Indian Trail in Hays.

Thompson was originally charged with premeditated first-degree murder, criminal possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of methamphetamine with the intent to distribute.

According to court documents, Thompson shot Gallaway in the back of the head while holding him in a choke hold.

Under the plea agreement, Thompson faces 272 months in prison for second-degree murder and another 15 months on the drug charge, for a total of 287 months in prison. The gun charge was dropped.

Thompson’s sentencing will be scheduled for later this year.

Also on Monday, Kylie Waldschmidt was bound over as charged with aiding and abetting first-degree murder during commission of inherently dangerous felony.

Ellis County Attorney Tom Drees said Waldschmidt and Thompson went to the 2700 block of Indian Trail to commit an aggravated battery or aggravated assault that escalated to murder.

Waldschmidt was also bound over for interference with law enforcement for allegedly lying to police.

A formal arraignment for Waldschmidt has not been set.

HAWVER: Governing by ‘council’ in Kansas

Martin Hawver
It’s starting to become apparent that Democrat Gov. Laura Kelly has devised a new tool to use to run the state that is essentially managed by a Republican-heavy Legislature.

Of course, Kansas government is basically run, its policies set, its benefits delivered by a majority of a quorum in legislative committees and a majority of members of the House and Senate.

Barring a veto (see last year’s two tax bills) which drives up the votes needed to override the governor, probably one of the most subtle tools is creation by a two- or three-page executive order which establishes “the Governor’s Council” on, well, whatever she wants.

In the first year of her administration, Kelly has made clear that she’s using that “Governor’s Council” to propose tax policy for the state and Medicaid expansion.

Now those councils are just advisory, they come up with policy for their assigned subjects and that policy is going to become the governor’s policy for the state.

Nope, it doesn’t get anything passed, but those council recommendations become a fence for the Kansas Legislature, setting boundaries for lawmakers’ actions. Approve most of whatever those “Governor’s Councils” propose, and it’s likely those bills will become law.

Get outside that fence, and the governor can veto a bill and cite—at length—that a specialized study group (and because a handful of Republicans is on those councils, she can refer to them as “nonpartisan”) considered and rejected those provisions.

Not a bad tactic.

Kelly’s first council, dealing with tax reform, has started its exhaustive look at Kansas tax policy, whom is taxed, what is taxed and what isn’t. It’s a big issue that will paint what tax changes produce…and what those changes may do to the state’s economy that most of us wouldn’t have thought of.

For example, continuing to under-fund the Kansas Department of Transportation doesn’t just take less money but it also is likely to damage the state’s economy through depreciating roads used for getting state products to out-of-state buyers, getting Kansans to their jobs, and even contributing to inadequate recreational bike trails to give cyclists a reason to stay in Kansas or come to Kansas to spend their lives.

Oh, and those roads that are now getting a little makeup with an inch or two of new asphalt and striping are actually deteriorating and will at some point require expensive rebuilding from the dirt to the road surface.

Now, does that sound like tax policy? No, but roads that are deteriorating faster than they are being preserved call for tax money to be spent.

And this week Kelly gives an introductory welcome to the Governor’s Council on Medicaid Expansion. That panel will, of course, propose expansion of Medicaid–we call it KanCare–and what that expansion should look like.

That’ll put some fences around the Legislature’s plans for expanding Medicaid which the House passed last session…and which the Senate never considered.

Look for the panel, of course, to deal with the social issues of caring for the health-care needs of the state’s poor, and then underline that expansion and accompanying federal funding with the possibility of more Kansas hospitals closing, jobs leaving small communities, and residents and workers leaving, too, with dire economic effects.

And look for the panel to disapprove legislative efforts to hinder that expansion through any number of provisions that would prohibit Kansans from becoming eligible for expanded Medicaid—like pre-existing conditions, or work requirements and such…

So, it’s just not the governor proposing tax and Medicaid plans, it’s a bipartisan council that helps draw fences around Medicaid legislation.

This governance by “council” might get interesting…

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

Strategic Doing kicks back off with October session

The Heartland Community Foundation, which serves Ellis, Rooks and Trego counties, has scheduled the Strategic Doing meeting for Ellis County.

The Ellis County meeting will be held at 6 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 8, at the Rose Garden Banquet Hall in Hays. Results of the working groups from the September meeting will be shared. Additionally, other project ideas will be identified, and project teams will be formed for discussion and action.

Strategic Doing is an engaging process that actively helps residents implement their ideas for community improvement projects. New ideas and working groups are encouraged to attend and start working through the Strategic Doing process.

“We hope all who attended the first event in September will join us, but also encourage anyone who was unable to attend the first meeting to come to this one as well,” said Sandy Jacobs, executive director. “There is much more input to be shared by many, as new issues come to the table all the time. Folks with projects that have stalled or those who need resources should also attend and share!”

Dinner will be served. There is no cost to attend, but registration is required. RSVP to [email protected] or 785-621-4090 by Oct. 4.

— Submitted

Exploring Outdoors Kansas: Signs, signs, everywhere are signs (maybe)

Steve Gilliland

I’m not a very opinionated man, but I do have a few annoyances. I try hard to keep these “pet peeves” on their leashes, but occasionally they break free.

Bad signs really irritate me; hard to read, too small, homemade looking, bad signs! For instance, a bad “for sale” sign might as well say” I really don’t want to sell this, but my wife won’t let it stay, so after you’ve read this sign, please just drive away.”

Speaking of bad signs, a major “pet peeve” of mine is trespassing and hunting without permission, and with the myriad of fall hunting seasons already underway, allow me to offer some pertinent information. I am a hunter and I have been a land owner, so I’ve been on both sides of this “fence” so to speak. Are you land owners and sportsmen aware that regulating trespassing and hunting on private property DOES NOT even require a “bad sign” but in fact, requires no sign at all?

In Kansas, law requires hunters to gain land owner permission even on unmarked property. Let me also note the difference between “hunting with permission only” and “hunting with WRITTEN permission only.” “Hunting with permission only” allows for any form of permission, written, verbal or over the phone, and requires the land owner’s signature on any ticket or formal complaint issued by the conservation officer. “Hunting with WRITTEN permission only” is satisfied only by permission in writing, and gives law enforcement personnel free rein to issue citations, and /or make arrests with no further authorization.

By the way, land owners, the fish and game dept. furnishes both the signs and permission slips, at no cost, for this type of posting. I’m sure we hunters have all seen the bright purple paint on fence posts and old tires along property lines. These purple markers along property boundaries also mean “hunting with WRITTEN permission only,” and corresponding compliance is required. The local conservation officer told me that trespassing violations are misdemeanors, so fines are determined and levied by the judge. A few years ago in McPherson County, the minimum was two hundred fifty dollars plus court costs of ninety-eight dollars, and could easily have run up to five hundred dollars depending on circumstances and the judge’s decision.

We hunt mostly deer and turkeys, and trap coyotes, raccoons and beavers. Lots of land owners, especially farmers, are willing to let respectful, responsible hunters help them control deer, turkey, predator and beaver populations on their land. In my assessment, there are very few reasons why hunting and trapping permission is denied. One is because the owner wants to reserve the privilege for themselves and their family. Another is because someone else has “beaten us to the punch.” There are also land owners who simply do not want game animals harvested. These are all legitimate reasons we hunters must respect. The explanation that makes me cringe is when a land owner denies hunting or trapping permission because of a bad experience with previous hunters or trappers. Trespassing, cut or broken-down fences, gates left open, muddy ruts in fields, indiscriminate shooting and other disrespectful actions toward the owner or his property; I’ve seen or experienced them all! Sadly, these actions by a few of our comrades adversely affect all hunters in the end.

Remember, NO SIGN of any kind is required to keep unwelcome hunters off your land, nor to have them prosecuted for trespassing! I was once denied permission to hunt deer during firearms season on a man’s property because years before he and his wife had dodged bullets whizzing through the trees as they attempted to cut firewood. Evidently the shooter had never before heard the sound a chainsaw makes…Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors.

Steve Gilliland, Inman, can be contacted by email at [email protected].

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