Posted inElections

Steve Huebert, Jesse McCurry, Darren Pugh running in Wichita Kansas House Republican primary for District 90

Incumbent state Rep. Carl Maughan suspended his reelection campaign after a DUI arrest. That drew three challengers — Steve Huebert, Jesse McCurry and Darren Pugh — into the Republican primary for District 90. The winner of the primary takes on Tracy Edingfield in the general election this November.  The primary election is Aug. 6. You […]

Posted inKansas

Chase Blasi takes on J.C. Moore in Kansas Senate Republican primary for District 26

Incumbent Sen. Chase Blasi, a Wichita Republican, is trying to defend his Statehouse seat from J.C. Moore, who has served in the Legislature before.  Moore sells himself as more of a moderate Republican while Blasi leans more conservative in a key Republican primary race. The winner of the primary takes on Raymond Shore Jr. in the […]

Posted inEducation

Why finding enough substitute teachers is a daily challenge for Wichita schools

In the gig worker era of Uber and DoorDash, Wichita Public Schools seeks its own on-demand employees — substitute teachers.  COVID-19 pandemic troubles, low wages and licensing hurdles have over the last five years tamped down the number of people signing up to substitute teach.  “There’s assignments that don’t get filled almost every day,” recruiter […]

Posted inHealth

Missouri wants pharmacists to stay quiet about ivermectin, but a judge gets to say if that’s constitutional

A politically charged Missouri law that would prevent pharmacists from counseling patients or doctors about ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, two treatments that have been debunked for COVID-19, has been on hold for two years in federal court. Yet the Missouri Board of Pharmacy posted a guidance statement at the end of June that doesn’t mention that […]

Posted inHealth

Kansas nursing home owners say they can’t afford to hire more staff. Advocates say it’s essential

The call came late on a cold night in February, from the Overland Park, Kansas, nursing home where Georann Whitman’s mom was living. “They said that they found her on the floor,” Whitman said. “She had gotten up in the middle of the night and had fallen.” Whitman’s 86-year-old mom, Ann Collins, had dementia. She […]

Posted inLocal Government

Kansas City knows which streets are most dangerous. Now, it’s trying to fix them

Traffic experts and city planners in Kansas City have tried to make it quick and easy to drive in and out of downtown.

At the time, it was great for getting office workers home in time for dinner.

But over the years, interstates and highways bloomed to carry commuters into and out of the city center more quickly. That meant four-lane surface streets became an overbuilt legacy. With so many lanes and so little traffic, drivers went faster and the roads became, counterintuitively, more dangerous.

Posted inHealth

How the Kansas City heat this week, this summer and beyond threatens your health

The sort of heat wave baking Kansas City looks to be increasingly common, and increasingly dangerous.

“The climate crisis isn’t one single moment of disaster,” said Laela Zaidi, an organizer with Sunrise Movement KC, a group fighting climate change. “It’s also days and weeks of extreme heat, of drought, of failing infrastructure.”

Here’s why severe heat is so dangerous and what you can do to keep yourself, your neighbors and your loved ones safe.

Posted inState Government

Only 12% of eligible Kansas families signed up for programs to make child care cheaper

The families of nearly 100,000 children in Kansas were potentially eligible for child care subsidies in 2020. Yet barely more than one in eight got the federal benefit designed to make child care more affordable.  That happened even as Kansas has been expanding its child care subsidy and has more room for families to apply.  […]

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