TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State students rallied against white nationalism after racist posters were plastered around campus.
The Kansas City Star reports that participants in the Thursday night solidarity rally also decried President Donald Trump’s decision to phase out the Deferred Action for Children Program, which allows some immigrants who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children to stay. About 800,000 people are affected by Trump’s decision to give Congress six months to end their limbo status.
The rally was organized after posters appeared on campus Wednesday. The school described the fliers as “unwelcome” in a statement.
The university also found several racist messages on campus during the spring semester, including a noose hanging in a tree. Kansas State created two new diversity and inclusion administrative positions over the summer.
Thursday chase and crash in Wichita-photo courtesy KWCH
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a pursuit has ended with a fleeing driver ramming into the cruiser of a Sedgwick County sheriff’s deputy.
The crash happened just before 10:30 a.m. Friday near McConnell Air Force Base in southeast Wichita. A Sedgwick County dispatch supervisor says one person is in custody. Authorities are looking for one other person who was in the vehicle.
Marketing Maven Consulting, a brand management firm located in Great Bend, announced the addition of a new full-time employee to help with social media and design projects.
Haley Acker, a native of Hoisington, Kansas, is the newest addition to the growing firm.
“I am excited to bring my experience and knowledge back to the Great Bend community,” Acker says. “It will be fun serving so many different types of businesses in my new role.”
Previously, Acker was the social media and web communications specialist for the Wichita Public Schools. Haley holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Communication from WSU and is currently pursuing a Master’s in Business Administration from her alma mater.
“Haley is the perfect personality for our team, because she is very intelligent and has lots of great skills, but she also has a great sense of humor and can really help our clients think outside the box on their social media strategy,” says Rachel Mawhirter, Owner of Marketing Maven Consulting. “We are also proud to recruit a native of Barton County home to Central Kansas.”
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Labor says the state’s unemployment rate rose to 3.9 percent in August, an increase of two-tenths of a percent from July.
The unemployment rate in August 2016 was 4.3 percent.
The department said Friday the increased unemployment was related mostly to manufacturing layoffs and revised government job estimates.
Economist Emilie Doerksen said nonfarm employment grew by 800 jobs last month and the service-providing sector added nearly 2,000 jobs. But that was offset by temporary layoffs in manufacturing and decreased government job estimates.
Officials say Kansas has lost 9,000 seasonally adjusted nonfarm jobs, including 6,300 private-sector jobs.
The certified public accounting firm of Adams, Brown, Beran & Ball, Chartered (ABBB) is pleased to announce that Austin Coyan, CPA, senior staff accountant, recently obtained his license as a Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE).
As stated on the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners website, “The Certified Fraud Examiner (CFE) credential denotes proven expertise in fraud prevention, detection and deterrence. CFEs are trained to identify the warning signs and red flags that indicate evidence of fraud and fraud risk. CFEs around the world help protect the global economy by uncovering fraud and implementing processes to prevent fraud from occurring in the first place.”
“Congratulations to Austin for earning this new designation,” said Brian Staats, CPA, CGMA, managing partner of ABBB. “We look forward to the positive contributions this designation will allow him to make for clients as he continues to grow and develop his career.”
Coyan graduated magna cum laude from Wichita State University in 2013, earning a Bachelor of Business Administration. He is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants (KSCPA), and the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE). Raised in Goddard, Kansas, his parents are Gary and Denise Coyan. He is a Goddard High School graduate. Coyan currently resides in Great Bend and enjoys spending his free time reading, baking, and volunteering in the community.
State Rep. Cindy Holscher, right, an Olathe Democrat, hands U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos a packet of statements from groups like Stand Up Blue Valley that oppose her position on school choice. CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos touted the importance of making higher education accessible Thursday while on a whirlwind tour of vocational classrooms at Johnson County Community College.
The highly orchestrated two-hour visit included stops to view spaces used for teaching automotive, electrical, welding, nursing and culinary programs.
The stop was part of a six-state tour in which DeVos has traveled to public and private schools, highlighting themes ranging from services for children with autism to Native American education.
Asked how Thursday’s focus on career and technical education at the Johnson County college fits with her agency’s proposal to cut more than $165 million from federal funding for career and technical education, DeVos said the U.S. Department of Education is dedicated to ensuring students have opportunities beyond high school.
“We are actually supporting career and technical education at nearly the same level from the last fiscal year, and the focus is administration-wide on supporting career and technical education as part of a holistic look at higher education,” she said. “For too long, I think we’ve done a disservice to young people in suggesting that four-year college or university was the only way that they could be successful as adults.”
Earlier this year, DeVos put forth a budget proposal with the Trump administrationthat included more than $165 million in cuts to career and technical education. Kansas schools received $10.2 million from that budget in 2016.
A summary of the budget on the U.S. Department of Education website says “a decrease is necessary to align with overall Budget priorities” but adds that states would continue to have spending flexibility for those dollars.
During her short tenure, DeVos has met with fierce criticism from public education and civil rights advocates, in part for her policies relating to higher education.
She’s seen as sympathetic to for-profit colleges on fraud and loan regulations that had been intended to protect students and recently announced a review of Title IX regulations against sexual discrimination on campuses. Advocates fear a rollback that will shield perpetrators of sexual assault, though some faculty have expressed concern with Title IX’s implementation.
‘Energized’ by the opportunity
DeVos’ JCCC visit came late in the afternoon — 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. — meaning some classes already had ended. She greeted and spoke briefly with small groups of students working in the automotive and electrical labs. In the health care lab, where class was over, she heard from a professor and two students who described what they had done that day.
Afterward, health care professor Kathy Carver said she had been excited for DeVos’ visit —“energized that we would have an opportunity to share what we’re doing here at the college.”
“I want her to know that we are creative, we are cutting edge,” Carver said.
Asked about the controversies surrounding DeVos, Carver said those aren’t the point.
“I’m not really speaking to her in that level. I really want to appreciate her being a representative of our government,” she said. “She’s come here to get information about who we are, and I think that’s valuable, because they can’t make decisions if they don’t know who they’re making decisions about.”
Several students expressed a similar sentiment, saying they appreciated the opportunity to showcase their school.
“It’s a great opportunity for her to see our campus and show her what a great example of public education is, so she has that exposure,” said Ryanne Pritchard, a student of American history with a concentration in African American studies. “I try to stay away from the political aspect. I’m only here because I’m a student and I want her to see the positives.”
Fellow student Derek Benson hoped DeVos would come away knowing the value of community colleges.
“I think it’s good to show her how affordable college can actually be,” he said. “You can actually spend like $2,000 a year to go to a community college and still get the same education — or even a better education at that.”
School choice a hot topic
As DeVos wrapped up her visit with by mingling with students in the culinary building, state Rep. Cindy Holscher, an Olathe Democrat, slipped into DeVos’ hands a folder full of statements from public education advocacy groups.
Holscher said the letters express concern about DeVos’ proposals to use federal funding for school choice programs that are a perennial source of debate in education and political circles. The agency’s budget proposal this year included $1.4 billion to advance public and private school choice.
To say she and I are on different pages in regard to our view of public education is probably an understatement,” Holscher said afterward. “I am the product of public schools, my children go to public schools, 90 percent of our children go to public schools in the United States, so to me that’s where we need to be making the investment.”
National media have reported that DeVos attended private school and chose the same option for her children, a detail that rankles public education advocates who fear she doesn’t support their schools.
Asked about criticism that she focuses too much attention on private instead of public schools, DeVos said she has visited “a wide array of schools.”
The focus for her current six-state tour, she said, is visiting schools “that are doing things creatively and innovatively.”
“We are highlighting all schools that do a great job at meeting the needs of their students,” she said. “There are all kinds of educational opportunities — a wide range — that I would hope that we could focus less on what word comes before ‘school’ and more on what we need to do to meet the needs of all individual students and give them the greatest opportunity to personally succeed.”
Public details of DeVos’ six-state itinerary have been sparse and came on short notice, an approach that Education Week has observed repeatedly and says is meant “to thwart potential protestors.”
On Thursday near the JCCC campus, a small group of protesters held signs with messages opposing public funding for private school tuition, DeVos’ stance on Title IX and other policies.
Protests continued Friday morning on the other side of the state line, where DeVos visited a small private school. The school is known for embracing inclusion and the rights of LGBTQ students. DeVos has rescinded federal guidance supporting the rights of transgender students.
Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.
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WASHINGTON—U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos brought her “Rethink School” tour to Kansas Thursday.
She visited with students at staff at Johnson County Community College. A few who disagree with her and the Trump administration held signs in protest of the visit.
The tour is designed to highlight the innovative and groundbreaking work happening in schools across America.
The “Rethink School” tour will showcase creative ways in which education leaders are meeting the needs of students in K-12 and higher education.
“There are so many new and exciting ways state-based education leaders and advocates are truly rethinking education,” said Secretary DeVos. “It is our goal with this tour to highlight what’s working. We want to encourage local education leaders to continue to be creative, to empower parents with options and to expand student-centered education opportunities.”
The Rethink School tour started in Wyoming. She also made stops Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri and Indiana.
COFFEY COUNTY – One person was injured in an accident during a police pursuit just after 7a.m. Friday in Coffey County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported Lyon County Deputies were involved a chase northbound on Interstate 35 five miles south of Waverly with a 2004 Jaguar X-type driven by London Leroy Blaylock, 24, Overland Park,
The driver swerved to avoid the stop sticks overturned and rolled. Blaylock was transported to Newman Regional Health Center. A passenger Raven Deon Anderson, 28, Grandview, MO., was transported to a hospital in Topeka.
The two-county chase started after deputies noticed the incorrect tag on the vehicle. They were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
Blaylock is being held for Felony Flee and Elude, Reckless Driving and other traffic violations, according to the Lyon County Sheriff’s Department.
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