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KC man who said ‘I won’ after wife’s murder gets life in prison

Santamaria Jr. -photo Clay Co.

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A Kansas City man who declared “I won” after killing his wife has been sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.

A Clay County jury in August convicted 45-year-old Thomas Santamaria Jr. of first-degree murder in the beating and strangulation death of his 50-year-old wife, Yuvett Santamaria.

Clay County Prosecuting Attorney Daniel White said video and audio recordings taken when Santamaria was being led away from the crime scene show him telling an acquaintance “I won.”

The victim was found dead on a bedroom flood in March 2015. Her husband was asleep in the bed in the same room.

The Kansas City Star reports trial testimony indicated Santamaria suspected his wife was having an affair and wanted a divorce.

New state command senior enlisted leader for JFH Kan. National Guard

TOPEKA – Maj. Gen. Lee Tafanelli, the adjutant general, announced the selection of Chief Master Sgt. Maurice L. Williams as the state command senior enlisted leader for Joint Forces Headquarters, Kansas National Guard, Topeka. Williams replaces Command Chief Master Sgt. James Brown, who is leaving the position to become the command senior enlisted leader for Joint Force Civil Support, Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia.

In this role, Williams, will be the primary advisor to the adjutant general of Kansas on all matters pertaining to the enlisted force. He currently serves as the state command chief master sergeant for Joint Forces Headquarters, North Carolina National Guard, and will begin his duties in Kansas Oct. 2.

“I am pleased to announce the selection of Chief Master Sgt. Williams, who brings with him an impeccable record and leadership experience that will benefit the Kansas National Guard,” said Tafanelli. “This position carries great responsibility and I am confident that he is the right person to join our team.”

“I am looking forward to serving the Citizens, Airmen and Soldiers of the state of Kansas,” said Williams. “Chief Master Sgt. James Brown has laid a great foundation for the enlisted Soldiers and Airmen of the Kansas National Guard and I look forward to the opportunity of building upon his legacy.”

“It has been my absolute honor to serve the citizens of Kansas and the soldiers and airmen as their command senior enlisted leader for the Kansas Guard,” said Brown. “It is comforting to know I am leaving our most valuable assets, our enlisted warriors, in the capable hands of this tremendous Airmen, Chief Master Sgt. Maurice Williams.”

Williams entered the North Carolina Air National Guard in 1987 and graduated from the Air Transportation Specialist course at Shepard Air Force Base, Texas, in 1988. During his career, he has served in a number of command positions in North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas, Germany, Iraq, Kuwait, and Qatar.

His military education includes the Noncommissioned Officer Prep Course, Noncommissioned Officer Leadership Course, Senior Noncommissioned Officer Academy Course, Air National Guard Chief Executive Course, Chief Leadership Course, Command Chief Orientation Course, Senior Enlisted Joint Professional Military Education Course, and numerous other professional courses.

Williams earned an associate’s degree in criminal justice, and bachelor’s and master’s degrees in businesses administration from Columbia Southern University, Orange Beach, Alabama.

Williams’ military awards and decorations include the Meritorious Service Medal, Air Force Commendation Medal with oak leaf cluster, Joint Service Achievement Medal, Air Force Achievement Medal, North Carolina National Guard Meritorious Unit Citation, North Carolina Adjutant General’s Meritorious Achievement Service Ribbon and North Carolina National Guard State Service Ribbon.

Early Saturday kick for Big 12 football championship game

IRVING, Texas (AP) – There will be an early Saturday kickoff for the Big 12 Conference football championship game in December.

Big 12 officials announced Wednesday that the Dec. 2 game will be played at 11:30 a.m. Central time at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.

It is the Big 12’s first football championship game since 2010, when Oklahoma beat Nebraska 23-20 at the home stadium of the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys.

The championship game will match the two teams that finish the regular season with the highest winning percentage in conference play.

Tickets for the game, which go on sale Friday, will range from $90-$175. Each participating school will receive about 7,000 tickets and there will be another 1,000 student tickets for $50 each.

Tyson considers new location for chicken plant in Kansas

Members of Gov. Sam Brownback’s Cabinet are working to find a new home for a $300 million Tyson Foods chicken plant in Kansas.
STEPHEN KORANDA / KPR

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — Saline County commissioners are supporting an effort to bring a Tyson chicken plant to Cloud County and Concordia.

The commissionon Tuesday signed a letter in support of the $300 million project. The letter says the plant would benefit the entire region because Tyson will invest $100 million to help farmers and ranchers raise poultry.

Tyson was planning to build the plant near Tonganoxie but put those plans on hold after fierce opposition from nearby residents. On Sept. 19, the Leavenworth County Commission rescinded an offer for $500 million in industrial bonds for the plant because of the opposition.

Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration had pledged an undisclosed amount of tax breaks to persuade Tyson to locate on a 300-acre site south of Tonganoxie.

Free coats are coming! Coat drive continues in Great Bend

What started as a back-to-school party hosted by Trinity United Methodist Church in Great Bend seven years ago, has turned into a needed effort in the community. The 7th annual coat drive put on by the church and Master Cleaners is nearing the completion of collection phase and will soon be redistributing the coats to anyone in need.

Karla Essmiller says they are always in need of more children’s coats to be donated.

Karla Essmiller Audio

Any new or gently used coats and jackets can be dropped off at Master Cleaners, Trinity United Methodist Church, any USD 428 school building, Holy Family Elementary, and Central Kansas Christian Academy. The drop-off date ends Saturday, September 30 and then all the coats will be cleaned by Master Cleaners.

The free coats will be handed out Saturday, October 7 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Trinity United Methodist, 5700 Broadway in Great Bend. All ages and sizes are welcome to pick up a free coat.

Western Kansas man held on $500K Bond for fatal shooting

SCOTT COUNTY — A western Kansas man accused in a September 22, shooting death in  Scott County made a first court appearance Wednesday.

Rene Inguanza, 50, of rural Scott County, is charged with Aggravated Battery and First-Degree Murder, according to Undersheriff Jeff Pounds.

Just after 10p.m. on September 22, deputies responded to report of a shooting at a rural residence in Scott County, according to the sheriff’s department.

They located 44-year-old Darryn Rodenberg dead from a gunshot wound. Deputies found Inguanza in a pickup approximately one-half mile from Rodenberg’s residence and arrested him without incident.

An investigation revealed that Inguanza was angry and accused Rodenberg of selling drugs to his son, according to Pounds. During a confrontation Inguanza allegedly shot Rodenberg.

Inguanza remains jailed in Scott County on a $500,000 Bond, according to Pounds.  His next court appearance is scheduled for October 11.

Kansas man sentenced a second time for child sex crimes

Pruitt -photo KBI

MEDICINE LODGE –A Kansas man was sentenced Tuesday to more than 19 years in prison for sex crimes against a child, according to Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

Robert E. Livi Pruitt, 26, pleaded guilty in July to one count of attempted rape, one count of aggravated intimidation of a victim and one count of contributing to a child’s misconduct. Judge Francis Meisenheimer sentenced Pruitt to 231 months to be served in the Kansas Department of Corrections. The sentence is to run consecutive to the Jessica’s Law life sentence Pruitt is currently serving.

The crimes were committed in May 2012, before his Jessica’s Law conviction. The charges stemmed from an investigation by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. Assistant Attorney General Lyndzie Carter of Schmidt’s office prosecuted the case.

Pruitt had a previous rape conviction in Barber County in 2014.

Kansas Officials Cast Small Net For Comments On Education Plan

Kansas education officials did little to promote a public comment period for a school accountability plan designed to steer the state through 2030 and guide nearly $2 billion in federal spending.

Randy Watson, Kansas education commissioner, says state officials gathered input for an educational initiative in 2015 that helped inform their work on a plan that could guide $2 billion in federal funding through 2030.
CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

While some states that publicized town halls and launched online surveys for their plans collected comments by the thousands, Kansas officials didn’t use such tools nor issue news releases or social media posts about the state’s public comment period.

Fewer than 20 people submitted feedback during the 30-day period — primarily the month of August — when the draft was available on the Kansas State Department of Education’s website.

Education Commissioner Randy Watson said that number isn’t a concern.

“What it speaks to is that most people in Kansas are attuned to where the (state) board is heading” with its vision for schools, he said. “And the people that are engaged and wanting to know about the impact of the ESSA plan, they are giving us feedback for that.”

ESSA refers to the Every Student Succeeds Act, a federal statute on better serving students — particularly those who are historically disadvantaged or underserved.

States were charged with crafting accountability plans that demonstrate how they will comply with the law, which replaced its predecessor, called the No Child Left Behind Act, in 2015. Kansas submitted its plan to the U.S. Department of Education on Sept. 12. Watson said Kansas had gathered public input for a separate initiative in 2015 that helped inform its work on complying with ESSA.

Public notices

Jawanda Mast, an advocate for children with disabilities, disagrees with Watson’s assessment. Mast, whose teenage daughter attends school in Olathe, said she knew Kansas was required to publish its draft online for public comment but had difficulty finding it. She reached out to the department to ask for the link.

“I am pretty involved and kind of know what’s going on,” said Mast, who has concerns about how details in Kansas’ ESSA plan will affect special education. “If it’s that hard to find, it’s not very public.”

Read the National Down Syndrome Congress comments on the Kansas plan that lay out concerns shared by Jawanda Mast.

Through an open records request, the Kansas News Service sought all notices used to announce the public comment period and copies of the submitted comments.

The agency provided a screenshot of its public comment page — which was part of the early childhood, special education and federally funded services section of its website — and an invitation sent to an email list for specialists in early childhood and special education.

Read the email sent to an early childhood and special education listserv.

“These are the two tools that were used to get the message out,” an attorney for the agency wrote.

It did not use social media. During the 30-day comment period, however, it did share dozens of posts on social media platforms regarding other agency news.

The Kansas State Department of Education posted a notice of the public comment period on its website. CLICK to EXPAND

Sixteen people or organizations submitted feedback. The agency initially delayed releasing the public comments to the Kansas News Service, citing an exemption to open records law pertaining to documents in which opinions are expressed.

Martha House, a longtime school librarian in Council Grove, was among those who wrote in. House said she and other librarians had kept an eye out for town hall opportunities to discuss the ESSA plan, but seeing none, watched for the 30-day online commenting window.

Several current and former school librarians were among those who wrote in with concerns about the plan’s lack of specifics on leveraging libraries to bolster student achievement.

“We had to try,” said House, president of the Kansas Association of School Librarians. “There are some things that librarians can really contribute to.”

Advisory committee

Watson and education deputy commissioner Brad Neuenswander say Kansas had an ESSA advisory committee that met two or three times a year to discuss and help shape the plan.

Meeting dates and minutes were posted online, and the gatherings attracted extra participants who shared their thoughts.

The group included nearly 40 people, according to a list provided by the agency. About half were employees from large and small school districts across the state, representing various roles and functions, such as special education and school administration.

Others represented private schools, the postsecondary sector, education advocacy groups such as the teachers union and school board association, parents of children with disabilities and others.

“We try to get a lot of voice,” Neuenswander said. “We try to have a large enough representation of what we believe Kansas student population looks like, as well as trying to keep it a manageable enough group.”

Watson and Neuenswander also said they discussed and showed the ESSA draft in a variety of other contexts, such as at superintendent meetings.

“I would say most of what we did was get comments when we were out in the field,” Neuenswander said.

‘Deep and broad’

Kansas receives about $150 million annually for the federal programs tied to its ESSA plan, the bulk of which goes toward addressing academic achievement in low-income communities.

Chad Aldeman, of Bellwether Education Partners, a consulting group that promotes school improvement for underserved students in particular and is independently reviewing state ESSA plans, said states would benefit from seeking “both deep and broad” input because “no one person can represent an entire state.”

Aldeman has not reviewed what steps Kansas took, but he said most states used a combination of advisory committees and broader public outreach tools, such as surveys.

“If you think accountability matters, then you want a system that people can understand and react to,” he said.

The Kansas News Service reviewed dozens of other state websites for ESSA information and found news releases from all but two announcing the release of the drafts and calling for public comment.

Some states added summaries or readers’ guides to the dense policy blueprints — which can be upward of 100 or 200 pages — held town halls, supplemented the statutory minimum 30-day comment period with surveys or enlisted the help of school districts to notify families about input opportunities.

Such varied approaches were recommended by the Council of Chief State School Officers, which brings together heads of education for each state.

“Most states reached out to many stakeholders in different ways,” council spokeswoman Olympia Meola wrote in an email.

Last year the council published a guide on engaging communities in the ESSA process. It advised drawing on a range of strategies, such as leaning heavily on Facebook and Twitter to reach parents, using blogs and online surveys, and distributing printed materials to reach families that don’t have computers.

The group also suggested releasing glossaries, summaries free of education jargon, or other materials that make the ESSA draft more accessible to non-educators and clarify how it relates to the state’s own strategic vision.

“The intent of ESSA is to make sure the people affected by the law are at the table from the start of the process,” the guide said.

To that end, it advocated for starting early, to avoid a situation in which people feel they have been invited to give input only after decisions have been made.

Multiple drafts

According to a partial list of ESSA plans compiled on the Collaborative for Student Success’ UnderstandingESSA.org website, at least 15 states released more than one draft to the public.

Oklahoma is among those 15. It issued three drafts during 2016 and 2017, starting with a preliminary version published online with a survey that attracted more than 3,000 comments on questions such as what tests to use for measuring student progress and whether to spend certain funds on teacher retention or other efforts.

“In making those decisions, it was so very critical we heard from stakeholders,” said Robyn Miller, deputy superintendent for the Oklahoma State Department of Education.

The state polled participants at its annual conference and distributed news releases and a video of its education commissioner explaining ESSA and asking Oklahomans to weigh in.

It solicited comments from dozens of groups and institutions — from Native American tribes to military bases — and issued nearly 800 invitations for input.

The state held town halls and online webinars, seeking student participation at each, and 1,000 people turned out at seven locations statewide.

“I think from draft to draft, those stakeholders who have been very vocal, they could see that they were heard,” Miller said.

For example, Oklahoma added plans to recognize schools with robust arts or science programs in its online school accountability tool that families can navigate for information. The state also adopted feedback from its school librarians similar to the input that librarian House and others provided in Kansas.

Kansans Can

The Kansas State Department of Education did conduct dozens of public meetings and gather thousands of comments in 2015, but that was unrelated to ESSA. Those efforts gleaned input from educators, families and businesses on what skills they thought today’s youths need to succeed and the role of schools in instilling those.

The feedback they received became the backbone for Kansans Can, the Kansas State Board of Education’s vision, which includes outcomes like success after high school and social skills and emotional growth among students.

“None of that is included in our ESSA plan,” Neuenswander said. “The board’s vision is not part of the ESSA plan.”

Instead, Neuenswander and Watson described ESSA as a subset of their agency’s work.

But because the Kansas ESSA plan is geared at meeting requirements for receiving and spending federal dollars, it contains many details above and beyond what was discussed on the Kansans Can listening tour.

It asks schools to more than triple test score proficiency rates for some student subgroups — such as African-Americans, English language learners and children with disabilities — by 2030. That would mean boosting scores on standardized math and reading tests at steep annual rates that the Kansas Association of School Boards is concerned have not previously been achieved and sustained on this scale.

Related story: Kansas plan sets ‘tough’ long-term goals for current kindergartners

The state also was required to make decisions in its plan about:

  • How to support struggling schools.
  • What steps to take if they miss progress targets.
  • How to ensure children in minority racial and ethnic groups or from low-income families have equal access to qualified, skillful, experienced teachers.
  • Whether to spend certain funds on improving equitable access to good teachers.

Some of these nitty-gritty components are what concerned Mast, the parent from Olathe.

Kansas, for example, used a key statistical threshold to determine which schools will have to meet which accountability targets. The state said it chose a threshold that is statistically sound, but Mast worries it will exempt many schools from goals related to serving children with disabilities. That’s one reason she wanted more public discussion.

“I did not feel like they were very transparent,” she said.

Watson and Neuenswander said the state education department’s ESSA plan fits with the Kansans Can vision. The proficiency targets and the goal of a 95 percent graduation rate, for example, reflect the State Board of Education’s push to meet Kansas workforce needs and ensure students are ready for life after high school.

The agency wasn’t trying to discourage public comments on its ESSA plan, Watson said, but did want to avoid causing any confusion in which the public might think educational officials were shifting away from Kansans Can.

The listening tour for that vision was one reason the agency didn’t see a need for more extensive outreach on ESSA.

“We felt like we already had the input of what Kansans wanted,” Watson said. “So we didn’t have to go repeat that process.”

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

GBFD Preparing for “Fire Prevention Week”

“Every Second Counts: Plan 2 Ways Out!”… That’s the theme this year for Fire Prevention Week October 8-14. The Great Bend Fire Department will once again visit every elementary school in the city with the department’s safety trailer in tow for demonstrations. Firefighter Matt Peterson is helping to organize the visits.

Mike Peterson Audio

The demonstrations will also deal with fire safety in the living room and bedrooms, and the department will utilize a smoke machine so students can learn to stay low and practice escaping through a window.

Firefighter Mike Reifschneider, who is also helping organize the activities this year, says reaching out to the young people in the community is a great way to help prevent fires in the future, and equip students with the knowledge they need to escape a fire if they are put in that situation.

Mike Reifschneider Audio

The Fire Department will begin their visits to Great Bend Schools on Monday October 9.

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