The St. Joseph School District released a new Public Service Announcement today regarding the importance of school attendance. The PSA, “Minutes Matter,” was produced for Attendance Awareness Month, which began September 1.
Student attendance is counted by the minute, not by the day or partial day. “The goal for each student is to maintain a 95% or higher attendance percentage per year,” said Dr. Fred Czerwonka, Superintendent of Schools. “Medical appointments are important, and we ask parents to work with us and schedule those after school, or plan to return to school immediately following the appointment. Each minute counts, and missed school time can add up quickly to affect a student’s learning process,” said Czerwonka.
To support this goal:
• Parents are encouraged to be mindful of attendance when scheduling medical, dental, orthodontist and all appointments during the school day;
• Be aware of student attendance when scheduling family trips when school is in session;
• Make school attendance a high priority; students miss out on learning opportunities when absent from school.
Every minute counts! Attendance Awareness Month is a nationwide event recognizing the connection between school attendance and academic achievement. The goal is to promote the value of good attendance and taking concrete steps toward reducing chronic absence. The St. Joseph School District Public Service Announcement can be viewed on the St. Joseph School District website, www.sjsd.k12.mo.us .
Month: September 2014
Capital charge filed over Topeka officer’s death

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 30-year-old man has been charged with capital murder in the shooting death of a Topeka police officer.
Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor announced Wednesday that he had filed the charge against Ross Preston Lane, who was being held without bond. Kansas law allows the death penalty for the slaying of a law enforcement officer.
Police Cpl. Jason Harwood was shot to death Sunday after stopping a car in east Topeka.
Lane also was charged with possessing a stolen firearm and criminal possession of a firearm as a past felon.
Another 30-year-old man, Anthony Allen Ridens Jr., was charged with obstructing apprehension of a felon and possession of a stolen motorcycle.
Abortion opponents pray for success at Missouri Capitol
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Abortion opponents prayed for success Wednesday at the Missouri Capitol as lawmakers consider overriding vetoes.
About 80 people gathered for a prayer vigil Wednesday morning in the Capitol Rotunda, asking that God would provide courage and boldness to anti-abortion lawmakers. Larger crowds of both abortion opponents and abortion-rights supporters are expected for rallies later in the day.
Republican legislators say they are confident that they will be able to override Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon’s veto of a bill requiring women to wait 72 hours after consulting a doctor before having an abortion.
Nixon has called the bill “extreme” because it lacks an exception for cases of rape and incest.
Missouri currently has a 24-hour abortion waiting period. The bill would make Missouri’s wait one of the longest in the nation.
US News Annual College Rankings -How did your school do?
The U.S. News & World Report has released their latest report of school rankings.
The same schools make the list each year and are typically moved up or down a few spots.
Ivy league schools Princeton, Harvard and Yale claimed the top three spots in the overall rankings this year.
The University of Missouri, St. Louis University, and The University of Nebraska-Lincoln tied at 99th place on the list.
The University of Kansas tied with Iowa State and the University of Oklahoma at 106. MU S&T was #138
Kansas State University was 142 on the list. UMKC placed 189. Check out the 2015 rankings here.
Charges filed in armed standoff

58-year-old David M. Bush Sr. has been charged with unlawful possession of a firearm in connection with an early Tuesday morning standoff.
The St. Joseph Police department responded to 2000 block of Elm Street in St. Joseph Monday Evening on a domestic disturbance call. When Mr. Bush allegedly refused to come out the Special Response Team was called. Police Sgt. Brett Kelly told the St. Joseph Post that firearms were in the home.
Sgt. Kelly said after a negotiator began talking to Mr. Bush other family members were allowed to leave the residence.
Shortly after midnight officers breached the door and administered pepper spray on Mr. Bush who then surrendered.
No shot were fired and no injuries were reported.
Mr. Bush has been denied bond.
UPDATE – US-36 Now Open In Macon County
U.S. Highway 36 Now Open |
All lanes of U.S. Hwy 36, both east and west bound, are now open near New Cambria, west of Macon, according to the Missouri Department of Transportation. Westbound lanes were closed initially due to flash flooding and a barrage of chemical tanks washed down Puzzle Creek into the bridge on the highway. Soon after, a trailer initially holding some of these tanks washed into the eastbound lanes, which led law enforcement and MoDOT to close all lanes of highway until it was determined there was no chemical issues with the tanks.
Other routes throughout northern Missouri remain closed due to flooding. MoDOT MoDOT encourages all motorists to check the Traveler Information Map athttp://www.modot.org/. |
Kan. and Mo. organizations receive grants to help with ACA sign-ups
By Andy Marso
KHI News Service
The Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved will get a $468,000 federal grant to again lead the state’s efforts to get residents signed up for health insurance on the online exchanges.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Monday announced $60 million in “navigator” grants to 90 organizations nationwide, including KAMU.
“We’re thrilled that we got the grant for another year,” said Katrina McGivern, KAMU’s communications coordinator. “We’ve been working very diligently trying to lay out a plan prior to getting the grant to have navigators in place to get them retrained and ready to start enrollment assistance.”
McGivern said KAMU plans to use about 160 navigators for 2015 enrollment, including many who helped with sign-ups last year and “some new blood.” McGivern said the navigators’ efforts are being rebranded as “Cover Kansas.”
This year’s grant was less than the $525,000 KAMU received last year to train navigators to help Kansans sign up for health insurance on the online marketplace created by the federal Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare.
This year’s open enrollment period will be from Nov. 15, 2014 to Feb. 15, 2015. McGivern said the second year of sign-ups should be smoother than the first, when the effort was besieged by technological glitches for the first six weeks.
“One challenge we hope we don’t have is that the website works, unlike last year,” she said.
McGivern said KAMU-trained navigators across the state helped more than 15,000 Kansans sign up for health insurance during 2014 open enrollment. She said one of the challenges for 2015 will be letting those Kansans know they need to renew their policies. Use of a navigator was not required to sign up, and about 57,000 Kansans total used the marketplacee to select a plan last year, according to HHS.
In addition to KAMU, a Catholic nonprofit health system called Ascension Health received about $242,000 in grant money to help enroll Kansans. The group received a $166,000 grant last year, which Via Christi Health administered to help cancer patients and survivors obtain health insurance.
Across the state line, the Missouri Alliance of Area Agencies on Aging ($954,618), Advanced Patient Advocacy ($393,022), Community Action Agency of St. Louis County ($144,000) and National Healthy Start Association ($99,094) received navigator grants.
Advanced Patient Advocacy received a grant to operate in Kansas last year, but not this year.
Despite the technological glitches, widespread Republican opposition and several court challenges, about 8 million Americans are estimated to have selected a plan and paid for premiums under the ACA.
Last year after reports that one navigator had a bench warrant for unpaid medical bills, the Kansas Senate passed a bill to require all navigators in the state to pay $100 to register with the attorney general, be fingerprinted and undergo a background check, though KAMU already required background checks of its navigators.
Democrats said Senate Bill 362 was politically motivated. It stalled in the House.
“We’ll still have the strong opponents who are against the ACA and navigators as well,” McGivern said. “We hope the legislation that got brought up last year does not rear its head again this year, but we’re prepared to go to battle if we have to.”
McGivern said her organization expects a “significant amount” of new health insurance plans to be offered on the exchange this time around. Consumers are advised to study the plans before their appointments with navigators to determine which might best suit their needs.
Navigators also will have some studying to do if there are as many new options as rumored, she said.
“They’ll have to do more research on their end getting to know what all’s out there and available,” McGivern said.
Highways & Transportation Commission Meets In St Joe
The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission will hold its monthly meeting at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 10, in St. Joseph.
The meeting will be held in the Kemper Room of the Fulkerson Center at Missouri Western State University. The public is invited to attend.
“We are happy to be returning to St. Joseph and Northwest Missouri,” said Commission Chairman Stephen Miller. “We are interested in learning more about the area’s transportation needs and issues and we invite anyone who is interested to attend this meeting.”
The full agenda is available here.
First on the agenda, the commission will go into closed session to discuss competitive bidding specs, sealed bids or contract terms, personnel administration about particular employees, and legal action or attorney-client privileged communications.
When they return, the commission is expected to vote on bids for transportation impvoements, possible changes to MoDOT’s medical plan funding calendar, and a fiscal appropriations request from MoDOT.
A public comment period will close the meeting. To speak, you must sign in at the registration desk by 1:30 p.m. Comments will be limited to five minutes per person, and ten minutes per topic.
Students criticize KU response to sexual assault

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — University of Kansas students are pressuring the school to improve its response to sexual assault reports.
More than 200 people attended a forum on the subject Tuesday, hours after a student group posted a video telling people that the school is not safe. The student group, called September Siblings, also is circulating petitions asking the school to change its response to sexual assault allegations.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports the effort is in response to recent reports that a university student who said she was raped in 2013, and her assailant was given a lenient punishment. University officials have declined to comment on the case, which Douglas County District Attorney Charles Bronson is reviewing.
Speakers at Tuesday’s forum criticized the university’s current approach of emphasizing education about sexual-assault awareness.
Graves: U.S. House Votes to Ditch EPA Water Grab
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representative Sam Graves (MO-06), House Small Business Committee Chairman, released the following statement after voting to protect the American people from an overreaching EPA water rule.
“The mission of the EPA is to protect human health and the environment. With overreaching and unnecessary rules like the Waters of the U.S., the EPA has clearly ventured well beyond this mission. Its recent rulemakings are an unprecedented power grab that are infringing on the rights of both the individual and small businesses,” said Rep. Graves. “Rules, such as the Waters of the U.S. and countless others, have real and direct consequences. The American public deserves to have a complete picture of the costs and benefits of these rules.”
“I am glad that the House has taken action to stop this harmful rule, but we must have the same check and balance on all rules being forced upon the people of Missouri’s 6th District. That is why we must pass my bill, the Stop the EPA Act, without delay.”