Nearly $840 million in trade aid has been handed out to farmers from the Department of Agriculture so far this year. The payments stem from the trade mitigation package announced by USDA to help offset trade war loses for farmers. The package, worth $12 billion, has paid out $837.8 million to farmers. Top aid recipients are soybean, wheat, corn dairy and hog producers, according to Reuters. The five states that received the highest amount of aid were Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Indiana and Minnesota. The second set of payments is expected in December, and USDA says producers who signed up for the first round will be automatically included in the second round of payments. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue has said that there are no plans to extend the aid into 2019, for now.
Category: News
7 Kan. schools in innovation program decide to drop out
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Seven school districts in Kansas that were given special status through the state’s “Coalition of Innovative School Districts” program now say it’s not worth the effort.
The districts last week asked the Kansas Board of Education to release them from the program that began in 2013.
Districts that join have the freedom to ignore some state oversight in exchange for pursuing novel approaches for improving student achievement. The seven participating districts say they want to continue to collaborate, but as an informal network.
The coalition uses the program to loosen teacher licensure and state assessment requirements. Some unions and education advocates argue that the regulations are needed to maintain high standards.
Blue Valley USD #229, Concordia USD #333, Fredonia USD#484, Hugoton USD #210 , Kansas City USD #500, Marysville USD #364 and McPherson USD #418 are the schools included.
Police identify 3 found dead in parked vehicle in southwest Missouri
LAMPE, Mo. (AP) – Authorities say three people whose bodies were found in a parked vehicle in southwest Missouri died of apparent drug overdoses.
The Stone County Sheriff’s Office says in a Facebook post that deputies responded Saturday to a report of a deceased man in a car near Table Rock Lake. The post says the deputies found the vehicle parked outside an abandoned trailer house with, not one, but three victims inside.
Police identified them as 26-year-old Julie Orman, of Shell Knob, 35-year-old Joseph Johnson, of Green Forest, Arkansas, and 32-year-old Daniel Calvert, also of Green Forest, Arkansas.
Police say no foul play is suspected.
Eastern Corn Belt: Economic Conditions Deteriorate More Than Expected
Eastern Corn Belt farmers are facing similar conditions reported by the Western Corn Belt. The St Louis Federal Reserve Bank, following a Kansas City Fed report, says bankers reported that farm income had declined, and that farm household spending and capital expenditures remained below levels compared with a year ago. The survey includes seven Midwest and Midsouth states, including Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky. Overall, bankers were slightly less optimistic when asked about the prospects for farm income in the fourth quarter of 2018. As one Missouri lender stated, farmers are hurting, expecting “no change in the marketing plans because they have bills to pay and will need to sell the crop to make those payments.” The report says small farmers are hurting because of the low prices and are usually the ones who do not have on-farm storage to allow them to hold their harvested crops.
Kan. To Pay Nonprofit Group $270K For Recruiting 3 Teachers
By NOMIN UJIYEDIIN
The Kansas Legislature agreed to pay education nonprofit Teach For America more than $500,000 this year for a pilot program to recruit 12 teachers to the state.
But the national organization only recruited three teachers for the state in 2018. All of them were placed in Kansas City, Kansas, where the local school district pays their salaries and benefits on top of another $3,000 per teacher per year to Teach For America.
Meanwhile, the state is still on the hook to pay the nonprofit $270,000 for training and recruiting teachers with no guarantee they will work in Kansas schools.
Mischel Miller, director of teacher licensure and accreditation at the Kansas State Department of Education, said the contract was intended to help fill a teacher shortage in the state.
“Our intention,” Miller said in an interview, “is that those dollars would be used for Kansas teachers.”
Yet the Kansas City, Kansas school district says it only hired three Teach For America instructors this year. Two other recruits started teaching in the district last year before Kansas hired the organization.
The state education department says Teach For America told the department it recruited all five of those teachers this year. The department is currently drafting a $270,000 contract to pay the organization.
A budget document from the Kansas Legislative Research Department dated Oct. 10 states, “Teachers will be paid a salary of $36,000.” But that money actually goes just to recruiting, training and placing each teacher.
That totals $180,000 from the state for recruiting five teachers, plus $80,000 to pay for the salary, benefits and travel expenses of a recruiter and $10,000 for one day of professional development. The rest of the money appropriated during the legislative session, totaling $250,000, will go back to the state’s general fund to be appropriated for the next fiscal year.
Such funding arrangements with the group are common across the country. Tax filings show that Teach For America received $45.2 million in government grants in fiscal year 2016, about 16.6 percent of its revenue. States such as Texas, Arkansas and Missouri have also appropriated education funds for the nonprofit.
At a meeting of the Legislative Budget Committee on Wednesday in Topeka, state lawmakers expressed disappointment in the low number of recruits and the fact that the program only placed teachers in the far eastern corner of Kansas.
“That’s the best they can do so far?” asked committee chair Sen. Carolyn McGinn, who represents a district in south-central Kansas. “I don’t recall during that appropriation process that we said, ‘Just stay in the Kansas City area.’”
In an interview, Teach For America Kansas City executive director Chris Rosson said the organization had originally presented its pilot as an extension of its program in Kansas City, Missouri, “with the opportunity for us to explore the possibility of looking westward, but with clearly no direct promises.”
Rosson said his organization planned to encourage teachers to become more familiar with other parts of Kansas. Events like an alumni reunion in Lawrence and a trip to western Kansas are scheduled for upcoming months.
But the money hasn’t been allocated yet, and will not come out of the training and recruiting budget that the state has agreed to pay this year.
“We’re eager to do those things to try to support the work that’s happening in the state of Kansas,” Rosson said. “But we are also a (nonprofit group) that has to be very deliberate about and intentional about how we are allocating our resources.”
Rosson said the vast majority of Kansas City metro placements had ended up on the Missouri side because Kansas City, Kansas Public Schools took longer to hire Teach For America recruits than Missouri schools.
A KCKPS employee confirmed that the process was slow because the district needed to make sure Teach For America candidates met a state requirement of being enrolled in a master’s degree program.
Other parts of the state’s agreement with Teach For America drew questions from lawmakers at the Legislative Budget Committee meeting on Wednesday, including the $80,000 allocated for a full-time national Teach For America recruiter based in Lawrence.
State Sen. Rick Billinger expressed skepticism about a one-day professional development program in Topeka with a price tag of $10,000.
“I’d personally like to see a little breakdown on that,” Billinger said. “It just looks kind of out of line.”
Rosson said this year’s training has not yet taken place, but the budget request was based on the cost of doing the training in previous years. The event entails busing 120 Kansas City Teach For America corps members, the vast majority of whom teach in Missouri, for a tour of the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site. Other costs include food and a speaker who leads “cultural responsive teaching and instruction,” according to a document provided by the state education department.
Rosson said he hoped the event would increase interest in teaching in Kansas after the Teach For America placements are completed.
“It’s typically a very powerful experience to have that type of content delivered in a place that has that level of historical significance,” he said.
Rosson said there were 13 Teach For America alumni currently working in Kansas — nine working as teachers and four working in school leadership positions.
Teach For America’s Lawrence-based recruiter, he said, is the first in the state. He said the recruiter is responsible for attracting applicants for Kansas, but also for the organization’s nationwide pool of potential teachers, who then rank which areas in which they’d like to be placed.
He said he wasn’t sure, but it’s possible that the Lawrence recruiter may have recruited Kansas applicants who were then assigned to schools outside of the state.
“Somebody who is from Sacramento and is going to Wichita State may choose that really what they want to do is go back to California and teach,” he said.
According to data from the state education department, there were 612 vacant teaching positions in Kansas schools this fall. Many were concentrated in the state’s population centers of Wichita and Kansas City, but schools in rural western Kansas also struggled to find qualified teachers.
At the Capitol on Wednesday, Rep. Steven Johnson said he had hoped the amount of money allocated for Teach For America would lead to more hires.
“The five teachers, I think, we’re excited about — just disappointed we don’t have more,” he said. “That ratio just doesn’t feel very good as we look at results.”
Nomin Ujiyediin is a reporter for the Kansas News Service.You can reach her on Twitter @NominUJ.
Farm Bill Conference Committee Talks Suddenly Close
The farm bill conference committee could have an agreement in place as this week starts. “We’re darn close,” House Ag Committee Chair Mike Conaway told Politico a couple days after a bout of finger-pointing between conference committee members, who have since downplayed previous comments. Senate Ag Chair Pat Roberts was hopeful a deal would come together by Monday. Roberts had reportedly received a House proposal Friday afternoon. Senate Leader Mitch McConnell, meanwhile, discussed the farm bill with President Trump and said that he and the President are determined to finish the bill this year. McConnell previously told reporters the farm bill is one of two items that “absolutely have to be accomplished” before the end of 2018. Conference committee talks remain fluid, and as of Friday afternoon, unresolved issues included the conservation title and regulatory language, along with negotiations ongoing regarding the nutrition title.
Drury University wrestler shot, wounded in hunting accident
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) – Freshman Drury University wrestler Donovan Benetti has been shot in the abdomen in a hunting accident.
University athletics spokesman Ed Beach says Benetti was flown to a Columbia hospital after he was wounded Saturday morning in Phelps County. Drury wrestling said in a Facebook post that Benetti has undergone one surgery and will likely need another. But the post says the Nixa High School graduate has a “really good prognosis” and is “extremely positive and strong.”
Three other hunters were killed earlier this month in separate accidental shootings during the opening weekend of Missouri’s firearms deer hunting season. They’ve been identified as 52-year-old Randy Reising, of Arnold, 70-year-old Charles Bark, of Marengo, Illinois, and 24-year-old Justin Atchison, who was an assistant football and baseball coach at Willard High School.
Missouri man charged with killing witness in 2017 murder
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) – Authorities say a Missouri man who was free on bond while awaiting trial in a deadly September 2017 shooting has been charged with killing a key witness in the case.

Twenty-seven-year-old Michael Dumas, of Pleasant Hill, was charged Sunday with first-degree murder, first-degree assault and two counts of armed criminal action in the shooting that killed Sarah Simms and left another person with minor injuries.
The charge was filed hours after Simms was slain in an Independence home. She was a key witness against Dumas in the fatal shooting of Phillip Anderson, whose body was found in a convenience store parking lot. Dumas was charged with second-degree murder in that case and released on bond in November 2017.
His attorney in the 2017 case didn’t immediately return a phone message.
4 Missouri men dead, 4 hospitalized after crash
PHELPS COUNTY — Four people died in an accident just after 9a.m. Sunday in Phelps County.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1994 Chevy Cavalier driven by Alonzo C. Moore, 22, Rolla, was southbound on Highway O four miles south of Rolla.
The vehicle traveled into the path of and collided with a northbound 2015 Nissan Titan driven by Andrew E. Knehans, 41, Rolla.
Moore and passengers in the Chevy Logan K. Barton, 27, Zachary J. Barton, 26, both of Salem and Andrew T. Theiss, 25, Rolla, were pronounced dead at the scene.
Knehans and passengers on the Nissan Lainie E. Knehans, 41, Rolla, and two children were transported to Phelps County Regional Medical Center.
The occupants of the Chevy were not wearing seat belts, according to the MSHP.
Police: 2nd victim from October triple shooting in KC dies
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Police say a second victim of a triple shooting last month in Kansas City has died from his injuries.
Police have confirmed the death of 21-year-old James Speers. Police say Speers died Nov. 8, more than two weeks after he was shot along with two others in the Sterling Acres neighborhood.
The Oct. 23 shooting also killed 21-year-old Miranda Carr of Grandview. Another woman was also injured.
Police are asking the public for any information on the shooting.