The Platte Perspective

"If there is any one secret of success, it lies in the ability to get the other person's point of view and see things from that person's angle as well as from your own."

Thursday, August 23, 2012

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill Girls Golf

Despite losing their top golfer to graduation, Park Hill girls golf has come into 2012 at a high level in preseason practice. After a summer full of competition, the Trojans’ top three golfers return this fall shooting as if they were in midseason form. State qualifiers senior Bailey Warlen and sophomore Adrianna Elliott, who finished 68th and 33rd respectively at state last year, return along with sophomore letter winner Sydney Paulak. Those three will provide a strong foundation head coach Tari Garner says is pretty impressive.

“Those three are pretty solid at 1, 2, 3,” Garner said. “We’re starting really strong.”

While the Trojans have talent at the top the real story of their team success will be who fills the rest of the varsity spots. The good news for Park Hill is there is plenty of competition with a number of younger players coming into the program with golf experience, something not always a given for incoming freshmen.

“We’re looking for those four and five spots,” Garner said. “I’d really like to have four or five girls shooting for those two spots so they can battle for it. I’d like to be able to rotate kids in so they get that varsity experience.”

With 18 players on the preseason roster, Garner says it’s the first time she’s had a team where everyone is a legitimate contender for either the five spots on varsity or JV. Seniors Rachyl Williams and Darion Peterson all the way down the roster to the team’s only freshmen, Chloe Dailey and Delaney Oehrke, have a chance at competing and will at some point.

Focus on specific pieces of each golfer’s game can range, but after falling short of a conference title last year by just a few strokes, Garner says the entire team will be seeing time on the putting green.

“We’ll work a ton on short game with everyone,” Garner said. “That’s what is going to make a difference with the scores.”

Excelling in putting will not only produce better results, but help them develop as players, which is the area Garner enjoys the most about her job.

“Once they start getting those lower scores, that’s a huge confidence builder,” Garner said. “It’s really fun to watch them grow into themselves.”

Park Hill will host two early matches at their home course, Tiffany Greens, against Winnetonka/Oak Park on August 29th and Kearney on September 4th before traveling to other various courses around the metro for the remainder of the season.

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill South Girls Golf

An impressive season in 2011 for the Park Hill South girls golfers included a 15-1 record, a third place finish at districts, and a team qualification for sectionals. Coming into 2012, the Panthers return three of five from last year’s team and will add to the mix a handful of upperclassmen to fill the gaps for another run at a successful season.

Seniors Lindsey Gile and Savannah Kutz along with junior Sydney Sanders return from sectional qualifications to lead Park Hill South this season. Sanders scored the highest (+27) for the Panthers in the state sectional tournament, which made her just a few strokes shy of a state qualification in 2011. Others in the varsity mix will be seniors Ashley Kildow and Cailin Ballard as well as juniors Kyliegh Keith, Lauren Pusateri, and Abbe Rechstener.

“We have a good group this season. Any of them have a great chance to make the varsity team,” head coach Larry Torgerson said. “I truly cannot project five of the eight players that will be playing varsity. I do know that it will be great to watch their matches!”

Park Hill South is not used to having large senior classes on their golf teams, so even though they will feature a strong class of four, it will be the most they’ve had in the program’s history. With that kind of leadership and experience comes high expectations.

“With a group of successful players this year our expectations will be high,” Torgerson said. “But with golf it is one stroke at a time.”

Playing up a conference as a result of realignment could present a challenge, but one the Panthers are looking forward to meeting head on this fall on the links. They begin the season with a handful of competitions in Liberty on August 22nd, 27th, and 28th before returning home to host St. Joe Central, Lee’s Summit North, and Lee’s Summit West at The National on August 29th.

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill Boys Cross Country

Despite losing their two top runners to graduation from a year ago, Park Hill boys cross country returns the rest of their varsity team in 2012 for what could be one of the more unified groups the Trojans have seen in recent years. Hoping to lead a team that finished in third place at conference and fourth place at sectionals last year are seniors Kainen Utt, Riley Fahrenholz, Nate Thomas, and Daniel Chen.

While the Trojans qualified as a team for sectionals last year, Utt returns as the only individual qualifier and has so far emerged as Park Hill’s number one runner. Head coach Jon Davis says Utt is ready to take on the role both in terms of performance and leadership.

“Cainen has been a sectional qualifier the last two years,” Davis said. “He’s really looking forward to this year and I think he’s got a good shot at getting pretty far as well. He does a good job of leading guys by doing the right things and acting the right way. He’ll be fine because he knows he’s the number one guy and has worked really hard to earn it.”

Davis says last year there was a drop-off between his top two runners and the rest of the team, but in 2012 he believes the team is a more cohesive group that can run together and still see success.

“As long as they’re running towards the front of the pack, and not the middle or back, running together is always positive,” Davis said. “We’ve got a number one in Kainen, but the two, three, and four guys won’t be as far back as they have in the past.”

Junior James Adams and sophomore Hanok Tekle return as seasoned varsity runners who were part of last year’s sectional qualifying team. Sophomores Noah and Carter Barajas along with Cade Kellem will compete for some of the final spots on varsity, representing just a portion of the underclassmen which make up a majority of the team overall.

“What I’ve noticed this year is we have a smaller number of runners, but we have more kids that really want to do this. They really want to run, so I like the group we have,” Davis said. “I think 21 of our 31 guys are freshmen or sophomores so the older guys who do things right will help them.”

Lee’s Summit West and St. Joe Central will be the teams to beat at the conference meet, but Park Hill thinks they can give them some tough competition. While the Trojans start their season at the Liberty Invitational, they believe they’ll have a good idea of their potential after Week Three when they return from Blue Springs and the Wildcat Invitational.

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill South Boys Cross Country

Park Hill South will defend its 2011 conference championship with most of the same runners that helped contribute to clinching it last year. The Panthers return three all-conference runners in seniors Lendon Calhoun and Mason Homoly as well as their top runner sophomore Tucker Melles. Melles burst onto the scene last year as a freshman, qualifying for the state meet before finishing 43rd overall.

“He’s been running races all summer long,” head coach Brad Banning said of Melles. “He also swims, so he’s coming back in great shape.”

Also returning for the Panthers are senior Jacob Bowlin, juniors Westley King, Chase Whorton, Eli Williams, and Keaton Murray, and sophomore Gus Whitman.

Overall, Banning says his junior and sophomore classes make up a large portion of the team with about 13 runners in each class. It’s certainly not a problem, as it should help Park Hill South field quality varsity as well as junior varsity teams, which help fuel competition between the individual runners.

They will start the season off at the Liberty Invite on September 1st followed by the Ray-Pec Invite on September 8th.

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill Girls Cross Country

Sometimes less is more. That’s what Park Hill girls cross country coach Jason Parr is hoping as his team heads into the 2012 season. Despite only having a little more than 20 girls on the team, Parr believes he’s seen more dedication and commitment coming into this year compared to some of his bigger teams of the past.

“The focus has been totally different this year, it’s kind of been fun because I’ve got girls who are telling me they want to work this year,” Parr said. “We don’t have a lot of girls this year, maybe 20 or 21, but they’re ready to contribute.”

Returning for Park Hill and leading the way is two-time state qualifier junior Kim Rau who will be joined by sophomore Mercedes Robinson. Both had successful track seasons in the spring and kept the momentum going through the summer, as did a number of the girls who will make up the core of this year’s team including Gianna Tutorino, Brooke Bischof, Madeline Mudd, Emma Gaiser, Libby Lund, and number of other young runners.

Now in his third year, Parr says he spent the summer with his team focusing in on how to fulfill what has the potential to be a very talented team.

“We’re kind of reprocessing and re-evaluating everything, and kind of starting over again. We had a great track season and over the summer re-thought everything we do,” Parr said. “We established contact day requirements meaning they had to make 18 days to run a meet. We ended up having some of the best summer miles that we’ve ever had.”

Along with the new energy and approach has come a new attitude, one which is comfortably confident and business-like.

“I’d say the attitude this year is calm. Our girls come, work, don’t say much, and really go about their business. They’re a close bunch,” Parr said. “We’re really looking to whoever says I’m going to commit to this and ready to do this. They’re the ones who are going to get the job done.”

Park Hill starts the season off at the Liberty Invitational on September 1st, but the KC Metro Classic at the end of the month is what Parr believes will be a good tool to judge the Trojans’ progress leading into the conference and district meets.

“A good meet is always KC Metro. It’s a flat, fast course that can help up evaluate half-way through the season,” Parr said. “Our goal is to always get as many girls to the state meet. It’s just something we work for and that’s something the girls look to.”

FALL PREVIEW: Park Hill South Girls Cross Country

After winning their conference, earning their highest placement at districts in nine years, and finishing seventh in sectionals last season, the Park Hill South girls cross country team returns seven letter winners in 2012 and are looking stronger than ever.

“We’re pretty excited about the girls we have returning,” head coach Pam Jurgensmeyer said. “We’ve ran a lot and it’s probably the best participation we’ve had from incoming freshmen, so that’s exciting to get that interest at the younger level.”

Leading the way will be three decorated seniors in Lizzy Jurries, De De O’Toole, and Audrey Rothers who’ve been familiar faces at the front of the Panther pack the past couple seasons. Other varsity runners returning from last season include Raven Jennings, Madeline Homoly, Danielle Black, and Erica Guzman who received the team’s top time at last year’s sectionals.

While Park Hill South will return a strong team, they’ll also be dealing with a realignment in conferences, which in their case means a tougher road to defending and repeating as champions.

“We have talked about moving up a conference, which will be quite a challenge with Lee’s Summit West, who has won state a couple times),” Jurgensmeyer said. “That will be a mental and physical challenge.”

Nonetheless, the Panthers are come into the season with confidence and have added an additional, but worthwhile theme to their training.

“The overall theme has been integrity. Cross Country can kind of be a sport where you can be out there alone with no coaches and you’re not all in the same place at once, so it’s easy to cut a corner short or stop early. We want them to show the integrity of putting in hard work and knowing how it feels to put it in.”

They will start the season off at the Liberty Invite on September 1st followed by the Ray-Pec Invite on September 8th.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

New King of the Hill

Students and teachers are wrapping up their summer break to return to the classroom next week, but there probably is not anyone more excited to start the 2012-13 school year than new Park Hill Superintendent Scott Springston, whose first day on the job was July 1st.

After nearly a five month selection process, Springston emerged as the final candidate to replace retiring Superintendent Dennis Fisher in February when he accepted a contract from the Park Hill Board of Education. Describing himself as a person with high passion and a focus on continually improving, Springston is now the top official overseeing the 15-school district responsible for the education of more than 10,000 students.

Educating and preparing students to become a part of a 21st Century workforce is what Springston said is one of his top goals for the Park Hill School District. It is a challenge schools are facing across the nation, but Springston believes it will require a working relationship with the business community to implement an effective strategy.

“We need to have conversations with businesses and industry to ask them what they need from their employees and how we can prepare them for that,” Springston said. “A lot of employers I’ve talked to in the past are saying they can teach the technical skills needed themselves, but soft skills are what employees need coming in.”

Like most school districts, Park Hill’s priorities are outlined in its annual budget and since the budget for the 2012-13 school year was developed and approved before Springston took office, a lot of what he will be doing in his first year is an evaluation of what works and what needs to improve.

“We want to be proactive, not reactive to issues,” Springston said. “It goes back to the question: if we want to be the best, what do we need to do? In this first year, I want to meet as many people as possible and help our staff get better. I want to meet with the kids to ask them how we’re doing, because they are our end-user and it’s their education.”

For Springston, coming to Park Hill is another opportunity to continue what he found to be a passion at an early age. Growing up in a family where his father was a teacher and coach, Springston shared an interest in working with young people and seeing their development take place.

“I did some volunteering and coaching in high school and really enjoyed seeing the growth take place,” Springston said. “When you take the teaching and learning aspect combined with system organization, this is a natural fit.”

After graduating from Gardner City High School and then Fort Hays State University in 1992 with a degree in biology education, Springston started working on his master’s degree right away while working as a teacher in the Hays Public School District.

“I started my master’s pretty quick because I knew this was what I wanted to do,” Springston said.

He went on to serve as an assistant principal and principal in the Blue Valley School District in Johnson County, Kan. from 1996 to 2004. But the accomplishments he is most proud of came from his work from 2004-12 in the Valley Center School District just outside Wichita, Kan. After earning his doctorate from the University of Kansas in 2006, he was named superintendent and identified two challenges facing the district that needed to be addressed. The first was a top-down focus from the administrative level, not bottom-up from the teacher-student level. The second was a rapidly growing student population that was beginning to grow beyond the district’s facility capacities, some of which were decades old.

“It was a very top-down culture that we needed to flip the other way,” Springston said. “We began to focus more on professional development for our teachers and staff, implemented a late start day to allow students extra attention they needed it, and created data based performance measures to compare our scores to state standards.”

To address the district’s growth, following a reported commissioned by Wichita State University outlining future growth projections and the critical need for more classroom space to keep class sizes as low as possible, in 2008 Springston along led an effort to pass a nearly $58 million bond issue. The comprehensive improvements included a new high school which opened last fall, additional classrooms to elementary schools, new transportation and administrative facilities, and increased security and access to technology throughout the district. Springston says it wasn’t just a matter of campaigning to pass the bond; it was about building a vision for the entire community, one which will affect students and teachers for years to come.

“We established a standard of excellence at Valley Center,” Springston said. “Park Hill is a high performing, high level district, and I want to work to make it better every day.”

When asked how the district could match and exceed the successes it has achieved by being honored with several prestigious state and national awards over recent years, Springston emphasized the classroom experience.

“Our focus needs to be on the teacher-student level and what happens in the classroom,” Springston said. “Awards just reflect that and will follow over time.”

Although the process which led to Springston’s hiring was somewhat continuous between the board members who led it and a group of active parents who voiced opposition to it, he didn’t take it personally. In fact, Springston believes it was a positive reflection of the district and showed a hint of the passion and improvement-oriented leadership Park Hill can hope to look forward to him uniting the district under in the future.

“I don’t think it was ever about one particular person,” Springston said. “We all have more in common than we don’t in the end. I’d rather have parents with passion compared to apathy. Park Hill is more important than any one person.”

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Local Dems leader supports GOP candidate

(Author's note: this piece is not intended to serve as an endorsement, but an example of principle over party, and should not be viewed as an indictment of the writer's personal preference towards the candidates mentioned)

With less than two weeks until Primary Day, this column could easily be dedicated to previewing a handful of interesting contests playing out in Republican and Democratic circles. But I’m confident Citizen readers will research the candidates, read The Citizen profiles on candidates, make an informed decision and show up to vote Aug. 7, so I’ll leave the prep work up to you.

Regular readers know by now I often go to painstakingly-long lengths to describe my desire for our elected leaders to make choices and decisions with good government principles behind them, not purely politics. I often have to use hypothetical situations, wishful thinking, and broad strokes of the brush to paint that picture. Last week, a tangible example was finally found.

When it comes to the competitive race in southern Platte County for County Commissioner of the 1st District, Pauli Kendrick and a handful of other long-time Democrats find themselves split between the responsibilities they have towards two different roles. As Chair of the Platte County Democratic Party, Kendrick is charged with promoting and supporting the party’s candidates and principles through thick and thin. On the other hand, her civic efforts have transcended into non-partisan activities without party labels at times as well. This includes her term as mayor of Weatherby Lake and a recent stint on the Park Hill Board of Education.

With no Democratic candidate filing to run in November, the winner of the August Republican primary between incumbent Kathy Dusenbery and challenger Beverlee Roper will go on to take office in December. As someone opposed to Dusenbery’s re-election for various reasons and a long-time Weatherby Lake neighbor of Roper’s, Kendrick decided to lend her efforts in support of Roper, whose candidacy has garnered significant support from the Republican establishment.

Despite the simple reasoning behind Kendrick’s decision, which has little to do with a shift in personal ideology, Roper’s Republican supporters have over-emphasized this as a positive indictment for their candidate’s wide-ranging appeal. This hasn’t been sitting well with local Democrats, who believe it is inappropriate for their chairperson to be involved in the race. Democratic central committee members went to great lengths voicing their displeasure with Kendrick at last week’s monthly meeting. Their argument was that as elected representatives of the Democratic Party in Platte County, no committee member should publicly support a candidate of another party, no matter who the candidate is or what the circumstances are.

After all the passionate and strong-felt opinions were expressed, the floor was open for Kendrick, who had calmly refrained from responding up to this point. Collected and composed, she delivered what I believe was one of the most well-reasoned political defenses I have heard in recent memory. She talked about the lack of cooperation between parties at the national and state levels, discussed her disapproval of the way Platte County business had been handled in recent years, and talked about the personal reasons she was supporting her candidate. It was a refreshing statement from a person who - no two ways about it - genuinely wants to see what she believed could be a positive change.

Kendrick is making a decision other Democrats might also make this August. They’re voting to have a say about the future of leaders in Platte County, in a race their party has failed to field a candidate for. As long as the local Democratic Party continues to fall short in recruiting and supporting qualified candidates like they have in recent years, it’s a dilemma their supporters will be forced to deal with more and more. Other than electoral defeat, this is one of the additional side effects of a local Republican Party whose organization and growth has outpaced Democrats in the last decade.

In the end, Kendrick and other Democrats who decide to pick up a Republican ballot instead of a Democratic ballot want to have a say in who represents Platte County at the local level. There are less than a handful of Democratic races on the state level, but they recognize the old adage that all politics are local still holds true and it makes the biggest difference in our daily lives. They aren’t doing it to compromise their political principles. Though in the absence of a candidate available from their own party, a higher standard of principles surface. They respect their right to vote and recognize that duty to country, state, and community comes before party affiliation.

Maybe if similar decisions were made more often in the course of actual governing, we’d think more highly of our elected officials.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Political discourse often reverts to childish rhetoric

The most effective way for a person to make a difference in government has always been to take on the role of an elected or public official

Having the appetite for holding public office isn’t something a lot of people want to do, so the next best way to have a positive effect on the process can simply be contributing to the conversation. This means not necessarily being the loudest voice in the room, but by promoting respectable, informed, and productive public discourse. All too many times, though, it results in the opposite, resembling more of an argument between children than an actual discussion that can bring us closer to positive results.

You remember when you were a kid or maybe you’ve witnessed your own kids try to win a petty argument, right? They might go back and forth for a short period of time, and then one side just decides they don’t want to try anymore so they throw out a line like “You’re stupid” or “You’re dumb.” The other side goes on to react with “No, you’re stupid, you’re dumb.” No matter what the argument was previously, it’s lost all credibility at this point.

When I think of political discourse in this country, frequently that same argument between children is what I’m reminded of. Legitimate discussion of the issues all too often evaporates because one side or the other decides to take the dive into name calling, stereotyping, or simply polarize the issue. It transcends Washington D.C. and is present anywhere from your local newspaper to the coffee shop to the workplace.

While kids can be excused for this type of behavior for just being kids, there’s a term for when adults act the same way in regards to their political interactions. Whether intentional or not, it goes by the name of demagoguery, a word you may have never heard of before that is just as loaded in meaning as it is in syllables. It’s the “stupid” and “dumb” of adult American politics.

It’s important to distinguish the difference between an information based talking point and an emotionally driven act of demagoguery, which can be broadly described as the use of impassioned, crude, or agitating appeals to prejudices of the public. That is, rational and intelligent reasoning is not always at its core. Its vocabulary is often a hint that you’ve wandered off the path of productive discourse. Terms like Satan, nazi, communist, marxist, welfare queen, fair share, and the war on (insert cause) seem to be a few used to turn attention away from a mature debate.

Republicans sometimes express the idea that President Barack Obama is a socialist. In return, some Democrats have accused Republicans of being racist. Both are forms of demagoguery, whose purpose is to appeal towards a certain audience in order to support a cause. The extent of the statement’s accuracy is not important. Once it is said, its purpose of rousing a sense of emotion in people has been served.

In a democratic and free society like the one we enjoy here in the United States, demagoguery is all within the scope of free speech, as it should be. It’s seen on a daily basis from our country’s top leaders all the way down to average citizens. The responsibilities we generally associate with free speech are perhaps the most intangible and unenforceable of all, so they can only be promoted by example, which should be on display first and foremost from our elected officials, who more often than not choose to be intellectually lazy, using insults instead of engaging in policy discussions.

On the other hand, we can’t really expect others to discuss the issues in a sane and logical way unless we do so ourselves. Only then will results fueled by logic and reason replace those of emotion and passion. Good government and the discourse surrounding it isn’t supposed to be exciting; it was never meant to be compacted into 30 second sound bites, split-screen television interviews, or Hollywood movies. It was meant to be approached more like long-term relationships between people, because in the end that’s all good government is: quality interactions between groups of people over time. So ask yourself, how do we achieve the best solutions to just some of the following questions facing our local, state, and federal governments?

What is the best balance between Platte County’s park tax and making sure law enforcement and road needs are also maintained? How can Missouri’s education formula be fully funded again to ensure local school boards don’t have to levy higher property taxes? Are there any bipartisan solutions Congress can adopt to address both our short-term economic and long-term debt problems?

All are legitimate questions that have so far been met with little serious debate. We may not be debating on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives or even at the County Courthouse, but a lot of those discussions stem directly from how we talk about them around our own kitchen tables with family and friends. The difference between it turning into actual policy or just another name-calling, shouting match really depends on the discussion we have first.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

South Platte ditches KCFD, goes for better coverage with cheaper AMR

The Southern Platte County Ambulance District will have a new service provider effective October 1, 2012. Americal Medical Response (ARM) will take over the coverage area currently be serviced by the Kansas City Fire Department at that time. AMR's contract was approved unanimously at Wednesday evening's meeting after being previously narrowed down as the final candidate at last week's board meeting where board President Bobby Kincaid was given approval to negotiate the contract. Wednesday was the first time AMR had been named publicly as the selected service provider.

Prior to the board going into closed session Wednesday night to review the contract with a representative of AMR, Kansas City Fire Chief Smokey Dyer addressed the board. In his statement he threatened to cut a mutual aid agreement with any selected contractor should the Southern Platte County Ambulance District decide to choose another provider. In the end, it did not deter the board and sets in motion the end to a relationship which has been on unsure ground since the district's previous provider, MAST, was merged with the Fire Department in 2010. Tensions have escalated over recent months as response times have continued to deteriate with KCFD response times with the recent report indicating ambulance calls only met contract standards 42% of the time. KCFD will be issued a 90-day cancellation as outlined under their current agreement.

Under the newly approved contract with AMR, SPCAD will pay an annual amount of $437,000 for ambulance services with a medical price index adjustment each year. The $437,000 contract price with AMR compares to the price of approximately $478,000 being paid currently to KCFD. Coverage under the new contract is also scheduled to increase as the district will have the 24 hour a day ambulance dedicated to the district it already has along with another ambulance which will be on-duty during the 12-hour period which has historically had the highest call volume.

"Having the ambulance dedicated to Platte County, and not other areas outside of Platte County, will mean they are just servicing the South Platte Ambulance District," AMR Operation and Communications Manager Cam Hendry said. "We didn't submit our proposal with only one ambulance, we felt it was important to have at least one and a half to meet the response time needs we were given."

Over the next 90 days, AMR will be responsible for making arrangements so the transition is smooth.

"I've asked for an operational plan to be added as an amendment to the contract, but it takes time for them to figure how many calls are placed in a year from a certain area to determine where to locate," Bobby Kincaid said. "As far as mutual aid agreements and other issues, this is AMR's contract so they will need to iron those issues out."

Hendry did not see a reason why Dyer and KCFD would not cooperate with the transition and hoped to work together in order to ensure everything is handled professionally as it has been in the past.

"We will need to work with both the KCFD and Platte County Sheriff's office to make sure the dispatch is transitioned well," Hendry said. "We expect to work with them as we have in the past to make sure the transition is smooth."