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Immigration Thought Partners
Peggy Ruebke: The importance of aligning our words and actions
Reynaldo Mesa: ‘I believe we can fix it, and we choose not to.’
Alba Gutierrez-Ortiz: Let’s talk about keeping families safe
Marty Hillard: Listening to the people ‘directly affected’
Jim Terrones: Hoping to finally see ‘immigration reform’
Mark Lowry on challenges: ‘This country is built on diversity’
Clemente Bobadilla-Reyes: An immigrant’s view
Dave Sotelo: Sharing a ‘long and difficult’ immigration journey
Josey Hammer: Bridge divides with stories of experience
Inas Younis: America is ‘proving something to the world’
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More Stories
Opinion: Join effort to document local government meetings
One of the best professional compliments I’ve ever received came from Joe Palacioz Sr., the longtime city manager of Hutchinson who retired from that post in 2005 after more than three decades of public service. I was a young reporter covering City Hall for The Hutchinson News. Palacioz told me during the 2004 budget approval process that he appreciated how I worked to understand the ins…
With tornado risk high in Kansas, be aware of storm trauma
Amy Ragland still has nightmares about tornadoes 30 years later. As a young teenager growing up in rural Butler County, Ragland loved to spend Friday nights listening to music in her bedroom. But for once, she and her brother decided to go bowling with their parents at their weekly league outing in El Dorado on the last Friday in April 1991. When tornado sirens sounded, they…
Why Wichita’s Century II is salvaged but not quite saved
Even as workers finished replacing the distinctive blue roof of Century II, the flying saucer of a convention center that landed in downtown Wichita in 1969, the fate of the landmark and the area surrounding it remains strangely murky. After a master plan that pushed to replace it, a grassroots campaign to save it, and political and legal fights that amounted to a battle for the…
Push emerging to recognize gap-filling community paramedicine
Kansas emergency medical workers respond at a moment’s notice, no matter if they just sat down for dinner or laid down to sleep. Many are volunteers with full-time jobs and families. First responders in the Sunflower State are trained to deal with a multitude of calamities, from traffic crashes to plummeting blood sugar levels in diabetic patients and everything in between. But they often provide non-emergency…
Unified government, fractured community in Wyandotte County
Find a table, pull up a chair and talk amongst yourselves. Broadly, those were the instructions for the several dozen people who gathered on a chilly evening last December for a meeting at The South Branch Library in the Argentine neighborhood of KCK. The purpose, as stated in a Facebook invitation: “To discover the successes and failures brought about by the unification of Wyandotte County over…
Native American sobriety group in Wichita heals with culture
Editor’s note: This article was produced by KMUW and is being republished through the Wichita Journalism Collaborative (WJC), a partnership of 11 media and community partners, including KMUW. Two drums sit to the north and south in the Gallery of Nations at the Mid-America All Indian Museum. For the past several months, members of Prairie Rose Wellbriety have been learning to play the ceremonial drums. This is the first time…