Kansas
Kansas City Embracing Mizzou, Declared SEC Territory; The Buzz, Friday, September 13
The Missouri Tigers have a growing presence in Kansas City.
Mizzou athletics’ leaders, its curators, along with SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey were in the city Thursday for an mportant moment in Mizzou athletics history. The UM held its Board of Curators meeting at the University of Missouri – Kansas City, where it officially approved plans for a $250 million rennovation project of Memorial Stadium.
READ: Mizzou Athletics Looks to Continue Momentum with Final Approval of Stadium Project
Additionally, Kansas City City Council passed a resolution Thursday, declaring Kansas City as SEC Territory.
“Kansas City has alumni from every single SEC institution – most significantly Mizzou alumni, many of KC sports teams have Mizzou Tigers and other SEC athletes on their rosters,” the resolution states.
“The Mayor and Council hereby declare Kansas City is officially Southeastern Conference Territory.”
To celebrate the passing of the resolution, the SEC logo was displayed on Union Station Thursday night, along with black and gold lights for the Tigers. A Mizzou flag was also flown over City Hall.
Though Missouri has put a heavy focus and has more of a foot in St. Louis recruiting, it also sees its growing presence as an important part of its future. The initiatives are led by a Kansas City native in Athletics Director Laid Veatch.
“I know important the city is going to continue to be to our future,” Veatch said in a press conference Thursday. “Whether it’s donors, fans, investing in what we’re doing, the corporate community, this is a really important market for us and you will see me and our staff here time and time again.”
Kansas City has become an increasingly important recruiting area for the Tigers. Williams Nwaneri, a native of the Kansas City suburb of Lees Summit, Mo., made waves when committing to Missouri as a top 5 prospect in the nation in the class of 2024.
Missouri has plenty of rival competition for attention in the Kansas City area but expect the Tigers to continue to make efforts to be a prevalent team in the area.
Soccer suffered a brutal 7-0 loss to Duke, the fourth loss of the season for the Tigers. It took Duke over 19 minutes to score its first goal, but it finished the first period alone with four goals.
Volleyball: hosts Mizzou Invitational:
• vs. Kansas City, 11:30 a.m. — Watch, Live Stats
• vs. UT Martin, 6:30 p.m. — Watch, Live Stats
Cross Country at Spiked Shoe Invitational, State College, Pa. — Live Stats
Tennis: at Penn Invite, Philadelphia, Pa.
• Missouri baseball announced its conference schedule for the 2024-’25 season. It features series against both of the SEC’s new members.
Tigers reveal 2⃣0⃣2⃣5⃣ @SEC schedule. Mark your calendars…and reserve your season tickets! — Mizzou Baseball (@MizzouBaseball) September 12, 2024
🔗 | https://t.co/xgtJw8S6tp
🎟️ | https://t.co/OML6zM1fqX#𝙈𝙞𝙯𝙯𝙤𝙪𝙉𝙊𝙒 | 🐯⚾️ pic.twitter.com/a6SU5t7jfr
• Mizzou legend Jeremy Maclin will return to Faurot Field Saturday for the Big Mo drum pre-game tradition. The former receiver racked up 2,315 yards and 22 touchdowns in his three seasons with the Tigers.
• SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey announced at the UM Board meeting that he will be in attendance for Missouri’s week 3 game against No. 24 Boston College Saturday.
Sept. 13, 2001: Former Missouri defensive end Darius Robinson was born in Southfield, Mi. He was praised as a crucial leader in his time with the Tigers before being selected in the first round of the NFL Draft in April.
Sept. 13, 1980: No. 17 Missouri defeated New Mexico State 47-16 to open its third season under head coach Warren Powers. The Tigers would go on to finish the season 8-4 before falling 25-28 to Purdue in the Liberty Bowl.
Sept. 13, 2004: Missouri cornerback Nic Deloach was born in Cahokia, Ill. Now in his redshirt freshman season, Deloach has carved out a role for himself as a consistent contributor on the Tigers’ defense, often rotating in for Toriano Pride Jr. at boundary corner.
How to Watch: Boston College at Missouri; Full Week 3 College Football Schedule
WATCH: All Things Mizzou Podcast: No. 6 Mizzou Welcomes No. 24 Boston College
Kansas
Miami County, Kansas, rallies behind volunteer firefighter after devastating house fire
KSHB 41 reporter Ryan Gamboa covers Miami County in Kansas and Cass County in Missouri. He also covers agricultural topics. Ryan has worked with organizations the Aude’s are involved with in the past. His connections in the Miami County community helped him get in touch with the family. They expressed extreme gratitude for those who have helped them out. Share your story idea with Ryan.
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A family of five in Osawatomie, Kansas, is receiving overwhelming community support after losing their home to a kitchen fire on Sunday.
Miami County, Kansas, rallies behind volunteer firefighter after devastating house fire
Ben Aude was lucky to make out alive after the Sunday lunch he was cooking sent their house into flames. His wife, Hannah Aude, along with their three children, were on their way home after spending some time with grandma.
Jake Weller/KSHB
A line of colorful wax-like streaks on their refrigerator from melted alphabet magnets symbolizes the memories made in the young couple’s first home. It’s where their son learned to spell his name.
“Accidents happen, it’s life,” Hannah Aude said. “Just seeing where our keys would hang, the kid’s name on the fridge, it’s just memories.”
Jake Weller/KSHB
The fire started at the stove and spread rapidly throughout the house.
Ben was making lunch when some grease in a pan on the stove caught fire. He rushed to get the burning pan outside and before he knew it, the back part of their home was in flames.
In a 2025 report from the American Red Cross, cooking fires are the number one cause of house fires and house fire injuries. Fires inside the home are more likely to start in the kitchen than any other room in the house.
Leaving cooking food unattended can often be the cause.
Jake Weller/KSHB
Heating equipment is the second-leading cause of home fires, as nearly half of all American families use alternate heating sources to stay warm. Heating equipment, wood stoves and portable space heaters are blamed for 74% of fire-related deaths.
“It was 90 seconds of ‘Wow, this was on fire, to wow my house is on fire,”‘ Ben Aude said.
Jake Weller/KSHB
The combination of colder and shorter days leads people to spend more time inside their homes and cooking more meals, according to the Red Cross.
There has been an increase in various fire department responses across the metro area over the weekend — including four people hospitalized for carbon monoxide poisoning in Kansas City, Missouri.
The Kansas City, Missouri Fire Department responded to seven different fires overnight on Jan. 22, including one that killed a person inside a Northland home.
Jake Weller/KSHB
“It’s crazy,” Ben Aude said. “I was doing something I’ve done 100 times. We’ve had three kids in this house and living here every day, it’s just hard to see, just gone in an instant.”
Standing in what’s left of their home, the couple reflected on the devastation. Hannah broke down in tears as she surveyed the damage.
“I just see the memories that we built here,” Hannah Aude said.
Jake Weller/KSHB
The hardest part for Ben Aude has been not having answers for his children — the five are now staying in a hotel.
“It’s hard to look at your kids and say, ‘I don’t know. I don’t know where we’re going to live yet. I know you just got this toy for Christmas.”‘ “I don’t know yet, man. It’s been hard as a dad to look at your kids and not know any of those answers,” Ben Aude said.
Jake Weller/KSHB
The first night was particularly difficult when the children asked if they could go home.
The Aude family is deeply involved in their community. Ben serves as a local football coach and Hannah is president of the Paola Chamber of Commerce, works as a banker, and volunteers with the fire department as its administrative asssistant.
Fire Chief Aaron Sharp of the Osawatomie, Kansas Volunteer Fire Department, said Hannah is always the first to help when extra assistance is needed, whether it’s administrative duties, organizing fundraisers, or making breakfast for the firefighters.
Jake Weller/KSHB
“If we need anything extra, Hannah is the first one to jump in,” Sharp said. “She’s as much a part of this department as the guys are holding the ends of those hoses.”
Sharp said the department’s response to the fire was business as usual until it was extinguished and Hannah was standing on the sidewalk.
It became personal for the entire department.
Jake Weller/KSHB
“Once the fire’s out, and you see her standing there on the sidewalk in tears, then it becomes a little more personal at that point,” Sharp said. “It is one of your own and you want to be there as best you can. It does affect us.”
The family lost everything in the fire, but donations have poured in locally and across the country through social media campaigns. Those include the Miami County Sheriff’s Fund, an online meal train fundraiser, and in-person donations of clothes and other household necessities.
The response has been overwhelming as the couple navigates insurance claims and finding temporary housing.
Jake Weller/KSHB
“Between insurance and finding out where we’re gonna live, it’s just been hard to get to everyone. It’s just been overwhelming,” Ben Aude said.
For Hannah Aude, who describes herself as a natural giver, accepting help has been challenging, but eye-opening.
“I’m a giver, I truly am a giver. I don’t even like accepting birthday gifts,” Hannah Aude said. “My love language is giving and receiving is so tough for me, and just seeing the community that is around us every day, giving back to us and communities we aren’t even part of, it’s just crazy.”
Jake Weller/KSHB
The experience has taught her an unexpected lesson about community and reciprocity.
“It’s a lesson I didn’t think I needed to be taught,” Hannah Aude said. “The small impacts that you make on people, the large impacts that they’ll make on you.”
Ben Aude is using this tragedy as a teaching moment for his children about the importance of being good to others.
“I’ve been trying to use this as another moment to teach the kids” he said. “This is why you try and be a good person.”
Jake Weller/KSHB
The football coach plans to incorporate this experience into future motivational speeches for his players.
“I always try and rally my football players around overcoming adversity, and one day this will be a great story in one of those pregame speeches that they’ll get from me,” he said. “The time my house burned down, we figured it out and this is what you gotta do as a man.”
Sharp believes the community’s response reflects Hannah’s years of service coming full circle.
Jake Weller/KSHB
“I’m a firm believer in we reap what we sow, and this is just everything coming full circle coming back to here for everything she already does for the community,” Sharp said.
The fire chief noted that cooking fires happen year-round, not just in winter, and encouraged people to keep fire extinguishers handy.
Jake Weller/KSHB
Winter weather does add additional challenges for firefighters responding to calls, with icy roads making it dangerous for volunteers to reach the station and get trucks out safely.
For Hannah, the house represented their first major step as a family, but she views this tragedy as another stepping stone in their journey.
“To me, it was a stepping stone,” she said. “Everything in life there’s a stepping stone. This was our first big step as a family.”
If you’d like to help the Aude family during their time of need, you can click here to donate to the Miami County Sheriff’s Fund and include “Aude Family” in the notes.
Click here, to donate to the meal train fundraiser.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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Kansas
KS Insurance Commissioner proposes new bill to help Kansans save on insurance costs
TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) – Kansas Insurance Commissioner Vicki Schmidt testified in favor of a bill to help Kansans save on some insurance costs Monday.
The bill, HB 2430, would create the Insurance Savings Account, giving Kansans a state tax-free way to save for property and casualty insurance expenses.
If the bill is passed, it would allow Kansas tax filers to open an Insurance Savings Account and make contributions up to a set amount, depending on their tax filing status.
“Insurance Savings Accounts are a sustainable way for Kansans to save state-tax free for their insurance costs,” Commissioner Schmidt said. “As the legislature works to address affordability, they should include this tool for Kansas families.”
Account holders can then use the money contributed to pay for property and casualty expenses, along with home and auto insurance and any associated deductibles.
Married couples who contribute the maximum payments to an ISA could save up to $670 on their taxes each year.
The bill was heard in the House Committee on Taxation on Monday, Jan. 26, this being the second year it’s been proposed to the Legislature.
Schmidt recently announced that the department has recovered over $202 million for Kansas policyholders since taking office in 2019.
Find the full text of the bill here: https://kslegislature.gov/.
Copyright 2026 WIBW. All rights reserved.
Kansas
Man, 20, seriously injured in crash on icy I-35 in Butler County
EL DORADO, Kan. (WIBW) – One person suffered serious injuries in a single-vehicle crash Sunday afternoon on icy Interstate 35 along the Kansas Turnpike in Butler County, authorities said.
The crash was reported at 2:35 p.m. Sunday on northbound I-35, about a mile south of El Dorado.
According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, a 2017 Hyundai Sonata was northbound on I-35 when the driver lost control of the car on the icy, snow-packed roadway.
The car then entered the east ditch and began to roll.
A passenger, Dylan Lee Hapner, 20, of Wichita, was transported to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita with serious injuries.
The driver, Ashley Nichole Seamans, 22, and another passenger, Hadleigh M. Wilson, 2, both of Wichita, also were transported to Wesley Medical Center with suspected minor injuries. The patrol said all of the car’s occupants were wearing their safety restraints.
said
Copyright 2026 WIBW. All rights reserved.
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