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Cause of Fire Still Undertermined

emergency management(AP) – Investigators are still trying to determine the cause of a fire that destroyed thousands of hay bales in southwest Kansas.

The fire started May 28 near Moscow and was considered extinguished by June 5. But workers at Abengoa Bioenergy are still spreading the hay out to check for hot spots.

Officials say the blaze destroyed an estimated 38,000 hay bales, most owned by Abengoa. The company says workers will continue to spread the hay for the next few days. Once that’s done, cleanup will begin.

The Garden City Telegram reports the company has not yet determined value of the hay that was lost.

The Kansas Department of Emergency Management’s preliminary finding was that the fire was caused by lightning but that has not been confirmed.

KHAZ Country Music News: Kacey Musgraves Wins Big at 25th Annual “MusicRow” Awards

khaz kacey musgraves 20130213Kacey Musgraves was a big winner at the 25th annual MusicRow awards, voted on by the subscribers of MusicRow magazine.  Kacey won Breakthrough Artist, Breakthrough Songwriter and Song of the Year for “Merry Go ‘Round.”  Lee Brice‘s hit “I Drive Your Truck” tied for Song of the Year honors with “Merry Go ‘Round.”

A full rundown of this year’s winners will appear in MusicRow‘s June/July 2013 print issue.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

Roberts Introduces Bill to Help Investors

U.S. Senator Pat Roberts today introduced a bill to block foreign governments from collecting taxes on securities transactions, protecting Americans from additionalRoberts costs to investors and businesses and avoiding problems such taxes cause to markets.

“In Europe, we have seen the instability these financial transaction taxes have on markets,” Roberts said. “A foreign tax is the last thing the U.S. economy needs. We have too many of our own taxes to have to then collect them for the French.”

Roberts’ bill would prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from assisting any foreign government with respect to the collection of a tax on securities transactions occurring on a United States exchange. It also protects securities transactions in the United States from enforcement of any excise taxes imposed by the government of France.

Countries that have imposed a financial transaction tax have found that such a tax impedes the efficiency of markets, impairs depth and liquidity, raises costs to issuers, investors, and pensioners, and distort capital flows by discriminating against asset classes. Furthermore, a financial transaction tax by one country that does not include all major financial centers will increase market dislocation and decrease liquidity; which will only serve to shift trading volume to venues that do not impose such a tax.

A vaguely drafted financial transaction tax, such as those being implemented in France and Italy, and under consideration by the EU, will also negatively impact the agriculture sector. Agriculture producers and many other participants in the food production chain hedge all manner of prices that relate to their business. Corn growers use hedging and options to lock in prices, farm coops also actively hedge prices. Fuel prices are also locked in up and down the production chain. Because agriculture is global in scope, these financial transactions are increasingly based on the price, trade or other activity in foreign markets.

“This tax could be especially harmful to farmers and ranchers. It is not uncommon,” Roberts said, “for a Kansas farm coop to use a derivative transaction that is based on a foreign financial instrument; they may hedge grain prices based on European or South American grain prices.”

A tax on the trades based on a European transaction would filter through to an American taxpayer, even though that taxpayer has no direct connection to the foreign transaction. Foreign governments may also try to force the bank or broker who facilitated a transaction to collect and remit the tax. While the rate of the tax may be small, because of the volume of these trades, the costs can add up. As with other transactional costs, these will be passed on to the end user/customer; a real tax cost passed on to Americans.

U.S. Representative Tom Price (R-GA) is introducing companion legislation in the House.

Senator Roberts is a senior member of the Senate Finance Committee which has jurisdiction on taxes and trade. He is also a member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture Nutrition and Forestry, which has jurisdiction on the Commodities Futures Trading Commission.

Immigration reform now

Immigration reform nowInsight

by John Schlageck, Kansas Farm Bureau

The immigration debate has begun in Washington, D.C., and not a moment too soon. It is past time our failed immigration and guest-worker program was fixed.

Too often, “immigration” is used as a bad word. The truth of the matter is, a reliable guest-worker program makes sense for Kansas farmers and ranchers, our communities and our food system.

Farmers and ranchers face a shortage of workers who are willing and able to work on farms and in fields. Most U.S. residents don’t find these jobs attractive; yet for many prospective workers from other countries, these jobs present real economic opportunities.

Immigration is directly responsible for about 8 percent of the Kansas economy. Every job held by an immigrant, on average, equates to nearly one additional job created in the state. Furthermore, Kansans should not fear losing work to immigrants. If every unemployed non-immigrant in our state were to be immediately employed, there would still be roughly 50,000 jobs available.

This state has a long history of utilizing workers from other countries, even other states. Folks from Missouri and Arkansas have helped harvest Kansas wheat since before World War II. A handful of Aussies from “Down Under” have also been known to show up as harvest help.

Workers from Mexico showed up in southwestern Kansas in the ‘50s to help with the fledgling irrigation crops. Shortly after, they became heavily involved in the feedlot and packing industries in this region of our state.

This same minority came to northwestern Kansas where I grew up at the start of the ‘60s. In Sherman and Sheridan counties they hoed weeds in the sugar beet fields.

Today, some workers from South Africa are working the fields of northwestern Kansas and plenty of people from south of the border still provide a needed labor force for the Sunflower State.

It’s past time for this country to figure out a workable immigration policy. One that will benefit our country and those willing to come to these United States and provide valuable labor.

The U.S. Senate is now debating an immigration bill that deals responsibly with our existing workforce, gives farmers and ranchers access to a usable, legal, stable supply of workers and addresses border security and employer enforcement.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office recently released a report stating the Senate’s immigration bill could save our nation up to $197 billion during the next 10 years and an additional $700 billion in the decade to follow. The report also said the legislation would increase real U.S. gross domestic product by 3.3 percent through 2023 due to the influx of new workers.

If Congress can’t fix our broken immigration system, we’ll be forced to import more food and agricultural products from foreign countries. More U.S. and Kansas farmers and ranchers will go out of business, crippling the rural communities that are the backbone of our nation.

As we struggle to pull ourselves out of the Great Recession, can we Americans afford to ignore the economic and social benefits that will come with immigration reform?

Immigration reform is right for the economy, for the business community, and for immigrants who follow us in their hopes for a better life.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

Community Theatre Needs Help

The  Hays Community Theatre’s production of 9 to 5 is set to begin soon.  They need your help!Hays Theatre

If you are able to help with sound and light, they want to hear from you  and would love your help.

Please call 785-317-9386

Thoughts on School Finance Lawsuit

There was some doubt expressed Wednesday by veteran legislators attending a legislative wrap up session in Junction City on the outcome of the ongoing school school financefinance lawsuit in Kansas.

State Representative Tom Moxley and State Senator Jeff Longbine both thought the state would lose the lawsuit. If that happens the State could have to make up at least $440 million in the 2014 session.

Moxley feels the state will be called on by the courts to come up with no less than $450 million. He said there is some thought that it will be substantially more than that. “Because we are not funding at levels we had made an agreement with the court to do, and that has shown up in your local communities. ” Moxley added something more than $500 apiece per student has been withheld by the state. The state representative added the budgets have been balanced by not funding education.

Longbine expects the legislature to have to come up with $440 million, or determine some sort of alternative.

Huelskamp will file Constitutional Amendment to restore DOMA VIDEO

Kansas Congressman Tim Huelskamp will file a constitutional amendment to restore DOMA

Congressman Tim Huelskamp (R-Kansas) made the following statement concerning the Supreme Court’s DOMA and Prop. 8 decisions and his plan to introduce the Federal Marriage Amendment:
“With these two decisions, a very narrow 5-4 Court majority has substituted its personal preferences on marriage for the Constitutional decisions of the American people and their elected Representatives. In doing so, five activist justices have short-circuited the democratic process. The Court had neither logic nor constitutional principles in mind: in the DOMA decision, the majority claims states have the sole responsibility to define marriage. But in the Proposition 8 case they discarded the votes of 7 million Californians who voted to defend traditional marriage.
In the end, these unelected judges have allowed the desires of adults to trump the needs of children. Decades of research on families, combined with generations and centuries of human experience, all agree – children do best when they have a married mom and dad in the home. This ruling further undermines that ideal, causing harm to America’s children and all of society.
Despite the illogic of these two decisions, there are positive points to be made: the Court did NOT fabricate a constitutional right to homosexual “marriage.” Contrary to the claims by President Obama and others, the Court did NOT overrule DOMA in its entirety – Section 2 still preserves the states’ sovereign power to decline recognition of same-sex “marriages” in other states. The Court did NOT overrule those laws and constitutional amendments, including the Kansas Marriage Amendment I authored as a state Senator, that still protect traditional marriage in 37 states.
This radical usurpation of legislative and popular authority will not end the debate over marriage in this country. Congress clearly must respond to these bad decisions, and as a result, I plan to introduce the Federal Marriage Amendment (FMA) to amend the United States Constitution to define marriage as the union of one man and one woman.”

Hays Woman involved in I-70 Accident

A woman from Hays was involved in a 3 vehicle accident on I-70 Wednesday. According to the Kansas highway patrol, “A truck/tractor trailer transport vehicle wasKHP-Patch2.jpg traveling westbound on I-70 at milepost 222.3, a mile east of K-14 and followed by a 2008 Dodge Caliber driven by Mark G. Rice of Branson, Missouri.

A 2010 Toyota Highlander driven by 83 year old Joan K. Henry of Hays was following the Caliber. The transport truck’s trailer swung off the edge of the road into the shoulder and kicked up dust, reducing visibility.  The Caliber’s driver applied brakes and was rear ended by the Highlander. Rice and a passenger in the Caliber, Nellie Rice, age 64 of Branson, Missouri were transported to the hospital in Ellsworth. All were wearing seat belts. Henry was also possibly injured. She was not transported to the hospital in Ellsworth.”

Commission will discuss Concealed Carry tonight

CITY OF HAYS COMMISSION MEETING THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 2013 – 6:30 P.M.  Watch the session on Eagle Cable channel 14 or 614hays ks logo

AGENDA

1. Call to order by Chairperson.
2. MINUTES: Consider approval of the minutes from the regular meeting held on
June 13, 2013. (PAGE 1)
3. FINANCIAL STATEMENT: Consider accepting the Financial Statement for the month of
May 2013. (PAGE 11)
4. CITIZEN COMMENTS: (non-agenda items).
5. CONSENT AGENDA: (Items to be approved by the Commission in one motion, unless objections are raised).
A. Mayoral Appointments for Approval: Hays Beautification Committee and Hays Public Library Board (PAGE 71)
B. Mayoral Appointment Recommendation: Hays Area Planning Commission (PAGE 77) UNFINISHED BUSINESS
(No business to review)
NEW BUSINESS
6. COMMERCIAL INSURANCE RENEWAL – 2013/2014: Consider authorizing the City Manager to renew the 2013/2014 Commercial Insurance Policy with Companion Commercial Insurance for the coverage presented, to be funded from the Intergovernmental Insurance and Surety line item. (PAGE 83)
7. 13TH STREET OVERLAY (VINE TO HARVEST) – AWARD OF BID: Consider authorizing the City Manager to enter a contract with APAC-Kansas, Inc. for the rehabilitation of 13th Street from Vine Street to Harvest Road including restriping from Milner to Harvest from four lanes to three lanes, with funding from the Financial Policy Projects line item. (PAGE 103)
8. 2012 AUDIT: Consider accepting the 2012 Audit for the City of Hays as presented by Adams, Brown, Beran and Ball. (PAGE 111)
9. UPDATE ON CONCEALED GUN/KNIFE LEGISLATION: Hear an update from the City Manager in regard to concealed gun/knife legislation and authorize the City Manager to send a letter to the Attorney General exempting City of Hays facilities from the provisions of the modified concealed carry law through January 1, 2014. (PAGE 113)
10. WATER CUSTOMERS OUTSIDE THE CITY LIMITS: Consider approving the Policy for Water Service Requests for Properties Outside the City Limits. (PAGE 145)
11. WATER RATE ADJUSTMENTS – 2ND CONSERVATION TIER: Consider approving Ordinance No. 3866 amending Chapter 65 of the City of Hays, Kansas, Municipal Code, by modifying Article IV, Section 65-224, regarding rates inside and outside the city and adding the 2nd Conservation Tier, to take effect based on the Commission’s desire. (PAGE 155)
12. PROGRESS REPORT
13. REPORT OF THE CITY MANAGER (PAGE 167)
14. COMMISSION INQUIRIES AND COMMENTS
15. EXECUTIVE SESSION (IF REQUIRED)
16. ADJOURNMENT
ANY PERSON WITH A DISABILITY NEEDING SPECIAL ACCOMMODATIONS TO ATTEND THIS MEETING SHOULD CONTACT THE CITY MANAGER’S OFFICE 48 HOURS PRIOR TO THE SCHEDULED MEETING TIME. EVERY ATTEMPT WILL BE MADE TO ACCOMMODATE ANY REQUESTS FOR ASSISTANCE.

Harvest Update: Yields very inconsistent

The 2013 harvest continues to roll right along, with wheat harvest inching ever closer to the Nebraska border and mixed yield results throughout Kansas. It was a very hot day in the wheat field on Wednesday across Ellis and Trego County. The Midland Marketing elevator at Toulon told Hays Post that they received well over

Wheat being harvested west of Hays on Wednesday.
Wheat being harvested west of Hays on Wednesday.

60,000 bushels and reported average yields in the high 50s.

The staff at the Golden Belt elevator in Ellis reported that business on Wednesday was inconsistent. Their elevator at Riga, west of Ellis, had a busy day. Terry told Hays Post they received 60-70,000 bushels and that yields varied from the low 20s to 47.

At Cargill in Trego County, Caleb told Hays Post that they were very busy and had received 150-200,000 bushels. Yields were averaging about 35 bushels an acre but that he believed some of the best wheat was still waiting to be cut.

The Offerle Co-op in Bucklin expects to take in about one-third of last year’s below-average crop, according to Levin Benjamin, manager of that location. With harvest about 60% complete so far, protein averages 12.5, test weight averages 58 pounds, and yields range from 5 to 30 bushels per acre, depending upon whether the crop was summer-fallowed or continuous cropped. Much of the wheat in the area was abandoned, Benjamin says.

Wheat harvest is in full swing in Kearny County, where KAWG President Gary Millershaski, has already harvested his best field first. It averaged 28 bushels per acre, with test weight averaging 60 pounds per bushel. He expects the rest of his crop to range from 9 to 24 bushels per acre.

Frank Riedl, general manager of Great Bend Co-op, says the weather has been perfect for harvest, but the wheat has not. Harvest is about halfway complete throughout the cooperative’s seven locations. So far the company has taken in 1.7 million bushels, well short of its 3.8 million bushel average. Test weights company-wide average 58.8 pounds, with protein averaging 12.5. Riedl says yields range from 5 to 13 bushels per acre in drought-stressed fields west of Hwy. 281, to 60 bushels per acre and better east in eastern Barton County.

Oliver Dion, grain merchandiser at Scoular grain in Minneapolis and Ada says farmers were reporting yields greater than 60 bushels per acre until a storm event June 24 dropped 2.5 inches of rain and hail near Minneapolis, delaying harvest until Thursday. Prior to the storm, test weights at both locations were better than 60 pounds per bushel; protein at Minneapolis was 10 and at Ada, 11.5 to 12. Dion says harvest is only about 12% complete in the area.

Southeast Kansas isn’t normally considered wheat country, but Ken Swinney, manager of the Fredonia Co-op Assn. in Fredonia says this is the area’s best wheat harvest in some time. The crop is averaging 50 bushels per acre, test weight is 61.5 pounds per bushel and proteins range from 11 to 11.5. Swinney says the elevator has taken in 600,000 bushels. With the area harvest only about two-thirds complete, the 2013 harvest should far exceed last year’s 700,000 bushel total which was the most in recent memory.

The 2013 Harvest Report is brought to you by the Kansas Wheat Commission, Kansas Association of Wheat Growers and sponsors Kansas City Board of Trade, and the Kansas Grain & Feed Association.

Larks Bullpen Shines in Win Over Boulder

Larks LogoFive Hays Larks pitchers combined to allow one run on two hits as the Larks knock off the Boulder Collegians 7-1 in the first of a two-game non-league series at Larks Park Wednesday night. It’s the Larks third straight win and improves them to 18-3 on the season. The two teams close out the series Thursday at 7pm. Admission is free courtesy of Horizon Appliance and Electronics and Crawford Supply.

Frank Leo Postgame

Starter Kyle Krings gave up back-to-back singles to start the game and would walk in the Collegians only run later in the inning. He would leave the bases loaded and proved to be the Collegians only threat as Brandon Anderson, Alex Frey, Ian Bentley and DJ Carr held them hitless over the final seven innings.

Anderson (2-0) gets the win in his first action since June 7th. The freshman from Arizona Western, who is coming back from an arm injury, pitched three innings, striking out two and walking none.

Clayton Garland tied the game in the first with an RBI double and Brent Gillespie gave them the lead for good with an RBI single in the third and would drive in two on the night. Mackenzie Handel and Brett Lang would also drive in runs as the Larks move to 11-1 at home.

Former TMP-Marian Monarch and current Fort Hays State Tiger Nick Hammeke pitched 1 1/3 innings for the Collegians, allowing one run on two hits.

Man Killed in Northwest Kansas Truck Accident

A man was killed in a rollover accident on I-70 in Sherman County on Wednesday. According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, “Twenty four year old Justin Tyler KHPStrickland of Burkburnet, Texas was driving a 2011 GMC pickup eastbound on I-70, 6 miles east of Goodland, when he fell asleep and drove into the south ditch.  The vehicle rolled and Corey Blaine McBride, age 23, of Bokoshe, Oklahoma, a passenger in the truck was ejected. The truck came to rest on its wheels facing north.  Burkburnett was wearing a seatbelt and was not injured. McBride was transported to Goodland Regional Medical Center where he died. He was not wearing a seat belt.”

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