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Morning power outage in parts of Hays

Power  was out briefly in areas of Hays Tuesday morning. The traffic lights at 22nd and Canterbury were not working.

From Midwest Energy Outage Viewer Tuesday Morning at 7 a.m.
From Midwest Energy Outage Viewer Tuesday Morning at 7 a.m.

Midwest Energy crews quickly restored power just after 7:30 a.m.

Mike Morley, Corporate Communications Manager at Midwest Energy told Hays Post that an unlucky bird in one of the substations caused this morning’s power outage that affected approximately 100 customers.

“Of all the things that contribute to power outages, animals cause from 10-30% of them depending on the weather and time of year,” said Morley.

 

 

Worst Ever?

By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm BureauInsight

Hundred degree days coupled with 30-40 mile-per-hour winds and little moisture spells crop and pastureland failure for western Kansas. It’s like putting the corn and grass in a giant outdoor oven and turning a fan on.

Forty-year-old Ben McClure, Stevens County says the extended drought that began during the summer of 2010 may be the worst drought ever in southwestern Kansas – and that includes the infamous droughts of the Dirty ‘30s and ‘50s.

Although McClure didn’t experience those two droughts some veteran farmers and stockmen did. They’ve told him this drought may be the worst ever. He’s looking at three consecutive years of failed dry-land crops.

His irrigation crop yields fell by as much as 30 percent in 2011. While the Stevens County farmer believes he’s fortunate to have the availability of flex accounts, he’s worried about using up his pumping allotment in two or three years and no more water to irrigate with if the drought continues.

“It’s bad,” McClure says. “Since the drought started during the summer of 2010, we’ve received less than 17 inches of rain and no measurable snow.”

Average rainfall for Stevens County is 17 inches annually. McClure’s land received no precipitation of any kind during a recent 13-month period.

The hardest part of such a drought, McClure says, is putting effort into growing a crop and watching it die. His family has farmed the Kansas soil for five generations.

“I believe you don’t farm as a chosen career,” he says. “It’s a career that chooses you.”

Watching the precious top soil blow during this three year drought is especially painful. At this point there’s little a farmer can do to stop erosion.

“You can pull a shovel or a blade through the soil that’s bone dry a foot deep; all you’ll be doing is turning over dry dirt,” McClure says. “Because we haven’t really grown any crops for three years now, there’s little residue left to hold the soil in place either.”

Last winter the Stevens County farmer watched the soil blow down to the hardpan (a layer of soil so compacted that neither plant roots nor water can penetrate). That’s gut-wrenching. It leaves a scar on a farmer and the land.

McClure says the wind has blown crop residue drifts four and five feet deep on his family’s driveway. Last winter, corn stalks blew into his yard, drifting around his farm equipment like snow.

Strong southerly winds have also uncovered fence rows he’s never seen before – probably relics from the ‘50s or even the ‘30s Dust Bowl days.

The livestock situation is dire in Stevens County as well. McClure pulled his cow herd off pastures early in 2011 and placed them in a dry lot in 2012. He’s reduced his cow herd by one-third.

Many of his neighbors have sold their entire herds.

“Some neighbors tell me they’ll buy cows again, but I wonder if they’ll be able to because they don’t want to go through another heartache of losing something they spent a lifetime building,” he says.

McClure is trying everything he can to keep his cow herd. He’s grazing irrigation corners and grass he labels “wasted” just to put roughage in his cattle.

“We flashed across the pastures for a week when a little shower moved through earlier this summer,” he says. “The pigweeds, kochia and thistles all came up but now we’re back to feeding hay.”

To cope with the three-year drought, McClure has changed his cropping practices. He’s reduced corn acres and replaced some with wheat. He’s also shifted to 500 acres of cotton.

Like other producers in the region, he’s looking to grow more drought and heat tolerant crops. He’ll plant mostly milo on his irrigated land next year instead of corn.

“It’s been a tough few years,” McClure says. “I hope I can persevere and my kids can see me be successful.

“At times I’ve been paid well for what I do,” the Stevens County farmer/stockman reflects. “Other times I’ve done it for free and at times I’ve paid dearly. But I love farming and I wouldn’t change it.

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.

Stormy Monday for parts of Kansas

Storms rolled through portions of Kansas on Monday.  Sumner County in south central Kansas reported straight-line winds of up to 80 miles per hour. The storm severe-weathercaused substantial damage to the school roof in Argonia.  Monday storms also caused damage in portions of Reno County where power lines were down with 60 mile per hour winds. Areas of Barber County, near Sun City reported 83 mile per hour winds. Golf ball size hail was reported near Kingman and one-inch hail in Pretty Prairie.

There is a slight risk for more storms in west central and south east Kansas today. Stay tuned to Eagle Radio and check Hays Post for weather updates.

Leadership Kansas coming to NW Kansas

Northwest Kansas will play host to the 2013 Leadership Kansas class on July 24-26.Kansas Chamber

During this session, 40 members of Leadership Kansas will participate in discussions related to current water issues, the economics of Kansas agriculture, the sustainability of rural Kansas communities, the challenges of providing healthcare in rural America, and the role of Community and Technical Colleges in the higher education paradigm.

Throughout the course of the six-month regional meetings, the class will continue to engage in discussions with top experts on the key issues facing Kansas. The Colby/Goodland area is the third of six communities to host the 2013 Leadership Kansas class. Other locations include: Wichita, the KC Metro area, Pittsburg, Topeka, and Garden City.

Leadership Kansas is one of the oldest and most prestigious statewide leadership programs in the country. Established by the Kansas Chamber in 1979, the program is celebrating its 35th year of educating and motivating Kansas leaders from all four corners of the state. The Leadership Kansas program remains committed to its original mission to inspire persons to maintain involvement in the social, business and political fabric of our Kansas communities.

 

Youth tennis coach pleads guilty to child porn

(AP) — A youth tennis coach from western Missouri has admitted soliciting nude photos from a minor after telling the girl he found her sexually interesting.Court-gavel

The U.S. Attorney’s office says 56-year-old Rex Haultain, of Parkville, pleaded guilty Monday in federal court in Kansas City, Kan., to one count of soliciting child pornography.

A supervisor with an online high school contacted police in Overland Park, Kan., in August 2011 after the girl reported being sexually abused by her tennis coach.

Haultain is scheduled to be sentenced Oct. 28. Both sides in the case have agreed to recommend he serve between five and seven years in federal prison.

 

Kansas group plans seminar on violence in workplace

Screen-Shot-2013-07-23-at-5.50.12-AM.png(AP) — A Kansas advocacy group is planning a one-day seminar for businesses and human resources officers on domestic violence in theworkplace.

The Kansas Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence will hold the conference July 31 in Topeka.

Experts will offer advice on how to spot the signs of stalking or domestic and sexual violence in the workplace. The seminar will also provide training in how to respond to incidents of stalking or violence and how to create safety plans.

Other sponsors are Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas and the Topeka affiliate of the Society for Human Resource Management.

 

Monarchs Stay Alive at Zone Tourney

The Hays Monarchs American Legion baseball team raced out to an early 5-0 lead after two innings and beats Hoisington 8-0 to stay alive at the zone 6 tournament Monday night in Lincoln. The win improves the Monarchs to 15-13 on the season. They will now play Smith Center in another elimination game Wednesday at five o’clock.

The Monarchs took advantage of a walk and three errors and score three in the first. Two more Hoisington errors in the second led to two runs. The Monarchs would tack on two more in the fourth and one in the sixth.

Taylor Rome pitched four innings and allowed just two hits while striking out two and walking one to pick up the win.

Braiden Werth, Pierce Schippers, Ryan Schippers and Grant Romme were the only Monarchs to get a hit. Pierce Schippers, Ryan Schippers, Jordan Gottschalk and Grant Romme all had RBIs.

Backpacks for Kids

backpacks 1
Jenny Dixon, Nex-Tech, volunteers at Backpacks for Kids Friday at the Hays WalMart. About 650 Ellis County students will receive new backpacks
August 1 through the First Call for Help program.

Most kids probably don’t want to think about it, but that first day of school is creeping closer, and purchasing the necessary school supplies can be a  major financial burden for some families.

To help those families in Ellis County, First Call for Help (FCFH) has partnered with Nex-Tech and Nex-Tech Wireless to provide “Backpacks for Kids.”

About 650 local students and their families will be helped this year.

Donations of various school supplies were collected Friday at Wal-Mart, the Hays Mall, Dollar General and Walgreens.

School items are still being collected this week and can be dropped off at any Hays Nex-Tech location.

The biggest needs, according to FCFH, are new backpacks, reams of computer paper, composition notebooks and three-ring binders, although anything on a school’s supplies list is appreciated.

Personal hygiene items such as deodorant, shampoo and toothpaste are also welcomed, as are cash donations.

Students and their families will pick up the ”Backpacks for Kids” August 1 at the Hadley Center.

 

Kansas agency hosting preparedness summit

(AP) — Emergency management officials from across Kansas are convening this week for a two-day summit on disaster preparedness.Screen Shot 2013-07-23 at 6.21.39 AM

The conference opens Friday in Wichita. Sponsors include the Kansas Division of Emergency Management and the state Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Topics range from strategic planning and psychological first aid to managing volunteers and responding to human-caused tragedies.

The summit is geared for emergency management and human services professionals, first responders, experts in animal health and nonprofit organizations.

Hays NEA/USD 489 Negotiations Continue Today

 

Contract negotiations between Hays NEA and USD 489 continue Today. They will meet in a negotiations session from 4:30 PM to 6 PM in the Toepfer Board Room.nea

One major issue– a Hays High School committee recommendation the school return to the block schedule.

Teachers taught five classes and had one 90-minute planning period each day. The 2012-13 contract required HHS teachers to teach six classes. If the current schedule recommendation is approved by the negotiating groups, teachers would continue to teach six classes, but students would have seven classes in the former 90-minute class block schedule.  Teachers would lose one planning period every other day.USD489 logo white

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ellis American Legion Baseball Zone Tourney Update

Ellis (15-6) will be the number 1 seed in the Goodland  American Legion zone tournament.  It will run Wednesday night throughEllis baseball
Friday or Saturday night depending on if a game 2 is needed for the finals.  First game of the tournament will be Norton vs Ulysses 4 pm
and Ellis will face the winner of that game at 8 pm.  Colby and Goodland square off on the other side at 6 pm.  

One Injured in Construction Zone Accident

One person was injured in a construction zone accident north of Hays on Monday.KHP

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, Twenty-seven year old Eric Haas of Hays was driving a 2007 GMC MagnaVan southbound on US 183 at milepost 166, a mile north of Homestead Road in a construction zone when he rear-ended a 1992 Buick Oldsmobile driven by Redeara Godfrey, age 49, of Long Island, Kansas. She was transported to Hays Medical Center.  Haas and a teenage passenger in the van were not injured.

HACC Canned Food Drive

hacc food driveA  community service project organized by the Hays Area Children’s Center is helping the United Way of Ellis County and a member agency, Options Domestic and Sexual Violence Services.

Community Relations Coordinator Kelly O’Brien Koerner says the HACC School Age Program is collecting non-perishable food items this week.

“People who would like to help can bring canned foods to the HACC front entryway at 94 Lewis Drive,  where we have drop-off boxes,” she says.

 

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