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Scaled-down farm bill has some farmers concerned

(AP) — Kansas farmers remain leery of the scaled-down farm bill passed by the U.S. House as they wait to see what actually makes it into law. But the competing

Kansas Farm Bureau president Steve Baccus
Kansas Farm Bureau president Steve Baccus

versions for now preserve the one thing most cherished here — crop insurance subsidies.

Kansas Farm Bureau president Steve Baccus says the bill is good for Kansas agriculture.

It maintains conservation programs and keeps export market development and assistance programs that promote U.S. agricultural products overseas. And most importantly, he says the bill keeps the crop insurance program.

But gone from both the House and Senate versions of the bill are subsidies that are paid regardless whether a recipient farms or not.

Kansas farmers collected $927 million in agricultural subsidies last year.

Two injured in Saturday Morning Rollover Accident

Two men were injured in a Logan County rollover accident early Saturday morning.Screen Shot 2013-07-13 at 1.56.28 PM

According to the Kansas Highway patrol, “Forty-one year old Melgarego C. Ramiro of Hugoton was driving a 1998 Chevy Tahoe northbound on K25, south of Colby and traveled off the roadway into the west ditch and rolled.  Ramiro and a passenger in the vehicle Armando J. Tinoco, age 35 of Hugoton, were transported to Oakley Medical Center. They were both wearing seat belts.”

 

Low Income Assistance Program Helps Kansans Stay Cool

Kansans with low income will have a little extra help paying their utility bills this summer, thanks to the Low Income Energy Assistance Program (LIEAP).Ks Department of Children and families
“The summer heat can take a dangerous toll on our most vulnerable populations,” said DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore said. “This extra assistance will help keep Kansans safe from extreme heat.”
LIEAP provides an annual benefit to help qualifying households pay winter heating bills. Persons with disabilities, older adults and families with children are the primary groups assisted. In the winter of 2013, nearly 48,000 households received an average benefit of $386.

This year, funding is available to provide an additional benefit to those households for energy costs. This is not a new application period. Households that applied and received a benefit during the regular application period will automatically be issued a supplemental benefit of approximately $103, bringing the average benefit for the year to almost $490. The supplemental funds are in the process of being dispersed.

Funding for the Low Income Energy Assistance Program is provided by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Community Service through the Federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
For more information on the Low Income Energy Assistance Program, visit https://www.dcf.ks.gov/services/ees/Pages/Energy/EnergyAssistance.aspx  or call 1-800-432-0043 toll free.

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural

Kansas Profile – Now That’s RuralK-State Research and Extension
Pat Lyons – Lyons Twin Mansions

By Ron Wilson, director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

“Hey, Pat. I’m going to a bed and breakfast meeting in Topeka. Want to come along?” It was a simple request, but it led to the creation of a remarkable bed and breakfast in an amazing, historic home. That bed-and-breakfast is now one of the longest running B&B’s in the state of Kansas

Pat Lyons, or Miss Pat as she is sometimes called, is the innkeeper of the Lyons Twin Mansions bed, breakfast, hotel and spa in Fort Scott, Kan.

Pat was a military child. “I grew up in an Oldsmobile on Route 66,” she said with a smile. While her father was stationed in Mississippi, she met and married Larry Lyons, a young Air Force officer from Kansas.

Larry grew up near the rural community of Fulton, population 162 people. Now, that’s rural.

He went on to an Air Force career. While preparing for a one-year overseas deployment, he and Pat came to Fort Scott to see his family. She spotted a home where she could stay with the kids while he was overseas. Soon after, Pat visited a gorgeous mansion for sale in Fort Scott. It was a four-story Victorian Italianate home built in 1872-76 by wealthy bankers who had come to Fort Scott from New York.

“It was a dream house, a treasure,” Pat said. They purchased the home, had repairs done and moved in after Larry retired in 1979.

In the late 1980s, as the kids were growing up, Pat had a request from a friend who had opened her home as a bed and breakfast. The friend was going to a meeting in Topeka and wanted Pat to come along, so she agreed.

Bed and breakfasts were a growing trend in the 1980s, encouraged by the work of K-State business professor Fred Rice. When Pat’s friend had more guests than she could hold in her B&B, she asked if Pat could open up a room or two to hold the overflow. Pat did so and the business began to take off. Ultimately Pat’s friend closed her B&B. Pat’s business continued to develop.

Next door to the Lyons home was a virtually identical mansion which was also built by those New York bankers in the 1870s. In 2007, Pat and Larry’s son Nate purchased the mansion next door and went into the business with his parents.

Today, Lyons Twin Mansions is one of the leading bed and breakfast enterprises in Kansas. Both historic mansions have guest rooms with plasma TVs and all the amenities, plus there is a day spa. The homes are exquisitely furnished, including items Larry purchased on Air Force tours, including Persian rugs from Persia.

Nate has opened Nate’s Place, a restaurant and lounge, in the mansion he purchased. In addition, the Lyons family has a cottage across the street and upstairs apartments downtown for extended stays, while managing yet another nearby mansion for an owner in Texas. Altogether, there are ten guest rooms.

Through the years, Pat has hosted guests from coast to coast and beyond. The average life span of a bed and breakfast business is five to six years, while Pat has been going for 22 years.

“We have reinvented ourselves many times,” she said.

Why is this transplanted Kansan so passionate about her community and her state? “When we first moved here, I took my daughter in for her school shots,” Pat said. “The next morning, the doctor’s wife was at my door with a plate of cookies. My neighbor brought a loaf of bread. I cherish the people of Kansas.”

“We are modernizing the rooms and embracing new technology,” she added. “I appreciate this wonderful business and wonderful community.”

For more information, go to www.lyonstwinmansions.com.

“Hey, Pat, want to go to a bed and breakfast meeting in Topeka?” That chance contact has led to a remarkable innkeeping career for Miss Pat and the Lyons family. We salute Pat and Larry Lyons, Nate and all those involved with the Lyons Twin Mansions for making a difference with their entrepreneurship. They offer historic hospitality.

 

Late Rally Costs Hays Eagles Senior American Legion

The Lee’s Summit Pirates scored nine runs with two outs in the sixth inning to rally past the Hays Eagles Senior American Legion 13-12 Saturday at the Lee’s Summit (Mo.) Wood Bat Tournament. The Eagles (20-16) had scored 10 runs in the top of the fifth to grab an 11-5 lead.

The Eagles finish 1-4 in the 40-team tournament.

Brady Bieker, the fourth Eagles pitcher of the game, takes the loss allowing two unearned runs without recording an out in the sixth.

Kade Parker had three hits and Hayden Hutchison drove in three runs for Hays.

Traffic Alert: US 183 North of Hays UPDATE

10:49 a.m.  US 183 on the north edge of Hays is open again after a morning mishap with large bales of hay. According to Hays Police, “A semi truck carrying an Hays policeunsecured load of large hay bales lost several that temporarily blocked the highway. Hays Public Works Department staff pushed the bales from the road.”

Nobody was injured. The semi truck driver was apparently unaware he had lost the bales. Law enforcement did contact him near Plainville. Additional efforts by the owner and or truck driver to clean up the bales started  at 11:10 a.m.

 

8:39 a.m. A semi truck carrying hay has lost large round bales on US 183  at the north edge of Hays. Lanes are blocked.  We will report additional details as they become available.

 

KHAZ Country Music News: New Grand Ole Opry Tours Give Fans All Access to Country Music’s Most Famous Stage

khaz grand ole opry 20130712A new backstage tour at the Grand Ole Opry gives fans a chance to stand on that legendary stage, even if they can’t carry a tune.

The VIP Behind the Opry Curtain tour allows a few fans to stand onstage as the curtain goes up for an Opry performance. Those on the tour will also see the Opry’s themed dressing rooms, the Opry House Family Room with photos from major events in the show’s history, and Opry House Studio A, where shows like Hee Haw were filmed.

An Opry House Post-Show tour with video host and Opry star Darius Rucker, and a daytime tour with video host Blake Shelton, are also available. Go to Opry.com for booking information.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

 

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

 

 

KSU Study: Wind Power Impact on Local Wildlife

Wind power developers have courted Ellis County for several years. Another commercial developer of wind projects, Invenergy, LLC, recently received a conditional wind turbineuse permit from Ellis County.  A new study says wind power development does not ruffle the feathers of greater prairie chicken populations. This information from  a seven-year study by a Kansas State University ecologist and his team.

The researchers — led by Brett Sandercock, professor of biology — discovered that wind turbines have little effect on greater prairie chickens, and that these grassland birds are more affected by rangeland management practices and by the availability of native prairie and vegetation cover at nest sites. Unexpectedly, the scientists also found that female survival rates increased after wind turbines were installed.

With the arrival of wind energy projects in Kansas and throughout the Plains, Sandercock and his team were part of a consortium of stakeholders — including conservationists, wildlife agencies and wind energy companies — who studied how these wind projects influence grassland birds.

“We had a lot of buy-in from stakeholders and we had an effective oversight committee,” said Sandercock, who studies grassland birds. “The research will certainly aid with wind power site guidelines and with the development of mitigation strategies to enhance habitat conditions for the greater prairie chicken.”

The greater prairie chicken was once abundant across the central Plains, but populations have declined because of habitat loss and human development. The chickens now are primarily found in the Great Plains in Kansas — particularly the Smoky Hills and the Flint Hills — where the largest tracts of prairie remain.

Sandercock and his team started their study in 2006 with three field sites that were chosen for wind development: a site in the Smoky Hills in north central Kansas, a site in the northern Flint Hills in northeastern Kansas and a site in the southern Flint Hills in southern Kansas. The Smoky Hills site — the Meridian Way Wind Power Facility near Concordia – was developed into a wind energy site, which gave researchers the opportunity to observe greater prairie chickens before, during and after wind turbine construction. The researchers cooperated and collaborated with private landowners at each site.

The researchers studied the birds for seven breeding seasons and captured nearly 1,000 total male and female birds around lek sites, which are communal areas where males gather and make calls to attract females. Females mate with the males and then hide nests in tall prairie grass.

The scientists researched many different features of prairie chickens and their biology: patterns of nest site selection; reproductive components, such as clutch size, timing of laying eggs and hatchability of eggs; survival rates; and population viability.

“We don’t have evidence for really strong effects of wind power on prairie chickens or their reproduction,” Sandercock said. “We have some evidence for females avoiding the turbines, but the avoidance within the home range doesn’t seem to have an impact on nest site selection or nest survival.”

The results are somewhat surprising, especially because similar studies have shown that oil and gas development affect prairie chickens, Sandercock said. With wind power development, the researchers had the unexpected result of female survival rates increasing after wind turbines were installed, potentially because wind turbines may keep predators away from nest sites. Female mortality rates are highest during the breeding season because females are more focused on protecting clutches than avoiding predators, Sandercock said.

“What’s quite typical for these birds is most of the demographic losses are driven by predation. We can say that with confidence,” Sandercock said. “What’s a little unclear from our results is whether that increase in female survivorship was due to the effects of wind turbines on predators.”

The researchers also found that conservation management practices seem to have the strongest effect on the birds, Sandercock said. Prairie chickens are ground-nesting birds and need adequate cover for their nests to survive. Grazing and fire management practices can affect how much nesting cover is available for chickens.

“A lot of what drives nest survival is the local conditions around the nest,” Sandercock said. “Do they have good nesting cover or not? Our results are important because they suggest ways for mitigation.”

The team is conducting follow-up studies to test mitigation strategies that may improve habitat conditions for prairie chickens. They are in their third season in a field study of patch burn grazing in Chase County and how it affects prairie chickens and grassland songbirds. Patch-burn grazing involves dividing a pasture into three parts and burning a third of the pasture each year. The practice creates a rotation basis so that each third of a pasture rests for two years. Preliminary data shows that patch-burn grazing seems to provide enough cover for ground-nesting birds, Sandercock said.

Collaborators on the wind development project include Samantha Wisely, associate professor of wildlife ecology and conservation at the University of Florida; Virginia Winder, assistant professor of biology at Benedictine College; Lance McNew, 2010 doctoral graduate in biology and research wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey at the Alaska Science Center; Andrew Gregory, 2011 doctoral graduate in biology and postdoctoral scholar at Northern Arizona University; and Lyla Hunt, master’s student in biology, Riverside, Calif.

The Grassland Community Collaborative Oversight Committee of the National Wind Coordinating Collaborative oversaw the research project. The project received funding from a variety of sources including the U.S. Department of Energy; the National Renewable Energy Laboratory; the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks, and Tourism; the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation; and The Nature Conservancy.

The final project report can be viewed at https://www.osti.gov/bridge/product.biblio.jsp?osti_id=1080446.

Great Bend’s Gotsche shoots 77 at U.S. Senior Open

Steve Gotsche tried and tried but could just never get that birdie that would turn his round, and his U.S. Open around.  The Great Bend native shot 7-over 77 Friday atScreen Shot 2013-07-13 at 7.07.48 AM the U.S. Senior Open at the Omaha Country Club.  He was +12 for the tournament missing the cut by 6-strokes.

Gotsche, who shot a 5 over par 75 in Thursday’s round, needed to shoot par or better on Friday to have a chance at making the cut and getting back in the tournament.  But he bogied the first hole Friday morning and made the turn 3-over for the round and 8-over for the tournament.  His round fell apart on the final four holes as he was a combined 4-over on 15,16,17, and 18.

Michael Allen shot a course record 63 to go to 10-under for the tournament and leads the event with two days left by 5 shots over Rocco Mediate.

Statewide Civil Rights Symposium in Kansas

A Wichita historian and author of an awarding-winning book on the civil rights movement in the Midwest will be the Barry Grissomfeatured speaker at the U.S. Attorney’s third annual statewide Civil Rights Symposium Aug. 9 at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said today.
 
Gretchen Eick Ph.D., professor emeritus of history at Friends University, will draw upon her book,  “Dissent in Wichita: The Civil Rights Movement in the Midwest, 1954-1972,” when she speaks. Through protests such as the sit-in at the Dockum Drugstore in Wichita in 1958, civil rights advocates applied pressure leading up to the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964.
 
Eick will be one of several speakers during the free, day-long event focusing on federal civil rights enforcement in Kansas. Grissom said this is the third year in a row his office has sponsored the symposium.
 
“This event is an opportunity for us to rededicate ourselves to the continuing struggle for equal rights, equal opportunity and equal justice,” said U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom. “We are inspired by the example of those before us who spoke out despite difficulty and danger.”
 
The U.S. Department of Justice is responsible for upholding the civil and constitutional rights of all Americans. It enforces federal statutes prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex, disability, religion, familial status and national origin.
 
Other presentations during the symposium will include a panel discussion on civil rights with panelists U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom; Gary Brunk, executive director of the ACLU of Kansas and Western Missouri, and Thomas Witt, executive director of the Kansas Equality Coalition.
 
The symposium is free and open to the public, but anyone who wants to attend must register. A registration form and more information will be available on the U.S. Attorney’s Web site at www.justice.gov/usao/ks
 
Sponsors for the event include the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Kansas, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Missouri, the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center, the Public Safety Training Center at Johnson County Community College and the Regional Community Policing Training Institute at Wichita State University.

Five hospitalized after I-70 Accident

Law enforcement authorities in Logan County are investigating a two-vehicle crash on Interstate 70 a mile East of Oakley. The accident on Friday sent five people toKHP the hospital.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, “Fifty two year old Robert L Overschmidt of Washington, Missouri was driving a 2008 Dodge Durango and Rhea L. Powers-Krueger, age 71, of Castle Rock, Colorado was driving a 2012 Honda Odyssey.

She was transported by EMS to Logan County hospital and later flown to Swedish Hospital in Denver.

A passenger in the Odyssey, Christopher A Krueger, age 61, of Castle Rock, Colorado was transported to Logan County Hospital.

The driver of the Durango and passengers in the Durango Cyndi Overschmidt, age 45, Dustin Overschmidt, age 25, and Corbin Overschmidt, age 8, of Washington, Missouri were also transported to Logan County Hospital. All were wearing seat belts.”  No other details are currently available.

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