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Western Kansas Woman Appointed by Governor

Kansas Governor Sam Brownback has named Angel Shaver, WaKeeney, to a three year term on the Kansas State Rehabilitation Council. Ms. Shaver earned a Shaverbachelor degree from Mid-America Bible College and a masters of science from Friends University. She is currently a secretary at WaKeeney Church of God and bookkeeper for Hillman Family Trust.

The Kansas Rehabilitation Council works in partnership with Kansans with disabilities to achieve their goals for employment and independence.

“I appreciate the time and talents these Kansans have given to our state,” Governor Brownback said. “Without their service our state would not be as great.”

The governor’s office is always looking for qualified, interested Kansans to serve the state on commissions and boards in their areas of expertise. If you are interested in serving on a commission or board, please visit https://governor.ks.gov/serving-kansans/office-of-appointments.

Moran: The Real Problem is the entire Affordable Care Act.

U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) released the following statement on the Obama Administration’s decision to delay the Affordable Care Act employer mandateSenator Moran:

“While the Administration finally admitted that the employer mandate is unworkable in 2014, it now must recognize that the real problem continues to be the entire Affordable Care Act. Implementation of the ACA has not lowered costs or increased access as promised. Individuals, families and employers still face increasing health insurance costs, new taxes overseen by what we have recently learned is a politically-biased IRS, burdensome mandates, and massive uncertainty because of this flawed law. The best course of action is to dismantle the ACA and replace it with practical reforms that are workable and will actually reduce health care costs.”

The employer mandate provision included in the President’s $2.6 trillion health law requires businesses of 50 employees or more to provide a prescribed level of health insurance or pay a penalty between $2,000 and $3,000 for each employee working 30 hours or more a week. This mandate is expected to lead to an estimated 3.2 million lost jobs, according to the nonpartisan Hudson Institute.

In March, Sen. Moran sponsored the American Job Protection Act, which would repeal the provisions in the ACA that require employers with 50 or more full-time equivalent (FTE) employees to provide health insurance for their employees in 2014 or face a tax increase that the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found would hit employers with $150 billion in new taxes over eleven years.

While the employer mandate has now been delayed until 2015, the requirement has already pushed many employers to keep their staffs below 50 or hire part-time workers to avoid the mandate. According to a study by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 72 percent of small business owners said that the health care law would make it harder for them to hire. The small business owners also reported that, in addition to limiting hiring, the new law might force them to reduce the size of their business. For example, respondents reported considering making workers stay less than 30 hours a week or replacing them with temporary or part-time workers. A significant number reported the likelihood of canceling insurance coverage for employees, as paying the penalty would be less expensive for their company.

Man considers challenging Roberts for Senate seat

(AP) — A Manhattan man says he’s considering a run against Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts.Eastabrook

Aaron Estabrook, a western Kansas native, says he is forming an exploratory committee to look into running against Roberts, who’s up for re-election in 2014.

Estabrook, an Army veteran, works at the Salvation Army as a case manager for homeless veterans in northern Kansas. He says he’d run under the banner of the “Moderate Party of Kansas,” a political action committee he co-founded last year. He ran unsuccessfully for the Kansas House as a Democrat last year.

Roberts spokeswoman Sarah Little says Roberts doesn’t take any election for granted “and will continue to fight for Kansans each and every day whomever his opponent may be.” Roberts is a Marine Corps veteran.

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Kansas launches jobs, education site for veterans

(AP) — A new website has been launched by the state of Kansas to help link military veterans with educational and employment opportunities.Screen Shot 2013-07-03 at 5.31.35 AM

The new KanVet site was announced this week by Gov. Sam Brownback and Maj. Gen. Lee Tafanelli, state adjutant general. It’s aimed at active duty veterans, as well as members of the National Guard.

Veterans will be able to use the site to find information about educational opportunities in Kansas, including lists of schools and links to scholarship programs.

The employment portion offers links to state agencies, the Kansas National Guard, career fairs and information about starting a business.

Other information about services and programs and veterans can be found through a link on the site to the Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs.

 

Wild West Festival Fitness Fun

Hays MedThe Center for Health Improvement will host a free Family Bootcamp Workout on Saturday July 6, in conjunction with the Wild West Festival.  The bootcamp will be held from 8:30 am – 9:30 am.  Participants are asked to meet at the entrance to Larks Park.

The workout is designed for ages 10 and over.  For more information please contact 623-5900.

Ellis County Ministerial Alliance Needs Golfers

It’s not too late to sign up to play in the 10th Annual Ellis County Ministerial Alliance’s   “Swingin’ for Support” Golf Tourney this Friday July 5th at Fort Hays Golf Ellis County Ministerial Alliance golfCourse.

Carts, lunch and prizes are all included in the $60 fee with all of the proceeds going to E.C.M.A ‘s  2nd mile fund which benefits local residents through First Call for Help.

To register, contact First Call for Help at 623-2800 or just show up this Friday morning at 8am for ECMA’s Swingin for Support” Golf Tourney. Call 785-623-2800 for more information.

 

Kansas AG won’t represent KCC against lawsuit

AP) — The Kansas attorney general will not be representing the Kansas Corporation Commission in a Shawnee County lawsuit accusing the state agency of Attorney General Derek Schmidtviolating the state’s open meetings.

Don Brown, spokesman for Attorney General Derek Schmidt says that Schmidt has declined to represent the KCC in with the open meetings investigation being conducted by Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor.

Taylor filed a complaint last month alleging KCC members approved a rate increase for water users in Salina during a process that wasn’t public.

KCC attorneys have argued that the process is legal when commissioners are unable to meet together. After the lawsuit was filed, however, the KCC indefinitely suspended the practice.

 

Harvest update: Great weather to cut wheat

Farmers in Ellis and Trego County are enjoying beautiful wheat cutting weather this week.  The harvest in the area is slowly winding down. Elevators across the

A truck delivers grain to the Midland Marketing downtown Hays location
A truck delivers grain to the Midland Marketing downtown Hays location

region are busy but not working the long hours they did last week. North of Hays it’s a different story.

Stockton farmer Jerry McReynolds says yields are variable in Rooks County; they range from 30 to 65 bushels per acre depending upon the crop rotation; test weights average 61 pounds per bushel on summer-fallow, and 59 pounds per bushel on continuous wheat. The variety Armour is his best performer so far.

Dale Weeks, manager of the Wheeler Co-op Mercantile Equity Union in Cheyenne County says about 65,000 bushels have been received as of Tuesday. Test weight averages 58 pounds per bushel, and protein ranges from 11 to 14. Yields range from 17 to 40 bushels per acre with a 25 bushel average. Weeks says drought has taken a dramatic toll on the crop, which will only amount to about 35% of a normal harvest.

Harvest is about 60% complete near Grainfield according to Chad Miller, location manager for the Hi-Plains Co-op Association location there. The crop ranges from 25 to 60 bushels per acre, with a 35 bushel per acre average; farmers north of town benefitted from timely rains that farmers south of town didn’t receive, Miller says. Test weights range from 58 to 63 pounds per bushel, averaging 60 pounds. Protein is right at the 12% benchmark. Harvest should wrap up early next week.

Richard Fisher, general manager of the Farmers Co-op Union in Sterling, says this harvest has been above average for area farmers. Yields range from 30 to 60 bushels per acre and average about 50; test weights were 61 pounds per bushel prior to a rain event last week, and now are at 59 pounds. Protein ranges from 10.5 to 13. The area harvest is about 90% complete and should be wrapped up early next week.

Harvest is about 75% complete in the Salina area, where KAWG director Justin Knopf says this has been one of the best wheat crops he has seen. Yields range from 60 to 70 bushels per acre, with 62 pound test weights the norm. Protein averages about 10.5. A thunderstorm the last week of June did cause some lodging, but all in all Knopf is very pleased with the 2013 harvest.

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.

KS Highways Ranked #2 in Quality and Cost-Effectiveness

ks highwaysKansas has the nation’s second best and most cost-effective highway system, according to a new report by a libertarian research group.

The Reason Foundation listed Kansas second only to North Dakota on its annual highway report, which is based on 11 factors including spending, pavement conditions and highway deaths.

The rankings are largely based on information the state sent to the federal government that reflects spending and conditions from 2008 and 2009.

The study results follow a move by lawmakers this year to merge management of the Kansas Turnpike Authority into the Kansas Department of Transportation, a move some lawmakers from both parties warned could hamper the historically well-run Turnpike. It also follows the 2010 sales tax increase that channels four-tenths of a cent toward long-term highway improvements.

The nonprofit foundation, which lists David Koch among its trustees, says the 10,607 miles under the state of Kansas’ control have moved up one notch since the last two highway reports.

Kansas didn’t rank No. 1 in any single category, but it did well in almost all of them, the report shows.

“…there was only one area in which it did not best the U.S. average: its fatality rate was 15 percent higher than the national rate,” the study says. “And Kansas was able to achieve this performance in spite of spending 24 percent less than the U.S. average per-mile spending.”

Delay Announced for Major requirement of Obama health law

AP) — In a major concession to business groups, the Obama administration Tuesday unexpectedly announced a one-year delay, until 2105, in a central requirement Screen-Shot-2013-07-02-at-9.08.04-PM.pngof the new health care law that medium and large companies provide coverage for their workers or face fines.

The move sacrificed timely implementation of President Barack Obama’s signature legislation but may help the administration politically by blunting a line of attack Republicans were planning to use in next year’s congressional elections. The employer requirements are among the most complex parts of the health care law, which is designed to expand coverage for uninsured Americans.

“We have heard concerns about the complexity of the requirements and the need for more time to implement them effectively,” Treasury Assistant Secretary Mark Mazur said in a blog post. “We have listened to your feedback and we are taking action.”

Business groups were jubilant. “A pleasant surprise,” said Randy Johnson, senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. There was no inkling in advance of the administration’s action, he said.

Under the law, companies with 50 or more workers must provide affordable coverage to their full-time employees or risk a series of escalating tax penalties if just one worker ends up getting government-subsidized insurance.

Originally, that requirement was supposed to take effect next Jan. 1. Business groups complained since the law passed that the provision was too complicated. For instance, the law created a new definition of full-time workers, those putting in 30 hours or more. But such complaints until now seemed to be going unheeded.

The delay in the employer requirement does not affect the law’s requirement that individuals carry health insurance starting next year or face fines. That so-called individual mandate was challenged all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled last year that requirement was constitutional since the penalty would be collected by the Internal Revenue Service and amounted to a tax.

Tuesday’s action is sure to anger liberals and labor groups, but it could provide cover for Democratic candidates in next year’s congressional elections.

The move undercuts Republican efforts to make the overhaul and the costs associated with new requirements a major issue in congressional races. Democrats are defending 21 Senate seats to the Republicans’ 14, and the GOP had already started to excoriate Senate Democrats who had voted for the health law in 2009.

Senior White House adviser Valerie Jarrett cast the decision as part of an effort to simplify data reporting requirements.

She said since enforcing the coverage mandate is dependent on businesses reporting about their workers’ access to insurance, the administration decided to postpone the reporting requirement, and with it, the mandate to provide coverage.

“We have and will continue to make changes as needed,” Jarrett wrote in a White House blog post. “In our ongoing discussions with businesses we have heard that you need the time to get this right. We are listening.”

Republicans called it a validation of their belief that the law is unworkable and should be repealed.

“Obamacare costs too much and it isn’t working the way the administration promised,” said Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. “The White House seems to slowly be admitting what Americans already know … that Obamacare needs to be repealed and replaced with common-sense reforms that actually lower costs for Americans.”

 

Feds charge 9 Kansas students with visa fraud

(AP) — Nine Kansas State University students from Nepal have been charged with scheming to commit visa fraud.Screen Shot 2013-07-02 at 7.33.42 PM

A federal indictment unsealed Tuesday alleges the students conspired to maintain their visas by temporarily pooling their money. Prosecutors contend the goal was to make it appear they had sufficient funds to meet requirements that they could support themselves.

All nine are charged with conspiracy to commit visa fraud plus varying counts of visa fraud.

The government alleges the students presented a notarized bank letter to their international student adviser to obtain certification of financial responsibility. The indictment says that once they got the needed documents, they returned most of the temporarily obtained funds.

The U.S. attorney’s office says the maximum penalty for each count is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

 

Midwest Energy Helps Westar Restore Service

Shane Wente, Line Foreman at Colby, climbs a pole to reconnect lines after a storm on June 27th knocked out power to 22,000 homes in Wichita.
Shane Wente, Line Foreman at Colby, climbs a pole to reconnect lines after a storm on June 27th knocked out power to 22,000 homes in Wichita.

Wichita was slammed with nearly 90 mph winds June 27, snapping tree limbs and bringing down hundreds of power lines, cutting power to more than 22,000 Westar Energy customers, and causing one of the largest outages in Westar’s history. 

Nathan Harter, Line Foreman at Colby, and Ben Jaeger and Mason Newell, Journeyman Linemen from Colby, were three of the 22 linemen Midwest Energy sent to Wichita to help restore power to 22,000 homes after high winds brought down lines on June 27th.
Nathan Harter, Line Foreman at Colby, and Ben Jaeger and Mason Newell, Journeyman Linemen from Colby, were three of the 22 linemen Midwest Energy sent to Wichita to help restore power to 22,000 homes after high winds brought down lines on June 27th.

The next day, when Westar put out a call to Kansas utilities for assistance, Midwest Energy (MWE) sent 22 linemen and 15 trucks from the Colby, Great Bend, Hays, and Lyons areas, to help get power restored.

“Several crews had volunteered to help,” said Dale Giebler, Operations Project Manager for MWE in Hays. “We had 18 of our own poles come down in the same storm in Barton County, but we were happy to be able to help out in Wichita.”

The MWE crews worked 16-20+ hour days from June 28th through July 1st, in different areas of Wichita and Haysville. Most of their work was done overnight, climbing poles in alleys and confined areas where using buckets was impractical.

“There was a lot of tree damage and lines down,” said Nathan Harter, Line Foreman from Colby, who led one of the six crews. “We spent most of our time climbing poles and connecting the wires back in.”

Westar reported power restored to most all its customers on the afternoon of July 1, and MWE crews returned home on July 2.

Suspects sought in Monday Shooting Update

3 p.m. update Dodge City Police have made arrests in connection with Monday’s shooting incident.  Dorian Capers surrendered to authorities this morning. A 23 year old suspect has also been taken into custody.

 

Authorities in western Kansas are looking for two suspects wanted in connection with an early morning shooting in Dodge City. The shooting occurred just after Capersmidnight at Loves Country Store located at 400 E. Wyatt Earp. Two individuals were shot in the parking lot after a confrontation.

According to police, “The victims:
Gaudencio Galindo a 26 year old male and Crystal Galindo a 25 year old female are both Dodge City residents and had gunshot wounds to their lower extremities. 
There two suspects being sought are.
Dorian T. Capers DOB: 07/20/85 Hgt: 608 Wgt: 350 Race: Black Sex: Male and an Unknown male
A warrant for the arrest of Capers has been issued by the Ford County District Court alleging the following crimes:

Attempted 1st Degree Murder
Criminal Discharge of a Firearm

Anyone who may have information about this incident is encouraged to call one of the numbers below with their information:

CRIME STOPPERS 620-227-STOP
877-424-4414 (Toll free)

Dodge City Police Department 620-225-8128

Or text your information

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