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Wichita museum plans events to celebrate MLK Day

WICHITA (AP) — The Kansas African American Museum in Wichita is planning a series of events on the Saturday before the Jan. 20 observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The Wichita Eagle reported memorial events honoring the slain civil rights leader have been held in Wichita for more than 30 years, drawing more than 700 people annually.

Activities scheduled for Jan. 18 include a pancake breakfast, a community-wide parade and a celebration that will include a gospel concert.

Museum executive director Mark McCormick says the program was designed to make the holiday more of an American holiday than an African-American holiday. He says the museum is trying to be “more purposeful and intentional about being inclusive.”

Woman hurt in Monday rollover accident in Thomas Co.

A Winona woman was injured in an accident just after 4 p.m. Monday when the minivan she as driving rolled in Thomas County.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol, a 2003 Chevrolet Venture driven by Brooke L. Hinnegardt, 42, was southbound on Kansas 25 south of the Interstate 70 junction when the driver reachers for a water bottle and ran off the right side of the road.

The KHPO said she overcorrected, crossed the centerline and rolled in the west ditch. The vehicle came to rest on its top.

Hinnergardt was taken to Citizens Medical Center, Colby, for treatment of injuries.

The KHP said she was wearing a seat belt.

No. 16 Kansas hands Toledo first loss of season

KULAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Perry Ellis had 21 points and 11 rebounds, Naadir Tharpe added a career-high 20 points and No. 16 Kansas beat Toledo 93-83 on Monday night for the Rockets’ first loss of the season.

Andrew Wiggins also had 20 points and fellow freshman Joel Embiid had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Jayhawks (9-3), who built a 16-point lead early in the second half.

Toledo (12-1) made one final charge, using some hot outside shooting and sloppiness on the part of Kansas to get within 81-73 on a 3-pointer by Julius Brown with 3:23 left in the game.

Tharpe answered moments later with a free throw and then a driving layup off a miss, and Kansas finally put the game away when Frank Mason fed Wiggins on a run-out for an easy dunk that gave the Jayhawks an 88-76 lead with less than 2 minutes remaining.

 

Teen arrested in church break-ins

shutterstock_6281075215HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A Hutchinson teenager is facing charges after being arrested in two church burglaries.

The 17-year-old was arrested Friday after a custodian discovered him at the First Church of God. Nothing was reported stolen from that church.

But police say the teenager is also a suspect in the theft of some cash from Riverside Baptist Church less than an hour before the break-in at the First Church of God.

The teen also is suspected of breaking into vehicles in the past week.

Investigators say the thefts apparently aren’t related to a string of church burglaries that hit Hutchinson in 2012.

 

One injured in Monday night truck accident

KHPA Wakeeney man was injured in a Monday night accident.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol Fifty-three old Dale M. Kenney of WaKeeney was driving a 2006 Mack truck northbound on 330th Avenue, 6 miles east of U283 in Graham County.

Kenney failed to negotiate a left turn on the A Road. The truck continued on northbound into the ditch. Vehicle came to rest on its wheels facing north. Kenney was transported to Trego County Lemke Memorial Hospital. He was not wearing a seat belt.

Unconscious driver robbed at Wichita restaurant has died

6 a.m. Tuesday  WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 43-year-old Wichita woman, who was robbed after becoming ill at a fast-food restaurant has died.

Officials at Via Christi Hospital St. Francis say 43-year-old Danielle Zimmerman died Monday.

She was hospitalized after being found unconscious at a Taco Bell restaurant Sunday evening. Police say her car drove over a speaker box and stopped in the drive-thru lane.

Wichita police Lt. Doug Nolte says Zimmerman suffered a possible brain aneurysm. When her husband arrived, he noticed that her purse, phone and wedding ring were missing.

Her family says she was taken off life support on Monday. The family said it didn’t care about her purse or phone, but they hope to get her wedding ring back.

 

4:30 p.m.  Monday  WICHITA (AP) — Wichita police are looking for the thief who victimized an unconscious driver at fast-food restaurant’s drive-through lane.

The Wichita Eagle reported the 43-year-old woman suffered a possible brain aneurysm and struck the speaker box outside a Taco Bell around 8 p.m. Sunday.

She came to a stop in the drive-through lane. Someone then reached into her vehicle and stole her wedding ring, a cellphone and a purse containing cash, credit cards and a checkbook.

The woman’s husband was called to the scene and noticed the items were missing.

Paramedics rushed the unconscious woman to a hospital, where she was reported in critical condition Monday.

Kansas to check for voter birth records

Kris_Kobach

by JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach says the state will start checking birth certificates within a few weeks to decrease the list of voters with registrations on hold for not complying with a proof-of-citizenship requirement.

Kobach told The Associated Press in an exclusive interview that attorneys for his office and the state Department of Health and Environment were meeting Tuesday to finish an agreement.

The health department’s Office of Vital Statistics maintains birth certificates.

Kobach said Monday that the Office of Vital Statistics will check lists of prospective voters against its records to determine whether it has birth certificates. Kobach said the checking should begin by mid-January.

The proof-of-citizenship law took effect Jan. 1, 2013. More than 19,300 registrations are on hold, preventing the voters from legally casting ballots.

 

‘Wannabe’ gang members sentenced

By JOHN SIMMONDS
Hays Post

The Ellis County Attorney’s office recently prosecuted five members of what county attorney Tom Drees said was a “wannabe gang.” According to Drees, five individuals, two of whom are juveniles, identified themselves as members of a gang called “187 Crips.” Drees added their affiliation was self-proclaimed and there was no indication the five were officially tied to any known street gangs.

According to Drees, the group lured a 17-year-old to the home of one of the defendants, where four of the five allegedly beat the victim while the fifth watched.  The victim suffered bruising to the face, head, chest, body and legs as well as a chipped tooth, severely bruised shoulder and ribs, and a badly strained wrist.

“Explanation given by the defendants who gave an explanation,” Drees said, “was that he had identified them as members of the gang, in violation of their code.”

The group’s self-proclaimed gang affiliation pushes the allegations under a special provision of Kansas sentencing guidelines. Under Kansas law, if it is shown at sentencing that an offender committed a felony for the benefit of or at the direction of, or in any association with a “criminal street gang,” the court has the option to impose a prison sentence rather than probation.

Judge Glenn R. Braun ordered extended jurisdiction juvenile prosecution for the minors, which means they have a juvenile sentence they are on probation for, and they also have an adult sentence that is imposed. If the children violate their juvenile probation, they will serve the adult sentence with the Department of Corrections.

The following were sentenced:
Derek James Reniker
Derek James Reniker
Age: 16
Charges: Aggravated battery level 7 person felony with a special provision for claiming to be a member of a street gang.
Sentenced to 24 months probation with intensive supervision through the juvenile justice authority. Underlying adult sentence is 12 months underlying with probation for 24 months. Reniker had a prior juvenile conviction for battery.

Brennon Christopher HiltonBrennon Christopher Hilton
Age: 16
Charges: Aggravated battery level 7 person felony; felony level 8 criminal threat with a special provision for claiming to be a member of a street gang.
Sentenced to 12 months probation with intensive supervision through the juvenile justice authority. Underlying sentence is 12 months on the battery and six months on the criminal threat.

Jacob Leo Towns
Age: 21
Jacob Leo TownsCharges: aggravated battery level 7 person felony with a special provision for claiming to be a member of a street gang.
Sentenced to 24 months probation through community corrections. Underlying sentence of 27 months. Probation to start after serving time in another criminal threat case, for which probation was revoked and Towns is serving with community corrections.
* There is currently a motion to revoke probation on the aggravated battery case as Towns was arrested in Rooks County on Dec. 3 for two counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child.
Andrew Sanchez Cervantes
Andrew Sanchez Cervantes

Age: 30
Charges: attempted aggravated battery level 7 person felony with a special provision for claiming to be a member of a street gang.
Sentenced to 12 months probation under supervision of community corrections with an underlying sentence of 12 months. Probation to run consecutive to probation from a previous case of attempted aggravated battery.

Tyler Joseph FlinnTyler Joseph Flinn
Age: 20
Charges: aggravated battery level 7 person felony with a special provision for claiming to be a member of a street gang.
Sentenced to 24 months probation through community corrections with underlying sentence of 12 months.

Drees said probation through community corrections is a middle ground between standard probation through court services and serving prison time. Community corrections is more intensive supervision, including more frequent urinalysis, more meetings with probation officers, and surveillance officers randomly visiting the homes and jobs of those on probation to verify their location.

“I don’t want to send out the message that Hays now has gangs, “ Drees added, “but we do take very serious when people want to talk about being in a gang or claiming to affiliate with a gang, obviously that ratchets up law enforcement taking a look at them.  The purpose of street gangs is to promote crimes and violence, and we don’t want that.  We don’t want to see that in Ellis County.”

Kansas Statehouse visitor center to open Thursday

Capitol Building - KS 003TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — State and local officials will hold a ceremony this week to mark the official opening of the Kansas Statehouse visitor center to the public.

The Kansas Historical Society will cut the ribbon Thursday morning on the new facilities on the north side of the Statehouse. Gov. Sam Brownback and Topeka Mayor Larry Wolgast are scheduled to speak, and visitors will be offered tours of new exhibits lining the halls of the Statehouse.

Workers are completing a 13-year, nearly $330 million renovation of the capitol building. The project has included expanded office and meeting space for state officials, new ventilation and electrical systems, and the visitor center on the ground floor.

The center includes a marble floor with a map of Kansas with each county’s name engraved.

 

Moran: OSHA regulation of family farms ‘unlawful’

WASHINGTON — In a press release Monday, U.S. Sens. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., and Mike Johanns, R-Neb., called on the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to immediately stop what they called unlawful regulation of family farms.

Moran, Johanns and a bipartisan group of 41 senators also have directed OSHA to issue updated guidance correcting their misinterpretation of current law. The request was made in a joint letter to Department of Labor Secretary Thomas Perez, who oversees OSHA.

Sen. Jerry Moran, R.-Kan.
Sen. Jerry Moran, R.-Kan.

“This is not the first time this administration has proved that Washington’s values are not rural America’s values through regulatory over-reach into the family farm,” Moran said. “I am committed to working with my colleagues to protect the individual rights of farmers and ranchers, and make certain OSHA does not continue to misinterpret the law.”

Since 1976, Congress has exempted small, family-run farms from OSHA regulations, but in a 2011 memo OSHA asserted that on-farm grain storage and handling was not part of farm operations. The memo essentially expanded OSHA’s regulatory scope to nearly every farm in the country without going through the established rule making process that allows Congressional review and public comment, in defiance of the law.

—————

A copy of the senators’ letter is below:

December 20, 2013

The Honorable Thomas E. Perez
Secretary
U.S. Department of Labor
200 Constitution Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20210

Dear Secretary Perez:

We write to you regarding reports that regulators at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) have begun taking regulatory actions against farms that are specifically exempted by Congress from regulatory enforcement conducted by OSHA. Since 1976, Congress has included specific language in appropriations bills prohibiting OSHA from using appropriated funds to apply requirements under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1976 to farming operations with 10 or fewer employees.

It has come to our attention that OSHA is now interpreting this provision so narrowly that virtually every grain farm in the country would be subject to OSHA regulations.  OSHA’s interpretation defies the intent of Congress in exempting farming operations from the standards of the Occupational Safety and Health Act.

In viewing a farm’s “grain bin operation” as somehow distinct from its farming operation, OSHA is creating an artificial distinction in an apparent effort to circumvent the Congressional prohibition on regulating farms.  The use of grain bins is an integral part of farming operations.  Without grain bins, farmers must sell corn and soybeans immediately after harvest, when prices are usually low.  Storing grain in bins is thus a fundamental aspect of farming.  Any farm that employs 10 or fewer employees and used grain bins only for storage prior to marketing should be exempt, as required by law, from OSHA regulations.

A memo issued by the Director of Enforcement Programs on June 28, 2011, stated that “many of these small farm employers mistakenly assume that the Appropriations Rider precludes OSHA from conducting enforcement activities regardless of the type of operations performed on the farm.”  The memo declares that all activities under SIC 072—including drying and fumigating grain—are subject to all OSHA requirements (the memo did not even mention grain storage).  There are many farms that have grain dryers on-farm to address wet harvest conditions or fumigate grain to prevent pests from ruining a crop prior to marketing.  These are basic, common, and responsible farming activities that OSHA has arbitrarily decided are non-exempt.

Worker safety is an important concern for all of us—including the many farmers who probably know better than OSHA regulators how to keep themselves and their employees safe on farms.  If the Administration believes that OSHA should be able to enforce its regulations on farms, it should make that case to Congress rather than twisting the law in the service of bureaucratic mission creep.  Until then, Congress has spoken clearly and we sincerely hope that you will support America’s farmers and respect the intent of Congress by reining in OSHA.

We would ask that you direct OSHA to take the following three steps to alleviate this concern.  First, OSHA should cease all actions predicated on this interpretation, which is inconsistent with Congressional intent.  It is important that OSHA also issue guidance correcting this misinterpretation of the law.  We suggest consulting with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and organizations representing farmers to assist with this guidance  Finally, we ask that OSHA provide a list and description of regulatory actions taken against farms with incorrectly categorized non-farming activities and 10 or fewer employees since the June 2011 memo.  Given the nearly four decades of Congressional prohibition of OSHA enforcement against farms, this should be a simple request to fulfil.

We would appreciate your response by February 1, 2014, to include a copy of the corrected guidance, the data regarding enforcement actions on farms, and confirmation that OSHA will cease such enforcement.

DD carve-in not approved for Jan. 1 launch

By MIKE SHIELDS
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Kansas will not be able to move forward Jan. 1 as planned with its KanCare expansion intended to include long-term supports for the developmentally disabled.

Instead, officials at the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services continue to talk with state officials about various concerns they have with the state’s plan.

Officials said the lack of a CMS sign-off for the Jan. 1 start more likely would result in a delayed approval after various changes are made to the plan as opposed to outright rejection of what has been one of the more controversial components of Gov. Sam Brownback’s ongoing Medicaid program makeover.

“They have told the state that they will not approve the 1115 waiver that carves in the DD folks on Jan. 1,” said Sen. Laura Kelly, a Topeka Democrat who has been in contact with CMS officials. “My sense is that this will just delay the decision.”

Kelly said there were four main areas of concern with the administration’s plan as outlined by federal officials and others:

• The number of disabled people on the state’s so-called “underserved list.”

• Concerns about whether the state can guarantee prompt payments for services by the state managed care companies to DD service providers.

• The state’s organizational structure for its KanCare ombudsman. Critics say the ombudsman should not be directly employed by a state Medicaid agency in order to assure greater independence.

• Concerns about “notices in the state’s 1915C waiver and proposed 1115C waiver amendment.”

Brownback officials subsequently issued a statement saying they would continue talks with CMS through Feb. 1 — a date not mentioned in the letter from CMS — in an effort to resolve or respond to the concerns that have been raised and, during that interval, develop a new implementation timeline for the KanCare expansion, to which they said they remain fully committed.

“Going forward, this administration aims to keep Kansans off the underserved list and reduce the (physical disability/developmental disability) waiting lists, and KanCare’s integrated care coordination is key to solving that longstanding issue,” Shawn Sullivan, secretary of the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, said in the prepared statement.

Administration officials said they would mail letters to DD consumers and providers to notify them “of this temporary postponement” of the state’s expansion plan.

State officials said the delay also would allow adequate time for them and federal officials to review the latest public comments on the planned expansion.

Interhab, the association that represents most of the state’s Community Developmental Disability Organizations, filed comments earlier this week with CMS, newly outlining that group’s ongoing trepidations with the proposed carve-in of DD services.

The public comment period on the state’s so-called 1115C waiver amendment proposal did not officially close until Dec. 24 after being extended because of an earlier glitch on the CMS public comment website.

Interhab also sent a memo dated Dec. 23 to Sullivan at KDADS, urging the state to delay or cancel its plan to include DD long-term supports in KanCare due to — among other things — “too much detail work left undone.”

Earlier this month, the National Council on Disability, a federal advisory panel, urged CMS officials to delay for one year the state’s request to include long-term DD supports and services in the state’s sweeping managed care plan. Medical services for the developmentally disabled were included in KanCare on Jan. 1, 2013, when virtually all the state’s 380,000 Medicaid beneficiaries were moved into managed care plans run by three major, for-profit insurance companies.

Advocates for the disabled said they were pleased that CMS had withheld approval.

“We are extremely pleased that CMS has listened to Kansas stakeholders about the serious problems with KanCare, including but not limited to wrongly forcing over 1,700 people on the so-called underserved waiting list and the lack of proper notice regarding service reductions and appeal rights,” said Rocky Nichols, executive director of the Disability Rights Center of Kansas.

“KanCare simply isn’t ready to take on the DD Waiver, and thankfully the federal government is getting that message loud and clear,” he said.

Interhab Executive Director Tom Laing said the delay would allow the group to continue its appeals to the Kansas Legislature, which convenes again in January, to block the administration plans to carve in DD services.

“I think legislators — many of whom who were being assured by the administration that everything was fine — will now want to ask new questions,” Laing said. “This wasn’t ever a partisan issue. We had Republicans and Democrats and moderates and conservatives who had concerns about this. It’s not a matter of adjusting a few nuts and bolts. However much the state might want to say otherwise, there are fundamental problems” with the expansion plan.

Interhab has long argued that long-term supports for the developmentally disabled should be left alone, saying they don’t lend themselves to the commercial, medical models used by shareholder-owned insurance companies.

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