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FHSU baseball swept at Missouri Southern

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Missouri Southern remained undefeated by sweeping a doubleheader against Fort Hays State on Thursday (Feb. 27) in Joplin, Mo. Fort Hays State fell by scores of 8-0 and 11-7, now 3-6 overall and 2-4 in the MIAA. Missouri Southern improved to 10-0 overall and 6-0 in the MIAA.

Game 1: Missouri Southern 8, Fort Hays State 0
The Tigers could not get anything going offensively in the first game, scratching out just one hit against Missouri Southern starter David Reese. Reese threw a complete game shutout, striking out nine Tigers and did not allow a walk, but hit one batter.

Cooper Langley had the lone hit for FHSU in the second inning. FHSU had runners at second and third in that inning, but could not push a run across with MSSU holding a 1-0 lead at the time. MSSU went on to score one in the second, two in the third, and four in the sixth.

Steven Federau went the distance for FHSU, allowing eight runs on 11 hits with two walks and one strikeout.

Game 2: Missouri Southern 11, Fort Hays State 7
The Tigers fell behind 7-1 after three innings, then 11-2 after five innings and could not mount a big enough comeback to catch the Lions in game two.

Horace Johnson had a RBI single in the first inning to give FHSU the lead 1-0 momentarily until Missouri Southern scored four in the bottom half of the first. FHSU added its second run of the game in the fourth on a sacrifice fly RBI by Nick Hammeke.

Down by nine, the Tigers scored twice in the sixth on a two-RBI single by Alex King, then plated three in the eighth on a two-RBI double by King and a RBI single by Cooper Langley. King finished the game with four RBI.

The Tigers had two pitchers each go 4.0 innings. Starter Tyler Patty pitched to one batter in the fifth before being relieved by Ty Thomas. Patty surrendered eight runs on 11 hits with one walk. Thomas allowed just three runs (one earned) and eight hits, while striking out three.

Payton Walker threw 6.0 innings for the Lions, picking up the win. He surrendered four runs on 11 hits and struck out eight. Josh Engler (0.1 innings) and Stephen Vaughn (1.0 innings) shut down the Tigers over the final inning and a third.

Fort Hays State and Missouri Southern play the final two games of the four-game series on Friday, starting at 1 pm.

Agency says Kansas exports rose in 2013

Screen Shot 2014-02-28 at 5.15.12 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — State commerce officials say exports by Kansas companies grew by 6.46 percent in 2013, pushed by growth in the sales of cereals and other agricultural products.

The Department of Commerce released the data Thursday, showing that total exports were $12.45 billion. The state’s exports have rebounded in the past three years to near levels last seen in 2008.

Canada, China, Japan and Mexico were the state’s top trading partners. The department says exports to China have grown by nearly $1 billion since 2011.

Cereal exports grew by $686 million, while meat products grew by $298 million. Exports of aircraft and related parts totaled $1.86 billion, the most exported commodity in the state.

 

No waiting for those Girl Scout Thin Mints (VIDEO)

gs cookie boothBy BECKY KISER
Hays Post

It’s Girl Scout Cookie time, and you don’t have to wait for you order to come in to satisfy your sweet tooth.

gs cookie store timesThe Girl Scout Cookie Store in the Hays Mall is open Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays through March 9.

Proceeds from the sales go to the Girl Scout Council and its troops.  Scouts operating the booth split the profits.

McKenna McBride and Callie Raacke are both members of Troop 10427 and are well on the way way to their sales goals:

The eight types of Girl Scout cookies sell for $3.50 a box.  The Scouts are also selling door-to-door.

 

Moran legislation would reauthorize drought information program

nidis logoWASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate has passed bipartisan legislation offered by U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., that will reauthorize the National Integrated Drought Information System. NIDIS provides vital drought information to farmers, ranchers and other industries affected by weather conditions.

“During a time when producers are still grappling with the devastating effects of drought, the passage of this legislation provides them with much-needed certainty,” Moran said in a news release today. “The reauthorization of this program will aid farmers and ranchers, and enable agricultural operations to continue across our state.”

Government agencies have worked to develop a long-term plan for drought prevention, research and education since the NIDIS Act was signed into law in 2006. The legislation extends the program for five years and supports an interactive “early warning system” of timely and accurate drought information, as well as an integrated weather monitoring and forecasting system. The NIDIS Reauthorization Act of 2013 is the companion bill to the Drought Information Act, which was introduced in February 2013.

The bill now heads to the president for his signature.

New commercial vehicle tag takes some owners by surprise (VIDEO)

ks-dept-of-revenueBy BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Legislation passed in 2012 moved state appraised and taxed motor carriers to a commercial vehicle registration application that is now performed at the county level.

A lot of “service-oriented” business owners who thought they’ve been operating their vehicles within state and federal Department of Transportation laws, are finding out they’re not.

When it comes time to renew heavy truck and trailer tags with their county treasurer, many owners are told their vehicles are part of the new commercial vehicle system, and must bear the state’s new purple and white “Commercial” license plate.

Penny Fryback is a Special Investigator for the Kansas Corporation Commission Transportation Division.  She offers regular Motor Carrier Safety Regulations seminars in Hays and throughout western Kansas.  Fryback says attendance has begun exploding, from an average of about 25 people to a record 93 carriers in Hays Monday:

Fryback says it’s businesses such as plumbers, painters and landscapers that have been unknowingly “operating under the radar” for years. Gerald Long of Saint John is one of those—he’s operated Long’s Harvesting the past 15 years and custom cuts in Kansas, Oklahoma and Colorado.  Long says he thought he “was running legal all these years” and “fully intends to come into compliance with state law:”

The renewal deadline is Friday, although the Kansas Division of Vehicles is waiving late fees for one month.

Ellis County Treasurer Anne Pfeifer says her office workers have been busy learning the new system as well.  The biggest challenge, she says, is “explaining who needs to be registered as a commercial vehicle.”  That can be answered by the free KCC seminars.

The situation will likely continue through the year, predicts Fryback, because some current vehicle tags, which should be the new commercial tags, will come up for renewal each month.

More than 45,700 vehicles have been registered through the new process, according to the Kansas Department of Revenue.commercial tag new

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Roberts Introduces Bill to End Health Care Rationing (VIDEO)

Washington, DC–U.S. Senator Pat Roberts today introduced a bill to protect the doctor patient relationship and to end health care rationing by the federal government as authorized in Obamacare.


“In the absence of a full repeal of Obamacare, we need to fight the further intrusion of the federal government into the relationship between doctors and patients,” Senator Roberts said. “This intrusion through four unaccountable government agencies is hidden under the cloak of innovation and prevention and is one of the most damaging threats to the quality of health care in America. My bill repeals the four rationing bodies that seek to limit options for care under the misconception that health care is one size-fits-all.”

Senator Roberts introduced the Four Rationers Repeal Act of 2014. It repeals the following rationing bodies:

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Innovation Center: the “Innovation Center” is aimed at finding innovative ways to reform payment and delivery models. It gives the government new powers to cut payments to Medicare beneficiaries with the goal of increasing innovation but in reality reducing patients’ ability to access the care they want and need.
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force: This preventive services task force used to be a body that was scientific and academic, that reviewed treatment, testing, and preventive health data and made recommendations for primary care practitioners and health systems. Because of Obamacare, the task force can now decide what should and should NOT be covered by health plans. If the task force doesn’t recommend it, then it won’t be covered by health plans and patients will bear the cost of the procedure.
Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute: Conducts comparative effectiveness research, also known as CER, which should be used to inform decisions between doctors and their patients but under Obamacare will limit treatment options for individuals.
Independent Payment Advisory Board: The Board is made up of 15 unelected bureaucrats who will decide which treatments in Medicare coverage should be taken away. They have no accountability and their decisions are practically impossible to overturn.
“I’ve been talking about the four rationers for a long time and what it means to patients. What really scares me, as I watch all the other warnings and broken promises come true, is what is going to happen to Kansans back home when the warnings about the four rationers come true. Access to quality care will be a thing of the past for Americans.”

During the debate on Obamacare, Senator Roberts offered amendments to prohibit the use of comparative effectiveness research and to eliminate the four rationers. He voted against the bill in both Committees and on the Senate floor.

He also led the fight in the U.S. Senate to block the nomination of Dr. Donald Berwick to head the Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services due to his support for the use of comparative effectiveness research and rationing.

Senator Roberts is a senior member of the Senate Committee on Finance and is the ranking member of its Subcommittee on Health Care. He is a member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions and is co-chairman of the Senate Rural Health Caucus.

Education bills not yet passed as ‘turnaround’ approaches

By EVAN DUNBAR
KU Statehouse Wire Service

TOPEKA — Friday marks the halfway point of the 2014 Kansas legislative session, better known as “turnaround.” Their chamber of origin must pass all bills, except some that are exempt, if they are to be considered during the second half of the session.

Several bills under consideration have educational implications, ranging from school sex abuse and sex education to student data and records, and new private charter schools.

Here are some notable bills in the House and Senate involving these education issues that have yet to pass in committee or on their respective chamber floors:

• House Bill 2432 would require each school district to adopt and implement a plan to address child sexual abuse for each of its schools offering grades kindergarten through six. The State Board of Education would develop materials and guidelines that local boards of education could use. The plan would require teacher training and education so teachers could be aware of child sexual abuse issues (such as identifying warning signs of sexual abuse), as well as age-appropriate student instruction that is related to child sexual abuse.

• Each district would be required to inform parents that they can review the educational materials and decide if the child should be instructed with the materials. If a parent decides that his or her child should not be taught, the parent would have to inform the school in writing. A hearing was held on the bill earlier this month, but no action has been scheduled.

• House Bill 2621 would prohibit boards of education from spending funds to implement extraneous information into a statewide longitudinal data system. The system is used to track student information over time in multiple schools. The bill states that personally identifiable information of any student or teacher “could not be provided by the State Board of Education, Department of Education, or any local school board to any federal, state or local agency, under certain circumstances.” The bill would prohibit implementing any examination or test which would collect certain data, including “data related to cognitive skills, psychological mindsets, social skills, or other intrapersonal resources,” unless written consent has been given by student’s parent or guardian.

• House Bill 2623 would require all school district building construction projects on or after Jan. 1, 2015, to include the construction of a storm shelter. The shelter would be located in the building of the new project and be designed and constructed in compliance with the rules and regulations adopted by the Adjutant General. If the building project already has an existing storm shelter, but it is not in compliance with these rules and regulations, the bill states the plans for the new project “would be required to include the remodeling or reconstruction of the existing storm shelter.” The Kansas Board of Education would be required to coordinate with the Adjutant General to develop, adopt, and enforce any of the rules and regulations. Representatives from the Department of Education said spending for the bill would be negligible because most new buildings around the state already include storm shelters. The bill was tabled by the House Education and Budget Committee on Tuesday.

• Senate Bill 211 would amend an existing law concerning elections for local governments. The bill would apply to these jurisdictions: extension districts, cities, boards of public utilities, water districts, drainage districts, irrigation districts, unified school districts, and community colleges. The bill states it would make all local elections “partisan instead of nonpartisan; move these elections from the spring of odd-numbered years to the fall of even-numbered years to coincide with national, state, and county elections; and eliminate the election of political party precinct committee positions at the August primary election.” The bill would also “eliminate ballot rotation, where candidates’ names are rotated so each candidate’s name shows at the top of the list an equal number of times through the election district.” The Senate Election Committee decided not to work on this bill Wednesday.

• Senate Bill 196 would create the Kansas Public Charter School Act, which would allow Public Charter Schools to open and operate without oversight from state laws, rules and regulations, other than those outlined in the bill. Any organization that wants to be a PCS authorizer may apply to the State Board of Education for a grant of authority. The application would be submitted in a form and manner determined by the State Board of Education.

Each authorizer would be required to report annually to the board, the governor and the legislature on the progress of the PCS. The bill would outline the information that must be submitted to the authorizer for approval of a PCS. The initial term of a charter for a PCS would be five years and a PCS would be considered part of the state’s public education system.

• Senate Bill 376 would require local boards of education to receive written consent from a parent or legal guardian before instruction on health and human sexuality is given to a student.  The bill states local boards of education “must provide all instructional materials on health and human sexuality when requested by a parent or legal guardian before a decision is made to allow the student to be instructed.” The bill has no current scheduled action.

Evan Dunbar is a University of Kansas senior from Houston, majoring in journalism.

Cyberattack forces Kan. school district off the Internet

JC Post

USD-475-Logo4-300x300

JUNCTION CITY — Geary County USD 475 pulled the plug in its Internet service after what is believed to be a cyberattack overloading the district’s systems.

“The first outage affected most of the state. The attackers sent out a code that caused one or more computers to repeatedly send out millions of pieces of data to clog our network,”  Superintendent Ron Walker said in a new release.

He said the district’s firewall prevented any access to financial or confidential information.

Consultants were called in by the school district to help resolve the problem.

Washington Elementary wireless program on USD 489 agenda

USD 489By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

The Hays USD 489 Board of Education have a work session at 6:30 p.m. Monday at Rockwell Administration Center, 323 W. 12th

The board will discuss an update on the E-rate process for wireless infrastructure at Washington Elementary, a USD 489 budget review and new appointments for the District Technology Committee.

According to the U.S. Department of Education, the E-Rate program “provides discounts of up to 90 percent to help eligible schools and libraries in the United States obtain affordable telecommunications and internet access.”

Other agenda items include a community assessment Head Start will be conducting soon.  The Eligibility, Recruitment, Selection and Enrollment Plan is an assessment required by the state every three years.  The board also will discuss authorizing the Kansas Early Head Start Grant for the Early Childhood Connections program.

The USD 489 website provides a full work session agenda.

The meeting will be held at Toepfer Board Room at Rockwell Administration Building, 323 W. 12th at 6:oo p.m.

Police release photo from stolen laptop

photo courtesy Wichita Police
photo courtesy Wichita Police

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police have released a webcam photo from a stolen laptop in a bid to track down the laptop thief.

The laptop was among several items taken in a theft Feb. 19.

The Wichita Eagle reports  the laptop’s owner used the laptop’s built-in webcam a few days after the theft to remotely take a picture of a person using the computer.

Wichita police spokesman Capt. Doug Nolte says police have posted the photo on Facebook. He says police are hoping someone will recognize the man using the stolen laptop and call police.

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