We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Police officer stops SUV, finds 100 chickens

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — A Grand Island animal shelter is caring for nearly 50 malnourished chickens after a police officer discovered them in the back of an SUV during a traffic stop.

The Grand Island Independent reported that the police officer discovered nearly 100 chickens in the back of the vehicle around 1 a.m. Friday. Half of them were dead.

Sgt. Bud Edwards says he stopped the SUV because it was driving in the dark without headlights. The driver, 36-year-old Luis Motola-Palacio of Grand Island, was arrested on suspicion of a second offense of driving drunk.

The live birds were taken to the Central Nebraska Humane Society, where officials determined the birds weren’t being fed properly and that many are missing feathers.

Officials are weighing whether to charge Motola-Palacio with animal cruelty.

Authorities ID 3 killed in southeast Nebraska crash

UTICA, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska State Patrol says a Lincoln family of three has been killed in the crash of a small car and a semitrailer on Interstate 80 near Utica in southeastern Nebraska.

The patrol says the crash happened around 8 a.m. Saturday when the driver of the westbound car lost control, crossed the interstate median and was hit by an eastbound semi.

The patrol says the crash killed 42–year-old Ranulfo Martinez Lopez, his wife, 39-year-old Maria Fernandez, and their 6-year old daughter, Amy.

The crash closed a three-mile stretched of I-80 between Utica and Beaver Crossing. Westbound lanes were re-opened after two hours, but eastbound lanes remained closed for about five hours Saturday.

Kansas files brief supporting Hobby Lobby

Hobby LobbyWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas is supporting Hobby Lobby in its fight to challenge the Affordable Care Act’s requirement that employers cover emergency contraceptives.

The Kansas Attorney General’s Office filed a brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in support of Hobby Lobby Inc., an Oklahoma-based arts and crafts retail chain. Hobby Lobby’s founder and CEO David Green objects to the regulation based on his religious principles.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt says in a statement that the issue is religious liberty. He says the Constitution protects businesses that want to base policies on religious teachings.

The Supreme Court is expected to argue the case in March, with a decision expected by summer.

 

Lady Tigers defeat Washburn for second straight win

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

The Fort Hays State Lady Tigers outscore Washburn 14-6 over the final 4:42 and defeat the Ichabods 69-62 Saturday afternoon at Gross Coliseum. The Tigers improve to 15-4 overall and 8-4 in the MIAA while Washburn falls to 13-6 and 8-4 in the coneference.

The Tigers used an 11-2 run to build a nine-point lead with 5:11 to play in the first half and were up seven at halftime. A Tera Ingalsbee 3-pointer pushed the lead to 10 early in the second half. Washburn tied the game at 43 with 12:31 to play then pulled within one at 55-54 with 4:42 to go before the Tigers took control down the stretch.

Foe a second straight game, the Lady Tigers were dominant on the glass, outrebounding the Ichabods by 18 and scored 24 second chance points off of 19 offensive rebounds.

Kate Lehman led the Tigers with 14 points despite playing only 17 minutes because of foul trouble. Nikola Kacperska added 11 and Tera Ingalsbee 10.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Kansas woman charged in Lawrence death returns

Screen Shot 2014-01-29 at 3.39.22 PMLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 19-year-old woman charged with killing a Lawrence businessman has been brought back to Douglas County from Florida where she was taken into custody.

Douglas County District Attorney Charles Branson told The Lawrence Journal-World that Sarah B. Gonzales McLinn was turned over to the sheriff’s office and booked into Douglas County Jail on Saturday.

McLinn is charged with first-degree murder in the death of Harold M. Sasko, whose body was found on Jan. 17 at the home they shared. Branson says McLinn will appear before District Judge Paula Martin in Douglas County District Court on Monday.

McLinn’s being held on a $1 million bond .

Lawrence police who went to Florida to talk to McLinn after her Jan. 25 arrest at Everglades National Park drove her back to Lawrence.

Crowd gathers for first Eggs & Issues legislative breakfast

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Local legislators Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer, Rep. Travis Couture-Lovelady and Rep. Sue Boldra talk to constituents at Saturday's HACC Eggs and Issues breakfast.
Local legislators Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer, Rep. Travis Couture-Lovelady and Rep. Sue Boldra talk to constituents at Saturday’s HACC Eggs and Issues breakfast.

The snow and cold temperature didn’t hinder attendance at Saturday morning’s kickoff of the Eggs and Issues legislative series, hosted by the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce.

A light breakfast was served and then on to business with Statehouse updates from three area legislators:  111th District Rep. Sue Boldra, R-Hays, 110th District Rep. Travis Couture-Lovelady, R-Palco, and 40th District Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer, R-Grinnell.

The trio first delivered brief remarks about their legislative work since the 2014 session opened Jan. 13, and then answered questions submitted by the audience.

Many wanted to know about education funding.

Boldra, a longtime educator, has been appointed to the special committee considering Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposal to fund all-day kindergarten.

“I love the concept,” said Boldra, “but I’m unsure where the money will come from.”

The governor’s plan is for the Legislature to spend $16.3 million the first year and add an additional $16 million for each of the next five years. The plan total would be $240 million.

“There are only 15 Kansas school districts without full-day kindergarten,” Boldra pointed out, “but some of them require families to pay for it. Olathe is the highest, charging $1,375 per semester, so you know which kids are being left out.”

The plan would not mandate that kindergartners be in school all day.

“The state would pay for those who choose to attend all-day kindergarten, which should be available to all kids,” Boldra said. “Research shows money spent on early childhood education is getting the ‘best bang for your buck.'”

The legislature is still awaiting a Kansas Supreme Court ruling that will determine whether the state must comply with a lower-court ruling requiring the state to increase annual funding for K-12 education by an estimated $450 million.

All three legislators contend it is an “affront to the Constitution for the court to tell the Legislature how much to pay” for school funding, a remark that drew audience applause when Boldra spoke.

“It’s an interesting dynamic,” Couture-Lovelady said. “Kansas students are consistently in the top 10 percent of national testing, yet what we’re doing is ‘educate and export.’ We need to get the economy growing first and more people moving into the state. We do a great job of educating students but there are no jobs when they graduate, especially well-paying jobs.”

“We need to be fair,” Ostmeyer said. “We’ve put more money into education every year.  The low-enrollment formula is critical for rural western Kansas school districts. But judges should not tell us how much to spend.”

The next Eggs and Issues breakfast is scheduled for March 22 at the Sternberg Museum of Natural History.  The series is sponsored by AT&T.

NBC World Series seeking nonprofit status

NBC world seriesWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Officials with the National Baseball Congress World Series say they hope to hear by the fall whether the organization will receive nonprofit status from the Internal Revenue Service.

City Manager Robert Layton says attorneys are confident the amateur baseball tournament will be declared nonprofit, which supporters believe will help secure the financial future of the 80-year-old tournament.

The Wichita Eagle reports nonprofit status would enhance the tournament’s efforts to attract sponsors, which would get tax benefits for supporting the World Series.

Layton says the city will appoint a volunteer board to direct the tournament once the IRS acts.

The city of Wichita also is pursuing a national television deal for next summer’s tournament.

Kansas lawmakers seek to sever state from health act

Rep. Brett Hildabrand
Rep. Brett Hildabrand

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Some conservative Kansas lawmakers are pushing to let the state join a compact seeking independence from the Affordable Care Act.

Rep. Brett Hildabrand introduced the measure in the House Committee on Federal and State Affairs last week to make Kansas a member of the Health Care Compact.

The Wichita Eagle  reports eight states, including Missouri and Oklahoma, already have approved joining the compact, which seeks independence from the federal health care law.

The Shawnee Republican says he got the idea from an email conversation with Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Shawnee Republican, and Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

Congress must give permission for the states to suspend federal health care laws. Hildrabrand thinks that could happen if Republicans regain control of the U.S. Senate in November.

New KU site helps students with business startups

KU campus
KU campus

Lawrence, KS (AP) — Students at the University of Kansas will be able to bring their startup ideas to a new university-run business accelerator.

The new program, KU Catalyst, is a joint project between the School of Business and the Bioscience and Technology Business Center. It will seek to connect students with mentoring, workspace and capital to start new companies.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports KU Catalyst will open in the BTBC next month, but its ultimate home will be the new business school building, which is scheduled to open in the 2015-16 school year.

Entrepreneurship faculty offices will also be built near the accelerator workspace so students can have easy access to mentors.

Sundays on the Porch series returns to Red Rocks

EMPORIA — The Kansas Historical Society announced that the Sundays on the Porch series returns Feb. 9 to Red Rocks State Historic Site, the home of the William Allen White family. The series is inspired by the White family’s legendary hospitality. If a member of the family was on the porch of their Emporia home, guests were welcome to join them for a visit. The series consists of three free weekly programs 2 p.m. Feb. 9, 16 and 23. Due to cooler temperatures, this winter series will meet in the visitor center. Red Rocks is located at 927 Exchange Street, Emporia. For more information, call (620) 342-2800 or visit kshs.org/red_rocks.

The following programs will be presented:
• Feb. 9 – William Allen White’s Boyhood Home: The History of El Dorado, Kansas – presented by Lisa Soller.
• Feb. 16 – General Frederick Funston: One of William Allen White’s Best Friends – presented by Dr. Chris Lovett, Professor of History, Emporia State University. Lovett’s expertise is in military history.
• Feb. 23 – Treasures of the White Collection – presented by the William Allen White Memorial Library Archives staff, Emporia State University.

Red Rocks State Historic Site is one of 16 state historic sites operated by the Kansas Historical Society, a state agency.

Oil, gas companies partner with states on lesser prairie chicken habitat

Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism

PRATT – Five oil and gas companies are voluntarily enrolling nearly 1.5 million acres of land under an innovative plan to conserve the lesser prairie chicken. This represents the first enrollment in the Lesser Prairie-Chicken Range-wide Conservation Plan, developed by the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and state wildlife agencies in Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas.

lesser prairie chicken range

Continental Resources, Devon Energy, Apache Corp., Occidental Oil and Gas Corp., and Samson Resources have committed to develop enrolled land in ways that minimize impacts on lesser prairie chicken habitat. They will also mitigate development impacts that cannot be avoided by providing funding for conservation on private land throughout the region. Other companies in various industries, including oil and gas, pipeline, electric transmission and distribution, and wind energy, are now considering enrollment in the plan.

“The oil and gas industry enthusiastically supports the WAFWA range-wide plan,” said Ben Shepperd, Permian Basin Petroleum Association president. All five enrolling companies are members of the association, which also helped fund aerial surveys to verify chicken populations in 2012.

“We’re proud to see these member companies stepping up early on to support the range-wide plan in a significant way,” Shepperd said. “We believe this plan offers the best, most comprehensive approach available to conserve the lesser-prairie chicken and its habitat, while providing some assurance for participating companies so we can continue to do business.”

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service endorsed the range-wide plan in October and verified that companies who enroll would get legal assurances that their business activities could continue if the bird is listed under the federal Endangered Species Act. The federal agency has proposed listing the lesser prairie chicken as threatened, and is expected to make a final decision in March.

“The Lesser Prairie-Chicken Range-wide Conservation Plan addresses all threats to the species and could represent an alternative to designating the bird as threatened,” said Ross Melinchuk, WAFWA Lesser Prairie Chicken Initiative Council chairman.

The USFWS recently announced it would accept public comments on a proposed special 4(d) rule that “…would exempt from regulation under the Act any activities that harm or result in take of the prairie-chicken if incidental to carrying out the state-developed range-wide lesser prairie-chicken conservation plan. The proposed special rule would also exempt take incidental to routine agricultural practices on existing cultivated lands and to landowner participation in the Natural Resource Conservation Service’s Lesser Prairie-Chicken Initiative.”

Under the range wide plan, mitigation fees are based on actual costs for habitat management and restoration. Fees range depending on factors like the number of acres impacted, quality of habitat affected, and habitat management costs. Basically, developing in higher quality habitat costs more, and working in lower quality habitat and cropland costs less.

“This landmark program allows for industry development within the region and incentivizes farmers and ranchers to conserve and restore habitat for this species,” said Bill Van Pelt, WAFWA Grassland Initiative Coordinator. “WAFWA and state fish and wildlife agency staff are now working to enroll farming and ranching lands with those mitigation dollars.”

Mitigation fees will help fund proven habitat management activities, such as voluntary agreements with landowners to protect or restore native grassland habitat. Already in Texas, as of today, 73 landowners across the Texas Panhandle and Rolling Plains have enrolled 594,253 acres in a similar though separate strategy, voluntary Candidate Conservation Agreements with Assurances, or CCAAs, for the lesser prairie-chicken. Texas CCAA acres have grown more than five-fold since September, 2010. New Mexico has more than 800,000 acres of oil and gas leases enrolled in their CCAA, plus 1.5 million acres of ranch land. Oklahoma has submitted 200,000 acres of ranch land for approval in their CCAA and has requested USFWS to allow enrollment of an additional 200,000 acres.

Besides industry enrollment, landowners are also able to voluntarily enroll in the plan to help conserve and restore habitat for the bird on private land in Texas and other states. In exchange for management practices such as prescribed grazing, burning, and brush management, landowners are assured they can continue to operate under provisions of a management plan if the bird is listed.

The plan includes habitat management goals and voluntary conservation practices to be applied throughout the lesser prairie-chicken’s range, guided by the Crucial Habitat Assessment Tool online database and mapping system (https://kars.ku.edu/geodata/maps/sgpchat/).

The Range-wide Conservation Plan for the Lesser Prairie Chicken can be viewed on WAFWA’s lesser prairie-chicken web page at https://www.wafwa.org. A recorded online seminar explaining the industry mitigation system is online at https://192.120.246.152/CTL/WAFWA.html.

Commission looks to R9 Ranch for long-term water source

The city of Hays is moving closer to developing a new water resource.

hays city logo

On the agenda for Tuesday’s work session is discussion of a staff recommendation to declare the city’s intent to develop the R9 Ranch, which is in Edwards County south of Hays and has long been eyed as a possible source of new water for the city.

The action is listed among the agenda items for this week’s Hays City Commission work session, scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall.

“After years of studying potential water sources, it has been determined that the R9 Ranch provides the most viable long-term option for Hays and the surrounding area,” City Manager Toby Dougherty wrote in his memo to the commission.

Development of the Edwards County water resource, which would be delivered via pipeline, is a solution that looks out “50 to 70 years,” Dougherty wrote, noting the project would provide water regionally, not just to the city of Hays.

The project is estimated to cost $65 million, but Dougherty said the city already has approximately $27 million in reserves to assist with the project. Since 1992, the city has collected a special sales tax to help fund water projects, and Dougherty said the majority has been placed into reserve, a fund he said would continue to grow.

Also on Tuesday’s work session agenda is further discussion of the inoperable vehicle ordinance and rules governing storage of shipping containers. Commissioners also will discuss a project to increase the size of the water main serving the King’s Gate addition on 41st Street.

For a complete agenda, click HERE.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File