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Lawrence seeks donations for recreation equipment

The new stadium and track at Rock Chalk Park
The new stadium and track at Rock Chalk Park

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Lawrence officials are spending more than $22 million for the new Rock Chalk Park Sports complex in northwest Lawrence while also seeking donations at recreation centers in other parts of town to help maintain current equipment.

Tim Laurent, Lawrence recreation operations manager, says donation boxes at recreation centers aren’t a sign the city is struggling to fund the maintenance of existing facilities and equipment now that money is being devoted to Rock Chalk Park. He says residents who take Parks and Recreation classes pay a fee, while people who use the fitness rooms aren’t required to pay fees.

But Lawrence resident Anne Schulman told The Lawrence Journal-World that the donation boxes are “a slap in the face to residents who live in other parts of town.”

FHSU students will gather supplies for animal refuge

A Fort Hays State University Leadership 310 team will host “Pack the Truck” Saturday to gather supplies for Western Plains Animal Refuge.

Western Plains Refuge

The team, Pawprints for Change, will have the event will be from from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Orscheln Farm and Home parking lot, 2900 Broadway. The group hopes to pack a pickup full of donated supplies.

Items sought include:
• pet beds, pads, and blankets
• pet carriers and wire pet kennels
• leashes, collars and harnesses
• brushes and grooming supplies
• Purina One or Diamond Naturals cat food
• IAMS or Science Diet Ideal Balance kitten food
• Diamond Naturals or Nutro Natural Choice dog food
• scoopable kitty litter
• natural dog and cat treats
• external parasite treatment and repellent
• Seventh Generation cleaning products

For those unable to attend, items also can be dropped off at the FHSU Leadership Department in Rarick Hall or at Orscheln. For more information about WPAR, visit click HERE.

 

KHAZ Country Music News: Tim McGraw on the Today Show Concert Series

khaz tim mcgraw 20130315NEW YORK (AP) – Mariah Carey will kick off the “Today” show’s concert series. She will play on the May 16 show. The concerts run every Friday through the summer. Other performers include Tim McGraw, Rascal Flatts, Pharrell Williams, Sara Bareilles , Train, Fall Out Boy, Ed Sheeran, Jason Mraz, Jennifer Hudson, Aloe Blacc, Neon Trees, Maroon 5 and Usher.

 

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Kan. economy first concern of 1st District candidate Roth (VIDEO)

1st Congressional District candidate Kent Roth, R-Ellinwood
1st Congressional District candidate Kent Roth, R-Ellinwood

 

 

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

It’s been 30 years since Ellinwood attorney Kent Roth was a Kansas state legislator.

At age 61, he’s jumping back into politics, campaigning for the First Congressional District GOP nomination against incumbent Rep. Tim Huelskamp.

Roth’s campaign theme song is “Keep Talking” by Pink Floyd. He believes Congress needs to do just that, without the increasing political rhetoric:

Roth, who was campaigning in Hays on Wednesday, is a supporter of the Congressional group “No Labels,” which encourages bipartisan legislation.

More information about Roth’s campaign is available on his website.

The primary election is  Aug. 5.

HPD activity log, April 30

AOBB-Logo-Main11

The Hays Police Department conducted 10 traffic stops and received five animal calls on Wednesday, April 30, according to the HPD activity log.

Assist, 100 block West 12th, 1:19 a.m.
Animal call, 1300 block Vine, 2:14 a.m.
Water use violation, 2900 block Canal, 8:56 a.m.
Theft, 2900 block Broadway, 6:58 p.m.
Theft of services, 3200 block Vine, 11:24 a.m.
Disturbance, 2000 block General MacArthur, 12:50 p.m.
Mental health call, 1700 block Vine, 1:19 p.m.
Drug offenses, Hays, 2p.m.
Battery, 2200 block East 15th, 2 p.m.
Animal call, 1300 block Agnes, 2:37 p.m.
Drug offenses, 300 block East 14th, 3:03 p.m.
Assist, 1000 block Fort, 2:59 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 27th and Ash, 3:04 p.m.
Noise disturbance, 1000 block Country Club Drive, 3:39 p.m.
Sex offense, 100 block East Seventh, 4:28 a.m.
Harassment, 1900 block Vine, 4:24 p.m.
Child in need of care, 700 block East Sixth, 4:25 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident/private property, 3800 block Vine, 4:54 p.m.
Lost animals, 300 block West Eighth, 6:42 p.m.
Animal at large, 500 block Ash, 7:05 p.m.
Warrant service/failure to appear, 100 block West Fourth, 7:51 p.m.
Mental health call, 2400 block Indian Trail, 9:08 p.m.
Drug offenses, 1100 block East 43rd, 10:02 p.m.
Driving while suspended/revoked, 3300 block Vine, 11:33 p.m.

Reward for information on arsons continues to grow

The reward offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction in a string of March arsons continues to grow.

ARSON FIRE

The reward, being gathered by Hays businessman Chris Miller, now stands at nearly $4,000.

Miller, owner of Auto Tech, 600 Vine, was one of the earliest victims of the rash of fires, which began March 6 and ultimately resulted in approximately 20 arsons.

The Kansas State Fire Marshal is investigating the fires, and Ellis County Sheriff Ed Harbin said this week that there is nothing new to report on the investigation.

“If we produce enough reward money, we’ll get some results,” Miller said. “Somebody out there knows something.”

Anyone with information that could help the investigation is asked to call the Ellis County Sheriff’s Department at (785) 625-1040.

Miller said anyone wishing to add to the reward pot can contact him at (785) 625-6409.

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Moran on HHS refusal to justify administration’s budget request

Senator Moran during Wednesday's hearing
Senator Moran during Wednesday’s hearing

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education, issued a statement upon learning the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will not confirm a date to justify its budget request before the Senate Appropriations Committee:

“The Department of Health and Human Services requested nearly $70 billion in taxpayer money for Fiscal Year 2015, and I would expect the head of any U.S. Department to justify their budget request before the Senate Appropriations Committee. This Administration vowed to be transparent and work with Congress to establish regular order for appropriations bills, and defending their budget request is part of that pledge.”

Greetings from Ellis on a lovely May Day

It’s a beautiful day! Or so says my oldest son, and I think I have to agree.

Dena Patee
Dena Patee

The wind is finally down, however it will be back up as the day goes on.  Maybe today you only have to keep two rocks in your pocket to help weigh you down, — much better than Monday, which had to be an eight-rock day!

Today, I encourage everyone to get out and take a walk around your neighborhoods. While you’re out, check out your neighbor’s yards, visit with them, enjoy the birds and take in the scenery. Then, pick up the items that have blown out of your yard and take them home with you. I had to track down some things from the Chrysler Home yard yesterday and get them back in the yard. Hopefully, they are still there this morning.

This week has been busy, however many activities were delayed due to the crazy Kansas weather. Stay tuned, and I’ll post updates and times as soon as I hear of anything. Today, the Ellis Junior High Track team will head out to Oakley and the EHS Golfers are hosting the I-70 Classic with Trego. Tomorrow finds the EHS Track team in Quinter, and the Softball Team will travel to Plainville. Saturday is State Forensics and State Journalism. Go Railers!

The end of school is very near but there are tons of activities between now and then. Music concerts, track meets, baseball, softball, golf, FFA activities, awards, graduations — lots of activities to go! One announcement that the Ellis school kids will totally dig is that the last half day of school on May 21 has been removed from the calendar. The Ellis school year will end on May 20. (Whooping and hollering are being heard from the crowd.)

Ellis will soon have a new downtown business. Please welcome, Big Creek Floral & Gifts! They will be open and running by June 1. Keep your eyes here for more details on a Grand Opening celebration and Ribbon Cutting. Ellis will have a new LED Downtown sign too! Thank you all for the very generous donations to the project, they are appreciated! There is still time to donate to the project if you would like.

Riverfest 2014 will be a Battle on Big Creek. Don’t miss your chance to skydive with us. Team Fast Track will be taking us up for a tandem skydive as part of the fun of Riverfest. Would you like to go? Give me a call at the Alliance Office at (782) 726-2660 for all the details and to get signed up! Final deadline to register to skydive is May 10.

Get out today and enjoy the sunshine and lots less wind. As always, if you know things that I don’t, please share with me and I’ll spread the word.

Happy May Day, everyone!

Dena Patee is executive director of Ellis Alliance.

Officials say Medicaid enrollment growth expected to continue

Kari Bruffett, director of the Division of Health Care Finance- Photo KHI News Service
Kari Bruffett, director of the Division of Health Care Finance- Photo KHI News Service

By Mike Shields
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — State officials say they expect more than 13,000 Kansans currently eligible but not enrolled in Medicaid will sign up for it by July 2015 due to greater awareness of the program from the Affordable Care Act and KanCare.

Kari Bruffett, director of the Division of Health Care Finance at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said Medicaid enrollment so far this year already has outpaced “normal growth” patterns and that trend was expected to continue at least over the next year or more thanks to the so-called “woodwork effect.”

KanCare, the name given Medicaid in Kansas after the administration of Gov. Sam Brownback rebranded it in 2012, is being promoted on billboards and ads by the three managed care companies competing to attract enrollees to their respective health plans. And the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, has heightened awareness of the various options available to those needing health coverage, officials said.
How much credit or blame for the growth should be assigned to either initiative hasn’t been parsed yet, legislative and agency analysts said. But they pledged they would try to find out and report back to legislators on that later.

Medicaid, which covers more than 400,000 Kansans, is the federal-state program that provides health care for the poor and disabled.

Packed agenda

Bruffett’s comments came as part of a day-long meeting of the Robert G. Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight.

The panel had a packed agenda and heard from a stream of state officials, insurance executives, Medicaid providers and beneficiaries.

The providers mostly registered complaints of the sorts legislators have heard in previous meetings about frustrations with KanCare’s administrative complexities and persisting difficulties getting paid in timely and complete manner by the state’s KanCare contractors: Amerigroup, UnitedHealthcare and Sunflower State Health Plan, a subsidiary of Centene.

A couple of providers also told the committee members they were pleased with the KanCare changes, but more said they were having problems.

‘No significant improvement’

Bob Finuf, vice president of payor relations at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., and a member of the hospital working group that has been trying to resolve KanCare payment problems in regular meetings with officials from the state and the KanCare companies, said from Children’s Mercy’s perspective KanCare has improved since its troubled launch in January 2013, “but not significantly.”

Finuf said the hospital has $14 million in unpaid and overdue KanCare payments with two-thirds owed by a single KanCare company: Sunflower State Health Plan.

“From our perception,” he said, “there’s an unwillingness (on the part of the company) to fix reasonable problems.

“We simply did not encounter the number or magnitude of operational and claim payment delays or denials that we have encountered since the implementation of KanCare,” Finuf told the panel. “Kansas Medicaid is our lowest and slowest payer source and the biggest demand on resources in our organization.”

Officials from Newman Regional Health, a small county-owned hospital in Emporia, described the same type of problems and also named Sunflower as particularly difficult to deal with.

“Newman Regional Health continually maintained accounts receivable, productivity and claims processing financial indicators in the top 75 percent of hospitals across the country,” said Karen Hastert, the hospital’s patients accounts supervisor. “Prior to the KanCare implementation, our processes were efficient and effective. It is disappointing to have little or no control over an issue that is so significantly impacting productivity and cash collections.”

‘Not an entitlement’

Top executives of each of the KanCare companies generally struck a conciliatory tone and told committee members that they were working to improve their payment processes and talking with providers about ways to smooth things.

But at one point, Mike McKinney, chief executive of Sunflower, bluntly told the committee that although Medicaid is an entitlement for enrollees, “it is not an entitlement for providers.”

He said managed care is different than fee-for-service care. In so many words, he suggested that providers should just get used to the new way of doing business.

McKinney said managed care works because managed care companies give greater “scrutiny” to bills submitted by providers, disallowing “waste.” He said that hospitals typically note accounts receivables on their ledgers at sums three, four and five times more than they expect in actual payment from insurance companies.

“They show what they billed,” he said. “Not what they’re owed.”

But Committee Chair David Crum, an Augusta Republican who has been among KanCare’s strongest supporters in the Legislature, told McKinney he wanted to see the problems with provider payments settled.

“I’m trying to be patient,” Crum told him. “But it is becoming more difficult. … I’d like to see some positive development.”

‘We’ll do better’

McKinney and the other executives confirmed after questioning by Rep. Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat, that their companies had lost money the first year of KanCare. But they, and state officials, also said the losses weren’t entirely unexpected because managed care companies sometimes lose money in the first year of a contract.

Laura Hopkins, chief executive of Amerigroup Kansas, said the company expected to become profitable this year. According to filings with the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, the company lost about $32 million.

The Sunflower filings showed about $70 million in losses.

In a later interview, McKinney wouldn’t confirm that, saying he didn’t know exactly how much the company had lost “because it’s not all settled up.”

But he said it was a “considerable amount.”

“I just know we lost money. We’ll do better,” he said.

Hays waterline projects up for discussion at commission meeting

The Hays City Commission will discuss bids for 2014 waterline improvements at a work session Thursday.

WaterProjects050113

The meeting is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall.

According to a memo to commissioners by Bernie Kitten, director of utilities, the project will replace water mains on Hickory and Ash streets from 27th to 29th, and on Elm Street from Fort to Fourth.

The low bid of $233,458 for the Hickory and Ash street project was submitted by Stripe and Seal of Hays. APAC-Kansas, Hays, submitted the second lowest bid of $164,773 for the Elm project. The low bidder was unable to meet the city’s requirements that the project be done during summer break at Fort Hays State University.

APAC is expected to begin its portion of the project this summer, while Stripe and Seal is scheduled to begin at the end of September.

The project will be funded from the water and sewer capital reserve fund.

In other action at Thursday’s work session, commissioners will discuss:

• The commission’s representative on the board of the Ellis County Coalition for Economic Development. Commissioner Kent Steward has represented the city on the board since 2013.

• The city of Russell’s proposed usage of water from Cedar Bluff Reservoir.

• A contract with a company that would detect leaks in the city’s water system.

Click HERE for a complete agenda for Thursday’s work session.

Related story: Skateboard park improvements up for discussion.

Related story: 13th Street reconstruction on the agenda.

Senior citizens can use Mulvane school track

Mulvane High School
Mulvane High School

MULVANE, Kan. (AP) — Despite some parents’ concern about their children’s safety, a Kansas school district will continue to allow senior citizens to use an indoor walking track during school hours.

The Mulvane school board voted this week to allow anyone over 55 to use the indoor track at Mulvane Grade School.

The Wichita Eagle reports some parents had raised concerns about allowing the public access to the track while school is in session.

Mulvane district spokesman Tom Keil says the board voted unanimously Monday night to authorize its attorney to negotiate an agreement with the city’s recreation commission over public use of the track and two new fitness studios.

Royals hold on for victory over Blue Jays

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Alcides Escobar delivered a two-run double in the seventh inning, and the Kansas City Royals held on for a tense 4-2 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Wednesday night.

Eric Hosmer drove in the other two runs for the Royals, whose bullpen blew a 2-0 lead for young starter Yordano Ventura before holding on to beat Toronto with a late rally for the second straight night. Kansas City won the series opener 10-7 behind a six-run eighth inning.

Kelvin Herrera (1-1) stranded runners on second and third in the seventh, and Wade Davis struck out Jose Reyes to leave the bases loaded in the eighth. Greg Holland worked around a double in the ninth for his seventh save in seven tries.

Drew Hutchison (1-2) allowed all four runs on five hits in seven innings for Toronto.

Drive-by shooting reported in Arkansas City

police-lights3-150x150ARKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a 21-year-old man is in jail after a drive-by shooting into an Arkansas City home occupied by a couple and their young child.

Arkansas City police say in a news release that several shots from a car hit a house late Tuesday. The bullets went into a room in which the couple and their 3-month-old child were sleeping but no one was injured.

The Arkansas City Traveler reports the residents were moving out of the house Wednesday. One resident, Garret Watkins, says he thought the suspect was high on drugs during the shooting. He says he also might have shot at the house because he owed money to a friend of Watkins.

No charges have been filed.

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