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Douglas County investigating highway shooting

police-lights3LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office say a man is recovering in a hospital after being shot while driving on a highway south of Lawrence.

The shooting occurred late Monday on Highway 59. The sheriff’s office says the 24-year-old man was taken to a Topeka hospital after being shot late Monday.

Officers closed a three-mile section of the highway for several hours Tuesday to search for clues.

Sheriff’s spokesman Lt. Steve Lewis said authorities have no information on a suspect or a vehicle.

Great Bend man flown to Wichita after rollover accident

Great Bend Post

GREAT BEND — A Great Bend man was flown to Wichita Monday for injuries he sustained in a one-vehicle rollover accident in Barton County.

According to the Barton County Sheriff’s Department, 31-year old Kevin King of Great Bend was traveling east in a Dodge Ram 1500 on East K-4 highway at NE 80 Avenue when the vehicle went left of center and exited the roadway around 12:30 a.m. King lost control of the truck, which rolled 3 1/2 times before coming to rest in the south ditch. King, who was not wearing a seat belt, was ejected from the vehicle.

King was transported to Clara Barton Hospital in critical condition, and then was airlifted to Via Christi Medical Center where he was listed in good condition as of late yesterday morning.

The Barton County Sheriff’s Office continues to investigate the crash.

Kerry: US to start $5 billion anti-terrorist fund

Kerry
Kerry

WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State John Kerry says the United States will begin a $5 billion “terrorism partnership fund” to help other countries push back against radical extremists.

Kerry says President Barack Obama will announce the fund during his commencement speech Wednesday at the U.S. Military Academy in West Point, New York.

Obama on Tuesday put forward a blueprint for ending U.S. military engagement in Afghanistan by the time he leaves office.

Kerry says that plan will allow the U.S. to divert resources to the anti-terrorism fight in other parts of the world. He says U.S. foreign policy needs to reflect a “rapidly changing, more complex world where terrorism is the principal challenge.”

Kerry described the anti-terrorist funding on “CBS This Morning.”

Survey: Cybercrime on the rise

MARTHA MENDOZA, AP National Writer

computer crime cyberSAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — A survey of 500 executives of U.S. businesses, law enforcement services and government agencies released Wednesday finds that the hackers are winning.

The 12th annual survey of cybercrime trends concludes that online attackers determined to break into computers, steal information and interfere with businesses are more technologically advanced than those trying to stop them.

The survey is co-sponsored by San Jose, California-based business consulting firm PwC, the U.S. Secret Service, the CERT Division of Carnegie Mellon University’s Software Engineering Institute and CSO security news magazine.

The survey found that three out of four respondents said they had detected a security breach in the past year, and the average number of security intrusions was 135 per organization.

 

Privatization initiative offers window on Kansas government

Map courtesy of Kansas Department for Children and Families
Map courtesy of Kansas Department for Children and Families

By Dave Ranney
& Mike Shields
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Soon after Gov. Sam Brownback’s inauguration, his then-chief of staff David Kensinger sat down for a private meeting with his recent lobbying firm partner, Matt Hickam; a Cabinet secretary, Rob Siedlecki; and a Brownback campaign contributor seeking to expand his company’s business in Kansas.

The brief meeting of political insiders was held in a refurbished Kansas Statehouse vault where state bonds once were safeguarded and – in one historic episode during the tenure of Gov. Alf Landon – were looted by the notorious Ronald Finney, a key perpetrator of the state’s greatest known political scandal.

The two-story vault now serves as a small conference room for the Capitol’s second-floor governor’s suites in the west wing.

The purpose of the meeting, held soon after Brownback was inaugurated in 2011, was to introduce the players and give the government contractor an opportunity to talk about his multi-state operations and the virtues of privatization as applied to child support enforcement.
ob Wells, the contractor, is — according to some who know him — a smart, personable Mississippi lawyer and shrewd businessman who said he met Brownback and Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer before they took office at an out-of-state fundraising event for Republican governors and gubernatorial candidates that included then-Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour.

Wells said he happened to sit at the same dining table with Brownback and Colyer at the fundraising event. Child support enforcement was among the topics discussed that night. He said the governor impressed him with his apparent grasp of the subject.

“I’ve made it a habit of meeting governors in states where I was in business,” Wells said in a recent interview. “I think it’s currently in 12 states, though I’ve done business in four or five others, and really – when you get down to it – we either do business or are seeking to do business in every state. So, we deal with people at various levels all over the country.”

Lobbyists who know lobbyists

Barbour then was chairman of the Republican Governor’s Association, a so-called 527 or SuperPAC. It spent more than $113 million in states across the country in 2010, helping GOP gubernatorial candidates.

Barbour had a successful career as a Washington, D.C., “megalobbyist” before and after serving two terms as Mississippi’s chief executive and is still sometimes described as the “godfather” of Mississippi politics.

Another person at the meeting in the Statehouse vault was lobbyist Austin Barbour, Haley Barbour’s nephew, who is prominent in GOP circles in his own right having served as an adviser to Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign. Austin Barbour came to the meeting with Wells, a fellow Mississippian and lobbying client.

Wells said that after meeting Brownback at the Republican governors’ event, and seeing his apparent interest in child support enforcement, “I came back to Mississippi and talked to Austin … and said I think there’s a possibility that Kansas might be interested in doing something to advance its child support system, which, frankly, was awful. Austin said he knew a guy (in Kansas) named Matt Hickam.”

According to filings with the Mississippi Secretary of State’s Office, Wells paid Austin Barbour a $67,500 retaining fee to represent him in 2011.

Hickam said he arranged the meeting so that Wells could meet key members of the new administration even though the businessman hadn’t yet hired him to be Kansas lobbyist for his company, YoungWilliams Child Support Services. According to disclosure filings, Hickam’s representation of the firm began Feb. 24, 2011.

Hickam said he arranged the gathering so that Wells could meet members of the new administration, but he didn’t remember much else about it.

“I remember that it happened,” he said.

“As a native Kansan, I was hired to provide information about the state and I guess that was helpful to the client,” Hickam said of his subsequent work for YoungWilliams, a company he continues to represent.

Unlike Mississippi, Kansas does not require lobbying clients to report the fees and costs they pay for the services.
Wells said he remembered his presentation in the vault as being more-or-less routine, in that it was similar to others he had given to officials in states across the country.

“Basically, what I was explaining was several ways of going about addressing the problem (of a poor performing child support system), one of which is privatization, which has had some wonderful results in various places,” he said.

But at least one person in the meeting recalled feeling uncomfortable about it all.

“It appeared to be a meeting for the contractor to sell himself to the governor’s staff. No other contractor was sitting at the table. Was that the point? It was uncomfortable in that one contractor had the ear of the governor’s top staff, made the sales pitch, and no other contractors were invited or in attendance,” said the person, who requested to be unnamed, citing fear of possible retribution for speaking about it.

Wells said the meeting was his first opportunity to meet Siedlecki — then secretary of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) — and that his recollection of Kensinger from it was vague.

“I only met him once,” he said.
Kensinger, who has long been Brownback’s top political adviser, and Hickam had worked together as lobbying partners for almost seven years until Brownback was elected in November 2010 and Kensinger joined the governor’s staff as his top aide.

In a brief email, Kensinger told KHI News Service that he could not remember the meeting in the vault.

According to some sources who say they have been questioned, Kensinger and members of the new lobbying firm that he partnered in after leaving the Governor’s Office in 2012 that does not include Hickam, figure in an FBI inquiry into possible influence peddling, though the FBI will not confirm that.

Influence peddling is commonly defined as the illegal act of using one’s influence in government or connections with people in authority to obtain favors or preferential treatment, usually in exchange for payment. Legal experts say the difference between influence peddling and lobbying sometimes is difficult to distinguish. When criminal charges are filed in connection with influence peddling cases, they often include counts of bribery.

Neither Kensinger nor any of his current or former lobbying partners have been charged with a crime to date.

The Statehouse vault meeting was described to KHI News Service by four people who attended it and three people who were told of it soon after it occurred. In all, more than 25 people were interviewed for this story and hundreds of pages of contracting and other documents were reviewed.

Privatization moves forward

Within several weeks of Wells’ sales pitch in the vault meeting, Trisha Thomas, one of Wells’ employees at YoungWilliams, was hired at SRS. The agency now is called the Department for Children and Families (DCF) as the result of Brownback’s reorganization of several executive branch agencies.

Two weeks before Thomas arrived at the agency on June 16, 2011, the previous director of the child support enforcement division was fired as part of a general Brownback housecleaning aimed at putting his own people in key positions throughout the state bureaucracy.

Thomas stepped in immediately to fill that vacancy.

“She (Thomas) always wanted to be a child support director and they (administration officials) talked about plans to change the child support director. I happened to mention it to her and she applied,” Wells said. “I don’t know how many people they went through (considered for the job), but they picked her. She’s the one I would have picked … that woman knows everything about child support. She knows it all. It was an excellent choice by the governor or the administration or whoever makes that decision. And no, I didn’t have anything to do with it.”

Thomas, who continues to work as the child support enforcement director at DCF, said she didn’t remember exactly how she heard about the job opening, but that she learned of it sometime in April, May or maybe as late as June and perhaps was told about it by Wells.

“Rob’s a great guy who probably has a better memory than I do,” she said. “I don’t know if he would have emailed it or if he would have said it.”

In any event, she submitted a resume, had two telephone interviews and was hired.

“It all happened kind of fast,” she said.

Thomas said she thought she remembered at least three other people on the conference call interviews, including Siedlecki, Bob Corkins and Jeff Kahrs. Corkins was the agency’s new chief counsel. Kahrs was chief of staff to Siedlecki.

DCF officials interviewed for this story said at least three other candidates were considered for the job and Thomas was selected based on experience and salary expectation.

Thomas has a law degree and has worked for private child support companies and state agencies. She has more than 20 years of experience in the field.

She said she took a significant cut in pay to come to Kansas but wanted to return to the Midwest, where she has family, and was eager for the new responsibilities. At DCF, she is paid $75,000 a year, according to agency officials.

“I do this job because I feel like I’m giving back,” she said. “I think it’s important in life to give back. Yes, I make less. Yes, I could have kept making more at probably five or 10 other companies.”

Thomas said the chance to fix the state’s “screwed up” child support enforcement system also appealed to her.

“I like a challenge and like to fix things. Actually, I’m still fixing it,” she said.

According to Thomas and others, she soon made it apparent at the agency that she favored full, statewide privatization of the state’s child support functions, portions of which had been privatized since the administration of Gov. Bill Graves, a Salina Republican who served between 1995 and 2003. Privatization of various state functions, not just at SRS, was a key element of Graves’ promised goal of running a “high and tight” administration.

Thomas said she concluded that expanded privatization was the quickest way to improve Kansas’ child support enforcement performance numbers, which she said were “dismal.”

Wells said that also was what he had been telling Kansas officials: “The quickest (solution) would be privatization and I believe the cheapest would be privatization,” he recalled telling them.
The research

DCF spokesperson Theresa Freed said there was no formal study or analysis by the agency of the potential benefits of broader privatization.

“No,” she said. “It was an informal kind of pitch, I guess; research done, based on her (Thomas’) experience in other markets.”
In Mississippi, as policymakers there considered 2013 legislation to expand child support privatization, legislative researchers for the Committee on Performance Evaluation and Expenditure Review (PEER) did a report. It concluded that: “Little independent research exists comparing private and public sector provision of child support enforcement services and the independent research that does exist is dated and reports mixed results.”
Though major components of the Kansas system had been privatized for years, the state still ranked low in key performance measures, particularly cost effectiveness.

Thomas said that was because the privatization ushered in by the Graves administration “was set up to fail.”

“Sometimes if you don’t set up things right, you’re not going to get the right benefit,” she said.

Thomas’ immediate predecessor as CSE director, Janis DeBoer, now executive director of the Kansas Area Agencies on Aging Association, said in an email to KHI News that, “Kansas’ CSE program needed to improve its performance, unquestionably. Several surrounding states, including Nebraska and Iowa, were outpacing Kansas. I reached out to both states to determine if their successes might be applicable to Kansas. In addition, we conducted analysis to determine if the enforcement privatization contracts, at the time, were proving to be beneficial. Our analysis did not suggest privatization, in and of itself, would increase CSE’s performance measures. Instead, reaching out to employers seemed to be a key element to Nebraska and Iowa’s success stories.”

A 45-page consultant’s report done for DCF in November 2012 by Veritas HHS offered a list of recommendations for improving the system.

Privatization wasn’t an explicit recommendation except for improving one small but important element of the state’s child support enforcement system, which was handled by the Department of Labor. The agency continues to perform that function even after DCF’s 2013 privatization initiative.

The consultant concluded there was some duplication of effort between the state’s contractors and state CSE staff and suggested eliminating that by assigning duties exclusively to either the contractors or state staff; or, in the short term, by improving communications between the state workers and the contractors.
Thomas said her research on how to improve Kansas’ performance numbers was drawn from how privatization had worked in other places, “especially in Omaha, Wyoming, Tennessee … and North Carolina” where it was done “very well.”

YoungWilliams, according to company literature, has 51 percent of the child support caseload in Wyoming, which is not fully privatized. It has the contract for services in Omaha and has contracts in Tennessee and North Carolina.

Thomas said it wasn’t difficult to persuade her bosses that privatization was the best and quickest way to improve the state’s performance. Kansas ranked 46th in cost effectiveness and was below or near average in the other four performance categories measured by the federal government. Those relatively weak performance numbers were compelling, she said.

“I think they trusted me. I had the knowledge. I had been around and had the expertise. If you want the fast way to get there, this is going to be it, because we’re 15 to 20 years behind everybody else,” she recalled telling them.

New role for chief counsel

Corkins, the new SRS chief counsel appointed by Brownback, also was keen on full privatization of the state’s child support functions, according to multiple sources familiar with the agency’s operations during that period.

Corkins and some other key agency officials had heard about or received a plan for statewide privatization from Wells weeks before Thomas joined the agency, sources said. Corkins, now head of the Office of Administrative Hearings at the Kansas Department of Administration, declined to be interviewed for this story, instead referring questions about his role in the privatization to DCF.

But it is clear from documents and various sources that Corkins played pivotal roles in the agency’s CSE privatization initiative and the contracting process that accompanied it.

Siedlecki, according to former DCF officials, had a less conspicuous role in the CSE privatization initiative, though he was the agency’s chief and the effort encompassed major policy and operational changes.

In any event, by the end of 2011, Siedlecki was gone from the Brownback Cabinet, leaving Kansas under a cloud of controversy prompted by his management and some unpopular changes, including the closing of some SRS regional offices as Brownback budget officials pushed agencies to cut costs.

Siedlecki then went to work at the Department of Children and Families in Florida and within a year played a role there in a scandal involving an agency contract awarded to a campaign donor to Gov. Rick Scott, also a conservative Republican elected in 2010.

By the time Corkins began work at SRS, he already was well known in conservative GOP circles as a “small government” ideologist and advocate for public school vouchers.

He once was the president and sole employee of the Kansas Public Policy Institute and in 2005 was hired by the Kansas board of education to be state education commissioner. His tenure at the education department, however, was brief. He was criticized, among other things, for his lack of experience working in the education field. When moderates regained voting control of the board, he was given a severance payment of $11,000 and moved on.

After Brownback took office, Corkins went back into state government, starting work at SRS on Jan. 18, 2011, the week after the governor was sworn in.

On Feb. 8, 2011, Corkins sent a memo to all SRS attorneys statewide informing them they would answer to him, including the attorneys who worked in the agency’s child support enforcement division.

Historically, most of the CSE lawyers focused on child support casework. But there were a few who were tasked with writing contracts and the requests for proposals that precede contracts. All, however, had answered to the child support enforcement or CSE division director, who, according to the agency’s organizational chart, was subordinate to the deputy secretary of family services.

Corkins announced in the same memo that the CSE director, not an attorney, also would answer to him.
Many CSE staff workers saw the memo as a clear signal that Corkins intended to play a large role in the agency’s child support enforcement functions, unlike his predecessors in the chief counsel’s post.

By March 1, 2013, DCF officials were ready to open bidding on the statewide privatization of its child support enforcement functions.

Twelve organizations submitted proposals, but only YoungWilliams offered bids for all of the state’s 31 judicial districts. In 10 districts, it faced no competition.

Procurement committee selection

When procurement teams were formed to evaluate the proposals, Thomas said she chose not to serve on them “because I know too many people” among the potential bidders.

Even so, according to an email kept in state contract files, Thomas suggested the names for the teams as well as the three-person committee charged with negotiating contracts with the selected firms.

Thomas said she also provided technical input for the request for proposal as it was written, though much of it was “cut and paste” from privatization RFPs used by the states of Wyoming and Tennessee.

“Most privatization contracts all look the same except for a few little things here and there,” she said.

The evaluation team scored YoungWilliams as the strongest bidder on the technical merits.

When the time came in April 2013 to negotiate the contracts, Corkins was named to the procurement negotiating committee, a move that former CSE employees said would have been unusual in earlier administrations.

The three-person teams are required to include one representative from the contracting agency, one representative from the contracts division at the Department of Administration and a third person representing the Secretary of Administration.

In the case of the statewide privatization RFP, however, there were two DCF employees on the procurement negotiating team. Greg Harris, then deputy secretary of DCF administration, was the designee for DCF and Corkins, though still chief counsel at DCF, served on the committee as the representative for the Department of Administration.

Thomas and other DCF officials said it has been routine on all CSE contracts, at least since the Brownback administration began, for the procurement negotiating committee to include two top-level DCF officials and one person from the Department of Administration.

“That’s the way we’ve done all of them,” Thomas said.

But former CSE employees said that was a change.

“All the ones I ever worked on there was someone from D of A (Department of Administration), then the CSE director (from SRS) and then an independent person from D of A, usually an officer from the architect’s office, someone whose function was totally independent of CSE to be sure we were following the rules, not showing any bias,” said one former state CSE employee involved with the agency’s contracting who agreed to speak on condition of anonymity.

Using Corkins and Harrison, both from the DCF executive team, on the procurement committee struck the former employee and others as a significant departure from the way CSE contracts were previously handled.

“That was not the procedure when I was there, and I’m not sure why that change was made,” the source said.

The privatization contracts were based on what is called a “negotiated bid” process, which allows the agency that writes the request for proposal (RFP) and the subsequent contracts considerable leeway to influence or shape the outcome at various points in the process.

“In the context of child support enforcement, the (child support) payment center, or anything else, the (CSE) division determines what’s in or out of an RFP and what the contract will look like,” said a lobbyist familiar with state contracting procedures. “They determine everything that should be covered or not. They develop the RFP and what’s important or not. They develop the scoring systems of what’s relevant and what isn’t. That’s all in the procurement.”

The contracts were awarded to four companies or organizations: YoungWilliams; Lee Fisher, a law firm in Hays; Veritas HHS, a national company based in Denver; and the 18th Judicial District Court Trustee in Wichita.

The total value of the contracts was about $75 million over four years, not counting the options to extend.

YoungWilliams got the award for 23 of the state’s 31 judicial districts, worth about $48.2 million over four years. The company gained a dozen more districts than it had under earlier contracts, including Johnson County.

The bids it submitted in each of the districts it won were lower in cost than the competitors, sometimes significantly so.

Thomas said the award decisions were based solely on cost. The bidder that submitted the lowest-cost proposal in a district won the contract.

YoungWilliams’ success in winning most of the contracts drew some criticism when the awards were announced, including from Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, who had earlier received complaints from state CSE workers informed they would be laid off because of the pending privatization.

“This pay-to-play kind of thing is one of the reasons people distrust politicians and the whole political process,” Hensley told KHI News Service in June 2013, soon after the awards were announced.

But DCF officials said the vendor selection process was cleanly done.

“The only way there could have been any inappropriateness was if somebody had tipped off the bidder to bid low, and as far as we know that never happened,” said DCF spokesperson Freed.
Privatization as policy

Brownback officials said the early results from the June 2013 privatization of child support enforcement look promising.
The federal government requires states to annually report their standings in five performance areas and in at least one of those five — cost effectiveness ratio — DCF officials said they anticipate reporting significant improvement. That indicator is based on the total child support dollars collected versus the cost to collect them. That number had been slowly improving since 2002 but showed marked gains in the first two quarters of 2014, according to preliminary reports prepared by the agency.

Overall, the amount of money collected quarterly has gone down or held steady. But the cost of collecting the same or fewer dollars has been less. In the privatization contracts, the state settled on a flat payment formula that officials said would assure monthly costs of the program remain steady.

Some attribute at least a portion of the reduced costs to the fact that the contractors typically don’t pay as well or offer as generous a benefit package to their workers as the state. Many of the contractors’ employees previously did the same or similar jobs as state employees. One of the Brownback administration’s expectations of the contractors was that they offer jobs to the laid-off state CSE workers.

Others attribute the efficiency gains to a better-streamlined system and the elimination of duplicated services; state employees no longer are doing some of the things also done by contractors and vice versa.

Thomas said she believed, based on the early numbers, that the privatization initiative will cut the program’s costs between $14 million and $16 million in its first year.

However, the trend line doesn’t yet indicate that DCF officials are on track to achieve another goal of privatization: a projected $52 million increase in child support collections in the first three years.

Despite a lack of supporting data to date, Wells, the majority owner of YoungWilliams, said he expects the new system will meet if not exceed the projected $52 million gain in collections.

“That number is easy,” he said. “I’m expecting more like $25 million to $30 million a year,” he said. “I beat that already all around the country, and this is an easy one to do. And the collections will be fairly automatic because the federal wage withholding program is so automated it will work just like magic.”

But several family law attorneys from across the state said they hadn’t seen any benefits yet for the people they work with.

“It doesn’t seem to be working out very well in Johnson County, I can tell you that,” said Ron Nelson, a Lenexa attorney who serves on the Kansas Bar Association’s family law committee and chairs the Johnson County Family Law Bench-Bar Committee.

“Over the years, I’ve received many calls from people searching for a private attorney to help them collect child support or establish a support order,” Nelson said. “In the past, I’ve told them that they can hire me, but ‘You don’t want to because federal law mandates that you be able to request this service from the state and that it’s to be provided at no charge.’ I don’t tell them that anymore because of all the complaints I’ve received — and heard — about how the process is working.

“People throughout the state are frustrated,” he said. “They’re frustrated because the process is taking too long and they can’t get their questions answered.”

Nelson said the feedback he’s received from other family law attorneys working in YoungWilliams districts is that the company’s collection efforts have focused on “the low-hanging fruit, the obligors who have steady jobs that don’t change.”
The more complicated cases, he said, now appear to linger in the system longer than they did prior to full privatization.

“If you’ve got an obligor who has a steady job, all you (the collection enforcer) have to do is establish paternity, obtain a child support order and send it to the employer. It (the child support payments) comes in like clockwork,” Nelson said. “But if you’ve got somebody who’s self-employed, or who doesn’t have regular employment, or who’s a temp worker or who moves around a lot, it requires much more involvement, much more work on the part of the contractor.”

In Johnson County, he said, these cases do not appear to be getting the attention they once did.

Lawyers elsewhere made similar comments.

‘Just ridiculous’

“Our clients have not felt any impact whatsoever in the receiving of child support funds due to privatization. None,” said Bethany Roberts, a managing attorney with Kansas Legal Services in Topeka. “The number of initial filings is way behind what it was when DCF did them, and the bureaucracy is a nightmare. It’s incredibly difficult to get through to a human being. You call their 800 number and you’ll wait for ages, and then you’ll get hung up on. It’s just ridiculous.”

“It’s pretty much exactly the same except we have another layer of administration now,” said Trish Morrical, a family law attorney in Salina, another area served by YoungWilliams. “The idea was that this would be cheaper, faster and easier, but that’s just not turned out to be the case. It’s turned into more paperwork and having another level of administration to deal with.”

Similar reports on the privatization results were heard in areas not served by YoungWilliams.

-Staff writer Trevor Graff contributed to this report.

Kansas agency boosting surplus property visibility

Screen Shot 2014-05-28 at 5.19.46 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An enhanced website and open house are part of efforts by the Kansas Department of Administration to increase public awareness of state surplus property available for purchase.

The agency says in a news release that it launched the website in April to let the public shop online for items ranging from computers to office furniture, supplies and vehicles.

Property is available to the public one month after it’s removed from the agency’s inventory. An open house at the Topeka facility where the items are stored will take place June 6. The warehouse is open Monday through Friday.

The Department of Administration is also using social media to promote items available for sale.

Sunny, warm Wednesday

Screen Shot 2014-05-28 at 5.13.29 AMRelatively low chances for shower and thunderstorms are expected much of this week. Highs will be slightly warmer than normal for late May

Today Sunny, with a high near 91. Light and variable wind becoming east northeast 5 to 8 mph in the morning.
Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 60. East northeast wind 5 to 9 mph becoming light east after midnight.
Thursday Sunny, with a high near 85. Calm wind becoming east southeast 5 to 9 mph in the afternoon.
Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 61. Southeast wind 8 to 13 mph.
Friday A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 87. Southeast wind 8 to 14 mph.
Friday Night A 10 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 7pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.
Saturday A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 87.
Saturday Night A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 67.
Sunday A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 90.

DAVE SAYS: AAA or self-insure?

Dear Dave,
What do you think about auto club memberships like AAA?
Jeremy

Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey

Dear Jeremy,
I’ve got nothing against AAA. But honestly, I tend to self-insure through savings for these kinds of things. I’ve probably used, or had need of, a tow truck twice in the last 20 years. When it comes to this kind of product, I always look at it from the perspective of, “Where does it leave me if I don’t sign up for their service?”

Again, I don’t think AAA is a big rip-off or anything like that. It’s just a type of insurance, if you will, for which I have no need. I guess it could be a handy thing to have if you were in a situation where you were using their services a lot. But if their average customer were like that, they’d probably end up losing money on you.
—Dave

Dave Ramsey is America’s trusted voice on money and business. He has authored five New York Times best-selling books: Financial Peace, More Than Enough, The Total Money Makeover, EntreLeadership and Smart Money Smart Kids. His newest best-seller, Smart Money Smart Kids, was written with his daughter Rachel Cruze and recently debuted at No. 1 on the New York Times best-seller list. The Dave Ramsey Show is heard by more than 8 million listeners each week on more than 500 radio stations. Follow Dave on Twitter at @DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

McHugh shuts down Royals, Astros roll to win

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer 

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Collin McHugh held light-hitting Kansas City at bay over seven innings, and Matt Dominquez drove in the only run the Houston Astros needed in a 3-0 victory over the Royals on Tuesday night.

Houston tacked on two more runs off reliever Tim Collins in the eighth, and Tony Sipp and Chad Qualls breezed through the final two innings without allowing a hit to complete the shutout.

McHugh (3-3) scattered five hits while striking out nine without issuing a walk to earn his first win in five starts. He stranded a runner at third base in the second inning and runners at second and third in the fifth, but otherwise cruised through the Kansas City lineup.

The only run Jeremy Guthrie (2-4) allowed came when Dominquez followed up a pair of one-out walks to Dexter Fowler and Jason Castro with a single in the fourth inning.

Hays High golfers sixth at 5A state tourney

NCKTechculinary
The Hays High Indians came up short in their goal of bringing home a trophy from the 5A state golf tournament at the Wichita Country Club. The Indians shot a 324 to finish sixth which did improve on their eight place finish the two prior years. Kapaun Mt. Carmel wins the team title with a 300. Maize South was second with a 312.

The Indians were led by senior Kaden Beilman and junior Cash Hobson who tied for 26th with an 80. Payton Ruder shot an 81 and tied for 32nd. Kapaun’s Sam Stevens wins the individual title with a 71.

Team Results
1. Kapaun Mt. Carmel  300
2. Maize South  312
3. Bishop Carroll  314
4. St. Thomas Aquinas  314
5. Topeka Seaman  315
6. Hays High  324
7. Blue Valley Southwest  329
8. St. James Academy  330
9. Andover  349
10. Shawnee Heights  353
11. Valley Center  356
12.  Salina Central  361

Individual Results
1. Sam Stevens Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel 36-36–72
2. Caleb Haight Wichita-Heights 36-37–73
3. Jack Reilly Lenexa-St. James Academy 35-39–74
4. Wells Padgett Maize-South 39-35–74
5. Luke Hennes Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas 41-34–75
6. Jared Burns Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel 39-36–75
7. Matthew Gilbaugh Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel 39-37–76
8. Luke Russell Lansing 37-39–76
9. Mitchell Lummis Tecumseh-Shawnee Heights 38-38–76
10. Ruger Hummel Topeka-Seaman 40-36–76
11. Nick Auer Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel 39-38–77
Zach Pitcher Wichita-Heights 39-38–77
Matt Sander Wichita-Bishop Carroll 36-41–77
Max Iseman Wichita-Bishop Carroll 39-38–77
Troy Hilderhof Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas 36-41–77
16. Ben Hadden Shwnee-Mill Valley 41-37–78
Seth Wingerter Overland Park-Blue Valley Southwest 39-39–78
Bobby Armstrong Wichita-Bishop Carroll 38-40–78
19. Mason Wages Topeka-Seaman 39-40–79
Alex Graf Wichita-Kapaun Mt. Carmel 39-40–79
Jake Weller Topeka-Seaman 40-39–79
James Pyle Overland Park-St. Thomas Aquinas 39-40–79
Collin Kasitz Maize-South 42-37–79
Jalen Oehlert Shawnee-Mill Valley 41-38–79
Hayden Padgett Maize-South 40-39–79

5A Individual Results

Hays High Results
T26. Cash Hobson  40-40–80
Kaden Beilman  42-38–80
T32. Payton Ruder  40-41–81
T37. Nathan Romme  43-40–83
T66. Lane Clark  43-46–89
82. Chase Lynd  44-54–98

TMP-Marian fifth at 3A state golf; Megaffin medals

NCKTechculinary

The TMP-Marian golf team shot a 344 to finish fifth at the 3A state golf tournament at Cherry Oaks Golf Course in Cheney. Wichita Collegiate wins the team title with a 302. Hesston was second with a 317 and Sabetha third with a 323. Phillipsburg came in fourth with a 340.

The Monarchs Max Megaffin shot an 82 and finished 20th to lead the Monarchs. Phillipsburg’s Michael Dusin fired a 77 and finished sixth. Collegiate’s Ian Trebilcock was the individual champ with a 71.

Team Results
1. Wichita Collegiate  302
2. Hesston  317
3. Sabetha  323
4. Phillipsburg  340
5. TMP-Marian  344
6. Prairie Village-LCC  349
7. Cheney  366
8. Caney Valley  366
9. Fredonia  368
10. Cimmaron  369
11. Osage City  396
12. Council Grove  405

TMP-Marian Results
Max Megaffin  82
Hayden Rohr  83
Lane Fisher  87
Dan O’Connor 92
Keynan Hysten  111
Joe Heiman  120

Ellis’ Tebo wins 2A state golf title; Trego third in team standings

After winning four regional titles, Ellis’ Skyler Tebo finally has that elusive state championship. Tebo shot a 5-under-par 66 to win the 2A state championship Tuesday at the Fort Hays Municipal Golf Course. Tebo carded seven birdies and finished six strokes ahead of Ellinwood’s Jared Oelke. Trego’s Dion Reetz finished fourth with a 73 and teammate Blake Huxman was sixth with a 75.

The Golden Eagles finished third in the team standings, shooting a 322, four back of first-place Olpe. Plainville came in eighth with a 350.

Team Results
1. Olpe  318
2. Sterling  320
3. Trego  322
4. Ellinwood  323
5. Syracuse  323
6. Pittsburg-Colgan  336
7. Olathe Heritage  350
8. Plainville  350
9. Oberlin  352
10. Republic County  355
11. Washington  402
12. Bennington  403

Individual Results

Stockton finishes 3rd at 1A state golf

The Stockton golf team finished third and Osborne fourth at the 1A state golf tournament at Southwind Country Club in Garden City. The Tigers, who shot a 387 and finished 15 strokes behind first-place Centralia, were led by Casey Duetschers who finished 10th with a 90 and was their lone medalist. Jetmore finished second in the team standings.

Quinter’s Ryan Tebow shot an 84 and finished fifth.

Team Results
1. Centralia  372
2. Jetmore-Hodgeman County  379
3. Stockton  387
4. Osborne  389
5. Ashland  399
6. Wallace County  408
7. Baileyville B & B  412
8. Valley Heights  428
9. Chetopa  432
10. Ingalls  438

Individual Medalists
1. Ryan Vernon Centralia 73
2. Corey McCann Ashland 76
3. Chandler Huddleston Rolla 81
4. Kolt Washburn Jetmore-Hodgeman County 84
5. Ryan Tebow Quinter 84
6. Breylan Berrios Chetopa 87
7. Seth Shriwise Jetmore-Hodgeman County 87
8. Ryan Gfeller Winona-Triplains 88
9. Matt Stutsman Almena-Northern Valley 88
10. Casey Deutschers Stockton 90
11. Jake Tiernan Osborne 92
12 Chad Ryersee Ransom-Western Plains 92
13. Dayde Mader Hoxie 92
14. Justin Burch Osborne 92
15. Peyton Manley Valley Heights 93
16. Michaela Loewen Ingalls 93
17. Cameron Haug Baileyville B & B 93
18. Erik Scott Stockton 94
19. Blade Canter Hutchinson-Central Christian 96
20. Alex Ornelas Ashland 97
21. Dylan Barnett Udall 97
22. Danny Mueting Centralia 97
23. Parkes Wolters Osborne 98
24. Kyle Gfeller Wallace County 98
25. Quade Kay Ashland 98
26. Ryan Allen Stockton 98
27. Brett Burdiek Centralia 100
28. Ryan Janitel Wallace County 101
29. Blake Clayborn Chetopa 101
30. Jared Lawellin Chetopa 101
31. Trevor Briggs Jetmore-Hodgeman County 101
32. Jason Gore Centralia 102
33. Nate Klinge Wallace County 103
34. Alec Doner Valley Heights 103
35. Blake Scism Baileyville B & B 103
36. Reece Hiebert Goessel 104
37. Andrew Meyer Linn 104
38. Mike Swift-Plaschka Moran-Marmaton Valley 104
39. Dylan Schmitz Baileyville B & B 104
40. Matt Wilder Salina-St. John Militaryy 105
41. Cayden Conyac Stockton 105
42. Lee Schrader Minneola 106
43. Cade Allen Wallace County 106
44. Michael Burnett Rolla 106
45. Chase McGatlin Linn 106
46. Derick Coomes Kensington-Thunder Ridge 106
47. Patrick Hale Valley Heights 106
48. Peyton Taylor Hoxie 107
49. Kendrick Baker Minneola 107
50. Trace Klein Jetmore-Hodgeman County 107
51. Mitch Covey Moran-Marmaton Valley 107
52. Brett Kenworthy Frankfort 107
53. Tanner Conway Osborne 107
54. Chipper Harms Jetmore-Hodgeman County 108
55. Kaleb Conway Osborne 108
56. Zane Ward Greeley County 109
57. Eric Gfeller Wallace County 110
58. Joe Jefferis Moran-Marmaton Valley 111
59. Isaac Baxa Ingalls 111
60. Taylor James Jetmore-Hodgeman County 111
61. Eric Embers Hutch-Central Christian 112
62. Chase Boyce Centralia 112
63. Trevor Holthaus Baileyville B & B 112
64. Ryan Millershaski Ingalls 113
65. Christian Hamel Stockton 113

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