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Moran joins push to Improve military mental health services

Screen Shot 2014-05-20 at 6.00.20 AMWASHINGTON, D.C. – As part of his continued efforts to improve access to quality behavioral health treatment for all Americans, U.S. Senator Jerry Moran sent a letter Monday with U.S. Senators Roy Blunt (Mo.) and Debbie Stabenow (Mich.) calling on the U.S. Departments of Defense (DoD) and Veterans Affairs to explain their findings on two mental health studies by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) regarding treatment for service members deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan and their families.
The bipartisan letter comes in the wake of the Fort Hood, Texas tragedy and reports of lax mental health services at the St. Louis VA hospital. The Senators sent the letter in advance of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) mark-up this week. Blunt serves as a member of both the defense appropriations and authorizing committees. Moran is a member of the Veterans’ Affairs Committee.
In the letter, the Senators highlighted their concern with the reports’ conclusion that “‘screening, assessment, and treatment approaches for psychological health problems are not always implemented between and within DOD and VA in a consistent manner or aligned with the evidence base, which threatens the delivery of high-quality care and hampers evaluation efforts.’”
Moran and Stabenow also joined together to co-sponsor Blunt’s bipartisan “Caring For America’s Heroes Act” to bring mental health treatment in-line with the way physical injuries are treated under TRICARE. In addition, Blunt and Stabenow successfully worked together to pass a version of the “Excellence in Mental Health Act” last month to address the nation’s fragmented mental health system.

Hays High golf wins regional tournament

NCKTechcarpentryhouse
By DUSTIN ARMBRUSTER
Hays Post

The Hays High Indians shot a team score of 321 on Monday, earning a trip to Wichita and the 5A State Golf Tournament.  Hays High definitely had to be considered the favorite in the field playing on their home course at Smoky Hill Country Club.  Hays won by 23 strokes over Valley Center who shot a 343.  Valley Center and Salina Central (362) also qualified for the state tournament.

The Indians placed four in the Top 10.  Payton Ruder and Kaden Beilman both fired a 76 to tie for first.  The playoff was won by Ruder on the first hole.  Nathan Romme was 5th with an 82 and Cash Hobson ended the day in a three way tie for 8th, carding an 87 and finishes eighth by winning the playoff on the second hole.

Hays will play at the Wichita Country Club on Tuesday, May 27th.  State information can be found at https://www.kshsaa.org/Public/Golf/StateBoys.cfm

HHS Coach Mark Watts

Related story: TMP golfers take regional title in Norton.

 

TMP-Marian golfers take Norton Regional title

NCKTechcarpentryhouse
TMP-Marian placed four golfers in the top-10 to win the Norton 3A Regional. The Monarchs shot a 333 at the Prairie Dog Golf Course and win by 18 shots over Phillipsburg who also qualifies for state.

Max Megaffin was the top individual medalist, shooting a 5-over-par 75 to win by two strokes. Hayden Rohr fired a 79 to finish third, Lane Fisher carded an 89 and was seventh while Dan O’Connor had a 90 and came in eighth.

The Monarchs will play Tuesday at Cherry Oaks in Cheney.

Sunny, warm Tuesday

Above normal temperatures continue today with a chance of severe storms Wednesday and Thursday. Thunderstorm chances continue Friday into Screen Shot 2014-05-20 at 5.15.20 AMthis weekend.

Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. North wind 7 to 13 mph.
Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 63. Northeast wind 10 to 14 mph.
Wednesday A 10 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly sunny, with a high near 89. Northeast wind 13 to 17 mph.
Wednesday Night A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. East northeast wind 10 to 13 mph.
Thursday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 3pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Partly sunny, with a high near 85. Southeast wind 9 to 14 mph.
Thursday Night A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Friday A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 7am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 81.
Friday Night A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62.

 

Western Kan. hog farm expansion raises questions about water use

The Ladder Creek farm site in Greeley County is the largest hog-growing facility in Kansas. -Photo by Phil Cauthon
The Ladder Creek farm site in Greeley County is the largest hog-growing facility in Kansas. -Photo by Phil Cauthon

By TREVOR GRAFF
KHI News Service

TRIBUNE — Even as Greeley County farmers are counting water by the drop, Seaboard Farms plans to increase production at its giant hog facility near here, bringing as many as 396,000 hogs to an exhausted area of the Ogallala Aquifer.

Seaboard Farms’ planned expansion at its Ladder Creek facility would make it the second largest of its kind in the country. The plan, approved by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment in March, has some local residents and environmentalists questioning its prudence and feasibility.

“They’re (water officials) telling farmers out here to cut back irrigation,” said Julie Samuelson, publisher of the Western Times, a newspaper in Sharon Springs. “Water has become a big bone of contention out here – just the fact that you tell one form of agriculture you have to cut down your water use, but then let corporate agriculture use more.”

Samuelson said one farmer near the Ladder Creek site has only five years of groundwater left at his home and that several families have moved from their farms to town after their wells became too expensive to operate.

Groundwater Management District No. 1 is considering measures to cut irrigation in the area by as much as 20 percent in the coming months.

Even so, Seaboard’s new permit allows it to boost head counts at the Ladder Creek facility from 132,000 mature, 275-pound hogs to 198,000 mature hogs or 396,000 hogs still in growing stages. Increasing the number of hogs also will significantly increase the amount of water used at the facility.

Spokespeople for Seaboard did not return calls seeking comment.

Local farmers object

In written testimony to the agency during the permit process, several local farmers asked KDHE to withhold approval of the expansion, citing the area’s lack of water.

But KDHE officials said that once water rights are established, water quantity is not a factor in the agency’s final permitting process.

“Once the Department of Water Resources has issued the water rights for them, then water quantity goes on DWR (Division of Water Resources), and we just worry about water quality,” said Terry Medley, chief of the Livestock Waste Management Section at KDHE’s Bureau of Water. “But we do verify that they have the water rights.”

Lane Letourneau, water appropriations program manager at the state Division of Water Resources, said Seaboard purchased existing rights in the area in compliance with state regulations.

Water levels in the aquifer dropped more than 51 inches in 2012 and have dropped 14 feet since 1996, according to the Kansas Geological Survey.

“The appropriations far exceed the current recharge, and so it’s running at a tremendous deficit now,” said Duane Schrag, co-conservation chair of the Kansas Sierra Club. “Any potential attempt to get more water out only accelerates that process.”

In January 2013, DWR granted Ladder Creek term permits allowing for the pumping of 158.61 million gallons of groundwater for industrial use over the course of the year.

But even with the permit, Ladder Creek has struggled to maintain the required water levels in its anaerobic sewage lagoons, which are designed to control odor and assist in breaking down manure generated by the hogs. The lagoons require the proper volume of water for the growth of bacteria to break down the waste and control odor.

In December 2012, KDHE officials gave the Ladder Creek site a variance from the permit when they did not meet the 14-foot water level requirements. At the time of inspection, Seaboard was told to submit a plan to bring the lagoons into compliance by Jan. 31, 2013.

Agency records show that Seaboard began filling the lagoons on Feb. 7, 2013, after submitting a plan to be compliant in six to eight months. The department approved.

“They (KDHE officials) say, ‘Well, they don’t have enough water, so we’re going to grant them a variance’ and then they turn right around and allow them to increase the size of this facility by 50 percent,” Volland said. “That just does not compute.”

Environmentalists said KDHE is not a particularly strong enforcer of its own regulations, noting that in Wichita County, the department allowed a smaller hog farm to operate more than three years on an expired permit from June 2008 to October 2011.

Current Kansas law doesn’t distinguish between smaller hog operations and one the size of the Ladder Creek facility. A facility with 10,000 hogs is held to the same standard as one with 198,000 mature hogs.

“Really we just make sure that each one meets the statute’s regulations, and if they do then we really don’t have a whole lot of authority to make them do something different,” Medley said. “We’re making sure they’re following the requirements to protect water quality, and that’s all we have the authority to do.”

Medley said he saw no need to change the law to account for the added size of a facility such as Ladder Creek.

Beyond water quantity issues, some local residents and environmentalists question the site’s compliance with federal Clean Water Act guidelines, which are administered by KDHE. They said the expansion would make controlling odor from the site’s sewage lagoons more difficult.

“Our principal concern is our sense that the neighbors to such a large facility – the neighbors who didn’t benefit economically by sale of the land, for example – are being really unfairly treated because they have to suffer the consequences of these things,” said Craig Volland, agriculture chair of the Kansas Chapter of the Sierra Club. “They get no economic recovery from it.”

Trusting Seaboard

At Ladder Creek, KDHE is trusting Seaboard to verify the number of hogs on site. The hog population correlates directly to the amount of waste generated and the odor produced.

“We do have the authority to go in the barns. We typically don’t because they (Seaboard officials) submit monthly reports or keep them on site,” Medley said. “The monthly reports indicate how many head are on site, and then they submit an annual report that also gives the maximum number that they’ve had on site during the year.”

Medley said the company also provides a report on the amount of waste generated at the facility.

“We can pretty much correlate the number on site with the waste generated. Unless we see a huge discrepancy in those numbers, we really don’t take the risk of going inside the barns and spreading disease,” he said.

Disease has become a major issue in confined swine operations. Porcine epidemic diarrhea virus, or PEDv, has spread to 27 states, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The USDA announced in April a program requiring the pork industry to report all cases of the virus and will be working closely with state agencies to stem its spread.

To keep the virus from entering the Ladder Creek site, Seaboard is among producers taking extra precautions, including postponing state inspections.

A November 2012 letter from Seaboard to KDHE stated that the company quarantined its Kansas operations and had “postponed all inspections in Kansas sites due to bio-security issues.”

Medley said there was nothing unusual about that.

“They can’t completely deny or make it unreasonable for us to go,” Medley said. “We do have our own biosecurity protocols, and we follow theirs as well.”

New approach needed

With water supply and quality issues growing in importance, Kansas policymakers should examine state laws to determine whether they are adequate to protect the public interest, said Roger McEowen, director at the Center for Agricultural Law and Taxation at Iowa State University.

McEowen isn’t convinced that they are.

“Some people are going to claim that they’re violating state law,” McEowen said. “No, they’re not. This is permissible, but is this the best policy going forward into the future where there will be battles over scarcer resources? That’s the real issue.”

He said Kansas might want to consider a water use system like Nebraska’s. There, he said, both surface and groundwater use are directly linked and water rights are given with stricter consideration of what consumption might mean to neighboring holders of water rights.

“The system that we have had in Kansas for some time – with the chief engineer at the Division of Water Resource’s authority, the groundwater management districts, the local people – you have to ask, ‘Is that system functioning to protect all parties’ vested right?’” McEowen said. “People in policymaking positions have really got to think through this and get up to speed on it.”

KHP seeking assistance identifying possible car in hit-and-run fatality

hit and run

Kansas Highway Patrol

The Kansas Highway Patrol has an interest in locating a vehicle possibly involved in a pedestrian death in Cloud County. It’s believed the vehicle possibly involved is a 1998-2002 Oldsmobile Intrigue or a 1997-2005 Buick Century or Regal. This information was gathered from vehicle debris at the scene when law enforcement arrived.

The Kansas Highway Patrol continues to actively investigate various aspects of this event and is asking for any information that may lead law enforcement to locating the vehicle and driver involved.

On Saturday, May 3rd, 2014 the Kansas Highway Patrol responded to a call of an injured female on the west shoulder of US-81 Highway at Vale Road, north of Concordia.

The victim was located and later transported by emergency personnel to Salina Regional Health Center, where she died from her injuries. It is believed the woman was struck as a result of a hit and run collision, which occurred at approximately 12:20 am on May 3. The victim was identified as 48-year-old Lisa McFarlane, of age from Concordia, Kansas.

The investigation is ongoing and the KHP is attempting to identify and locate the driver and vehicle involved in this incident.

If you have any information regarding this collision, contact the Kansas Highway Patrol Troop C Headquarters at (785) 827-3065.

Kansas wheat condition declines as drought endures

Screen Shot 2014-05-20 at 5.05.40 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The condition of the Kansas winter wheat crop continues to decline despite spotty rains that relieved drought pressure in central eastern parts of the state.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Monday that 59 percent of the winter wheat is in poor to very poor condition. About 29 percent is listed as fair, with just 11 percent rated as good and 1 percent excellent.

The agency says that with pasture grasses shortened by drought, some producers are turning cattle out to graze the failed wheat.

The weekly report also said cool temperatures slowed crop development, and freezing temperatures in parts of Kansas kept many farmers from putting seed in the ground.

About 86 percent of the state’s corn has now been planted, along with 7 percent of sorghum and 32 percent of soybeans.

 

Kansas State sticking by Romero transfer decision

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) – Kansas State is standing by its decision to deny a transfer request from talented guard Leticia Romero in a case that has begun to draw national interest.

Romero sought a release from her scholarship after the school fired Deb Patterson, the coach who had recruited her. Romero then met with an appeals committee last month and was again denied her release. The freshman guard has been trying to gain her release ever since.

In a letter that surfaced this week, Kansas State athletic director John Currie asked appeals committee member Pat Bosco to consider new information and “potentially approve her request.”

Kansas State vice president Jeffrey Morris said in a statement late Wednesday that “the final and binding nature of these (appeals committee) decisions does not allow them to be overturned by university administrators.”

White Sox rally from 5-run hole, beat Royals

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Alexei Ramirez homered and drove in four runs, Dayan Viciedo and Paul Konerko also went deep and the Chicago White Sox climbed out of a five-run hole before holding on for a wild 7-6 win over the Kansas City Royals on Monday night.

Zach Putnam (2-0) worked two shutout innings in relief of Scott Carroll, and Ronald Belisario also threw two scoreless innings before Scott Downs and Jake Petricka bailed out Matt Lindstrom.

Lindstrom, normally the White Sox closer, gave up a leadoff single to Nori Aoki in the ninth, then appeared to hurt his foot fielding a sacrifice bunt by Alcides Escobar that resulted in an error. Downs entered and struck out Eric Hosmer, then Petricka picked off pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson at second base before getting Billy Butler on a groundout to end the game.

Guthrie strong in Royals’ win over White Sox

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Jeremy Guthrie, Wade Davis and Greg Holland combined on a four-hitter and the Kansas City Royals beat the Chicago White Sox 3-1 Wednesday night to avoid being swept in their three-game series.

The White Sox had scored 14 runs and hit five home runs in the first two games.

Guthrie, who is winless in seven starts since an April 9 victory over Tampa Bay, left after seven innings with the score 1-1. He gave up three hits, walked two and struck out two.

Wade Davis (3-1) struck out two in a flawless eighth and has tossed 10 scoreless innings in his last nine appearances. Greg Holland logged his 13th save in 14 chances, but not before giving up a single to Dayan Viciedo and walking Adam Dunn in the ninth.

Left-hander Jose Quintana (2-4) gave up three runs on eight hits over 7 1-3 innings for Chicago.

La Crosse golf finishes second at own Sand Green Regional

La Crosse has qualified for state, finishing second in their own Sand Greens Regional. The Leopards shot a 353 and finished nine strokes behind Bird City-Cheylin.

The Leopards Shane Miller shot an 81 to win the individual title. Taylor Yohe fired an 84 and finished fourth. Chase Klozenbucher carded an 89 to place seventh.

The Leopards will be in Leonardville for state on Tuesday.

Kansas man dies in Monday rollover accident

fatal crashPERRY, Kan. – A Kansas man died in a Monday afternoon crash in Jefferson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Scion van driven by Ronald C. Heugel, 71, Lenexa was traveling westbound on U.S. 24 three miles east of K-237.

The vehicle left the highway and entered the north shoulder.

The driver overcorrected, re-entered the highway and the vehicle slid across the highway into the southbound ditch and began to roll, coming to rest on a high-tension wire facing northwest.

Heugel was pronounced dead at the scene.
The KHP reported he was wearing a seat belt.

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