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KU Med Center will hold ‘Sizzlin’ Summer 2014’ in Hays

07.17-18.14 Sizzlin Summer

The registration deadline for this year’s ‘Sizzlin’ Summer 2014: A Patchwork of Care’ — sponsored by the KU Medical Center Area Health Education West — is Thursday.

The two-day program for rural health care providers will be July 17 and 18 at Whiskey Creek.

This year’s program will feature topics such as national patient safety goals, healthy work environments, leadership, and evidence-based practice at bedside. There also will be a self-defense presentation.

Online registration is available at www.kumc.edu/AHECcalendar. Call (785) 628-6128 for more information.

13th Street and water warning on Thursday city agenda

By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

On Thursday night, Hays City Commissioners are scheduled to vote on the design agreement for the 13th Street from Main to Milner project.

hays city logo

Renovations will include the reconstruction of all sidewalks, curbs and parking areas along the street, installation of brick accents in the intersections and parking spots, a monument sign, and decorative street lights from Oak to Milner. The project also will include some waterline and sewer improvements.

Professional Engineering Consultants of Wichita has submitted the low bid of $95,000 for the design agreement for the project and staff members are recommending that the commission accept it. The current design schedule calls for a construction bid opening in January 2015 with construction beginning during the 2015 construction season.

Commissioners also will consider moving the city’s water status from “Water Warning” to “Water Watch.”

At last week’s work session, Bernie Kitten, director of utilities, said that the water levels at the Smoky Hill wellfield are well above the “watch status” because of the significant June rainfall. Meanwhile, the Big Creek wellfields did not change much — but do remain above a watch level.

POLL: Should the city of Hays return to a Stage 1 Water Watch?

The current drought forecast released by the National Weather Service also lists the Hays area “at a line” of possibly going out of the drought. Because of these factors, city staff is recommending that the commission move from a warning down to a watch.

Commissioners also will consider:

• A 2015 wage agreement with the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 48 that will provide members with a one-time 2 percent bonus, paid biweekly beginning with the first payroll in 2015.

• Approving a new city ordinance that will exempt the draining of pools and hot tubs from the prohibition of water escaping the property, however the new ordinance would impose a fine for draining them into alleys. The issue was brought up in a June work session by Commissioner Ron Mellick.

The meeting will take place at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at City Hall.

Click HERE for a complete agenda.

Lawrence cracks down on fireworks violations

fireworksLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — In response to complaints from residents, Lawrence police cracked down on violators of the city’s ban on fireworks this year.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports police issued 34 citations for violating the citywide ban on fireworks in the week between June 30 and July 6. That’s 10 times more than the average of three citations in previous years.

Police spokesman Trent McKinley says officers responded to 226 calls about fireworks this year, up from the average of 204 calls between 2008 and 2013.

The department assigned several officers to fireworks calls this year. McKinley says that and a slower-than-normal July 4 evening contributed to more citations.

Lawrence banned fireworks within city limits in 2002 but has done little to enforce the ban in previous years.

KHP reports on activity over holiday weekend

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TOPEKA — The Kansas Highway Patrol released data from their Independence Day holiday weekend activity. It began at 6 p.m. Thursday through 11:59 p.m. Sunday.

The KHP worked one fatal crash, which was not alcohol-related, and resulted in one death.

Information in the table is compared to the Independence Day holiday activity from 2013.

There was one additional day on the 2013 reporting period, due to July 4 holiday falling on a Thursday.

State delays rollout of system to prevent fraud

Screen Shot 2014-07-09 at 7.07.36 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The state has again delayed implementation of a new computer system designed to prevent fraud and improve efficiency in applications for social services.

The state said Tuesday no firm date is set to take the $135 million computer system online. The program, called KEES, or Kansas Eligibility and Enforcement System, was originally to go live by Oct. 1, 2013.

Sara Belfry, spokeswoman for the state’s health department, said a pilot program test last month persuaded the department to delay the rollout again.

KEES is intended to bring together enrollments for all programs in the federal-state Medicaid programs.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports  startup costs of the project were $85 million, with $60 million from the federal government, followed by an additional $10 million per year for five years for maintenance.

 

HPD activity log, July 8

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The Hays Police Department conducted 23 traffic stops and received 11 animal calls on Tuesday, July 8, according to the HPD activity log.

Criminal damage to property, 1700 block Eisenhower, 12:40 a.m.
Welfare check, no location provided, 1:18 a.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 1500 block Henry, 3:47 a.m.
Bicycle/lost, found, stolen, 400 block East 14th, 7:37 a.m.
Civil dispute, 2700 block Vine, 9:23 a.m.
Violation of restraining order, 1700 block Golden Belt, 5:19 a.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 400 West 10th, 9:48 a.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 400 block West 10th, 9:49 a.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 400 block West 10th, 9:50 a.m.
Drug offenses, 500 block East Eighth, 9:52 a.m.
Identity theft, 2500 block Sherman, 10:32 a.m.
Abandoned vehicle, 200 block East 20th, 10:41 a.m.
Animal injured, 200 block East 19th, 11:05 a.m.
Animal at large, 1700 block Ash, 11:10 a.m.
Motor vehicle accident/private property, 300 block Mopar, 1:15 p.m.
Animal at large, 2200 block Marjorie, 1:15 p.m.
Criminal damage to property, 100 block West 14th, 3:16 p.m.
Welfare check, 2200 block Centennial, 3:19 p.m.
Found/lost property, Hays,3:33 p.m.
Motor vehicle accident, 2700 block Vine, 2:45 p.m.

First winner of ‘Push for 5,000’ contest announced

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To show our appreciation to readers, Hays Post recently announced the “Push for 5,000” contest. Five of our 5,000-plus Facebook fans will be chosen at random to receive a special prize.

ARROW HESS of Hays is the first winner and will receive a $100 gift card or credit at any local Hays Post advertiser.

Four more winners will be announced in the coming weeks. Stay tuned to Eagle Radio, and thanks for reading HaysPost.com.

Get the latest local news, sports and information via Facebook.

KHAZ Country Music News: No Garth Concerts for Ireland

khaz garth brooks 20140708“It is with great regret that Aiken Promotions announces that the five-concert Garth Brooks Comeback Special Event at Croke Park has been canceled,” Peter Aiken said in a statement issued Tuesday. “No concerts will take place. The ticket return process will be outlined Wednesday. Aiken Promotions has exhausted all avenues regarding the staging of this event. We are very disappointed for the 400,000 fans who purchased tickets.” Brooks’ sold-out Dublin, Ireland shows were scheduled to take place July 25-29, and he’d given the city an ultimatum this weekend after only three shows were granted permits. He’s expected to address the cancellation during Thursday’s (7/10) press conference.

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

Fourth of July accidents result in DUI arrests

Hays PostHays police

The Hays Police Department arrested two people for driving under the influence in two separate Fourth of July accidents.

The first occurred on July 4 shortly after 4:30 p.m., according to HPD Lt. Brandon Wright.

Wright said Marla Stroup, 52, Hays, was driving a 2002 Lexus on Old U.S. 40 before losing control of the vehicle and leaving the roadway.

Stroup reportedly hit a trailer at Southgate Mobile Park, wiping out the trailer’s deck and hitting a truck before coming to a stop.

The second incident occurred at 6:15 p.m. on the 2700 block of Thunderbird.

According to Wright, Laura Engel, 19, Hays, was driving a Nissan Altima when the vehicle left the roadway and hit a retaining wall on the lawn of residential property.

No injuries were reported in either accident.

Over the holiday weekend, a total of seven arrests were made for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs.

Related story: Highway patrol reports on holiday weekend activity.

Longoria has 2 RBIs, Rays top Royals

By MARK DIDTLER
Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The Tampa Bay Rays got the key hits and outs when they needed. them

Evan Longoria drove in two runs, Jeremy Hellickson went 4 1-3 innings in his season debut, and the Rays beat the Kansas City Royals 4-3 on Tuesday night.

“We have to win these games like this,” Tampa Bay manager Joe Maddon said. “We’re used to doing this in the past. We’re starting to get that feeling back again now.”

The Rays opened the sixth with three consecutive hits, including a two-run single by Longoria off Jason Vargas (8-4), to take a 2-1 lead. Vargas, who allowed two runs and six hits in 5 2-3 innings, was coming off seven innings in the Royals’ 4-0 win Wednesday against Minnesota.

The Royals went 2 for 12 with runners in scoring position, had at least one baserunner every inning, and left 11 on base.

The fourth-place Rays, winners of 10 of their last 13 games, are nine games behind AL East-leading Baltimore.

Hellickson, coming back after arthroscopic surgery on his right elbow in January, gave up one run and six hits.

“I was pretty anxious,” Hellickson said. “Had a few butterflies floating around when I was warming up in the outfield. It felt really good to get back on a mound in a big league game.”

James Loney had an RBI double and Logan Forsythe hit a sacrifice fly as Tampa Bay took a 4-1 lead in the eighth. The Rays were aided when Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar fielded Longoria’s grounder with no outs, but was beaten to second base by Brandon Guyer, who had a leadoff bunt single.

“I think Escy thought he was closer to the bag,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “Omar (Infante) was standing right on it, and I think Escy thought he was a little closer to the bag. Both guys had pretty good speed. Flip it to Omar and you get one. He was taking a shot at getting two, but he was a step farther than he needed to be on that play.”

Salvador Perez had three RBIs, including a two-run single off Jake McGee in the ninth that pulled the Royals within 4-3. McGee ended the game by striking out Infante with a runner on second.

“Jake didn’t break,” Maddon said.

McGee, the fourth Tampa Bay reliever, went the final 1 1-3 innings for his sixth save. The left-hander entered with two on and two outs in the eighth, and got a flyball from pinch-hitter Danny Valencia.

Kansas City’s Lorenzo Cain reached base five times — four hits and a walk. The Royals went 1 for 10 with runners in scoring position through eight innings.

Brad Boxberger (2-1) replaced Hellickson in the fifth with runners on first and third with one out and gave up an RBI grounder to Perez that put Kansas City ahead 1-0.

NOTES: The Royals signed LHP Joe Saunders to a minor league deal and will assign him to Triple-A Omaha. … Maddon said OF David DeJesus (broken left hand) should be back by early August, while OF Wil Myers (broken right wrist) could return in mid-August. … Yost said OF Nori Aoki (strained left groin) could return just before or right after the All-Star break. … Tampa Bay SS Yunel Escobar (shoulder) started a rehab assignment with Single-A Charlotte. … Royals RHP Yordano Ventura (6-7) and Rays RHP Alex Cobb (4-6) are the scheduled starters for the series finale Wednesday night.

 

Dodge City pastor gets probation in sex abuse case

CourtDODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Dodge City pastor will serve three years of probation for sexual battery in a plea deal that dropped six other felony charges, including rape.

Eighty-year-old Jerrold Wayne Ketner was sentenced Tuesday. He was arrested in March after a woman who went to him for counseling reported she had been raped and molested for several months.
The woman told KWCH-TV that Ketner demanded sex when she could not pay him. She videotaped one of the visits and turned it over to police.

Ford County Judge Leigh Hood cited Ketner’s age, health and lack of prior convictions when announcing the sentence.

Ketner will not have to pay restitution, do any community service or register as a sexual offender. He cannot have contact with the victim or her husband.

 

Conflicting views of Court’s contraception decision cloud other cases

Screen Shot 2014-06-30 at 10.30.13 AMBy Julie Rovner
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Supreme Court’s decision last week that some for-profit corporations don’t have to comply with the contraceptive coverage mandate under the Affordable Care Act may have raised more questions than it answered. Expect confusion – and arguments – as lower court judges and the Supreme Court itself apply the decision to other cases.

This became apparent soon after the Hobby Lobby ruling when the court granted a temporary injunction to Wheaton College, a Christian school in Illinois. The college argued in a lawsuit that the special provisions provided by the Obama administration allowing it to escape the mandate are still insufficient.

But the order for the college, citing the Hobby Lobby ruling earlier in the week, created some confusion over whether Wheaton employees would still get access to contraceptives under the law. And the order provoked a blistering dissent from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by the court’s two other female members, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan. They argued that the majority already was breaking with the precedent it established only days earlier.

Here are some of the questions raised by the Hobby Lobby case and the remaining cases also challenging the contraceptive coverage mandate.

What is the contraceptive mandate?

As part of the Affordable Care Act, most health insurance plans are required to cover, with no cost-sharing beyond premiums, a wide array of preventive health benefits. For women, that includes all contraceptives approved by the Food and Drug Administration, as well as sterilization procedures and patient education and counseling.

The mandate does not include coverage of RU-486 (mifepristone), the drug used for medical abortions after a pregnancy has been established. But it does require coverage of emergency contraceptives and intrauterine devices, which some believe can prevent the implantation of a fertilized egg. (Newer research suggests that is probably not the case, by the way.)

Who has sued to try to block the mandate?

There have been two separate sets of court cases challenging the contraceptive coverage requirements.

The first set comes from for-profit corporations that, under the law and accompanying federal regulations, are required to provide the benefits as part of their insurance plans. According to the National Women’s Law Center, for-profit firms have filed 50 cases, while the Becket Fund for Religious Justice, which is representing many of those suing, counts 49. Most of those companies charged that the requirement to provide some or all of the contraceptives in question violated their rights under a 1993 federal law, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA).

The cases filed by Hobby Lobby, a nationwide arts-and-crafts chain, and Conestoga Wood Specialties, a Pennsylvania cabinet-making firm, were the first of those to reach the Supreme Court for a full hearing.

Religious nonprofit entities, mostly religious colleges and universities and health facilities, filed the second set of cases. The NWLC counts 59 nonprofit cases; the Becket fund, 51.

The Obama administration, under regulations issued by the Department of Health and Human Services in 2013, is not requiring those organizations to directly “contract, arrange, pay for, or refer” employees to contraceptive coverage. But the organizations say the process by which they can opt out of providing the coverage, which involves filling out a form and sending it to their insurance company or third-party administrator, still violates their religious beliefs by making them “complicit” in providing something they consider sinful.

What did the Supreme Court rule in the Hobby Lobby case?

The majority opinion written by Justice Samuel Alito said that “closely held corporations,” including those like Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood Specialties, can exercise religious rights under RFRA. Further, because the Obama administration was requiring those firms to directly provide the coverage, rather than offer them the same accommodation it was offering religious nonprofit groups, the requirement was not “the least restrictive means” of ensuring that women can get contraception and thus a violation of the law.

In making the case for Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood, Justice Alito went out of his way to praise the accommodation for religious nonprofits, saying it “does not impinge on the plaintiffs’ religious beliefs that providing insurance coverage for the contraceptives at issue here violates their religion and it still serves HHS’ stated interests.”

What impact has the Hobby Lobby decision had on pending nonprofit cases?

A fairly substantial one. Later that same day the Hobby Lobby decision was handed down, a federal appeals court in Atlanta cited it in issuing an injunction against enforcing the mandate against the Eternal Word Television Network.

But the real fireworks erupted on July 3, when the Supreme Court granted its own injunction in the case filed by Wheaton College.

The unsigned order required the college to write to the Secretary of Health and Human Services, stating “that it is a nonprofit organization that holds itself out as religious and has religious objections to providing coverage for contraceptive services.” The order specifically said the college “need not use the form prescribed by the government, EBSA Form 700, and need not send copies to health insurance issuers or third party administrators.”

Justices Sotomayor, Ginsburg and Kagan were furious.

“Those who are bound by our decisions usually believe they can take us at our word. Not so today,” Sotomayor wrote. “After expressly relying on the availability of the religious nonprofit accommodation to hold that the contraceptive coverage requirement violates RFRA as applies to closely-held for-profit corporations, the court now, as the dissent in Hobby Lobby feared it might … retreats from that position.”

What happens now?

The court made clear that in granting Wheaton College its injunction (as it did earlier this year in a case filed by the Denver-based Little Sisters of the Poor), it was not prejudging the case. “This order should not be viewed as an expression of the Court’s views on the merits,” it said.

But what is less clear is whether people covered by the health plans of those nonprofit organizations that are still in litigation will have access to no-copay contraceptive coverage.

The Supreme Court majority appears to think they can be covered. “Nothing in this interim order affects the ability of the applicant’s employees and students to obtain, without cost, the full range of FDA approved contraceptives,” the order said. “The government contends the applicant’s health issuer and third-party administrator are required by federal law to provide full contraceptive coverage regardless whether the applicant completes EBSA Form 700.”

The Obama administration, however, seems not so sure that will happen. “An injunction pending appeal would deprive hundreds of employees and students and their dependents of coverage for these important services,” the Justice Department wrote in its memorandum to the court.

One thing is clear: Many more of these cases are yet to be decided by many more courts.

Three from western Kan. hospitalized after vehicle goes airborne, rolls

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMBURDETT — Three people were injured in a rollover accident just after 2 p.m. Tuesday in Pawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2012 GMC Sierra driven by Nikki L. Backstrom, 33, Ness City, was northbound on 370th Road, 5 miles west of Burdett. The vehicle hit a bump in the road and went airborne.

The driver lost control of the vehicle, rolling into the east ditch.

Backstrom and passengers in the vehicle Megan N. Janke, 33, Buhler, and a 10-year old child were transported to Pawnee Valley Community Hospital.

The KHP reported Backstrom and the child were not wearing seat belts.

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