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NW Kan. cities will receive KDOT funding for road projects

Kansas Department of Transportation

Forty-six projects that will improve intersections and road deficiencies in Kansas cities have been selected for funding through two Kansas Department of Transportation programs.

Seventeen cities will receive a combined total of approximately $9 million in state funding under the Geometric Improvement (GI) program. And, 29 cities will receive a combined total of about $5.4 million under the City Connecting Links (KLINK) program, which funds improvements to state highways that extend through cities.

Under the GI program, a city contributes up to 25 percent of the project cost based on its population. Cities under 2,500 in population aren’t required to provide a match. GI projects typically improve drainage, capacity and intersections, add turning lanes and more.

KLINK projects involve maintenance work such as resurfacing and are funded up to $200,000.

“These programs are very popular with Kansas cities, and every year we receive many more requests for projects than we can fund,” said Kansas Transportation Secretary Mike King. “As a result, funding for the GI program next year will be increased by $2 million, for a total annual commitment of $8 million. And, to catch up with inflation, the maximum state contribution per project under the KLINK program next year will go up 50 percent to $300,000.”

The maximum state contribution for a GI project will be increased to $1 million.

Cities selected for the GI program and the maximum state contribution include:

Seneca, $400,000; Silver Lake, $125,000; Clifton, $700,000; Grandview Plaza, $650,000; Russell, $650,000; Hoxie, $700,000; Sharon Springs, $50,000; Baxter Springs, $650,000; Ottawa, $400,000; Hutchinson, $65,000; Wellington, $725,000; Dodge City, $600,000; Elkhart, $500,000; Leavenworth, $750,000; Osborne, $700,000; Brownell, $700,000; and Independence, $650,000.

Cities selected for the KLINK program and the amounts awarded include:

Emporia, $200,000; Alma, $180,106; Oskaloosa, $144,407; Atchison, $200,000; Lawrence, $200,000; Concordia, $200,000; McPherson, $151,148; Clay Center, $200,000; Junction City, $200,000; Moundridge, $200,000; Abilene, $200,000; Coffeyville, $149,999; Pittsburg, $167,592; Independence, $185,184; Parsons, $200,000; Hoisington, $146,081; Lyons, $200,000; Larned, $200,000; Pratt, $160,800; Great Bend, $169,418; Hutchinson, $170,277; Sterling, $200,000; Wichita, $200,000; Winfield, $200,000; Caldwell, $200,000; Wellington, $200,000; El Dorado, $200,000; Garden City, $173,931; Ness City, $200,000.

Warm Saturday, chance of thunderstorms late

FileMost locations will be hot and dry through mid-day, with a high temperature near 90.

A weak cold front will move across western Kansas later today and will extend near a line from Kansas City to Liberal by sunset. A few thunderstorms will form along the front this afternoon. Widespread rainfall is not expected.

Cooler air will move into Kansas tonight and Sunday. There will be a chance for thunderstorms from Monday through at least Thursday as an upper level trough wallows in the Central Plains.

Today: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. South southwest wind 6 to 10 mph becoming west northwest in the afternoon.

Tonight: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before midnight. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. North northeast wind 3 to 8 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 78. Northeast wind 9 to 13 mph.
Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 49. East northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.

Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 76. South southeast wind 6 to 16 mph.

Kansas Farm Bureau celebrates Farm Safety Week

Kansas Farm Bureau

MANHATTAN – Gov. Sam Brownback has declared September as Farm Safety Month and the week of Sept. 21-27 as Farm Safety and Health Week.

Kansas Farm Bureau

“I appreciate Gov. Brownback’s proclamation,” says Holly Higgins, Kansas Farm Bureau’s organization director/safety and agriculture education director. “It’s a great reminder to all of us that farm safety is important, and should be thought about every day on our farms and ranches.”

For more than 66 years, Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization, has had a full-time staff position dedicated to safety and health issues for farmers.

“Kansas Farm Bureau is a farm organization, and we understand keeping our farm families safe is an important issue,” Higgins says. “We value this opportunity and thank our volunteers who have helped spread the safety message.”

In addition to KFB staff, County Farm Bureaus provide hundreds of farm safety programs every year reaching thousands of adults and children.

To bring awareness, KFB offers a multitude of Do-It-Yourself programs for volunteers and those interested in learning more. Annually, a safety poster program provides an opportunity for children to learn, consider and draw ways to stay safe on the farm. Kansas Farm Bureau is the only organization in the state that tracks farm accidents—something we’ve done since 1980.

For more information on farm safety, visit www.kfb.org/educationoutreach/safety.

Kansas man dies in truck rollover accident

fatal-accident1

WINFIELD, Kan- A Kansas man died in an accident just after 10 p.m. on Friday in Cowley County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1969 Ford Pickup driven by David C. Andreae, 59, Winfield, was westbound on 132nd Street two miles north of Winfield.

The truck left the roadway for an unknown reason and rolled. Andreae was transported to Winfield Hospital where he died.

The KHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

Kansas receives $3.5M grant to reduce infant mortality

KDHEBy KHI NEWS SERVICE
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has been awarded a $3.5 million, five-year Healthy Start grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The Healthy Start grants, awarded to 87 organizations in 33 states, will launch projects aimed at reducing infant mortality rates and improving the health of mothers and infants.

The Kansas grant will help support a Geary County project known as Delivering Change, which is designed to help eliminate disparities in perinatal health in rural Geary County.

Key partners in delivering these programs include the Geary Community Healthcare Foundation, Geary Community Hospital, Geary County Health Department, Flint Hills OBGYN, Kansas Breastfeeding Coalition Inc., Kansas Infant Death and SIDS Network, Kansas Children’s Service League, Unified School District 475 and March of Dimes.

“This Healthy Start initiative is an effective way to empower pregnant women by giving them the resources they need to improve their own health and the health of their babies,” said Dr. Robert Moser, KDHE secretary. “We are looking forward to working with a number of partners in Kansas so that Geary County children will benefit from these services.”

Delivering Change will expand on the work of the Geary County Perinatal Coalition and support these key project goals:

• Improve women’s health, with a focus on access to care.

• Promote quality services.

• Strengthen family resilience.

• Increase program accountability

Kan. School efficiency commission approves consolidation study

school  classroom TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas school efficiency commission has recommended studying ways that districts can share administrative operations.

The study recommended Friday by the K-12 Student Performance and Efficiency Commission comes as the issue of consolidation has become an issue in the governor’s race. Gov. Brownback has accused Democratic gubernatorial candidate Paul Davis of nominating a pro-consolidation appointee to the commission. Davis and appointee John Vratil insist that’s not true.

In recommending the study, commissioners took off the table a proposal to realign district geographical boundaries. The commissioners also decided that offering districts incentives to combine or cooperate would be part of the study.

Commissioners also recommended that an efficiency audit be performed on the Kansas Department of Education and the creation of a taskforce to establish efficiency standards for school district operations.

Moran Responds to GAO Conclusion that HealthCare.gov Still a Security Risk

MoranWASHINGTON, D.C. – This week, the nonpartisan Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report detailing ongoing problems with the security of the Obamacare website – HealthCare.gov. More than a year since its launch, GAO raises concerns that HealthCare.gov users continue to face a serious risk of having their personal information – including Social Security numbers, income and employment records, and tax returns stored by the system – stolen by fraudsters and identity thieves. U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Health Subcommittee, shares GAO’s concerns and believes the Administration has consistently kept Congress and the public in the dark about the serious security concerns with the Obamacare website.

“This GAO report makes it clear that, more than a year later, the Administration refuses to provide a true account of how the website is performing and whether it is safe for Americans to use,” Sen. Moran said. “Given the Administration’s history of misrepresentations regarding the readiness of the Obamacare exchanges, I am extremely concerned about the security of Americans’ personal information. I am a sponsor of two commonsense bills to increase transparency surrounding Obamacare’s implementation and help address the serious privacy and data security concerns associated with the law. This is not about politics, this is about personal security and privacy.”

 The GAO report finds that the federal enrollment website still has not undergone rigorous end-to-end testing to check for vulnerabilities. Additionally, it accuses the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Service (CMS) of accepting significant security risks when it allowed the website to launch on Oct. 1, 2013. This report came on the heels of a hack of HealthCare.gov in July 2014 in which malicious software was installed within the website’s network and went undetected for more than a month.

According to GAO’s review:

 “CMS has not fully addressed security and privacy management weaknesses, including having incomplete security plans and privacy documentation, conducting incomplete security tests, and not establishing an alternate processing site to avoid major service disruptions. In addition, we identified weaknesses in the technical controls protecting the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of the data maintained in the [federally facilitated marketplace]. … Until these weaknesses are addressed, increased and unnecessary risks remain of unauthorized access, disclosure, or modification of the information collected and maintained by HealthCare.gov and related systems or the disruption of service provided by the systems.”

In January 2014, Sen. Moran sponsored two bills to protect American individuals and families from the consequences of Obamacare’s implementation. The Exchange Information Disclosure Act (S. 1590) requires the Obama Administration to disclose detailed information about the performance of the Obamacare health insurance Exchange website, HealthCare.gov. The other bill, the Health Exchange Security and Transparency Act (S. 1902), would increase the Administration’s responsibility for safeguarding personal information of Exchange users in response to growing security concerns about the website. The House of Representatives passed its own version of both bills with broad, bipartisan support, yet the Senate Majority Leader has yet to bring the bills up for a vote in the Senate.

TMP falls short in Smith Center

By JEREMY McGUIRE
HaysPost

Smith Center 30, TMP 22

In by far their best effort of the season the TMP Monarchs came up just short in Smith Center on Friday night, losing 30-22 to the state ranked Redmen. It was a tight game throughout with Smith Center scoring the first points of the night midway through the second quarter on a 34 yard Kody Zabel field goal. TMP would answer back with just over three minutes to play in the half on a one yard touchdown run from Nick Schmidt to give the Monarchs their first lead of the game and the entire season. Smith Center came right back down the field and were able to take the lead going into the half when Nick Lehmkuhl found the end zone from a yard out to take a 10 to seven halftime lead.

The two teams would trade a possession in the third quarter before TMP would begin a march of their own. The Monarchs went on an 87 yard scoring drive capped off by a Jared Schumacher 8 yard touchdown reception from Max Megaffin. That would give TMP a 14 to 10 lead heading to the fourth quarter.

Smith Center took control in the fourth outscoring the Monarchs 20 to eight in the fourth quarter to pick up the 30-22 victory. The Redmen are now 3-0 on the season and will play at Norton this coming Friday. TMP is 0-3 and will host Plainville at Lewis Field Stadium.

High School Football Scoreboard – Week 3

https://insuringhays.com/Area Scores
Hays 42, Liberal 28
Smith Center 30, Hays-TMP-Marian 22
Logan-Palco 46, Stockton 34
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 14, Ellis 6
St. John 0, Victoria 46
Norton 35, Oakley 6
Phillipsburg 27, Plainville 0
LaCrosse 33, Minneapolis 29
Central Plains 74, Macksville 0
Osborne 60, Rock Hills 28
Thunder Ridge 46, Pike Valley 0
Otis-Bison 22, Ness City 72
Hill City 40, Quinter 20
Wallace County 48, Trego 0
Southeast Saline 46, Russell 17
Hoxie 50, Greeley County 0
Garden City 28, Great Bend 21

Statewide Scores
Abilene 13, Concordia 7
Andale 34, Wichita Collegiate 28
Andover 17, Arkansas City 14
Andover Central 28, Goddard 7
Atchison 27, KC Washington 26
Axtell 26, Pawnee City, Neb. 22
Baldwin 35, Perry-Lecompton 14
Beloit 48, Salina Sacred Heart 6
Bennington 32, Moundridge 21
Bishop Miege 42, Blue Valley Stillwell 21
Blue Valley Southwest 49, Gardner-Edgerton 25
Bluestem 50, Belle Plaine 14
Bonner Springs 53, Basehor-Linwood 14
Buhler 50, Winfield 15
Burlingame 40, Frankfort 28
BV West 42, BV North 13
Caldwell 54, West Elk 20
Chanute 24, Coffeyville 12
Chapman 13, Clay Center 0
Cheney 42, Wichita Independent 0
Cherryvale 35, Burlington 7
Chetopa 70, Pleasanton 0
Cimarron 60, Sublette 7
Colby 27, Hugoton 12
Columbus 27, Galena 6
Conway Springs 25, Garden Plain 7
Derby 35, Mill Valley 14
Dodge City 21, Wichita Heights 13
Douglass 48, Medicine Lodge 7
Ellsworth 27, Republic County 0
Emporia 75, Topeka West 7
Flinthills 42, Elk Valley 8
Fredonia 52, Yates Center 0
Frontenac 37, Southeast 12
Girard 57, Baxter Springs 13
Halstead 57, Hillsboro 27
Hanover 52, Wakefield 6
Hesston 62, Sterling 6
Hoisington 21, Pratt 7
Holcomb 17, Ulysses 14
Holton 42, Sabetha 12
Hooker, Okla. 47, Syracuse 0
Hutchinson Trinity 40, Inman 0
Independence 33, Parsons 0
KC Piper 24, Louisburg 0
KC Schlagle 32, KC Wyandotte 0
Kingman 3, Larned 0
Kiowa County 50, Ashland 34
Labette County 36, Iola 6
Lansing 37, Tonganoxie 12
Lawrence Free State 31, Lawrence 12
Lincoln 50, Clifton-Clyde 18
Lyndon 47, Northern Heights 18
Madison 62, Hartford 14
Maize South 35, Goddard-Eisenhower 7
Manhattan 23, Topeka Hayden 20
Marion 28, Remington 16
McLouth 28, Jackson Heights 20
McPherson 32, Augusta 20
Meade 24, Southwestern Hts. 21
Mulvane 31, Clearwater 13
Nemaha Central 42, Hiawatha 0
Neodesha 40, Erie 8
Newton 26, Valley Center 21
Nickerson 28, Lyons 3
Northeast-Arma 26, Anderson County 14
Northern Valley 22, Rawlins County 20
Olathe East 14, SM South 6
Olathe North 27, Olathe South 26, OT
Olathe Northwest 15, Leavenworth 6
Oskaloosa 58, Immaculata 15
Oswego 36, Jayhawk Linn 14
Ottawa 44, Spring Hill 43
Paola 48, Eudora 8
Pittsburg 41, Fort Scott 0
Pleasant Ridge 50, Jefferson North 30
Poteau, Okla. 66, Wichita Campus 26
Prairie View 55, Central Heights 6
Riverside 48, Atchison County 6
Rose Hill 46, El Dorado 14
Rossville 45, Rock Creek 0
Rural Vista 46, Solomon 30
Salina Central 29, Maize 28
Salina South 27, Hutchinson 21
Santa Fe Trail 55, Royal Valley 13
Satanta 36, South Central 24
Scott City 65, Goodland 12
Sedgwick 44, Ell-Saline 12
Shawnee Heights 41, Junction City 33
Silver Lake 42, Riley County 7
SM East 41, SM Northwest 6
SM West 36, SM North 6
Spearville 64, Bucklin 18
Springfield, Colo. 56, Rolla 6
St. James Academy 14, DeSoto 0
St. Mary’s 27, Wabaunsee 0
St. Thomas Aquinas 35, BV Northwest 7
Stafford 46, Hutchinson Central Christian 0
Sunrise Christian 20, Veritas Christian 8
Topeka Seaman 21, Washburn Rural 14
Triplains-Brewster 46, Cheylin 0
Udall 54, Oxford 6
Wamego 55, Marysville 9
Wellsville 46, Osawatomie 15
West Franklin 54, Mission Valley 18
Wheatland-Grinnell 56, Golden Plains 8
Wichita Bishop Carroll 49, Kapaun Mount Carmel 7
Wichita Home School 47, St. Mary’s Academy 14
Wichita Trinity 53, Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 46
Wichita West 46, Wichita East 7

Hays Holds Off Liberal Comeback For Win

By Dustin Armbruster

Midway through the second quarter it looked as if the Hays High Indians were going to run away with their third victory of the season. Leading 28-0 the Indians had forced Liberal to punt on four consecutive possessions. Hays in the meantime had scored touchdowns on their first four. Alex Delton scored on the first play of a drive twice on runs of 57 and 49 yards. Adam Klaus scored on a 10 yard run and Isaiah Blackmon scored from four yards out.

Liberal needed something positive to happen and they found their spark on an 85 yard kick-off return for a touchdown by Mershek Wiltshire, cutting the score to 28-7. Liberal had one more chance to score before the end of the first half following an Indian punt. The Redskins drove to the nine yard line but could not score before the clock expired.

Hays High received the football to open the second half, but fumbled on the first play setting up Liberal for a 10 play, 41 yard drive that resulted in a Jared Hasik 16 yard touchdown run. With the lead cut down to 28-14, Hays drove inside the 20 on the next possession, but again fumbled the ball. Liberal was forced to punt, but Hays turned the ball over on downs.

Liberal wasted little time scoring, using a 48 yard run by quarterback Jared Hasik to make it a one score game at 28-21.

Hays though would get the offense in gear, but it took a little luck. Delton broke off a 42 yard run, but fumbled at the one yard line running through a tackle. The ball traveled into the end zone where it was recovered by Maddux Winter for the score. It was the second time in two weeks the Indians fumbled inside the five yard line, but recovered the ball for a touchdown.

Hays led 35-21 when Liberal had a luck play of their own. Hasik passed to the left side, only to have the ball go through the hands of a receiver and end up in the grasp of running back Jared Carrol who raced 63 yards for a 35-28 score with 7:27 remaining in the game.

It took Hays just three plays to score using runs from Delton of 48 and 4 yards, to set up a 12 yard score from Klaus. The Indians sixth rushing touchdown of the night proved to the final points of the evening at 42-28.

Delton ran for 265 yards on 13 carries as the Hays High piled up 451 total yards, 388 on the ground. Liberal totaled 311 yards in the loss.

Hays is 3-0 and 2-0 in the Western Athletic Conference. Liberal drops to 1-2 and 0-1 in league play. Hays travels to 1-2, 1-0 Garden City Friday. Liberal is home to 2-1, 0-0 Dodge City.

Western Kansas man hospitalized after rear-end crash

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMST. FRANCIS, Kan- A Kansas man was injured in an accident before 4 p.m. on Friday in Cheyenne County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2013 Ford F150 driven by Pamela K. Weeter, 36, St. Francis was eastbound on U.S. 36 five miles west of Junction 27 in St. Francis.

The vehicle rear-ended a 2011 Dodge Ram driven by Douglas E. Sloper, 56, St. Francis, that was making a left hand turn from eastbound U.S. 36 to northbound Quincy Street.

Sloper was transported to Cheyenne County Hospital.
The KHP reported Weeter was possibly injured, not transported for treatment and not wearing a seat belt.

Davey’s golden goal carries FHSU women’s soccer past UNK in conference opener

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Women’s Soccer opened conference play with a golden goal victory on Friday (Sept. 19) evening, defeating Nebraska-Kearney, 1-0, on Hailey Davey’s double overtime game-winner.
 
FHSU (3-2-0) had 13 shots in the game, seven of which came in the two overtime periods, and snapped a two-game losing streak as MIAA play begins.
 
Scoreless after regulation, FHSU failed to put a shot on goal in the first half, and had just one shot on goal in the second.  In the 79th minute, FHSU had its best scoring opportunity of regulation, but a header from Ceynada Guzman sailed just wide of the goal.
 
Nearing the end of the second overtime, Kelsey Steffens dribbled down the right side of the box and hit a low cross to Davey at the top of the box, who waited until the late in double overtime to fire her first shot of the night.  After gathering herself, Davey struck a ball towards the left side of the goal and found the net, sealing the Tigers’ victory.
 
The goal was Davey’s second of the season, pushing her season points total to eight, tying with Steffens for the team lead.  Steffens had her second assist of the year on the play.

Jasmine Beaulieu and Jordan Hester had three shots for the Tigers, leading the team.
 
Between the pipes, Kristin Thompson had seven saves and posted her second shutout of the season.
 
Fort Hays State returns to FHSU Soccer Stadium on Sunday against Emporia State.  Kickoff is set for 2 p.m.

Kansas man accused of airport bomb hoax

CourtKANSAS CITY (AP) – A Kansas man who investigators say made comments about a bomb at Kansas City International Airport is facing federal charges.

The U.S. Attorney’s office says 33-year-old David James Cain, of Kansas City, Kansas, was indicted Friday by a federal grand jury in Kansas City, Missouri.

The incident prompted evacuation of a main airport terminal while arriving flights were rerouted to another terminal the evening of Aug. 31.

Cain is charged with one count each of making a bomb hoax and conveying false information. Prosecutors said he told two people at an airline ticket counter there was a bomb in a truck he had parked in front of the terminal.

Cain does not have a listed phone number. Court records did not show an attorney for him Friday.

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