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Health care compact article debate heats up

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee-Photo by Phil Cauthon
Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee-Photo by Phil Cauthon

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

OLATHE — Tension built Monday as legislators who supported a health care compact bill that would free Kansas from federal health care regulations made a last ditch-effort to sway a Johnson County advisory board against publishing an article critical of the compact in a county newsletter.
After Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Shawnee Republican, expressed concerns at a legislative breakfast last week about the coming article, the Johnson County Commission on Aging invited her to have a follow-up meeting on that specific issue. Pilcher-Cook returned on Monday flanked by 10 other Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Ray Merrick of Stilwell.

The legislators present called the article scheduled for publication in Johnson County’s The Best Times magazine “reckless,” “dishonest,” “irresponsible,” “partisan” and “misleading.”

“I think you have taken a huge jump, a reckless jump, with the article you intend to publish in The Best Times,” Pilcher-Cook said.

All the legislators who attended Monday’s meeting are conservative Republicans who support House Bill 2553 as a repudiation of federal health care changes spearheaded by President Barack Obama. They said the proposed article unfairly portends changes to Medicare as a result of the bill in a blatant attempt to scare seniors.
Members of the commission on aging defended their work, saying they understood the compact well and remain concerned about its potential effect on Medicare, the federal program that provides health coverage to the elderly and some disabled citizens, including about 450,000 Kansans.

“We did our due diligence too,” chairwoman Patti Rule said. “We didn’t immediately put out just a knee-jerk (response).”

Following the meeting, commission on aging leaders said they may tweak the headline to appease the legislators but said they don’t intend to otherwise change the content of the article. They said a demand that the legislators be allowed to run their own concurrent article about the compact was outside their authority.

The Johnson County Commission assumed publication duties of The Best Times last year, but the pages allotted to the commission on aging are provided through federal dollars from the Older Americans Act.

Future implications?

The commission on aging is a group of eight volunteer advocates who advise the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging. They are appointed by Johnson County commissioners.

Sen. Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park, said that publishing the article would anger many area legislators.

“You really need to think about this because one of your objectives is to have a good working relationship with the Johnson County legislative delegation,” Denning said.
During the meeting, Merrick sat off to the side of the conference table next to Dan Goodman, director of the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging.

At one point, Merrick turned to Goodman and said, “This is going to set you guys back.”

Goodman did not respond.

Merrick declined to explain the comment after the meeting.

When asked how he interpreted it, Goodman said “I don’t know how I should take it.” He said his agency receives some state funding to operate an Aging and Disability Resource Center.

When told what Merrick said, Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita who was not at the meeting, said it sounded like a threat.

“This is typical behavior,” Ward said. “Call your opponents names and threaten them. They cannot win the debate on ideas.”

Nine states have signed the health care compact, which petitions the federal government to release them from health care regulations and would allow them to receive the money currently spent on federal health programs like Medicare and Medicaid as block grants.

Proponents said it would liberate Kansas from the mandates of the Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare. Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger and the retirees group AARP testified against the bill, saying it posed a threat to Medicare.

The commission on aging’s article focuses opposition on the compact’s potential to turn Medicare over to the state.

Praeger, in a phone interview Monday, said it is a legitimate concern.

“They have a very serious concern, and I think it’s very appropriate that they raise those concerns, as did AARP, as did several other groups,” Praeger said. “This has kind of flown under the radar, and I think it’s great that it’s finally getting some attention.”

When the bill came to the House floor, Ward offered an amendment to take Medicare out of it, but it failed 57-61.

Rep. Keith Esau, a Republican from Olathe who supported the compact, said the Legislature couldn’t amend the bill because all of the states joining the compact were attempting to approve the same version.

The House passed the compact 74-48 without Ward’s amendment, the Senate passed it 29-11 and Gov. Sam Brownback signed it April 22.

Congress must approve the compact before it can become operational, but constitutional scholars also say the president would need to approve it.

In signing it, Brownback said he would oppose any cuts to Medicare.

Downplaying Medicare concerns

Some legislators sought to assure the commission on aging members Monday that the state had no interest in touching Medicare. But others said the compact could provide a safety net if the state needs to save Medicare from the federal government. Rep. Jerry Lunn, a Republican from Overland Park, said he believed that rising federal debt made a state takeover of the program almost inevitable.

“Does anybody believe that the federal government is not going to make wholesale, major cuts to all programs?” Lunn said. “This would be included. We’re trying to do something to get out ahead of that because this is going to come back to the states to try to manage and fix this mess.”

Peg Deaton, a member of the commission on aging, said she opposed the compact in part because the state doesn’t have a plan for administering the massive federal program. She said she had heard little practical information in general on the compact, including how the state would pay for an advisory commission, mandated by the compact, to make recommendations to member states.

“It has to be funded by the states that are members of the compact,” Deaton said. “How much money are we talking about?”

“It could be minuscule, because they could teleconference,” Pilcher-Cook said.

“And it could be millions,” Deaton said. “Where is that money coming from?”

Eugene Lipscomb, vice chairman of the commission on aging, asked why legislators had not done more to educate seniors about the compact, saying that most people he had talked with had not even heard of it.

“How come you hadn’t talked to them before you wrote it, before you signed it?” Lipscomb said.

Sen. Jeff Melcher, R-Leawood, said the commission on aging should have done that.

“You should be watching legislation that’s important to you and participating in the development of it,” Melcher said. “But to ignore it and abdicate your responsibility and then to come back at the 11th hour and drop an October surprise is partisan and it’s disingenuous.”

Other legislators echoed Melcher’s complaints about the timing of the article, which will publish in October, one month before the general election for all House seats and statewide offices including the governor.

Three Republican senators and about a dozen Republican House members crossed party lines to vote against the compact, deepening a divide between moderate Republicans like Praeger and conservatives who gained control of both chambers and the other statewide offices in part by making their opposition to Obamacare a centerpiece of the last two election cycles.

‘Right for seniors’

Chuck Nigro, chairman of the commission on aging’s legislative committee, said the timing was a function of how long it took for the commission to study the compact bill, write the article and prepare it for publication. Nigro said the commission is nonpartisan.

“Our intent was not to have a big fight over this,” Nigro said after the meeting. “Our intent was just to do what we think is right for seniors.”

Sen. Molly Baumgardner, a Republican from Overland Park who was appointed after the compact was approved, said regardless of the commission on aging’s intent, the article will be used by Brownback’s Democratic opponent, Paul Davis.

“The minute it is printed and distributed, you have published campaign material and get ready to see it in the television advertising and mailers and emails across the state, I guarantee it,” Baumgardner said. “You will be used. I don’t think that’s your intent, but you will be used.”

Baumgardner asked the commission on aging members to consider how that might reflect on the county commissioners who chose them.

“I know that you are not here necessarily from a political standpoint, but keep in mind why are you here and how are you here,” Baumgardner said. “You are appointed.”

After the meeting Deaton said she had been appointed and reappointed by several different county commissioners during her eight years on the commission on aging.

“I’ve got two years more to go, and nobody can fire me,” Deaton said.

Ex-candidate for governor eyes Wichita mayoralty

Winn
Winn

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita business owner who sought this year’s Republican nomination for Kansas governor now says she intends to run for Wichita mayor.

The Wichita Eagle reports Jennifer Winn says her supporters have encouraged her to enter the race next spring. Current Mayor Carl Brewer is barred by term limits from seeking re-election.

Winn lost the August GOP primary to Gov. Sam Brownback. But she drew more than 94,000 votes — about 37 percent of the total — in a showing that surprised many observers.

Winn is a Wichita native and the owner of a property management company.

She has told The Eagle that legalizing and taxing marijuana would help state revenue and allow other taxes to be lowered. Proponents of decriminalizing marijuana hope to get a proposal on Wichita’s April ballot.

Sunny, warm Wednesday

Screen Shot 2014-09-17 at 5.13.31 AMMostly sunny skies today with highs up into the 90s this afternoon.

Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. Light and variable wind becoming south 5 to 10 mph in the morning.
Tonight A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 10pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.
Thursday Mostly sunny, with a high near 90. South southeast wind 7 to 11 mph.
Thursday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 66. South wind around 11 mph.
Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. South wind 9 to 16 mph.
Friday Night A chance of showers and thunderstorms, then showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Saturday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 82.

Eisenhower Memorial panel considers Gehry’s design

BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal commission working to build a memorial honoring President Dwight D. Eisenhower near the National Mall is considering whether to move forward with architect Frank Gehry’s design after years of controversy over the project.

Earlier in September, Gehry’s team presented a revised design in response to objections from critics and Eisenhower’s family. Now the Eisenhower Memorial Commission is scheduled to meet Wednesday for the first time in more than a year to consider the changes.

Gehry’s Los Angeles-based team has eliminated metal tapestries on the sides of the proposed memorial park, along with some columns. One stainless steel tapestry would remain as a backdrop, depicting the Kansas landscape of Ike’s boyhood home.

But in a letter Monday, Eisenhower’s family says the revised design still does not address their concerns.

Kansas gets $3.8M federal grant for conservation

Screen Shot 2014-09-17 at 5.14.29 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will receive $3.8 million in conservation funding to help landowners protect key farmlands, grasslands and wetlands.

The grant was announced Tuesday by the Natural Resources Conservation Service. It’s part of $328 million the U.S. Department of Agriculture is investing nationwide for conservation easements.

The USDA’s Kansas conservationist, Eric Banks, said conservation easements will help farmers protect valuable farmland from development, restore lands best suited for grazing and return wetlands to their natural conditions.

The 2014 farm bill created the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program. About 18 projects in Kansas were chosen to restore 4,800 acres.

 

Justice Ginsburg: Watch 6th Circuit on gay marriage

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — People looking for clues about how soon the Supreme Court might weigh in on state bans of gay marriage should watch the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg told a Minnesota audience Tuesday that there would be “some urgency” if an appeals court upholds same-sex marriage bans. Such a ruling would run contrary to a legal trend favoring gay marriage.

But Ginsburg says if the appeals court covering Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee falls in line with other rulings, there’s “no need for us to rush.”

She says the nation’s top court will reach a decision point “sooner or later,” while commenting on how much societal attitudes regarding same-sex marriage have changed.

Ginsburg spoke at the University of Minnesota Law School.

 

Kansas man electrocuted in bucket truck accident

PRATT, Kan. — County Fire, Rescue, and Sheriff’s Deputies were dispatched to the area of Lake Road and Country Club Road near Pratt Tuesday afternoon on the report of an electrocution. .

Authorities say a 58-year-old man apparently came into contact with a 7,200 volt power line while using a bucket truck.

The man was transported to Pratt Regional Medical Center where he died.

The name of the victim has not been released.

The case is being investigated by the Pratt County Sheriff’s Office.

 

University group aims to boost graduation

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas is joining 10 other major institutions in an initiative to increase graduation rates for low-income and first-generation college students.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the University Innovation Alliance will develop what the group calls a “playbook” on how to help such students complete their degrees.

Kansas chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little was in Washington on Tuesday as the alliance was announced. Gray-Little says the initiative will allow university leaders to share and adapt ideas that have proven to help students from all backgrounds.

The group said studies show students from wealthy families are seven times more likely than low-income students to earn college degrees.

All of the participating universities have large numbers of low-income and first-generation students and have developed programs to help them succeed.

Severe respiratory illness confirmed in 12 states

MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials say 12 states now have respiratory illnesses caused by an uncommon virus — enterovirus 68.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials say Alabama, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, New York, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania together have 130 lab-confirmed cases. All are children.

The virus can cause mild to severe illness, with the worst cases needing life support for breathing difficulties. Kids with asthma have been especially vulnerable. No deaths have been reported.

The strain is not new but only a small number of labs can test for it. Since mid-August, there’s been an unusual spike in identified cases. The CDC has tested more than 200 specimens from more than 30 states.

Investigators say it’s not yet clear what triggered the outbreak or whether it’s worsening.

Magician on this season’s ‘America’s Got Talent’ will perform at FHSU

Mike Super
Mike Super

FHSU University Relations

The winner of NBC’s hit television show “Phenomenon” and a contestant on this season’s “America’s Got Talent,” magician Mike Super will perform at the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Sheridan Hall on the Fort Hays State University campus at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 24.

Super’s recent advancement on “America’s Got Talent” caused him to reschedule his FHSU performance. The night originally scheduled, he will perform live on “America’s Got Talent.”

The University Activities Board is sponsoring Super’s campus performance. Admission is free to students and the public.

For additional information, call the University Activities Board at (785) 628-5355.

Feds seek forfeiture of business jet in pot bust

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Federal prosecutors are seeking the forfeiture of a business jet after the pilot was arrested in July at a Kansas airport and accused of possessing more than 50 kilograms of marijuana with the intent to sell it.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says 58-year-old Kenneth Weaver of Denver also is accused of conspiracy and interstate travel in furtherance of drug trafficking.

Prosecutors say Weaver was arrested on July 11 after agents executed a search warrant on the plane at the airport in Iola and seized a load of marijuana.

The superseding indictment seeks the forfeiture of a 1979 Israel Aircraft Industries jet, a 2007 Bentley Continental GT-C automobile and more than $450,000 in cash seized Aug. 8 in Sylmar, California.

Weaver’s attorney didn’t immediately return a call Tuesday seeking comment.

 

Feds allow Kansas to withhold test data

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Federal education officials have granted a request from Kansas to not release assessment test results that experts say are invalid because of technical problems and cyberattacks.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports only generalized information about how Kansas students did on certain test items will be made public. The decision means parents, teachers and administrators won’t be able to see how specific students, schools or districts performed in math and reading assessments.

Kansas State Board of Education chairwoman Jana Shaver says there were so many problems it was not feasible or fair to release the data.

The Center for Educational Testing and Evaluation at the University of Kansas department administers the tests. It says problems affected up to one-third of this year’s math tests and two-thirds of the English tests.

 

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