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Doctor running for lieutenant governor swears by ‘direct primary care’ model

Josh Umbehr has operated a direct medical care practice in Wichita since 2010. Rather than bill insurance companies for his services, he charges a monthly membership fee of $10 for kids and $50 for adults for unlimited visits, texts, phone calls, discounted prescription medications and in-office services.-photo by Kevin Brown
Josh Umbehr has operated a direct medical care practice in Wichita since 2010. Rather than bill insurance companies for his services, he charges a monthly membership fee of $10 for kids and $50 for adults for unlimited visits, texts, phone calls, discounted prescription medications and in-office services.-photo by Kevin Brown

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Wichita physician Josh Umbehr has never understood the traditional model of health care reimbursement — the one in which doctors and hospitals fill out pages of forms to bill a patient’s insurance company for everything from a $3 test to a $30,000 surgery.

“You don’t have car insurance for gasoline,” Umbehr said in a recent phone interview. “Why would you have health insurance for family practice?”

With that philosophy in mind, Umbehr has operated on a kind of service plan for the human body since he opened his practice in 2010.

He sees hundreds of patients at his Wichita clinic, AtlasMD, but he bills no insurance companies. Instead, he charges a monthly membership fee of $10 for kids and $50 for adults for unlimited visits, texts, phone calls, discounted prescription medications and a slew of in-office services like stitching wounds and removing lesions.

“Any procedure we can do in the office is included free of charge,” Umbehr said.

It’s what used to be called “concierge medicine,” and it used to be mostly for wealthy people. But Umbehr and others in the small but growing monthly-fee model prefer to call it “direct primary care” because they say they’re offering it at prices now accessible to the masses.

Umbehr, whose practice now includes two partners and a patient list of more than 1,600, is one of the more high-profile direct primary care physicians in the country. AtlasMD has been written up in the Wichita Business Journal and Bloomberg Businessweek, and Umbehr, 33, spends a chunk of his time these days helping other doctors disillusioned with the traditional insurance model start their own direct primary care practices.

“We had doctors out today, we have doctors out Tuesday, we have a medical student with us,” Umbehr said just before the Labor Day weekend. “The momentum for this is picking up. When I started four years ago, they said this would never work or they doubted it. Now I’ll be traveling three of the next four weeks lecturing on this.”
Umbehr also is running for lieutenant governor as a Libertarian with his father, Alma attorney Keen Umbehr, at the top of the ticket.

Josh Umbehr said he’s “still doing the math” on whether the state should move its 400,000 Medicaid recipients to a direct primary care plan if he and his dad are elected, so it’s not part of the official platform yet. But he’s not shy about spreading the gospel of direct primary care on the stump, now that his father has “talked me into running.”

“We’re very passionate about this model. We want Kansans to have access to good-quality, affordable health care,” Umbehr said. “The race as a whole has several platforms and goals. My key is to advance the cause of direct primary care.”

Gambling on staying healthy

Umbehr faces skepticism from consumer advocacy groups at the state and national level.

“Our concerns around concierge medicine are mostly that we worry that people that go that route are not going to have the best access to a comprehensive range of services,” said Claire McAndrew, private insurance program director for the group Families USA. “That provider can provide you primary care, but are you going to have affordable access to specialty services when you need them?”

A comprehensive insurance policy would cover the primary care as well as specialty services like cancer care and surgeries, minus deductibles and co-pays.

Umbehr and his counterparts say their monthly memberships are not a substitute for health insurance, but serve as a supplement that can reduce a patient’s cost in most circumstances.

“We recommend the same thing we have, which is a high-deductible plan,” Umbehr said.

Umbehr said coupling his direct primary care membership with “catastrophic care” health insurance, like his $5,000 deductible plan, can save consumers because such plans generally have much lower premiums than traditional comprehensive health insurance plans with deductibles in the $500-$1,000 range.

Ryan Neuhofel operates a direct primary care practice in Lawrence. He says most people are unlikely to run into a medical problem that would take up their entire deductible, and believes the monthly membership fee for his practice helps his clients better manage their health care costs.-Tara Higgins/Fosse Photography
Ryan Neuhofel operates a direct primary care practice in Lawrence. He says most people are unlikely to run into a medical problem that would take up their entire deductible, and believes the monthly membership fee for his practice helps his clients better manage their health care costs.-Tara Higgins/Fosse Photography

McAndrew wonders whether those flocking to concierge medicine are pricing out the possible outcomes, even with catastrophic coverage. One hospital visit, she said, and a patient could end up having to pay that entire $5,000 deductible out of pocket. Even for young, healthy people, that’s a financial risk, she said.
People are young and healthy until they’re young and fall ill, or they’re young and get into an accident,” McAndrew said. “I think that’s a pretty big gamble for young people to take.”
Ryan Neuhofel, who runs a direct primary care practice in Lawrence, said he makes sure his patients understand the risks, but he still thinks most come out ahead if they opt for his monthly fee plus a catastrophic plan.

In a given year most people are unlikely to run into a medical problem that would suck up their entire deductible, like a compound fracture requiring surgery, he said.

“Those type of events are pretty rare; they don’t happen very often to people,” Neuhofel said. “You’re going to need insurance for that. If they have to pay $5,000 because of the deductible, that’s going to stink at the time and they’re going to have to pay for that over time. But is that better than paying $200 a month in premiums for the rest of their life?”

Neuhofel said he carries a $10,000 deductible plan.

A quick glance at the AtlasMD Facebook page reveals comments from satisfied customers like Jason Garraway, a 38-year-old health insurance agent from Kechi.

Because Garraway is self-employed, he had to buy insurance for himself, his wife and their five kids on the private market. Two years ago he meshed his catastrophic coverage plan with membership in Umbehr’s clinic.

Garraway appreciates the convenience of being able to contact his doctor any time, via email or phone, and feels like he’s getting more personal attention than he did from doctors operating under traditional insurance.

“I am now a client to be served, rather than someone who grabs a number in a line to see my doctor when it is my turn for 10 hurried minutes after waiting for an hour in a waiting room,” Garraway said.

Garraway recently was dealing with a persistent cough. By Sunday evening it had gotten bad enough that he decided to send an email describing his symptoms to his AtlasMD doctor, Doug Nunamaker, who called in a prescription to a nearby pharmacy.

“I had treatment and medicine in my hands within two hours of when I emailed Doug at 6 p.m. on a Sunday,” Garraway said.

That ease of use has made his family more proactive when it comes to seeking preventive care, Garraway said.

ACA considerations

Like Umbehr, Neuhofel said his practice has grown faster than he expected since he started it three years ago. He has more than 600 patients and will likely cap his practice at 700 soon.

“I’ve seen a big shift in the last year,” Neuhofel said. “More and more people are approaching us, as opposed to us approaching them and trying to sell them on the idea.”

Neuhofel has a fee structure similar to Umbehr’s, and most of his patients are below the median income level, he said.

He makes each new patient sign a form stating that they understand his recommendation to pair his plan with some type of insurance, but he estimated that about 70 percent are uninsured and coming to him because they can’t afford a comprehensive insurance plan.

Katrina McGivern, communications director for the Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved, said that could present another problem.

Under the Affordable Care Act, Americans who do not carry health insurance face a penalty that started at $95 a year. A clause in the health reform law states that a concierge plan coupled with catastrophic care insurance qualifies as “wrap-around” coverage, while a concierge plan alone does not.

“Truthfully, by law they should be getting insurance through the (online) marketplace or they’ll face the penalty by tax time,” McGivern said.

The online insurance marketplace created by the ACA offers subsidies to buy insurance based on income. But Kansas’ decision not to expand Medicaid has created a gap in that scheme. Thousands of Kansans who would have been eligible for Medicaid under the expansion make too little money to qualify for subsidies on the marketplace.

Even for the uninsured who fall in the coverage gap, though, McGivern said only some would benefit from paying a monthly fee for primary care.

“If you’re frequenting the doctor, that could possibly save you money,” McGivern said.

Sean Gatewood, interim executive director of the Kansas Health Consumer Coalition, said his organization has no official position on direct primary care. But he also said he isn’t sure it’s the answer for the uninsured or those struggling with health care costs.

“That doesn’t seem workable for the broad population,” Gatewood said.

Neuhofel said the savings are widespread, and come from attentive preventive care.

“They’re getting really good primary care,” he said. “I’m managing their diabetes, and a lot of downstream costs are being reduced.”

Effect on physician shortage unknown

Direct primary care practices grew by 25 percent in 2013, according to the American Academy of Family Physicians, which endorses the direct primary care model as consistent with its goals.

“The DPC contract fee structure can enable physicians to spend more time with their patients, both in face-to-face visits, and through telephonic or electronic communications mediums should they choose, since they are not bound by insurance reimbursement restrictions,” a statement on the academy’s website reads.

Olathe doctor Douglas Brooks said patient care time — as opposed to paperwork time — drew him to direct primary care.
Unlike Umbehr and Neuhofel, who chose the model straight out of medical school at the University of Kansas, Brooks had decades of practice under the traditional insurance model when he decided to switch last year.

“I really had seen just about every aspect of medical management, and it really just kind of came down to the state of medicine today is so out of control that I had to do something,” Brooks said. “This was something that had caught my eye back in the mid-2000s, and I finally decided I had to jump on it.”

Douglas Brooks, an Olathe doctor, switched his practice to direct primary care so he could spend more time with patients rather than on paperwork. Many of his patients made the switch with him.
Douglas Brooks, an Olathe doctor, switched his practice to direct primary care so he could spend more time with patients rather than on paperwork. Many of his patients made the switch with him.

Brooks already had a large panel of patients he had to break the news to, and did so in two informational seminars.

“Part of the reason for doing (the seminars) was to ask ‘Are you willing to follow me if I do this?'” Brooks said, “And the overwhelming response was ‘Yes.’”

Brooks said most of his patients stayed on and he added new ones from inside and outside Johnson County, including many who take advantage of the opportunity to contact him via phone and email with pictures of problems for him to diagnose. Brooks said he has reached his 2,000-patient cap and started a waiting list.

That number sounds like a lot compared to Umbehr and Neuhofel, but Brooks said under the traditional insurance model he and a couple of physician assistants handled patient loads of up to 18,000.

Brooks’ practice is perhaps the newest direct primary care office in Kansas. Concierge Medicine Today’s website lists Neuhofel, Umbehr and Umbehr’s AtlasMD partners Nunamaker and Michael Palomino as the only physicians in the state practicing under the model. In Missouri, it lists only St. Louis-based doctor Gayathri Raman and Ann Riggs of Platte City.

But the list is growing. Neosho County doctor Joseph Sheppard’s website bills him as the “Free Market Physician” and says he opened his direct primary care practice in July. Umbehr said he helped another Wichita doctor, Jeffrey Davis, get started this year.

One of the persistent criticisms of direct primary care is that by allowing physicians to see fewer patients, it exacerbates the existing shortage of primary care doctors.

Umbehr said that’s not the case, arguing that the model will attract doctors who otherwise would have become specialists to try primary care and will keep doctors like Brooks from burning out and retiring early.

Brooks said that if he had kept dealing with insurance companies under the old reimbursement model, “I would have been looking toward retiring as soon as I could afford to do so.”

And now?

“I’ve got a good 20-some years left, probably,” Brooks said.

McAndrew, from Families USA, said there are anecdotes about direct primary care physicians spending more time with each patient but no measurable metrics.

She also said there are other ways to lessen the paperwork burden and streamline reimbursement for doctors.

“We believe there are negative consequences to the health care system when doctors are pulling out of health care networks,” McAndrew said.

For better or worse, Umbehr said that will continue to happen as long as health care costs keep climbing and patients seek alternatives to traditional health insurance.

“Health care is a commodity, like gas or milk,” Umbehr said. “Everybody needs it and everybody wants it to be more affordable than it is.”

KFIX Rock News: Mick Fleetwood Autobiography To Be Published Next Month

Mick Fleetwood Play On Now Then and Fleetwood MacAs the drummer of Fleetwood Mac since its 1967 inception, Mick Fleetwood saw the group transform from a respected British blues outfit to one of the most successful U.S.-based pop-rock acts ever.

The 67-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer certainly has more than a few tales to tell about his experiences in the group, and will share them in a new autobiography titled Play On: Now, Then and Fleetwood Mac, which will be published on October 28.

The memoir, which was co-written with veteran Rolling Stone journalist Anthony Bozza, will offer an intimate look at the personal and professional triumphs and trials of Fleetwood and his band mates.

Through Fleetwood Mac’s volatile history, which has included lineup upheavals, madness, drug abuse and intraband love affairs, Mick has been there for it all: He’s the only member to have played with every incarnation of the group.

Play On will be released about one month after Fleetwood Mac kicks off its latest tour — its first with longtime singer/keyboardist Christine McVie since 1998.  The trek begins September 30 in Minneapolis and runs through a December 20 show in Tampa, Florida.

Copyright 2014 ABC News Radio

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Schmidt’s western Kan. swing includes two stops in Hays

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt
Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt announced in a news release this week that he will visit five counties in western Kansas to speak to students and community groups and participate in roundtable discussions with local prosecutors.

The schedule includes two stops in Hays.

At noon Sept. 15, Schmidt will address the Hays Rotary Club at the Hadley Center, 208 E. Eighth, before heading to Dodge City.

After a stop in Ulysses on Sept. 16, Schmidt is scheduled to return to Hays Sept. 17 (Constitution Day) to speak to an American government class at Fort Hays State University from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. From 10:30 to 11:30 a.m., he will address a political issues class.

Schmidt wraps up his western Kansas swing with a stop in Leoti from 4 to 5 p.m. to meet with local prosecutors.

Debra D. (Gleason) Kisner

Debra Kinsner - crop

VICTORIA — Debra D. (Gleason) Kisner, age 62, of Victoria passed peacefully Saturday, September 6, 2014, at Hays Medical Center after her short yet courageous battle with cancer.

Debra was born March 25, 1952, at the Gleason Hospital, Larned, KS to Verne M. “Bud” and Lorene (Dykes) Gleason. She married Roger P. Kisner on June 13, 1981, in Hays, KS.

She grew up on a working cattle ranch in Stafford County, graduated from St. John High School in 1970, and attended Kansas State University and Fort Hays State University.

Debra had a tremendous work ethic that began during her childhood. She and her husband formed Kisner’s Auction Services and she worked as head cashier until their transition with Purple Wave Auction Inc.  In her position with Purple Wave, Debra continued to work in customer service until her retirement in February, 2014. Debra was also a past president of the Kansas Auctioneers Association Auxiliary.

She loved animals, the outdoors and was very proud of her roots growing up working with horses and livestock and as a child, entertaining the public at numerous equine shows and rodeos performing her skilled horsemanship.

Survivors include her husband, Roger, of the home; one daughter, Laura Kisner and fiancée, Shaun Roth, Wichita, KS; one son, John Kisner and fiancée, Lisa Jones, Ellis, KS; one granddaughter, Briauna, two brothers, Darryl Gleason, Wichita, KS; Patrick Gleason, Larned, KS; one sister, Karla Stevens and husband, Stephen, Normal, IL; parents in law, Alverna and Ambrose Kisslinger, Ransom, KS; two brothers-in-law, David Kisner and wife, Susan, Hays, KS; Rex Kisner and wife, Lena, Hutchinson, KS; one sister-in-law, Mary Jane Spresser, Denver, CO; and numerous aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews. Debra is also survived by her beloved pets, the yorkies: Spankey, Lacey and Bailey.

She was preceded in death by her parents, and father-in-law, Anthony “Tony” Kisner.

Services are 10:00 A.M. Tuesday, September 16, 2014, at Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, Hays. Kansas. A private family inurnment will be held at a later date.

A vigil service will be at 7:00 P.M. Monday at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 east 22nd Street Hays, Kansas 67601.

The family will receive friends from 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. Monday, at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays and from 9:30 to 10:00 A.M. Tuesday, at the church.

Memorials to Cancer Council of Ellis County or St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Condolences can be sent via email to [email protected].

County opts for former call center building for temporary space

Vacant NEW Corp. building on south Commerce Parkway
Vacant NEW Corp. building 

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

After weeks of searching, the Ellis County Commission voted Monday night to lease the former N.E.W. call center building to house staff during the year-long remodeling project at courthouse and Law Enforcement Center.

Staff had expressed privacy and ethical concerns about housing everyone in the same building, but Commission Chairwoman Barb Wasinger said keeping all departments in the same building works out the best.

The building is located at 3000 New Way Drive.

“Because it is all the way open, we will have to sit down and figure out how to block it off with temporary walls so that everyone has privacy … (and) we don’t have problems between the courts and the police department,” she said.

The county will lease the east half of the building, approximately 20,850 square feet, at a cost of $8 per square foot.

County Administrator Greg Sund estimated it will cost between $160,000 and $170,000 to rent the building for the entire year.

Wasinger said staff will begin discussion this week on the best way to make the move work.

She also reiterated that moving all staff from the courthouse and LEC during construction would save the county between $750,000 and $1 million and cut the length of construction time in half.

• The commission voted to replace approximately 450 fire sprinkler heads at the 718 Main Administrative Building at a cost of $22,000.

• Public Works Director Mike Graf submitted a grant application to the Kansas Department of Transportation to replace the bridge located 6 miles north and 5.3 miles west of Hays in the 900 block of Emmeram Road. The replacement will cost $159,283 and is part of the KDOT Local Bridge Improvement Program.

Kansas seeks to dismiss gun lawsuit challenge

Screen Shot 2014-09-09 at 10.19.48 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas has asked a court to dismiss a lawsuit filed by a national gun control group against a state law that challenges federal authority to regulate firearms.

The state contended in a court filing Monday in U.S. District Court that the Washington-based Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has no legal standing to challenge its law. The statute declares the federal government has no authority to regulate guns made, sold and kept only in Kansas, and allows felony charges against any federal employee who tries to enforce federal regulations for Kansas firearms and ammunition.

The attorney general’s office argues Kansas is enforcing the Second Amendment by punishing violations of the established rights of Kansans.

The Brady Center contends the law ignores regulations that protect public safety and help law enforcement.

 

‘Forrest Gump’ edges out ‘The Identical’

James Gerstner reviews movies for Hays Post.
James Gerstner reviews movies for Hays Post.

One of the things I’ve been enjoying most about living in Kansas City is the bevy of older films that are brought back to theaters for special engagements.

This past weekend the only new film that opened in Hays was “The Identical,” which is apparently about twin brothers separated at birth, one of whom becomes Elvis (or a character based on Elvis) and the other becomes an Elvis impersonator. These separated twins apparently feel some type of mysterious bond in what happens to be a vaguely Christian-themed movie.

That just sounds awful. “The Identical” opened at 12th place for the weekend box office with an absolutely abysmal score of 4 percent on RottenTomatoes.com, which means that only 4 percent of critics gave it a positive review.

Conversely, “Forrest Gump” reopened in theaters this weekend for its 20th anniversary. “Forrest Gump” is one of the all-time greats. I will continue to see the new movies that come out each weekend, but it was far too difficult to choose “The Identical” over “Forrest Gump.”

Lera Kesler

Lera Kesler, age 86, of Quinter, passed away, Monday, September 8, 2014, at Gove County Medical Center Long Term Care.

Services are pending with Schmitt Funeral Home of Quinter.

DAVE SAYS: We need help with our budget!

Dear Dave,
My husband and I have been living on a budget for a few months, and for some reason there seems to be leaks in our budget. It’s just a few dollars here and there, but added together it makes a huge dent. Can you give us some advice?
Joy

Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey

Dear Joy,
This kind of thing happens a lot in household budgeting, especially to folks who are new to the game. Here are some ideas to help stretch your dollars and plug those leaks.

Use the cash-only method, especially when shopping for groceries. Take only the amount you have budgeted, and don’t use your debit card or a check. Also, use coupons only for items you would buy anyway. In addition, you can stock up on items you use often when there is a big sale. These little things will add up.

Try eating out only on special occasions, drink water as your beverage and don’t be afraid to use coupons in restaurants, either. When it comes to buying clothes, make a habit of checking out the sale rack first. You can shop at thrift and consignment stores, and sell the clothes you don’t wear anymore.

With entertainment, use dollar-off and buy-one-get-one-free coupons whenever you can. See a matinee or a second-run movie, and if you’re going somewhere with a bunch of people, call ahead and ask for a group discount. You’ll be amazed at how much money these tactics will save!
—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. 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.

State considering federal charges against dove hunters

Doves seized in Ellis County. Courtesy of KDWPT
Doves seized in Ellis County. Courtesy of KDWPT

Hays Post

It has been a week since four men were stopped in rural Ellis County after allegedly shooting over 269 doves in one day. The legal limit is 15 doves per hunter.

The length of the case and release of details will hinge upon whether the hunters are charged in district court or will face more serious charges of violating federal laws regarding migratory birds.

The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism is in contact with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service about possibly filing charges in federal court.

“If federal charges are filed, it will take considerable time,” said Capt. Dan Melson of KDPWT in Hays. “If it is decided to just charge them in Ellis County, it won’t take much time at all.

The state is not releasing the names and ages of the hunters until a decision on charges is made.

“The officer who had contact with the hunters that day will make the decision,” said Melson.

Related story: Hunters accused of taking 269 doves in a day.

Pictures of Kansans killed in Vietnam sought

Screen Shot 2014-09-09 at 9.06.58 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Press Association is searching for pictures of Kansas residents who died in Vietnam.

The pictures will become part of a national project called “Faces Never Forgotten.” They will be added to the Wall of Faces in a new education center at the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports the KPA began searching for the photos several months ago. KPA executive director Doug Anstaett said this week that of 265 photographs of Kansans sought in the project, 42 have been submitted to the KPA as of last Wednesday.

A total of 627 Kansas service members were killed in the Vietnam War. When the project began, photographs for 362 Kansas servicemen already were in hand.

Deadline for submitting photos is Nov. 11.

Hill City store sells another winning lottery ticket

ks lottery logo

Kansas Lottery

TOPEKA – Cameron’s Corner in Hill City seems to be a lucky store to purchase a Kansas Lottery ticket. On Aug. 7, the store sold an 8-spot Keno ticket worth $153,630 that was claimed by a Quinter resident on Aug. 12. Nearly a month after the big Keno win, the store sold another large cash prize. This time, Cameron’s Corner sold a Powerball Power Play ticket worth $30,000.

On Sept. 2, store owner Rhonda McDonald was visiting with Kansas Lottery District Manager Mike Rohr when he asked her if she had purchased her lottery tickets for the week. Since she hadn’t purchased them, McDonald was glad he had reminded her and bought tickets for the Sept. 3 drawings.

“I’m so glad I listened to Mike when he reminded me to purchase my tickets,” said McDonald. “I always buy Mega Millions, Powerball, Hot Lotto and Super Kansas Cash tickets every week. When I buy Powerball tickets, I always spend an extra $1 for Power Play. I figure I might as well spend an extra $1, so if I win I’ll win even more.”

Players who purchase the Power Play option for an extra $1 per play have a chance to multiply their winnings by 2X, 3X, 4X or 5X. The winning numbers in the September 3 Powerball drawing were 2-16-43-45-51 Powerball 35 Power Play 3. McDonald matched four of the first five Powerball numbers and the Powerball to win a $10,000 cash prize. Since the Power Play number was 3, she tripled her winnings to $30,000!

“After scanning my tickets and realizing I had won $30,000 on my Powerball ticket, I was completely shocked,” said McDonald. “I had my husband Jim take a look at the ticket and then called Mike, our Lottery guy, because I wasn’t sure what to do. I gave him the information on my ticket and he called Lottery officials in Topeka to verify my win. After filling out a claim form, Jim and I made a trip to Topeka to claim the prize. It’s still hard to believe the amount we’ve won. Our store has had incredible luck selling lottery tickets lately. It’s been great for business.”

The McDonalds, who have been married 28 years, have two grown children. They were undecided how they would spend their winnings.

Cameron’s Corner, located at 405 W. Main St. in Hill City, has been selling Kansas Lottery tickets since 1987.

Domestic violence order versus Nebraska Lt. Governor; withdraws from campaign UPDATE

Lt Gov. Lavon Heidemann
Lt Gov. Lavon Heidemann

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Republican candidate for governor Pete Ricketts will announce a new running mate to replace Nebraska Lt. Gov. Lavon Heidemann, who resigned from office and withdrew from his party’s ticket.

Ricketts will announce his new pick Tuesday afternoon at the Nebraska Republican Party headquarters in Lincoln.

Heidemann announced Tuesday morning that he was withdrawing one day after a judge issued a protective order requested by his sister. His sister alleged that Heidemann had grabbed her wrists and pushed her during a dispute over farmland and their elderly mother.

Ricketts says Heidemann notified him Monday night that he was withdrawing, and he accepted the news with “a heavy heart.”

Ricketts, of Omaha, is running against Democrat Chuck Hassebrook, of Lyons. Hassebrook has chosen Jane Raybould of Lincoln as his running mate.

 

—————-

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A judge has granted a protection order against Nebraska Lt. Gov. Lavon Heidemann after his sister accused him of violent behavior.

The order issued Monday against Heidemann, an Elk Creek farmer, comes as he looks to return to the office as the running mate of Republican gubernatorial candidate Pete Ricketts.

Heidemann’s sister, Lois Bohling, filed a sworn statement last month in which she says he grabbed her wrists and screamed at her in a dispute involving their mother and their family’s farmland.

Heidemann released a statement saying he disputes many of his sister’s claims, but did not elaborate. The statement describes the situation as a “private, legal family matter” relating to his late father’s estate and medical treatment for their mother.

Heidemann was appointed lieutenant governor in February 2013.

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