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Hays woman reappointed to state accountancy board

TOPEKA — Gov. Sam Brownback on Friday announced recent appointments to boards and commissions.

“On behalf of the people of Kansas, I’d like to thank these individuals for their commitment to serving our state,” Brownback said.

Among the appointments was Kathryn Mitchell, Hays, who is being reappointed to serve a three-year term with the State Board of Accountancy.

Mitchell earned her bachelor’s degree at Fort Hays State University and is also a Kansas certified public accountant. She works as a partner at Brungardt Hower Ward Elliott & Pfeifer.

The State Board of Accountancy is a licensing and disciplinary board. The governor appoints seven members to the board with five members being certified public accountants and two members who represent the general public. All members serve a three-year term.

Anyone interested in serving on a commission or board should visit http://governor.ks.gov/serving-kansans/office-of-appointments.

Moran accepting applications for spring 2015 internships

\WASHINGTON – U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., on Friday announced he is accepting applications for paid congressional internships in his Washington and Kansas offices for spring 2015.

“Congressional internships offer Kansas students a great opportunity to learn about Congress and the legislative process,” Moran said. “I hope to give Kansans an opportunity similar to the one I had serving in a Congressional office years ago.”

An internship in Moran’s office – either legislative or communications – provides a unique opportunity to work closely with Senate staff on behalf of the state of Kansas. Legislative interns will gain a better understanding of the legislative process in the U.S. Congress, and develop knowledge and professional skills valuable to future career pursuits. Communications internships provide a unique opportunity to learn about how political communications and the legislative process intersect, and gain practical knowledge about the inner workings of a fast-paced press office.

The intern program is open to qualified undergraduate and graduate students – or recent graduates – who have strong interest in public service and government and have achieved academic excellence. Applicants for a communications internship should possess exceptional writing and communication skills, knowledge of AP style, experience in digital media, and follow current events closely. While preference is given to Kansas residents, students from all states are encouraged to apply.

The application deadline for spring 2015 internships is Nov. 1. Application forms can be obtained and completed under the “Services” section of Moran’s website at www.moran.senate.gov. Applicants should submit a completed application form, resume, academic transcript, two letters of recommendation and a cover letter explaining the applicant’s interest in public service and goals of serving as an intern. Please submit required materials to: [email protected]

For questions, contact Moran’s office at [email protected] or call (202) 224-6521 and request to speak with the intern coordinator.

Sunny, mild, and dry Saturday

FileA picturesque September weekend is in store. Temperatures will be on the upswing over the next few days and the weekend is shaping up to be ideal for all types of outdoor activities.

Dry weather is expected both today and Sunday. Wind should be light today, and just a bit stronger from the south tomorrow.

Today will be a fantastic day to be outside with sunny skies and high temperatures in the mid 70s. Tonight will be mostly clear with lows in the low 50s.

Today: Sunny, with a high near 73. Light and variable wind becoming east northeast 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 49. East wind 5 to 8 mph becoming south after midnight.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 80. South wind 5 to 10 mph.

Sunday: Night Partly cloudy, with a low around 61. South southeast wind 11 to 13 mph.

Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 89. South wind 11 to 14 mph.

Health care spending forecast to increase modestly in next decade


Screen Shot 2014-09-05 at 12.17.08 PMBy Mary Agnes Carey
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — National health spending will increase modestly over the next decade, propelled in part by the gradual rebound of the U.S. economy and the growing ranks of Americans who became insured under the health law, government actuaries projected Wednesday.

But those growth rates are not as high as what the country saw for the two decades before the Great Recession crippled the U.S. economy at the end of 2007, according to the report from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Office of the Actuary and published in the journal Health Affairs.

The actuaries estimate that health spending grew just 3.6 percent in 2013, the fifth year of historically low rates of spending growth. But it will accelerate to 5.6 percent in 2014. They also forecast that the average growth rate for 2015-2023 would be 6 percent. That is up just slightly from last year.

The findings also suggest that health care will outpace growth in the gross domestic product over the next decade. Health care’s share of GDP, which has remained fairly stable since 2009, will rise from 17 percent in 2012 to more than 19 percent in 2023.

While some health care analysts and Obama administration officials have said the Affordable Care Act is reducing costs, CMS actuaries are no longer measuring the effects of the law on health care spending.

“We are no longer quantifying the impacts of the Affordable Care Act on national health spending,” Andrea M. Sisko, the lead author on the study, told reporters at a briefing on the findings. “Now that the Affordable Care Act has been in place for well over four years, it is becoming increasingly difficult to accurately estimate … what the world would look like in the absence” of the law.

Sisko also said it is too soon to estimate the effect of the health law’s delivery system changes on the nation’s health care system.

Paul Ginsburg, a public policy professor at the Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics at the University of Southern California, said the report illustrates that “the recession and the very slow recovery from the recession are important determinants of health spending trends …. There’s a been a lot of debate over the past year or two about how much of the slowdown we’ve experienced has been from the business or the economic cycle and how much is due to real changes in health care. My sense is it’s both. This very steep recession and this very slow recovery from it, especially when you look at the very low growth in wages, is something that has definitely depressed health care spending. The implication of higher deductibles, of greater cost sharing, that’s important as well.”

Better economic conditions, the aging of the baby boomer generation into Medicare and increased number of people with insurance are expected to result in greater demand for health care goods and services, increases in health coverage and faster rates of spending growth, in particular for private health insurance, the researchers said.

Those trends, the researchers said, will be countered by somewhat slower growth in Medicare payment rates mandated by the health law, cuts made to hospitals and doctors in the congressional budget-cutting efforts and the increasing use of higher deductibles in private insurance plans that have cut down on consumer health spending.

The number of uninsured people is projected to fall from about 45 million in 2012 to 23 million by 2023, according to CMS actuaries.

Other key takeaways from the CMS report include:

• Medicare spending growth slowed from 4.8 percent in 2012 to 3.3 percent in 2013. That was caused by the automatic 2 percent payment cuts known as sequestration and other payment adjustments, especially reductions in federal payments to the private Medicare Advantage plans that offer an alternative to traditional Medicare. Late last month, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that lower costs for medical services and labor will help reduce both Medicare and Medicaid spending over the next decade.

Continued movement of baby boomers in to the program and more spending on older beneficiaries will cause Medicare expenditures to rise 7.9 percent in 2020, according to the CMS report.

• Medicaid’s growth rate is expected to rise from 3.3 percent in 2012 to 6.7 percent in 2013, reflecting the health law’s Medicaid expansion – which is optional for states – and the effect of the law’s temporary payment increase for primary care physicians, among other factors. The researchers forecast that Medicaid spending will spike nearly 13 percent in 2014 but the growth rate will fall back to 6.7 percent the following year.

• In 2014, private health insurance premiums are projected to grow 6.8 percent, largely a result of higher per-enrollee spending and increased insurance coverage through the health law’s online marketplaces, or exchanges, and individually purchased insurance. For 2016-23, average premium growth for private health insurance is projected to be 5.4 percent per year.

• For 2016-2023, faster increases in disposable personal income and greater enrollment in private health insurance will contribute to the projected 6.1 spending growth per year for health care services, faster than the 4.7 percent average growth expected for 2013-15. But those conditions are likely to change, researchers warned.

“Consistent with the historical relationship between health spending and economic cycles, these projected changes in the economy are expected to influence health expenditure growth with a lag,” resulting in a projected peak growth in health spending of 6.6 percent in 2020, CMS said.

One dead in Friday night rollover crash

fatal crashLARNED, Kan.- One person died in an accident just before 9:30 p.m. on Friday in Pawnee County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Dodge Durango driven by Jared Riley Streich, 22, Alva, OK., was eastbound of U.S. 56 two miles west of Larned.

The vehicle went off the roadway to the right. The driver overcorrected, crossed the roadway to the left and vehicle rolled.

Streich was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Beckwith Mortuary.

Two passengers in the Durango Tayler Keeth Conder, 21, Shattuck, OK., and Tylor Chad Raymond Coghill, 20, Alva, OK., were injured but refused transport for treatment according to the KHP office in Garden City.

The KHP also reported Conder was not wearing a seat belt.

Friday Night High School Football Scores 9/5

http://insuringhays.com/Area Scores

Hays 12, Olathe Northwest 10
Phillipsburg 48, Hays-TMP-Marian 0
LaCrosse 28, Olpe 8
Central Plains 42, Victoria 24
Osborne 52, Thunder Ridge 28
Ness City 44, Kinsley 6
Norton 46, Ellis 0
Logan-Palco 50, Golden Plains 0
Wallace County 24, Rawlins County 12
St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 68, Hill City 22
Oakley 14, Colby 10
Ellsworth 41, Russell 10
Smith Center 24, Plainville 0
Trego 70, Stockton 56
Otis-Bison 56, Macksville 6

Statewide Scores

Abilene 21, Royal Valley 0
Andale 41, Buhler 20
Andover 21, Goddard-Eisenhower 0
Andover Central 34, Valley Center 31
Anthony-Harper-Chaparral 47, Wichita Independent 13
Arkansas City 34, Winfield 13
Atchison 42, Pleasant Ridge 22
Atchison County 52, Hiawatha 27
Attica/Argonia 66, Cunningham 20
Balko, Okla. 40, Moscow 6
Basehor-Linwood 20, Baldwin 17, OT
Beaver, Okla. 46, Johnson-Stanton County 0
Bennington 8, Remington 7
Bishop Miege 51, BV Northwest 36
Blue Valley Southwest 26, BV North 19
Blue Valley Stillwell 29, SM Northwest 0
Cair Paravel 60, St. John’s Military 26
Caldwell 8, Central Burden 6
Caney Valley 35, Yates Center 0
Chapman 39, Circle 14
Chase 50, Wheatland-Grinnell 0
Chase County 36, West Franklin 21
Cheney 35, Garden Plain 21
Cherryvale 14, Humboldt 0
Chetopa 56, Marmaton Valley 0
Columbus 25, Chanute 14
Concordia 26, Beloit 0
Conway Springs 55, Bluestem 14
DeSoto 70, KC Harmon 8
Dodge City 27, Wichita West 18
El Dorado 17, Mulvane 15
Ell-Saline 20, Inman 8
Emporia 45, Washburn Rural 44
Eudora 35, Bonner Springs 27
Fort Scott 30, Parsons 0
Frankfort 38, Clifton-Clyde 30
Fredonia 27, Erie 6
Goodland 52, Wray, Colo. 28
Greeley County 32, Weskan 31
Halstead 22, Haven 14
Hanover 52, Axtell 12
Hesston 27, Smoky Valley 7
Hodgeman County 58, Kiowa County 12
Holcomb 36, Cimarron 0
Horton 46, Jackson Heights 14
Hugoton 31, Guymon, Okla. 23
Hutchinson Trinity 39, Sedgwick 14
Independence 41, Labette County 10
Junction City 48, Highland Park 12
Kapaun Mount Carmel 35, Wichita East 18
KC Piper 20, Lansing 14
KC Sumner 8, KC Bishop Ward 0
KC Turner 26, KC Washington 14
Kingman 20, Nickerson 0
Lakin 53, Syracuse 8
Larned 21, Hoisington 20
Lawton, Okla. 49, Salina Central 3
Leavenworth 19, Great Bend 0
Lincoln 52, Tescott 6
Linn 52, Wilson 16
Little River 46, Rural Vista 22
Louisburg 19, Ottawa 0
Lyndon 47, Herington 6
Maize 20, Derby 13
Maize South 28, Goddard 0
Manhattan 28, Shawnee Heights 25
Marais des Cygnes Valley 48, Lebo 0
Marion 38, Moundridge 7
Maur Hill – Mount Academy 50, Immaculata 0
McLouth 41, Jefferson North 6
Medicine Lodge 15, Belle Plaine 9
Mission Valley 33, Osage City 12
Nemaha Central 35, Sabetha 27
Neodesha 14, Northeast-Arma 12
Newton 32, Wichita Campus 12
Northern Heights 35, Council Grove 18
Northern Valley 40, Alma, Neb. 15
Oberlin-Decatur 46, Hoxie 14
Olathe East 26, Garden City 14
Olathe North 18, Rogers Heritage, Ark. 13
Olathe South 24, Hutchinson 2
Oskaloosa 32, Valley Falls 30
Oxford 72, South Haven 38
Peabody-Burns 54, Goessel 8
Perry-Lecompton 45, Tonganoxie 20
Phillipsburg 48, Hays-TMP-Marian 0
Pittsburg 27, Coffeyville 14
Prairie View 3, Wellsville 0
Pratt 13, Lyons 3
Pratt Skyline 48, South Barber 32
Quinter 62, Dighton/Healy 40
Riverside 35, Jefferson West 14
Riverton 21, Girard 9
Rock Hills 60, Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 6
Rossville 41, Clay Center 7
Santa Fe Trail 35, Iola 0
Satanta 50, Bucklin 0
Scott City 37, Clearwater 0
Silver Lake 18, Holton 7
SM East 40, Gardner-Edgerton 0
SM South 42, SM North 14
Solomon 62, Centre 36
South Central 52, Ashland 6
Southeast 36, Baxter Springs 0
Southeast Saline 54, Salina Sacred Heart 13
Spearville 32, Madison 28
Spring Hill 14, Paola 13
St. James Academy 35, Pleasant Hill, Mo. 7
St. Mary’s 8, Marysville 0
St. Thomas Aquinas 34, Mill Valley 24
Stafford 34, Pretty Prairie 26
Sylvan-Lucas 26, Natoma 6
Topeka 69, KC Schlagle 0
Topeka Hayden 56, Topeka Seaman 7
Troy 30, Washington County 0
Udall 56, Norwich 6
Ulysses 38, Liberal 6
Wakefield 50, BV Randolph 0
Wamego 34, Rock Creek 10
Waverly 26, Southern Coffey 20
Wellington 27, Augusta 13
West Elk 46, St. Paul 0
Wichita Bishop Carroll 43, Wichita Northwest 14
Wichita Collegiate 28, Rose Hill 6
Wichita Heights 35, Wichita Southeast 0
Wichita Home School 45, Veritas Christian 0
Wichita Trinity 32, Douglass 0
Word of Life 36, Bishop Seabury Academy 0

Phillipsburg blanks TMP

By JEREMY McGUIRE
HaysPost

Phillipsburg 48, TMP 0

It took Phillipsburg exactly 13 seconds to score their first touchdown on Friday night and they never looked back. Brock Means rumbled 90 yards on the opening kick to set the tone for the Panthers. TMP did not have an answer the entire night.

Phillipsburg led 28-0 at halftime, 35-0 at the end of the third quarter and 48-0 at the end of the game. TMP will be at home again next Friday to take on Ellis.

PLAY OF THE GAME

JOHN MONTGOMERY POST-GAME

FHSU men’s soccer opens season with home win

The 23rd-ranked Fort Hays State men’s soccer team opened their season with a 2-1 win over Colorado State-Pueblo Fridah on the first day of the Days Inn Soccer Classic at the FHSU Soccer Stadium.

Michael Cole’s header off a left side pass from David Lucio in the 82nd minute put the Tigers ahead for good. Diego Cabral scored off a penalty kick in the 40th minute to give the Tigers the 1-0 lead.

The Thunderwolves tied the match on a free kick in the 65th minute.

Kent Fruend made five saves in goal.

The 1-0 Tigers will play Drury (Mo.) Sunday at 1:30pm. The Panthers defeated Lubbock Christian 2-1 in the first match of the day.

James Shields pitches Royals past Yankees

NEW YORK (AP) — James Shields took a two-hitter into the ninth inning and Nori Aoki lined a run-scoring single in the third following Chase Headley’s two-base error, leading the Kansas City Royals over the New York Yankees 1-0 Friday night.

Two starts after losing to the Yankees 8-1 in one of his worst outings this season, Shields (13-7) retired his first 11 batters before Brett Gardner’s double in the fourth. Headley singled in the fifth, and Gardner flied out to the right-field warning track in the sixth.

Shields retired 11 straight before Derek Jeter singled softly with one out in the ninth. Wade Davis relieved, and pinch-runner Antoan Richardson stole second before Gardner struck out swinging on a 3-2 fastball.

Carlos Beltran took a called third strike, giving Davis his first big league save. Davis has fanned 92 batters in 62 1-3 innings this season.

A night after Mark Teixeira and Headley had ninth-inning homers for a 5-4 win over Boston, the Yankees rarely hit the ball hard against Shields, who induced 12 groundouts. He allowed three hits in 8 1-3 innings, struck out five, walked none and hit a batter with a pitch.

Kansas City (78-61), which began the night one game in front of Detroit in the AL Central, is in first place in September for the first time since 1985. The Royals have won four in a row and are 17 games over .500 for the first time since 1989, according to STATS.

New York began the night four games out for the second AL wild card and in danger of missing the playoffs in consecutive years for the first time since 1992 and ’93.

Michael Pineda (3-4), who has not allowed more than two runs in any of his 10 big league starts this year, has received 18 runs of offensive support in his last 13 outings dating to August 2013.

He was hurt by the Yankees’ defense in the third, when Alcides Escobar hit a one-out grounder to third that Headley allowed past him and into left field. Escobar hustled into second and scored an unearned run two pitches later when Aoki singled to center.

Pineda gave up three hits, all singles, in seven innings and walked none.

Dellin Betances followed and reached 100 mph while pitching to Escobar in the eighth, according to the scoreboard radar gun.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Following a day off, manager Ned Yost said his entire bullpen was available.

Yankees: INF-OF Martin Prado, recovering from a left hamstring strain, could be back in the starting lineup Saturday.

UP NEXT

RHP Brandon McCarthy (5-4) is slated to start Saturday for the Yankees against LHP Danny Duffy (9-11).

FHSU women’s cross country first, men second at Trojan Invitational

FHSU Athletics

The Fort Hays State women’s cross country team won the Trojan Invitational, hosted by Colby Community College on Friday evening (Sept. 5) in Colby, Kan. The Tigers swept the top three positions and tallied the low team score of 18 points. Ramsey McCarter topped the field on the 4K course in a time of 14:37.

Micki Krzesinski finished right behind McCarter in a time of 14:38, while Chelsea Jackson crossed the line third overall in 14:43. Alex Keehn was fifth overall in 15:15, while Hannah Robinson  was seventh overall in 15:27. The Tigers had 10 of the top 13 runners in the race, which also included Sydney Lower, Vanessa Resh, Amanda Morgan, Shea Bonine and Jessie Rubottom. 

The Tigers topped a field of four teams at the event. FHSU returns to action next Saturday (Sept. 13) at the Hutchinson Blue Dragon Invitational.

Tiger men finish second

FHSU Athletics
FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State men’s cross country finished second at the Trojan Invitational, hosted by Colby Community College on Thursday (Sept. 4). Colby won its home meet, topping the Tigers by 12 points. Colby had 25 points, compared to 37 for FHSU. Four teams competed at the event.

Ryan Hopkins was the top runner for the Tigers, finishing third overall in a time of 15:36 on the 5K course. Isaac Williams was fourth overall with a time of 15:37. Troy Wineinger was ninth in 15:57, Seth Parres was 15th in 16:30, and Jake Spencer was 17th in 16:44.

Next up for the Tigers is the Hutchinson Blue Dragon Invitational on Saturday (Sept. 13).

FHSU women’s soccer upsets No. 21 Mustangs

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Women’s Soccer exploded with four goals in a 4-1 season opening road win over No. 21 Southwest Minnesota State on Friday (Sept. 5).  The win was the Tigers’ first over a ranked opponent since the MIAA Championship Game in 2012, and is a regional victory for the team. 

Jordan Hester had two goals for the Tigers, leading the way as Jordan Shaw and Hailey Davey each added a goal.  The two goals in a game for Hester ties a school record, and is a new career best for the junior.

Jasmine Beaulieu and Kylee Loneker were credited with assists in the game.
 
Fort Hays State struck first in the 16th minute of action, when Makatura’s corner kick found Shaw in the box, who headed it in for a score.
 
That lead was extended to 2-0 just before intermission, when Davey took a pass from Beaulieu for her first goal of the season, carrying over strong offensive play from exhibition action.
 
Out of the break, Hester entered the scoring column at 54:35.  Using a cross from Loneker, Hester headed the ball past the keeper into the back of the net and put Fort Hays State ahead, 3-0.
 
Hester’s second goal of the night came just past the 71-minute mark (71:07).  Steffens crossed a pass to the back post of the goal where Hester was waiting for FHSU’s fourth and final goal of the night.
 
SMSU got one back soon after as Justine Hauck scored in the 74th minute, but that was it for the Mustangs as FHSU closed out the win.
 
FHSU had six shots all night, five of which were on goal.  In the goal, Kristen Thompson played all 90 minutes, allowing one goal and recording seven saves.
 
The Tigers return to competition on Sunday (Sept. 7) against the University of Sioux Falls.  Game time is set for 11 a.m., in Sioux Falls, S.D.

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