We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Kansas Marketplace Successfully Open for Year Two

This report provides actual monthly premiums for the silver benchmark plan in each county as well as monthly premiums for plans in other tiers and the premium tax credit amounts available at various income levels.- KHI graphic
This report provides actual monthly premiums for the silver benchmark plan in each county as well as monthly premiums for plans in other tiers and the premium tax credit amounts available at various income levels.- KHI graphic

By LeAnn Bell, Pharm.D.
Health Policy

TOPEKA — The second open enrollment period for the health insurance marketplace in Kansas opened Saturday. Last year, slightly more than 57,000 Kansans signed up for health insurance coverage through healthcare.gov, created by the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The Kansas Health Institute (KHI) has produced an issue brief describing changes in the marketplace, and several online maps showing the plans and premiums offered in the seven premium rating areas across the state.

See monthly premiums here

The most important features of the 2015 marketplace include:

The 2015 Kansas marketplace has 82 plans available – 64 for individuals and families (down from 65 in 2014), and 18 for small businesses (up from seven in 2014).
All of the current insurers are again offering coverage, and one additional insurer has joined the Kansas marketplace in 2015, bringing the total number of insurers to five.
The average premium for all plans offered in the marketplace changed very little – an increase of just 0.1 percent from 2014 to 2015.
However, individual Kansans could see a wide range of price changes for specific plans. For example, premiums for some silver plans are anywhere from 11.6 percent more to 13.0 percent less in 2015 compared to 2014.
Kansans seeking coverage through the marketplace, especially those considering renewing their current plans, are encouraged to evaluate their options carefully. Insurers may have adjusted their rates substantially and similar coverage may be available at a lower cost.
KHI’s online maps provide the monthly premium cost, available monthly tax credits to help pay for premiums, and the net monthly cost to representative consumers purchasing coverage through the Kansas marketplace. The maps and additional information on the Kansas marketplace are available at www.khi.org.

“Kansans are encouraged to visit healthcare.gov to learn about the plans and premiums available in their area,” said LeAnn Bell, Pharm.D., author of the new brief and a senior analyst at KHI. “It is important for shoppers to look at the options carefully to ensure they are getting the best coverage and value for themselves and their families whether they are renewing their coverage, or getting coverage for the first time,” she added.

Turkey production down, wholesale prices up

thanksgiving-turkey-dinnerBILL DRAPER, Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — U.S. farmers produced the lowest number of turkeys in nearly three decades this year and wholesale prices are at an all-time high, but Thanksgiving cooks aren’t likely to see a difference in what they pay for their frozen birds.

The federal National Agricultural Statistics Service says this year’s anticipated turkey stock is 235 million birds, the fewest since farmers raised 207 million birds in 1986.

Farmers say high corn prices after the 2012 drought forced them to scale back their turkey numbers to remain afloat, and that the impact of this year’s record corn harvest likely won’t be seen until next year.

The good news for consumers is that grocery stores typically take a loss on turkeys to woo shoppers, who will purchase other items for their holiday feasts there.

With Saint Nick’s entry comes racial controversy

Screen Shot 2014-11-15 at 8.47.59 AMRAF CASERT, Associated Press
MIKE CORDER, Associated Press

SINT-NIKLAAS, Belgium (AP) — In this town named after Saint Nicholas, Yuletide cheer is being clouded by controversy over the good saint’s helpers.

Across Belgium and the Netherlands, celebrations in which Saint Nicholas rolls into town surrounded by a host of “Black Petes” have come under increasing pressure year by year from complaints about racism. Pete is usually played by a white person who paints his face pitch black, dons a frizzy wig and gives himself bright red lips — stereotypes that disappeared from most countries decades ago.

On Saturday, police detained several anti-Black Pete protesters as Saint Nicholas arrived in the historic Dutch city of Gouda in a nationally televised event. Thousands of children and their parents lined the streets and gathered at a central market square to catch a glimpse of the saint known in the Netherlands as Sinterklaas.

Police spokeswoman Yvette Verboon said the protesters were detained because they were in the center of Gouda and not at two locations that had been set aside for protesters well away from the festivities.

The Belgian town of Sint-Niklaas with a church and statue honoring the saint has long been one of the focal points of the celebrations. A grand entrance this Sunday is expected to bring tens of thousands of children flocking to the “home of the saint.” Yet even in this bastion of saintly tradition, questions are starting to be asked about Black Pete.

Wouter Van Bellingen remembers how, as a black child growing up in mostly white Sint-Niklaas, he used to be taunted with chants of: “Look, there goes Black Pete.”

“Kids can be hard when it comes to that,” said the former Sint-Niklaas alderman and current director of the region’s Minorities Forum. “I retorted with, ‘There goes White Pete.’ I always had my answer.”

Around this time of year, Saint Nicholas visits hundreds of villages in Belgium and Holland, arriving by steamer or on his white horse to the delight of shrieking children across the two countries. The Black Petes do everything from carrying presents to throwing sweets at the children and generally prancing about until Saint Nicholas day on Dec. 6.

The Dutch cheese capital of Gouda came up with a strategy for reconciliation as Saint Nicholas arrived Saturday. Black Petes walked side-by-side with yellow-colored “Cheese Petes,” a nod to the city’s most famous products but also a concession to critics of Black Pete. In another sign of changing times, the daily Dutch children’s television report on Saint Nicholas’ travels also featured White Petes on Thursday night.

Black Pete has evolved over the years. A quarter century ago, Black Pete was a scary character, carrying a big bag to hold naughty children and a whip to punish the disobedient. Promoting him in recent years as a happy-go-lucky sidekick full of quirky madness has helped him to compete in popularity with Saint Nicholas himself.

“The last few years, Pete is at least as popular. Kids cling to him, ask him questions, hold his hand,” said Raf Rumes, the secretary of the Flanders Saint Nicholas Guild.

In another new touch, almost half of the Petes greeting children in this town’s Saint Nicholas “mansion” — a yearly holiday attraction — are played by women. At the fun house, which reopened this week for a monthlong run, children squealed as female Petes showed them Saint Nicholas’ dining room and sleeping quarters for all of the Petes.

But efforts at softening Pete’s image have failed to subdue bad blood between the pro- and anti-Black Pete camps in the Netherlands, where resentments over immigration have simmered for years. Liberals want to abolish the tradition, while the right-wing firebrand Geert Wilders and his anti-immigration Freedom Party have proposed legislation that would keep Pete black — by law.

“There is a war underway against Black Pete,” said Martin Bosma, the party’s culture spokesman. “Ministers and mayors are working to give this loyal helper another color. That must not happen. Our culture should not be damaged from on high. This law must protect Black Pete.”

Last year, more than 2 million people endorsed a Facebook petition to keep Black Petes’ image unchanged. That’s nearly one-eighth of the entire Dutch population, indicating the depth of emotion over the issue.

But Van Bellingen insists democracy is not about numbers alone.

“It is about the will of the majority and the rights of the minority,” he said. “As a majority you have to be sensitive and show empathy for things that are hurtful to a minority.”

He says it’s time to get rid of Black Pete.

Downs man named FHSU Half Century Club president

fhsu hccFHSU University Relations

J. Alan Feist, Downs, a 1955 graduate of Fort Hays State University, assumed the position of president of the FHSU Half Century Club during the annual luncheon and induction ceremony held during Homecoming 2014 weekend. He will serve a two-year term.

Feist earned a Bachelor of Science in technology studies. He was a standout in football and track and field, winning three letters in football and four in track. Feist was the first Tiger athlete to capture an individual championship when he won the two-mile run at both the AAU and NAIA national meets in 1953. He also earned All-American honors three straight years in track. He was inducted into the FHSU Sports Hall of Fame in 1989. Feist is a member of the Kappa Sigma Kappa fraternity.

Feist is a Gold-Lifetime member of the FHSU Alumni Association. He is a proud supporter of the university, contributing to the annual Beloit Student Recognition Program, which honors prospective students with scholarships and awards. Feist served on the FHSU Alumni Board of Directors from 1977-1980. He has been an active member of the Half Century Club since 2005 and a member of its Executive Council since 2012. He and his wife, JoAnn, now deceased, have four children: Jeffrey, a 1979 FHSU alumnus, Wichita; Julie Holloway, Beloit; Doug, Lenexa; and Debra (deceased).

The Half Century Club was established Oct. 18, 1969. Graduates of the 50-year class are inducted formally during the Homecoming meeting, and FHSU faculty and staff become members upon retirement. New members receive the Half Century Club pin, which symbolizes the lineage from the past to the foundation for the future.

Established in 1916, the Fort Hays State University Alumni Association serves the population of FHSU graduates by identifying needs and providing solutions. More than 57,000 graduates live throughout the United States and in at least 74 foreign countries. For more information, visit www.goforthaysstate.com or contact the Alumni Office at 785-628-4430, toll free at 1-888-351-3591 or by email at [email protected].

FHSU grabs first seven-win season since ’96 with dominating win at Central Missouri

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

Fort Hays States scored touchdowns on four of their first five possessions racing out to a 28-3 halftime lead and defeat Central Missouri 45-17 Saturday on a cold day at Walton Stadium Warrensburg, Missouri. Quarterback Treveon Albert threw scoring strike to Garrison Hendricks and Ed Williams and Quinten Darby added a pair of short TD runs helping the Tigers take control early.

The victory is the Tigers seventh of the season (7-4), giving them their first seven-win campaign since 1996. It is also their first win over the Mules (7-4) since joining the MIAA in 2006, snapping and eight-game losing streak. FHSU finishes in a fourth place tie in the MIAA standings, their highest finish ever.

Chris Brown Postgame Interview

 

The Mules moved to ball deep into Tiger territory on the first possession of the third quarter but fullback Sean Gorman fumbled which was recovered by linebacker Brock Long at the one yard line.

Central’s first touchdown came on a blocked punt midway through the third quarter, but FHSU responded with a seven-play which resulted in a 33 yard Drew O’Brien field goal.

 

Game Highlights

 

Ed Williams hauled in a 19-yard TD pass and Ed Smith an eight yard TD run for the final margin.

The Tigers finish with 384 yards of total offense, 289 on the ground. Ed Smith led the Tigers rushing attack with 144 yards on 12 carries. Kenneth Iheme added 114 yards on 29 carries.

Treveon Albert  completed nine of 17 passes for 95 yards and three touchdowns.

2 arrested in Haskell University sexual assault

Screen Shot 2014-11-15 at 4.52.34 PMLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Two people have been arrested in an alleged sexual assault on the Haskell Indian Nations University campus.

Lawrence police said in a news release that a woman told police early Saturday that that two men whom she knew raped her at one of the dormitories on campus. The woman was taken for medical treatment while officers tracked down the two suspects.

The release says officers interviewed the suspects before taking them to the Douglas County Jail. Police plan to turn over their investigative reports to prosecutors so a decision on whether to file charges against the suspects can be made.

Vehicle tied to drive-by death of Kansas girl found

Police InvestigationKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Kansas City, Kansas, police say officers have recovered a vehicle that they think was involved in a drive-by shooting that killed a 10-year-old girl.

Maj. Vince Davenport says police are “making progress” investigating last month’s killing of Machole J. Stewart. The Kansas City Star reported that detectives investigating Machole’s death are being aided by agents from the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Davenport says the outside agencies are providing “technical services.”

Machole was inside her family’s home when the occupants of a passing vehicle fired shots into the dwelling.

Her death came a little more than a week after a 6-year-old Angel Marie Hooper was shot to death at a convenience store in Kansas City, Missouri. Two men have been charged in Angel’s killing.

 

McDonald’s won’t buy new GMO potato

Screen Shot 2014-11-15 at 4.05.56 PMBOISE, Idaho (AP) — BOISE, Idaho — The U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved Idaho-based J.R. Simplot Co.’s new genetically modified potato. But one of the company’s oldest business partners — McDonald’s — hasn’t.

The Idaho Statesman reports  that the fast-food giant says it doesn’t use genetically modified potatoes and has no plans to change that policy.

The USDA this month gave Boise-based J.R. Simplot Co. permission to begin commercial planting of its new spud, called the “Innate” potato. The company altered the potato’s DNA so it produces less acrylamide, which is suspected to be a human carcinogen. Potatoes naturally produce the chemical when they’re cooked at high temperatures.

The potato is also engineered to resist bruising.

Simplot is a major supplier of french fries, hash browns and other potato products for restaurant chains like McDonald’s.

Demand for quake insurance grows in Kansas

earthquakeWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — People have been flooding insurance agencies with calls about adding earthquake coverage after a 4.8 magnitude temblor rocked part of Kansas on Wednesday.

The Wichita Eagle reported that because Kansas doesn’t have a history of earthquake losses, the price and deductibles are low compared to more quake-prone places like California.

Traditionally, earthquakes have been relatively infrequent in Kansas. But after dozens of them rocked the state this year, more equipment is being brought in to explore what is happening.

Studies have shown earthquakes can be caused when fluid, which is byproduct of various methods of oil and gas production, is injected into disposal wells. But a panel commissioned by Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback has found there isn’t enough evidence to link the Kansas quakes to oil and gas exploration.

FHSU men’s basketball comes up short against Minnesota State-Moorhead

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State men’s basketball dropped to 0-2 to open the 2014-15 season with an 83-71 loss to Minnesota State-Moorhead on Saturday (Nov. 15) in Maryville, Mo. The Dragons shot 54.3 percent from the field and drained 11 3-point field goals on their way to a 2-0 start to the year.

Coach Johnson’s Post game Interview

 

MSU-Moorhead controlled the game throughout, taking the lead for good at the 17:45 mark of the first half. The Dragons pushed the lead to double figures at the 12:31 mark of the first half and never let the Tigers closer than seven points the remainder of the opening frame. MSU-Moorhead led 42-32 at the half.

Game Highlights

 

FHSU cut the lead to single figures three times in the first 10 minutes, but the Dragons had an answer every time to push the lead back to double figures. Scoring went back-and-forth for the majority of the second half as the Tigers couldn’t find a run to put pressure on MSU-Moorhead.

Aaron Lien had the hot hand for MSU-Moorhead from the outside with 26 points, hitting 6-of-8 3-point field goal attempts. He finished 9-of-14 from the field and 2-of-3 at the free-throw line. Post player Isaac Sevlie had 16 points, going a perfect 8-of-8 at the free-throw line. Jordan Riewer had 12 points, Ngijol Songolo had 11, and Urbane Bingham had 10.

Craig Nicholson and Royce Williams led the way for FHSU, each with 14 points. Nicholson had six assists and Williams added five. Jake Stoppel scored 13 points off the bench and Tomislav Gabric had 11. Jeremy Wilson led FHSU in rebounds with seven.

The Tigers will look to get on track in their home opener against Central Christian College on Wednesday (Nov. 19) at 7:30 pm.

 

Meaningful gestures

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

More folks are walking around talking when no one is present. I watched a gentleman waiting in line for a flight. His earpiece and dangling cord with a microphone near his mouth revealed that he was speaking to someone on his smartphone. And while he was speaking Spanish, a language I do not speak, I understood much of what he was saying. His gestures gave away his enthusiasm. He exuberantly pointed to himself, outward to the listener, and aside when referring to others. His hands and fingers swirled as he made his points in spite of the fact that the person he was taking to could not see him.

He was one of those speakers where we might ask the question: “Could you talk if you had to sit on your hands?”

We all, more or less, converse with our hands and our eyes and our body posture. We understand people not only by what they say, but by how they say it.

These innate or unschooled gestures are “homesigns” as described by Professor Susan Goldin-Meadow in the Department of Psychology at the University of Chicago. While working on her doctorate, she saw how a deaf child who had not learned sign language nevertheless used richly meaningful gestures that were natural and understandable. Goldin-Meadow is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. AAAS recently profiled her work that showed that deaf children naturally use these gestures even when they have never experienced any linguistic model.

Homesign gestures are nouns and verbs and possess the “universal properties of language.” Children use these gestures to try to communicate a word before they have mastered the ability to say the word. And after we master our language, we continue to supplement what we say with gestures.

What I was observing in the expressive man at the airport line was “co-speech gesturing” that he naturally provided even though his intended listener could not appreciate this added visual richness.

In a recent teaching evaluation, one of my students wrote: “When you are excited, we are excited.” This is the richness of face-to-face classroom communication. The excitement my students feel is transferred more by my gestures and body language than just by the words I say. And to really perceive the subtlety of these gestures, you have to be in the presence of the speaker.

But media dampens this perception, much as you feel the environment while riding on a motorcycle more then in a car with the windows rolled up.
Or look at the recent Veteran’s Day parades. Or compare sitting at a ball game amidst the enthusiastic cheering crowd versus watching on ESPN where the view is actually better but the atmosphere is not as electric. It is the high resolution gestures that we can read by “being there” that provides greater understanding and empathy and exultation.

Lack of resolution in co-speech gesturing is but one of many deficiencies of so-called online learning. This medium, whether it was the televised instruction fad of the 1960s or the hyped anytime-anywhere convenience “courses” of today fails to provide these subtle gestures that make speech a rich communication. We recognize our barren words in our e-mail and instant messaging and we attach inadequate smiley-face emoticons.

Our cell phone and computer screen images likewise fall flat. The next time you are in a meeting where the superiority of the online media is touted, just ask: “Then why are we sitting here?” The answer is clear to all present. It is not merely the logic in the situation, but also because of the richness of gestures that we used before we ever spoke. They will nod in recognition. It is the richness in gestures that makes face-to-face meetings so much more effective.

To get carried away in learning, students need to get off of the media and join the excitement of really being there. If you agree, you don’t have to say anything. Just give me a “thumbs up” or a “high five.” Yeah!

KHP: Two hospitalized after accidents on icy Kansas roads

U.S. 75 near Topeka on Saturday
U.S. 75 near Topeka on Saturday

SILVER LAKE- Two people were injured in accidents blamed on icy roads late Saturday morning in Eastern Kansas.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Chevy Trailblazer driven by Toni R. Mahana, 47, Silver Lake, was southbound on U.S. 75 just north of Lower Silver Lake Road at 11 a.m.

The driver lost control of the vehicle on the slick roadway and overturned in the median.

Mahana was transported to Stormont Vail.

Just after 11 a.m., a 2004 Toyota Tacoma driven by Joseph Hollerich, 65, Tipton, was northbound on Highway 59 five miles north of Ottawa.

The vehicle crossed the Stafford Road Bridge. The driver lost control on the ice and the vehicle rolled according to the KHP.

A passenger in the vehicle Peggy Eisman, 63, Bonner Springs was transported to Ransom Memorial Hospital.

Hollerich was not injured.

The KHP said all were properly restrained at the time of the accidents.

Kansas man sentenced in robbery, rape case

jail prisonWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has been sentenced to 61 years in prison for robbing and raping a 76-year-old woman.

On Friday, the Sedgwick County prosecutor announced that 18-year-old Marquatesz Redmon had been sentenced Thursday. More than 51 years of the sentence is for the rape conviction. He also will serve time for aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary and aggravated intimidation of a witness.

Redmon was a minor in June 2013 when the crimes were committed but was tried as an adult.

Co-defendant John Thompson Jr. was sentenced last month to 10 years and nine months in prison for aggravated robbery, attempted kidnapping and aggravated burglary convictions.

Police say that after the teens broke into the woman’s home, she was sexually assaulted at gunpoint. Authorities used DNA samples to help prosecute the men.

 

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File