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Kansas offers trout fishing at more than 30 public fishing lakes

troutKS Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism

PRATT–Winter weather may not be synonymous with fishing for most people, but the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism offers anglers winter trout fishing opportunities that make putting up with the cold worth it.

Trout are stocked in select waters during the trout season, which is open through April 15. Anglers can try their luck at trout fishing in Type 1 waters, which require all anglers to possess a $12.50 trout permit, and in Type 2 waters, which require only those fishing for or possessing trout to purchase the permit. The $12.50 permit is valid for the calendar year and can be purchased wherever licenses are sold and online at ksoutdoors.com.

Trout fishing opportunities are available at the following lakes:

TYPE 1 LAKES: TROUT PERMITS REQUIRED OF ALL ANGLERS

Cedar Bluff Stilling Basin
Dodge City Lake Charles
Ft. Scott Gun Park Lake
Glen Elder State Park (SP) Pond
Kanopolis Seep Stream
KDOT East Lake in Wichita
Lake Henry in Clinton SP
Mined Land WA Unit #30
Pratt Centennial Pond
Walnut River Area in El Dorado SP
Willow Lake at Tuttle Creek SP
Webster Stilling Basin
Sandsage Bison Range and WA Sandpits (Periodically Dry)
Vic’s Lake and Slough Creek in Sedgwick County Park
Topeka Auburndale Park
Garnett Crystal Lake
TYPE 2 LAKES: TROUT PERMITS REQUIRED ONLY FOR TROUT ANGLERS

Sherman County Smoky Gardens Lake
Solomon River between Webster Reservoir and Rooks County #2 Road
Ft. Riley Cameron Springs
Lake Shawnee – Topeka
Salina Lakewood Lake
Moon Lake on Fort Riley
Scott State Fishing Lake
Scott State Park Pond
Hutchinson Dillon Nature Center Pond
Atchison City Lake # 1
Belleville City Lake (Rocky Pond)
Holton-Elkhorn Lake
Syracuse Sam’s Pond
Cimarron Grasslands Pits
Colby Villa High Lake
Great Bend Stone Lake
Herington – Father Padilla Pond
TROUT Permit required year-round

Cherokee County – Mined Land Wildlife Area No. 30
*Because trout survive through the summer here, a trout permit is required year-round for anglers utilizing the lake.

Residents 16-74 years old, and all non-residents 16 and older must also have a valid fishing license. The daily creel limit is five trout unless otherwise posted. Anglers 15 and younger may fish without a trout permit, but are limited to two trout per day, or they may purchase a permit and take five trout per day. Possession limit for trout is 15.

For information on trout stocking schedules, visit ksoutdoors.com and click “Fishing / Special Fishing Programs for You / Trout Fishing Program.”

Longtime FHSU educator named ‘Icon of Education’

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Larry Gould, the former provost at Fort Hays State University who returned to the classroom in October 2013 as a professor of political science, has been named an “Icon of Education” by Ingram’s, the Kansas City business magazine.

Dr. Larry Gould
Dr. Larry Gould

Dennis Boone, managing editor of Ingram’s, said the nine honorees for 2015 share the ability to inspire in students not just a desire to learn but to live what they learn. “That may be the most important contribution that an educator makes over the course of a career,” Boone said. “It’s a quality we look for every year at Ingram’s when we take on a nearly impossible task: winnowing to a comparative handful the rich roster of candidates for consideration as one of Missouri and Kansas’ Icons of Education.”

Since launching the program in 2009, Ingram’s has recognized the career contributions of dozens of administrators, professors, academic researchers and teachers.

“I’m delighted with the recognition, but nobody gets selected for this career contribution without the teamwork and support of countless colleagues, students and friends at Fort Hays State and throughout the global higher education community,” Gould said. “This designation is as much their honor as it is mine. In the end, it has been their work and commitment that has made FHSU the ‘icon’ of accessible, affordable quality education among state comprehensive universities across the nation. I’m just happy to have been a part of that remarkable journey. I’m convinced the new generation of institutional leadership will keep us on that pathway to future success.”

Ingram’s said that Gould was a man who seems to have spent his entire life at the right place, at the right time, embracing megatrends that defined America for half a century.

The Ingram’s article stated: “From witnessing a new dawn in Scientific America after Sputnik, to the democratization of higher education, from living through the civil-rights era and Vietnam to engaging something called the Internet long before competing colleges realized its potential, Gould is the product of an unbridled intellectual curiosity about the way mankind processes current events and a deep-seated belief that, in his words, ‘education is the fuel that runs the ship of the state we call American democracy.’

“His list of signature accomplishments defies description. The native of Massachusetts’ Berkshires region came to Fort Hays State in 1984 as founding director of its Docking Institute of Public Affairs, taught political science for eight years, served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences for seven and as provost for 16. He chaired the search committee that made recently retired Ed Hammond FHSU’s president in 1987. He’s served on Regents’ committees and the Faculty Senate, and even chaired Hays’ planning commission for 28 years. And he was among the chief architects of distance-learning initiatives that have given Fort Hays a huge footprint in China, among other places, in the early 1990s.”

Dr. Mirta M. Martin, FHSU president, said the honor from Ingram’s was well deserved. “Dr. Larry Gould presided over our Academic Division as provost during the years when Fort Hays State accomplished some amazing and trailblazing initiatives,” she said. “Chief among them were a Virtual College that has made us a national leader in providing online education and the development of partnerships with Chinese universities that have produced annual FHSU enrollments in China of more than 3,000 students. These are notable achievements, and I congratulate Larry on his recognition as an Ingram’s Icon of Education.”

About Ingram’s
Ingram’s is Kansas City’s premier business publication and has been for the past 40 years. With more than 105,000 influential and affluent monthly readers and 25,000 additional readers of Ingram’s Quarterly Reports and reprint sections, Ingram’s has earned the respect of top executives in the Kansas City area, as well as one of the highest readership profiles of any business magazine, business journal or daily newspaper in North America.

Oil train wrecks increase pressure for tougher safety rules

A Union Pacific train moves oil west of Hays.
A Union Pacific train moves oil across Kansas

JOAN LOWY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Fiery wrecks this month of trains hauling crude oil are intensifying pressure on the Obama administration to approve tougher standards for railroads and tank cars, despite industry complaints that it could cost billions and slow freight deliveries.

On Feb. 5, the Transportation Department sent the White House draft rules that would require stronger tank cars and make other safety improvements.

Nine days later a train hauling crude oil and petroleum distillates derailed and caught fire in Ontario, Canada. Less than 48 hours later, another oil train derailed and caught fire in West Virginia.

Brigham McCown was responsible for safe transportation of hazardous materials during President George W. Bush’s administration. He says that the more incidents there are, the less willing the administration will be to listen to industry.

Middle-class taxpayers on Obamacare learn that it’s payback time

taxby Anna Gorman, KAISER HEALTH NEWS

Roberta and Curtis Campbell typically look forward to tax time. Most years, they receive a refund – a little extra cash to pay off credit card bills. But this year the California couple got a shock: According to their tax preparer, they owe the IRS more than $6,000.

That’s the money the Campbells received from the federal government last year to make their Obamacare health coverage more affordable.

Roberta, unemployed when she signed up for the plan, got a job halfway through the year and Curtis found full-time work. The couple’s total yearly income became too high to qualify for federal subsidies. Now they have to pay all the money all back.

“Oh my goodness, this is just not right,” said Roberta Campbell, who lives in the Sacramento suburb of Roseville. “This is supposed to be a safety net health care, and I am getting burned left and right by having used it.” As tax day approaches, hundreds of thousands of families who enrolled in plans through the online insurance marketplaces could be stuck with unexpected tax bills, according to researchers.

Those payments could be as high as $11,000, although most would be several hundred dollars, one study found. The result is frustration and confusion among some working and middle-class taxpayers, whom the Affordable Care Act was specifically intended to help.

The repayment obligations could dissuade people from re-enrolling and provide more fuel to Republicans’ continuing push for a repeal of the law. The problem is that many consumers didn’t realize that the subsidies were based on their total year-end income and couldn’t reliably project what would happen over the course of the year, said Alyene Senger, research associate at

The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. “How do you know if you are going to get that promotion?” she said. “How do you know what your Christmas bonus is going to be?” In addition, Senger said the government didn’t go out of its way to publicize the tax consequences of receiving too much in federal subsidies.

“It isn’t really something the administration focused on heavily,” she said. “It’s not exactly popular.” Life changes can be tax liabilities The system was intended to ensure that people received the right amount in subsidies, no more or less than needed.

But the means the government chose to reconcile the numbers was the tax system — notorious for its complexity well before the Affordable Care Act passed. Some who enrolled in Obamacare now are realizing that certain positive life changes – a pay raise, a marriage, a spouse’s new job – can turn out to be a liability at tax time.

“We are definitely seeing some pain,” said Jackie Perlman, a principal tax research analyst at H&R Block. H&R Block released a report Tuesday saying that 52 percent of customers who received health coverage through the insurance marketplaces last year underestimated their income and now owe the government.

They estimate that the average subsidy repayment amount is $530. At the same time, about a third of those enrolled in marketplace coverage overestimated their income and are receiving money back – about $365 on average, the report said. Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government made subsidies available to people who earned up to 400 percent of the federal poverty level — about $47,000 for an individual and $63,000 for a couple.

For families who ended up making less than that, the federal government limits any repayments that might be due: The poorest consumers will have to repay no more than $300 and most others no more than $2,500.

But the Campbells’ income last year exceeded the limit to receive federal help, so they have pay back the whole amount. Roberta Campbell said she was only trying to do the right thing. Campbell, now 59, lost her job as a program director for the Arthritis Foundation in late 2012.

She and her husband, who was working part-time as a merchandiser, downsized and moved into a smaller house. They were left uninsured but were mindful of the federal mandate to be covered as of January 2014. So they signed up for a plan through California’s insurance marketplace, Covered California. The plan cost about $1,400 a month, but they were able to qualify for a monthly subsidy of about $1,000. “We are rule followers,” she said.

“We decided to get insurance because we were supposed to get insurance.” They barely used the coverage. Roberta and Curtis each went to the doctor once for a check-up. Then, about halfway through the year, Roberta got a job at UC Davis and became insured through the university. Curtis, who had been working part-time, got a full-time job for a magazine distribution company.

They notified Covered California, which Campbell said cancelled the insurance after 30 days. But with the new salaries, his pension from a previous career and a brief period of unemployment compensation, the couple’s year-end income totaled about $85,000, making them ineligible for any subsidies.

Their tax preparer told them they would have been better off not getting insurance at all and just paying the fine for being uninsured. In that case, the Campbells say their financial obligation would have been much smaller – about $850. “The ironic thing is that we tried to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps,” Curtis Campbell said. “Now they are going to penalize us. It’s frustrating.”

It’s not surprising that the projections people made about their income in 2014 in many cases were incorrect, said Gerald Kominski, director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. The first open enrollment period started in October 2013, meaning that some enrollees based their estimates on what they earned in 2012.

Kominski said that policy experts knew there would be significant “churn” of people whose incomes change throughout the year and who would gain or lose their eligibility for subsidized coverage. But he and others said there was less understanding among consumers about how that could affect their taxes.

Adjustments allowed With tax season still under way, it not entirely clear how many people will have to repay the government for excess subsidies. But along with the recent H & R block estimates based on the firm’s customers, a UC Berkeley Labor Center study published in Health Affairs in 2013 suggested the numbers would not be not small.

Nationwide, 6.7 million people enrolled in marketplace exchanges through Obamacare in the first year. About 85 percent of people got federal help paying their insurance premiums. Using California as a model, labor center chair Ken Jacobs estimated that even if everyone reported income changes to the insurance marketplace during the year, nearly 23 percent of consumers who were eligible for subsidies would have to pay the government back at least some of the amount received.

About 9 percent of those receiving subsidies would have to pay the full amount. If no one reported changes, 38 percent would owe money. The median repayment – if people reported income changes along the way — would be about $243 but some couples could owe more than $11,000, according to the research.

The median amount due if people didn’t report the changes during the year would be $750. “The most important thing for people to do along the way is to report [income] changes so the subsidy amount is adjusted,”

Jacobs said. For those who must repay money, the IRS will allow payment in installments, even after the April 15 tax deadline. Interest will continue accruing, however, until the balance is paid. Covered California spokesman Dana Howard said he understands paying back excess subsidies puts some in a difficult spot.

But he said consumers who think their circumstances might change can decline the money or just take part of it. Howard also said the subsidies were designed to give the working class and middle class folks a leg up in affording health coverage. So when people get good jobs, he said, they don’t necessarily need the federal help to get insurance.

“When you get that really good fortune, that has to be shared back,” Howard said. “That is just how the ACA law was written.”

Hays Sweeps Great Bend on Senior Night

By Dustin Armbruster

Girls
Hays 55 – Hays 48

Like their game in January, Hays fell behind by double figures in the first quarter to Great Bend. The Indians trailed 13-3 after the first six minutes of the game. Hays did end the first quarter with back to back field goals to get pull the score to 13-7.

Hays trailed by five at 17-12, then went on a 12-2 run over four minutes to take a 24-19 lead. Talyn Kleweno capped the run with back to back three pointers to give Hays their first lead of the game. Great Bend scored in the final seconds of the first half cutting the Indian lead down to 24-21.

Highlights

The Indians opened up the second half on a 8-0 run and held Great Bend scoreless for four minutes to build their lead to 11 at 32-21. Great Bend was able to erase that defecit and even take a a one point lead in the 4th quarter. Down 43-42, Hays went on an 8-2 run to regain the lead the the victory 55-48.

Coach Kirk Maska

The Indians were led in scoring by Audra Schmeidler 14 points and 11 rebounds. Talyn Kleweno scored 10.

Hays finishes the regular season at 6-14 and 2-6 in the WAC. Great Bend drops to 8-12 and 3-5.

Boys
Hays 56 – Great Bend 30

The Great Bend Panthers tried to slow down the Indian’s offense on Friday night and for one quarter it worked. Hays trailed the Panthers 8-7 after the first quarter. Hays started the second quarter on a 7-2 run and ended it on a 12-0 run to go up 26-13 at half time.

Highlights

Hays did not let off in the second half, pushing their lead to 20 with 5:00 to go in the third quarter. The Indians led 47-25 after three quarter and went on for the 56-30 win.

Coach Rick Keltner

Cash Hobson scored a game high 15, while Nunnery added 14 and Werth scored 13. Hays finishes the regular season at 13-7 and 5-3 in the WAC. Great Bend drops to 2-18 and 0-8.

Hays will host sub-state next Thursday Friday and Saturday. Brackets will come out on Saturday.

More layoffs at Nebraska farm implement plant

Screen Shot 2015-02-27 at 10.09.41 AMGRAND ISLAND, Neb. (AP) — A farm implement plant in Grand Island will be eliminating the jobs of 136 more employees.

CNH Industrial America said in a news release Thursday that the indefinite layoffs result from market conditions and that they will begin in May and be finished by July.

In August the company announced layoffs of 170 full-time company staffers and 68 agency employees, and in May the company said it would cut 200 third-party agency positions.

On Friday CNH North America spokeswoman Kathleen Prause (prows) declined to tell The Associated Press how many workers still would be on the plant payroll after the 136 people are let go. She also would not say whether the plant was still producing combine harvesters and self-propelled windrowers.

Kansas woman hospitalized after truck rolls

KHPSTAFFORD- A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just before 2 p.m. on Friday in Stafford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2008 Chevy Silverado driven by Brenda C. Hill, 52, Pratt, was eastbound in the 500 block of South East 60th Street six miles south and two miles west of Stafford

The driver lost control of the truck and rolled multiple times.

Hill was transported to Stafford County Hospital.
The KHP reported she was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Acclaimed actor Rainn Wilson brings SoulPancake to Hays

Rainn Wilson at SoulPanckae prsentation Thursday evening at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center on the campus of FHSU
Rainn Wilson at SoulPancake presentation Thursday evening at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center at FHSU

By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

Rainn Wilson, best known  for his role as the eccentric but lovable Dwight Schrute on the popular TV show ‘The Office,’ presented “SoulPancake: Chew on Life’s Big Questions” to a full house at Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Hays Thursday evening.

The acclaimed actor started with a sing-along of the band Kansas’ 1977 hit song “Carry On Wayward Son.”

Carry on my wayward son. There’ll be peace when you are done. Lay your weary head to rest. Don’t you cry no more,” Wilson and the audience sang together.

The song’s lyrics echoed how Wilson described SP, to “uplift people, connect people, inspire and challenge them at the same time.”

Rainn Wilson leads crowd in singing the 1997 hit by the band Kansas, "Carry On Wayward Son"
Rainn Wilson leads crowd in singing the 1977 hit by the band Kansas, “Carry On Wayward Son”  Thursday.

As he joked with the audience and posed for a few pictures, the discussion got more serious as Wilson described a journey of growing up with faith, leaving it behind, coming back to his faith, and finding happiness in the here and now, not the ‘what ifs and whens.’

“What my talk is all about, and what SP is all about, is people going on a spiritual journey…a journey of self-discovery,” Wilson said. “One of the things that can help people on that journey is a reflection on our own mortality…we are given just a certain number of heartbeats and you have to make your choices about your life in that time, and if not now, when?”

Wilson has traveled the country with his “mission-based” movement but says he prefers talking at colleges like FHSU in smaller cities.

“In my experience, I really like going to middle America to do these talks more. I think people in middle America, their minds and their hearts are actually more open into seeing the spiritual, the Divine, and looking at their lives as having a purpose,” he said.

rainwilson3
Rainn Wilson poses for pictures

During the show, Wilson showed a video from the SP YouTube channel and a segment of what he called his “most proudest” SP project, a series called ‘My Last Days’ with advice on living life from people who are facing death due to a terminal illness.

Although Wilson admitted at times the series is sad, it serves to inspire. He pointed to one feature about Zach Sobiech, a 17-year-old diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer who wrote the popular iTunes song “Clouds,” which after his death in May 2013, still serves to raise money for cancer research.

“It’s simple. Try to make people happy…as long as you learn that, you’re going to make the world a better place,” Sobiech said as he discussed life in a MLD video feature shared with the Hays audience.

Wilson ended his talk by saying, “I don’t know all the answers,” but he asked the audience to seek their own truth through spiritual teachings, philosophy, art and more.

He also shared his favorite quote attributed to French philosopher Pierre Teilhard de Chardin who died in 1955 , “We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.”

For more SP, visit the website HERE.

Roberts Votes Against DHS Funding Bill That Allows Executive Amnesty

Homeland Secuirty 001WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., today released the following statement after voting against the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act of 2015 which fully funds President Obama’s illegal executive amnesty:

“President Obama’s executive amnesty is wrong, it has been rejected by the American people, and, according to a federal court, it is illegal. When I was elected, I swore to uphold the Constitution. That is an oath I take very seriously and I cannot support a bill that funds the President’s illegal executive order.”

“The Constitution gives Congress the power of the purse, and it is our obligation to use that power to stop executive overreaches like President’s executive amnesty. I cannot support legislation that allows actions that directly violate the separation of powers as defined in the Constitution.”

Nebraska judge gives Kansas man 9 years for elderly scam

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — A Lincoln judge has sentenced a Kansas man to nine years in prison for a scam he conducted that targeted elderly people.

U.S District Judge John Gerrard on Friday ordered 53-year-old Thomas Whitlow, of Kansas City, to pay $17,521 in restitution in addition to his prison sentence. Jurors found Whitlow guilty of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in November.

Prosecutors say Whitlow had his wife scour online obituaries and search for phone numbers of the relatives of the dead. Authorities say he then called, claiming to be a family member in need of cash, and had the money wired to him on at least 12 occasions.

The Lincoln Journal Star reports that Whitlow has denied involvement in the scam. He says he plans to appeal the ruling.

WAYMASTER: From the Dome to Home

109th Dist. State Rep. Troy Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill
109th Dist. State Rep. Troy Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill

Troy L. Waymaster, R-Bunker Hill, State Representative, Kansas House District 109

TOPEKA–Turnaround Approaches

This Friday, February 27, marks the first major deadline of the legislative session, commonly referred to as “Turnaround.” All bills, aside from some exempt bills, must be passed by the chamber of origin by this deadline in order to be considered after today. If a non-exempt bill is not passed by its chamber of origin prior to this deadline, then it cannot be considered.

Committees only had until Wednesday to send non-exempt bills to the House floor, so a majority of the House’s work this week remained in committees. This week, long hours were spent on the House floor in order to move the non-exempt bills to the Senate for action in the second half of the session.

While being on the floor of the House all day on Wednesday and Thursday, we debated and voted on many bills with varying subject matter and impact to the state of Kansas. Here are some of the bills that were debated this week:

House Bill 2061 – Amending the powers and duties of the Kansas Department of Agriculture division of conservation and the state conservation commission;

House Bill 2228 – Allowing in-state tuition status for current and former military members;

House Bill 2104 – Elections regarding filling vacancies of nominations;

House Bill 2326 – Contract negotiations for certain professional employees, namely teachers. This bill was amended on the House floor on Wednesday by Representative Sue Boldra’s amendment, which removed language and inserted the contents of House Bill 2257.

These bills, and many others, were debated during the week and those that were passed will then be sent over to the Senate for its consideration. We will now most likely be working the Senate bills that will come across the rotunda to the House starting next week.

House Bill 2108: Straight Ticket Ballots
One of the bills that the House Elections committee passed out is a bill that would require a straight party ticket option to be placed on, and only on, a general election ballot. This method of voting would be defined as allowing voters to vote for all candidates of one party for all partisan offices by selecting a single party designation on the ballot. There would be an exception to allow the voter to select a single candidate in another party or cast a write-in vote, which of course would be counted.

The bill also specifies that if the voter does not wish to vote a straight party ticket, the party boxes may be left unmarked and the voter may select individual candidates. The ballot would distinguish the difference between a straight party ticket vote and a vote for judicial retention, nonpartisan offices, or ballot questions.

KPERS Bonding
The Pensions and Benefits House committee passed out House Bill 2095, which would authorize the issuance of $1.5 billion in bonds for the unfunded liability of the Kansas Public Employee Retirement System. The bonds would be subject to the approval of the State Finance Council and a maximum percentage rate on the bonds would be 5 percent.

The bill would also require adjustments to the fiscal year 2017 State and School Group employer contribution rate. The rate would be reduced by the amount of the debt service payment in 2017. The existing statutory cap of 1.2 percent would apply to future fiscal years.

According to KPERS and a cost study completed by KPERS’ consulting actuary, this bill could create a long-term KPERS employer contribution savings totaling $2.8 billion. For the fiscal year of 2015, the employer contribution rate was reduced to 8.65 percent, as a result of Governor Brownback’s allotment plan. For the fiscal 2016 year the rate would return to the statutory rate of 12.37 percent, which has been certified by the KPERS Board of Trustees. Then for fiscal year 2017 the rate would be reduced by 1.94 percent or the cost of the debt service payment on the bonds, which is estimated to be $90.3 million annually.

Personal Privilege, Shadow, Pages, and Contact Information
Each year, the Speaker of the House grants each representative two Points of Personal Privilege, which we can utilize to honor someone with a statewide recognition. This past Tuesday, I had the distinct pleasure of honoring Melinda Cross, who was selected as the 2014-2015 Dr. Earl Reum Kansas Advisor of the Year. It was a great honor for Melinda to be recognized for this achievement by the entire House of Representatives.

Also this week, I had the pleasure of having Larry Lambert, Smith Center, participate as a Legislative Shadow for me. He attended all committee meetings and House sessions to see what a day in the life of a legislator is like.

I also had six pages this week on Monday. Those that served as Legislative Pages were Whitley and Brooke Leiker, Jordynn Guenot and Lacey Nuss, all from Russell, and Ross and Reed McNett from Larned.

If you have any concerns, feel free to contact my office at (785) 296-7672, visit www.troywaymaster.com or email me at [email protected]

It is an honor to serve the 109th Kansas House District and the state of Kansas. Do not hesitate to contact me with your thoughts, concerns and questions. I appreciate hearing from the residents of the 109th House District and others from the state of Kansas.

Troy L. Waymaster,
State Representative
109th Kansas House
300 SW 10th
Topeka, KS 66612

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