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Kansas man hospitalized after semis collide

Kansas Highway Patrol KHPWICHITA – A Kansas truck driver was injured in an accident just before 8 a.m. on Tuesday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Kenworth semi driven by William A. Collier, 55, Wichita, was southbound on Interstate 235 at Maple in Wichita. The vehicle struck a southbound 2007 Freightliner semi.

Collier was transported to Wesley Medical Center.

The driver of the Freightliner Steven L. Lane, 52, Wichita, was not injured.

The KHP reported both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Commissioner expresses frustration over staff additions

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Ellis County residents have seen a recent increase in wait times at the treasurer’s office, which County Treasurer Ann Pfeifer attributed to lack of staff.

Pfeifer told the Ellis County Commission on Monday night her office has had a number of complaints about wait times in the last two months, with at least one instance of a person waiting for almost 90 minutes for service.

At the end of last year, two people retired from the treasurer’s office, and Pfeifer said Monday after waiting the three months they were instructed to, in an effort to save money, the department has hired two new employees.

They will begin work March 1.

At a budget meeting earlier this month, the county commission called on department heads to hold off on filling open positions so the county can work through the budget process.

During the Feb. 2 meeting, Commissioner Barb Wasinger instructed all departments to provide the commission with a list of open positions and the county would then determine what positions can be filled.

Monday night Wasinger expressed frustration with the treasurer’s decision to bring on two new employees.

“This isn’t to punish the public — this is to figure out what to do with our finances,” Wasinger said. “I think this is the wrong time to be doing it. You shouldn’t be doing it. We asked you not to.”

Wasinger added she feels for people who have to stand in line, but asked the public to have patience as the county attempts to cut nearly $2 million from its 2016 budget.

Last year, the commission had discussed the possibility of a county hiring freeze, but then-Commissioner Swede Holmgren rallied against the idea and no action was taken.

Wasinger said while the county did not vote to enact the hiring freeze, she saw it as a cautionary symbol for department heads.

In other business:

• The commission voted 2-1 to hire Kaw Valley Engineering to inspect the courthouse and Law Enforcement Center Project for $29,066.

Commissioner Dean Haselhorst voted against the measure because the inspection was not included in the bid, although a spokeswoman for Treanor said the inspection fee was included in the project estimate.

The commission asked for a Treanor representative to come before the commission in a future meeting.

• The commission also approved a $7,486 change order at the courthouse/LEC to create a permanent power connection between the county’s server room, located in the basement of the LEC, and the courthouse.

Last week, the contractor inadvertently tore up the previously installed lines because contractors did not realize they were there.

FHSU students earn spot on 4.0 business Honor Scholars list

FHSU University Relations

Business students who earned a perfect 4.0 GPA during the fall 2014 semester have been named to the College of Business and Entrepreneurship Honor Scholar list at Fort Hays State University.

These students were also listed on the Deans Honor Roll for the fall 2014 semester. Kansas students include:

Bennington: Madison Wolf is a junior majoring in marketing.
Caldwell: Justin Mayo is a senior majoring in management.
Claflin: Aubrey Kempke is a junior majoring in accounting.
Clearwater: Amber Light is a senior majoring in business education (corporate communication).
Ellinwood: Michelle Klepper is a senior majoring in management.
Ellis: Shelby Hollern is a junior majoring in accounting (public accounting).
Eudora: Melissa Cole is a senior majoring in management (human resource management).
Frankfort: Jenna Maas is a junior majoring in management.
Galena: Doris Adams-Scott is a senior majoring in management
Great Bend: Jordan Klima is a senior majoring in finance (banking).
Peter Marston is a junior majoring in accounting.
Hays: Mohammed Alfraih is majoring in business education (corporate communication).
Ashley Nease is a senior majoring in marketing.
Quan Nguyen is a junior majoring in accounting (public accounting).
Adam Schibi is a freshman majoring in management information systems.
Jason Switzer is a junior majoring in accounting (public accounting).
Michael Vonfeldt is a senior majoring in marketing.
Corinne Ziegler is a junior majoring in accounting.
Chloe Zimmerman is a sophomore majoring in accounting (public accounting)
Healy: Manuel Turner is a senior majoring in management.
Hutchinson: Alicia Wilson is a senior majoring in information networking and telecommunications (Web development).
Kansas City: Vilma Maldonado is a junior majoring in management
Samantha Morrissey is a sophomore majoring in accounting.
La Crosse: Taylor Betts is majoring in business education (teacher licensure).
Larned: Larry Peterson is a junior majoring in management information systems.
Macksville: Adam Oak is a junior majoring in management.
Maize: Michael Russell is majoring in business education (teacher licensure).
Manhattan: Lee Witt is a junior majoring in international business and economics.
Milton: Bridget Hale is majoring in management (human resource management).
Ness City: Matthew Frank is a sophomore majoring in accounting.
Norwich: Bailey Poe is a sophomore majoring in accounting
Overland Park: Shannon Elliott is a senior majoring in management information systems.
Park City: Steven Nelson is a senior majoring in management.
Phillipsburg: Kelly Grismore is a junior majoring in management.
Makenzie Weinman is majoring in accounting.
Russell: Savanna Huff is a sophomore majoring in finance.
Topeka: Rosemary Dahlgren is majoring in tourism and hospitality management.
Wichita: Matthew Alliman is a senior majoring in information networking and telecommunications.
Steven Grimstead is a junior majoring in management information systems.
Jonathan Piszczek is a senior majoring in accounting.

KHAZ Country Music News: Hall Of Fame Visitation Up

khaz country music hall of fame 20120713NASHVILLE (AP) – The Country Music Hall of Fame is doing gangbusters in terms of attendance. The hall of fame reports attendance last year rose 45 percent from the year before, with nearly 971,000 people coming through its doors. The hall of fame completed a 210,000-foot expansion in April. Current exhibits focus on the music of Kenny Rogers, Ronnie Milsap, Alan Jackson and Tanya Tucker.

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

Fire remains a vital management tool

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

Every spring, the ritual continues. Farmers, stockmen and landowners continue to use fire as a range management tool while maintaining the economic viability of the Flint Hills.

Viewed up close or at a distance, prairie fires are riveting. Across the vast, open grasslands we call the Flint Hills, fires can be seen for miles. The flames lick at the blue Kansas sky as the brown, dry grass crinkles, crackles and bursts into orange.

These fires aren’t recent phenomena and they aren’t strictly for the viewing pleasure of those traveling up and down our highways. Long before civilization invaded the prairie, fires were ignited by lightning storms and the charred prairie restored the health of the native grasses.

Native Americans were the first practitioners of prescribed fires. They used the fire to attract the buffalo for easier hunting.

The artificially ignited controlled burning of the tall-grass prairie in east-central Kansas is an annual event designed to mimic nature’s match. It has become a tradition, part of the culture of the communities and the people who inhabit this region of our state.

Fire is an essential element of the ecosystem. Burning these pastures is one of the best management tools for maintaining the native prairie.

This annual pasture burning only occurs for a few days each year. It is not a procedure that is drawn out and lasts for weeks. However, weather conditions dictate the length of the burning seasons most years.

Not every cattleman burns his pastures each and every year as is sometimes portrayed. Instead, individual ranchers and landowners survey and decide each spring, which pastures will benefit and produce a healthier, lush grass for livestock after burning occurs. Often neighbors plan and burn together, giving them more hands to ensure a safe, controlled burn.

Forage quality and ecosystem health are both dependent on fire. Without fire woodlands take over the Flint Hills and the livestock industry loses a fantastic resource.

Kansas State University recommends burning take place when wind speeds are between 5 and 15 miles per hour, relative humidity is from 40 to 70 percent and temperatures fall in the range of 55 to 80 degrees.

Landowners in all counties must notify local officials prior to planned, controlled burns. This notification is a key to preventing prescribed fires from turning into accidental wildfires and ensuring burning is allowed under the existing conditions.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has a Kansas Flint Hills Smoke management plan to help alleviate air quality issues in urban areas generated by prescribed burning in the Flint Hills region. Coupled with the associated web tools, it should give producers better decision-making abilities when planning and implementing prescribed fires.

Producers can now assess how the smoke from their burns may impact urban areas downwind. Information like this can make a difference in keeping ozone within acceptable levels and keeping regulatory restrictions from impacting ranchers. This website is www.ksfire.org.

Actions to control smoke in the Flint Hills ranching community must remain voluntary. To ensure this continues, the farm and ranch community should tune into ever changing weather conditions and keep prescribed fire in the tall grass prairies confined to a minimum time period.

Prairie fires help rejuvenate the grasses that carpet the fertile Flint Hills. This is good for cattlemen, agriculture, rural communities and the Kansas economy.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

Gates Bar-B-Q restaurant burns to the ground

photo KMBC-TV
Gates BBQ store front (photo KMBC-TV)

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — A Gates Bar-B-Q restaurant near the Truman Sports Complex in Kansas City has burned to the ground.

Battalion Chief Mike Ditamore said an employee called firefighters about 1 a.m. Tuesday after seeing a fire around the exhaust system above a grill. The fire spread to the building’s attic and roof. No one was injured.

Investigators say the exact cause is still unclear. The building is total loss.

It was one of six Gates restaurants in the Kansas City area. It was popular with athletes, fans and celebrities who came from nearby Arrowhead Stadium and Kauffman Stadium.

Founder Ollie Gates says it’s too early to say if he will rebuild at that location but he will definitely have another restaurant in Independence.

Sen. Moran on Obama’s Cybersecurity Executive Order

WASHINGTON – To U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Chairman of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety, Insurance and Data Security, released the following statement on President Obama’s executive order related to improving critical infrastructure cybersecurity:

“Recent high-profile data breaches demonstrate the significant cyber threats that businesses and consumers face in our digital world,” Sen. Moran said. “The President’s actions today are not a complete solution, but do help prepare a policy foundation on which Congress can build a robust legislative strategy to solving the data security challenges American businesses face. I hope the President will keep his commitment to work with Congress to align incentives for American businesses to protect themselves and consumers. As Chairman of the Commerce Subcommittee on Consumer Protection and Data Security, I will continue my efforts to provide solutions to these important issues.”

Sen. Moran chaired a hearing of the Commerce Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety, Insurance and Data Security entitled, “Getting it Right on Data Breach and Notification Legislation in the 114th Congress.” The hearing featured testimony from experts to inform committee efforts in crafting a federal data breach bill, and focused on issues including the consumer benefits of a uniform federal law in place of disparate state laws, the timeliness of notification to consumers, and how sensitive personally identifiable information should be defined.

Rooks County Health Center marks 60th anniversary Saturday

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PLAINVILLE — Saturday marks the 60th Anniversary of Rooks County Health Center. Originally opened as Plainville Rural Hospital at 304 S. Colorado, the name was changed in 2003 to Rooks County Health Center and a new facility opened September 2008 at its present location 1210 N. Washington Street.

According to articles in the Plainville Times from February 1955, the original hospital opened after two years hard work and cost $275,000. Bill Brickley was the Administrator and Medical Technologist for 36 years. Dr. E.C. Petterson, the only physician serving the area prior to the hospital construction, helped recruit Dr. A .M. Pederson and Dr. Vale Page to the county. On opening day, the medical staff consisted of Chief of Staff, Dr. Petterson, Dr. Pederson, Dr. Page and two dentists, Robert Andreson, D.D.S. and Arvin Rueger, D.D.S. A few months later, Harold Mauck, M.D., William Votapka, M.D., George Hopson, M.D., all of Stockton, joined the medical staff of the hospital.

Year-round celebrations for the 60th Anniversary are under way beginning with the annual Rooks County Health Center Health Fair slated for April 25 at the Stockton High School Gymnasium.

“This year’s health fair will pay homage to all those who helped bring the latest in health care to Rooks County and also present an opportunity to see what RCH has in store for the next generation,” stated Kandie Morain, Communications & Development Assistant.

Having outgrown the original campus, RCH’s new facility experienced tremendous growth within its first five years, lab tests were up 34%, diagnostic imaging was up 52% and inpatient and outpatient services increased nearly 300%. With last year’s addition of a second ultrasound machine, a new CT scanner and soon an in-house MRI machine, these numbers are expected to experience another climb according to Morain.

RCH’s popular walk-in clinic, Doctors Without Delay, is credited for increasing patient visits over 630% since opening. Nearly 40% of these visitors travel to RCH from outside Rooks County. 2014 was another record setting year for the clinic.

“Patients enjoy the convenience of having immediate access to a clinic and should they need further tests or their condition merits emergency intervention, there is not extra travel, they literally cross the lobby and have access to a full state-of-the-art hospital,” explained Morain. “This convenience along with RCH’s family style of care endears patients to Rooks County Health Center.”

According to the Denver Post, almost 50 rural hospitals have closed since the beginning of 2010 with over half of those just in the last two years. “We feel so much compassion for these rural communities and it makes what we are doing here at RCH to keep moving forward that much more important,” said Morain.

New nonprofit focuses on area youth

Submitted

LENORA — The “Nex-Generation” name is no stranger to northwest Kansas. In 2011, Nex-Tech formed a youth services department and branded the Nex-Generation title to its many student-centered services. Recognizing the out-migration of youth and its future economic impact, Nex-Tech worked to develop a sustainable solution.

NGlogo

In 2014, and with IRS approval, the company helped form a new, nonprofit organization that will focus on youth retention strategies for the entire northwest and north central Kansas region: Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth, Inc.

As a nonprofit, 501(c)3 organization, Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth, Inc., is designed to fund, promote and support educational projects, scholarships and community programs focused on youth.
The organization operates under the direction of Executive Director Jacque Beckman of Lenora and a three-member Board: Rhonda Goddard, Nex-Tech’s Chief Financial Officer; Robert Muirhead, Midwest Energy’s Director of Community and Economic Development; and Scott Sproul, Executive Director of Norton City/County Economic Development.

Funding of Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth and its programs is made possible through grants, individual donations and round-up contributions through partnering businesses.

Beckman said Nex-Generation promotes a variety of youth-centric programs, including career development and entrepreneurship; internships and work-study; digital citizenship and Internet safety; and scholarships.

Nex-Generation works with local economic development offices, chambers of commerce, and schools to educate students about career opportunities within their communities.

“Some of our goals include providing summer internships for students within their local communities; scholarships for higher education; return-to-community incentives; and other programs that provide students with hands-on experience in business, entrepreneurship and other key areas,” Beckman added.
“Contributing to Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth is making a personal investment: an investment in your children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren; your nieces and nephews; and, ultimately, your own community, your businesses, your schools, your parks, your livelihood, your future,” Beckman said. “With this in mind, we hope many businesses and individuals will commit to helping with this investment. By partnering with Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth, Inc., you can help support projects that ensure the growth and sustainability of our small, rural communities into the future.”

For more information about Nex-Generation Round Up for Youth Inc., visit www.nex-tech.com/nex-generation, email at [email protected], or call (877) 567-7872, Ext. 1170.

City to discuss CID policy, street projects at early work session

By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

Hays city commissioners will discuss revising the city’s Community Improvement District policy at their Tuesday night work session.

The discussion was prompted by the commission’s approval of a CID at the Hays Mall, which does not include any capital from the mall developers for the project. One idea on the table is to limit the amount of money, by percentage, that a developer or owner can be compensated by a district. CIDs currently can be used for expenses greater than $250,000 in order to promote economic development or tourism within the city.

Commissioners also will discuss awarding a construction bid for the 13th Street project to APAC Inc. for $2.07 million. The recommended bid includes reconstructing the full width of the street including renovated water and storm sewer upgrades. Staff will also recommend commissioners add brick crosswalks as an alternate which is included in the recommended bid. The commission has an option to add other alternates, which include brick pavers, decorative lighting and a monument base for an increased price.

The commission will also talk about future street projects for the rest of 2015 and 2016. Ideas for future projects include reconstructing and restriping several sections of 27th Street, including 27th to 41st, Sherman to Canterbury, and Englewood to Hall Street. The Seventh Street overlay and chip-seal project also will be discussed.

The commission will also consider awarding a 2015 Street Maintenance bid for several projects at a total cost of approximately $459,000.

The meeting date, normally Thursday, was changed due to this week’s Hays Area Chamber of Commerce annual banquet. The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall.

Click HERE for a full agenda.

Willis Olen Crowley

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Willis Olen Crowley, age 86, passed away on Tuesday, February 10, 2015 at Wichita County Health Center LTCU in Leoti, Kansas. Willis was born December 22, 1928 at Pagosa Springs, Colorado, the son of Asher J. & Myrtle Emma Putnam Crowley. A resident of Wichita County since 1957 moving from Greeley, Colorado, he was a Cowboy and Rancher. Willis served his country in the United States Air Force during the Korean War.

Willis was a member of the United Methodist Church, Kansas Farm Bureau, Wichita County Amusement Association, Rough Riders Saddle Club and Wichita County Rodeo Association all of Leoti, Kansas.

On September 14, 1952 he married Margaret Mabel Bateman at Mansfield, Illinois.

Willis’s surviving family includes-

His wife-

Margaret Mabel Crowley- Leoti, Kansas

Nine children-

Linda & Willard Sanders- Scott City, Kansas

Marilyn & Mac Vass- Thermopolis, Wyoming

Alan & Kim Crowley- Doyline, Louisiana

Richard Crowley- Sunray, Texas

Glen & Jan Crowley- Cabot, Arkansas

Carol & Terry Laws- Leoti, Kansas

Mark & Raquel Crowley- Ellensburg, Washington

Sharon Jessen- Spokane, Washington

Carolie & Eddy Watkins- Vanderwagen, New Mexico

Twenty-Eight grandchildren, Thirty-Two great grandchildren and Six great great grandchildren.

His parents, a sister, Doris Crowley, a grandson, Tim Sanders and a great granddaughter, Jennifer Emaheizer precede him in death.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 pm Friday, February 20, 2015 at the United Methodist Church in Leoti, Kansas with the Reverend Brad Kirk and Elder Terry Laws officiating. Inurnment will be in Leoti Cemetery.

Memorial may be given to the Wichita County Amusement association in care of the funeral home.

HAWVER: A closer look at who runs our local schools

martin hawver line art

If there is one culture in Kansas that is isolated from nearly every other, it’s probably K-12 education — your local school district.

There are Kansans who like that isolation, making sure that school board members are not tied to a political party, that they don’t get suggestions from “someone upstream” either politically or through the finance of their election campaigns. Makes sense to some.

There are Kansans who think that isolation essentially makes those school board members less representative of the public that elects them and whose children are in school, and more responsive to the district’s administrators than to the taxpayers who help support the schools.

And, there’s that third factor that operating public schools is now very complicated. There are state and federal laws to be observed, and, well, the schools that kids attend now are instructionally very different than those back in the days before cars came with shoulder belts, or that many people knew that for some pupils, their best meal of the day was their free or reduced-price lunch. Or, even before the Internet.

That education culture is hard to understand fully, and many school board elections draw a fraction of the turnout that participates in those November general government elections for state and national officials.

Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe those spring school board election voters know what goes on in the schools, what policies and courses and procedures—that all cost money, of course—are necessary to make sure that your children will be job-ready when they graduate—and move out of your home.

Lots of talk at the Statehouse about low turnout in those spring school board elections, and maybe that’s a good thing because presumably those voters are interested enough to know what issues are important, and if their elections were moved to November, the school boards candidates just become a few more boxes to check off before you get back to the car.

And, are those off-the-cuff, just check the box beside the names you aren’t really familiar with votes that you want to elect the people who run your schools? If the candidates must become partisan, as at least one bill getting a hard look by the Legislature proposes, what does that mean?

Will Republicans spend less on schools, or less on administering the school district and more in the classroom? Will Democrats make sure the administration takes care of harder-to-educate students so they are job-ready when they are graduated?

Maybe that political isolation of school board elections—in the spring without party labels behind their names—is best, maybe not. It’s sure a place for political upstarts to open their election careers, getting the probably unstudied votes of party-line voters, which can be leveraged for higher offices later. Or maybe it is a place for those whose sole interest is educating your children, without a non-education focused general government political party litmus test to meet.

There may just be some significant education/election legislation this year that tosses all those questions in the air. There’s even a bill introduced that would disqualify teachers, those married to teachers, who have children who are teachers or who live in the same house with teachers, from seeking school board seats. That’s a way to eliminate the inward-focused industry of educating children, if that’s what you are looking for.

Those decisions come as state funding for school districts is headed downward, and local property taxes for those without children in school or much reason to know what happens in the classroom and why are probably going to inch upward.

Nearly everything dealing with the issues of education and voting are intertwined this session. And, not surprisingly, nobody’s sure how it gets sorted out…if it does…

Syndicated by Hawver News Co. of Topeka, Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report. To learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit www.hawvernews.com.

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