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

2016 presidential candidates

Les Knoll
Les Knoll

We are all aware, that is, informed voters are aware, President Barack Obama has announced he will go it alone following his big loss to Republicans in the November elections.  In other words, he will not depend on Congress to get things done his way for the remaining two years of his presidency.

Democrats in Congress have our Founders turning over in their graves since our Constitution clearly (for the sake of checks and balances) depends on Congress making laws and not the president.  Dems literally stomped on and spit out the thinking of our Founders. They are more than willing to give up congressional legislative authority to their president.

What about the GOP’s presidential candidates for 2016?

We do not want another Bush, and Romney had his chance in 2012 but blew it.  If polls clearly show Americans are fed up with Washington in general why in the world would voters want another Washington establishment type like the two just mentioned?  The approval of our government in D.C. is at an all time low.  We need new blood, not more of the same.

Any Democrat, especially the likes of a Hillary Clinton, would be ten times worse, but a Jeb Bush is not the answer either, nor anybody like him.

Maybe what we need is a “go it alone” Republican president, in a way just like Obama.  No, not in terms of shredding the Constitution as Obama does.  No, not in terms of having government agencies completely out of control with thousands upon thousands of new regulations every week many of which should be going through Congress first.

If we can have a “go it alone” far left Obama president with agendas all over the place not in the best interest of America why not one who will make sure we do what is best for Americans.

What we need is a president not beholden to anybody except the American people.  Too many in Congress, on both sides, are beholden to big donors, lobbyists, and cronies.   We need a president who will do what’s right for America even if it takes bringing around a “kicking and screaming” stubborn Congress.

I do not trust Congress.  I do not trust the Republican leadership in Congress.   There are too many in our legislative body who are “Washington Republican Establishment” types no different than Democrats when it comes to the many issues facing this country.

There are some really good conservative Republicans on the hill, but unfortunately they do not have the clout to take on the Washington Republican Establishment.  We need a president that will “go it alone” in his or her thinking. Not in everything, of course, but on issues where Reps cave to Dems.  The WRE has too much control and caves too often.

The WRE caused McCain’s loss to Obama in 2008 and then Romney’s loss in 2012.  Liberal mainstream media will prop up Jeb Bush now then knock him out in 2016 as it did with the other two.

Last November’s elections clearly showed there’s a huge divide (and I mean huge) between Obama policies and what Americans want for this country going forward.  In other words, there’s this huge divide between liberalism and conservatism. Voters spoke in November that the majority wants to move to the right.  Doesn’t look to me the new Congress is carrying out the mandates of voters. Unfortunately, there’s a big divide within the Republican Party itself.

We need to elect a conservative president in 2016 who will listen and act on the desires of the people, not the DC cocktail party circuit consisting of Democrats and Republicans alike.

Les Knoll lives in Victoria and Gilbert, Ariz.

INSIGHT KANSAS: Social engineering the foster care system

Every child deserves a family. I know this as well as anyone. Had the Rackaways not adopted me as a baby, I may never have known what it means to be part of a family.

Throughout my life, as an adoptee and now as an adoptive parent of two beautiful children, I have been able to see that what makes a family is not necessarily biology, but love and care. When a biological family cannot provide adequate care for a child, having others willing to foster and/or adopt kids is often the ticket to a productive and happy life.

Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.
Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.

As of fiscal year 2013, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Administration for Children and Families*, there were more than 400,000 children in foster care systems in the United States, 6,441 of them in Kansas. Six thousand human lives in limbo. For prospective foster parents, the foster system itself is a maze of complicated regulations, strict behavioral barriers, extensive training, and scrutiny.

I lived the life of a foster-parent-in-waiting before we opted for adoption through other means in 2009 and 2010. Foster care is not something entered into lightly. And the thousands of children in the system speak to a limited supply of foster families relative to the demand of children in the system.
When a policy-drenched topic such as foster care comes up, there is a natural opportunity for legislatures to step in and hopefully make improvements for the benefit of kids in need as well as the families that make them part of their own – even if only temporarily. Enter Altoona Republican Forrest Knox, who knows a bit about foster care having fostered-to-adopt four boys with his wife. Rather than finding a way to expand the pool of foster families, Knox has decided that what the Kansas foster system really needs is more restrictions on foster families.

Knox introduced Senate Bill 158 on February 5, which would create a new tier of foster care families known as CARE. Foster families who are deemed to qualify for CARE and its higher state subsidy must: 1) be married for seven years, 2) have no alcohol or tobacco in their home, 3) have never been a drug user in life, 4) have both parents possessing high school diplomas, 5) attend church or equivalent organization weekly, 6) provide evidence that neither of the parents ever had an extramarital affair and 7) must have at least one parent who does not work outside of the home.

Knox said that when social workers would visit his home, they were struck by its normalcy. The social workers would tell Knox and his wife horror stories of other foster households. With a two-inch three-ring binder of regulations for all foster houses, how those horror stories made state review satisfactorily is mind-boggling.

If this were 1970, then Knox’ idea of an ideal family would be fairly easy to recruit into the system. A family like The Brady Bunch would easily fit into Knox’s archetype for the CARE foster family. One parent does not work outside the home, a long-term stable marriage is present, no sinful beverages are strewn about their sprawling split-level home, and presumably the Bradys were good church-going parents.

Of course, behind the scenes we know that Brady family patriarch Robert Reed was a tormented gay man stuck in the closet for life. Florence Henderson created the Carol Brady character as a manifestation of an ideal mother that she never had in her own life after being abandoned by her own mother early in life. Sexual tension abounded between Henderson and the actor who played her on-screen son, as well as between the actors who played the Brady children. Henderson herself admitted in her 2010 autobiography to having affairs during her married life.

So the very image of the ‘perfect’ family that would fit in the CARE system would actually have failed to meet more than half of the standards Knox’s bill establishes – and that was forty years ago. Today, the picture of an archetypal American family is radically different, though. Look at the Dunphys of Modern Family. A blended/post-divorce couple with later-in-life children, a gay couple who adopted, and a more traditional male-female couple with multiple biological children. In each extension of the family, though, children are lovingly cared for. Neither the Brady Bunch nor Modern Family examples should serve as a template for the ideal family, which makes Knox’s attempt at social engineering all the more difficult to fathom.

From my own experience and that of fellow adoptees and adoptive parents, I can say that family is what one makes of it. Regardless of our background, we build our families out of love of care, not tickmarks on a checklist of “approved” behaviors and customs. Oddly enough, if an unmarried church pastor or a nun wanted to foster in the CARE program, they would be ineligible. Single people need not apply, either.

Knox has said that this is an incentive program, and not an expectation that all foster families would fit his criteria for a ‘normal’ family. But Knox further stated that he would like to see his standards established as the minima for fostering in the state. How drastically these new restrictions would reduce the available foster family pool is not currently known, but with demand far exceeding supply doing anything that might cause families to exit the foster system and new ones to forego entering the system is the exact wrong way to go about the problem. In fact, by providing higher subsidies to CARE families, Knox’s plan may incentivize some families to look to foster care as a cash cow first instead of expanding their family and providing safe homes for children in need.

In short, setting unrealistic goals about personal values for foster families is the wrong solution to an even bigger problem. Someone who enjoys a glass of wine with dinner is not less of a parent, nor in reduced capacity to foster a child. Reforming the foster system to better care for children, to provide support for fostering families and encourage more potential foster families to enter the system, is the right direction. Let us hope that Senator Knox will amend his bill to refocus on the most critical aspect of the foster system in need of immediate reform.

Chapman Rackaway is a professor of political science at FHSU.

Data source:* https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/cb/children_in_care_2013.pdf

Winner: Sweetheart Package from 99 KZ Country

20150121 khaz sweetheart package aCongratulations to Alan Borthwick!

******

Register to win a Sweetheart Package from Fossil Creek Inn & Suites in Russell with 99 KZ Country.

The package includes:
-one overnight stay at Fossil Creek Inn & Suites in Russell, KS
-chocolates
-beverages
-a long stemmed rose
-breakfast the next morning

To receive all of the above, overnight stay must happen by March 31, 2015. After March 31, 2015, the winner receives the room only.

One registration per person. Must be 21 to register. Listen for chances to call Theresa Trapp February 2 – 13, 2015 to register or send an email to [email protected].  Please include full name and phone number in email with “Sweetheart Package” on the subject line.

Winner will be announced Friday, February 13, 2015.

 

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

 

 

 

2015 HHS Indian Call candidates

The Hays High School annual Indian Call dance is Saturday, Feb. 14 from 8 to 10:30 p.m.  Candidates are Rylie Rowland, Alex Winter, Lily Meska, Emily Peckham, Mattie Schaefli, Cash Hobson, Brady Werth, Jacob Balzer, Craig Dreiling and Jake Thorell.

Front – Rylie Rowland, Alex Winter, Lily Meska, Emily Peckham, Mattie Schaefli Back – Cash Hobson, Brady Werth, Jacob Balzer, Craig Dreiling, Jake Thorell
Front – Rylie Rowland, Alex Winter, Lily Meska, Emily Peckham, Mattie Schaefli
Back – Cash Hobson, Brady Werth, Jacob Balzer, Craig Dreiling, Jake Thorell

Kan. man dies after truck goes airborne

Fatal crashMISSION – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 4 a.m. on Friday in Johnson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Chevy Silverado driven by Matthew S. Doan, 33, Shawnee, was on the ramp from Interstate 35 southbound to Interstate 635 north.

While negotiating the curve of the ramp, the truck struck the guardrail.

The driver overcorrected and traveled off the roadway through a grassy ditch.

The truck went airborne, crossing Interstate 635.

Doan was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to First Call.

The KHP reported he was properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Sebelius criticizes Brownback at Dole Institute event

Photo by Jim McLean Former Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius talks with Bill Lacy, director of the Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas, at Thursday night's lecture on women in politics. It was one of Sebelius' first public appearances in Kansas since stepping down in June as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Photo by Jim McLean Former Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius talks with Bill Lacy, director of the Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas, at Thursday night’s lecture on women in politics. It was one of Sebelius’ first public appearances in Kansas since stepping down in June as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

By Jim McLean

Former Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius didn’t mince words when asked about the direction of Kansas politics during an event Thursday night at the Dole Institute of Politics. Making one of her first Kansas public appearances since stepping down in June as secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Sebelius called the re-election of Republican Gov. Sam Brownback “a low point” in the state’s political history.

“Every time I think it can’t get any worse, it does,” Sebelius said in an apparent reference to the deepening budget crisis triggered by tax cuts and plummeting revenues.

“So, I hesitate to say ‘how low can you go.’” The Democrat, whose final months at HHS were marred by the problem-plagued rollout of the health reform law, was especially critical of Brownback’s recent decision to rescind an executive order that she issued to protect state employees from discrimination based on sexual orientation or sexual identity. Sebelius said she signed the order in 2007 to “send a strong signal that we wanted a talented and diverse workforce.”

She said she had “no idea” what compelled Brownback to repeal a policy that had been in place for eight years and “seemed to be working well.” “It’s distressing,” she continued. “But I think we need to be clear to people around the United States, this is not Kansas. This is not what the state was founded on.

This is not what we believe in. And this is not an acceptable policy going forward.” In the statement explaining his decision, Brownback said Sebelius’ order inappropriately gave state employees protections not enjoyed by other citizens. Rescinding the order, he said, “ensures that state employees enjoy the same civil rights as all Kansans without creating additional protected classes.”

In addition, Brownback said, decisions to extend additional civil rights protections should be made by the Legislature, not “through unilateral action” by a governor. Sebelius’ comments about Kansas politics came in response to questions from members of an overflow audience that turned out for the first in a series of lectures on women in politics at the institute on the University of Kansas campus in Lawrence.

For most of the evening, the former governor chatted with Bill Lacy, the institute’s director, about her experiences as a woman in politics, her relationship with President Barack Obama and the political and executive challenges she faced during her career. When technical problems with a microphone delayed the start of the conversation, a relaxed Sebelius quipped,

“Kind of the like the website,” a reference to well-publicized troubles with the healthcare.gov website at its launch. Sebelius said the early days of the rollout and the final days of the lobbying effort for the ACA were among her most challenging as secretary. “We had a lot of near-death experiences,” she said of the days leading up to the vote in Congress.

“There were lots of times when it seemed like it was all going down the tubes.” Even when the bill’s prospects seemed bleak, Sebelius said, President Obama resisted calls to pare back the bill and compromise to save political face.

“He kept saying, ‘If there’s a chance for a comprehensive bill, this is the time,’” she recalled. In a brief interview after the program, Sebelius said she believes the ACA will survive because by the time President Obama leaves office, tens of millions of Americans will have come to depend on it for health insurance.

In addition, she said, it will be difficult to reverse the changes the law has made in the health care system. “I think the framework is now kind of in the DNA of the health system in a way that will be very difficult to turn back,” she said.

While making no predictions, Sebelius said, she finds it “hard to believe” that the U.S. Supreme Court will side in an upcoming case with those who contend that Congress intended to make ACA tax credits available to consumers only in states that set up their own marketplaces.

“To have that available only to a certain portion of the population seems ludicrous,” she said. Kansas is one of several states that declined to establish its own online marketplace, forcing consumers to use one set up by the federal government. More than 80 percent of Kansans who selected plans during the current enrollment period have qualified for tax credits that lower the cost of their premiums, according to HHS. Finally, Sebelius said Kansas’ refusal to expand Medicaid has deprived tens of thousands of low-income Kansans of coverage they need.

“Folks who are in states not expanding Medicaid are in terrible trouble,” she said. Brownback and GOP legislative leaders opposed to participating in expansion have said they’re concerned the federal government will not fulfill its obligation to pay 100 percent of expansion costs for three years and no less than 90 percent thereafter. Sebelius said those concerns are unfounded.

“The bill is fully paid for even if all 50 states come in,” she said. State officials who continue to have doubts, she said, could protect themselves by including language in their plans that automatically returns eligibility to pre-expansion levels if federal funding dips below the 90 percent threshold. “Lots of states have said, ‘If the deal changes, we’re out,’” Sebelius said. “And we’ve said from the beginning, ‘That’s just fine.’

 

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

Paul Binder

Paul Binder

Paul Binder, 97, Munjor, died Thursday, February 12, 2015 at his home.

He was born December 24, 1917 on the family homestead near Munjor the son of Joe and Maggie (Befort) Binder.  On November 25, 1946 he married Ruby Klaus at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, Munjor.  He attended Hays High School and Fort Hays State University.

In 1942, during WWII, he joined the U.S. Army and served with the 333rd Engineers serving in England, Belgium, France, and Germany.  He was awarded five campaign stars and was honorably discharged as a Staff Sergeant.  He was a grain farmer and dairyman and served on the St. Francis of Assisi Church Council, District #8 School Board, Marian High School Board, Farmers Credit Union, 4-H Fair Board, and Board of Directors of Farmers Co-op.

Survivors include his wife, of the home in Munjor, three sons, Ernest and Lilly (Legleiter) Binder of Munjor, Stephen and Carolyn (Beaudet) Binder of Washington, MO, and Thomas and Mary Beth (Wheeler) Binder of Marion, IA, one daughter, Margaret Ann and Willie Schaffer of Hoxie, Kansas, ten grandchildren, Elliot Binder, Preston Binder, Stephanie Schaffer-Howie and husband Tom, Tami Schaffer-Chievous and husband Derrick, Jennifer Binder, Julie Binder, Joe Binder and wife Carola, Annie Binder, Katie Binder, and Peter Binder, and five great grandchildren, Braydon Binder, Tahki, Malia, and Aven Chievous, and Ruby Binder.
He was preceded in death by his parents, brothers Isidore, Alois, Adolph, and Julius Binder, sisters Mary Lafferty, Helen Gross, and Bertha Drees, and an infant brother Adolf.

Funeral services will be at 10:00 am on Monday, February 16, 2015 at the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, Munjor with Fr. Daryl Olmstead officiating.  Burial with military honors by the Hays VFW Post #9076 honor guard will be in the church cemetery. Visitation will be from 5:00 until 8:00 pm on Sunday and from 9:00 am until 9:45 Monday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine.  A parish vigil service will be at 6:30 pm on Sunday at the funeral home.

Memorials are suggested to the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, in care of the funeral home.  Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

John Dice

scanpic079

John Dice, age 82, of WaKeeney, passed away Thursday, February 5, 2015 at Trego County Lemke Memorial Hospital, WaKeeney.  He was born November 19, 1932 in Acosta, Pennsylvania, to Clarence Albert and Iva Melissa (Puttman) Dice.

John proudly served our country in the United States Army.  On October 1, 1954, he was united in marriage to Greta Gorsky at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church in WaKeeney.  John drove truck over the road for several years before going to work at Trego County Lemke Memorial Hospital, in the Maintenance Department.  He retired from the hospital in 1996 after 18 years.  He loved fishing, camping, and getting together with family.  He was known for his talents in the wood shop, as he could build almost anything.  John was a member of the VFW, Oddfellows Lodge and Eagles Lodge.

Survivors include five children, Dawn and husband Gary Cookus of Marion, Robin and husband Rodney Armbrister of Ellis, Deanna and husband Richard Augustine of Hays, John Dice and wife Marci of Hastings, Nebraska, and Joan and husband Brian Townley of WaKeeney; eleven grandchildren, Andrea Northcutt and family of Iola, Aaron Cookus and family of Marion, Randy Armbrister of Derby, Dana and husband Kody Ellis of Hays, Craig Augustine and family of Hays, Tera Linenberger and family of Olathe, C.J. Dice and family of Hastings, Nebraska, Darin Dice of Hastings, Nebraska, Bonnie Dice of Hastings, Nebraska, Tanner Townley of WaKeeney, and Ryan Townley of WaKeeney; thirteen great-grandchildren, Dakota, Remingtyn and Easton Cookus of Marion, Christopher, Johanna, Breanna, and Kolton Northcutt of Iola, Noah and Lane Linenberger of Olathe, Emilee and Madison Augustine of Hays, and Tuff and Gracie Dice of Hastings, Nebraska; his grand animals, donkey – Gus, horse – Bailey, dogs – Annie, Mollie, Chyna, Tyson, Jerico, Joey, Jessie, Snuggles, Abby, Dakota, Daisy, and Ace, cats – Lucky and Rueben.  He was preceded in death by his parents; wife; father and mother-in-law, Joseph and Amalie Gorsky; brothers, Albert and Wayne; brothers-in-law, Julius, Edwin, and Joe Gorsky, Bob Conness, and Carl McGuire; sisters-in-law, Helen Conor, Ruth Conness, Marvel McGuire, and Betty Dice; and pets, Buttons #1 and Buttons #2.

Funeral service will be 10:00 a.m., Wednesday, February 18, 2015 at Bethlehem Lutheran Church.  Burial will be in the WaKeeney City Cemetery with military honors.

Visitation will be Wednesday from 9:00 a.m. to service time at the church.

Memorial contributions are suggested to the Walk-A-Thon For Health.  Checks made to the organization may be sent in care of Schmitt Funeral Home, 336 North 12th, WaKeeney, KS  67672.

Condolences may be sent to the family at www.schmittfuneral.com.

Hays commission OKs 33rd Street rezoning despite concerns

StreetBy NICK BUDD
Hays Post

Hays city commissioners unanimously approved rezoning a plot of land on 33rd from a single-family dwelling district to a multi-family dwelling zone at their Thursday night meeting.

The city was zoned for civic use because USD planned to use the land for another school, but the plot was sold to ZMM Management in 2014. Before Thursday’s meeting, commissioners were presented with a petition with 249 signatures of citizens close to the area who opposed the rezoning. ZMM Management plans to use the area to build duplexes.

The letter attached from Jennifer Wittman stated “There was tremendous concern expressed about property values, increased/reckless traffic, college kids moving into the duplexes, and the decline/mismanagement of the duplexes over time.”

Wittman also said she was concerned commissioners weren’t balancing the needs of the community while making the decision to rezone the area.

“This decision is not about the goodwill of the citizens and what we need,” Wittman said. “We’re the people that are going to remain here for a long period of time. You’re going to drive out the people who want to have the American dream of owning a home.”

Commissioners offered evidence against several of the claims. Commissioner Eber Phelps provided several examples of property values increasing despite the construction of similar developments nearby. According to Phelps, some properties close to 33rd Street increased by as much as 50 percent from 1998 to 2003.

“I think a lot of those old concerns this day and age with our housing demands in Hays actually play out. We’ve got duplexes placed all over town and none of the houses near those areas have depreciated over time,” Phelps said.

In regard to traffic concerns, City Manager Toby Dougherty said the city is always looking for problematic areas in the city.

“We look at accidents, traffic flow and things like that in almost every area. If something necessitates a change, we have no problem recommending it, Dougherty said.

Mayor Henry Schwaller also addressed one residents concern over the management of the property. Schwaller is the president of Schwaller & Associates, a property management company in Hays.

“The reason I presume they’ll be well built is because the owners will want to have families in there just like the other duplexes around town … because they get a good return on their investment. They’re expensive to build, but they have a lifelong return on investment,” he said.

Commissioner Ron Mellick believes people around the area are simply scared of the change that will come to the area if the duplexes are built.

“Turning this lot into a residential area will have less of an impact than its original use (as a school),” Mellick said. “Zoning 14 lots to (a multi-family area) is not the real issue here. The real issue here is change; changing an empty lot into something other than an empty lot.”

Commissioners also agreed that the duplexes will help out with the housing crunch in the city of Hays by providing families with more affordable places to live in.

Sen. Roberts Introduces Bill to Protect Patients from Rationing

Screen Shot 2015-02-13 at 6.39.22 AMWASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Pat Roberts on Thursday introduced legislation to block a rationing tool known as comparative effectiveness research (CER) from denying or delaying coverage of health care treatments for patients in federal health programs such as Medicare.

“Health care is not one size fits all. Comparative effectiveness research is a tool the government can use to limit a patient’s options for treatment and effectively ration care. My bill closes the door on this irresponsible option. The government should never interfere with decisions made between a patient and their doctor,” Roberts said.

The “Preserving Access to Targeted, Individualized, and Effective New Treatments and Services (PATIENTS) Act of 2015” prohibits the Secretary of Health and Human Services from using data obtained from CER to deny or delay coverage of an item or service under a federal health care program. It also requires the Secretary to ensure that any CER conducted or supported by the federal government accounts for those factors that contribute to differences in treatment response as well as patient preference, including patient-reported outcomes, genomics and personalized medicine, the unique needs of health disparity populations, and indirect patient benefits.

“We have seen how comparative effectiveness research works in Canada and the United Kingdom, and it is the patient who ends up paying the price for increased government intervention in the doctor-patient relationship,” Roberts said.

“Americans do not want the federal government limiting their treatment options and deciding what is best for them. They want to be informed and work with their doctor to determine the best individualized plan of care.”

Since the health care reform debate in 2009, Senator Roberts has been an outspoken opponent of rationing care as a way to cut costs. As a member of both the Senate Finance Committee and the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Roberts fought the use of rationing in the new health care law during both committees’ consideration of the bill.

Cosponsors include Senators John Barrasso (R-WY) and Rob Portman (R-OH).

Commission approves new golf cart shed, maintenance building

NewGolfCartShed
Model of new golf cart shed

By NICK BUDD
Hays Post

To replace the golf cart shed destroyed in a storm last year, Hays city commissioners Thursday approved building a new one at a total cost of $49,980.

Quality Structures Inc. submitted the low bid of $45,980 for the “shell” of the building. The electrical work will be done separately, and city staff will complete the concrete work. According to Parks Director Jeff Boyle, the new shed will also bring new opportunities to the course. Boyle said the extra space will allow the golf course to host more tournaments.

“I think this building will allow us to increase our tournament revenues,” he said at Thursday’s regular commission meeting. “We lost one last year because we didn’t have enough space.”

Boyle said he expects the building to be completed by April 1.

The commission also moved forward with another new building — the total cost for the new utilities maintenance facility will be $300,000 and will be located south of the water treatment plant. The city plans to use the building to store equipment and water-sensitive vehicles, which will allow the department to open up some needed office space.

NewShed
The new utilities building will look similar to this structure.

The building site is currently undergoing remediation, a process used to clean up soil contamination. The new facility has been a priority for several years, but the cleanup operation has stalled construction. The city leases the land but has the option to buy the property for $1 at the end of the lease in 2038.

Haselhorst Construction submitted the low bid of $285,700, and city staff will complete some of the concrete, stormwater and some other aspects of the project in-house.

“This is one of those things that’s just a matter of growth,” City Manager Toby Dougherty said. “The city has grown by 20 percent in population and 50 percent in land since the last time we expanded the utilities department.”

HPD Activity Log Feb. 12

hpd top image

The Hays Police Department responded to 5 animal calls and 34 traffic stops Thursday, Feb. 12, 2015, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Truancy–2300 block E 13th St, Hays; 08:03 AM
Driving Under the Influence–1500 block 270th Ave, Hays; 09:10 AM
Animal At Large–2000 block Canal Blvd, Hays; 09:45 AM
Burglary/residence–300 block W 11th St, Hays; 2/10/15 4:30 AM; 2/12/15 11:00 AM
Suspicious Activity–400 block W 7th St, Hays; 2/11/15 4:30 PM; 2/12/15 11:30 AM
Animal At Large–2200 block Virginia Dr, Hays; 12:29 PM
Custody Dispute–200 block W 29th St, Hays; 01:41 PM
Found/Lost Property–Hays; 01:46 PM
Shoplifting–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 01:40 PM and 01:50 PM
Animal Cruelty/Neglect–1500 block 40 Bypass Hwy, Hays; 03:26 PM
Traffic/Driving Complaint–21st and Anthony, Hays; 04:11 PM
Disorderly Conduct–3000 block New Way, Hays; 06:35 PM
Welfare Check–500 block E 11th St, Hays; 07:15 PM
Driving Under the Influence–600 block E 6th St, Hay; 08:45 PM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–6th and Riley, Hays; 10:54 PM
Disturbance – Noise–6th and Elm, Hays; 11:34 PM
Driving While Suspended/Revoked–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 11:36 PM

hpd  bottom image

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File