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KHAZ Country Music News: Brooks and Dunn on ACM Awards

khaz brooks and dunn 20150331NASHVILLE (AP) – Brooks and Dunn will reunite for the Academy of Country Music Awards. It’s their first televised performance in five years. Other performers added to the lineup are Alan Jackson, Martina McBride, Brad Paisley, Lady Antebellum, Little Big Town and Rascal Flatts. Nick Jonas will do a duet with Dan and Shay, and Christina Aguilera will perform with surprise guests. Previously announced performers include Jason Aldean, Dierks (DURKS) Bentley, Garth Brooks, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Eric Church, Miranda Lambert, Reba, Blake Shelton, George Strait, Keith Urban, Florida Georgia Line, Sam Hunt, Thomas Rhett and Cole Swindell (swin-DEL’). The ACM Awards are April 19.

 

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Kansas Senate panel to consider expanding liquor licenses UPDATE

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas counties would be allowed to expand liquor licenses under a bill being discussed by a state Senate panel.

Lobbyists and representatives of supermarkets and liquor stores gave dueling testimony on Tuesday during a hearing in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee.

The bill would allow big box retailers to sell liquor, wine and full strength beer in counties that approve the measure through a local election.

Supporters say it would be more convenient for consumers, but opponents say it would hurt the state’s roughly 750 individually owned liquor stores.

Committee Chairman Republican Sen. Ralph Ostmeyer says the bill is unlikely to pass, though he acknowledged that intense lobbying efforts by supporters would likely push the measure through the Legislature eventually.

 

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas counties would be allowed to expand liquor licenses under a bill being discussed by a state Senate panel.

The Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee will hold a hearing Tuesday to discuss the issue.

The bill would allow supermarkets and other retailers to sell liquor, wine and full strength beer in counties that approve the measure through a local election.

Supporters say it would be more convenient for consumers, but opponents say it would hurt the state’s roughly 750 individually owned liquor stores.

Both sides are major donors to political campaigns and have actively lobbied the Legislature on the issue.

A House panel has passed a bill that would allow supermarkets to sell alcohol statewide in 2018, but it has not been debated on the House floor.

Kansas shooting suspect makes court appearance

Little Apple Post

MANHATTAN – Murder suspect Tierre Wall appeared in Court Tuesday afternoon via a video feed from the Riley County Jail for a status check.

Wall is suspected in the shooting death of Casey Lindley, 27, Ogden.

Just after 2 a.m. on March 12, law enforcement officers were dispatched to Ogden after receiving reports of a gun fired.

Police found Lindley suffering from a gunshot wound. He was transported to a Topeka hospital where he later died of his injuries.

Wall was arrested after turning himself in at a police station in Georgia.

Wall’s charge of voluntary manslaughter is a severity level 3 personal felony, and comes with a minimum 55 months of incarceration, up to 247 months and $300,000 in fines.

Wall was granted a court appointed attorney during his last appearance.

The case was continued for two weeks so discovery in the could be handed over to the defense.

Wall is expected back in court on April 14.

Repairs underway after gas line hit at 22nd and Vine

811

Repairs are underway on a gas line after the line was struck by a trencher, releasing natural gas Tuesday afternoon.

Midwest Energy spokesman Mike Morley said a contractor working in the area of 22nd and Vine — behind the VFW building — did “exactly the right things” after hitting the line by calling Midwest and city authorities.

Midwest crews quickly closed off gas service to the area and begin repairs. Morley said it is likely only a couple of properties are likely affected.

While the contractor had taken the appropriate steps to locate underground lines, Morley reminded anyone thinking about digging to call 811 in advance of planting trees, building fences or anything else that could disrupt buried services.

Providers such as the City of Hays, Midwest and Eagle Communications will located those lines free of charge in order to prevent accidents and outages.

RELATED STORY: April is Safe Digging Month in Kansas.

Hays commission will discuss wastewater treatment plant rebuild

The Hays City Commission will meet for a work session at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at City Hall.

Commissioners are scheduled to discuss hiring an “owner-representative” to assist with the reconstruction of the wastewater treatment plant.

The project, which has been mandated because of Kansas Department of Health and Environment permit requirements in 2018, is expected to cost between $26 million and $28 million.

City staff is recommending the commission enter into a $1.7 million contract with Olathe-based HDR to serve as owner-representative during the project, essentially serving as an extension of the city staff and leading the project.

Requests for proposal for the service were issued in February. HDR officials are scheduled to be on hand Thursday to answer questions.

Reconstruction of the wastewater plant is expected to be in late 2017.

Also on the agenda is continued discussion of a proposal to increase the pay of Hays city commissioners, an issue recently raised by outgoing Commissioner Kent Steward.

Click HERE for a complete agenda for Thursday’s work session and supporting materials.

Funding for mental health advocacy organization issue in budget bill

By Dave Ranney

Three or four months from now, the National Alliance on Mental Illness office in Kansas may be closed.

“The future is uncertain,” said Rick Cagan, the office’s executive director.

It’s uncertain because most of the office’s funding has long been tied to a $150,000 grant from the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. Earlier this year, KDADS officials announced they had decided not to renew the grant as part of an effort to better coordinate efforts to promote behavioral health and substance abuse treatment, reduce problem gambling and prevent suicide.

KDADS officials have said they expect to announce the guidelines for applying for the new grants within the next three weeks. The new grants, they say, will be awarded in June; the current grants expire June 30.

How NAMI’s services fit within the guidelines remains to be seen.

“It’s hard to tell at this point,” Cagan said. “KDADS has been saying the RFP (request for proposals) will be focused on better integration and better promotion of mental health, addiction, suicide prevention and problem gaming. All of these are good things to focus on, but we’re not convinced they fit with the core services that we provide, which is being the backstop for the many people who fall through the cracks in the system and helping them access the system when no one else is helping them.”

The mega-budget bill that’s now in the House includes a proviso that orders KDADS to set aside $150,000 for NAMI for the next two fiscal years. The bill has yet to pass the chamber.

But a proviso in the budget bill that passed the Senate last week would ensure NAMI’s funding for only 30 days after the new contracts are awarded.

The proviso’s sponsor, Sen. Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park and a member of the chamber’s budget and health policy committees, said it’s meant to protect NAMI’s day-to-day operations if the grants are not awarded as planned.

Denning’s proviso stops short of telling KDADS what to include in the RFP.

“I’m a big believer in NAMI, and I think they’ll do fine,” Denning said. “But KDADS is telling us they think they can increase efficiency and maybe reduce some overlap between programs. I think we need to see what that process produces. If there are problems with it, I would let KDADS and NAMI work that out.”

Prior to its passage, the Senate bill was folded into a House measure, a so-called “gut-and-go” procedure that allows the House to take a straight yes-or-no vote on whether to concur. Legislative leaders sometimes use the procedure when they want to prevent amendments and move bills quickly.

If the House were to adopt the Senate-passed bill, Denning’s provision would remain intact. But if the House were to insist on working a budget bill of its own, the NAMI-funding proviso would be subject to conference committee negotiations.

Meanwhile, the House budget bill has been added to a Senate bill as well.

“We don’t know what’s going to happen,” Cagan said. “I guess we’ll find out more this week.”

NAMI is the only organization mentioned in the House proviso. The Senate proviso includes NAMI and four other advocacy programs affected by the KDADS decision to reconfigure its grants. The four programs, their missions and their current grant amounts:

Families Together, provides training and support for parents of children with physical and developmental disabilities, $243,894.
Self Advocate Coalition of Kansas, provides training programs designed to help people with developmental disabilities advocate for themselves, $97,000.
Kansas Family Partnership, administers several initiatives aimed at reducing drug and alcohol use among children, teens and families, $418,500.
Keys for Networking, advocates for families with children with serious emotional disorders, $150,000.
“We’re in the same place we’ve been for the past couple weeks,” said Mary Ellen Conlee, a lobbyist who’s also president of the Keys for Networking governing board. “We’re working with KDADS to find out what it is they’re looking for and how we might be successful in continuing to provide the services we’ve been providing for the past 20-plus years. We’re hopeful, but at this point I don’t know that any of us know how this is going to end.”

Attempts to reach representatives of Kansas Family Partnership, Families Together and Self Advocate Coalition of Kansas on Monday were unsuccessful.

KDADS also has announced its intent to cut $160,000 from a peer support programs for people with severe and persistent mental illnesses.

The programs, also known as “consumer run organizations” or CROs, are expected to spend $970,000 in the current fiscal year, which ends June 30.

“We’re hoping to hang on, but we took a big hit a couple years ago and now we’re taking another one,” said Koleen Garrison, leadership academy coordinator with the Kansas Consumer Advisory Council for Adult Mental Health, a group that helps coordinate CRO activities across the state. “All we’ve been told is that we’re not going to get as much as we’re getting this year.”

There are CROs in Arkansas City, Augusta, Colby, Dodge City, Hays, Independence, Lawrence, Kansas City, Liberal, Manhattan, Newton, Olathe, Osawatomie, Parsons, Topeka, Wellington and Wichita.

Dave Ranney is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Driver hospitalized after semi overturns in a ditch

KHPEFFINGHAM – A semi truck driver was injured in an accident just after 9 a.m. on Tuesday in Atchison County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Freightliner semi driven by Matthew F. Zuehlke, 41, Coloma, WI., was eastbound on Kansas 116 at Edwards Road four miles south and three and a half miles west of Effingham.

The truck went off the road and overturned in the ditch.

Zuehlke was transported to Atchison County Hospital.

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

Ag Department estimates Kan. farmers’ spring planting plans

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Agriculture Department estimates that Kansas farmers will plant corn on the same number of acres this season, even though growers elsewhere are cutting back.

Its prospective plantings report released Tuesday by National Agricultural Statistics Service forecast that Kansas would sow in 4.05 million acres of corn.

Nationwide, NASS has forecast the lowest planted corn acreage since 2010 due to lower prices.

Kansas growers are also expected to plant 2.9 million acres into sorghum, up 2 percent from a year ago.

Farmers in the state plan to reduced their soybean acres to 3.8 million acres, down 5 percent from last year.

The revised estimate for winter wheat acres planted last fall in Kansas is now at 9.4 million acres. That is down 2 percent from the previous year.

Manteuffel will join KSHSAA staff

Kansas State High School Activities Association

TOPEKA— The Kansas State High School Activities Association has announced Craig L. Manteuffel of Hays will join its staff on July 1 as an assistant executive director.

HHS band director Craig Manteuffel
Craig Manteuffel

Manteuffel was selected in a national search from a field of 21 candidates. He will succeed Reggie L. Romine, who is retiring from the KSHSAA staff after 10 years of service.

For the past 19 years, Manteuffel has served as director of bands for grades 9 to 12 for Hays High School. Prior to his tenure at HHS, he served 10 years as the instrumental and vocal music director for grades 5 to 12 for Oris-Bison USD 403.

During his tenure at Otis-Bison High School, Manteuffel served as assistant activities director, assisted with coaching middle school football and registered with the KSHSAA as an interscholastic wrestling official.

Manteuffel, a Hays native, earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Instrumental/Vocal Music Education from Fort Hays State University in 1986. In 2003, he completed a Masters of Liberal Studies/Fine Arts degree from FHSU with an emphasis on Instrumental Conducting.

Widely known throughout Kansas as an outstanding music educator and advocate for the fine arts, Manteuffel completed a six year term of the executive offices of the Kansas Music Educators Association on March 1. During this span, Manteuffel served as KMEA President from 2011- 2013. In 2013 he was chosen by the National Association for Music Education and the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington to attend the Kennedy Center Arts Alliance Symposium. Manteuffel was one of three music education leaders from the United States invited to present music advocacy ideas with other leaders of the arts from the nation.

During his 29-year teaching career, Mr. Manteuffel was honored as the Outstanding Kansas Young Bandmaster by Phi Beta Mu, served as KMEA Southwest District Band Chairman, was named the KMEA Northwest District Music Educator of the year in 2001, served as KMEA Northwest District President 2007-2009, was a clinician and conductor in the “Youth for Music” festival in Concordia, Kansas and served as Hays City Music Festival Manager from 1999-2006.

Manteuffel’s primary responsibilities will be the administration of vocal, instrumental and orchestral music, piano, debate speech and drama activities, spirit activities (cheer and dance) camps and clinics, Citizenship/Sportsmanship programs, sanctioning of approved events and assisting with general administration of the KSHSAA.

“Mr. Manteuffel is widely known and respected as an outstanding educator throughout Kansas, and an ardent supporter of the fine arts programs offered by the KSHSAA. He is an outstanding choice to fulfill the duties so capably administered by Mr. Romine,” KSHSAA Executive Director Gary Musselman said.

Kansas lawmakers agree on plan to issue $1B in pension bonds

Shawn Sullivan
Shawn Sullivan

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Legislative negotiators in Kansas have agreed on a proposal to authorize $1 billion in bonds to bolster the short-term financial health of the state’s pension system for teachers and government workers.

Three senators and three House members settled their differences Tuesday.

Both chambers could vote on the plan this week.

The proposal is less aggressive than one from Republican Gov. Sam Brownback to issue $1.5 billion in bonds. Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said the administration hasn’t seen the new plan.

Supporters of issuing bonds argue that it will give the pension system an infusion of cash and immediately narrow a long-term gap in funding for pension benefits. They believe the pension’s system’s investment earnings on the funds will exceed bond payments.

Critics see the move as risky.

KFIX Rock News: Def Leppard Record New Album “By Accident”; Won’t Road-Test The Material This Summer

leplogoNEW YORK (AP) – Def Leppard didn’t really mean to make an album, but one sort of appeared.

Singer Joe Elliott says they got together in February of last year to record a few songs, maybe for an EP.

They had 12 songs and figured they had an album “by accident rather than design.”

Don’t expect to hear any of those songs on the upcoming tour with Styx and Tesla.

Elliott says if they do, they will just end up on YouTube as really bad versions filmed on iPhones.

A release date for the album has not been announced.

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Police canines find ‘indicants’ of drugs at Kan. high school

Little Apple Post

MANHATTAN — Manhattan High School Principal Greg Hoyt released a statement regarding a “lockout” drill that occurred on Tuesday morning at the school.

Officers with the Riley County Police Department and other regional law enforcement entities, including multiple canine units, conducted a joint operation to perform a random search for illicit drugs.

“This was a planned and coordinated effort between the school and law enforcement and was not prompted by any specific information regarding drugs or drug activity at the school,” said Hoyt.

“The building was placed into “lockout” mode during the drill, which means that all exterior doors were locked to prevent anyone from entering the building during the search. School officials monitored the front entry ways during the drill to direct any incoming traffic. Students were not permitted to leave their classrooms, but regular instruction did continue for the duration of the drill.”

According to the release there were several positive indicants of drugs, and school administrators are following up with law enforcement.

Energy cooperatives team for $1.8M loan for Hoxie project

Midwest_Energy logo

HOXIE — Midwest Energy and Western Cooperative Electric this week announced the award of a $1.816 million loan from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Economic Loan and Grant Program, which will be used by BJKLM Development Co. to fund the site development and building construction of a large implement dealership in Hoxie.

The dealership will be operated by BTI and is expected to add 20 to 25 jobs to the Hoxie economy.

The loan, announced by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, was one of 38 loans and grants totaling $31 million announced Monday to support job creation efforts, business development and strengthen economic growth in rural communities in nine states.

Midwest Energy and Western Cooperative Electric each requested $908,000 from USDA, each essentially guaranteeing their half of the loan. It marked the first time the two cooperatives have collaborated on a REDLG application, reflecting a new era of confidence in development of projects requiring larger sums for investment.

western electric

“We’re pleased to partner with Western Cooperative, and we’re pleased for the growth that this project will bring for the residents of Sheridan County,” said Earnie Lehman, President and General Manager at Midwest Energy, noting Midwest Energy provides electricity to the city of Hoxie, while Western Cooperative serves the southern portion of Sheridan County.

“Though the first collaboration between Western and Midwest on a REDLG application, this isn’t the first, and won’t be the last, time Western and Midwest work collaboratively on issues impacting their member-owners,” said Darrin Lynch, General Manager at Western Cooperative Electric. “Concern for community is one of the seven cooperative principles by which we live. As such, Western is honored to support this project, one that represents a step in the direction of forward progress and development for rural Kansas.”

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