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One hospitalized after interstate rear-end collision

SALINA – One person was injured in an accident just after 3:30 p.m. on Thursday in Saline County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Dodge pickup driven by Marilyn Akridge, 68, Maricopa, AZ., was northbound on Interstate 135 five miles south of Salina in the right lane.

A 1997 GMC pickup driven by Nellie Marie Newman, 46, Haysville, came from behind and struck the Dodge pickup in the rear.

Akridge was transported to the hospital in McPherson.

Newman was not injured.

A passenger in the GMC Steven Dean Newman, 51, Haysville, was not wearing a seatbelt and refused treatment at the scene according to the KHP.

Report: Suicides by girls and young women continue to climb

MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials say the suicide rate for girls and young women continues to rise, at a pace far faster than for young males.

The suicide rate for boys and young men climbed from 2007 to 2013, too. And it remains three times higher than the female rate for ages 10 to 24.

But the female increase has been steadier and more dramatic. One expert said that may be because more girls and young women are using hanging or other forms of suffocation, which is more lethal than drug overdose — the method used most by younger females.

In 2013, the rate for young females was 3.4 per 100,000. The rate for males was 11.9.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the report Thursday.

Kan. Bill Would Give Parents More Leeway To Refuse Medication For Kids

By ANDY MARSO

A 14-year-old Washington boy died of leukemia in 2007 after a judge ruled the state could not compel him or his legal guardian to accept blood transfusions that ran counter to their faith as Jehovah’s Witnesses .

Two years later, when the parents of a 13-year-old Minnesota boy with cancer did not want him to have chemotherapy because of their beliefs in natural healing, the state secured a court order compelling the treatment. The boy’s condition quickly improved.

In Kansas, when parents or guardians decline to provide their children treatment the medical community deems necessary, the state can use medical neglect statutes to compel treatment unless that treatment would run counter to religious beliefs determined to be legitimate by a judge.

A bill that overwhelmingly passed the Kansas Senate could alter that.

Sen. Forrest Knox, a Republican from Altoona, said he introduced Senate Bill 157 to keep schools from forcing parents to medicate children with behavior-control drugs like Ritalin, which is used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

But a prominent attorney and a doctor who studies bioethics say the proposal could have much wider implications, including strengthening the legal case for parents who object to medical treatments that could save their children’s lives — even if those children are already in the foster care system.

Under SB 157, the state could not compel parents to medicate their child if a single licensed physician supports their wishes.

“You can find one or two physicians in almost any state to say almost anything,” said Douglas Diekema, a doctor who has written about ethics in medicine for the University of Washington School of Medicine. “So it’s an interesting proposal, which I think is probably pretty flawed.”

In testifying for the bill, Knox said he introduced it because “often public schools and sometimes our mental health clinics push parents to medicate their children simply because the schools cannot otherwise control the children.”

“If parents, in consultation with their doctors, refuse to medicate their children, the schools often call the authorities, accuse the parents of medical neglect, and the children enter the (foster care) system as children in need of care,” Knox told the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Two private citizens also testified for the bill, based on their experiences with the education system.

Rocky Nichols, executive director of the Disability Rights Center of Kansas, said overuse of behavioral control drugs is a legitimate concern, at least as it pertains to students with disabilities.

“We have heard all kinds of examples of parents being intimidated with CPS (Child Protective Services) because of them refusing to do all kinds of things, whether it’s use restraints on their child or medicate them,” said Nichols, whose organization lobbies on behalf of Kansans with disabilities. “CPS is used as a leverage inappropriately a lot.”

But Ron Nelson, a family law attorney in Johnson County, said Knox’s bill as written does not directly address that problem.

The bill never references schools, Nelson pointed out. It adds a paragraph to the state’s Child In Need of Care statutes that begins: “Nothing in this code shall be construed to permit any person to compel a parent to medicate a child if the parent is acting in accordance with medical advice from a physician.”

Nelson said the use of “any person” broadens the bill well beyond the school setting.

“So the language doesn’t address schools at all, but instead addresses children who have been or might be removed from a parent’s care because the child has been abused or neglected, is truant, or the parent is unable or unfit to care for the child,” Nelson said.

Nelson said the effect of the bill as written would be to make it much easier for parents to decline to provide medical treatments for their sick children.

“It is directly written to stop the state from stepping into a situation to treat a child who is not being adequately treated by a parent because that parent is following that parent’s view of what is best for the child,” Nelson said.

Knox said his intention was to protect parental rights, but not to allow for situations where any actual harm would come to a child. That’s why the bill requires parents to collaborate with a physician licensed by the Kansas Board of Healing Arts, he said.

“The whole safety valve here is you’ve got to have a doctor you’re working with,” Knox said.

Nelson said that part of the bill that does little to ensure a child will receive necessary treatment.

“As we all know, if you want someone to say something, you can always find someone to say it,” Nelson said.

Diekema agreed.

“I hate to say it, but there are physicians out there who do not follow the standards of care, don’t always practice good medicine and have some crazy ideas about treatment,” he said.

Diekema said that the issue of overmedicating school children with behavioral problems is worthy of policy debate and if Knox’s bill were crafted to specifically address that, he might be able to get behind it.

In the bill’s current form, he said he’s very skeptical.

“I just don’t think it’s good for kids,” Diekema said. “It doesn’t sound like a good idea.”

The Department for Children and Families provided neutral testimony on the bill that urged the Senate committee to consider its implications for all of the state’s various protocols for medical treatment of children in need of care before and after they enter the foster care system.

No one testified against the bill.

The Senate passed it 38-2, with only Sen. Jeff Longbine and Sen. Vicki Schmidt, a pair of moderate Republicans, voting against it.

“I think that bill was poorly vetted,” said Schmidt, a pharmacist. “We should be speaking to family law experts about it and folks in the medical profession about it. Because that is a very broad bill.”

Longbine said he also thought the bill was overly broad and had concerns it could amount to a philosophical exemption that would allow parents to send their children to Kansas schools unvaccinated if they found a physician who supported that decision. Kansas students currently must be vaccinated against certain diseases unless they have a documented medical or religious reason that prohibits them from being vaccinated.

Knox emphasized that his goal with SB 157 was to address the issue of over-medication of behavioral issues and to keep the refusal to medicate in those situations from being a basis for a child to be taken into state custody.

If there is a more effective way to do that, he said he trusts the House will change the bill as it goes through that chamber.

“I fall on both sides of this,” Knox said. “We’re definitely interested in preserving parental rights in this state, but when there’s actual harm, when there’s a causal relationship (between parents’ action and harm)… judges need to step in.”

 

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

Sen. Moran Sponsors Legislation to Support General Aviation

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, recently sponsored bipartisan legislation to support pilots and general aviation. Over the past 10 years, 60,000 pilots have left the general aviation industry. Sen. Moran joined several of his Senate colleagues in introducing two bipartisan bills to help reverse this troubling trend – the General Aviation Pilot Protection Act and the Pilots Bill of Rights 2.

“These common-sense bills will allow general aviation to grow and prosper while providing vital protections to pilots and aircraft operators,” Sen. Moran said. “I am proud to be an original cosponsor of the General Aviation Pilot Protection Act and the Pilots Bill of Rights 2, two important steps toward ensuring a brighter future for general aviation.”

For many pilots, the current process of obtaining a third-class medical certificate has become burdensome and expensive, while providing very little benefit to the industry. The General Aviation Pilot Protection Act of 2015 (S. 573), introduced by U.S. Senator John Boozman (R-Ark.), extends the 2004 Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) sport pilot rule to include slightly larger aircraft, provided certain safety requirements.

The Pilot’s Bill of Rights 2 (S. 571), introduced by U.S. Senator Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), would expand the third-class medical exemption for recreational pilots and broaden the protections provided in the original Pilot’s Bill of Rights, which was signed into law in 2012. In addition, S. 571 represents a significant improvement in the due process rights and liability protections for volunteer pilots by ensuring certificate holders have the right to appeal FAA decisions through a new, merit-based trial in Federal Court.

General aviation is the largest industry in Kansas, generating nearly $3 billion in annual exports and manufacturing 40 percent of all general aviation planes.

SELZER: Insurance Matters

Ken Selzer, Kansas Insurance Commissioner
Ken Selzer, Kansas Insurance Commissioner

By Ken Selzer, CPA, Commissioner of Insurance

Most Kansans realize that March through September are the storm-season months in our state. Living in Kansas can mean beautiful sunsets and wonderful views, but it can also mean damaging winds, hail, flooding, earthquakes and tornadoes.

Our staff at the Kansas Insurance Department has the following checklist for situations before or after a weather event strikes. Since the basis for insurance is managing risk, we want you to be prepared.

• Having the proper insurance coverage for your property is your best protection against damage caused by natural disasters. Check with your insurance agent or company about the proper limits for coverage, and make sure you update them as your needs grow.

• Make a personal home inventory before disaster strikes to keep track of your belongings. You can download the My Home Scr.App.book mobile application on your smartphone or tablet, where you can store photos of your items. Inventory booklets are also available for download on our Kansas Insurance Department website. See our department video on YouTube or Facebook for more information.

• Contact your insurance agent company immediately to report losses. Get instructions from your company’s adjuster before repairing or replacing damaged property. Remember: Your insurance company’s visual inspection of your loss may be required before claims are paid.

• Make temporary or emergency repairs only as needed to protect your property from further damage. Take photos of the damaged property first.

• Take notes about your conversation with your insurance company representative. Write down the time and date, the representative’s name and a summary of the call.

• Be wary of questionable or unfamiliar contractors. Get more than one bid, and hire a local, reputable contractor to make the repairs.

• If you must move out of your home, keep your receipts for hotel bills and meals. Your policy may reimburse you for these additional living expenses.

• Finally, don’t accept an unfair settlement. If you can’t reach an agreement with your insurance company, call the Kansas Insurance Department’s Consumer Assistance Hotline at 800-432-2484.

Knowing these tips ahead of time can provide peace of mind when a weather event occurs.

Look for more tips about coverage before and after the storm on our website,
www.ksinsurance.org; through our publications listed there; and on Facebook at www.facebook/KansasInsuranceDepartment. Our department booklet “Homeowners and Renters Insurance and Shopper’s Guide” also has some useful information regarding claims. You can print that from our website.

Ken Selzer is the Kansas Insurance Commissioner

KHAZ Country Music News: Shania Announces Final Tour

khaz shania twain 20150305NEW YORK (AP) – Shania Twain is going to launch her first tour in 11 years, and it will be her last. Twain will begin her “Rock This Country” tour June 5 in Seattle. She tells “Good Morning America” it will be a farewell tour because while she enjoyed her two years performing in Las Vegas, she’s ready to hang it up. She says she wants to go out with a bang. Twain says it will be a different show than the Vegas one. Canadian musician and actor Wes Mack will open for the Seattle date and all the Canadian dates, while Gavin DeGraw will open on the American dates.

 

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

 

 

 

Pensions big part of proposed aid boost for Kansas schools

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — New figures from the Kansas Legislature’s research staff show that rising state contributions to teacher pensions would eat up much of the proposed funding increases for public schools under a new plan.

Republican leaders Thursday outlined a measure for overhauling how the state distributes aid to school districts.

They said total aid for the 2016-17 school year would be $333 million higher than it was for 2013-14. That’s an increase of nearly 9 percent.

But data obtained from legislative researchers showed that when increases in pension contributions are factored out, the increase in 2016-17 compared with 2013-14 would be $184 million, or 5.2 percent.

And when proposed aid for 2016-17 is compared with the current 2014-15 school year, the increase outside of pensions is $39 million, or 1.1 percent.

FHSU student publishes international article on plant enzymes

nicole martin
Nicole Martin (Photos courtesy FHSU)

FHSU UNIVERSITY RELATIONS

An article by Nicole Martin, Lewis, a junior at Fort Hays State University, will be published in the March edition of the international journal Plant Physiology and Biochemistry.

Martin has been working on this project with co-author Dr. Brian Maricle, associate professor of biological sciences, for three years.

“Dr. Maricle and I studied the toxic effects of sulfide on enzymes of respiration in plant roots,” Martin said. ” In our study, we found in some types of plants that this enzyme was still working even when being poisoned by sulfide.”

“Nicole recognized the value of research experience, and she was able to make some of the ‘higher’ connections to link plant cell biology with physical therapy and, therefore, help her professional development,” Maricle said. “Some people are exposed to sulfide from sewers, coal-burning plants, landfills, paper mills and wastewater treatment plants, making this work of interest in several contexts.”

“Without the activity of this enzyme, respiration cannot be completed, therefore no energy is produced, and the organism either cannot live or has to figure out another way to produce energy,” Martin said.

brian maricle
Dr. Brian R. Maricle, FHSU Associate Professor of Biological Sciences

Maricle said that, on a molecular level, sulfide is 10 times as toxic as cyanide.

“Sulfide exposure is thought to have been a powerful agent driving evolution of life in early Earth conditions,” he said. “Understanding mechanisms of sulfide tolerance could therefore have relevance for understanding evolution of life, ecological structuring of some aquatic environments, and also potentially has implications for human health.”

Martin is majoring in biology at Fort Hays State University and plans to have a career in physical therapy. She is a 2012 Quinter High School graduate.

Hays couple adopts mission to help orphans in Haiti

BY KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

Orphans and community members in a remote village in Haiti will soon have access to health care due to the efforts of a Hays based nonprofit, Open Hands Of the Fatherless.

Board Vice President Mark St. Peter said the health care clinic, scheduled to open this June, serves the organization’s mission.

“We work to defend orphans in Haiti and around the world,” St. Peter said. “Our biggest goal and mission is to provide the six basic needs, to provide (orphans) with water, food, health care, education, job skills and a home.”

Jace St. Peter with new friend Casimi on OH4F mission trip to Haiti last summer.
Jace St. Peter with new friend Casimi on OH4F mission trip to Haiti last summer.

In just the last year, OH4F has already opened an orphanage and a school serving children living in the small, poverty stricken village of Myan, Haiti.

Mark was first introduced to OH4F by his wife, Avry, who traveled to Myan on a mission trip two years ago and said the trip changed her life.

“Unlike in America (where) if parents die, the state steps and figures out what to do with the kids,” she said, “there is not that system in Haiti. If the parents die, the kids are left on their own because the community can’t take care of them. They try and they do the best they can, but they are trying to take care of their own children.”

She remembers the first three children referred to the orphanage.

“They were young kids left on their own, and there was an older sibling trying to take care of the younger one that couldn’t walk,” she said.

The St. Peters traveled to Haiti again last summer and took their son Jace, 9, with them.

Avry said seeing Jace play and laugh with the children is proof friendship overcomes language barriers, as most of the children do not speak English.

Jace said when he saw the orphans waiting for their truck to arrive and running to welcome them, he made friends quickly.

“There was this one kid in the orphanage named Casimi, and he liked Frisbee, so we played it together,” he said.

Avry said at first she and her husband struggled leaving Myan.

“It is hard to see (poverty), but knowing we are are not just watching it on TV and forgetting about it makes it easier. We are going and we are taking care of our brothers and sisters without daily clothes and food,” she said, adding she and her husband feel God wants them in Hays.

“People have big hearts here in Hays. … We realized we need to spread the word and we need to raise awareness,” she said, adding community members can sponsor the school, the orphanage or both with just $1 or $2 a day.

For more information about OH4F, to donate or travel on a mission trip, visit the website HERE.

Kansas nuclear plant requests rate increase for upgrades

LA CYGNE, Kan. (AP) — Westar Energy has requested a $152 million rate increase from the Kansas Corporation Commission to pay for environmental upgrades and repairs at the state’s only nuclear plant.

The Topeka Capital-Journal  reports that the commission will evaluate the request for the La Cygne plant over several months. The Citizen’s Utility Ratepayer’s Board, businesses and others can intervene to argue for a lower rate or disagree with how the company plans to distribute the funds.

About half the request would be used to bring the plant in line with federal emissions standards.

The company is responsible for about $600 million, and has already recovered about half of that money through previous rate increases.

John Bridson, senior vice president of generation and marketing at Westar, said that the upgrades were required by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission after a tsunami damaged the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan in 2011.

NW Kan. sheriff among those suing over Colorado pot laws

DENVER (AP) — Ten sheriffs from three different states are suing Colorado for legalizing marijuana.

The sheriffs are from Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska. They say in a lawsuit filed Thursday that Colorado’s 2012 marijuana legalization vote violates federal law and shouldn’t be permitted.

Among the plaintiffs is Sherman County Sheriff Burton Pianalto.

The sheriffs were joined by county attorneys from Kansas and Nebraska. They are asking a U.S. District Court in Denver to nullify the marijuana amendment to Colorado’s constitution.

Charles F. Moser, county attorney for the counties of Sherman, Wallace and Greeley, also is among the plaintiffs.

The lawsuit is the latest legal challenge to legal weed. Separately, Nebraska and Oklahoma have appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down marijuana legalization in Colorado. The Supreme Court hasn’t said yet whether it will hear that case.

And a group of Colorado citizens have filed their own federal challenge, saying marijuana reduces property values.

Click HERE to read the lawsuit.

Supreme Court Justices set date to hear gay marriage cases

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court will hear arguments over same-sex marriage on April 28.

The court released its calendar Thursday for the final two weeks of arguments this term and allotted the gay marriages cases two-and-a-half hours on the last Tuesday in April.

The cases come from the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, so far the only federal appellate court that has upheld state bans on same-sex marriages since the justices’ 2013 ruling striking down part of the federal anti-gay marriage law.

Lawyers on both sides will get 90 minutes to argue whether gay and lesbian couples have a constitutional right to marry everywhere in the U.S. Another hour will be devoted to the question of whether states must recognize same-sex unions performed elsewhere.

A decision is expected before July.

Insight Kansas: The Spirit of 1787

The U.S Constitution is a remarkable example of resilience. Changed an average of once a decade, the two-century-old document has adapted to the times.

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.

Or has it? Compromises on the slave trade pushed an inevitable conflict back until civil war was necessary. Millions had civil rights denied because of a lack of Constitutional protections. Today, the argument has shifted to a federal government so liberated from constraints it regularly tyrannizes states and expands its already overstretched appetite for power. State legislatures get short shrift and engage in marginal politics because of their second-rate status under a dominant federal government. Into that fray enters a group seeking to engage in an exercise in democracy that might substantively change American politics.

The group, Convention of States, has developed unified language and presented it to thirty-five state governments for review and possible passage. To do so would trigger what is known as an Article 5 Convention, a national meeting to discuss possible revisions to the Constitution or even a replacement document. While similar efforts have been introduced twice before in American history, neither attempt met the threshold of 34 states to empanel a new Convention.

An Article V Convention could be tricky – after all, there are reasons one has not been successfully called since 1787. The last time a convention revised a governing document, it presented an entirely new government. The Articles of Confederation needed replacement, of course. Today, there is no need for such drastic change but an imperative desire for significant adjustment. Writing a call that restricts the Convention from becoming a runaway is vital if possible, and the narrow language of the application to convention suggests the promoters of the movement have anticipated that possibility.

In the proposed convention, each state’s legislature could send as many delegates as it wanted, but each state would receive only one vote. For states like Kansas, having the security of not being dominated by states with larger populations is significant.

There are important concerns to note. Many details, such as the selection process for delegates and the kinds of amendments that could be offered at the convention are not elaborated on, which would give the delegations freedom to consider a wide swath of issues and reform proposals. The process by which any proposed changes would be ratified is potentially problematic.

The Constitution provides the option of three-quarters of state legislatures or three-quarters of public state conventions for ratification. The text of the convention call specifies state legislatures would have final approval for any changes, while a series of state conventions would involve the general public as a method of having true public buy-in. State conventions would also avoid a state legislative power play at the expense of the federal government’s interests over that of the general public. Considering the lack of faith and engagement the public holds at the moment, though, keeping the populace out might be the most constructive design for the convention.

The issues brought up by convention proponents are as wide-ranging as the scope of the proposed convention itself. While issues like a federal Balanced Budget Amendment and restrictions on federal regulatory authority suggest a conservative bias behind the move, posts on the convention support website suggest liberal preferences such as reining in defense spending. The fact that states like Democratic New Jersey have signed on along with more Republican states like North Dakota means there is mutual and bipartisan desire to open up the Constitution to a modern-day re-reading and interpretation. Could the states be resurgent under a new model of power sharing? Democratic reform may just be well-served by a revival of the Spirit of 1787.

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

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