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Kansans purchasing Obamacare have greater health care needs

Photo by Jim McLean Sherry Calderwood, a waitress at a Topeka breakfast spot frequented by legislators and lobbyists, didn’t buy insurance through the Obamacare marketplace last year but did this year. “It’s great,” she said. “I’m not racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of medical bills anymore."
Photo by Jim McLean Sherry Calderwood, a waitress at a Topeka breakfast spot frequented by legislators and lobbyists, didn’t buy insurance through the Obamacare marketplace last year but did this year. “It’s great,” she said. “I’m not racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of medical bills anymore.”

By Jim McLean

Sherri Calderwood’s Obamacare story isn’t unique.

It’s likely similar to those that could be told by many of the nearly 100,000 Kansans who have so far purchased coverage in the Affordable Care Act marketplace known as healthcare.gov. Calderwood looked into signing up for an Obamacare plan during the first enrollment period but concluded she and her husband couldn’t afford it.

She regretted the decision just a few months later when a difficult-to-diagnose illness that doctors initially feared might be leukemia sapped her energy and forced her to endure tests and hospitalizations she couldn’t afford.

“I thought, ‘Oh well, I haven’t been sick in all these years, I’ll be fine,” she said, looking back on the decision. “And here I sit. I’m worried about my house, my car payments, my family.” Calderwood, 45, is a waitress at a popular Topeka breakfast and lunch spot just a few blocks from the Kansas Statehouse.

Her husband is a construction worker whose hours fluctuate with the seasons. When the second enrollment period opened in November 2014, the couple signed up for an Obamacare plan. The federal tax credits their income qualified them for made it affordable, Calderwood said.

“It’s great,” she said. “They’re covering my bills. I’m not racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of medical bills anymore.”

Calderwood’s new policy covered most of the cost of a recent surgery to remove her spleen. But she said it was the process of getting her post-surgery prescriptions filled that convinced her husband of the policy’s value. Not used to having coverage, he forgot to mention it to the pharmacist and ended up paying full price — $140 in cash.

Calderwood said she worried she wouldn’t be able to pay the water bill until she realized what had happened. When she went back to the pharmacy with her new insurance card, she said, the pharmacist refunded her money and she only had to pay $10 for the prescriptions.

Prior to the Affordable Care Act, it would have been virtually impossible for Calderwood to purchase affordable coverage because of her pre-existing health problems. Denying coverage to sick people was one of the ways that insurance companies managed their risk.

Not surprisingly, a significant number of Kansans who purchased Obamacare coverage in the initial enrollment period were older and less healthy than the general population, said Matt All, a senior vice president for Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas, the state’s largest health insurer.

“That has come through in the claims data,” All said. “It’s an issue that we’re going to have to deal with, and it’s an issue that the system is going to have to deal with.” If the trend continues, many expect it will drive up the cost of health insurance premiums. But that hasn’t happened yet.

The average premium for all 82 plans offered in the Kansas Obamacare marketplace increased just 0.1 percent from the first enrollment period to the second, which is open through April 30 for certain groups. The newly covered Kansans are different in other ways as well, All said.

Because it’s the first time many of them have had insurance, they’re having to learn how to use it. “So, they have different kinds of questions, more basic questions than what we’re used to,” he said.

Debbie Berndsen oversees a network of navigators across the state who are trained to help people shop for coverage.

She said as consumers new to the insurance market learn about deductibles, copays and provider networks, they’re becoming more selective. During the first enrollment period, Berndsen said consumers were primarily focused on price — the cost of their monthly premiums.

But when they returned in the second enrollment period, they were more focused on ensuring they had the coverage they needed. “A lot of those people were coming back this year after living with those plans,” Berndsen said. “I see a trend looking more at what your coverage will be versus what the premium will be.”

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

41st annual ACE auction scheduled for Saturday

tmp ace auction 2015

The 41st annual Auction for Christian Education (ACE) will begin at 4:30 p.m. Saturday at Al Billinger Fieldhouse.

This is Thomas More Prep-Marian’s largest fundraiser of the year.

The event will be streamed live online by Eagle Community Television at HaysPost.com and will conclude with the drawings for a 2014 Chevy Cruze valued at more than $14,000 and $10,000 in cash prizes.

Click HERE for more information.

From Augusta National to Abilene, Eisenhower Tree now on Display

ABILENE – The Eisenhower Presidential Library has a new piece of history on display.

It took an Ice Storm and nearly 60 years but President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s request for the removal of a tree at Augusta National Golf Club was fulfilled in February of last year.

Eisenhower became a member at Augusta National in 1948 and for years had a problem with one tree, as many golfers did, that lined the left side of the 17th fairway.

Finally In 1956, during his Presidency, he attended a club meeting, asking to have the tree cut down according to William Snyder, The Curator of the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum.

“Since his topic wasn’t on the agenda the Club Chairman stood up and said, ’You’re out of order,’ and promptly adjourned the meeting that way he didn’t have to tell the President of the United States, No!

But they effectively did tell him no and it took another 60 years before the tree came down,” said Snyder.

Following the meeting in 1956 the tree then became known as “The Eisenhower Tree,” and was not removed until it was killed during the February ice storm of 2014.

Augusta National worked with the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum to preserve two slices of the tree that are now on display at both the Golf Club in Georgia and the Library in Abilene.

Gladys Elliott

Phillipsburg resident Gladys Elliott passed away Monday, April 20, 2015 at the Phillips County Hospital in Phillipsburg, KS at the age of 97.

She was born in Phillips County on August 15, 1917 to Samuel E. & Margaret B. (Nehring) Perrine. Her husband, Robert C. Elliott, Sr., and son, Richard Elliott, preceded her in death, along with a stepson, stepdaughter, and step grandson.

Survivors include her son, Rev. Robert Elliott, Jr. of Gower, MO; her daughters, Anita Elliott and Linda Imm, both of Phillipsburg, a sister, Marguerite Clark of Vancouver, WA; six grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; two step grandchildren and two step great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Saturday, April 25, at 11:00 a.m. in the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, with her son, Rev. Robert Elliott, Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in the Fairview Cemetery, Phillipsburg.

Mrs. Elliott will lie in-state on Thursday from 3-9 p.m. and on Friday from 9 a.m. – 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Memorial contributions may be given to the Phillips County E.M.S. or the First Christian Church. Online condolences to: www.olliffboeve.com.

Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, is in charge of arrangements.

Supreme Court sides with Kansas in natural gas price-fixing case

TOPEKA – The U.S. Supreme Court today sided with Kansas and decided states may continue to enforce antitrust laws to protect consumers from retail price fixing in the natural gas market according to Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

In doing so, the court, in a 7-2 decision, rejected the federal government’s assertion that federal law preempts state enforcement.

“This is a major victory for Kansas consumers and all purchasers of natural gas,” Schmidt said. “The Supreme Court has sided with our view that those who illegally fix the price of natural gas cannot hide behind federal law to avoid state liability.”

The underlying lawsuit involved accusations by the plaintiffs, which included both Kansas-based Learjet, Inc., and Topeka Unified School District No. 501, that the defendants illegally drove up the retail price of natural gas, costing gas purchasers millions of dollars. Similar cases from around the country were consolidated into multi-district litigation in Nevada, and the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit Court of Appeals eventually allowed the plaintiffs to proceed with their state-law claims. The defendants, backed by the federal government, asked the Supreme Court to reject the lawsuit by concluding that federal law preempts state laws that combat price-fixing in the natural gas retail market when the challenged industry practices also affect the wholesale gas market.

In November 2014, Schmidt led a bipartisan group of 21 state attorneys general in filing an amicus curiae brief asking the Supreme Court to allow continued enforcement of state anti-price fixing laws against retail sellers of natural gas who illegally rig prices. The federal government, which was opposite Kansas in this lawsuit, argued that state antitrust laws are preempted by the federal Natural Gas Act. The defendants and the Obama Administration argued the preemption extends to the retail market when the challenged practice is engaged in by a federally regulated seller and affects a federally regulated wholesale rate.

Oral arguments in the case, ONEOK, Inc. v. Learjet, Inc., were heard in January. Kansas Solicitor General Stephen McAllister argued on behalf of Kansas and the amici states when the case was heard in January at the Court.

CDC eyeing bird flu vaccine for humans, though risk is low

STEVE KARNOWSKI, Associated Press

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Federal officials say they’re taking steps to create a human vaccine for the bird flu virus that’s affected the Midwest poultry industry, though they still consider the danger to be low.

The state of Kansas lifted restrictions on the movement of poultry flocks in parts of Leavenworth and Wyandotte counties imposed after a case of bird flu was confirmed last month.

Dr. Alicia Fry, an influenza expert with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, says they’re optimistic there won’t be any human cases of the H5N2 strain that has cost chicken and turkey producers nearly 6.8 million birds so far.

She said Wednesday that most human infections with other bird flu viruses have required close, prolonged contact with infected birds. So, officials are monitoring farm workers who’ve been exposed to affected flocks.

Fry said the CDC has taken early steps toward developing a human vaccine in case it’s needed, but that’s a standard procedure with all emerging diseases.

April’s USD 489 Best of Best earn recognition

April's 'Best of the Best', Terri Tramel and Meredith Martin
April’s Best of the Best: Terri Tramel and Meredith Martin

By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

O’Loughlin Elementary School administrative assistant Terri Tramel and Hays High School junior Meredith Martin are April’s USD 489’s Best of the Best honorees.

Both received their awards Monday at the USD 489 Board of Education meeting.

Tramel was nominated by O’Loughlin teacher Sonya Herl.

“(Terri) always helps everyone at school. … She drops everything right there and helps you and she does it with a smile,” Herl said, adding it was Tramel who coordinated O’Loughlin’s Walking School Bus in the fall of 2014 and again this spring.

First Walking School Bus, Fall 2014

Martin was nominated by HHS business teacher Susie Stark for volunteering her time to help with HHS events and public service projects by using her artistic skills to design tickets and promotional materials for school, Downtown Hays Development Corp. and Hays Rotary Club events.

“She takes on anything,” Stark said.

Tramel and Jennings were awarded a trophy and a $50 dining gift certificate.

For more information or to nominate a USD 489 staff or student for the May awards, click HERE.

Prosecutors seek more info in Kan. marijuana advocate’s case

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors are seeking more information before deciding whether to charge a medical marijuana advocate who lost custody of her 11-year-old son following comments the boy made in a drug education program at a Kansas school.

Finney County Attorney Susan Richmeier said Wednesday she has asked Garden City police for follow-up reports in the case of 37-year-old Shona Banda. Those are expected to be completed within 10 days.

Banda referred any comment to her attorney, who did not immediately return a message.

Authorities were called to the boy’s school on March 24. A search of their house found marijuana and other drug-related items.

Police referred the case on Monday to the county attorney, saying possible charges include possession of marijuana with intent to distribute, possession of drug paraphernalia and child endangerment.

Hays Soroptimist Club recognizes area women

soroptimist 2015
From left, Lindsay Augustine, Monica Legleiter and Rachel Harman

Soroptimist International of Hays, a volunteer organization for business and professional women, held its annual awards ceremony Tuesday at the Rose Garden Steak Haus. The club recognized three women in different areas.

Lindsay Augustine, Ellis, was honored with the Violet Richardson Award. The Violet Richardson Award program recognizes young women ages 14 to 17 for demonstrating leadership by identifying an issue that is important to them in their communities and the world and addressing it through their volunteer efforts. Lindsay volunteers at the Ellis Food Pantry, Ellis FFA and St. Mary’s Church.

Monica Legleiter, Hays, received the Ruby Award. The Soroptimist Ruby Award: For Women Helping Women honors ordinary women, who through their professional or personal activities, make extraordinary efforts on behalf of women and girls. It also provides a $500 award, which the recipient can donate to the charity of her choice.

Legleiter plans to donate her $500 award to the Girl Scouts of America. Legleiter has worked for Girl Scouts of America for 14 years, and works primarily in the Volunteer Services area.

Rachel Harman, Hays, received the Live Your Dream Award. Soroptimist International of Hays is one of 1,300 clubs that make up Soroptimist International of the Americas, an organization dedicated to improving the lives of women and girls through programs leading to social and economic empowerment. The Live Your Dream Award program provides women who serve as the primary wage earners for their families with the financial resources to offset costs associated with their efforts to attain higher education or additional skills and training. The award can be used for tuition, books, childcare, carfare or any other education-related expense.

Harman will use the cash award to obtain her bachelor’s degree in general studies at FHSU. Harman is currently an administrative assistant at FHSU’s Institute of Applied Technology. In the past, she worked with special-needs children, young children in daycare, pregnant teens and women in domestic violence situations.

“I will just continue to move forward and be my best – day in and day out for me, my family and my community,” Harman said.

Police investigate the use of fake $100 bills

Little Apple Post

MANHATTAN -Police in Riley County are warning the community of a100 potential fraudulent U.S. currency scam involving counterfeit bills.

On Tuesday, officers responded to several reports of counterfeit money from businesses in the Manhattan area, including Pizza Hut (Moro Street and Hosteler Drive), Little Caesar’s, Dollar Tree and Baskin Robins.

Officers are still investigating the matter and encourage anyone with information on these counterfeit $100 bills to contact police.

Tipsters can remain anonymous by calling the Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers Service at (785) 539-7777.

KFIX Rock News: Vinyl Box Set Featuring John Lennon’s Entire Solo Catalog Being Released In June

JohnLennonpeace
Photo credit: Roy Kerwood

A new box set featuring high-quality vinyl versions of John Lennon’s eight studio albums will be released on June 9.

The nine-disc collection, titled simply Lennon, marks the first time that vinyl editions of the late Beatlesstar’s solo albums will be available together in one package.

Each album — spanning from Lennon’s 1970 solo debut, Plastic Ono Band, through the 1984’s posthumous Milk and Honey — is pressed on 180-gram vinyl and replicates the original U.K. version’s art, sleeves and other packaging elements.

All but two of the records — 1971’s Imagine and 1975’s Rock ‘n’ Roll — have long been out of print on vinyl in the U.S.  A video showing the collection being unboxed can be viewed at Lennon’s official YouTube channel.

The albums were remastered in 2010 using Lennon’s original mixes by Yoko Ono and a group of engineers at London’s Abbey Road Studios and New York City’s Avatar Studios, while the new vinyl masters were cut at Abbey Road by engineer Sean Magee.

The new vinyl editions of Lennon’s solo albums will be released individually on August 21.

Here is the full list of albums featured in the Lennon vinyl box set:

John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band (1970)
Imagine (1971)
Some Time in New York City (two LPs) (1972)
Mind Games (1973)
Walls and Bridges (1974)
Rock ‘n’ Roll (1975)
Double Fantasy (1980)
Milk and Honey (1984)

Copyright © 2015, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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Cover photo courtesy Capitol/UMe

Kansas teen facing charges after school gun threat, lockdown

BROOKVILLE -A discussion on Facebook Tuesday morning escalated to the threat of the use of a gun and a brief lockdown at Ell-Saline Middle-High School.

Saline County Sheriff’s Captain Roger Soldan said chat back and forth on Facebook between several students about a fight after school, concerned a student when the chat turned to a threat to bring a gun to school.

Soldan said a picture of a gun was placed in the chat and a student contacted Deputy Dave Lanning, the School Resource Officer.

Lanning worked with school administrators and contacted Soldan for additional deputies to provide extra security at the school.

The lockdown began around 10 a.m. and lasted about an hour.

Ottawa County authorities arrested Joshua K. Downey, 18, Tescott, at his home for allegedly making the threat of taking the gun to school.

Soldan said a search warrant was used to search Downey’s home, but no gun that matched the picture posted was found.

There were weapons in the home that belong to Downey’s stepfather, but they were not seized.

Downey was booked into the Saline County Jail on eight counts of aggravated criminal threats.

Downey is not a student at Ell-Saline.

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