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One arrested, one life-watched after incident at Hays hotel

At 2:51 a.m. Sunday, the Hays Police Department received a report of a disturbance at America’s Best Value Inn, 2524 Vine.

Officers arrived on scene and found a 33-year-old male lying in the parking lot. The man was unconscious and had been beaten. The man was transported to the hospital for treatment and was later life-watched to Wichita.

Truman T. Begay, 22, was also located at the scene. Begay has been arrested for aggravated battery and is being held in the Ellis County jail.

The Hays Police Department and the Ellis County Sheriff’s Office continue to investigate this incident.

If anyone has any information reference this incident, they are encouraged to contact Investigator Aaron Larson at (785) 625-1030 or at [email protected].

Hays Police investigate Sunday morning stabbing

The Hays Police Department reported in a media release that just before 1 a.m. on Sunday, officers were dispatched to the alley behind The HOME, a nightclub located at 229 W. 10th, for a report of a stabbing.

Officers discovered a 20-year-old male had been stabbed in the chest. The initial investigation revealed that the stabbing had occurred during a brief altercation inside the nightclub. The victim was transported to the hospital for treatment of his injuries.

The stabbing is being investigated by the Hays Police Department and the Ellis County Sheriff’s Office.

If anyone has any information reference this incident, they are encouraged to contact Investigator Jeff Ridgway at (785) 625-1011 or at [email protected].

Ex-lawmaker faces sentencing for fraud to finance Kan. campaign

ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A former state lawmaker will soon learn his punishment for defrauding a bank to help fund his political activities.

Forty-one-year-old Trent LeDoux of Holton is expected to be in federal court Monday in Topeka for sentencing. A federal grand jury indicted the Republican member of the Kansas House a year ago.

LeDoux pleaded guilty in May 2014 to bank fraud and agreed to pay $465,100. But his sentencing has been pushed back several times since then while he undergoes treatment for various health issues.

While he was in office, LeDoux obtained three loans from Farmers and Merchants Bank in Colby to buy cattle, purportedly using the livestock as collateral for the loans. Instead he deposited the loan proceeds into his campaign account and paid off other debts.

More school districts discuss ending the year early

MANHATTAN – School districts around the state continue to consider plans to end the school year early to save money. The Concordia district and the Twin Valley district, which includes Bennington and Tescott, announced last week they would release students in early May.

The USD-383 Board of Education in Manhattan met last Thursday night and discussed the possibility of reducing school days to save money.

Michele Jones, USD-383 Director of Communications and School Safety, said the board discussed how many minutes would have to be added each day to reduce the school year by 5 or 10 days.

The school district would save approximately $10,000 each day they shave off the calendar.

The talks were in response to the school district having to do budget reductions. There isn’t another BOE meeting until May 6th, and it’s up to the district’s Budget Advisory Steering Committee to determine if the possibility of a shortened school will take place.

Hays Fire Department crews will train at airport this week

hays fire airport
Courtesy HFD

 

On Monday, city of Hays firefighters will be completing practical fire attack training to re-qualify as airport firefighters.

The practical firefighting training will be presented by the University of Missouri Fire & Rescue Training Institute and conducted at the Hays Regional Airport. The University of Missouri’s mobile aircraft fire trainer will be used to simulate various aircraft firefighting and rescue situations.

To support airport operations, Hays firefighters are required to complete a comprehensive airport firefighter training program meeting FAA standards. This includes a 30-hour airport firefighter refresher course each year for firefighters to remain qualified for airport firefighter duty.

Because this training will be conducted in the secure flight operations area of the airport, it will not be accessible by the general public. Members of the media who wish to report on this training as asked to contact Deputy Fire Chief Ryan Hagans at (785) 628-7330 or [email protected] for access.

Kansas woman hospitalized after car overturns on I-70

MAPLE HILL -A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 10 p.m. on Saturday in Wabaunsee County

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1991 Honda passenger car driven by Dylan T. Shafer, 17, Baldwin City

was eastbound on Interstate 70 in the left lane two miles west of the Maple Hill exit.

The driver’s side rear tire suffered a malfunction. The driver lost control and cut in front of a 2014 Hyundai driven by Lori L. Flippin, 51, Topeka, in the right lane. The Hyundai swerved to avoid the Honda and overturned. The Honda struck the guardrail.

Flippin was transported to St. Francis Hospital
Shafer was not injured.
Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Hays Fire Department responds to fire at Holiday Inn Express

HFD

At 10:04 p.m. Saturday, the Hays Fire Department, assisted by the Hays Police Department, was dispatched to an automatic fire alarm at the Holiday Inn Express, 4650 Roth.

First arriving police officers reported there was a fire in the building and that occupants were evacuating. At the same time, Holiday Inn Express staff called 911 to report a fire in the laundry room. At that time, additional fire crews and Ellis County EMS were alerted to respond.

Police officers immediately began assisting with the evacuation of the building. Ellis County EMS assisted one guest with limited mobility in evacuating the hotel. There were no injuries as a result of the fire.

Firefighters advanced one attack hose line to the laundry room and found the fire had been extinguished by two automatic fire sprinklers. After confirming that the fire was extinguished, firefighters worked to clear the smoke and shut down the fire sprinkler system.

The laundry room suffered fire, smoke and water damage. The lobby area and portions of the first floor of the building suffered water and smoke damage.

The most probable cause of the fire was the spontaneous combustion of laundry inside a clothes dryer.

Five fire trucks and 18 firefighters responded.

The last fire crew left the scene at 12:31 a.m. Sunday.

Reddick’s 3-run homer sends A’s victory over Royals

By DAVE SKRETTA
AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Josh Reddick hit a three-run homer, Jesse Hahn and Jesse Chavez combined for a seven-hitter, and the Oakland Athletics rolled to a 5-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Saturday night.

Yordano Ventura (2-1) gave up all five runs in the fourth inning, right before hitting A’s third baseman Brett Lawrie with what appeared to be a retaliatory pitch for an incident the previous night.

Stephen Vogt and former Royals designated hitter Billy Butler each drove in a run for Oakland, and Hahn (1-1) scattered three hits and a walk over 5 1-3 innings before leaving with a blister on the middle finger of his pitching hand.

Chavez then picked him up with 3 2-3 innings for the save, completing the fifth shutout by Oakland in its first 12 games.

Few hospitals nationwide score five stars in Medicare’s new ratings

By Jordan Rau, KAISER HEALTH NEWS

Many in the hospital industry fear Medicare’s five-star scale won’t accurately reflect quality and may place too much weight on patient reviews, which are just one measurement of hospital quality. Medicare also reports the results of hospital care, such as how many died or got infections during their stay, but those are not yet assigned stars.

View hospital performance by state here

“We want to expand this to other areas like clinical outcomes and safety over time, but we thought patient experience would be very understandable to consumers so we started there,” Dr. Patrick Conway, chief medical officer for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, or CMS, said in an interview.

Medicare’s new summary star rating, posted Thursday on its Hospital Compare website, is based on 11 facets of patient experience, including how well doctors and nurses communicated, how well patients believed their pain was addressed, and whether they would recommend the hospital to others. Hospitals collect the reviews by randomly surveying adult patients – not just those on Medicare — after they leave the facility. In assigning stars, Medicare compared hospital against each other, essentially grading on a curve.

It noted that “a 1-star rating does not mean that you will receive poor care from a hospital” and that “we suggest that you use the star rating along with other quality information when making decisions about choosing a hospital.” The American Hospital Association also issued a caution to patients, saying:

“There’s a risk of oversimplifying the complexity of quality care or misinterpreting what is important to a particular patient, especially since patients seek care for many different reasons.”

Nationally, Medicare awarded the top rating of five stars to 251 hospitals, about 7 percent of all the hospitals Medicare judged, a Kaiser Health News analysis found. Many are small specialty hospitals that focus on lucrative elective operations such as spine, heart or knee surgeries. They have traditionally received more positive patient reviews than have general hospitals, where a diversity of sicknesses and chaotic emergency rooms make it more likely patients will have a bad experience.

A few five-star hospitals are part of well-respected systems, such as the Mayo Clinic’s hospitals in Phoenix, Jacksonville, Fla., and New Prague, Minn. Mayo’s flagship hospital in Rochester, Minn., received four stars.

Medicare awarded three stars to some of the nation’s most esteemed hospitals, including Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, New York-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan, and Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago. The government gave its lowest rating of one star to 101 hospitals, or 3 percent. On average, hospitals scored highest in Maine, Nebraska, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Minnesota, KHN found.

Thirty-four states had zero one-star hospitals. Hospitals in Maryland, Nevada, New York, New Jersey, Florida, California and the District of Columbia scored lowest on average.

Thirteen states and the District of Columbia did not have a single five-star hospital. In total, Medicare assigned star ratings to 3,553 hospitals based on the experiences of patients who were admitted between July 2013 and June 2014. Medicare gave out four stars to 1,205 hospitals, or 34 percent of those it evaluated. Another 1,414 hospitals — 40 percent — received three stars, and 582 hospitals, or 16 percent, received two stars.

Medicare did not assign stars to 1,102 hospitals, primarily because not enough patients completed surveys during that period. While the stars are new, the results of the patient satisfaction surveys are not. They are presented on Hospital Compare as percentages, such as the percentage of patients who said their room was always quiet at night.

Often, hospitals can differ by just a percentage point or two, and until now Medicare did not indicate what differences it considered significant. Medicare also uses patient reviews in doling out bonuses or penalties to hospitals based on their quality each year. Some groups that do their own efforts to evaluate hospital quality questioned whether the new star ratings would help consumers.

Evan Marks, an executive at Healthgrades, which publishes lists of top hospitals, said it was unlikely consumers would flock to the government’s rating without an aggressive effort to make them aware of it. “It’s nice they’re going to trying to be more consumer friendly,” he said. “I don’t see that the new star rating itself is going to drive consumer adoption. Ultimately, you can put the best content up on the Web, but consumers aren’t going to just wake up one day and go to it.”

Jean Chenoweth, an executive at Truven Health Analytics, which also publishes its own list of top hospitals, said she feared hospital marketing departments would oversell the meaning of the stars. “It would be very unfortunate and misleading if a hospital marketing department could claim to be a CMS five-star hospital and fail to mention it only reflected a patients’ perception of care,” she said.

‘Intro to Massage Therapy’ to be offered this summer at FHSU

FHSUMassageTherapy_web
FHSU Massage Therapy

FHSU University Relations

Two introductory massage therapy classes will be offered at Fort Hays State University for the summer 2015 term. The courses will be offered over a weekend on June 6-7 and July 25-26 for one credit hour.

“Intro to Massage Therapy” will be a hands-on workshop, no textbook required. “It will give students an idea to see if this is really for them without investing a lot of time or money,” said Ceena Owens, coordinator of the Massage Therapy Program at FHSU.

The workshop cost is $148.95, the current undergraduate tuition and fee cost for one credit hour, plus a $30 application fee for FHSU non-students. Workshops will be in Cunningham Hall, room 145.

Each workshop is limited to 20 people. Current students can sign up through TigerTracks.

For more information, contact Owens at 785-639-7218, by email to [email protected], or through the Department of Health and Human Performance at 785-628-4376.

Watch an interview with Ceena Owens and Eagle Community TV’s Mike Cooper on Community Connections here.

Senator Roberts’ Education Bill Takes Huge Step Forward

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Senator Pat Roberts’ bill to stop the federal government from interfering with state and local education decisions on academic standards, like Common Core, took a huge step forward over the past week.

Roberts’ bill was included in the Chairman’s mark of the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act which was today approved by the Senate Committee on Health, Education and Pensions (HELP). The bipartisan Every Child Achieves Act of 2015, which reauthorizes elementary and secondary education programs, now goes to the full Senate for a debate and a vote.

“I want to thank the Chairman for including my language in the bill before us today because I firmly believe it will prohibit the Administration from finding additional ways to promote a state’s adoption of Common Core,” Roberts said.

“My legislation would strictly forbid the federal government from intervening in a state’s education standards, curricula, and assessments through the use of incentives, mandates, grants, waivers or any other form of manipulation. A state will now be free from federal interference in how to decide whether or not to use Common Core or any other type of academic standard.”

Video of Senator Roberts’ remarks during the mark-up are here.

Earlier this year, Senator Roberts introduced the Learning Opportunities Created At the Local (LOCAL) Level Act, designed to preserve state education autonomy by prohibiting the federal government from coercing states to adopt education standards like Common Core. Text of that bill can be found here.

A member of the HELP Committee, Roberts fought hard to ensure the LOCAL Level language was included in the Every Child Achieves Act.

The LOCAL Level Act has the support of Heritage Action for America, the Home School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), the Eagle Forum, FreedomWorks, and the Family Research Council.

The LOCAL Level Act was also co-sponsored by Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Senator Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.).

“As a member of this Committee,” Roberts said, “I am fully committed to fighting this one-size-fits-all federal education agenda because I firmly believe local control is best when it comes to education.

“I am supporting the legislation in its current form because it puts an end to Washington mandates and allows Kansans to make their own decisions about the best way to improve education.

“While this legislation heads in the right direction in reducing the federal footprint, I want to remind my colleagues that it is important that we avoid adding back in federal mandates and prescriptive requirements.

“As we move forward, I will continue to push to return K-12 education decision making to state and local control, where we can establish the best policies to ensure that every child receives the highest quality education.”

Kansas woman receives probation in child sex case

Hutch Post

HUTCHINSON — A Kansas woman who entered a plea to a charge of indecent liberties with a child was given probation on Friday in lieu of what could have been a lengthy prison sentence.

Samantha Otterbein, Hutchinson, was found guilty of inappropriate touching of a 15-year-old girl in July of 2014.

Judge Joe McCarvill told Otterbein that she could see significant prison time if she violates her 32 months of probation.

Otterbein who pleaded guilty to the charge in March was in a consensual relationship with the girl who was 15. Otterbein was 20 at the time.

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