The Ellis County Drug Enforcement Unit will once again host the annual drug take-back day this week to help residents dispose of unwanted or unused prescription drugs.
Ellis County Sheriff Detective Chuck White
This year’s event is again held in cooperation with the Good Samaritan Society and, new this year, Fort Hays State University Residential Life.
The event is from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday.
Ellis County Sheriff Detective Chuck White said residential life officials contacted the sheriff’s department about taking part in the program giving university students, faculty and staff have an on-campus location to drop off unwanted medications.
“They’ve researched it and think it’s a good program and they want to offer it to their population,” White said. “We’re very happy to have them.”
White said the disposal of the medication with “prevent the poisoning children and pets and collecting old meds prevents misuse by children and adults.”
In recent years, overdoses from prescription medications are on the rise, and there are more overdoses from those medicines than from illegal drugs, according to White.
As in previous years, the program is free and completely anonymous.
White said officers will take medicines in capsules, tablets, pill and liquid form — but syringes and aerosols will not be accepted.
The Good Samaritan Center is located at 27th and Canal. The site on the FHSU campus will be inside McMindes Hall, 410 Agnew Lane.
Karla Sue Evel, age 53, of LaCrosse formerly of Hays, passed away Tuesday, April 14, 2015, at her home. She was born May 28, 1961 in Ft. Collins, CO. She married Keith Evel May 5, 2007 in Hays.
Karla was employed at Kansas Pathology Consultants in Hays. She enjoyed cooking, baking sewing spending time with family and especially with her nieces and nephew.
She is survived by her husband, Keith of LaCrosse; parents Corky and Glenda (Binder) Knapp of Hays; two brothers, Doug Knapp and wife Angela of Wichita and Steve Knapp and wife Dawn of Hays; a brother-in-law, Pat Evel of Springfield, MO; two nephews, Cortin and Levi, and three nieces, Trystan, Zoey and Madison.
She was preceded in death by an uncle, Melvin Rupp and her father and mother-in-law, Dale and Carolyn Evel.
A celebration gathering and visitation will be Friday 10 AM – 2 PM at Brock’s Keithley Funeral Chapel 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601.
Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed to [email protected].
The Ellis County Historical Society in Hays will host “Sports Mascot Controversy” presentation and discussion by Salina sports historian Travis Larsen at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Stone Church at 100 W. Seventh.
Members of the community are invited to attend the free program. Contact the Ellis County Historical Society at (785) 628-2624 for more information. The program is made possible by the Kansas Humanities Council.
The use of Native American imagery for sports mascots has a long and controversial history. Some proponents say that the mascots honor tribal cultures; others argue that they reinforce ethnic stereotypes and cultural misunderstanding. The presentation will explore the history of these images and the controversies surrounding them.
Travis Larsen received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in history from Fort Hays State University and earned his doctorate in history from Oklahoma State University. His research focuses on media stereotypes of American Indians in football, as well as baseball history.
“Chad Smith, the former principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, addressed the issue this way,” said Larsen. “He stated, ‘A mascot by definition begets not only prejudice, but begets patronage and paternalism. For us as Indian folks, we don’t want to be second class citizens.’”
“Sports Mascot Controversy” is part of Hometown Teams: How Sports Shape America, a Smithsonian Institution traveling exhibition presented by the Kansas Humanities Council in partnership with the Smithsonian Museum on Main Street program.
Ellis County Historical Society is one of 19 Hometown Teams partner sites in Kansas, and their local exhibition Polo on the Plains tells the story of how the 1870s existence of a British colony of cattle breeders at Victoria in eastern Ellis County led to a taste for this traditional equestrian sport. Polo continued to have a loyal local following well into the 20th century when it was revived by the Hays Polo Club in the 1920s and the Fort Hays Polo Club in the 1940s.
Kansas Humanities Council Hometown Teams Speakers Bureau features presentations and discussions that connect communities with history, traditions, and ideas to strengthen civic life. This event is partially supported by gifts from the Johnson County Community College Foundation and the Rotary Club of Shawnee Mission in honor of Fred Krebs, a lifelong advocate of humanities in Kansas.
The Kansas Humanities Council conducts and supports community-based programs, serves as a financial resource through an active grant-making program, and encourages Kansans to engage in the civic and cultural life of their communities. For more information about KHC programs contact the Kansas Humanities Council at (785) 357-0359 or visit online at www.kansashumanities.org.
For more information about “Sports Mascot Controversy” in Hays, contact the Ellis County Historical Society at (785) 628-2624 or visit www.elliscountyhistoricalmuseum.org.
Hays City Manager Toby Dougherty with Congressman Huelskamp
WASHINGTON – This week, Congressman Tim Huelskamp welcomed a delegation of local leaders from western Kansas, including representatives from Hays, Garden City and Liberal. Delegates had the opportunity to ask questions of congressional staff covering specific issues areas and later each community met with the Congressman to discuss their concerns.
Some of the shared concerns included protecting rural hospitals, ensuring Veterans can receive health care close to home, need for immigration reform, and preventing more over-regulation by Washington bureaucrats. In particular, these leaders outlined concerns with the proposed ‘Waters of the U.S.’ rule, listing under the Endangered Species Act, and government barriers to economic growth, affordable housing, and job creation.
In their meeting with the Congressman, Hays representatives discussed development of the R-9 Ranch, water conservation efforts, and continued job growth in Hays and throughout Ellis County.
Congressman Huelskamp made the following statement: “After 11 town halls back home in the last two weeks, it was great to then hear directly from leaders throughout western Kansas. Each year, I look forward to this visit from western Kansas and the opportunity to learn more about the issues and concerns on the minds across my home region. I use what they share to continue fighting for the needs of the Big First district.”
HUTCHINSON — In Reno County court on Wednesday, the state was granted a continuance for a Kansas woman charged with three counts of attempted murder in the second degree because two of their witnesses were unavailable.
The state announced they will be amending the complaint against Nicole Green, 35, Hutchinson, adding three additional charges of aggravated assault and changing another count from criminal discharge of a firearm to intentionally firing into a vehicle.
Deputy District Attorney Tom Stanton said the three aggravated assault charges are additional counts added to the complaint and not alternate counts to the three charges of attempted murder.
Green was arrested on February 21, when Hutchinson Police were dispatched to Midas Muffler and Brake Shop at 1101 N. Lorraine after a vehicle struck the building.
The occupants of the vehicle, 28-year-old Daniel Newburn, 42-year-old Stacey Plantz and 39-year-old Michael Beason, reported they were at Walmart and were confronted by Green in the parking lot.
After a brief argument, they left the parking lot and drove south on K-61.
Green followed them in her vehicle and repeatedly shot at their vehicle until they eventually ended up on North Lorraine and crashed the vehicle into the southwest side of the Midas shop.
Green left the scene and later turned herself in at the Reno County Law Enforcement Center.
EMPORIA — Dustin Bittel of Ellis, is a member of the company that will present “As You Like It,” Shakespeare’s beloved comedy about love and mistaken identity. “As You Like It” begins with political intrigue at court and ends with love in the woods. The confusions abound.
Orlando loves Rosalind and writes really bad love poetry to her. Rosalind loves Orlando, but she’s dressed as a boy, so Phebe falls in love with him, even though he is really a she. Silvius loves Phebe and Touchstone loves Audrey who also loves him, but what about William, who loves her?
And in the end, Rosalind’s best friend Celia falls in love with Oliver, who is Orlando’s brother. Duke Senior loves the woods, and Jacques just loves his melancholy. The play might be Shakespeare’s most profound examination of love in all its guises.
Bittel, a freshman theater major, plays Dennis/Silvius.
The production is under the direction of Jim Bartruff. Nancy Pontius is the production designer, and Susan Mai will design costumes.
“As You Like It” runs April 21 through 26 in the Ronald Q. Fredrickson Theatre in Roosevelt Hall. For tickets or more information, contact the box office at (620) 341-6378.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A judge will decide whether to grant bail to a Topeka man charged as an accomplice in an alleged Fort Riley bombing plot.
Alexander Blair will appear for a detention hearing Thursday. Blair’s attorney, Christopher Joseph, has argued in a court filing that Blair is not a flight risk because he has little money and no car.
Blair allegedly gave money to John T. Booker, who was arrested in an FBI sting operation Friday as he reportedly attempted to arm what he thought was a 1,000 pound bomb outside of Fort Riley.
Blair was arrested a short time later. Prosecutors allege he knew about the plot and did not inform authorities.
Photo by Dave Ranney Vickie Judy, 40, of Topeka, took advantage of a recent leftover produce giveaway at the Kansas Expocentre. Judy and her three children, ages 9 to 18, receive $359 in cash assistance and $580 in SNAP food benefits each month. Judy says she relies on the cash assistance money to pay her rent and utilities.
By Dave Ranney
Gov. Sam Brownback said Wednesday that he intends to sign a controversial welfare bill despite concerns from those who work with poor Kansans about whether the restrictions it imposes are realistic or enforceable.
The governor will sign the bill at a Thursday morning media event featuring former welfare recipients who obtained jobs with help from a state training program.
However, Kansans who do “street level” work with the poor are concerned about the restrictions in Senate Substitute for House Bill 2258. Those wary of it include Barry Feaker, the director of the Topeka Rescue Mission and a member of Brownback’s task force charged with reducing childhood poverty.
“The bill, as I understand it, raises a number of concerns,” Feaker said. “One of those concerns would be: How would someone whose rent is $400 a month pay that rent if it has to be in cash and they’re only able to withdraw $25 a day? How would they be able to do that if the rent is due on the fifth and the cash assistance benefit isn’t loaded into the system until about that time?”
Many of the 6,200 families on the state’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, he said, do not have checking accounts. “This looks very problematic to me,” he said.
Another section in the bill would prohibit TANF recipients from spending their cash assistance on alcohol, cigarettes, lottery tickets, pornography, lingerie, tattoos, body piercings, fortune-telling sessions or cruises. “I’m in agreement with that,” Feaker said. “People with limited resources shouldn’t be using those resources to gamble or buy alcohol. But how are we going to enforce that prohibition? Again, that concerns me as well.”
Theresa Freed, a spokesperson for the Kansas Department for Children and Families, said that after someone withdraws money from their cash assistance accounts, subsequent transactions would be “very difficult to track.” DCF, Freed said, is assuming that TANF recipients will work around the ATM limitation by using the “cash-back” option when making food purchases at grocery stores.
Freed said the $25-a-day restriction applies only to ATM transactions. While the list of new restrictions on how welfare dollars can be spent is long, it does not include any prohibitions on guns or ammunition. Freed told the Wichita Eagle that families on TANF might need firearms to protect themselves in dangerous neighborhoods or hunt for food.
Vickie Judy, 40, of Topeka, and her three children, ages 9 to 18, receive $359 in cash assistance and $580 in SNAP benefits each month. “I wouldn’t care if they tell me I can’t take out more than $25 a day, just as long as there’s a way I can use my (debit) card to pay rent and utilities,”
Judy said earlier this week as she and a friend picked through boxes of oranges, apples, peppers and lettuce left over from a recent food giveaway in the Kansas Expocentre parking lot. “If I don’t pay the rent by the fifth (day of the month), my landlord gets mad,” she said.
“I’ll get evicted by the eighth. It’s happened before.” Judy, a longtime nursing home worker who went on TANF after losing her job and separating from her husband, admitted that she had used her cash assistance to buy non-essential items for her children.
“When you’re poor and you see how it is that rich people live, you’ll go crazy if you don’t buy things for your kids once in a while,” she said. “I’ve done it, but not very often. Because if you want to know the truth, after you pay rent and utilities the money isn’t there.
And whatever is there, you need to be spending on food. Your food stamps won’t get you to the end of the month.” Cutting a wide swath Miriam Krehbiel, chief executive with United Way of Greater Topeka, said she and others who work with “street level programs” could have alerted lawmakers to some practical problems with the bill. “When I first heard about this I wanted to say, ‘No! Stop! Wait!
You need to talk with some of the experts, the people who are dealing with these folks every day,’” Krehbiel said. “If they did, I think they’d see how reckless it is for them to be cutting such a wide swath when they ought to be using a scalpel.”
Support for the bill, Krehbiel said, appears to be driven by often-repeated stories of people on welfare mismanaging their money. “I hear those stories too. I get it,” she said. “People on public assistance shouldn’t be spending what little money they have on things like cruises. But what I don’t get is how we think that someone on public assistance – as little as it is – would ever be able to save up enough money to be on a cruise ship?”
Earlier this month legislators approved the bill by votes of 30-10 in the Senate and 87-35 in the House. Sen. Michael O’Donnell, a Republican from Wichita, carried the bill to the floor. He and other supporters said the bill would prevent fraud and help recipients move off welfare and into the workforce.
“We’re trying to make sure these benefits are used the way they were intended to be,” O’Donnell said. In Kansas, a three-person family — a single mother and two children, typically — is eligible for cash assistance if the household’s gross income is below 26 percent of the federal poverty level, or roughly $435 a month. Those living in urban areas are eligible for more than those in rural areas.
Last week, DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore defended the law on the agency’s Facebook page, saying its provisions were designed to protect taxpayer dollars and encourage personal responsibility. “This administration,” she wrote, “is helping people by walking alongside them to give them the skills and support they need to find and keep good-paying jobs so they no longer need to count on welfare benefits to pay their bills.”
The department’s welfare-to-work policies, she said, have “helped drastically reduce welfare rolls and resulted in more than 6,000 Kansans obtaining employment — just within the last year.”
According to DCF reports, in February, 14,749 Kansans — 3,906 adults, 10,843 children — received cash assistance. The average per-person payment was $114. The reports also show that between July 2014 and February 2015, 81 adults — 2 percent of the total — lost their cash assistance due to fraud.
“I’d like to see the data that shows how many of these people are spending oodles of money on cruises and the like, because I don’t see it,” said Joyce Stockham, who runs the Mid-Kansas Community Action Program, an 18-county anti-poverty program headquartered in Augusta.
“What I see is people using their TANF to pay rent and utilities and not having anything left over.” In 2013, KansasWatchdog.org, a conservative online news organization, found that TANF beneficiaries had used their state-issued debit cards to withdraw more than $43,000 over a three-month period from ATMs in or near a casino, a strip club, an adult video store, payday loan shops, liquor stores and smoke shops.
The report, based on information obtained through an open records request filed with what was then called the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, did not indicate the number of cardholders who lived within walking distance of the ATMs or worked in the stores that house them versus those who spent the money at the establishments.
The $43,000 represented less 3 percent of the total TANF money withdrawn from ATMs in that three-month period and less than two-tenths of 1 percent of all TANF monies spent in the previous year. Policy by anecdote?
Karen Wulfkuhle, executive director at the United Community Services of Johnson County, shared Stockham’s concern.
“This appears to be policy-by-anecdote rather than policy-by-evidence,” she said, referring to the bill. “I don’t see anything here that’s evidence-based that’s going to help anyone become self-sufficient.”
Currently, adults in eligible families are allowed to be on TANF for a total of 48 months during their lifetimes unless their circumstances meet the criteria for being considered a hardship case. The criteria: They become disabled, they’ve fled a violent relationship or they are in the process of retrieving their children from the state’s foster care system.
The new law reduces the lifetime limit to 36 months but allows up to another 12 in hardship cases. Krehbiel and others who work with poor Kansans say that while 36 months may seem like a reasonable limit, it isn’t that much time when you consider that people are in and out of the workforce for 40 years or more.
“There is a lot of opportunity for a lot of things to go wrong, especially when the economy goes up and down like it has the last few years” Krehbiel said.
“The question is not how long it takes someone to go out and find a job, it’s how long is it going to take for them to find life-sustaining employment for their families. I’m afraid that for a lot of these families, 36 months isn’t going to be long enough.” Many of the jobs being filled by former welfare recipients pay wages that keep them in poverty, according to Annie McKay, executive director of the Kansas Center for Economic Growth.
She said more than 25 percent of working Kansans need some kind of help to pay for food, utilities, transportation and child care. “If we continue to funnel Kansans into low-wage jobs, it’s not going to help them get ahead,” McKay said. “It’s not a path to prosperity, it’s a detour to poverty.”
The bill also penalizes parents who don’t meet the TANF programs’ work requirements by cutting off other benefits such as food stamps and child care assistance. Historically, eligibility for each of the three programs has been independent of eachother. Children of adults who lose their benefits continue to be eligible for food stamps — formally known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.
“We’re losing sight of the big picture here,” said Shannon Cotsoradis, chief executive with the advocacy group Kansas Action for Children. “In our desire to penalize the adults for what are perceived as poor choices or negative behaviors, we’re going to be penalizing large numbers of very poor children because their parents won’t have access to cash assistance and there will be less food in the house.”
Dave Ranney is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – Kansas City became the last team in the majors to lose this season, as Kyle Gibson pitched into the seventh inning and Oswaldo Arcia hit a two-run homer for the Minnesota Twins in a 3-1 victory over the Royals on Wednesday night.
The Royals (7-1) were chasing the 2003 team’s 9-0 start as the best in franchise history, but Gibson (1-1) used 12 groundball outs and three strikeouts to keep the highest-scoring team in the majors quiet for a night.
The Twins (2-6) went 1-8 to begin the 1994 season, the only other time in the club’s 55-year history they started with seven losses in their first eight games. Glen Perkins pitched a perfect ninth for his first save.
Edinson Volquez (1-1) struck out seven in 7 2-3 innings, with five hits and one walk allowed. He loaded the bases with no outs in the first, but he escaped with only Brian Dozier’s sacrifice fly as the damage.
As an upper level storm system approaches, numerous showers and thunderstorms will be likely across much of southwest and south central Kansas into tonight. Some severe thunderstorms are also possible mainly across southwestern Kansas this afternoon and evening.
Today Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 5pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 71. Southeast wind 8 to 18 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Tonight Showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 10pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Low around 53. East wind 5 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between three quarters and one inch possible.
Friday Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 9am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 69. Southeast wind 10 to 16 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Friday Night Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 9pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 49. Southeast wind 6 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Saturday A 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 71. South southeast wind 7 to 11 mph.
Saturday Night A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 48.
Sunday A chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 64. Chance of precipitation is 40%.