WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The remains of an amusement park that operated for more than six decades in Wichita are gradually disappearing.
The Wichita Eagle reports that Roger Nelson is a member of the family that has owned Joyland Amusement Park since the 1970s. He says efforts are underway to tear down the park “as soon as possible.”
Metropolitan Area Building and Construction Department director Thomas Stolz says there have been problems with graffiti and trespassing at the park since it closed in 2006.
Several buildings have already been demolished and more are scheduled. The remains of the historic wooden roller coaster are being dismantled. The Historic Preservation Alliance of Wichita and Sedgwick County is negotiating to buy a section of the track and some coaster cars.
JUNCTION CITY- The lightning and thunder that rumbled through northeast Kansas early Sunday left one calling card in Junction City.
Lightning slammed into the driveway of Traci Scott’s residence at 131 West Pine Street.
There were no injuries, and no damage to the house itself, but the driveway, a nearby patio, and her Jeep vehicle sustained damage.
Scott noted she was in bed listening to the storm. “And then out of nowhere this huge orange flash came right outside my bedroom window, and a very loud bang.
Scott went to her basement and smelled smoke, but it wasn’t until morning that she discovered the damage. “And there’s this huge hole in my driveway where the lightning struck. And when I say it struck it was with precision. It blew out about a foot-wide hole, and maybe about 8-10 inches deep hole in my driveway.”
The lightning strike cracked a window in her Jeep, left three black holes in the concrete patio, and the driveway. In one spot on the driveway you can see the rebar at the bottom of one of the holes.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators could enact new legal protections for faith-based groups on state college campuses even though the state already has a religious objections law.
Religious groups argue that the bill they’re pursuing this year sets a clearer legal standard and prevents lawsuits. Critics contend schools wouldn’t be allowed to withhold support even if groups discriminate based on race or national origin.
The state’s existing 2013 “religious freedom” law says state or local government agencies can’t substantially limit someone’s exercise of religion without a compelling reason. It allows lawsuits to challenge government actions.
This year’s proposal would specifically prohibit state colleges from refusing to provide resources to religious groups for requiring members to profess certain beliefs or adhere to a faith-based code of conduct.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A community walk to celebrate diversity is expected to draw thousands of people to a Jewish Community Center in suburban Kansas City where a man intent on killing Jews began a rampage that left three people dead a year ago.
The Faith, Love & Walk event Monday is the culmination of a week of events planned in response to the April 13, 2014, shooting deaths of 69-year-old William Corporon and his 14-year-old grandson, Reat Underwood, at the community center in Overland Park, and 53-year-old Terri LaManno, who was killed at the nearby Village Shalom retirement home. None of the victims was Jewish.
The suspect in the shootings, Frazier Glenn Miller Jr., of Aurora, Missouri, is charged with capital murder. His trial is scheduled for Aug. 17.
The city of Hays has been named a Tree City USA for the 36th consecutive year. The honor will be recognized during the Arbor Day celebration April 16.
The Tree City USA program is a national program that provides the framework for community forestry management for cities and towns across America.
Communities achieve Tree City USA status by meeting the four core standards of maintaining a tree board or department, having a community tree ordinance, spending at least $2 per capita on urban forestry and celebrating Arbor Day.
The Tree City USA award will be presented by Bryan Peterson, Kansas District Forester, at the Hays Arbor Day celebration Thursday, April 16.
The program, presented by the Hays Beautification Committee, begins at noon in the Hays Dog Park, Bickle-Schmidt Sports Complex, 1376 Highway 183 Alternate, where three Accolade Elm trees will be planted by Hays Parks Department employees.
Also to be presented are the Smokey Bear Poster winner awards by Brenda Slaughter, Prairie Garden Club.
The public is encouraged to attend.
For more information call the Hays Parks Department at (785) 628-7375.
Ulises Gonzalez, Garden City junior, and Molly Morgan, Wilson junior, were elected as president and vice president, respectively, of the Fort Hays State University Student Government Association in elections held April 8-9 for the 2015-2016 year.
Nineteen new senators were also elected: 11 in the College of Arts and Sciences, five in the College of Business and Entrepreneurship, and three in the College of Health and Life Sciences.
A constitutional amendment also passed which allows a shift to fall rather than spring elections for FHSU student government. The change was proposed to allow an opportunity for the incoming class of freshmen to run for office and to vote. A committee will be formed to begin the process.
Another ballot measure was approved establishing a dedicated student activity fee to fund athletic bands, campus intramurals and the Spirit Squad (Tiger Debs Dance Team). The increase will be $1.41 per credit hour: 63 cents for athletic bands, 50 cents for intramurals and 28 cents for the Spirit Squad. The measure included a provision that the fee will be reviewed annually by the Student Senate.
Gonzalez, the SGA president-elect, is a 2012 graduate of Garden City High School. He is a double major in management and in tourism and hospitality management. Vice President-elect Morgan, a 2012 Wilson High School graduate, is a political science major.
“Molly and I, in a collaborative effort, will strive to put the interests of the students first while maximizing their fees at a minimal cost,” said Gonzalez. “We are in this with the students and for the students.”
Gonzalez has previously participated in the SGA’s allocations process, the Big Event (a full day of service activities in the community), Tiger Day at the Capitol, and many other local and statewide initiatives. During his term as a senator, Gonzalez also served as chair of the Student Affairs Committee.
Morgan has been a part of the Student Government Association for three years as a senator for the College of Arts and Sciences. She has also served as the SGA’s administrative assistant and as chair of both the Senate Affairs Committee and the Appropriations Committee. This semester, she was elected chair of the Allocations Committee for the Fiscal Year 2016 funding process.
New senators are listed by hometown:
BELOIT: Emily Brandt, sophomore majoring in political science.
ELLSWORTH: Anna Hand, junior majoring in political science.
EVANS, Colo.: Morgen Pitts, junior majoring in management.
FREDERICK, Colo.: Rebecca Vincent, sophomore majoring in organizational leadership.
GARDEN CITY: Yoana Cruz, freshman majoring in biology.
GODDARD: Kenton Lindsey, sophomore majoring in mathematics.
HAYS: Nicholas Glassman, sophomore majoring in marketing.
Tandra Johnson, senior majoring in finance.
Spencer McCue, sophomore majoring in biology.
HAYSVILLE: Vivian Agnew, sophomore majoring in political science.
LEOTI: Parker Hassell, sophomore majoring in political science.
LYONS: Samuel DeVore, senior majoring in physics.
ROELAND PARK: Stephen Foster, sophomore majoring in management.
TOPEKA: Stephany Gress, senior majoring in political science.
Morgan Mitchiner, freshman.
VALLEY CENTER: Sierra Archer, sophomore majoring in communication sciences and disorders.
VICTORIA: Cody Scheck, senior majoring in accounting.
WICHITA: Aiyana Smith, freshman majoring in political science.
WILSON: Ashley Templeton, junior majoring in organizational leadership.
Vincent, Kansas – James W. Rajewski, age 91, died Thursday, April 9, 2015, at the Rice County Hospital in Lyons, Kansas.
He was born February 12, 1924, on the family farm at Vincent, Kansas to Joseph and Mary (Baier) Rajewski. He married Marian (Kuhlman) on May 22, 1951, in Olmitz, Kansas.
He was a farmer, an author, an historian, an oil field pumper, a member of St. Boniface Catholic Church Vincent and Knights of Columbus Victoria. He was a seed salesman for many years with Pioneer, Garst-Thomas and Walnut Valley. He served on the Vincent Grade School Board and the Victoria School Board. He also served as a board member and president for the Concerned Descendants of the St. Boniface Cemetery.
Survivors include his wife, Marian, Sterling, KS; four sons, John Rajewski and wife, Patty, Lincoln, NE; Michael Rajewski and wife, Betty, Hutchinson, KS; Bob Rajewski, Vincent, KS; Bill Rajewski and wife, Susan, Vincent, KS; four daughters, Diane Martinez and husband John, McPherson, KS; Jane Frenzl and husband, Michael, Hays, KS; Carolyn Rajewski and husband, Greg Zimmerman, Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan; Marie Schmidt and husband Andy, Olathe, KS; two sisters, Doris Marie Wellbrock, New Iberia, LA; Rita Gibson and husband, Don, Firestone, CO; one sister-in-law, Lois Rajewski, New Iberia, LA; one brother-in-law, Don Nowak, Edmond, OK; 23 grandchildren and 12 great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his parents, one brother, Gilbert Rajewski; two sisters, Mary Catherine Nowak, and Theresa (Norbert) Robben; one grandson, Simon Rajewski and one grand-daughter, Emily Rajewski.
Services will be 10:00 A.M. Monday, April 13, 2015, at The Basilica of St. Fidelis in Victoria, Kansas. Burial in St. Boniface Cemetery Vincent, Kansas.
A vigil service will be at 7:00 P.M. Sunday, followed by a Knights of Columbus rosary both at Cline’s Mortuary, 412 Main Street, Victoria, Kansas 67671.
Visitation is from 6:00 to 9:00 P.M. Sunday and from 8:30 to 9:45 A.M. Monday, all at Cline’s Mortuary Victoria, Kansas.
Memorials to the Concerned Descendants of the St. Boniface Cemetery, St. Boniface Catholic Church or the Sterling Presbyterian Manor.
The Hays USD 489 Board of Education will meet in work session at 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Rockwell Administration Center.
On the agenda is a discussion of “pay-to-play” — additional fees for students participating in athletics. Athletic directors Chris Michaelis and Bruce Rupp will offer the presentation to the board.
The board also will hear a presentation on insurance options, as well as receive financial and transportation updates from district staff.
Click HERE for a complete agenda and supporting documentation.
Scholarly and creative activities of students and faculty at Fort Hays State University will be celebrated during the university’s John Heinrichs Scholarly and Creative Activities Day on Wednesday, April 29.
The public is invited to attend.
The day celebrates the research, scholarly and creative work conducted by varied disciplines within the university. Departments across campus will sponsor special activities, including seminars and research presentations.
The event will feature a poster display of student and faculty work from the College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Business and Entrepreneurship, the College of Education and Technology, and the College of Health and Life Sciences. Posters will be exhibited from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Memorial Union’s Fort Hays Ballroom. Students and faculty will be available to explain their work and answer questions from 1 to 3 p.m. Refreshments will be served.
Awards will be given for poster presentations to undergraduate, graduate and faculty for empirical and non-empirical research and scholarly work.
For an up-to-date schedule of activities, visit the FHSU Scholarly and Creative Activities Day webpage or find it on Facebook by searching Fort Hays State University Scholarly and Creative Activities Day.
Scholarly and creative activity encourages critical thinking, innovation, collaboration and leadership. Participation provides the opportunity to clarify academic and professional goals while promoting advancement in a particular field of study. Fort Hays State supports developing new areas of excellence in all disciplines as part of its mission to advance knowledge and further the economic growth of the state.
Named after the late Dr. John Heinrichs, who championed research at FHSU, Scholarly and Creative Activities Day is sponsored by the university’s Scholarship Environment Committee with support from the Office of the Provost, the college deans and the Office of Scholarship and Sponsored Projects.
To benefit the Huntsman Cancer Institute, the Sigma Chi Fraternity, Zeta Tau Chapter, at Fort Hays State University will host the Jared Daniels Band in concert on Friday, April 17, at Singers Sports Bar and Grill, 114 E 12th St.
Doors will open at 7 p.m., and the show will begin at 9 p.m. Tickets are $5 and are now available from all Sigma Chi members. They will also be available at the door. All proceeds go to the Huntsman Cancer Institute.
For more information, contact the Sigma Chi-Zeta Tau chapter at zetatauconsul@
gmail.com or 620-639-1534.
Isolated thunderstorms are possible late this afternoon and evening along and ahead of a cold front as it pushes southeast into south central Kansas. Storms may be capable of producing quarter size hail and gusty winds in excess of 50 mph.
High temperatures today are forecast to be near 80, with an overnight low around 45.
Looking ahead into the upcoming work week, Monday and Tuesday will be dry. Slight chances for showers and thunderstorms enter the picture again Wednesday through Saturday.
Today: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10am. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 80. South southeast wind around 11 mph becoming west in the afternoon.
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a low around 44. North northeast wind around 11 mph.
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 68. North northeast wind 10 to 13 mph.
Monday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 42. East wind 7 to 10 mph becoming south southeast after midnight.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 71. South southeast wind 8 to 16 mph.
Celebrating science and advancements in biotechnology, Governor Sam Brownback has declared the week of April 13 as Biotechnology Awareness Week in Kansas.
Producing some of the nation’s finest crops, Kansas farmers work diligently to provide consumers with a safe, nutritious and sustainably produced product, while serving as conscientious stewards of land and water. With the responsibility to feed a growing population expected to top 9 billion by 2050, farmers in Kansas and around the country are utilizing biotechnology to grow and cultivate crops more efficiently.
Many farmers in Kansas voluntarily plant and produce genetically engineered (GE) crops. The utilization of GE crops can reduce the amount of chemicals and pesticides used, as well as provide virus resistance, improve flavor, add nutritional benefits and develop better drought resistance and crop performance.
Kansas Secretary of Agriculture Jackie McClaskey noted the importance of biotechnology to Kansas farms and ranches. “The mission of the Kansas Department of Agriculture includes the responsibility to help ensure a safe food supply, protect our natural resources and provide consumer protection to the best of our ability. Genetically engineered crops play a role in achieving that goal, allowing farmers to be good stewards of the land while producing safe and wholesome crops that are in demand around the globe.”
On average, it takes 13 years and $130 million to develop and test a GE crop before it is released into production. After intense examination, years and dollars later, these crops are approved for both consumer and environmental safety. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other credible sources have found GE crops to be as nutritious and safe as traditionally bred crops. There have been no scientifically-proven cases of biotechnology adversely impacting food safety or human health.
With the proclaiming of Biotechnology Awareness week in Kansas, the scientific technology behind these crops is supported and celebrated. Advancements in the technology of agriculture help reduce hunger worldwide, lessen our environmental footprint, protect crops from devastating diseases and produce greater yields with less water foretell a promising future for agriculture and for consumers around the globe.
Kansas Farm Food Connection, a coalition of agriculture groups, is hosting a panel discussion on the use of biotechnology at 6 p.m., Friday, April 17 at the River Market Event Place in Kansas City. The event, GMOs; Now we’re talking, will provide consumers the opportunity to interact with experts, food professionals and Kansas farmers to ask questions about the use of this technology on Kansas farms.
Photo by Dave Ranney Susan Mosier, acting secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, testified during a legislative hearing that Medicaid expansion would cost the state more than $100 million annually. But a recent study found that eight states where eligibility has been expanded have seen $1.8 billion in combined net savings and new revenue.
By Andy Marso
As a legislative session focused on the Kansas budget problems winds to a close with no decision on Medicaid expansion, a new study says some states that have expanded eligibility have seen their budget situations improve.
The State Health Reform Assistance Network, a partnership of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Princeton University, studied the effects of Medicaid expansion on budgets in eight states.
The study found that those states realized about $1.8 billion in combined savings and new revenue from expanded Medicaid eligibility. The money came mostly from the federal government picking up a larger share of the health care costs for those newly eligible for comprehensive
Medicaid coverage, which created state budget savings on programs that serve the uninsured, pregnant women and people with physical disabilities or mental health needs. The states in the study — Arkansas, Colorado, Kentucky, Michigan, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington and West Virginia — also gained new revenue by taxing insurance providers.
The study’s authors concluded that in Arkansas and Kentucky, budget savings are expected to offset the states’ share of expansion costs through at least fiscal year 2021. Kansas is one of 22 states that so far have declined to expand Medicaid eligibility under the federal Affordable Care Act since the expansion went into effect in 2014.
Expanding Medicaid access to Americans who make up to 138 percent of the federal poverty line was one of the cornerstones of the ACA, which President Barack Obama signed in 2010. Federal tax dollars fund 100 percent of expansion from 2014 through 2016, before gradually stepping down to a 90-10 federal-state cost share.
A 2012 U.S. Supreme Court decision allowed states to decide whether they will participate in the expansion. Little movement after hearing Advocates of Medicaid expansion in Kansas — led by the state’s hospital association — made their strongest push yet this session and succeeded in getting a legislative hearing on the issue last month.
But there has been little movement since that hearing, where a member of Gov. Sam Brownback’s Cabinet said expansion could cost the state more than $100 million annually.
Susan Mosier, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, also said the state should fully fund waiting lists for Kansans with disabilities seeking daily living support services before extending medical coverage to more low-income Kansans.
Brownback said at a recent news conference that he was still open to expansion and that talks with the Kansas Hospital Association continue. But he said concerns remain about the disability waiting lists and the cost of expansion. He also said he wants any expansion agreement with the Obama administration to include a work or job training requirement for new Medicaid recipients, similar to one the state recently instituted for food stamp recipients.
The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has allowed for Medicaid expansion revisions such as cost-sharing and premium assistance in states like Arkansas.
But it has yet to approve any work requirements. Brownback said he’s looking for a plan that can “thread the needle” between what the hospitals want, what his administration wants and what the Obama administration is willing to negotiate. “That’s why we continue to meet,” Brownback said. “I don’t know if the administration will show any more flexibility.
I don’t know what we can come up with for resources to be able to get our wait list down so we have money to be able to do it. But if this is a possibility, let’s continue to see if it’s something that could work.” Right now any plan the Brownback administration agrees to must be approved by the Legislature under state law.
Time is running out to change that during the 2015 session, which is now down to a few final weeks that begin April 29. During those weeks lawmakers will be focused on how to close a $667 million shortfall between the budget the Senate passed for the next fiscal year and what the state is projected to take in. Shifting costs
The State Health Reform Assistance Network’s study suggests expansion could contain budget savings by shifting costs to the federal government. An Urban Institute study published last month by the Kaiser Family Foundation found similar results in Connecticut, Washington and New Mexico. State officials there reported cost savings from expansion because of shifts in existing Medicaid-related expenses, and savings in the state’s behavioral health system and prisons system.
Those systems treat large numbers of people with mental illnesses. A study published this week by the American Mental Health Counselors Association found that population is better served in states that have expanded Medicaid. The Urban Institute researchers also found that after expanding Medicaid, Connecticut, New Mexico and Washington reported less uncompensated care — a major issue for hospitals in Kansas.
Medicaid expansion was intended to offset reductions in federal payments for Medicare and for hospitals that treat large numbers of uninsured patients.
Without expansion, some hospitals say they are now reaching a financial breaking point. Conservative think tanks that oppose expansion have said states that expanded eligibility are besieged by hidden costs that make the program more expensive than projected — including a “woodwork effect” in which residents who were already eligible for Medicaid but had not enrolled begin to take advantage of it. Expansion would extend coverage to individual Kansans who make $16,105 or less per year and families of four who make about $32,913 or less.
KDHE estimates about 151,000 Kansans who were not previously eligible would sign up for Medicaid if eligibility as expanded to the level called for in the ACA. Many of them now fall into a “coverage gap” within the ACA: They make too much to qualify for Medicaid under current Kansas income guidelines — some of the nation’s most restrictive — but too little to qualify for federal subsidies to help buy private insurance from an online exchange. A study published earlier this month by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that racial and ethnic minorities are disproportionately affected by the coverage gap.
Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.