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Wichita seeks ruling on legality of marijuana initiative

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita is seeking a court decision on the legality of an ordinance approved by voters to reduce the penalties for possession for small amounts of marijuana.

The city filed a legal action Wednesday in Sedgwick County District Court, a day after 54 percent of voters cast ballots in favor of it. It will make first-time possession a criminal infraction with a $50 fine.

State law makes first-time possession is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $2,500 and a year in jail.

Attorney General Derek Schmidt has issued an opinion saying the ordinance conflicts with state law and a vote to adopt it would have no legal force.

The city is asking the court to determine if the proposed ordinance is enforceable and whether it may be enacted.

Severe storms possible over much of Kansas

TOPEKA (AP) — State emergency management officials are monitoring a storm system that is expected to bring large hail, damaging winds and the possibility of tornadoes.

Forecasters say the system is expected to form Wednesday afternoon in southeastern Kansas and expand to the north and west throughout the evening. The Kansas Division of Emergency Management said in a news release that severe thunderstorms may last through Thursday.

Hail the size of baseballs is possible in south-central Kansas, and winds gusts of 60 to 70 mph are forecast for south-central and southeastern parts of the state.

The system also brings the possibility of isolated tornadoes. In western parts of the state, fire is a danger because of dry, windy conditions.

The forecast comes one day after a tornado touched down briefly in southeastern Kansas.

Head of Eisenhower Memorial Commission to step down

BRETT ZONGKER, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The head of the commission working to build a memorial honoring President Dwight D. Eisenhower plans to resign and says a Kansas senator should lead the effort.

In a letter Tuesday to the Eisenhower Memorial Commission, 93-year-old Rocco Siciliano of Los Angeles said he plans to step down as chairman. He said Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas should be the next chairman. Eisenhower grew up in Abilene.

Roberts says he would be honored to serve as chairman with the goal of ensuring a lasting tribute to Eisenhower on the National Mall.

Siciliano served in the Eisenhower White House. He led the memorial commission for 15 years and oversaw hiring Frank Gehry as its designer. In recent years, the effort stalled amid objections to the design from Eisenhower’s family.

Schwaller: Drought, oil prices among issues Hays commission will face

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Incumbent Hays City Commissioner Henry Schwaller was elected to his sixth term Tuesday and will be joined on the commission by two newcomers.

Lance Jones and Henry Schwaller share a congratulatory handshake while Commissioner Shaun Musil looks over the final results Tuesday night at the Ellis County Admin. Center
Lance Jones and Henry Schwaller share a congratulatory handshake while Commissioner Shaun Musil looks over the final results Tuesday night at the Ellis County Admin. Center.

James Meier and Schwaller each received 25 percent of the vote and will serve a four-year term on the Hays City Commission.

Lance Jones received the third most votes and will serve a two-year term on the commission.

Related story: Hays City Commission election results

Schwaller said the commission is in a good place, but there are issues facing the city.

“Our biggest concern would be the price of oil and, if the drought continues, what happens to agriculture,” Schwaller said. “We will need to watch our sales tax revenues going forward.”

He also said the reconstruction of the wastewater treatment plant, expected to cost between $26 million and $28 million, and the development of the R9 Ranch in Edwards County as a water resource are two important projects going forward.

Jones said he wants help keep the city in good fiscal standing but said the city must also continue to grow.

Group
Ellis County Commissioner Dean Haselhorst and USD 489 BOE candidate Greg Schwartz look over election results while Hays City Commission candidates Henry Schwaller and Lance Jones wait for the final numbers.

“Being fiscally responsible isn’t necessarily not spending money, but it’s spending money wisely and that’s what I want to do,” Jones said.

Jones said the downtown area is a good example, because it is bringing money to the city.

The new commissioners will be sworn in and begin their terms on the Hays City Commission later this month.

FHSU men’s soccer announces 2015 signing class

Fort Hays State head men’s soccer coach Brett Parker has announced the signing of eight student-athletes for the 2015 season, all of whom will be incoming freshman for the 2015-16 school year. Two international signees from Asuncion, Paraguay, are part of the class, while two other signees hail from Colorado and Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska each have one representative. By postion, Parker’s signing class breaks down as three midfielders, two forwards, one goalkeeper, one defender and one defender/midfielder hybrid.

The Tigers finished the 2014 campaign at 11-6-4 overall and reached the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season – advancing to the Elite Eight for the first time in program history. The Tigers put together an 11-match unbeaten streak and posted a nine-game winning streak during the season (both school records).

Complete list of the team’s commitments is below…

Tyler Clifton
Freshman, Defender
Wichita, Kan.
Wichita Northwest High School

Zack Estrada
Freshman, Midfielder
Bentonville, Ark.
Bentonville High School

Mauricio Etcheverry
Freshman, Midfielder
Asuncion, Paraguay
Colegio Nuestra Senora del Huerto High School

Cullen Fisch
Freshman, Goalkeeper
La Vista, Neb.
Papillion-La Vista South High School

Fernando Insaurralde
Freshman, Forward
Asuncion, Paraguay
Colegio Nuestra Senora del Huerto High School

Caeser Jones
Freshman, Defender/Midfielder
Denver, Colo.
Cherry Creek High School

Dylan Kintner
Freshman, Forward
Kansas City, Mo.
Park Hill South High School

Louie Sawaged
Freshman, Midfielder
Highlands Ranch, Colo.
Mountain Vista High School

Investigation of McPherson Co. officer involved shooting continues

CANTON– Law enforcement officials in McPherson County continue to investigate the March 31, officer involved shooting south of Canton. The man who was shot remains in a Wichita hospital.

Detective Doug Anderson said that no charges have been filed. Authorities are collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses. Anderson said he anticipated the investigation could be completed  late this week. The KBI is in charge of the investigation.

According to a media release, two deputies from the McPherson County Sheriff’s Office arrived at a residence at 2663 Dakota Road south of Canton just before 10:30 p.m. on March 31.

The officers were following up on an investigation concerning an incident reported earlier.

As the officers approached the residence on foot a man was observed standing near a garage pointing a shotgun at them.

The man was told several times to drop the shotgun but refused to do so while still pointing it at one of the deputies. Shots were fired at the subject and he was struck once.
Canton EMS responded to the scene and the subject was transported to a local hospital.

Neither of the deputies was injured in this incident.

 

KFIX Rock News: Previously Unreleased 1989 Grateful Dead Concert Film To Be Screened In US Theaters In May

deadinA previously unreleased concert film documenting a July 1989 performanceby The Grateful Dead at Alpine Valley in East Toy, Wisconsin, will be shown in theaters across the U.S. on May 4.

The one-night-only screening will serve as the fifth annual installment of the band’s “Meet-Up at the Movies” series.

The movie, which runs two hours and 50 minutes, captures the band a few months before the release of its final studio album, Built to Last.

The film was recorded using the venue’s analog master multi-camera video system. The group’s set at the show featured the then-new tune “Foolish Heart,” as well as such memorable Dead songs as “Sugaree,” “Box of Rain,” “Terrapin Station” and “Morning Dew.”

The band’s lineup at the time featured Jerry Garcia, Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart and keyboardist Brent Mydland.

The screenings will take place at 7 p.m. local time at more than 350 cinemas in the U.S.  VisitFathomEvents.com to purchase tickets and check out a list of the locations where this year’s “Meet-Up at the Movies” event will take place.

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KDADS releases criteria for behavioral health grants

Screen Shot 2015-04-08 at 10.17.39 AMBy Dave Ranney

The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services is soliciting applications for three grants it says are meant to strengthen services for people who have a mental illness, abuse drugs or alcohol, gamble irresponsibly or contemplate suicide.

The criteria for awarding the grants — called “requests for proposals” or RFPs — were posted last week on the Department of Administration’s website. Applications are due April 30.

KDADS officials in February announced the agency’s intent to alter the criteria for awarding the grants in an effort to break down what it viewed as “compartmentalization” that now separates some of its grantees.

The current grants are set to expire on June 30 with the new grants taking effect on July 1.

”We know that behavioral health difficulties do not occur in a vacuum. They interact,” KDADS Secretary Kari Bruffett said in a prepared statement last month. “Half of the individuals who enter our state hospitals for mental health treatment also have substance use difficulties. Those who struggle with problem gambling have higher rates of suicide than the rest of the population. To be successful, our approach needs to be more fully integrated.”

As proposed, the three grants are meant to:

Launch “a statewide behavioral health coalition” for disseminating information, promoting awareness, combating stigma and supporting individuals and families in crisis.
Develop community-based initiatives aimed at blending mental health services, substance abuse treatment and suicide prevention.
Develop a system for gathering, interpreting and storing data needed to measure performance outcomes and risk factors.

KDADS officials have said they expect to announce recipients of the new grants in late May or early June.

“We will be applying for at least one or more of the grants,” said Rick Cagan, executive director with the Kansas chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness. “That’s about all I can say, because at this point there’s a lot of confusion. I think we fit in what it is that KDADS is wanting to do; I’m just not sure how. The RFPs aren’t very specific.”

Previously, Cagan raised concerns that the reconfigured grants mean the state would drop its long-standing support for groups that advocate for people with mental health and developmental disabilities. If NAMI’s $150,000 grant were not renewed, Cagan said, its three-person office in Topeka likely would be forced to close.

Five programs, including NAMI, have been told their current grants will not be renewed. The other programs and their missions:

Keys for Networking, advocates for families with children with serious emotional disorders.
Kansas Family Partnership, administers several initiatives aimed at reducing drug and alcohol use among children, teens and families.
Self Advocate Coalition of Kansas (SACK), provides training programs designed to help people with developmental disabilities advocate for themselves.
Families Together, provides training and support for parents of children with physical and developmental disabilities.
Mary Ellen Conlee, a Wichita lobbyist who’s also president of the Keys for Networking governing board, said the RFPs do not appear to be as course-altering as Cagan and others had predicted.

“We believe that at least one of the grants provides a real opportunity for Keys (for Networking) to continue the work they do with families that are raising children with mental illnesses,” Conlee said. “We will be responding to the RFPs.”

But Connie Zienkewicz, executive director for Families Together, said it’s not yet clear how the reconfigured grants will affect her program.

“Going into this, all of us, I think, were under the impression that the RFPs that KDADS was considering would be for people with disabilities that may or may not include a mental illness or substance abuse,” Zienkewicz said. “But now that the RFPs are out, the focus really seems to be on mental illness and substance abuse, because we’re not in there and neither is SACK.”

Zienkewicz said she’s not been able to determine if KDADS plans to issue RFPs for grants geared toward advocacy programs for people with developmental disabilities.

Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokesperson, said in an email to KHI News Service that Families Together and SACK will have “other funding opportunities,” adding that “all providers” are encouraged to “look at the RFP and grant opportunities currently posted on our website and on the DoA website.” She declined further comment.

Earlier this year, the Senate Ways and Means Committee agreed to set aside $97,000 for SACK in case its grant was not renewed. It also added a proviso that protects the other programs’ budgets for 30 days after the new contracts are awarded.

The committee’s so-called mega budget bill later passed the Senate and, last week, was adopted by a Senate-House conference committee. Both $97,000 set-aside for SACK and the 30-day proviso remain intact. The Senate-passed budget bill is expected to reach the House floor after the Legislature reconvenes on April 29.

“We’re happy that there’s a line in the bill that says SACK will be funded,” said Barb Bishop, who runs ARC of Douglas County, an advocacy and case management program for people with developmental disabilities. She also administers the SACK grant. “But we’d also like to see the other program funded as well. They all provide services that are very valuable.”

Attempts to reach Kansas Family Partnership Executive Director Michelle Voth for comment were unsuccessful.

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

Local homeschool event offers support, advice, curriculum ideas

Ellis County Home School Network
Ellis County Home School Network

By KARI BLURTON
Hays Post

The Ellis County Home School Network is providing a curriculum fair Thursday for those who have already made “the leap” to homeschooling and for parents who are thinking about it, according to group Treasurer Andrea Meier.

Meier home-schools her 7- and 9-year-old children.  She said she started the  “homeschool journey” four years ago and admitted the idea was scary at first.

“I think a big part is finding a network of people that can help walk you through it,  to provide the encouragement you need, and to trust yourself and the children that they are learning what they need,” she said. “Just to trust you mom instincts because they are not usually wrong.”

Meier said the fair will offer a chance to talk to parents from all different backgrounds and experience who will provide ideas about the different types of homeschooling curriculum available.

“Some curriculums are very expensive, and you don’t want to put a lot of money in (to one type) and find out that curriculum does not work well with you and your style, and your child and his learning style,” Meier said, “so this is a great way to find out what works best for you.”

The fair will also provide a chance to learn about the network’s group classes, such as physical education, art and “Explore,” a class providing hands-on learning experiences.

Most importantly, Meier said the fair allows the 30 members, serving 90 children in Ellis County, to share ideas and support each other and anyone thinking about homeschooling.

“They are some who have been homeschooling for a long period of time and some who have only been homeschooling for a year or two, so we are all at different spots in our homeschooling journey,” she  said.

Meier said some curriculum and materials will also be for sale.

The hourlong event begins at 7 p.m. Thursday at North Oak Community Church.

Tiger tennis edges Coyotes in non-conference meet

FHSU Athletics

The Fort Hays State tennis team edged Kansas Wesleyan on Tuesday evening in Salina, Kan., by a score of 5-4 in non-conference play. The Tigers moved to 10-8 overall with the win. Fort Hays State won two of three doubles matches and then split with KWU in singles play for the one-point win.

In doubles play, Camille Caron-Bedard adn Reinette Strydom teamed at the No. 1 position to defeat Amber Zimmerman and Heather Koester 8-4. The No. 3 team of Raven Dick adn Katie Harp defeated Taylor Noeal and Brenda Sanchez also by a score of 8-4. The No. 2 team of Jessica Johnson and Michelle Miller fell 8-6 to Cassidy Cook and Sydney Reece.

All singles matches finished in straight sets. At No. 1, Caron-Bedard defeated Zimmerman 6-1, 6-2. At No. 3, Strydom defeated Reece 6-1, 6-1 and at No. 4, Hipp defeated Sanchez 6-1, 6-0. Miller lost at the No. 2 position 6-0, 7-5 to Cook, while Johnson fell at No. 5, 6-4, 6-1 to Koester. Dick lost at No. 6 by a 6-3, 6-0 count to Noel.

The Tigers pick up another road non-conference match at Stephens College on Friday in Columbia, Mo., before taking on Lindenwood on Saturday in conference play in St. Charles, Mo.

Request to lift hold of Obama immigration action denied

HOUSTON (AP) — A federal judge in Texas has refused to lift a temporary hold on President Barack Obama’s executive action that could shield millions of immigrants from deportation.

U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen turned down the request from the U.S. Department of Justice on Tuesday

Hanen issued a preliminary injunction on Feb. 16 to halt the immigration action by Obama, who wants to spare from deportation as many as five million people who are in the U.S. illegally. The injunction was sought by a coalition of 26 states, led by Texas, that argued Obama’s executive action was unconstitutional.

The Justice Department has already asked the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans to step in. The appeals court is scheduled to hear arguments April 17. A decision could take months.

Will Kansas de-professionalize teaching?

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

There is a shortage of medical doctors in rural Western Kansas. Why not allow pharmacists, nurses and veterinarians practice medicine? Presume that we have a shortage of lawyers as well. Why not let policemen practice law? We don’t. It would “de-professionalize” these fields. But this is what was proposed at the March Kansas State Board of Education (KSBE) meeting. And it will come to a vote at their April meeting.

In 2012, Governor Brownback signed into law House Bill 2319 creating the “Kansas Coalition of Innovative School Districts (CISD).” This allows “…up to ten percent of the state’s school districts [28], at any one time, to opt out of most state laws and rules and regulations in order to improve student achievement.” An additional 10 percent of USDs can join if they are Title I priority schools. Currently there are only a small number of schools in the CISD. That will rapidly change if they get their request.

Proposals to allow school districts to hire persons without teaching credentials come from two completely different school districts. The proposal from the affluent Blue Valley USD 229 is laden with “innovation spaces” and “digital learning centers.” This district pays well. It has no difficulty recruiting and keeping good teachers.

Reading between-the-lines is the fact that elite private college-prep schools in Kansas do hire college graduates that lack teaching credentials but have a major in the field they will teach. These teachers working in high-tuition, high-salary collegiate schools are turning out high school graduates who are performing quite well. They turn out the best because they only take the best.

On the opposite pole is the rationale from the Hugoton District that represents the completely different plight of the majority of Kansas rural school districts. Asking for “teacher licensure freedom,” Hugoton bases its request to hire-at-will based on the many problems of recruiting qualified teachers to rural Kansas. It asserts: “We want complete and total freedom from the overbearing KSDE licensure requirement.” It speaks to the various tentative fixes, the high cost of tuition, their need to appear at Topeka Review Boards, and other burdens that remain under the conditional (one year), restricted (Transition-to-Teaching and alternate route), interim alternative, and provisional endorsement programs.

Another benefit seen by little rural schools is that switching the granting of licensure to local school districts also allows them to hold the new teacher captive to that district—their local “grow your own” model would not allow these local teachers to transfer their local “license” elsewhere in the state.

Both the Blue Valley “innovative program” argument and the Hugoton “can’t get qualified teachers” argument boil down to asking the State Board to “trust us” to have good people in the classroom even if they are not licensed as teachers.

Both sides will address this issue at the 10:30am open forum at the next KSBE meeting in Topeka, Thursday, April 16. The KSBE will vote that afternoon.

If approved, Kansas will become the very first state to de-professionalize teaching.

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