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Kan. lawmakers send changes in election, lobbying laws to governor

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators have given final approval to a bill requiring lobbyists to disclose whether any of their activities are financed with taxpayer dollars and making it easier for campaigns to use social media.

The House approved the measure on a 66-48 vote Sunday. The Senate approved the measure Saturday, so it goes next to Gov. Sam Brownback for his potential signature.

The new disclosure requirement for lobbyists would take effect in 2017. They would have to report any funds they receive for their services from any government entity or publicly-funded association for government officials.

The measure also revises election laws dealing with social media.

The key change would exempt social media messages with up to 200 characters from a requirement for a disclaimer saying who paid for it.

Woman found shot to death in Kansas City, Kansas

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Police in Kansas City, Kansas, are investigating a weekend shooting death.

Police said in a release that officers responding to reports of a shooting found the body in the street Saturday. Police say the victim suffered a fatal gunshot wound.

Police say the victim’s identity hasn’t been released.

3 hospitalized after rear-end Kansas crash

MAYETTA – Three people were injured in an accident just after 4 p.m. on Sunday in Jackson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Pontiac driven by Luke Alan Ostergard, 24, North Platte, was northbound on U.S. 75 four miles south of Mayetta and rear-ended a 2001 Ford F150 that entered the highway from 134th Road and turned northbound.

The pickup then left the roadway and rolled.

Ostergard, the pickup driver Ramon Alexander Noriega, 78, and a passenger Leatrice S. Noriega, 69, both of Mayetta, were transported to Stormont Vail.

All three were not wearing seat belts according to the KHP.

Kansas state workers could be furloughed if budget delayed

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Budget Director Shawn Sullivan says that if state lawmakers don’t pass a budget by June 7 all non-essential state workers will be immediately furloughed.

Sullivan said during a meeting of GOP senators Sunday that agencies have already developed emergency plans for the situation.

Kansas legislators are currently meeting 11 days past the traditional end of their session and have yet to agree on a package of tax and budget policies to fill an estimated $406 million shortfall in the fiscal year beginning July 1.

Sullivan says rules concerning pay periods for state workers dictate that if a budget is not passed by the Legislature by 11:59 p.m. on July 6, the state will no longer be authorized to pay them and furlough notices will be sent.

Kansas wildlife exhibit gets $100K

Screen Shot 2015-05-31 at 3.05.48 PMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A $100,000 donation will be used to make improvements to the Kansas Wildlife Exhibit in Wichita.

The $100,000 gift is from the estate of Pamela J. Edwards, who left a trust to benefit pets. The trust is managed by local veterinarian Christin Skaer.

The Kansas Wildlife Exhibit has been in Wichita since the early 1900s and was the city’s zoo until the Sedgwick County Zoo opened in 1974. The exhibit’s focus is native Kansas animals.

Friends of the Kansas Wildlife Exhibit have formed a committee to address the facility’s long-term needs. The new donation will provide money for some of that work.

Kansas revenue chief relays veto threat on business taxes

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Revenue Secretary Nick Jordan has told state senators that Gov. Sam Brownback would veto proposals from legislators to increase business taxes.

Jordan spoke Sunday during a meeting of Republican senators. GOP lawmakers are sharply divided over how to close a projected $406 million budget shortfall for the fiscal year that begins July 1.

The shortfall arose after lawmakers cut income taxes in 2012 and 2013 at Brownback’s urging to stimulate the economy. One 2012 policy allowed 281,000 business owners and 53,000 farmers to avoid income taxes on their profits.

Brownback proposed Saturday that the state modify the policy to raise $24 million during the next fiscal year.

Legislators are considering business-tax proposals raising as much as $101 million.

Jordan twice told GOP senators that Brownback would veto such proposals.

Kan. man hospitalized after motorcycle travels down embankment

WICHITA – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 2 p.m. on Sunday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2015 Kawasaki motorcycle driven by Brandon Swart, 25, Wichita, was northbound Interstate135 exiting to eastbound Kansas 96.

The motorcycle was traveling too fast and left the roadway. It went down the embankment and the driver fell off of the motorcycle.

Swart was transported to St. Francis Medical Center.
The KHP reported he was wearing a helmet.

Kansas Tax Preparer Pleads Guilty to Filing False Returns

KANSAS CITY, KAN. – A Kansas City, Kan., tax preparer has pleaded guilty to preparing false tax returns according to U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom.

Ahferom Goitom, 35, Kansas City, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of preparing false tax returns. In his plea, he admitted that the crime occurred while he was working as a tax return preparer for Instant Tax Services in Kansas City, Kan. He prepared tax returns for clients that included false deductions and credits – often unbeknownst to his clients. He fabricated business expenses, inflated charitable deductions and exaggerated child care expenses. In addition, he told an IRS agent working undercover that the agent should find someone to claim as a dependent in order to inflate his refund.

Sentencing will be scheduled at a later date. The parties are recommending probation of 36 months and restitution of $101,157. The Internal Revenue Service investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Rask is prosecuting.

Kansas behind in private-sector job growth

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A report shows that private-sector job growth in Kansas has lagged behind other states in the region.

Data from the Congressional Joint Economic Committee shows Kansas came in fourth in its five-state region when measuring private-sector job growth since the 2007 start of recession.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that when compared to the beginning of the recession in December 2007, Kansas private-sector jobs had grown 1.6 percent. Ahead of only Missouri, which as of April, still had 1.8 percent fewer private-sector jobs than before the recession.

The other three states posted more significant growth than Kansas. Colorado, posted 6.3 percent; Oklahoma, 3.4 percent; and Nebraska, 3.2 percent.

The position of Kansas improved in recent years, however, and it was third out of five since April 2014 and February 2010.

Rain boosting Wichita water supplies

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The recent rain that’s boosted levels in Wichita’s primary water sources could also help the city during future droughts.

Cheney Reservoir has gained 5.5 billion gallons of water since the beginning of May and is at 104 percent capacity. The Wichita Eagle reports the underground Equus Beds is now also 96 percent full.

The city’s Aquifer Storage and Recovery recharge is meant to help build future water reserves in case of drought. The process involves taking extra water from the Little Arkansas River, cleaning it to drinking water standards and putting it into the underground aquifer for long-term storage.

The current phase allows the city to take water from the river at a rate of 30 million gallons a day when there’s enough water in the river.

New Small Business Development Centers to open in southwest Kansas

ksbdc logoThe Kansas Small Business Development Center statewide network has announced that Seward County Community College/Area Technical School will be the new host for the southwest Kansas regional network.

New centers will be opened in Dodge City, hosted by the Dodge City/Ford County Development Corp., and in Garden City. Twenty-two counties in the southwest region of the state will continue be served from the offices in Liberal and the centers in Garden City and Dodge City.

Several prospective host agencies participated in a formal request-for-bid process to be selected as the new regional host.

“We were pleased to see such a strong response from organizations interested in supporting Kansas SBDC services for small businesses,” said Greg Panichello, Kansas SBDC state director. “Ultimately, we found the ideal fit with our current outreach host, Seward County Community College, as our new regional host, and a new center host, the Dodge City/Ford County Development Corp.”

In 2013, the Kansas SBDC in the southwest region helped clients increase sales by more than $5 million and create and retain more than 169 jobs in the region. This amounts to a $12.69 return to the tax base for every $1 invested in the program.

About the Kansas Small Business Development Center
The Kansas SBDC network provides existing Kansas small businesses, start-ups, and pre-venture entrepreneurs with no-cost business consulting, low- and no-cost training, and resources for every stage of the business life cycle.

The Kansas SBDC network is funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration and the state of Kansas. The network receives funding from, and partners with, higher education and economic development organizations. The KSBDC is nationally accredited through America’s Small Business Development Centers.

The statewide host for Kansas SBDC is Fort Hays State University.

For more information on the Kansas SBDC Network, visit kansassbdc.net or call (877) 625-7232.

More copies of Laura Ingalls Wilder memoir to be printed

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — The autobiography of prairie author Laura Ingalls Wilder is expected to jump to about 145,000 copies in print by mid-summer.

South Dakota State Historical Society Press Director Nancy Tystad Koupal said Friday the small state-owned publishing house is ordering two more print runs of the book totaling about 20,000 additional copies. “Pioneer Girl: The Annotated Autobiography” was edited by Pamela Smith Hill and was released in November by the publishing house.

The memoir has been a best-seller.

Tystad Koupal says the additional 20,000 copies should keep the book stocked in stores when the holiday shopping season begins.

The book was written for an adult audience and gives a more realistic, grittier view of frontier living than Wilder’s popular children’s series of “Little House on the Prairie” books.

High Plains Music Camp students ‘wish it was a week longer’

band campFHSU University Relations

Every year High Plains Music Camp, hosted by Fort Hays State University, draws junior high and high school musicians from all over Kansas, and even a few from states such as Texas and Tennessee. The relatively unknown camp has a loyal following.

Shelly New, assistant orchestra director at McKinney Boyd High School, McKinney Texas, has taught at High Plains since she was a student at FHSU and now brings some of her students from Texas with her.

“Every student who goes wants to come back immediately,” said New. “They wish it was a week longer. By the end of the week, they always leave playing better than they did before.”

Dr. Ivalah Allen, associate professor of music and theatre at FHSU, is the High Plains Music Camp director. She and dozens of other camp faculty members strive to offer students of any playing ability a chance to grow as musicians while still having fun.

“Students receive top quality music instruction from music specialists around the country,” said Allen.

“With approximately 300 middle and high school campers each year — in band, jazz band, choir, and orchestra — there is an expectation to keep the quality of musical choices and instruction high,” said Allen.

Campers will participate in a large ensemble, small ensemble and one mini-class. Topics ranging from “Conducting” to “Wedding Gigs for String Players” are offered by departmental faculty, alumni and guest artists. This year’s camp will feature four renowned guest artists.

Theodore Kuchar, who will conduct the faculty and high school orchestras, is the Fresno, Calif., Philharmonic music director and conductor. He has served as artistic director and conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine; collaborated with artists such as Itzhak Perlman, Yo-Yo Ma, and Mstislav Rostropovich; and is hailed as one of the most recorded conductors in the last decade.

Gretchen Harrison will direct the middle and high school choirs. She is choir director at Frontier Trail Middle School in Olathe and is also assistant director of the Allegro Community Children’s Choir based in Overland Park. She has served in chair positions at numerous state and national music associations.

Two jazz clinicians will be featured: Rodney Jones and Pete Zimmer. Jones teaches jazz guitar at the Julliard School, New York, and has recorded with artists such as Billy Joel, Ray Charles, and James Brown.

Zimmer, a standout in the New York City jazz scene, teaches at the New York Jazz Academy, and has recorded five critically acclaimed albums as a bandleader and five albums as a sideman.

Campers have the opportunity to work closely with these and other faculty members.

“It’s lots of fun,” said Natalee Thomas, a recent graduate from Stockton who will major in music at FHSU in the fall. “It’s intense, but not overly competitive, so you still get that intensive atmosphere without the stress of competition.”

“Campers not only spend hours in rehearsals and various classes but they also have time to get to know each other,” said Allen.

“Many campers come to camp every year, up to seven years, to be with camp friends they otherwise would not have had the opportunity to meet,” said Allen. “They have fun during free time, impromptu sporting activities, the talent show, and camp dance.”

“Campers can also hear concerts every evening, including performances by camp faculty and specialists. The honor camper recital and the faculty orchestra will also be featured,” she said.

Registration for the camp, which offers students a level of musical training unparalleled in western Kansas, is still open. The camp will take place July 12-18 at the Fort Hays State University campus. New registrations will be accepted until camp begins; however, after June 15, a $100 fee will be added.

“As long as they are registered by June 15, the late fee does not apply — even if they have not paid the full amount,” said Allen.

The cost of registration for full campers is $495, which includes tuition, room and meals. Campers who do not wish to stay in the dormitories can attend as day campers, which costs $200. An optional $50 meal card is available for campers who wish to eat lunch on campus. In addition, students may take private lessons from instructors at a rate of $25 per 30-minute lesson, which is payable directly to the instructor.

Families with multiple campers are awarded a $50 scholarship for each child. Payments for registrations may be made in increments until July 1, at which time campers must make full payments. Refunds for cancellations, minus $100 for residence hall reservations, are offered until June 10.

Allen realizes that the cost is prohibitive for some students.

“If you know of a student who would really like to come, but needs financial assistance, have them call. We can give them a scholarship. We try to help as many people come to camp as possible,” she said.

For more information, visit www.fhsu.edu/musiccamp/, or contact Allen at (785) 628-4226 or [email protected].

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