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US judge won’t to block contact lens anti-price fixing law

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A federal judge is refusing to block a Utah law banning minimum prices for contact lens that has drawn the ire of the nation’s largest manufacturers.

In a decision handed down Monday in Salt Lake City, U.S. District Judge Dee Benson said contact-lens makers like Johnson & Johnson and Bausch & Lomb haven’t shown that the law is unconstitutional.

The manufacturers sued the state last month amid an increasingly bitter fight with discount retailers like 1-800-Contacts. They said the law was written at the behest of the Utah-based discounter and minimum prices help eye doctors make recommendations.

The law’s sponsor has said it fosters competition.

The measure set to take effect Tuesday targets a program that has manufacturers yanking their products if retailers sell them at too steep a discount.

Kansas legislators agree on local elections compromise

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators have agreed to move local elections to the fall in odd-numbered years.

Representatives from the Senate and House came to a compromise Monday after each chamber passed different versions of the same elections reform bill earlier in the session.

Republican Rep. Mark Kahrs of Wichita says the move would boost turnout to between 30 percent and 40 percent — more than double the turnout in most recent local elections. The bill also would bar general election candidates from dropping out of the race unless experiencing “severe medical hardship.”

Presidential primaries in the state also would be canceled under the bill.

The compromise would become law once it is approved by both full chambers and signed by the governor.

Government groups work across Kan.-Mo. state line

Screen Shot 2015-05-11 at 1.37.12 PMKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The four largest government units in the Kansas City metropolitan area are working together to address issues impacting the region on both sides of the Kansas/Missouri state line.

The group, called Core4, comprises the two Kansas Citys, Jackson County, Missouri and Johnson County, Kansas, which are home to about 80 percent of the region’s population.

The Kansas City Star reports that in the last couple of years, Core4 has upstaged the area’s long-established policy agency called Mid-America Regional Council, or MARC.

The Core4 members work independently and still work with MARC, which has more than 100 other members from other communities.

But the four top administrators meet regularly for lunch and dozens of top managers in city halls and county buildings regularly work on solving problems.

NFL suspends Brady 4 games for deflated footballs

BARRY WILNER, AP Sports Writers
JIMMY GOLEN, AP Sports Writers

NEW YORK (AP) — The NFL came down hard on its biggest star and its championship team, telling Tom Brady and the Patriots that no one is allowed to mess with the rules of the game.

The league suspended the Super Bowl MVP Monday for the first four games of the season, fined the New England Patriots $1 million and took away two draft picks as punishment for deflating footballs used in the AFC title game.

“Each player, no matter how accomplished and otherwise respected, has an obligation to comply with the rules and must be held accountable for his actions when those rules are violated and the public’s confidence in the game is called into question,” NFL executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent wrote to Brady.

The Patriots lose next year’s first-round pick and a fourth-round choice in 2017.

Brady would miss the season’s showcase kickoff game on Sept. 10 against Pittsburgh, then Week 2 at Buffalo, a home game against Jacksonville and a game at Dallas. He will return the week of a Patriots-Colts AFC championship rematch in Indianapolis.

He would be replaced by Jimmy Garoppolo, a 2014 second-round selection from Eastern Illinois who won the Walter Payton award as the best player in the FCS. He has thrown 27 NFL passes, including one touchdown.

Brady has three days to appeal the suspension to Commissioner Roger Goodell or his designee. His agent, Don Yee, said “the discipline is ridiculous and has no legitimate basis” and that Brady will appeal.

“And if the hearing officer is completely independent and neutral, I am very confident the Wells Report will be exposed as an incredibly frail exercise in fact-finding and logic,” Yee said in a statement.

The Patriots did not immediately comment on the punishments.

The league also indefinitely suspended the two equipment staffers believed to have carried out the plan, including one who called himself “The Deflator.”

Vincent wrote letters to the team and Brady saying a league-sponsored investigative report established “substantial and credible evidence” that the quarterback knew the employees were deflating footballs and failed to cooperate with investigators.

The investigation by attorney Ted Wells found that Brady “was at least generally aware” of plans by two Patriots employees to prepare the balls to his liking, below the league-mandated minimum of 12.5 pounds per square inch.

The Patriots defeated the Indianapolis Colts 45-7 and went on to beat the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl.

The fine matches the largest the NFL has handed out, to Ed DeBartolo Jr., then the San Francisco 49ers’ owner, who pleaded guilty to a felony in his role in a Louisiana gambling scandal in 1999.

Vincent told the Patriots the punishment was handed out regardless of whether the flatter footballs — which can be easier to grip and catch — affected the outcome of the blowout win over the Colts. Vincent said the flattening of balls probably began much earlier.

“While we cannot be certain when the activity began, the evidence suggests that January 18th was not the first and only occasion when this occurred, particularly in light of the evidence referring to deflation of footballs going back to before the beginning of the 2014 season,” he wrote.

“It is impossible to determine whether this activity had an effect on the outcome of games or what that effect was.”

In his 243-page report released by the league last week, Wells found that the team broke the rules again, this time by deflating the game footballs after they had been checked by officials. Although the report did not conclusively link the four-time Super Bowl champion to the illegal activity, text messages between the equipment staffers indicated that Brady knew it was going on. Investigators said Brady’s explanation for the messages was implausible.

“It is unlikely that an equipment assistant and a locker room attendant would deflate game balls without Brady’s knowledge and approval,” the report said.

The NFL allows each team to provide the footballs used by its offense — a procedure Brady played a role in creating — but it requires them to be inflated in that range of 12.5-13.5 pounds per square inch. Footballs with less pressure can be easier to grip and catch, and Brady has expressed a preference for the lower end of the range.

Brady said last week that the scandal hasn’t taken away from the team’s 28-24 Super Bowl win over Seattle — its fourth NFL title since the 2001 season.

“Absolutely not,” he said at a previously planned appearance in Salem, Massachusetts, last Thursday night. “We earned everything we got and achieved as a team, and I am proud of that and so are our fans.”

Fans chanted “Brady” and “MVP,” then gave him a standing ovation as he entered the arena in the town made famous by the colonial witch trials. Since the airing of the scandal in the hours after the Colts game, New England fans have been unwavering in their support for the team, blaming the investigation on grudges by opponents jealous of the team’s success.

San Francisco defensive tackle Darnell Dockett’s reaction in a tweet was: “You have to love the patriots. They do anything to win a Super Bowl.”

Time running out for Uber compromise, Kansas senator says

Sen. Longbine
Sen. Longbine

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas state senator says time is running out for ride-hailing company Uber to come to a compromise with the Legislature over regulations.

Republican Sen. Jeff Longbine from Emporia said Monday that he and representatives from the insurance and banking sectors continue to negotiate with Uber after it announced May 5 it was leaving the state.

The company said it decided to immediately cease operations in Kansas after the Legislature overrode Gov. Sam Brownback’s veto of regulations it found excessive. A spokeswoman for the company did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Longbine said the sides will likely have to come to agreement by Tuesday in order for the Legislature to have time to pass any changes to the earlier regulatory bill.

Senior Health & Fitness Day scheduled for May 27

Hays Medical Center

HaysMed’s Center for Health Improvement will host its 13th National Senior Health & Fitness Day on Wednesday, May 27, from 9 a.m. to noon.

The theme for this year’s event is “If You Keep Moving…You’ll Keep Improving.” The program begins with registration at 8:30 a.m. and health presentations starting at 9 a.m.  Topics covered during the program are: Rise and Shine Morning Stretch, More Than Moving to Improve: it is all about how you move that impacts how you improve, Polker Walk and Health Fair. There is no charge for registration and a free breakfast will be available. Participants are free to come and go at their leisure.

National Senior Health & Fitness Day is organized as a public/private good health partnership by the Mature Market Resource Center. It is a program which offers fitness activities for older adults at more than 1,500 locations including hospitals, park and recreation departments, senior centers, health clubs, retirement communities, houses of worship, health departments and other community locations. This national event is held annually on the last Wednesday in May as part of Older Americans Month.

“Fitness is for a lifetime,” said Stephanie Schaffer-Howie of The Center for Health Improvement. “Our goal is to keep older adults moving at whatever age they may be; by showing them that it is never too late to set fitness goals and to make regular exercise a part of their life.”

Please RSVP by Friday, May 22, by calling (785) 623-5900. Senior Health & Fitness Day is partially underwritten by a grant from the Heartland Community Foundation.

Kan. teen fatally shot in head during dispute at birthday party

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 17-year-old Wichita boy is dead after being shot in the head at a private birthday party during an argument that didn’t involve him.

The Wichita Eagle reports Leon McClennon died shortly before 3 a.m. Saturday in the basement of Parrot-fa-Nalia, where about 20 people had gathered for the party.

Police say an argument involving two men escalated until one of them pulled out a gun and fired shots, hitting McClennon.

Police spokesman Lt. Jason Stephens says there was a wide range of ages at the party, including people in their 40s.

Stephens says McClennon simply was in the wrong place at the wrong time. A person of interest has been identified in the shooting but no charges have been filed.

Kansas House panel passes bill to end business tax break

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas House committee has approved a bill to end a business tax break championed by Republican Gov. Sam Brownback.

The Taxation Committee’s 13-8 vote Monday sent the measure to the House for debate.

The committee is considering proposals to raise taxes to close a budget shortfall. Legislative researchers said the projected deficit is $406 million for the fiscal year beginning July 1.

The bill clearing committee would raise $134 million during the next fiscal year.

The measure repeals a tax break for 333,000 business owners and farmers enacted in 2012 at Brownback’s urging to boost the economy. The policy exempted their business income from taxes.

The bill imposes a 2.7 percent tax on most of the income and a 4.6 percent tax on rents and royalties.

Summer safety

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

Before long, kids will toss their schoolbooks and pencils in the far corners of their rooms, don their Magellan garb and embark on a summer course of outdoor exploration.

For many rural children, railroads, dumps, junkyards, abandoned properties and ponds make exciting places to explore. It is up to parents to decide where suitable adventure sites may be found.

Each year, hundreds of railroad trespassers are killed and injured, according to the National Safety Council. Children who crawl under or pass around lowered gates, walk the tracks, cross trestles, take shortcuts across railroad property, hop trains, or climb in, on or around railroad cars run a tremendous risk.

This spring take the time to warn your children of these dangers. Instruct them to obey warning devices and insist they never cross a railroad track until they have looked both ways and are sure it is safe.

Never assume children will act like responsible, mature adults. Advise them often because they forget.

Kids will be kids. For most, life is an adventure. Anything and anywhere is fair game for exploration.

When I was a boy growing up in northwestern Kansas, there was always something magnetic about a junkyard. We had an abandoned dump within walking distance.

We dug and sifted through the trash at the site for hours, collecting little treasures to add to our growing collections. Sometimes these “keepers” as we called them consisted of rusted iron spikes, neat-shaped bottles, broken wrenches and tools, discarded containers and other cast-offs.

While we weren’t aware of it or didn’t care, the risk of injury was always present. Wasps, snakes, rats, spiders and other creatures scrambled and slithered to move out of the way of our excavation projects. Broken glass and boards with rusty nails threatened to cut or puncture our small feet. I will never forget the pain of stepping on a nail.

Dumps also feature trucks, bulldozers and other heavy equipment. It’s difficult for operators to see children scooting among the debris. Warn your children to stay away.

Dark deserted buildings – including barns and abandoned farmhouses – often have the reputation of being haunted. Such structures were always considered another adventure when I was a youngster.

Big kids often dare little kids to go in. I remember accepting the challenge and brushing my way through cobwebs and crawling around rodent holes and fleeing mice. Although I survived, I wouldn’t advise any child of mine to do the same.

When I was a youth, my dad warned me again and again about swimming ponds. I guess the repetition paid off because I never swam in such pools of water until I was in high school and an “OK” swimmer.
Remember to tell your children about such ponds. They are deep. You can be into water up to your knees the first couple of steps and the next – over your head.

There are no lifeguards. Fencing off ponds may help. Warning signs also may serve as a deterrent, but kids always find a way into the water.

Warn children about such potential hazards. Then warn them again. Saving one child’s life is worth the effort. It takes more than once for them to grasp your warnings.

Lead by example and remember that as a parent you have been entrusted with safeguarding your children’s wellbeing. Summertime is a special time for kids. Having a child is indeed a treasure. Take care of, cherish and nurture this wonderful gift.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

Overnight frost advisory issued for northwest Kansas

With just a few days left of the school year, students are eyeing the outdoors from their classrooms — thoughts of parks and pools, kites and hikes on their minds.

At the same time, in a typical northwest Kansas weather twist, their parents are thinking about covering the outdoor plants to protect them from an anticipated May frost.

The National Weather Service has issued a frost advisory from 1 a.m. to 10 a.m. Tuesday, with low temperatures expected to range from 33 to 36 degrees. The cold air will be accompanied by winds ranging from 15 to 20 mph.

The advisory includes Trego and Ellis counties, including Hays, WaKeeney, Ellis and much of northwest Kansas.

While skies will be clear Tuesday, the week’s weather could include more precipitation, as well, with a 50 percent to 60 percent chance of thunderstorms through Wednesday night. A slight chance of storms continues through Sunday.

Click HERE for a complete forecast.

Fire at Salina home under investigation UPDATE

SALINA -Officials with the Salina Fire Department now say an incendiary device thrown through a bedroom window started an early morning mobile home fire.

Firefighters were called to the trailer park at 917 N. 13th just after 6:00 am Monday morning and found a working fire in the mobile home located on Lot #2.

Fire officials say that it appeared an incendiary device was thrown through a bedroom window from outside the home.  The home and its contents are said to be a total loss.

Six residents of the home, including five adults and a two-month-old baby, were sleeping inside the home at the time.

All six escaped without injury.  The North Central Kansas Chapter of the American Red Cross is assisting them.

The Salina Police Department is assisting with the investigation.

Anyone with information is asked to contact the police at (785) 826-7210 or the Salina Fire Department at (785) 826-7340.

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SALINA –A mobile home fire in north Salina on Monday morning is under investigation.

Just after 6 a.m., firefighters were sent to a residence in the 900 Block of North 13th where a home at Lot #2 was on fire.

Witnesses reported seeing a young man dressed entirely in black clothing, running east from the scene.

All occupants were able to escape the home safely.

One person was reportedly suffering from smoke inhalation at the scene.

Officials released no additional details.

Kan. woman hospitalized after vehicle misses deer, overturns

STERLING- A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just before 1 p.m. on Monday in Reno County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Mercury Cougar driven by Deni L. Brummer, 21, Hutchinson, was southbound on Kansas 14 five miles south of Sterling.

The driver attempted to miss a deer crossing the road. The driver lost control of vehicle. It entered the east ditch and overturned.

Brummer was transported to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center.

She was properly restrained at the time of the accident according to the KHP.

Lindsey Dugan – Dugan Design Studio

Lindsey Dugan and her company, Dugan Design Studio played a big part in Seth Kastle’s book, “Why Is Dad So Mad?” Mike Cooper finds out how much went into the production of Kastle’s childrens book to help military families cope with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.

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