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Near drowning reported at Kansas Bible Camp UPDATE

Reno County Sheriff Randy Henderson says the victim in Thursday’s near drowning suffered minor injuries and is in stable condition.

No name has been released.

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HUTCHINSON – Reno County EMS responded to the Kansas Bible Camp on Thursday morning for what the Sheriff’s Department is calling a near drowning.

The incident happened just after 10:30 a.m. at the camp located in the 4500 block of W. 56th Avenue northwest of Hutchinson.

One person, a female high school volunteer, was taken to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center for treatment.

Check Hays Post for additional details as they become available.

City to talk financing for wastewater treatment plant reconstruction

City of Hays logoBy BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The city of Hays’ commercial insurance premium should be decreasing slightly.

City Finance Director Kim Rupp will present the information to Hays city commissioners during their work session this evening.

Rupp will also discuss the possibility of using State Revolving Loan funds for the wastewater treatment facility reconstruction–a project estimated to cost about $28 million.

The work session starts at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, June 18, in Hays City Hall, 1507 Main Street.

The complete agenda is available here.

KFIX Rock News: Journey Drummer Arrested

journeySALEM, Ore. (AP) – Journey drummer Deen Castronovo is out on bail after his arrest for domestic violence in Salem, Oregon.

Castronovo was arrested Sunday and charged with misdemeanor assault and menacing.

Prosecutors say in court papers that Castronovo knowingly caused physical injury to a woman.

Castronovo has been forbidden to have contact with her.

Castronovo’s attorney, Jeffrey Jones, says his client is deeply saddened by the accusations and confident that no criminal conduct occurred.

A plea hearing has been scheduled for June 30.

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Educators told Kansas students need more workplace skills

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new education commissioner says employers across the state are telling him that students need to be learning more life skills in school.

Randy Watson, who will become education commissioner July 1, made his comments Wednesday at a meeting with employers and educators in Lawrence.

Employers at the meeting said students need to learn life skills such as punctuality, work ethic and problem solving along with their academic studies. Watson says it’s clear some changes need to be made in the focus of K-12 education.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the gathering was the last of several sessions the education department held across Kansas. Input from the sessions will be used as the Kansas Board of Education creates a new strategic plan for K-12 education.

Kansas regents hold tuition, fee increases to 3.6 percent

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Board of Regents is limiting increases in tuition and fees at state universities this fall to 3.6 percent after strictly interpreting a cap imposed by the Legislature.

The board’s unanimous decision Thursday came a day after it told universities to revise their proposals on tuition and fees.

All universities initially proposed limiting tuition increases for undergraduates from Kansas to 3.6 percent, but some proposed increases for non-Kansas students or graduate students were as high as 6 percent.

Some proposed fee increases also would have boosted total tuition and fee costs for some Kansas undergraduates by 4.9 percent.

The Legislature’s cap of 3.6 percent specifically applies to tuition, but several regents said it is more in line with lawmakers’ wishes to limit fee increases as well.

Five Tigers earn Preseason All-America recognition

FHSU Athletics

NEW YORK, N.Y. – Fort Hays State Football had five student-athletes named to the 2015 USA College Football Division II Preseason All-America Watch List, released on Wednesday (June 17). Matt Erbert was named to the second team as an offensive lineman, while linebackers Justin McPhail, Brock Long and Alex Schmidtberger along with defensive back Daniel Lindsey received honorable mention nods.

With 18,370 players competing on the gridiron for 168 NCAA Division II programs in 2014, USA College Football recognizes the top four percent (4%) of the returning players (750) on their All-America Watch List. Here is a link to all 750 players on the watch list… Watch List.

Erbert started all 11 games for the Tigers on the offensive line last year, earning All-MIAA Second Team honors. At right tackle, he helped anchor a young offensive line. The Tigers finished with 3,432 yards of total offense and he helped the team produce more than 200 rushing yards in four games this year, including the last three.

McPhail earned All-MIAA Third Team honors for the second straight year in 2014. McPhail led the Tiger defense in tackles with 108. He also recorded four sacks, a team-high nine tackles for loss, two interceptions, and one fumble recovery. He was the team leader in tackles for the second straight year and now has 207 for his career.

Long had an impressive 2014 season with the Tigers to earn All-MIAA Honorable Mention honors after transferring from Hutchinson Community College. He finished second on the team in tackles with 93, while also recording 3.5 sacks and 4.5 tackles for loss.

Schmidtberger, also an All-MIAA Honorable Mention selection in 2014, finished his sophomore season with 69 tackles to rank fifth on the team and tie for a team-high three interceptions.

Lindsey, an All-MIAA Honorable Mention selection at defensive back in 2014, finished with 77 tackles, seven tackles for loss, one sack, one interception, six pass break-ups, a forced fumble, and a blocked kick. The blocked kick was a big one, preserving the 7-6 win for FHSU at nationally ranked Pittsburg State on a potential go-ahead field goal attempt late in the game.

 

New director named for FHSU’s Kelly Center

Gina Smith
Gina Smith

FHSU University Relations

Gina Smith has accepted the position as director of the Kelly Center at Fort Hays State University. She will begin her role July 1.

Smith has worked as an instructor with the Department of Psychology and as a counselor in the Kelly Center. She has 23 years of experience working with people of all ages in mental health agencies, clinical counseling and supervising.

Smith will be promoting the Kelly Center, providing guidance for students, faculty and staff and planning T.I.G.E.R.S. Series Workshops.

Dr. Kenton Olliff
Dr. Kenton Olliff

“I want to continue the positive work Kenton Olliff has started,” said Smith. “I plan to begin my position by evaluating the Kelly Center’s services and see if there is anything we need to add or improve on.”

Olliff, the previous director, is now assistant vice president for student affairs.

One of Smith’s long-term goals is to serve on the task force that was initiated by Dr. Leo Herrman of the Psychology Department in conjunction with the Kelly Center, for the Jed and Clinton Foundation Health Matters Campus Program. This is a four-year program that focuses on campus health and wellness.

Another goal is to lessen the stigma of going to the Kelly Center for help.

“We are here to help the students in any way we can,” said Smith. “We want to make sure that we are providing the services and technology that best meets the student’s needs.”

After being at Fort Hays State University since 2000, Smith is ready to take on the challenge of her new role and aid the Kelly Center in providing services to the students.

“I’m really excited to start my new position,” said Smith. “The Kelly Center has a great staff, and I look forward to being a part of it.”

The Kelly Center, Picken Hall, room 111, provides free support services for students, faculty and staff. For more information visit the Kelly Center’s website, www.fhsu.edu/kellycenter/.

Kan. music instructor charged with molestation arrested in Calif.

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Police say a suburban Kansas City music instructor charged with child molestation has been arrested in California.

Overland Park police said they were notified Thursday that 28-year-old Sean Dow was arrested in the Los Angeles area. Further details about the arrest were not immediately released.

Dow is charged with sexually abusing four female students at a Shawnee music store where he taught music.

He was out on bond but confined to his home in Overland Park. Police say he removed an electronic monitoring device and fled on Saturday.

Police say they are unsure when Dow will be returned to Kansas.

Newsweek features interview with former Hays Med technician convicted in Hep-C case

Kwiatkowski
Kwiatkowski

On Thursday, Newsweek published a cover story on former hospital technician David Kwiatkowski, who was convicted of infecting 45 patients with hepatitis-C in eight states over nine years.

Kwiatkowski was employed as a technician for a time at Hays Medical Center.

He spoke to Newsweek’s Kurt Eichenwald, telling his story for the first time and even risking his own safety in the hopes of spreading the word of what he did and trying to help other hospitals from preventing similar acts from happening.

Click HERE for the story from Newsweek.

INSIGHT KANSAS: 2015 legislative session was an epic disaster

The Kansas Legislature has adjourned after the longest session in its history. While high fives and fist bumps characterized the final acts among legislators Friday, in truth they went home with tails between their legs.

Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.
Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.

The 2015 Kansas legislative session was a disaster on par with the movie “San Andreas.” Only Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson wasn’t there to save the day.

By now the story is well-known. A massive deficit caused by significant income tax cuts had to be addressed by some kind of revenue increase just to keep schools operating. Cuts, as popular as they are with donor groups and voters, don’t play well in the reality of public policy. To avoid the session plunging beyond disaster into anarchy, new revenue streams had to be developed. The Governor announced he would veto any substantive reduction of his corporate and income tax cuts, so other sources had to be found. Governor Brownback’s own proposal, mostly predicated on alcohol and tobacco taxes, was dead on arrival.

What were the alternatives, though? None. Despite a cadre of new and supposedly creative lawmakers in the chamber, no alternative plans emerged throughout the session. Most legislators seemed to want to wait for the Governor or Speaker Merrick’s office to produce a plan. Eventually they got one – seven days after scheduled adjournment. Once they got it, they didn’t like it, and chaos ensued.

Legislators spent extended final weeks of the session (and a million dollars in overtime pay) scrambling for options, and a half-dozen competing plans emerged from burgeoning factions within the legislature. Some of the plans were so absurd as to raise taxes on Girl Scout cookie sales. In a remarkably ironic plot twist, taxes on all Kansans increased – the exact opposite of Governor Brownback’s initial plan despite his insistence to the contrary.

Democrats, failing to learn lessons from 2014, simply watched the GOP implosion in vain hope their collapse would allow a Democrat to back into Cedar Crest just as they expected Paul Davis to do a year ago. And Republicans have done their best to give the Democrats enough ammo to go to war on their failure alone.

While much blame will go to Governor Brownback, as it should, the real question of leadership and the biggest failure of the year should be directed towards the Speaker’s office. Where has Ray Merrick been, and what has he done, other than transform the legislature from a subject of derision into a subject of mockery? The Speaker apparently never coordinated with the Governor on a revenue plan, nor did he vet initial drafts with influential rank-and-file members or the House Tax Committee.

Keeping legislators in the dark about the most important bill of the session is on par with Nancy Pelosi’s infamous bromide about Obamacare that Congress had to pass it to know what was in it. Pelosi at least had the votes to pass her bill. Kansas legislators didn’t take the bait and pass the first thing presented, but at a cost of their own reputations with constituents and the exposure of competing coalitions within the legislature’s polar alliance Republicans that could be exploited by center-right primary challengers and some Democrats if either group can recruit, fundraise, and organize against them. The legislature, in a complete leadership vacuum, has served up a heaping plate of opposition research to 2016 challengers.

Like “San Andreas” or “The Towering Inferno,” the relief at the end of the 2015 Kansas legislative session is that it is over. The damage has been done, and perhaps minimized. Nonetheless, we have been witnesses to a disaster of historic proportions.

Chapman Rackaway is a Professor of Political Science at Fort Hays State University.

Are new rules limiting cash withdrawals by Kan. welfare recipients too restrictive?

By Dave Ranney

Federal officials are reviewing new rules Kansas lawmakers approved that restrict poor families’ access to cash assistance. “This is new territory,” said Liz Schott, a senior fellow with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington, D.C.

“I don’t know of any other state that’s done what Kansas is doing, and I don’t know that anybody knows what the feds will do.”

Gov. Sam Brownback signed into law a bill that prevents families in the state’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program from using the program’s debit cards to withdraw more than $25 a day from an ATM. Though administered by the state, TANF is federally funded and subject to federal regulations.

The regulations require states to ensure that TANF families have “adequate access to their cash assistance” and the option of withdrawing cash “with no fee or charges.”

Alerted that the law could be too restrictive, the Legislature passed a modification that gives Kansas Department for Children and Families Secretary Phyllis Gilmore authority to adjust the ATM restriction to whatever the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services will allow.

“We are aware of the requirement,” said Theresa Freed, a DCF spokesperson. “The ATM limit is under review.” Still, she said, DCF intends to enact the $25 limit on July 1 “unless we are directed otherwise.” Freed said she couldn’t predict when HHS might rule on the restriction. “We’ve been in discussion with our federal partners,” she said.

“It’s under review. We’ll follow any guidance that we receive.” The consequences of enacting the $25 limit without first having HHS approval are unclear. “It would make sense not to do this July 1 if they (DCF) don’t have to,” said Schott, who studies TANF policies.

“But they can if they want to. States can take the first step.” Though the federal regulations were enacted in 2012, she said, HHS has yet to define what constitutes “adequate access.” “Bottom line: No one really knows what the feds are going to do,” Schott said. “But when you stop and think about it, limiting someone to withdrawals of $25 a day and having them pay 10 or 20 percent fees to access that $25 doesn’t sound ‘adequate.’ But, again, no one knows at this point.”

The new law does not stop TANF recipients from using the “cash back” debit card option when paying at, for example, Wal-Mart or a large grocery store. Shannon Cotsoradis, CEO with the advocacy group Kansas Action for Children, said the “cash back” option might not meet the adequate-access threshold once it is defined.

“All this does, really, is expose poor families to unnecessary fees and add yet another hassle to their day-to-day lives,” Cotsoradis said. “We’re eroding what was already a very minimal benefit.”

According to DCF reports, the average monthly cash assistance for a TANF family in April was $111 per person, or $333 for single parent with two children. The reports also show that over the last five years, the number of Kansas families enrolled in TANF has fallen by almost 60 percent, from 14,200 in March 2010 to 6,000 in April 2015. Originally, the bill limited TANF recipients to withdrawals of $60 a day.

During debate of the bill, the Senate approved an amendment to reduce the limit to $25. Lawmakers said the limit was needed to combat welfare fraud and abuse. Marilyn Harp runs Kansas Legal Services, a government-funded legal aid program for low- and modest-income people.

She said any limit on cash withdrawals could make it more difficult for low-income families to pay their rent.

“The biggest expenditure that the vast, vast majority of the people on TANF make each month is for housing, which is almost always due early in the month,” Harp said. “And the vast majority of the landlords who rent to low-income people are not in a position to take somebody’s (TANF) benefit card. They want cash or a money order.”

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

US to pay millions for Agent Orange claims

HOPE YEN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a turn-around, the government has agreed to provide millions of dollars in disability benefits to as many as 2,100 Air Force reservists and active-duty forces exposed to Agent Orange residue on planes that had been used in the Vietnam War.

The new federal rule, approved by the White House budget office, takes effect Friday.

It adds to an Agent Orange-related caseload that already makes up 1 out of 6 disability checks issued by the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The expected cost to the government over 10 years is $47.5 million. Separate health care coverage will add to the price tag.

The VA says the rule covers military personnel who worked on C-123 planes from 1969 to 1986. Those planes were used to spray Agent Orange during the Vietnam War.

Former Hays teacher seeks pardon for student rape conviction

Dinkel
Dinkel

SALINA (AP) — A former Salina middle school counselor imprisoned for raping a 13-year-old student plans to ask Gov. Sam Brownback for a pardon.

The Salina Journal reports a legal notice indicates Brooke Dinkel applied for executive clemency, which would free her from prison. Dinkel was sentenced in 2014 to nearly 14 years in prison for two counts of rape. She was a counselor at Smoky Valley Middle School at the time.

Dinkel’s chances of being granted a pardon appear slim. Brownback has not granted any clemency requests since he took office. His spokeswoman, Eileen Hawley, says some requests have been denied and others are being reviewed.

The Kansas Prisoner Review Board currently is accepting written comments on the application. It will make a recommendation before submitting the petition to the governor.

She previously had taught at Felten Middle School in Hays.

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