Jesse Eugene Coker, 61, WaKeeney, Kan., Passed away from this world on Wednesday, August 19, 2015.
He was born on February 22, 1954, in WaKeeney to Thomas B. and Marlene (Kessler) Coker. He attended WaKeeney Elementary School from 1960 to 1968. He graduated from Trego Community High School in 1972.
On June 29, 1972, he enlisted in the Army where he served as a Communication Center Specialist stationed in Korea and Fort Hood, TX, until July 1, 1974.
On July 12, 1975, he married Kim Hoffman, the daughter of Victor and Amelia Hoffman, in WaKeeney, KS. To this union, three children were born.
He was a lifetime resident of WaKeeney working at Tom’s Body Shop until his retirement in 2000. He was preceded in death by his parents Thomas B. Coker and Marlene (Kessler) Coker.
Those surviving are two sons: Cory Coker, Pueblo West, CO., Luke Coker & Jodi, Hays, KS. One Daughter, Micah Coker, Topeka, KS. One Brother, Thomas Coker and Lavonne, Hays, KS. One Sister, Christi Sumner, Fort Collins, CO. Grandchildren: Julian, Jase, Easton, Brooke and Dylan.
Services will be at 10:30 AM Friday August 28, 2015, at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, WaKeeney.
After just more than an hour, the scene of a Monday bomb threat has been cleared, according to law enforcement officials.
Just before 2 p.m. Monday, a bomb threat was called in to Dollar General, 1208 E. 27th. Public safety officials evacuated the store and blocked traffic on several roads in the immediate area during the investigation.
Just after 3 p.m., the store was declared safe, with no bomb found.
According to Lt. Brandon Wright of the Hays Police Department, a suspect has been identified and is in custody. The identity of the suspect has not been released.
Check Hays Post for details as they become available.
Each month, according to the latest available data, roughly 225 KanCare beneficiaries file complaints about the care they’ve received or been denied. That’s a small percentage, considering that more than 400,000 Kansans depend on the state’s privatized Medicaid program.
The numbers also show that all but a handful of the complaints are resolved within 15 days.
State officials often cite the data when assuring legislators that KanCare, now in its third year, is meeting the needs of its beneficiaries.
Mitzi McFatrich, executive director of Kansas Advocates for Better Care, isn’t so sure needs are being met.
“We just don’t have good data when it comes to assessing how things are going,” McFatrich says, noting that few complaints don’t necessarily mean that Medicaid enrollees are getting the services they need.
McFatrich is expected to share the group’s concerns with the Robert G. Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight, which meets at 9 a.m. Friday at the Kansas Statehouse.
Many KanCare beneficiaries, McFatrich says, are still figuring out how the new system works because the case managers who would have helped them file complaints in the past have been replaced.
Before KanCare, Kansans with disabilities on Medicaid had case managers that worked for advocacy groups in their communities. Now their care is coordinated by case managers who work for one of the three private insurance companies that administer KanCare.
“People are pretty much on their own now,” McFatrich says. “We’ve had consumers tell us their case managers discourage them from filing appeals or grievances because if they lose, their services will be cut even more.”
Kansas Advocates for Better Care is a nonprofit organization that lobbies on behalf of frail seniors, nursing home residents and their families.
The group last month published and began distributing “KanCare and Your Plan of Care: Know Your Rights.” The eight-page guide is designed to help beneficiaries understand the process for filing complaints with the insurance company handling their case or with the Office of Administrative Hearings within the Kansas Department of Administration.
“We just feel like it’s important for Medicaid beneficiaries to understand that they have rights and that there’s a process for disputing decisions that affect the level of care they receive,” McFatrich says.
The guide’s costs were underwritten by grants of $7,000 from the REACH Healthcare Foundation and $1,000 from the Legacy of Justice Foundation.
The processes outlined in the guide apply to frail seniors as well as people with physical and developmental disabilities.
“People are not always getting the services they need,” says Chris Owens, who runs the Prairie Independent Living Resource Center in Hutchinson, Kansas. “They’re having their hours cut, but they either find it difficult to file an appeal or they’re uncomfortable doing it, and they just let it go.”
The Hutchinson facility is one of 10 Centers for Independent Living in Kansas that provide services to help people with disabilities live independently. Many of the centers’ employees are disabled.
“It’s a good thing to have this guide out there,” Owens says. “People need to know.”
In Kansas, roughly 8,800 people with developmental disabilities, 3,800 people with physical disabilities, 18,000 frail elders and 20,500 nursing home residents are on Medicaid.
KanCare beneficiaries who think they’re being denied the services they need to live in community-based settings have the option of asking the insurance company overseeing their care to take a second look at their care plans or to restore whatever cuts in services they’ve proposed.
If they’re dissatisfied with the quality of care they are receiving, beneficiaries may file a grievance with their KanCare company.
More than 95 percent of these appeals and grievances, according to quarterly reports compiled by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, are resolved within 15 days of being filed.
But that doesn’t mean decisions about care plans were reversed or that services were restored. It only means they were reviewed.
Sara Belfry, a KDHE spokesperson, says the process provides an accurate measurement of how well the companies are meeting beneficiaries’ needs.
KDHE, she says, encourages KanCare beneficiaries to work with their care coordinators and to make themselves heard.
Those who aren’t satisfied with their KanCare company’s response can request a “state fair hearing,” during which an administrative law judge will hear the evidence and render an opinion.
Between July 2014 and June 2015, 185 KanCare grievances were filed with the Office of Administrative Hearings. Of these, 32 were denied; three were upheld; two were modified; 126 were dismissed or withdrawn, usually due to agreements reached outside the hearing room; and 22 are pending.
The processes, McFatrich says, are difficult to navigate, especially for people with disabilities.
“There’s no one in the system who advocates for them,” she says. “They can call the KDADS ombudsman’s office and they’ll try to answer their questions and they’ll tell them who to call, but they’re not allowed to advocate for them. They can in other states, but not in Kansas.”
Dave Ranney is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.
Nicholas Garner-photo Kan. Dept. of CorrectionsThe police officers car where the suspect backed into it-photo Wichita Police
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The officer who fatally shot a man while being dragged by a vehicle during a traffic stop has been released from the hospital.
Interim Wichita Police Chief Nelson Mosley said Monday the officer was talking to 26-year-old Nicholas Garner through the open door of the Toyota Prius after pulling him over Saturday night for traffic infraction.
Mosley says the officer may have tried to stop him from driving away and became lodged in the car, with his legs hanging outside.
Garner drove around some gas pumps and through a restaurant parking lot before driving the wrong way down a street. He hit a patrol car, three parked cars and a motorcycle before colliding with an oncoming car — all while dragging the officer.
A map showing approximate locations of the incident. The blue is where the traffic stop originally occurred, the red arrows show where the suspect drove when he fled and the green is where the suspect vehicle stopped.-click to enlarge
Police say the injured officer shot Garner, killing him.
On Thursday, Aug. 20, the Hays Police Department received a report that Steven Little, 64, and Kathleen Little, 62, both residents of Hays, were missing.
On Friday, Aug. 21, at approximately 9 p.m., Webster State Park Manager Zach Kesler located the Littles’ vehicle at the Goose Flats campground on the south side of Webster Reservoir.
Kesler approached the vehicle and discovered both were deceased. The investigation is being conducted by the Rooks County Sheriff’s Office, assisted by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, and the Hays Police Department.
An autopsy was conducted on Saturday, Aug. 22, in Hays. Preliminary findings indicated that both died from single gunshot wounds, with no other blunt trauma or injuries being found. A formal autopsy report is pending.
Preliminary investigation findings are consistent with a murder-suicide, and no other suspects or persons are believed to be involved.
No other information will be released at this time.
SALINA- A suspected wanted by law enforcement authorities has died after police say he shot himself.
Salina Police Captain Mike Sweeney said Jose Robles, 26, who was being sought by police for the battery and kidnapping of his girlfriend, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound Sunday evening.
Sweeney says that officers responded to an alley located east of Santa Fe and north of Woodland just before 5:15 p.m., after receiving a tip from a citizen that Robles was in that area.
Officers initially spotted Robles after arriving in the area, then lost sight of him. While searching the area a short time later, they heard a single gunshot.
HESSTON – Two people were injured in an accident just after 7:30a.m. on Monday in Harvey County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1997 Dodge Intrepid driven by Amy J. Makovec, 19, Lincolnville, was southbound on Interstate 135 a mile north of Hesston.
The vehicle rear-ended a 1997 Pontiac Grand Prix driven by Chad A. Record, 45, Wichita, that was in the right lane traveling slowly due to a mechanical malfunction.
Record and a passenger Sarah N. Smith-Orr, 40, Hoisington, were transported to Newton Medical Center
Makovec was not injured and was wearing a seat belt at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
The KHP had no record of seat belt usage for the occupants of the Pontiac.
Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services
TOPEKA – Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) Secretary Dr. Susan Mosier and Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) Secretary Kari Bruffett announced today a series of public forums to discuss integration of the state’s home- and community-based Medicaid waiver programs.
The forums are scheduled to be conducted in Topeka, Wichita, Kansas City, Coffeyville and Garden City. The agencies also plan to conduct one or more teleconference calls to discuss waiver integration, which will be announced at a later date.
“Our goal is to speak to Kansans receiving HCBS services to understand and address their frustrations with the current waiver system,” Dr. Mosier said. “These forums will provide Kansans who are on HCBS waivers and their families the opportunity to give input about how the waivers work for them.”
KDADS administers seven individual home- and community-based services Medicaid waivers for individuals with physical disabilities, developmental disabilities, traumatic brain injury and autism, those with a need for technology assistance, youth with a serious emotional disturbance and the frail elderly. There are a specific list of services provide under each individual waiver.
“A new 1115 waiver would allow us to establish an integrated set of services that would be available to all waiver recipients regardless of the waiver in which they are enrolled,” Secretary Bruffett said. “We want to move toward a system that no longer defines individuals by a specific disability, but rather by their needs and capabilities. CMS approval of a new Kansas 1115 Medicaid waiver would give us the ability to provide the right services to individuals regardless of their disability definition.”
Participants may RSVP for these public meetings at the following link:
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — The opening statement has been halted at the trial of a white supremacist accused of killing three people at two Jewish sites so a judge could clarify what the man — who is representing himself — is allowed to say.
Frazier Glenn Miller Jr. is accused of capital murder in the April 2014 killings near Kansas City. He attempted Monday to lay out a defense contending that Jewish people are committing genocide against the white race. All three victims were Christian.
Assistant Johnson County prosecutor Chris McMullin objected before Miller could complete his first sentence, in which he started to say that he tried to make a plea deal before the trial. Jurors were removed from the courtroom for a time.
The 74-year-old Miller later completed his abbreviated opening statement.
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OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A trial is underway for a Missouri white supremacist accused of killing three people last year at two Jewish sites in suburban Kansas City.
Frazier Glenn Miller Jr. could face the death penalty if convicted in the April 2014 killings. The 74-year-old is representing himself after firing his attorneys in May, saying he wanted to speak on his own behalf.
Opening statements are set to begin Monday.
Prosecutors say Miller killed 69-year-old William Corporon and Corporon’s 14-year-old grandson, Reat Griffin Underwood, outside a Jewish community center before shooting 53-year-old Terri LaManno outside a nearby Jewish retirement home in April 2014.
Miller has pleaded not guilty, though he’s publicly admitted killing the victims. The self-professed anti-Semite says he was morally obligated to kill Jews. All of the victims were Christian.
GREAT BEND–The Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Commission approved the duck and goose seasons at a public hearing, conducted Thursday, August 20, at the Kansas Wetland Education Center, Great Bend.
Following frameworks provided by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the following seasons and bag limits were approved.
DUCK SEASONS
High Plains Duck Zone (see duck zone map at www.ksoutdoors.com)
Oct. 10, 2015-Jan. 4, 2016 and Jan. 23-31, 2016
Youth season: Oct 3-4, 2015
Low Plains Early Zone
Oct. 10-Dec. 6, 2015 and Dec. 19, 2015-Jan. 3, 2016
Youth season: Oct. 3-4, 2015
Low Plains Late Zone
Oct. 31, 2015-Jan. 3, 2016 and Jan. 23-31, 2016
Youth season: Oct. 24-25, 2015
Low Plains Southeast Zone
Nov. 14, 2015-Jan. 3, 2016 and Jan. 9-31, 2016
Youth season: Nov. 7-8, 2015
Duck daily bag limit: Six ducks, which may include no more than five mallards (no more than two which may be hens), three scaup, three wood ducks, two redheads, two pintails and two canvasbacks.
Canada Geese
Oct. 31-Nov. 1, 2015 and Nov. 4, 2015-Feb. 14, 2016
Canada goose daily bag limit (including brant): Six
White-fronted Geese
Oct. 31, 2015-Jan. 3, 2016 and Jan. 23-Feb. 14, 2016
White-fronted goose daily bag limit: Two
Light Geese
Oct. 31-Nov. 1, 2015 and Nov. 4, 2015-Feb. 14, 2016
(Light goose Conservation Order: Feb. 15-April 30, 2016)
Light goose daily bag limit (including snow and Ross’ geese): 50
(No daily bag limit during the Conservation Order)
All waterfowl hunters 16 and older must have a Federal Duck Stamp, and all hunters required to have a hunting license must also have a Kansas Waterfowl Habitat Permit and Kansas Harvest Information Program permit.
The Hays Recreation Commission is seeking volunteer coaches for upcoming fall sports seasons — volunteers who will ensure all children who have signed up are able to participate.
“No kid likes to sit on the sideline. We are committed to making sure this happens as little as possible,” said Keith Smith, HRC youth sports director. “In order for us to provide as much on field experience as possible, we need your help. We are looking for coaches to help us serve over 700 kids.”
The HRC is short coaches for youth soccer, flag football and volleyball. Coaches are being sought for the following sports/age categories.
Soccer
6 Coaches for 5-6 Boys
5 Coaches for 5-6 Girls
5 Coaches for 7-8 Boys
4 Coaches for 7-8 Girls
2 Coaches for 9-10 Co-ed
2 Coaches for 11-14 Co-ed
Volleyball
3 Coaches for 3rd & 4th Girls
3 Coaches for 5th & 6th Girls
Flag Football
5 Coaches 6-8 year old
2 Coaches 9-12 year old
Sixty-one coaches already have volunteered for the fall season. Anyone wishing to volunteer or simply to learn more about the opportunity can contact the HRC at (785) 623-2650 or [email protected].