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KU Med Breaks Ground For New, $75M Training Facility

Breaking ground for KU Med Center's new education building Thursday were, from left, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, and Dr. Robert Simari, executive dean of the School of Medicine, MIKE SHERRY HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR
Breaking ground for KU Med Center’s new education building Thursday were, from left, Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, and Dr. Robert Simari, executive dean of the School of Medicine
MIKE SHERRY HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR

By Mike Sherry

When Dr. David Zamierowski was training as a physician in the 1960s, he tried out his new skills on living patients.

“I am so grateful to those poor souls, who knew it was my first time, but graciously allowed me to practice on them,” Zamierowski said Thursday at a groundbreaking ceremony for the University of Kansas Medical Center’s new health education building.

“But in the back of my mind, I always knew there had to be a better way, and when I first saw simulation, I realized that this was the answer.”

Zamierowski did his residency at KU Med and went on to a 25-year career in plastic surgery in the Kansas City area before retiring a dozen years ago.

His fealty to KU Med and his zeal for simulation are what brought him to the outdoor ceremony Thursday. He was joined by university and elected officials, including Gov. Sam Brownback, as earth was turned for the $75 million building at the corner of 39th Street and Rainbow Boulevard in Kansas City, Kansas.

The Zamierowskis were among private donors who kicked in a total $37 million, including $25 million from the Hall Family Foundation.

Other funding comes from $25 million in state bonds and $15 million from KU Med itself.

Construction is expected to begin next month and to be completed in summer 2017.

The 171,000-square-foot building will enable KU to train 50 additional medical students each year at its combined facilities statewide. KU now graduates 211 medical graduates annually at its three campuses across the state.

Ninety of the state’s 105 counties are medically underserved, according to the university. Current estimates project that 30 percent of the state’s physician workforce will retire or leave their practices within the next decade.

The construction gets underway just as a new patient tower for KU Hospital is rising at the corner of 39th Street and Cambridge streets, immediately east.

The education building “expands the important role that KU Medical Center plays in ensuring that Kansans have access to highly trained doctors and nurses,” Brownback said at the ceremony.

“We are going to train the next generation of physicians for this state and for this nation that are going to be fabulous, there are going to be more (of them), there are going to be more in rural areas … and it’s going to be a fabulous gift to the people of Kansas,” he added.

The building replaces an outdated facility that was built in 1976 and no longer suits the demands of current medical training. It will also enable a new type of medical education stressing interdisciplinary training in which physicians, nurses, pharmacists and other trainees learn together.

Some of that joint training will involve law students, said Dr. Doug Girod, executive vice chancellor of KU Med.

Fourth-year medical student Kirsten Devin, 26, of Omaha, said she and fellow students were elated when they heard a new education building might be in the offing.

“For as long as I have been here, and I suspect much longer than that, students on this campus have dreamed of a collaborative education with peers from all different professions and the place where this could effectively occur,” she said. “It is our dream that this building will become a place where future generations of brilliant Jayhawks come together to explore each other’s minds and also to enjoy each other’s company.”

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

1 dead, 1 hospitalized after southwest Kan. semi crash

HODGEMAN COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 10:30p.m. on Thursday in Hodgeman County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Chevy Cruze driven by Donnie Lee Addison Groth, 22, Garden City, was eastbound on Kansas 156 just east of U.S. 283.

The Chevy drifted into the westbound lane and struck a semi driven by Terry L. Nusser, 63, Dodge City.

Both vehicles came to rest in the south ditch.

Groth was transported to the Hodgeman County Hospital where he died early Friday.

Nusser was taken by air medical transport to Wesley Medical Center in Wichita.

Nusser was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

INSIGHT KANSAS: Dissing state employees and teachers

State employees and teachers should be celebrated. They provide valuable service in all parts of Kansas, yet have been on the receiving end of both low pay and disrespect, a direct result of the state’s financial crisis.

State leaders talk about employees as a problem, or as a cost that must be borne. Last fall, Speaker of the House Ray Merrick told the Wichita Eagle that “Government employees produce nothing. They’re a net consumer.”

Duane Goossen
Duane Goossen

Governor Brownback has not spoken quite as blatantly, but delivers the same message when he insists on only counting “private” jobs in Kansas to measure his economic experiment. “Public” jobs don’t seem to matter to the governor.

Along with the talk, lawmakers have cut away civil service protections, making the state workforce less professional and more subject to political allegiance, and eliminated due process rights for teachers.

Then consider pay. This is the seventh year in a row in which employees have not received any kind of cost-of-living or general pay increase. That perhaps was understandable when the state was mired in recession, but as our economy has recovered, Gov. Brownback has not even proposed an employee pay increase for the Legislature to consider.

Average Kansas teaching salaries have fallen almost to the bottom at 43rd in the nation last year.

Our statewide financial crisis prevents improvement. The Brownback income tax cuts routed Kansas’s budget without bringing any tangible economic benefits. Things became so unbalanced that the record tax increase passed by lawmakers in June barely allows the state to stay financially solvent, let alone address employee issues.

Last week, 38,000 state employees showed up for work. They engineered our roads and repaired bridges. Some inspected the food we eat. Social workers checked on children at risk for abuse and neglect. At state hospitals and prisons, many worked the night shift or put in overtime hours. Professors, cooks, and maintenance personnel geared up for a fresh contingent of students at universities. Highway patrol officers responded to accidents. Emergency management employees prepared to assist after the next tornado or flood.

In Kansas’s public schools more than 60,000 teachers, administrators, bus drivers, and staff took on a half million students who have a wide range of abilities and learning needs.

We should be glad all of those Kansans came to work, but we must change our approach to keep a vibrant state workforce. The recent Washington Post article, “Why Teachers Can’t Hotfoot it Out of Kansas Fast Enough” lays out why teachers are leaving. The U.S. is experiencing a national teacher shortage. Kansas will never successfully compete for teachers with an offer of low pay and with lawmakers who malign the profession.

The same thing is true in other parts of state government. The Topeka Capital Journal just reported on the staffing problems at state hospitals—for example, 189 out of 501 positions vacant at Osawatomie State Hospital. KAKE News did a story on similar vacancy problems rampant in the state prison system, a direct result of low pay. The prison system dropped age requirements, and now, for the first time, recruits 18-year-olds as prison guards to fill the void.

State employees and teachers understand the message being sent. If you knew that an employer never gave raises, suggested employees were just a financial drain, and routinely took away benefits and privileges, would you want to work for them?

Treating employees fairly is fundamental to good business practice and management. Making Kansas public employees bear the brunt of self-imposed financial problems will not serve the state’s future well.

Primary responsibility to set the tone and policies rests with the Brownback administration, but Kansas citizens should not look the other way. Especially as Labor Day approaches, be thankful for the dedicated state workers we have, and tell our leaders to fix state finances and quit dissing the employees.

Duane Goossen is a Senior Fellow at the Kansas Center for Economic Growth and formerly served 12 years as Kansas Budget Director.

What’s in a billion? Facebook users hit milestone in 1 day

BARBARA ORTUTAY, AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — You, your mom, your grandma and elementary school buddy Lawrence might have been some of the billion people who logged in to Facebook on Monday — the first time that has happened in a single day. That’s right, one billion people, or one-seventh of the Earth’s population.

It was a big symbolic milestone for the world’s biggest online social network, which boasts nearly 1.5 billion users who log in at least once a month. CEO Mark Zuckerberg marked the occasion with a Facebook post.

Most of the billion people who logged in on Monday were outside the U.S. and Canada. Of Facebook’s overall users, more than 83 percent come from other countries. This is also where Facebook’s next billions of users will likely come from as it grows.

KFIX Rock News: Slash Producing New Horror Movie

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Photo credit: John Rudolph

Who better to develop a new slasher movie than the man known as Slash?

The rocker will produce a horror film with Revolver Picture Company that will be a throwback to 1980s flicks like Halloween and Friday the 13th, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The plot has not yet been revealed.

Slash got involved after meeting with some folks at Revolver. He tells The Hollywood Reporter, “They had an idea that tied in perfectly with a theme that I was working on at the time.”

“From there, together with [screenwriter]Brian Sieve, I think we developed something awesome.”

The goal is that the movie will evolve into a franchise.

Slash isn’t new to the horror film genre — he produced 2013’s Nothing Left to Fear.

Copyright © 2015, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Cover photo: Laura Cox

Karl A. Schmidtberger

Karl A. Schmidtberger, 64, Hays, died Tuesday, August 25, 2015 at his home.

Karl Schmidtberger

He was born December 30, 1950 in Hays the son of Michael and Anna Marie (Burghart) Schmidtberger. He graduated from Victoria High School in 1969 and from Oklahoma State University as a Certified Pedorthist in 1997.

On July 19, 1971 he married Deborah K. Goetz in Hays. He was a US Army Veteran during the Vietnam War. He was a Certified Pedorthist and owner/operator of Pedorthic Specialists LLC in Hays until his retirement in 2013. Memberships include St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, the American Board for Certification in Orthotics, Prosthetics, and Pedorthics, the Hays Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #9076, and the Hays American Legion Post #173.

Survivors include his wife, Hays, two sons Jesse Schmidtberger and wife Jennifer of Olathe and their children Josie and Julia, and Blake Schmidtberger and his son Eric of Overland Park, KS, a brother Paul Schmidtberger and wife Judy of Russell, KS, three sisters Dianne Carter and husband Charles, Sr. of The Villages, FL, Janice Tholen and husband Tom of Victoria, Carol Dreiling and husband John of Hays, a sister in law Tess Schmidtberger of Russell, KS, and numerous nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his parents, his father and mother-in-law Daniel and Edna Goetz, and two brothers Kenneth F. and Ronald M. Schmidtberger.

Funeral services will be at 11:00 am on Saturday, September 5, 2015 at the St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, 2901 E. 13th, Hays. Military honors by the Hays VFW Post #9076 and the Hays American Legion Post #173 will be at the church following the services. The family will receive friends on Saturday from 10:30 until 11:00.

Memorials are suggested to the Salvation Army in care of the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

Woman charged in Kan. teen’s murder now in federal custody

Azucena Garcia-Ferniza
Azucena Garcia-Ferniza

WICHITA -The Kansas  woman who was previously charged with her involvement in the May shooting death of Salina teenager Allie Saum is now federal custody, according to James Cross, Public Information Officer for the U.S. Attorneys Office in Wichita.

In a federal criminal complaint filed on August 24th in the United States District Court in Wichita, 21-year-old Azucena Garcia-Ferniza was charged with one count of possession of a firearm by an illegal alien in the United States.

The complaint alleges that Garcia-Ferniza, a citizen of Mexico, is illegally and unlawfully in the United States was knowingly and intentionally in possession of a .45 caliber Glock 30 handgun on or about May 7, 2015.

The handgun is believed to the murder weapon used in the May 6th shooting death of Salina teenager Allie Saum. According to an arrest affidavit, Garcia-Ferniza was in possession of the weapon at the time of her arrest on May 7th. She was charged with felony obstruction by Saline County authorities for her involvement in the canse

Garcia-Ferniza was taken into custody by federal authorities at the Holiday Inn Express, 755 W. Diamond Drive, on Wednesday afternoon.

Allie Saum was shot on the evening of May 6th in what prosecutors have called a case of mistaken identity. Police say the shooting was the result of a fight that occurred earlier that same day. The suspects were part of a group of people that were out seeking revenge for the fight. One of the suspects mistakenly identified the male driver of a pickup, later identified as Saum’s boyfriend, as someone that had been involved in the fight. Shots were fired into the pickup in the 800 block of Russell and Saum, who was in the passenger’s side of the truck, was struck in the head.

She died shortly after midnight on May 7th.

Gladys Anglin

Gladys Anglin, age 104, of Gove, passed away Thursday, August 27, 2015, at Gove County Medical Center, Quinter.

Schmitt Funeral Home, Quinter, is handling arrangements.

Hutch residents arrested on suspicion of felony drug violations in Hays

marijuannadrugspotHays Post

A traffic stop in Hays resulted in the felony arrests of four Hutchinson residents last weekend.

According to Hays Police Chief Don Scheibler, the incident began as a traffic stop, with a vehicle being pulled over for speeding in the 700 block of East Eighth.

Scheibler said the driver told the officer the group was on the way back from vacation in Colorado and that GPS had inadvertently directed them to the middle of Hays.

According to reports, the officer detected a strong odor of marijuana. Upon further investigation 16 ounces of marijuana allegedly was found in the vehicle, as well as a loaded handgun.

Four people, all from Hutchinson, were charged with felony possession with intent to deliver and felony possession of drug paraphernalia: Erin Renee Willenborg, 28; Richard Andrew Petty, 37; Tony Roy Julian Jr., 28; and Courtney Danielle Brown, 26.

As of Friday morning, all four had bonded out of the Ellis County jail.

A hot Thursday in Hays, but not a record

heat sun hotBy BECKY KISER
Hays Post

It certainly felt like a record high temperature Thursday in Hays. It was not.

According to official weather guy Joe Becker at the K-State Agricultural Research Center south of town, it was hot yesterday–104 degrees.

But still not hot enough to set a record for August 27th, although you might remember when it was.

The temperature reached 108 degrees in Hays 14 years ago, on Aug. 27, 2000.

Kan. man arrested, allegedly showed obscene photos to toddler

SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating an Ottawa County man for allegedly showing pictures of sex acts to a toddler girl in Salina last month.

On Thursday, Salina police arrested Christopher Postlewait, 22, Culver, on requested charges of promoting obscenity to a minor.

Postlewait is acquainted with the child’s family, according to police.

A family member of the girl reported the incident to police.

Winner: Tickets to see Don Williams in Dodge City with 99 KZ Country!

khaz don williams 20150820Don Williams will be in concert at United Wireless Arena in Dodge City on Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at 7 pm.

Congratulations to Linda Windholz!

 

Listen to Theresa Trapp August 24 – August 28, 2015 for chances to call 785-628-2995 and register to win tickets for the show.  One registration per person!

The winner will be announced on Friday, August 28, 2015 and will need to pick up the certificate at the KHAZ Studio, 2300 Hall, Hays, KS.

Check out https://unitedwirelessarena.com/events_tickets/calendar/?act[v]=graphical&frm[d]=2015-09-01#event89 for ticket availability.

Good luck from 99 KZ Country!

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

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