We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Trial begins in robbery shooting of Kansas deputy

King
King

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A trial has begun for two men charged with shooting a Wyandotte County sheriff’s deputy.

The Kansas City Star reports that 25-year-old Dyron King and 36-year-old Cecil Meggerson are being tried this week in Wyandotte County District Court on charges including attempted capital murder and aggravated robbery.

A third suspect will be tried separately.

Deputy Scott Wood was shot early March 4 when three armed robbers stormed a Kansas City, Kansas, 7-Eleven store. The deputy spent two weeks in the hospital.

Authorities say DNA linked all three men to the crime.

Meggerson’s attorney says there wasn’t any evidence placing his client at the crime scene.

King’s attorney says an alleged threat King made against another deputy at the jail isn’t recorded.

Testimony is expected to last about two weeks.

Kan. first lady appears on latest episode of new Eagle program

Dr. Jamie Schwandt
Dr. Jamie Schwandt

TOPEKA – One Kansan who proved you can overcome a childhood of adversity is now inspiring others. A television program he recently launched with Hays-based Eagle Communications is bringing his message of hope to young people in foster care. It’s also offering helpful information to families associated with the foster care system and to residents interested in helping children in need.

First Lady Mary Brownback is a guest on Dr. Jamie Schwandt’s January episode of Dreaming Big with Dr. Schwandt. Filmed at Cedar Crest in Topeka, the First Lady discussed child welfare issues with Schwandt, as well as other topics.

The episode with the First Lady airs on Eagle affiliates across the state from Abilene to Goodland. In Hays, it can be viewed at Fridays and Mondays at 5:30 p.m. on Eagle Channels 14 and 614. It can also be viewed at HaysPost.com under the Eagle TV tab.

First Lady Mary Brownback
First Lady Mary Brownback

“I love to share my story of growing up as a foster child,” Schwandt said. “We hear a lot of negative stories about the foster care system, but I want to change that message. The foster care parents are superheroes, not the enemy.”

Due to issues of abuse and neglect, Schwandt, a Fort Hays State University alum who lives in Cheney, spent several of his teen years in the foster care system. He moved more than 20 times between foster families, his biological parents and his grandparents.

Schwandt began production of his television show last fall as a means to bring attention to child welfare and other issues. Eagle Communications is airing a short interview with Schwandt to promote the program.

A book he wrote about his journey to a successful adulthood (Succeeding as a Foster Child – October 2014), and the television talk show he hosts, are products of his desire to help others in a similar situation, as well as to promote understanding and involvement from the general public.

“Foster care saved my life, in little Kensington, Kansas,” he said. “I can’t thank all the people of that town enough. If it wasn’t for foster care, I wouldn’t be where I am today. Foster care in Kansas should be a model to the nation.”

Schwandt is also unveiling a children’s book, Finding Your Hero, to encourage younger children in foster care. Schwandt says looking back, being placed in the care of the State was the best thing that happened to him.

“We all want to give our (biological) children the opportunity to succeed in life,” said Schwandt, himself a husband and father to a baby girl, Ella. “But these foster children don’t have that. They don’t have parents who are giving them that best opportunity to succeed. That’s where the foster care system steps in.”

Schwandt’s television program features inspiring stories and educational discussions about issues that go beyond foster care and adoption. But one of the emphases of the show will be to promote the successes of children who came through the system.

“I want to focus on the foster child who became a success, find out how he or she did it, and build on those success stories,” he said.

Schwandt’s books, “Succeeding as a Foster Child: A Roadmap to Overcoming Obstacles and Achieving Success” and “Finding Your Hero,” can be ordered online at www.jamieschwandt.com.

The Kansas Department for Children and Families is a sponsor of “Dreaming Big with Dr. Schwandt.”

Interest-only payments concern Kansas lawmakers

Kansas Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita.
Kansas Senate President Susan Wagle, R-Wichita.

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers say they want more control over state finances after the Department of Transportation issued $400 million in bonds and arranged to only pay interest for the first decade.

Senate President Susan Wagle said in a statement that she and her colleagues “have serious heartburn” over aspects of recent deals. The Wichita Republican also raised concerns about a $19.9 million lease-to-own deal that the Kansas Department of Administration negotiated.

The Wichita Eagle reports Wagle says lawmakers will be pursuing legislation to “ensure legislative oversight over principal and interest payments, collateral agreements and long-term leases.”

Gov. Sam Brownback’s spokeswoman, Eileen Hawley, says the Departments of Administration and Transportation acted “well within their legal scope of authority.” She says Brownback is “happy to review legislation improving legislative oversight.

Kansas Water Office efforts recognized by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Office of the Governor
kwo
TOPEKA–Recently the Kansas Water Office (KWO) was recognized by the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) for their continued partnership and contribution to the USACE mission during the approval process of the John Redmond Reservoir Dredging Initiative. This project is the first and largest inland Section 408 request -permission for the alteration of a USACE civil works project- in the nation to be approved by USACE, Headquarters.

‪Lieutenant Gen. Thomas P. Bostick, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Commander, and Col. Richard A. Pratt, Tulsa District, Commander, presented the award to the KWO as well as former KWO employee, Susan Metzger, noting the efforts by the office reflect highly upon the state of Kansas and the nation.

“The KWO’s commitment to delivering enduring and essential water resources solutions to our nation through successful completion of all needed elements for review and approval of the John Redmond Dredging Initiative was commendable,” Bostick said. “Ms. Metzger’s demonstration of expert-level knowledge and skills in managing the drafting of technical elements of the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement, was pivotal for the successful completion of this effort by KWO.”

Since 1964, John Redmond has lost an estimated 42 percent of its conservation pool storage capacity, 80 percent more than originally projected by the USACE at the time the reservoir was completed. While there have been many short and midterm alternatives to reduce sediment or increase storage through streambank restoration projects and a two-foot pool raise and reallocation, these efforts alone will not remedy the sedimentation rate alone.

“Our work to dredge John Redmond Reservoir is part of our effort to preserve and extend water resources in Kansas,” said Governor Sam Brownback. “Increasing its storage capacity is an important part of our vision to preserve water resources in Kansas. I commend the efforts in protecting this vital resource.”

KWO has worked with the USACE on numerous projects around the state but knew this kind of 408 Request had not been done before. After the extensive review of alternatives, KWO saw no other choice to ensure future water supply.

“The water stored in John Redmond Reservoir is provided, through a contract with the KWO, to 19 communities, six industrial users and the Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Station,” said KWO Director Tracy Streeter. “This project is vital for many reasons including providing power to two-thirds of our state.”

Dredging sediment from the conservation pool would restore water supply storage for the benefit of the regional water users and restore the lost aquatic habitat for the benefit of public recreation and the lake ecosystem.

“After 10 years of collaboration and significant environmental and technical review of this project, it is exciting to see the construction of sediment disposal facilities and deployment of dredging equipment,” said Susan Metzger, KS Dept. of Agriculture Assistant Secretary. “Our state and the John Redmond project have paved the path for future storage restoration projects, not only here in Kansas but across the nation.”

The first dirt work began in November 2015 and the official dredging will commence this spring. For more information about the John Redmond Dredging project visit www.kwo.org.

Kansas woman arrested for alleged bank theft

Francesca Garcia-Marrero
Francesca Garcia-Marrero

SALINA- Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a case of alleged fraud.

Francesca Garcia-Marrero, 30, Herington is alleged to have used fraudulent checks to make deposits at 1st Bank Kansas last summer, according to Salina police.

She then withdrew the money from the account on seven different occasions between July 16th and September 29th totaling $4,708.

Garcia-Marrero was on a warrant on Monday and booked into the Saline County Jail on charges of felony theft.

Kansas Legislators Walk Back On Lifetime Ban For Hepatitis C Drugs

BY ANDY MARSO

Senator Mary Pilcher-Cook
Senator Mary Pilcher-Cook

A panel of legislators reversed their original recommendation of a lifetime ban on hepatitis C drugs for Medicaid patients who don’t comply with their treatment regimen.

Members of the Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight walked back on the recommendation they made in December after hearing from Mike Randol, who heads the Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s Division of Health Care Finance.

Randol acknowledged that the hepatitis C drugs are expensive but said KDHE has procedures in place to ensure that Kansans on Medicaid who abuse alcohol or intravenous drugs aren’t getting coverage for the medications.

“We do not believe it prudent to pay for those medications for those likely to either become re-infected or who are actively damaging their liver, regardless,” Randol said. “This is very common in other Medicaid programs as well.”

But Randol said a lifetime ban goes too far to withstand scrutiny from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which provide more than half of Medicaid funding.

“We do not believe that CMS would approve policy for a lifetime ban of medical beneficiaries for hepatitis C medications,” Randol said.

Partisan divide

The Republican-controlled committee voted 5-2 on party lines last month to recommend that KDHE impose the ban.

The partisan divide bubbled back to the surface Friday.

Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita, reiterated his claim that the lifetime ban amounted to a “death sentence” for Kansans who have hepatitis C.

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Republican from Shawnee, objected to Ward’s statement, calling it “way over the top.”

Minutes later the committee voted to scrap the lifetime ban recommendation, over Pilcher-Cook’s objection.

Randol said KDHE bases its prior authorization procedures for the hepatitis C medications on guidelines from the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease and the Infectious Disease Society of America that steer the medications to those who need them most.

KanCare testimony

The committee has a new rule for those who want to testify about problems with the managed care organizations that now run Kansas Medicaid, or KanCare.

The committee’s chairman, Rep. Dan Hawkins, said Friday that in the future the committee will require all health care consumers or providers who dispute the way the KanCare companies handled a claim to submit the claim information to the committee at least one week before its next meeting.

Hawkins said the companies would then be asked to bring their information about the claim to the meeting, which would allow for a more substantive discussion like the one the committee had Friday with the companies and Lawrence Memorial Hospital.

“I can assure you somebody might say, ‘Dan’s trying to stifle claims,’ but that’s absolutely not the case,” Hawkins said. “Actually, I want this process to be very fair and very transparent, and I want everybody to be able to discuss things just like we did today in a fair manner.”

The KanCare oversight committee meets quarterly. Its next meeting is scheduled for April 26.

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach him on Twitter @andymarso

Wichita airport seeing growth in passenger count

photo Wichita Eisenhower National Airport
photo Wichita Eisenhower National Airport

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita’s Eisenhower National Airport recorded a nearly 2.5 percent increase in passengers in 2015.

Wichita Airport Authority official Valerie Wise credits the gains to a new $160 million terminal that opened last June, offering passengers more conveniences and amenities.

The Wichita Eagle reports  about 1.57 million passengers flew into and out of Eisenhower last year, an increase of 37,679 passengers from 2014. Last year was the third-busiest year in the airport’s history, trailing only 1.59 million passengers in 2007 and 1.61 million passengers in 2008.

Wise says the gain in passenger growth came despite a reduction in capacity in flights using the airport. Passenger capacity at Eisenhower last year was down 4 percent from 2014, or 36,763 fewer seats.

US expands travel alert to pregnant women due to Zika virus

gty_malaria_mosquito_nt_110809_wgRIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The latest on the fight against the Zika virus that health officials suspect is linked to a wave of birth defects in Brazil. (All times local):

4:45 p.m.

U.S. health officials have again expanded their travel alert to pregnant women about trips to the Caribbean and Latin America.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday added the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Dominican Republic to the list of destinations with Zika virus disease outbreaks. Research in Brazil is suggesting a link between the infection in pregnant moms and a rare birth defect.

Previously, the CDC recommended that pregnant women should consider postponing trips to 22 destinations. In Latin America: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, French Guiana, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Suriname and Venezuela. In the Caribbean: Barbados, Guadeloupe, Haiti, Martinique, St. Martin and Puerto Rico. Also, Cape Verde, off the coast of western Africa; and Samoa in the South Pacific.

United Airlines says customers booked to fly to areas affected by the Zika virus can reschedule or get refunds.

American Airlines says it will give refunds to pregnant women who were planning to travel to parts of Central America.

The United Airlines offer began Tuesday and includes any country covered by a CDC travel notice. American Airlines began refunds Monday for pregnant passengers holding tickets to El Salvador, Honduras, Panama or Guatemala.

___

4:10 p.m.

Health authorities in Panama are recommending that members of an indigenous community hard-hit by Zika avoid getting pregnant.

At least 42 cases of the mosquito-borne virus have been detected in the sparsely populated province of Guna Yala along the Caribbean coast, one of them a 22-year-old pregnant woman. The area formerly known as San Blas is dominated by indigenous groups and popular with tourists.

Israel Cedeno, a Health Ministry expert, said that authorities are going house-to-house explaining how to prevent transmission but that it’s running up against cultural barriers and the lack of family planning among the Guna tribe.

___

4:30 p.m.

The Arkansas Department of Health says a person who recently traveled out of the United States has tested positive for the Zika virus.

The department says that the person has a mild case of Zika, which is spread by mosquitoes and is suspected of causing a spate of birth defects in Brazil. Spokeswoman Meg Mirivel would not say whether Tuesday if the infected person is a man or woman or give the person’s age.

Mirivel says the individual traveled to the Central America-Caribbean region, though she would not specify which country. Some U.S. travelers have been infected abroad with Zika but there are no cases of local infection in the U.S. so far.

Brazilian officials have linked the virus with a rare birth defect, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have urged pregnant women to consider postponing flights to areas where the virus is prevalent.

___

4:25 p.m.

Latin America’s largest airline says it’s waiving cancellation or flight-change fees for pregnant women who want to cancel flights to countries where the Zika virus is present.

Grupo LATAM says the policy applies to Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, French Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Martinique, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Puerto Rico, Suriname and Venezuela.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged pregnant women to consider postponing visits to 22 destinations because of concern that the mosquito-borne virus could be linked to a wave in Brazil of microcephaly cases in which children are born with heads that are smaller than normal and often have developmental problems.

The World Health Organization cautions that the link is not yet scientifically proven.

___

4:00 p.m.

Colombian officials are raising the number of suspected cases of the Zika virus in their country. They say 16,490 people now apparently have had the disease that’s been linked to birth defects in Brazil. Of those 1,090 are pregnant women.

The new figures come as health minister begins a nationwide effort to rally local officials to battle the Aedes aegypti mosquito that transmits the virus.

Minister Alejandro Gaviria said Tuesday he hopes Colombia will become “an example for Latin America” in the battle against Zika.

President Juan Manuel Santo has said Colombian officials expect to see 600,000 cases of Zika this year, and are preparing for the possibility of infants born with microcephaly, a birth defect that has skyrocketed in Brazil along with cases of Zika.

So far, there’s only one case of microcephaly in Colombia suspected of being linked to Zika.

___

3:00 p.m.

The U.S. territory of Puerto Rico is reporting a jump in the number of mosquito-borne Zika virus cases.

Health Secretary Ana Rius says there are 18 confirmed new cases in addition to one known earlier. None involve pregnant women. Brazilian officials have linked the tropical illness to birth defects.

Puerto Rico epidemiologist Brenda Rivera said Tuesday the majority of cases are in the island’s southeast region. She says many of the victims are elderly.

Officials said they are testing more than 200 other potential Zika cases that have tested negative to dengue and chikungunya.

U.S. officials say pregnant women should consider postponing trips to 22 destinations with Zika infections, including Puerto Rico.

___

2:55 p.m.

U.S. health officials are putting out advice to doctors on testing newborns for Zika virus, a tropical infection linked to a wave of birth defects in Brazil.

The guidance is for doctors caring for infants born to mothers who traveled to Zika outbreak areas in Latin America or the Caribbean during their pregnancy. The advice covers which situations call for Zika testing and when to do fetal ultrasounds.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the guidelines Tuesday.

Zika is spread by mosquitoes, and in most people causes no more than mild illness. But there’s been mounting evidence linking Zika infection in pregnant women to a birth defect in which a newborn’s head is unusually small and the brain may not develop properly.

2:40 p.m.

Argentina authorities say they are investigating a possible case of infection by the mosquito-borne Zika virus. It would be a first for the nation that shares a border with Brazil.

Santa Fe Health Department official Andrea Uboldi tells La Red radio that the man is in the city of Rosario and had recently visited Brazil, where hundreds of thousands of cases of Zika are suspected and authorities are investigating a possible link to birth defects.

Meanwhile, officials in the Argentine province of Corrientes have declared an epidemiological alert due to an outbreak of dengue in the area. Dengue and Zika are both transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

Traffic stop nets almost 50 pounds of marijuana

Christopher Jensen
Christopher Jensen

HERSHEY, Neb. (AP) — The Nebraska State Patrol says a traffic stop near North Platte on Interstate 80 has led to the seizure of nearly 50 pounds of marijuana.

The patrol says a trooper stopped a pickup Monday afternoon at the Hershey exit for a license plate violation. The trooper says he smelled a strong odor of marijuana coming from the truck and searched it, turning up 47 pounds of marijuana inside three plastic totes in the cab of the pickup.

The driver of the truck — a 30-year-old California man Christopher Jensen — was arrested on suspicion of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver and not having a driver’s license.

FHSU women’s basketball drops four spots in latest WBCA poll

The Fort Hays State women’s basketball team dropped four spots in the latest WBCA/USA Today top-25 poll, but remains in the top-10. The Tigers, who lost at Missouri Western and won at Northwest Missouri State last week, fell into a tie for seventh with West Texas A&M.

Missouri Western, who suffered their first loss of the season at home at the hands of Nebraska-Kearney, dropped one slot to No. 5. Emporia State sits at No. 11.

Rank Institution – First Place Votes Previous Rank Record Total Points
1 Lubbock Christian University (Texas) – 7 2 17-0 568
2 University of Alaska – Anchorage – 14 1 22-1 567
3 Ashland University (Ohio) – 1 4 18-0 543
4 California Baptist University 6 18-1 497
5 Limestone College (S.C.) – 2 7 15-0 488
6 Missouri Western State 5 18-1 467
T7 Fort Hays State University (Kan.) 3 17-2 442
T7 West Texas A&M University 8 18-1 442
9 Lewis University (Ill.) 9 18-1 424
10 Winona State University (Minn.) 14 19-2 328
11 Emporia State University (Kan.) 12 15-3 301
12 Nova Southeastern University (Fla.) 10 16-2 291
13 Benedict College (S.C.) 15 19-1 285
14 Union University (Tenn.) 16 17-2 251
15 Anderson University (S.C.) 11 12-2 243
16 Quincy University (Ill.) 18 17-1 238
17 West Liberty University (W.Va.) 13 16-2 216
18 Drury University (Mo.) 19 14-3 188
19 Clayton State University (Ga.) 22 16-1 185
20 Virginia Union University 17 13-2 182
21 Arkansas Tech University 20 13-2 169
22 Delta State University (Miss.) 24 14-2 122
23 Azusa Pacific University (Calif.) 25 16-3 81
24 Florida Southern College NR 16-2 59
25 University of California – San Diego 21 15-3 47

Dropped Out: Columbus State University (Ga.).

Others receiving votes: Bellarmine University (Ky.) 36; University Of Sioux Falls (S.D.) 26; Columbus State University (Ga.) 21; Bentley University (Mass.) 14; Northern State University (S.D.) 10; Pittsburg State University (Kan.) 10; California State University – Dominguez Hills 9; Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania 7; Colorado School of Mines 5; Kentucky State University 5; Texas Woman’s University 5.

Lockdown lifted at Kansas prison

Hutchinson Correctional Facility
Hutchinson Correctional Facility

HUTCHINSON -The lockdown at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility-Central Unit where multiple altercations occurred on Wednesday, January 20, 2016 and Thursday January 21, 2016, has been lifted, according to a media release from the Kansas Department of Corrections.

There were no staff injuries during any of the four incidents.

Inmate movement has returned to normal. Visits will resume as scheduled for this weekend, January 30 and January 31, 2016 at HCF-Central Unit.

Susan Marie (Naylor) Mayberry

Susan Marie (Naylor) Mayberry, 57, of Russell, Kansas passed away Monday, January 25, 2016 at the Russell Regional Hospital.

Susan was born January 30, 1958 om Plainville, Kansas area. The daughter of Verle and Lavon (Doughtery) Naylor. She grew up and attended schools in the Codell area.

Susan was united in marriage to Ricky D. Mayberry, Sr. on September 19, 1980 in Clay Center, Nebraska. This union was blessed with three children; Cassandra, Ricky, Jr. and Jessica. They made their home in Harvard, Nebraska until 1983 when they moved to Russell. Ricky preceded her in death on November 27, 2008.

Susan ran a Day Care out of her home during the late 80’s and early 90’s. Then she worked a couple of years at Meridy’s restaurant and was in housekeeping at Days Inn Motel before she started working at the Russell A&W restaurant. She worked there for over 10 years before retiring due to health reasons. She enjoyed wood working, raising a garden, and attending family barbeques. She loved traveling and experiencing new places and taking care of her grandchildren.

Surviving family include her daughter, Cassandra Mayberry of Russell, Kansas; son, Ricky Mayberry, Jr. (Connie) of Luray, Kansas; brother, Gerald Naylor (Carol) of Lucas, Kansas; sisters, Evelyn Burns (Steve) of Russell, Kansas and Ruth Ryan of Great Bend, Kansas; brother-in-law, Ronnie Bland of Lucas, Kansas; six grandchildren, Kandis, Alyssa, Makaila, Ricky III, Seth and Thomas; and many nieces and nephews.

Susan was preceded in death by her parents, husband Ricky, daughter Jessica, and sister Mildred Bland.

The family will be greeting friends from 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Saturday, January 30, 2016 at Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell. A private family graveside service will be held following the greeting. A Memorial has been established with Make A Wish Foundation. Contributions and condolences may be sent to Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary, who is in charge of these arrangements.

Obama to focus on expanding access to your retirement account

Screen Shot 2016-01-26 at 2.51.59 PMKEVIN FREKING, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama will pitch some new proposals to expand access to retirement savings accounts and revisit some old ones when issuing his budget next month.

The White House says Obama’s proposals, if enacted, would provide more than 30 million people with access to retirement savings accounts.

The biggest chunk of that increase would occur through legislation requiring employers that don’t offer a retirement plan to automatically enroll their workers in an Individual Retirement Account. The employers that did so would get a tax credit of $3,000 to help them offset the administrative expense. The proposal was also part of last year’s budget.

On the new front, Labor Secretary Thomas Perez says the administration will seek to make it easier for multiple employers to join together to offer retirement plans.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File