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FDA: E-cigarettes now have new federal rules

e cigaretteMATTHEW PERRONE, AP Health Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of electronic cigarette brands will have to seek federal permission to stay on the market under new rules that have the potential to upend a multi-billion dollar industry attempting to position itself as an alternative to traditional cigarettes.

The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday released long-awaited rules that bring the burgeoning industry under federal oversight. Among other steps, the FDA rules limit e-cigarette sales to minors and require new health warnings. In a move vigorously opposed by manufacturers, the agency said manufacturers would have to seek permission to remain on the market under a multi-tiered system. Those that don’t submit the required information could have their products taken off the market.

E-cigarettes turn nicotine into an inhalable liquid vapor. Their benefits and harms haven’t been extensively studied.

Kansas trial nears end in anti-abortion activist’s threat

Dillard Image -Tallgrass films courtesy Joe Winston
Dillard
Image -Tallgrass films courtesy Joe Winston

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Jurors have gone home without reaching a verdict in the trial of a Kansas anti-abortion activist accused of sending a letter suggesting someone might place an explosive under the car of a doctor training to perform abortions.

Deliberations will resume Friday in the trial of Angel Dillard. The lawsuit was filed under a federal law aimed at protecting access to abortion services.

A government attorney said during closing arguments Thursday it constituted a threat because Angel Dillard intended to make the Wichita doctor afraid to offer abortion services.

But a defense attorney portrayed the letter as simply a warning protected by the First Amendment.

The Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division sued Dillard in 2011 for sending the letter to Dr. Mila Means. At the time, abortions were not being performed in Wichita in the wake of the 2009 slaying of Dr. George Tiller.

Brownback administration suspends Medicaid waiver integration

BY ANDY MARSO

Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service Rep. Les Osterman, a Republican from Wichita, spoke at a March rally outside the Capitol for disability advocates seeking a delay of the state’s plan to integrate Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities. Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration will not fight a legislative directive to postpone the integration of Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities, according to an email sent Wednesday by an administration official. -
Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service Rep. Les Osterman, a Republican from Wichita, spoke at a March rally outside the Capitol for disability advocates seeking a delay of the state’s plan to integrate Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities. Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration will not fight a legislative directive to postpone the integration of Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities, according to an email sent Wednesday by an administration official. –

Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration will not fight a legislative directive to postpone the integration of Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities, according to an email sent by an administration official.

The Legislature passed a budget early Monday that included a provision prohibiting spending in the next fiscal year on any waiver integration plan to be implemented before July 2018.

Brownback could have vetoed that part of the budget bill. But an email sent Wednesday by Becky Ross, director of Medicaid initiatives for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, suggests the governor will let it stand.

“Due to a legislative directive, KDHE and KDADS (the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services) are suspending work on the waiver integration project,” Ross wrote in the email. “The agencies’ leadership expects to reassess the project at a future date to determine when to resume work and when it will be implemented.”

The administration’s decision appears to end a months-long saga during which advocates for Kansans with disabilities repeatedly voiced concerns that the integration plan was moving ahead too quickly, with too few details about how it would be operated.

The waivers provide Medicaid coverage for support services that allow Kansans with disabilities to remain in home and community-based settings rather than institutions. The services are split into seven groups based on type of disability: developmental, physical, frail elderly, autism, traumatic brain injury, technology assisted and serious emotional disturbance.

The Brownback administration’s plan would compress the services into two groups: one for children and one for adults. Administration officials say that would allow all Kansans to receive a broader array of services more efficiently, rather than being constrained by labels.

But disability advocates worried it could lead to service reductions.

The administration already agreed to delay it once, prior to this week’s suspension.

Sean Gatewood, a former Democratic legislator, is a spokesman for the KanCare Advocates Network, a coalition of groups that work with people on Medicaid, which in Kansas is a privatized program called KanCare.

“We’re just excited the administration and the Legislature took a stance to delay (integration) and get meaningful input from legislators and stakeholders,” Gatewood said.

Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita who chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee, appointed a subcommittee to evaluate the administration’s integration plan and the advocates’ concerns.

After that subcommittee in March returned a report that also concluded the plan was short on details and should be postponed, Hawkins procured a letter from Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer assuring him the administration would not move forward until after the 2017 session.

According to Ross’ email, the project is now on hold indefinitely.

Hal Schultz, a Lawrence resident who leads a self-advocacy group for Kansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities, said that was good news.

“I actually like that idea, because I think that if we put all the waivers into one that it would make things really confused for the state and for self-advocates and also that services would not be done the correct way,” he said.

Schultz, who spoke about waiver integration during a March rally at the Statehouse, said he felt like he was being heard by his representatives in government. Schultz said he and other advocates remain willing to provide input on any future waiver integration plan.

But Wednesday’s announcement also suspended the activities of several workgroups the administration had formed to discuss the plan.

Patricia A. Starbuck

Patricia A. Starbuck, age 78, died Friday, April 29, 2016, at Hays Medical Center Hays, Kansas.

She was born March 10, 1938, in Hays to Kenneth Sturgeon and Amelia Leiker.

She was a medical laboratory technician for 16 years and worked at Travenol Labs. for 17 years.  She attended Wichita Business College, Fort Hays State University and received a Associate Degree in Applied Science from Barton County Community College.

She played saxophone and clarinet with The Eddie Frank Orchestra and The Vicky Star Quintet for 26 years.  She was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church, Hays, and the American Society of Clinical Pathology.  She was a charter member of the American Federation of Professional Musicians’ Club.

Survivors include cousins and a host of friends.  She was preceded in death by her mother and stepfather, George Starbuck.

A memorial service will be held at 7:00 p.m. Thursday, May 5, 2016, at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd St.   A private inurnment will be held at St. Joseph Cemetery, Hays.

A gathering of friends will be from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. Thursday, at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays.

Memorials to Hays Medical Center Special Nursing or the Humane Society of the High Plains.

Condolences can be sent via e-mail to [email protected]

‘Honor Bell Birth Tour’ to stop in Ellis Saturday afternoon

A small replica of the Honor Bell which will be forged in Cincinnati
A small replica of the Honor Bell which will be forged in Cincinnati, weighing 1,000 pounds and 3-feet wide.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

ELLIS–The Honor Bell Foundation, based in Denver, is creating a community of veterans to foster public appreciation of military service and honor their fellow veterans with a proper, final tribute.

The first-ever Honor Bell is being made from metal artifacts, including military medals and pins,  donated by families of deceased Colorado veterans.

The “Birth of the Bell” tour will stop in Ellis Saturday afternoon with the artifacts on its way to Cincinnati, Ohio, where the bell will be forged.

Ellis Police Chief and retired Army Ranger Taft Yates, said the public is invited to visit with Honor Bell Foundation founder and CEO, Lou Olivera–who is also a Vietnam vet–in the Fischer Liquor Store parking lot from 1:45 to 2:15 p.m. .

“These artifacts get melted into the material which becomes the bell,” Yates explained.

honor bell foundation logo“The goal of the foundation–and it may take a very long time–is to have one of these 1,000 pound Honor Bells in every national cemetery in the U.S.   They can be used at various ceremonies–Veterans Day, Memorial Day, Wreaths Across America–and military funerals.”

The “Birth of the Bell Tour” riders include Patriot Guard Riders, Combat Veterans Motorcycle Association, VFW Warriors, American Legion Riders and others who ride along as far as they like.

The group is scheduled to arrive in Cincinnati Sunday, May 8, with foundry casting to begin Monday, May 9.  The mold is expected to be broken Thu., May 12, to reveal the Honor Bell and prepare it for tuning, polishing and mounting.

Saturday, May 21–Armed Forces Day–the “Forged With Honor Tour” will begin the journey with the Honor Bell from Ohio home to Ft. Logan National Cemetery in Denver.

For more information or to make a donation to the Honor Bell Foundation, go online at www.honorbell.org or Facebook.

Kansas man plans to change plea in Fort Riley bomb case

Blair- photo Shawnee County
Blair- photo Shawnee County

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Federal court documents show that a 29-year-old Topeka man plans to plead guilty to a conspiracy charge in connection with a plot last year to bomb the Fort Riley military base.

Alexander E. Blair’s attorney filed a request Thursday to change the not guilty plea entered for him last year by a federal magistrate.

A change-of-plea hearing is May 23.

Blair is charged with helping 21-year-old John T. Booker Jr. of Topeka in planning to plant a bomb outside the Army installation in northeast Kansas to aid the Islamic State group.

Blair could face up to three years in prison.

Booker pleaded guilty in February to two charges under an agreement with prosecutors calling for him to spend 30 years in prison. He has not yet been sentenced.

Kansas man charged with lying before FBI motel shootout, fire

Fire at the motel during gun battle -photo courtesy WIBW -TV
Fire at the motel during gun battle -photo courtesy WIBW -TV

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A man has been charged with lying about the whereabouts of a robbery suspect who killed himself during a fiery shootout that injured three federal agents at a Kansas motel.

The U.S. attorney’s office says 36-year-old Quentin Kirk Lawton, of Topeka, was charged Wednesday with one count of making a false statement to a federal officer. He is in federal custody. It wasn’t immediately known if he had an attorney.

The indictment alleges that Lawton denied having seen 28-year-old fugitive Orlando Collins after visiting him last month in a room at the Country Club Motel in Topeka. Lawton left the motel shortly before fugitive task force member came under fire while trying to arrest Collins. Authorities said Collins killed himself after starting a fire that caused $350,000 in damage.

KU chancellor vetoes fees for multicultural student government

Chancellor Little during a forum on alleged racism last fall
Chancellor Little during a forum on alleged racism last fall

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — University of Kansas Chancellor Bernadette Gray-Little has vetoed student funding for a parallel government for minority students.

The chancellor said in a letter to the Student Senate Wednesday that she could not recommend a $2 student fee because the revenue would be collected during the next academic year, even though the new government is not in place.

The Student Senate approved the Multicultural Student Government in March but details of how it would be structured and work with the current student government were not decided.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports Trinity Carpenter, who helped lead the effort to create a second government, said the work to secure funding will continue. She says minority students want an equal body that would work with the Student Senate, not as a separate body.

Sen. Moran discusses UAS program with FHSU faculty

(Pictured from left to right: Dr. Bill Stark, U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) and Dr. Craig Smith)
Dr. Bill Stark, U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran  and Dr. Craig Smith talk about the UAS program at FHSU.

Office of Sen. Moran

U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) met with Fort Hays State University Departments of Agriculture and Biological Sciences faculty Wednesday to learn more about the school’s Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) program.

Three months ago, FHSU was awarded a grant by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to develop curricula focused on the use of UAS in precision agriculture. As Chairman of the Senate Agriculture Appropriations Committee, Sen. Moran secured funding for the USDA program, which is furnishing the grant.

“Kansas is poised to see a tremendous economic impact resulting from the growth of the UAS industry, specifically its role in precision agriculture,” Sen. Moran said in a news release. “This promising program will give Kansas students the opportunity to gain hands-on experience in operating UAS and incorporating the technology into agriculture. FHSU is leading the way making certain graduates are equipped with the knowledge and skill set to help keep our farmers and ranchers on the forefront of technological advancements.”

The UAS program is in the first year of a three-year grant partnership.

In Kansas alone, the economic impact of UAS technologies is estimated at $2.9 billion over the next decade.

During his visit, Sen. Moran met with University Provost Dr. Graham Glynn; Agriculture Department Chair Don Benjamin; Assistant Professor Dr. Craig Smith; Professor Dr. Bill Stark; Professor and Chair of Biological Sciences Dr. Greg Farley; Assistant Professor Robert Keener, DVM; and FHSU Foundation Director of Development Tammy McClellan.

Mark C. Whitney

Mark C. Whitney
Mark C. Whitney

Norton resident, Mark C. Whitney, died Tuesday, May 3, 2016, at the Phillips County Hospital in Phillipsburg at the age of 65.

He was born July 30, 1950 in Omaha, NE. He was welcomed into the home of Joan and Eddie Whitney at the age of three.

He is survived by his wife Torre of St. Francis, KS; father Eddie Whitney of Norton, KS; stepchildren, Teresa Douthit of Junction City, KS, Chad Douthit of Basehor, KS, and Megan Douthit-Downey of St. Francis, KS; and 5 grandchildren.

Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 11:00 a.m. Monday, May 9, 2016, in the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, Norton, KS. Burial will follow in the St. Francis Cemetery, St. Francis, KS at 3:00 p.m.

A Scriptural Wake and Rosary will be conducted Sunday evening at the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church at 7:00 p.m. The family will then receive friends until 8:30 p.m. at the church.

Mark will lie in state at the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, from 12 noon until 9:00 p.m. Saturday and at the Catholic Church in Norton from 5 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. Sunday.

Memorial contributions may be made to the St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church or the Norton Knights of Columbus.

Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, 1115 2nd Street, Phillipsburg, KS, 67661, is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences at www.olliffboeve.com.

New Master Teacher joins VCA staff

Debbie Ermoian
Debbie Ermoian

Submitted

The Board of Directors of Victory Christian Academy in Hays announced that Debbie Ermoian will be joining the VCA staff as the upper grade elementary teacher for the 2016-2017 school year.

Ermoian has served the Hays USD 489 school district at Jefferson and Roosevelt Elementary Schools and Hays Middle School since 1993.

She has twice received “Master Teacher” honors.

Pam Brown, president of the VCA Board said in a news release, “We are thrilled to have someone with the vast experience and tremendous personal rapport with students that Debbie brings to our growing school. She will be a wonderful addition to our committed Christian staff.”

Victory Christian Academy is a non-denominational school with preschool (3 and 4 year olds) as well as kindergarten through fifth grades with a focus on educational excellence and spiritual formation.

VCA is housed at Celebration Community Church, 5709 230th Ave. in Hays.

To find out more about Victory Christian Academy and Pre-School visit their website at haysvca.com or call (785 )639-6303.

Suspect charged in fatal Kansas parking spot dispute stabbing

Collins- courtesy photo
Collins- courtesy photo

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has been charged with fatally stabbing a woman during a parking spot dispute.

Thirty-eight-year-old Seth Collins made his first court appearance Wednesday on charges of second-degree murder and aggravated battery in the death of 22-year-old Kayla Brown. The Wichita Eagle reports that Collins is jailed in Sedgwick County on $250,000 bond. A public defender will represent him.

Collins is accused of stabbing Brown once in the neck and her twin sister in the arm Saturday night in the parking lot of an apartment complex where they all lived. Police have said the driver’s door of Brown’s car was open when Collins tried to park, preventing him from pulling into a stall.

Brown died early Sunday morning at a Wichita hospital. Her sister’s injuries weren’t life-threatening.

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