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HPD Activity Log June 15

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The Hays Police Department responded to 11 animal calls and 51 traffic stops Wed., June 15, 2016, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Driving Under the Influence–1000 block E 8th St, Hays; 1:13 AM
Animal At Large–1000 block Reservation Rd, Hays; 6:08 AM
Animal At Large–1700 block Hall St, Hays; 7:09 AM
Criminal Damage to Property–1500 block US 183 Alt Hwy, Hays; 7:25 AM
Found/Lost Property–100 block W 12th St, Hays’ 7:41 AM
MV Accident-City Street/Alley–1300 block Main St, Hays; 10:31 AM
MV Accident-Private Property–2500 block Vine St, Hays; 12:05 PM
Animal At Large–100 block Main St, Hays; 12:13 PM
Theft (general)–1600 block E 27th St, Hays; 6/10 12:26 PM; 6/13
Create Public Nuisance–200 block W 5th St, Hays; 1:06 PM
Animal At Large–1300 block Lawrence Dr, Hays; 1:23 PM
Theft (general)–100 block W 35th St, Hays; 1:46 PM
Document Service–1300 block Felten Dr, Hays; 2 PM
Theft (general)–1300 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 6/10; 6/11
MV Accident-Private Property–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 2:43 PM
Parking Complaint–2700 block Hickory St, Hays; 2:50 PM
Harassment (All Other)–100 block W 6th St, Hays; 3:05 PM
Forgery–300 block E 11th St, Hays; 3:25 PM
Lost Animals ONLY–1400 block Washington Cir, Hays; 3:31 PM
Civil Dispute–200 block W 17th St, Hays; 3:57 PM
Found/Lost Property–Hays; 4:30 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:46 PM
Unwanted Person–1900 block Vine St, Hays; 5:04 PM
Animal At Large–1700 block Judith Dr, Hays; 5:12 PM
Driving Under the Influence–600 block W 13th St, Hays; 8:52 PM; 10:56 PM
Driving Under the Influence–100 block W 13th St, Hays; 11:14 PM

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HHS Junior Kelli Buxton prepares to crown new Rodeo Queen

buxton at el co fair
Kelli Buxton, 2015 Ellis County Rodeo Queen, waves to the crowd from her horse.

By ANNISTON WEBER
Hays High School Guidon

Hays High School junior Kelli Buxton was crowned Ellis County Rodeo Queen last year during her sophomore year of high school. Now, as a junior, Buxton is preparing to retire her crown and hand it off to a new queen.

“I’m sad to see this end,” Buxton said. “But I’m excited to move on to something different and new.”

Buxton said she has been involved with the Ellis County Rodeo Pageant for quite a few years. “Some girls from my 4-H club were involved and it looked fun,” Buxton said.

rodeo queen kelli
Buxton will end her reign as Ellis County Rodeo Queen July 19.

As Rodeo Queen, Buxton had to secure a sponsorship, make two Ellis County appearances and two out-of-county appearances.

“The experiences of the appearances depend on the event,” Buxton said. “I went to ones where they introduced me and I signed pictures. During other ones I went to nursing homes, modeled an outfit and signed pictures.”

Buxton was also involved in many pageant activities.

The Miss Ellis County Rodeo Pageant will begin Sunday, July 10,  at 8:00 a.m. at the Ellis County Fairgrounds, Hays.  The winners will be announced at the first performance of the rodeo at the Ellis County Fair, Tuesday, July 19.

The Ellis County Fair runs July 16-23.

 

Moss-Thorns to host “The Magic Box” reception Friday

(Photos courtesy Foxy-Wolff)
(Photos courtesy Foxy-Wolff)

FHSU University Relations and Marketing

Fort Hays State University graduate Kate Fox will hold a closing reception for her exhibition, “The Magic Box,” from 6 to 9:30 p.m. on Friday, June 17, at the Moss-Thorns Gallery of Art in Rarick Hall on the FHSU campus.

Fox created the exhibition for her Masters of Fine Arts in Intermedia, with which she graduated in May.

The Moss-Thorns gallery is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m Monday through Friday.

Fox’s work can be viewed at https://www.foxywolff.com.

Hot in Hays Wednesday, but not a record

IMG_6897[1]
An auto readout of the temperature in Hays Wednesday at 6:30 p.m.
By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

It was hot in Hays Wednesday.

According to the official record from the K-State Agricultural Research Station, the high temperature yesterday, June 15, was 103 degrees.

But that wasn’t high enough to break the record of 105 degrees on June 15, 1985.

The temperature dropped considerably after 8 p.m. as a fierce wind kicked up from strong thunderstorms that developed just east of Hays. According to Ray Burgert of the National Weather Service, it led to a strong outflow of air pushing in the other direction. While the rain and storms moved east, a strong west wind blew through Hays.

One year ago on June 15, the temperature in Hays reached just 85 degrees.

$200K in damage after fire at rural Kansas home

Thursday morning fire in Riley County.
Thursday morning fire in Riley County.

RILEY COUNTY – Investigators are working to determine the cause of a large garage fire on Thursday morning in Riley County.

Just after 2 a.m., Fire crews responded to a rural residence at 6660 North 52nd Street and found the garage fully engulfed in flames, according to Riley County Fire Chief Pat Collins.

In addition minor damage to the siding of the house, two vehicles were lost in the fire.

Damage is estimated at approximately $210,000, according to Collins.

There were no injuries reported

Moran Presses VA on Inadequate Progress on Timely Access to Care

MoranWASHINGTON – More than one year after the Government Accountability Office (GAO) included the Department of Veterans’ Affairs (VA) on its annual list of “High-Risk” federal agencies, U.S. Senator Jerry Moran (R-Kan.) joined a bipartisan group of eleven senators in writing Under Secretary for Health of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Dr. David Shulkin to raise their ongoing concerns regarding veterans’ timely access to quality VA health care. The senators urged the agency to take both short and long-term action to address the issues raised in the GAO report.

Sen. Moran and others asked the agency to promptly issue a comprehensive scheduling directive to address immediate wait times and healthcare access issues. The group also requested that the agency streamline operations and map out an aggressive and comprehensive strategy to resolve chronic risks identified by the GAO.

“More than a year has passed since the GAO identified VHA as vulnerable to fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement, and in need of transformation, based on five serious, long-standing and well documented deficiencies,” the group wrote. “As a result of these deficiencies, VHA was included on GAO’s list of “High-Risk” federal agencies. This letter sets out the three critical steps you must take to restore our confidence that VHA can resolve the chronic risks identified for veterans’ access to quality VA health care.”

Today’s letter was signed by U.S. Sens. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), John Boozman (R-Ark.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Jon Tester (D-Mont.), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.).

Click here to read the full letter to Under Secretary Shulkin.

Gary R. Lindenmuth

Gary Lindenmuth 001Gary R. Lindenmuth, 77, Hays, died Monday, June 13, 2016, at McAllen Heart Hospital, McAllen Texas.

He was born June 28, 1938 in Wenatchee, Washington, to Leo (Pappy) and Hazel (Stukey) Lindenmuth. On May 29, 1958 he married Helen Hendrix in Chickasha, OK. Gary truly enjoyed entertaining and spending time with his family and friends.

He was an avid golfer and enjoyed traveling to his home in Newfoundland each summer. He worked for Chief Drilling Company for many years and the last 22 years he has been employed part-time at Doerflers’ Harley-Davidson.  He was a member of the First United Methodist Church, Hays.

Survivors include his wife of the home, two children, a son, Jeff Lindenmuth of Hays, a daughter, Deanna Doerfler and husband Brian of Hays, three grandchildren, Niles Lindenmuth, Wichita, Ashley Doerfler Clark, and husband Derek, Marietta, GA, Tara Doerfler Chapin and husband David, Cincinnati, OH., three great grandchildren, Chase Brian Clark, Lila Jane and Quinn Lauren Chapin, and one sister, Joyce Disque and husband Wally.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

Memorial services will be at 11:00 am on Monday, June 20, 2016 at the First United Methodist Church, 305 W. 7th Street, Hays. Cremation has taken place in McAllen, Texas.  The family will receive friends on Sunday from 5:00 until 7:00 pm at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine, and from 10:00 am until service time on Monday at the church.

Memorials are suggested to First United Methodist Church or to the Fort Hays Municipal Golf Course, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

HaysMed one of two hospitals to earn Centers of Excellence honor

Healthy Kansas Hospitals Centers of Excellence to Hays Medical Center
Award Ceremony will be at 3:00 p.m. on June 22 in the Rock Garden Cafe


Kansas Hospital Association

If you haven’t visited Hays Medical Center in a while, you might be surprised by some of the changes you see—and taste. The newly remodeled hospital dining area, now called the Rock Garden Café, is the face of a much broader set of healthy initiatives HaysMed has championed in recent months. The 207-bed community hospital – one of the largest employers in Hays – has made significant changes to its food and beverage policy to promote healthy choices among staff, patients and guests. Hospital administrators, physicians and associates are taking the message out to the wider community as well.

“For decades our core purpose has been to help people be healthy, and that involves more than taking care of the sick and injured – it also involves taking steps to improve population health,” says John Jeter, MD, Hays Medical Center President and CEO. “For us, the Healthy Kansas Hospitals initiative fell right in line with our core purpose and represents our shared goal for creating healthier Kansas communities.”

That was the driving force behind the hospital’s pledge in 2014 to participate in Healthy Kansas Hospitals, which is a project of the Kansas Hospital Education and Research Foundation. The program’s goal is to help hospitals provide healthier food and beverage options throughout the facility for hospital employees, patients and visitors.

“The whole concept of health care is changing for the better,” says Stephanie Howie, Fitness Director at HaysMed’s Center for Health Improvement, where the prevailing philosophy on fitness can be found in signage that says, ‘Exercise is Medicine.’ “Keeping people out of the hospital has become integral to our mission, and we are doing that by promoting healthy habits and physical activity.”

Within two months of signing the pledge, the hospital formed a Healthy Hospital Committee comprised of diet, fitness, and wellness experts working alongside marketing and associate development personnel. Collectively, the Committee keeps new ideas coming to fruition, maintains momentum for overall sustainability, and works to engage others in both the journey and the goal. John Fitzthum joined the team as Executive Chef/Food Service Director to oversee the hospital’s dietary department. Fitzthum says he recognized something extraordinary about what HaysMed wanted to achieve as a Healthy Kansas Hospital, and he was eager to come on board to help lead the way to better health.

“The health care industry is finally taking a positive turn when it comes to fresh and fun foods,” he says. “More and more provider organizations are coming to the realization that the processed, high sodium and nutritiously insufficient foods we’ve been eating for the last 25 to 30 years have really affected our health—and that eating correctly should be part of a wellness program for the betterment of patients.”

Renovations for Rock Garden Café were completed in March. The updated eating area no longer serves fried foods, which have been replaced with more nutritious menu items like homemade hummus, baklava and grilled salmon. The hospital now dedicates a larger portion of its food budget to fresh fruits and vegetables, and more than two-thirds of all beverages served in the hospital have no added sugars. Very few starchy food options are still available, and café pricing and placement strategies make the few remaining unhealthy options more “out of reach” than before.

Through the Café’s “Ingredient of the Month” program, they are teaching different ways to prepare healthy foods that satisfy even the choosiest of palates. Recipes involving each ingredient of the month also are published in the local newspaper to expand reach beyond the hospital walls.

Aside from offering healthier items, the hospital also has found fun ways to get people up and moving throughout the day. They added two indoor walking trails for associates and visitors, and they host four 15-minute workout classes every week for hospital associates. They also offer free cooking classes, open to the community as well as hospital staff.

“It’s about being a leader in health care, and that means taking care of not only our patients and their families, but also the 1,200 associates that work at the hospital every day,” says Howie, whose team also works to educate associates about the benefits of the improvements made with regard to healthy food options and opportunities for exercise.

Outside the hospital, HaysMed has taken an innovative and integrated approach to environmental health as well, reducing waste and increasing the vitality of the environment, purchasing a new dishwasher to save 350 gallons of water per week, as well as adding a cardboard and aluminum/plastic recycling program. They replaced most of the fescue grass on campus with native grasses and plants that require far less water for upkeep, and the hospital partners with several members of the community—including WorkWell Kansas, the local school district, and others—to create new opportunities to improve public health.

HaysMed has made exceptional strides both inside and outside the hospital. For its outstanding achievements and innovation, HaysMed has been selected by KHERF as one of two 2016 recipients of the Healthy Kansas Hospitals Centers of Excellence Award. The hospital will receive the award and a monetary contribution to support its continued efforts at a special award ceremony on June 22.

“Our designation as a Centers of Excellence for Healthy Kansas Hospitals is a testament to the hard work and dedication of everyone involved, particularly our medical fitness center and dietary department leaders who work tirelessly to keep bringing bigger and better ideas to life,” says Jeter. “Together with their teams, they are finding ways to fuse healthy lifestyle changes into our culture and making healthy living pervasive within the whole organization.”

Kansas offers smokers help to quit the habit

courtesy image KDHE
courtesy image KDHE

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will start giving away nicotine gum, lozenges and patches next week to help smokers drop the habit.

The Wichita Eagle reports that effort will last from June 20 to July 1, or while supplies last. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is distributing the nicotine replacement products.

To participate, smokers can call the state’s Tobacco Quitline. They also must enroll with a trained coach who will help them quit using tobacco.

The program is part of a national tobacco education campaign through the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

State health officials say nearly one in five Kansas adults smoke cigarettes and that nearly 70 percent of all cigarette smokers want to quit.

Biting wind, dust storm cause delays at Hays sports complex

The fields at Bickle-Schmidt Sports Complex were filled with players and their families just after 8 p.m. Wednesday. The weather was sweltering — still air and early evening temperatures remaining in the 90s.

Then, with a gust, the complex was engulfed in something reminiscent of the Dirty ‘30s.

According to Ray Burgert of the National Weather Service, the strong thunderstorm that developed just east of Hays led to a strong outflow of air pushing in the other direction. While the rain and storms moved east, a strong west wind blew through Hays.

RELATED: Winds blow over semi on I-70.

While the machine that measures wind speed at the Hays Regional Airport isn’t functioning at the moment, Burgert estimated wind speeds of 50 mph — a figure that most at the complex would consider to be conservative.

Have photos, video of the dust storm? Send them to Hays Post.

With construction of the Fort Hays State University track complex just to the east of the complex, the wind — which blew steadily for up to 30 minutes — kicked up a dust cloud that sand-blasted participants and blocked the sun. Games came to a halt until the winds calmed.

Just a few minutes after the wind started, the temperature had dropped up to 15 degrees. The event seemed to be localized, as reports Thursday from other areas of Hays included strong wind, but no dust storm.

That relief will be short-lived, however, as this weekend’s brutal heat forecast is holding.

“You’ll recover today and heat right back up,” Burgert said, noting a Thursday high of 103 degrees is expected. “The heat stays with us through the weekend.”

Click HERE for the completed extended forecast.

INSIGHT KANSAS: Democrats in Deep Red Kansas

Twenty-five years ago, my colleague Al Cigler and I wrote a paper titled “Two-Party Politics in a One-Party State.” The thesis was simple.  Although Democrats at that time (1991) controlled the governorship, commanded a slender majority in the Kansas House, and held two (of five) U.S. House seats, Kansas remained essentially a Republican state, albeit one where Democrats could compete successfully for many offices.

Burdett Loomis
Burdett Loomis

Party registration numbers, the GOP’s dominance of U.S. Senate elections (since 1932), and Republican majorities in presidential contests (since 1964) led us to conclude that the state remained strongly, if not overwhelmingly, Republican.  Still, the Democratic Party of the 1970s through 1994 proved highly competitive.  Most importantly, it regularly captured the governorship; from 1966 through 1994, Democratic governors (R. Docking, Carlin, Finney) served for 20 years, while Republicans Bennett and Hayden each served one four-year term.

It could have easily been worse for the GOP.

In 1974, Democratic Rep. Bill Roy came close to defeating incumbent senator Bob Dole, and Democratic Attorney General Vern Miller lost by just 3000 votes to Bennett.  In 1977 and 1991, Democrats won control of the Kansas House, and throughout the 80’s and into the 90’s, Democrats were highly competitive in both chambers.

So what happened?

One partial answer is that guns and abortion crowded out economic issues for some voters, and the moderate wing of the GOP began to lose traction.  But more important has been the nationalization of state politics in Kansas.

Two major national  GOP “wave” elections changed the composition of the Kansas Legislature.  In 1994, after the first two years of the Clinton administration and a failed attempt to pass national health care reform, Republicans won sweeping victories across the country. In Kansas, this meant that Democrats lost 14 seats, and stabilized their numbers in the House at about 45. Still, on key votes, they could join with moderate Republicans to pass major legislation, as with school funding in 2005.

The second red “wave,” of 2010, after Obama’s successful national health care reform, swept Sam Brownback into office, along with an overwhelming GOP majority, including an absolute majority of far-right Republicans.  In 2012, Brownback and his allies linked moderate Republicans to Obama and, using national funding, eliminated most centrists from the Senate. Kansas Democrats have recently held eight (of 40) Senate seats and about 28 (of 125) House seats.

In 2014, national again politics intervened to affect the Kansas partisan balance.  After almost losing his primary election, Senator Pat Roberts was widely seen as vulnerable, and retaining his seat was crucial for Republicans to capture the Senate.  In the three months before the general election, millions upon millions of dollars in outside funding was spent to defend Roberts’ seat; he won handily, and the far-more-vulnerable Brownback narrowly won re-election, pulled across the finish line by Roberts’ anti-Obama campaign ads, mailers, and robo-calls.

To be sure, Kansas appears a far deeper red state than it was fifteen or twenty years ago. The state Republican Party has maintained its advantages, and extremely conservative activists have worked effectively to elect their candidates.

So, what of 2016? Republicans will nominate a presidential candidate in Donald Trump who did poorly in our caucuses, and, according to one Kansas survey, may actually trail Hillary Clinton.  Moreover, his bombastic campaign style and questionable statements likely weaken his appeal at the top of the ticket.

At the same time, Governor Brownback, while not on the ballot, dominates the politics of Kansas, largely in a negative way.  Most incumbents have little desire to associate themselves with him, while Democratic (and moderate Republican) candidates are readying their ads, which explicitly link their incumbent opponents to the governor.

Within a few months we’ll know whether Kansas will remain its deep-red self of the past six years or will return, perhaps, to “two-party competition in a one-party state.”

Burdett Loomis is a professor of political science at the University of Kansas.

Larks rally past Liberal for fifth straight win

LIBERAL, Kan. – The Hays Larks continued their hot start with a 7-4 win over the Liberal BeeJays at Brent Gould Field Wednesday night. After the BeeJays (3-7, 2-6 Jayhawk League) scored three runs in the seventh inning to tie the game 3-3, the Larks (11-1, 7-1 Jayhawk League) answered with three in the eighth and a run in the ninth for their fifth straight win, all on the road.

Mike Mioduszewski had three hits and drove in three including the go-ahead run in the eighth. He also scored three times. Connor Ross, who drove in the game winner in the ninth inning on Tuesday, also had three hits.

DJ Carr (2-0) pitched 1 1/3 innings of scoreless relief and picked up the win. Chad Smith gave up a run on two hits in the ninth but nailed down his fourth save.

The Larks go for the sweep Wednesday night. They return home for three with the Bethany Bulls on Friday.

Wednesday’s Jayhawk League scoreboard…
Hays 7, Liberal 4
Bethany 8, Dodge City 6
Derby 10, El Dorado 5
Wellington at Haysville, ppd rain

Eagles Senior Legion sweeps Dodge City

HAYS, Kan. – Make that six straight wins for the Hays Eagles Senior American Legion baseball team after a sweep of Dodge City Wednesday night at Larks Park. Hays won the opener 9-1 then took the second game 4-2 to improve to 6-2 on the season.

The Eagles did all of their damage in the late in the first game, scoring four runs in the fifth and five in the sixth. Dalton Stout had three hits including an RBI triple in the sixth. Marcus Altman added a two-run double and drove in three along with Jared Haynes. Ryan Ruder pitched three scoreless innings of relief for the win.

Altman gave up a run on six hits in two innings of relief and picked up the win in the second game. Jared Haynes and Dawson Harman both had two hits.

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