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Historic WWII-era bomber lands in Hays (VIDEO)

By COOPER SLOUGH
Hays Post

A national treasure dating back to World War II landed at the Hays Regional Airport on Monday. Maid in the Shade — a B-25 bomber — touched down in front of a crowd of eager onlookers just after noon as part of the Arizona Airbase Aviation Museum’s 2016 Flying Legends of Victory tour.

The goal of the Flying Legends of Victory tour is to celebrate the legacy of the men and women who flew these aircraft, and provide the public the opportunity to experience the aircraft up close.

The bomber’s volunteer crew includes Jim Swanke, Don Rader, Tom Earl, Roland Smith and Rich Petty.

Victory Marks
Victory marks denoting number of completed missions.

Manufactured in early 1944, Maid in the Shade is a rare warbird — one of only 34 flying B-25s left in existence. It flew 15 total missions, 13 over Italy and two over Yugoslavia. According to the crew, its main role was to bomb enemy oil fields, which crippled the enemy’s ability to manufacture planes, tanks, and other mechanized vehicles.

B-25s are classified as medium bombers and have a range of 1,350 miles.

Daily tours are taking place through Sunday, June 12, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Flight times are 9, 10 and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturday and 9, 10 and 11 a.m. and noon Sunday.

Flight times are subject to change in order to fill space.

For more information or to reserve flights, contact (602) 448-2350 or [email protected]. Rides are being scheduled now.

Flight deck area seats are $650 each, and waist gunner seats are $395 each.

Sheriff: Riding lawnmower started Kansas house fire

photo Saline Co. Sheriff
photos from Saline Co. Sheriff

SALINE COUNTY – A fire at a rural Saline County residence is being blamed on a riding lawnmower .

Marc Thomas, 54, Smolan, had been mowing his yard and parked the mower on a patio behind his house in the 300 Block of South Main, according to Undersheriff Roger Soldan.

Thirty minutes later, a neighbor told Thomas the back of his house was on fire.

The blaze melted the siding on the back of the house, melted a gas can and destroyed the 1982 Honda Goldwing motorcycle.

Thomas who put the fire out before emergency crews arrived suffered burns to his feet.

6-6 Fire 3Marquette Fire and EMS responded to the fire as did Saline County Rural Fire District #2.

The loss is estimated at $2,500, according to Soldan.

Mary Barbara Purser

1715058_profile_picMary Barbara Purser, age 64, of Fayetteville, died Monday, December 7, 2015, in Fayetteville Ark.

She was born January 5, 1951 in Hays, Kansas, the daughter of Elmer and Mary Barbara Hammerschmidt Schmidt. She was preceded in death by her parents, her sister, Phyllis Pentecost and a sister-in-law, Sally Schmidt.

She spent 43 years working at Campbell Soup/Vlasic/Pinnacle Foods in Fayetteville and was a member of St. Raphael Catholic Church in Springdale.

She is survived by her husband, Larry Purser; a daughter, Sara Purser of Russellville, Arkansas; two sons, Mike Hignite and his wife Marjay of Springdale and Jim Hignite of Fayetteville; three step-children, Kimberly Honeycutt, Doug Purser and Sam Purser; four sisters, Dorothy Boulware of Kansas City, Missouri, Glenda Thompson of Minneapolis, Minnesota, Chloe Peters of Wichita, Kansas and Chris Purdy of Junction City, Kansas; four brothers, Terry Schmidt of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Melvin Schmidt of Beloit, Kansas, Elmer Schmidt of Hays, Kansas and Tom Schmidt of Hays, Kansas; five grandchildren, Jackson, Mary Emma, John Paul, Blake and Spencer and seven step-grandchildren.

Visitation will be 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., Thursday, December 10, 2015 at Moore’s Chapel. Funeral service will be 10:30 a.m., Friday, December 11 at St. Raphael Catholic Church in Springdale followed by burial at Fayetteville National Cemetery, under the direction of Moore’s Chapel.

Ellis County to consider fireworks policy at next meeting

Ellis Co. Rural Fire Director Darin Myers
Ellis Co. Rural Fire Director Darin Myers

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Despite the spring rains, Ellis County Rural Fire Director Darin Myers is not in favor of allowing the discharge of July 4th holiday fireworks in unincorporated areas of the county.

“From a safety standpoint, you can’t tell if it’s going to be 90 degrees every day for the next three weeks and dry out,” Myers pointed out. “It can be windy.”

“Firetrucks responding out in the county is a lot different than within the city–longer distances, different types of grass, different types of winds–so you’ve got to take that all in to account.”

During Monday night’s Ellis County commission meeting, the commissioners asked Myers to find out what the fireworks policy is in surrounding counties and to bring that information along with a draft resolution to the next commission meeting.

“This is the first time in how many years (since April 2011) the entire state of Kansas is drought-free,” noted Commissioner Barb Wasinger.  “As much as I hate fireworks, I think we’re a little bit over a barrel on this–without having a drought designation that people will want to have fireworks.”

Last year Myers recommended against allowing fireworks but the commissioners voted in favor of it.

According to Myers, rural firefighters responded to two fireworks-related fires last July. The city of Hays is allowing fireworks from July 2-4 during the hours of 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.

Tyler Lee Gabel

Tyler Lee Gabel, age 12, passed away at his home on Monday, June 6, 2016. He was born in Wichita, Kansas, on March 20, 2004, the son of Brian and Carolyn Ferguson Gabel.

He was a member of the Sacred Heart Church and the Ness City Grade School 5th grade class.

He is survived by his parents Brian and Carolyn Gabel, his brother, Ryan, sister, Alexis, and two grandmothers, Nancy Ferguson and Shirley Gabel all of Ness City; two uncles, Steve Brackney (Sharon), Charleston, SC and Craig Gabel (Teresa),Wichita; and one aunt, Valerie Gabel (special friend Randy), Rowlett, TX. He was preceded in death by his identical twin brother, Jacob Gabel, one grandfather, Junior Gabel, and one uncle, David Ferguson.

Rosary will be on Friday, June 10, 6:30 p.m. followed by the Parish Vigil at 7:00. Funeral Service will be on Saturday, June 11, 2016, 10:00 a.m. at the church. Burial in the Sacred Heart Cemetery.

Memorial Contributions may be given to the Ness City Elementary School and the Sacred Heart Church.

Governor to call lawmakers into session on Kan. school funding

School funding smallTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback is calling the Kansas Legislature into special session to deal with education funding issues.

The Republican governor said Tuesday that he would call a special session but hasn’t set a date.

Brownback said in a statement that he is calling the session to “keep Kansas schools open” in response to a state Supreme Court order last month.

The court rejected some changes in school finance laws made by Republican lawmakers earlier this year to improve funding for poor districts.

The justices said poor schools still wouldn’t get their fair share of the state’s more than $4 billion in annual aid to its 286 districts.

The court warned that schools won’t be able to open after June 30 if lawmakers don’t approve further fixes.

Sheriff: Great Bend coach arrested for alleged sex crime

Todd Kaiser
Todd Kaiser

BARTON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating a suspect for alleged sex crimes.

On Monday, the Barton County Sheriff’s Office received a report of sexual exploitation of a child that had occurred in the City of Great Bend, according to a media release.

Sheriff’s deputies conducted an investigation and identified a suspect.

A search warrant was obtained for electronic media and served.

Sheriff’s Detectives arrested Todd E. Kaiser, 54, Great Bend.

He was booked into the Barton County Jail on one count of sexual exploitation of a child. Kaiser posted a $50,000 surety bond and was released.

Kaiser is employed by USD 428 as Eisenhower Elementary School’s Physical Education instructor.

He also serves as the head coach for the Great Bend High School cross country and track and field teams.

The juvenile will not be identified and is currently not a resident of Barton County.

Fort Hays State to go tobacco-free on July 1

FHSU University Relations

As of July 1, Fort Hays State University will enforce a tobacco-free campus, prohibiting the use of all tobacco products on all areas of campus.

FDA-approved smoking cessation products, such as nicotine patches or gum, are excluded from the ban. Smoking is currently allowed in specified FHSU parking lots.

The policy will operate on a self-enforced basis, and violators will not be fined.

“We aren’t trying to make tobacco use illegal,” said Robert Duffy, coordinator of the Drug and Alcohol Wellness Network. “We simply don’t want it on our campus.”

“We want the FHSU community to hold itself accountable and remind policy violators that use on campus is prohibited,” he said.

For more information on FHSU tobacco policy and its history, visit www.fhsu.edu/tobacco-policy/ or contact Duffy at 785-628-4401.

Inmate hospitalized after fire at Kansas prison

FireHUTCHINSON – Officials are investigating the cause of a fire at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility.

Just before 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday, a fire was reported at the Hutchinson Correctional Facility – Central Unit, according to a media release.

The fire occurred in a single-man cell in A3 Cell House, which houses special management inmates.

The fire was extinguished by staff at the facility that has been trained to handle these types of emergencies.

The Hutchinson Fire Department was notified and they responded to the facility. One inmate was transported by EMS to a Wichita area hospital for further treatment.

There were no staff injuries. The facility has resumed normal operations.
No other information was released.

Kansas disability service providers await budget change details

By ANDY MARSO

 CREDIT KHI FILE PHOTO

CREDIT KHI FILE PHOTO

Organizations that provide support services to Kansans with disabilities are anxious to see how the state will implement payment changes they fear will hamstring their operations.

The changes are part of cuts Gov. Sam Brownback announced after the Legislature approved a budget that didn’t balance.

Brownback’s administration projected about $2.6 million in savings from Medicaid reimbursement changes that affect providers of home and community-based services, or HCBS, which are intended to allow people with disabilities an alternative to institutional settings.

Cliff Sperry, vice president for CLASS Ltd., an organization in southeast Kansas for people with developmental disabilities, said he needs more information about how state is going to achieve those savings. “Until they tell us what they’re really talking about, we don’t really know how to even figure an impact,” Sperry said.

The money in question comes from changes to how the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services enforces two policies: one governing “capable person” reimbursements and the other residential pay.

Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokeswoman, said the first is a federal regulation that prohibits reimbursement for support services when a person with a disability lives with a non-disabled person who can perform the same task.

For instance, de Rocha said, if non-disabled people are making themselves dinner they also can make it for the people with disabilities who live with them, rather than the state paying them or someone else to do so.

De Rocha said the state expects to save $1.32 million through stricter enforcement of the policy, but she emphasized it would apply only to routine daily tasks for Kansans with disabilities.

“It has nothing to do with their personal care, like their medical treatment,” or nighttime sleep support, de Rocha said. Sperry said he wants to know more about how KDADS enforcement of the policy will change, including how the agency will define “capable person.” “You’ve got family members that, they need some assistance,” Sperry said.

Residential policy change

While the capable person change is stricter enforcement of an existing policy, de Rocha said the residential pay change is an alteration of the policy itself.

KDADS will give providers a per diem reimbursement only when they’re rendering services and not when they’re on call to assist if needed. De Rocha said the agency currently pays for someone to be on call at all times. “The change is going to be that we’re only going to pay for those services if the services are actually delivered,” she said. “We’re no longer going to pay for services that aren’t delivered.”

De Rocha said the change, expected to save the state another $1.32 million, should not reduce organizations’ capacity to serve clients with disabilities.

But Sharon Spratt, CEO of Cottonwood Inc. in Lawrence, said she fears that it could. Spratt’s organization serves Kansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities in Douglas and Jefferson counties. She said the residential pay change could mean her organization won’t be able to continue having staff available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to help clients when they get in a jam.

“They’re at greater risk of abuse, neglect and exploitation,” Spratt said, “to be taken advantage of in different ways, to not have assistance when there’s an emergency, not have assistance if they happen to get involved with the law.”

Spratt said she didn’t want to overreact to the policy changes, but a dearth of details is causing some concern. “We’ve not had a discussion with KDADS,” Spratt said. “So we really don’t know for sure what their plans are or how they’re going to determine how they’re going to pay under this policy.”

Groups taken by surprise

Spratt and Sperry both said their organizations felt misled by Brownback administration statements that the recent budget cuts had “protected” HCBS services by not subjecting them to a 4 percent reimbursement rate cut imposed on other Medicaid providers.

Tim Wood is the executive director of Interhab, a Topeka-based nonprofit that represents service providers for Kansans with developmental and intellectual disabilities. He said that’s a common sentiment among Interhab’s members, given the changes to the capable person and residential pay policies.

“Both of those affect HCBS,” Wood said. “So in one breath they’re saying, ‘We protected you,’ but then they’re going to come around the back door and smack us with this.” Wood said that when federal matching dollars are figured in, the policy changes stand to cost providers about $6 million. Other groups that provide in-home services to elderly Kansas said they were similarly surprised by a $2.1 million cut to the Senior Care Act program.

Janis DeBoer, executive director of the Kansas Association of Area Agencies on Aging and Disabilities, said that represents about 30 percent of the program’s budget, forcing the leaders of her agencies to start a waiting list for services.

DeBoer and Michelle Morgan, director of the Northwest Kansas Area Agency on Aging in Hays, both said the cuts are short-sighted because they will force older Kansans out of their homes earlier. “It seems as though Kansas is creating a roadmap for seniors that leads only to nursing homes,” Morgan said.

Sperry said seeking cost savings in the HCBS program also was likely to lead to more expensive care in institutional settings. “It’s going to happen,” he said. “We’re talking about people with disabilities.”

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

Power restored after Tuesday morning outage in Ellis County UPDATE

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Midwest Energy is investigating the cause of a Tuesday morning blackout.

According to Midwest spokesman Mike Morley, the power outage affected more than 5,600 customers, including much of Hays and west to Ellis. As of about 8:30 a.m., Morley said power had been rerouted and all customers had been restored.

Crews are at a substation north of Hays investigating the cause of the outage.

Check Hays Post for details as they become available.

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Edward J. Karlin

Edward Karlin - Paper PictureHays, Kansas – Edward J. Karlin, age 85, died Monday, June 6, 2016, at the Good Samaritan Society of Hays. He was born December 21,1930, in Hays, Kansas to John A. and Pauline (Rohleder) Karlin. He married Anita M. (Kuhn) on October 26, 1957, in Catharine, Kansas.

He farmed north of Catharine until retiring to Hays. He was a US Army veteran and served in Korea. He was a member of St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church and a life member of the V.F.W. Post No. 9076 both of Hays.

Survivors include his wife, Anita Karlin, of the home; three daughters, Marie Wade and husband, Don, Dodge City, KS; Elizabeth (Lisa) Karlin, Hays, KS; Patricia Havel, and husband, Corey, Leavenworth, KS; one sister, Margaret Karlin, Stamford, Connecticut; four grandchildren, Sam Culbreath, Taylor Wade, Alex Karlin and Grant Karlin.

He was preceded in death by his parents, one daughter, Martha Culbreath, one brother, Alfred Karlin, one infant sister, Pauline Karlin.

Services are at 10:00 A.M. Thursday, June 9, 2016, at St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church, Hays, Kansas. Inurnment will be in St. Joseph Cemetery, Hays, Kansas. A vigil service will be at 9:30 A.M. Thursday, at the Church.

The family will receive friends from 9:00 to 10:00 A.M. Thursday, at St. Nicholas of Myra Catholic Church. Family suggests Masses or memorial to Good Samaritan Society of Hays. Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601 is in charge of arrangements.

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

Kenneth Ronald Olson

Screen Shot 2016-06-07 at 7.45.52 AMKenneth Ronald Olson, age 87 of Kingman, Arizona, died March 10, 2016 in Phoenix, AZ. Kenneth was born February 3, 1929 to Eric and Erma (Nelson) Olson in Two Harbors, Minnesota where he grew up and graduated from Two Harbors High School in 1947.

After serving in the Army in Korea during the Korean Conflict, he returned to Two Harbors and the DM&IR where he worked as a machinist. Work then took him to Babbitt, Minnesota; Superior and Casa Grande, Arizona; and Rawlins and Laramie, Wyoming. He moved to Kingman, Arizona upon retirement in 1995.

Kenneth was preceded in death by his parents, an infant sister Ruth, a step son, and wife Phyllis (Patty) Cartwright Olson in 1988. He is survived by his companion of 27 years Jean Dearden Davis of Kingman, Arizona, (formerly of Scott City, Kansas); step-son George Cartwright of Pillager, Minnesota; cousins who were more like sisters and brother, and numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great grandchildren as well as the children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Jean Davis.

Kenneth requested cremation and a graveside memorial service that will held at 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, June 18, 2016 at the Scott County Cemetery in Scott City, Kansas.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made for research for Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) or for Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD) or to any Veterans group or organization.

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