You’ve no doubt seen the series of yellow signs around town. It’s a reminder of the first Hays Duck Derby benefiting Ellis County Big Brothers Big Sisters (BBBS).
More than 5,000 bright yellow rubber duckies are available “for adoption” costing five dollars for one duck all the way up to a 25-duck colony for $100.
They’ll be racing down the Lazy River at Hays Aquatic Park Wed., Aug. 10, 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the BBBS new fundraiser.
Duck Derby Grand Prize is this 2014 Ford Fiesta
The fastest duck and his/her owner in the Championship Race will win a bright red 2014 Ford Fiesta provided by James Motor Company, Hays Chevrolet, Auto World, Car Zone, Lewis Automotive Group of Hays, Happy’s Auto, Mid Kansas Auto Auction, and Lang Diesel.
Prizes for other races include everything from a one week stay at a cabin in the South Dakota Black Hills to a $250 Walmart gift card.
The ducks for kids are $2 each and each entrant will get to keep one duck.
A separate Duck Race 4 Kids will be held for children younger than 13. There’s more family fun with a hot dog picnic for $3.00 per person and Kids Quacktivities.
The Duck Derby also will feature a Soggy Bottom Challenge Cardboard Boat Regatta for groups paying the $500 entry fee to race their handmade cardboard canoes.
Duck adoptions are available at the Hays Big Brothers Big Sisters office, 1301 Pine,and the following businesses:
Bank of Hays
Big Brothers Big Sisters
Car Zone
Carrico Implement
Cerv’s – 2701 Vine St.
Cerv’s – 1601 Main St.
Cerv’s – 2722 Hall St.
Downtown Hays Development
Eagle Customer Care Office Eagle Media Center
Golden Plains Credit Union
Happy’s Auto
Hays Hobby Shop
Hays Recreation Commission
Hays Welcome Center
James Motor Company
Mid Kansas Auto Auction
Precision Valley
Riverside Chiropractic
Snow Cone Express – Big Creek Crossing
For more information, call Ellis County Big Brothers Big Sisters at (785) 625-6672.
SEDGWICK COUNTY -The Wichita Police Department confirms that Mariana Gonzalez was located on Tuesday and is safe.
Police thanked the community for helping with the search
More details will be released on Wednesday morning, according to a social media report.
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SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County continue to search for a missing Kansas teen.
Wichita Police reported 14-year-old Mariana has been missing since Saturday.
Police went door to door in the area where she was last seen near 2nd and Grove in Wichita throughout the Saturday night and again on Sunday
Authorities say if you or someone you know thinks it is possible that she was observed being somewhere in the last 24-48 hours, to please call 911 and ask to speak to police.
DOUGLAS COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Douglas County are investigating a suspect in connection to the infant found in a trash receptacle
Marquis Jamall Young, 27, Lawrence, is currently in custody in Johnson County on unrelated charges, according to a media release.
Just before 2:30 a.m. on July 7, Lawrence Police Officers received a call indicating that an infant had been abandoned inside of a trash receptacle at an apartment complex in the 2500 block of West 6th Street and that the infant was being taken to a local hospital for treatment.
The infant involved in this incident has since been released from the hospital and remains in the care of the state. She will continue to receive medical care for her injuries on an outpatient basis.
Through the course of the investigation, Lawrence Police Detectives conducted interviews, followed leads, and collected evidence, which lead to the identification of Young, the child’s stepfather, as the suspect.
The information gathered from the investigation was submitted to the Douglas County District Attorney’s Office, resulting in the issuance of a warrant for Young’s arrest.
Young will be brought to Douglas County to face charges of Attempted First Degree Murder and Child Abuse. There is no information to believe anyone else was involved, according to police.
BARTON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating child porn at a residence in Hoisington.
Just before 1p.m. on Monday, officers from the Hoisington Police Department, Wichita Police Department, Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Barton County Sheriff’s Office, Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Department of Homeland Security, and Dodge City Police Department executed a child pornography related search warrant at a residence located in the 300 block West 3rd Street in Hoisington, according to a social media report.
No additional details were available on Tuesday afternoon. Check Hays Post for more information as it becomes available.
DICKINSON COUNTY – The suspect who escaped from a jail in Abilene on Monday evening is back in custody, according to the Dickinson County Sheriff’s office.
Few details on the arrest were available late Tuesday morning.
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DICKINSON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Dickinson and Marion County are investigating a report of an escaped inmate from the jail in Abilene.
Trent Hostetter, 27, escaped between 7:25 – 8p.m. on Monday, according to Dickinson County Sheriff Gareth Hoffman
He was able to escape through a portion of fence that had been compromised in an exercise yard, according to Hoffman.
There was a report of a stolen vehicle in Abilene, a couple of blocks from the courthouse.
A Herington police office saw the vehicle and pursued it into Lincolnville. The stolen vehicle crashed and Hostetter took off on foot, according to Hoffman.
K-9 units from the Kansas Highway Patrol and Marion County and an airplane from the KHP worked to track the inmate but didn’t find him.
Hostetter was being held for impersonating an officer and a parole violation.
Photo by Mission Village Living Center At Mission Village Living Center in Holton, CEO Patricia Raasch wondered why the facility hadn’t received advance payments for residents whose Medicaid applications were caught in a state processing backlog. Instead of making those advance half-payments, the state has used those requests to prioritize which Medicaid applications are moved to the front of the processing queue.
The state has not made any advance payments under a program that promised financial help for nursing homes while they wait for residents’ Medicaid applications to process.
Nursing homes were told in March that they could apply for half-payments for their Medicaid-pending residents until the state resolves a backlog of thousands of applications.
But the state instead has used requests for advance payments to prioritize which Medicaid applications are moved to the front of the processing queue.
“To clarify, we have made no advance payments under the program,” Angela de Rocha, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, said last week via email. “Rather, what the State has done is to determine the eligibility of the individuals involved and to approve regular payments to the nursing facilities when advance payment requests are made. This reduces the administrative burden on both the state and the nursing facilities.”
De Rocha said the state had received requests for advance payment for 287 nursing home residents and responded to 246 of them.
Medicaid benefits have been extended to 39 percent of the 287 and denied to 38 percent, she said. The state had no Medicaid application on file for 4 percent.
The state is still trying to verify information for 12 percent of the advance payment applicants and continues to evaluate the financial assets of 6 percent to make sure they’re below Medicaid limits.
“Some of these are extremely complicated,” de Rocha said.
Another disruption?
Nursing home representatives heard details about how the state has used the advance payment requests during a meeting last week with KDADS officials and Mike Randol, director of the Division of Health Care Finance at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
Linda MowBray, director of the Kansas Center for Assisted Living, said the fact that the state is speeding the processing of certain Medicaid applications is not in itself a bad thing.
But she said that strategy requires putting aside other applications and could create new problems at the KanCare Clearinghouse, the Forbes Field outpost where state workers and contractors process Medicaid applications.
“How in the world is the Clearinghouse ever going to get a routine?” MowBray asked. “It just seems like it’s another way to disrupt the flow.”
It appears there has been miscommunication between the state and nursing facilities about the advance payment program from the start.
MowBray’s organization and its affiliate, the Kansas Health Care Association, thought that the state and its Medicaid contractors would recoup any advance payments after the Medicaid application was completed and then reprocess the claim before making payments in full.
“How in the world is the Clearinghouse ever going to get a routine? It just seems like it’s another way to disrupt the flow.”
– Linda MowBray, director of the Kansas Center for Assisted Living
De Rocha said the plan was to only recoup advance payments for residents whose Medicaid applications were denied. For those approved, the advance payments would be subtracted from the back pay owed to facilities.
But the financing details are largely irrelevant because the state is not granting advance payments.
Nursing home administrators who had been applying for them did not know that.
Charla Roberts, billing manager at Villa St. Francis in Olathe, said she had filled out the forms and had been wondering why she had not received any advance payments or any indication that she wasn’t correctly completing the forms.
She began to suspect no payments were being made even before the state confirmed it.
“That’s what I was afraid of,” Roberts said. “At first I wondered if it was just me.”
Roberts said her facility, which is affiliated with the Catholic Church, serves a lot of residents on Medicaid as part of its mission.
She will continue to complete the advance payment requests to get applications fast-tracked but fears the rush to get certain applications done may lead to processing errors. It’s not what the state promised, she said.
“I think it’s public knowledge what they said,” Roberts said. “If it’s approved for advance payment, we get half.”
Delays began last summer
As of June 19, there were 11,585 Medicaid applications awaiting processing — including 7,724 pending more than 45 days, which is the limit for a Medicaid determination under federal rules. As of Friday, de Rocha said the number pending more than 45 days had been reduced to 6,117.
The associations were among the first groups to raise alarms about long processing times, because Kansans rely on Medicaid to pay for assisted living once their savings are spent.
But Kansas Medicaid, or KanCare, also serves low-income children, pregnant women and people with disabilities. Groups that represent those Kansans also have reported long waits for the past year.
The backlog that started with KEES worsened in January when the state began funneling all applications through the Clearinghouse, including many that were previously the responsibility of the Kansas Department for Children and Families. The change came at the same time as a rush of applications due to the federal Affordable Care Act open enrollment period.
The state has added and shifted staff to try to resolve the backlog. But pressure is building to do more, especially since KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier revealed to federal officials last month that reports showing the backlog receding were erroneous and the number of Kansans waiting actually was several times larger than previously reported.
Deb Zehr, president and CEO of a group called LeadingAge Kansas that represents nonprofit nursing homes, sent letters last week to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the state’s U.S. House congressional delegation, asking them to intervene.
‘Held hostage’
Patricia Raasch, CEO of Mission Village Living Center in Holton, said her small nonprofit facility struggled to pay its bills as it applied for advance payments that never came.
She had to ask vendors to delay bill collections until more of her residents’ Medicaid applications were processed.
“We got gas shutoff notices,” Raasch said. “Notices that we were going to have our cable and telephone shut off. … (We) couldn’t pay our food bills. We have all these service charges now that were incurred for us.”
Raasch said the longest-pending applications for her facility’s residents now have been processed and approved. The residents are covered, with back payments, but she said those do not account for the service charges incurred for late payments to vendors. Nor do they restore her facility’s goodwill with those vendors.
Raasch wondered why no one from the state explained that the advance payments weren’t coming.
“I just want some accountability, and I haven’t seen any,” she said. “I haven’t heard one apology for any of this. … Yeah, we still finally got our money. But it got held hostage three or four months. Taking care of seniors here in Kansas sometimes just doesn’t pay.”
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
The Pharmacy Technician program at NCK Tech in Hays has received accreditation by the American Society of Health Systems Pharmacies (ASHP) and The American Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE). The mission of the ASHP and ACPE is to ensure and advance excellence in education for the profession of pharmacy.
Congratulations to Brian Dechant, Department Chair of the Pharmacy Technician Program, for achieving and maintaining this standard in education.
NCK Tech’s Pharmacy Technician program offers personalized, hi-tech education in a positive and innovative environment. To find out more about our program, please visit www.NCKTC.edu.
Jo French, 75, of Osage County, asked the state Election Board to certify her citizenship -photo courtesy Jonathan Shorman, The Capitol Journal
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A 75-year-old eastern Kansas woman who is unable to get a replacement for her lost Arkansas birth certificate has been certified as a U.S. citizen, allowing her to vote.
The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the state Election Board issued the ruling Monday after meeting with Jo French of Osage County. Evidence of her citizenship included a record of her birth in a family Bible and Census records.
The rare meeting comes amid ongoing legal challenges to Kansas’ proof of citizenship voting requirement.
French said that although she agreed with the requirement, she “just couldn’t imagine having to go through this procedure.”
Secretary of State Kris Kobach said the Election Board has only met a handful of times to review citizenship evidence since the proof of citizenship law was adopted.
We are now just days away from Primary Election Day in Kansas and wanted to share a couple of thoughts with you.
Earlier this year, many of us participated in our respective county caucuses to pick a nominee for President of the United States and now we know who will be on the ballot in November.
There has been a lot of hand wringing and consternation that none of the choices get people excited to go to the polls. Well, I am not here to tell you who you should vote for, but rather the importance of being engaged in one of the best fundamental rights we have in this nation, the power to vote.
Primary Election Day in Kansas is where the real change can begin. You don’t like how things are going in Washington, D.C.? Start by electing good people to county offices, state school board and legislature. As former U.S. Speaker of the House, the late Tip O’Neill said, “All politics is local.”
Being a representative republic is not for the faint of heart. The easy thing to do is stay home and say, my vote doesn’t matter. If you review voter turnout, you will see it is usually less than fifty percent for general elections and even fewer show up for the primary.
So if you really want to see change, talk to the candidates on the ballot, vote either early or on election day and ask your neighbor if they need a ride to the polls. By the way, don’t forget your identification.
A quick note regarding the special session that took place in June, you may have noticed I was not there to vote on the school funding bill. I was in attendance the first day and some of the second or last day, but needed to leave for a special event. I had the privilege of being the father of the groom as our oldest son was getting married out of state. I was in contact with legislators on what was going on in Topeka and was prepared to head to the Capitol if my vote was necessary to move forward. The vote was 116-6 and schools will open as scheduled.
I am really enjoying seeing many of you at events, including parades and county fairs, and I am working for you even when we are not in session. Please feel free to reach out to me with questions or concerns: Ken Rahjes, 1798 E. 900 Rd. Agra, KS 67621; [email protected] or (785) 302-8416.
Thank you for the honor and privilege of serving you in the Kansas House of Representatives.
Ken Rahjes, R-Agra, is the state representative for the 110th Dist.
PRATT – Law enforcement authorities in Pratt County are investigating a suspect for criminal threat and assault after he was shot by an apartment manager.
Joshua Benjamin Hamic, 31, threatened the manager of the apartment complex in Pratt and was escorted from the property, according to Pratt Police Sergeant Ed Gimpel.
“Hamic did not live there and during the dispute noticed the manager had a firearm on his hip,” said Gimpel. “He attacked the manager and the manager shot him.”
Pratt County EMS transported Hamic to a hospital in Sedgwick County for treatment of a minor gunshot wound from the small caliber handgun, according to Gimpel.
Hamic is now being held in the Pratt County jail on $50,000 bond for domestic battery, reckless bodily harm to a family member, criminal threat, assault, and criminal damage to property.
The next session of Coffee and Conversation will be held Tuesday, Aug. 2, at CHI Education Room, 2500 Canterbury Drive. Participants are asked to use the Southeast Entrance F.
The program will feature a presentation and roundtable discussion with Dr. Rashmi Thapa, Cardiologist, HaysMed DeBakey Heart Institute, and William Cadoret, RPh, Director of Pharmacy and Oncology Services at HaysMed.
Topic for the discussion is “The Smart and Safe Use of Vitamins and Supplements.”
The program begins at 5:30 pm with healthy snacks followed by the discussion from 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm.
The program is designed for those who have had Open Heart Surgery, Stents (PTCA), Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) or a Health Attack (MI) and the people who care about them.