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Another Kan. school seeks to join Innovative District Program

FREDONIA, Kan. (AP) — A southeast Kansas district is seeking to join a program that waives state laws and regulations for participating schools.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Fredonia district officials told the Kansas State Board of Education on Tuesday why they want to join the Coalition of Innovative School Districts. The program is meant to remove school performance barriers, but critics have raised accountability concerns.

The approximately 700-student Fredonia district has a five-part plan that includes creating an academy focused on science, technology, engineering, math and arts education. Superintendent Brian Smith says it’s “put a lot of time and effort into meeting with public, meeting with businesses to establish a common vision.”

The state board could vote on Fredonia’s application as soon as next month. Six districts are currently part of the coalition.

Company plans $40 million hospital in Kansas by 2018

CBC developed this Medical Office building in Iola
CBC developed this Medical Office building in Iola

DERBY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City-based real estate company says it will build a $40 million hospital in Derby.

The CBC Real Estate says in a news release that the hospital, to be called Rock Regional Hospital, is expected to open in 2018.

The company says the 65,000-square-foot hospital will include 12 inpatient beds, 12 surgical beds and six intensive care unit beds. It also will have three operating rooms, two procedure rooms, three catheterization lab rooms and three emergency rooms.

An adjacent 40,000-square-foot building will house medical offices.

Candor Healthcare, a Texas-based hospital management company, will oversee the hospital.

The Wichita Eagle reports health care offerings in Derby have been expanding. Wesley Healthcare plans to open its Derby ER in November and another walk-in clinic opened last week.

🎥 Cleanup underway following major morning storm

By COOPER SLOUGH and BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Cleanup is underway in Hays following an early morning storm which caused damage across the town.  Hays Post talked with homeowners and USD 489 maintenance employees as they began picking up the pieces.

Midwest Energy employee Rich Augustine said MWE has been responding to numerous calls of downed power lines and broken gas meters “sometimes in the same location.”  The gas lines have “automatic shutoffs when excessive flow is detected,” according to Augustine, “as a safety feature.”

RELATED: City lays out plans to pick up limbs throughout Hays.

KDHE: Only 1 Saline Co. blood test shows high lead level

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — Lead testing that was started after elevated levels of the substance were detected among some children in central Kansas’ Saline County has uncovered just one additional case so far.

The Salina Journal  reports that about 65 percent of the 342 blood samples recently sent to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment have been tested for lead. Saline County Health Department director Jason Tiller told Saline County commissioners Tuesday that only one sample has showed an elevated level.

The health department provided free blood tests for lead when the KDHE launched an investigation because of an unusually high number of children in Saline County showing elevated lead levels since the beginning of 2015.

The KDHE is continuing its investigation to try to determine what has caused those elevated levels.

Jerry J. Crenshaw

Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 12.35.40 PMJerry J. Crenshaw, 80, of Russell, Kansas died Sunday June 26, 2016 at the Salina Regional Hospital in Salina, Kansas.

Jerry was born June 13, 1936, in Arkansas City, Kansas, the son of Willis Alexander and Tilly Elizabeth (Leatherman) Crenshaw. He grew up in Alva, Oklahoma and graduated from Alva High School in 1954. He received his Bachelors’ Degree in Education from Northwestern State University at Alva and attended the University of Oklahoma where he received his Masters Degree in speech and did graduate work toward his PhD.

He was united in marriage to Terry Sue Brand on August 07, 1959, in Woodward, Oklahoma. To this union one child was born, their daughter, Sally. Jerry taught at Helena, Oklahoma, Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina and at Fairfield Unified School District in Langdon, Kansas. In 1967 the family moved to Russell, Kansas where Jerry taught speech, debate, English and directed plays and musicals at Russell High School until his retirement in 1996. He was most proud of his debate teams’ accomplishments and their numerous winning seasons. He also took great pride in the musicals Oklahoma, Cinderella and the Sound of Music he directed. He pursued many hobbies, but was best known locally for his cheesecakes. He was a devoted Royals fan and enjoyed watching and attending Royals games with his family.

Surviving family include his wife Terry of the home, daughter Sally O’Dell and husband Mike of Topeka, Kansas, brothers Neil Crenshaw and wife Nancy of McIntosh, Florida and Jeff Crenshaw of Gatlinburg, Tennessee; sister Panhachet Joachims and husband Greg of Enid, Oklahoma and grandchildren Jeremiah O’Dell and Kelsey Reed and husband Corbin all of Topeka, Kansas and his dog Winthorpe.

He was preceded in death by his parents.

A memorial service to celebrate Jerry’s life will be held at 3 PM on Friday, July 15, 2016, at the Deines Cultural Center in Russell, Kansas with Pastor Roger Dennis officiating. Cremation has preceded the service. Memorials may be given to the High Plains Humane Society of Hays, Kansas or Rebecca A. Morrison House of Salina, Kansas, and sent in care of the mortuary. Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, Kansas, is in charge of the funeral service arrangements.

Marvin Richard Strecker

Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 12.34.40 PMMarvin Richard Strecker, 89, of Russell, Kansas, passed away Monday, July 11, 2016 at the Russell Regional Hospital in Russell.

Marvin was born on May 5, 1927 on the family farm south of Russell in the Smoky Hill River area. He was the son of George David and Elizabeth (Stettinger) Strecker. He grew up in the Russell County area.

Marvin served his country in the U.S. Army in the Occupational Forces in Germany after WWII. He was a radio operator. After his tour of duty he returned to Lucas, Kansas.

Marvin was united in marriage to Naomi Gerdes on October 18, 1953 in Sylvan Grove, Kansas. This union was blessed with three children; Laurel, Jim and Mary. They made their home on the farm near Lucas.

Besides farming, Marvin was a Television and Electronics Technician. He worked for Johnson’s Hardware in Mentor, Kansas before moving to Emporia, Kansas where he worked for Montgomery Ward. Then they moved to Gorham, Kansas and he worked for Music Manor. Then they moved to Russell where he worked at Gamble’s before starting his own business. He was the owner and operator of Strecker TV and Appliance in Russell. He enjoyed fishing, camping and hunting; doing cross word puzzles, watching his Royals play ball and traveling the country with Naomi.

Surviving family include his wife of 62 years, Naomi of the home; daughters, Laurel Strecker of Russell, Kansas and Mary Strecker of Grandview, Missouri; son, Jim Strecker (Juanita Piedimonte) of Harrisonville, Missouri; sister, Thelma Blasé of Sylvan Grove, Kansas; granddaughter, Valiha Strecker (Mark Dedovesh) of Irvine, California; and great grandson, Grayson Dedovesh. He was preceded in death by his parents, infant brother and four sisters.

Celebration of Marvin’s Life will be held at 2:00 PM Saturday, July 16, 2016 at the St. John Lutheran Church. Cremation has preceded the services. Memorials have been established with the Russell Regional Hospital or the Russell County Food Pantry. Contributions and condolences may be sent to Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, who is in charge of these arrangements.

Josie Mae Sellens

Josie Mae Sellens, 94, of Russell, Kansas, died on Monday, July 11, 2016, at the Golden Living Center in Wilson, Kansas.

A celebration of Josie’s life will be held at 1 P.M. on Monday, July 18, 2016, at Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary in Russell, Kansas. Visitation will be from 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. on Monday, July 18, 2016 at the mortuary.

Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, Kansas, is in charge of the funeral service arrangements.

Dakota Lynn Frost

Frost,DakotaDakota Lynn Frost, 23, of Russell, Kansas, passed away Sunday, July 10, 2016 at his home.

Dakota was born September 16, 1992 in Hays, Kansas, the son of Gerald and Vickie (Pence) Frost. He grew up and attended schools in Natoma, Salina and Russell.

Dakota started working in the oil patch when he was 17 years old. He was a roughneck and driller. He enjoyed the oil field life very much. He also worked a short time for APCO Wire.

Dakota attended the Trinity United Methodist Church. He loved to hunt, fish,and work on cars with his dad and brothers. He also enjoyed video games. He loved spending time with family and greatly enjoyed playing with his nieces and nephews.

Dakota’s surviving family include his father, Gerald Frost and mother, Vickie Frost both of Russell, Kansas; twin brother, Dalton Frost, brother Ethan Frost (Mercadies Cosgrove) of Russell, Kansas; brother, Shane Michaelis of Colorado; sisters, Amanda Fabian Valadez (Cruz Enoe) of Russell, Kansas and Amber Frost of Lawrence, Kansas; grandmother, Marjoane Frost of Russell, Kansas; and many aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents and paternal grandfather.

A Memorial Service will be held at 11:00 AM Friday, July 15, 2016 at the Trinity United Methodist Church of Russell. Friends may greet the family the morning of the service from 9:00 AM to service time at the church. Cremation has preceded the services. A Memorial has been established as the Dakota Frost Memorial Fund. Contributions and condolences may be sent to Pohlman-Varner-Peeler Mortuary of Russell, who is in charge of these arrangements.

Lorene ‘Renie’ Mae Kuhn

Screen Shot 2016-07-13 at 12.29.49 PMLorene “Renie” Mae Kuhn, age 82, of Hays passed away Monday, July 11, 2016 at her home. She was born July 24, 1933 in Munjor, Kansas to Fidelis and Adeline (Befort) Engel. She graduated from Girl’s Catholic High in 1951 and attended college. She married Louis Kuhn of Victoria, Kansas in Munjor, Kansas at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church on December 29, 1951.

Renie was a loving wife, mother, grandmother and great grandmother. She was a member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, Daughters of Isabella, a Guardian Angel of the Perpetual Adoration Chapel, a life member of the St. Joseph’s Christian Mothers, and Epsilon Epsilon Sorority which raised charitable funds. She was a CCD teacher for 25 years and was a faithful and devout servant to our Lord. She enjoyed many activities including the theatre, movies, playing cards, bunco, slot machines, walking and exercise and especially traveling with Louie.

She is survived by her husband, Louis of Hays; a son, Louis Kuhn Jr. (Patty) of Omaha, Nebraska; three daughters, Jackie Sue Kuhn of Topeka, Kansas, Kelly Lynn Kuhn (Gary) of London, England and Tasha Renee Kuhn Aubey (Kelly) of Phoenix, Arizona; four grandchildren, Chuck Dinkel, Jeff Dinkel, Michelle (Josh) Davis and Jade Renee Aubey and two great granddaughters, Breanna Dinkel and Alyssa Dinkel; four sisters, Benita Rohr of Hays, Rosie Pfeifer of Ellis, Therese Haas and Sandy Wilson both of Hays; a brother, Fidelis Engel Jr. of Munjor.

She was preceded in death by her parents; a daughter, Renee Mae Kuhn in 1967 and two sisters, Dorothy Mermis and Ruby Remy.

Funeral services will be 11:00 AM Thursday, July 14, 2016 at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church 1805 Vine Hays, KS 67601. Burial will follow in the St. Joseph’s Cemetery.

Visitation will be Wednesday, 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM with an Adoration Chapel Adorers rosary at 5:30 followed by a combined Daughters of Isabella rosary and parish vigil service at 6:00 PM all at Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601.  Visitation on Thursday will be 10:00 AM at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church until the service begins.

Memorial contributions are suggested to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (www.stjude.org).

Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed to [email protected].

Midwest: Periodic power outages throughout the day as crews tackle repairs

Courtesy Midwest Energy
Courtesy Midwest Energy

Hays Post

Midwest Energy crews have converged on the area in an effort to restore power to the region after Wednesday’s early-morning wind storm.

Utility spokesman Mike Morley said he expects the total number of down poles to be around 100, with the hardest-hit area appearing to be in the Toulon Road area between Catharine and Old U.S. 40. Morley said entire sections of lines were blown down in that area — a dozen or more pole at a time.

Crews are working to get “feeder” lines, which carry power for large sections of the grid, back up and running first. Once those “main arteries” are repaired, smaller outages will be addressed.

Courtesy Midwest Energy
Courtesy Midwest Energy

“There are lots of scattered outages,” he said, noting those could range from a small transformer that feeds a handul of houses to an individual power line running from the alley to a single home. “Those will be, unfortunately, the last ones we hit.”

Because crews are cutting power while isolating sections for repairs, Morley said customers across the area might see periodic outages throughout the day. Click HERE for the Midwest outage viewer.

With poles and lines down throughout the region, Morley stressed safety above all else.

He pointed to an incident where lines came down on a person’s car.

“Fortunately, the driver knew to stay in the car, called the sheriff, and we got crews out there,” he said, “and got her out of there safe.”

He cautioned to stay away from downed lines.

“Don’t try to drive around or over wires and definitely don’t try to pick them up or move them yourself,” Morley said. “That could be terrible.”

The utility issued the following statement this morning”

“Midwest Energy’s electric system was hit hard by storms the morning of July 13. At 8 am, there are more than 4,400 customers now without power in Ellis and Russell Counties. Due to the number of poles down, the cities of Victoria, Gorham and portions of eastern Ellis County and Russell County could be without power into the evening, or longer. Residents are encouraged to prepare now for a prolonged outage.

“If you encounter; please DO NOT try to move a downed line yourself! Call it in at 1-800-222-3121 and we’ll respond as quickly as possible. Dozens of Midwest Energy crews, and contract crews from across Kansas are in route to assist with restoration efforts. We thank you for your patience as we work to safely restore power.”

200 block of East 28th, across from Wilson Elementary.
200 block of East 28th, across from Wilson Elementary.

Injured bald eagle, treated at Kansas nature center, has died

Photo KDWP&T Game Wardens
Photo KDWP&T Game Wardens

MARION COUNTY –A bald eagle treated for injuries in Marion County has died.

On Tuesday, a concerned citizen called county Game Warden Cody Morris about the bird that looked injured, according to a social media report.

It was spotted along a creek just North of Marion.

Warden Morris recovered the bird and transported it to the rehabilitation center at Milford Reservoir but it did not survive, according to Pat Silovsky with the Milford Nature Center.

“The bird was having a lot of seizures and that is usually an indication of lead poisoning. We will know for sure when test results are back by the end of the week,” she said.

There is lead all over from broken fishing lines, from firearms and large predatory birds are susceptible to this problem, according to Silovsky.

 

Dealing with massive storm cleanup, city of Hays changes trash routes

City of Hays

Due to the recent storm, refuse and recycling route collection schedules will be altered as follows:

There will be no refuse or recycling collection Wednesday. City crews will begin with Wednesday’s collection on Thursday. Although refuse and recycling collections might not occur on your normal day, collections will be completed by the week’s end.

City of Hays customers who may have questions regarding this notice should contact the Solid Waste Division of the Public Works Department at 628-7357.

Click HERE for city guidelines on down branches.

RELATED: Periodic power outages through the day. Midwest cautions residents about downed lines.

Providers: Loss Of KU Contract Will Diminish Quality of Mental Health Care

By JIM MCLEAN

What appears at first blush to be little more than a contract dispute between a state agency and a University of Kansas research center is actually much more than that.

The state’s failure to renew a contract with the KU Center for Mental Health Research and Innovation is another assault on the state’s mental health system, according to the directors of several community mental health centers.

The CMHC directors say the loss of training and quality assurance services that the KU center provided will make it harder for them to provide evidence-based treatment and track the difference they’re making in the lives of Kansans with mental illnesses.

“You have to have services that are evidence-based,” says Tim DeWeese, executive director of the Johnson County Mental Health Center. “The people at the KU center, through their expertise, have helped community mental health centers provide good-quality services that are evidence-based.”

DeWeese says he was “shocked and disappointed” when he heard that the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services was not going to continue a collaboration with the KU center that dated to the late 1980s.

“This is one more policy decision that unfortunately will have a negative impact on community mental health in Kansas,” he says. “Without the KU center, I’m not sure how the state plans to ensure that we continue to maintain the quality of our services.”

The $2.4 million contract proposed by the KU center would have been funded entirely by Medicaid dollars provided by the federal government to match a commitment by the university to dedicate faculty and staff time of roughly equal value. The state’s role was to act as a fiscal agent for the federal money and to administer the contract.

Randy Callstrom, CEO of the Wyandot Center for Community Behavioral Healthcare Inc. in Kansas City, Kan., says his center also would be challenged to maintain the quality of some services without the KU program.

“We don’t know how we’re going to deal with it,” Callstrom says, noting that CMHCs using evidence-based treatments can qualify for higher reimbursements. “Our staff is quite anxious about it.”

Take it or leave it

Contract negotiations between KDADS and the KU center broke down when center officials reluctantly concluded that they couldn’t accept what amounted to a take-it-or-leave-it offer from the state.

The final offer came from Brad Ridley, head of the KDADS budget and financial services division, in an email to Rick Goscha, director of the KU research center, sent at 12:01 p.m. Thursday, June 30, the day before the contract deadline and the start of the state’s 2017 budget year. It gave Goscha two hours and 29 minutes to review a set of final terms that would have required the center to scrap the KU-approved work plan it had submitted in March and agree to provide a limited set of services to be negotiated later at a reduced hourly rate.

“Their last-minute offer was not a viable option,” Goscha says. “They wanted us to agree to a contract with no work plan in place and no direction on work that they wanted to do or not do.”

In addition, he says, the offer included a reduction in funding that would have required him to lay off half of the center’s staff.

“When I asked them, ‘Well, who should I keep and who should stay based on what (work) criteria?’ they had no answer for that,” Goscha says.

In the weeks leading up to the deadline, he sent a series of increasingly desperate emails to KDADS officials seeking a resolution to the contract dispute.

“The work of this contract is built on trust,” Goscha wrote on June 23, noting that in 2013 Republican Gov. Sam Brownback had trusted him enough to put him in charge of a task force formed to develop recommendations for improving the state’s mental health system.

“Our contract is almost entirely structured to carry out multiple recommendations contained within the final report of that task force,” he wrote. “I don’t know how much more we can be aligned with the priorities of this administration.”

Goscha wrote that while he was willing to discuss transitioning to an hourly rate structure in a future contract, such a significant change couldn’t be accomplished only days ahead of the deadline to have a fiscal year 2017 agreement in place.

The loss of the KDADS contract forced Goscha to lay off 12 of the center’s 15 staff and all six students working on the project. He says he also soon must return a separate “supported living” grant to KDADS and close the center.

‘Good faith’ offers

Angela de Rocha, a media spokesperson for KDADS, says the agency made “three good faith offers” to the KU center in the days leading up to the contract deadline.

The first two were made during a meeting on Wednesday, June 29. Each would have required the KU center to fund itself while negotiations continued on the agency’s proposal to restructure the contract. That shouldn’t have been a stumbling block, de Rocha says, given that Goscha had more than $1 million in unspent funds from a 2016 contract that totaled $3.8 million.

However, Goscha maintains that he didn’t have the “cost-share match” needed to continue the project past June 30.

“If I had the cost-share match I would have done that in a heartbeat,” Goscha says. “I didn’t want to let all my staff go. But I had been telling them (KDADS) since January that we couldn’t accept a no-cost time extension.”

Goscha says tens of millions of dollars in cuts sustained by the university because of the state’s ongoing revenue and budget problems also complicated the negotiations. He says a hiring freeze instituted by the university prevented him from replacing a key researcher after she left for a job in another state.

The agency’s desire to restructure the contract also was problematic.

From the state’s perspective, changes were needed to ensure that federal Medicaid money was being spent appropriately, de Rocha says.

“We had some issues with some of the elements of the way the contract was being administered,” de Rocha says. “The way the contract worked before is we gave them money and they just did things. We wanted to devise a work plan based on the agency’s needs.”

Pressed for details, de Rocha said in an email, “Suffice to say KDADS funds were being used to pay for some things that were not directly related to KDADS tasks/projects.”

The concerns had nothing to do with the center’s work, de Rocha says, adding that the breakdown in negotiations was “a very disappointing experience for us.”

“We had hoped to continue to work with them,” she says.

Goscha says it didn’t feel that way on his side of the negotiating table. When the third and final offer was made, he said agency officials “had to know” he didn’t have the authority to approve something that university officials hadn’t had a chance to review.

“And there is no way the university would have approved a contract that basically said ‘to be determined,’” he says.

Ally Mabry, a social worker, is director of evidence-based practice at the KU center. In her nine years at KU, Mabry says she has worked with front-line providers at many of the state's 26 community mental health centers. CREDIT KU CENTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
Ally Mabry, a social worker, is director of evidence-based practice at the KU center. In her nine years at KU, Mabry says she has worked with front-line providers at many of the state’s 26 community mental health centers.
CREDIT KU CENTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH AND INNOVATION

Real-life consequences

The KU center is internationally known for its work developing, implementing and tracking the effectiveness of the “strengths model” of treating people with severe mental illness.

The model is designed to help therapists and counselors focus on helping people accomplish self-determined goals. When treatment teams use the model properly, it can transform lives, says Ally Mabry, a social worker and director of evidence-based practices at the KU center.

“We’re going to help you get a handle on your illness and we’re also going to focus on what you want to do with your life,” Mabry says. “Do you want to work? Do you want to go back to school? Whatever it is, we’re going to be highly goal-focused with you. We’re going to look at what you have, not what you don’t have. And we’re going to build on success with you.”

Data compiled by the center to document results show that community mental health centers using the strengths model correctly are achieving better outcomes. Fewer of their patients require hospitalization and more of them live independently, pursue post-secondary education and maintain jobs.

In the nine years she has been at the KU center, Mabry says she has worked with front-line providers at many of the state’s 26 community mental health centers. A lot of that work has been aimed at refining the model and ensuring that treatment teams at the CMHCs are using it correctly by grading them with a tougher new “fidelity scale,” Mabry says.

“This scale does not allow a center to just do this practice at a minimal or moderate level,” she says. “To meet fidelity, you really have to perform at an extremely high level. We’re seeing so much change, it’s really an exciting time.”

Or, at least it was. The prospect of seeing three decades of work with community mental health centers come to an end is “heartbreaking,” Mabry says.

The thought left both Mabry and Goscha fighting back tears.

“You can’t even imagine what this feels like,” says Goscha, who managed a treatment program for homeless people in Wichita before joining the KU center in 1999.

“All of my focus has been on improving the lives of people with serious mental illness in Kansas,” he says. “So, the thought that the state would make a decision that basically says that is no longer valued is absolutely crushing.”

It is valued, said KDADS Secretary Tim Keck in a letter sent last week to CMHC directors.

“It has never been the agency’s intention to discontinue using EBP (evidence-based practices)” Keck wrote. “Our program staff is working to identify the essential tasks that are required to be carried out to provide the most effective services to mental health consumers as a part of Medicaid and the most effective way to accomplish those tasks in the future. KDADS looks forward to continuing to work with our CMHC partners on this important part of our work.”

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

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