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LETTER: Community Connection helps spread the word

To the editor:

I’d like to personally thank Mike Cooper and Community Connection for mentioning the WaKeeney Travel Blog during his recent interview with Kirk Johnston of Shiloh Vineyards. I am the writer and manager of the blog and to have it mentioned through another medium was very affirming that I am doing my job, garnering interest in WaKeeney and Trego County.

Please extend my thanks to Mr. Cooper and all involved in the filming.

Thank you!

Best regards,

Dena Weigel Bell

Sunny, cool Saturday

filelThis morning will be frosty and cold as lows fell to the mid teens. The last time temperatures were this cold was back in late March. Today will be the chilliest day of the next 7 days with highs in the 40’s. Temperatures will warm back into the 50’s Sunday and Monday.

A low pressure system will form over Colorado Monday night, and then track across Kansas Tuesday with a chance of showers. Dry and pleasant weather is expected for Thanksgiving Day.

Today: Sunny, with a high near 47. West northwest wind 6 to 11 mph becoming south southeast in the afternoon.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 27. Southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 60. South wind around 8 mph.

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31. South southwest wind around 6 mph.
Monday: Partly sunny, with a high near 59. East southeast wind 5 to 11 mph.

BEECH: Time to clean out the refrigerator

Linda Beech
Linda Beech

National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day is observed annually on November 15. Get together a bucket filled with warm soapy water, disinfectant, a sponge and a garbage bag, and you are ready!

National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day was created by the home economists at Whirlpool Home Appliances in the 1990’s. It is said that they created the day to encourage people to clean out their refrigerator in advance of the upcoming holidays.

The timing for this day is perfect as Thanksgiving is coming soon. We will need room for all of the special holiday food and upcoming leftovers. Don’t expose your expensive holiday specialties to lurking bacteria and mold, or suffer the embarrassment when guests can’t find a place to store their items for the holiday buffet.
Due to our hectic and busy lifestyles, the cleaning of the refrigerator often gets neglected. This job may be dreaded by many, but it is an important task. There may be a surprise or two found at the back of the shelves. Things are often pushed back as new food is put in the front and gets forgotten. Regardless, it is a good idea to take stock and determine just how long some of those items have been in your refrigerator.

Start by taking everything out of the fridge and placing it on your countertop. If you will be at this for a while (more than an hour), have a cooler handy for perishables. Here are a few helpful steps to assist in making that cleaning job happen more quickly:

• Dismantle: Take out shelves and drawers so you can give the inside of the refrigerator a good, deep cleaning with hot, soapy water. Wipe down the interior, wash the shelves and drawers. Clean up all the drips and spills. Dry everything before reassembling.
• Dispose: Look for spoiled, shriveled (or unidentifiable) items and check expiration dates. Get rid of anything that is past it’s prime or that you do not use– such as that condiment or sauce or spread that no one really liked. It is time to toss and purge!
• Consolidate: If you have two half empty jars of pickles, combine them to save space – just make sure one of them has not out lived its shelf life. Store similar items together to make finding them quick and easy.
• Don’t forget the door: Make sure you clean all the pockets on the door and wipe down the seal around the edge of the door. Clean the handle and front of the appliance, too.
•Vacuum condenser coils and under the refrigerator.

Now that you have cleaned and organized your refrigerator, it would be a great time to set some new ground rules. Start by labeling and dating what is in your leftover containers. This way you know what you are saving for another meal. Time flies when we are having fun – something you tucked away in the refrigerator for another time has suddenly been saved for a couple of weeks, instead of a couple of days, and is no longer a safe leftover. By labeling and dating, you will know what is in the container and when to eat, freeze or toss it.

Tips like these help reduce waste, save money and keep your family from experiencing a possible foodborne illness.

Don’t wait until the next National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day. Make it a monthly event to treat your refrigerator well and it will take care of the foods you love.

Linda K. Beech is Ellis County Extension Agent for Family and Consumer Sciences.

Report: KanCare Delivered On Cost, Not Quality Of Care

By ANDY MARSO

Robin Arnold-Williams is a principal who specializes in Medicaid for Leavitt Partners, a policy consulting shop that analyzed the KanCare system. She testified spoke Thursday before the Legislature’s KanCare oversight committee. CREDIT JIM MCLEAN / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR
Robin Arnold-Williams is a principal who specializes in Medicaid for Leavitt Partners, a policy consulting shop that analyzed the KanCare system. She testified spoke Thursday before the Legislature’s KanCare oversight committee.
CREDIT JIM MCLEAN / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR

An analysis of KanCare performed by a former Republican governor’s think tank found that the switch to managed care Medicaid in Kansas has delivered on cost-cutting promises but not on quality of care.

Leavitt Partners, a policy consulting shop founded by former Utah Gov. Michael Leavitt, performed the analysis between May and October by interviewing KanCare providers and reviewing federal and state data.

“Across the providers that we interviewed and surveyed, there was general agreement that KanCare has not met its original rationale and commitments,” Robin Arnold-Williams, a principal at Leavitt Partners who specializes in Medicaid, said in a written summary of the analysis.

The analysis was sponsored by the Kansas Hospital Association, Kansas Medical Society and Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved.

Arnold-Williams, a former executive director of the Utah Department of Human Services, testified Thursday at a meeting of the Robert G. (Bob) Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight.

She told legislators that better communication among state officials, KanCare companies and Medicaid providers is key.

“Providers are not saying, ‘We’re fed up. We don’t want to help improve this,’” Arnold-Williams said. “They’re saying, ‘We’re ready to improve this system. We want it to be the best it can be for Kansans who are on Medicaid.’”

The committee of legislators is in the midst of two-day review of KanCare to seek input from providers about how the system should change as the state pursues permission from the federal government to extend the program after 2017.

“We all know we have problems,” said Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita who chairs the KanCare oversight committee. “The frustration level across the health care system in Kansas is immense right now.”

Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration started KanCare in 2013, placing all of the state’s 400,000-plus Medicaid recipients under the administration of three private insurance companies.

Brownback said the program would save the state $1 billion in Medicaid costs over five years without reducing eligibility, covered services or provider payment rates. The cost savings would instead be realized by coordinating care to improve Medicaid clients’ health.

However, payment rates for most providers were cut by 4 percent this year as Brownback and the Legislature struggled to keep the state budget balanced.

Arnold-Williams said the Leavitt Partners analysis determined that although cost-control benchmarks have been reached, KanCare has not delivered on coordination of physical health, behavioral health and daily support services for people with disabilities or met targets for improved health outcomes.

Hawkins said the 4 percent cut has caused a provider outcry across the Medicaid system and restoring it would be one of his top priorities.

Any problems within KanCare will be worsened by the cut, Hawkins said, if it causes providers to drop out of the system.

“We’re going to get into an access problem really quick if we’re not already in an access problem,” he said.

Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita, said providers should brace for more cuts.

The state has to close a $350 million budget hole in the next six months, he said, before moving on to addressing a projected $600 million hole for the fiscal year that starts in July.

“I don’t think there’s any question that more is coming,” said Ward, who favors reversing a 2012 income tax plan spearheaded by Brownback that reduced state revenue by about $700 million.

Amy Campbell, a lobbyist for the Kansas Mental Health Coalition, told the committee that the 4 percent cut and other funding reductions have caused the state’s mental health system to become increasingly frayed.

Rachel Monger, a lobbyist for LeadingAge Kansas, which represents nonprofit providers of aging services, said nursing homes are absorbing people with mental health problems who have nowhere else to go.

“It is an extremely poor fit, on both sides,” Monger said.

The Leavitt Partners report said KanCare providers already were feeling strained by the managed care switch and the reimbursement cut could be a last straw for some.

“While cost-control benchmarks appear to have been met, providers question whether some of the ‘savings’ resulted from shifting costs to them,” Arnold-Williams said. “Recent provider rate reductions, running contrary to original KanCare commitments, have escalated these concerns and are causing some to assess their ability to remain Medicaid providers.”

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

Kan. woman hospitalized after driver flees scene in 4-vehicle crash

emergency   crash KHP policeSEDGWICK COUNTY – One person was injured in an accident just before 2a.m. on Saturday in Sedgwick County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a vehicle was disabled on northbound Interstate 135 just south of Pawnee and traffic was stopped on the curve on the top of a hill.

A 2008 Ford truck driven by Felipe Trejo, 54, Wichita, did not slow in time and struck a 2001 Toyota Truck driven by Benjamin C. Wisdom, 48, Wichita, and a 2003 Pontiac Passenger car driven by Cynthia Spires, 39, Wichita.

Trejo fled the scene in his Ford and struck the Pontiac for a second time and also collided with a 2015 Dodge Truck driven by Caleb P Frasier, 30, Wichita.

Spires was transported to Via Christi St. Joseph.

Trejo, Wisdom and Frasier were not injured.

Details on possible charges from the incident were not available early Saturday.

Plainville earns title game spot with win over Smith Center

The Plainville Cardinals used a stout defense and just enough offense to upend Smith Center 14-0 Friday night to earn their first appearance in a state championship game since 1985.

After forcing Smith Center to punt on their first possession the Cardinals offense scored on a 60-yard touchdown run by senior quarterback Hayden Friend, his first of two touchdowns on the night, to take a 7-0 lead.

Smith Center failed to put together another successful offense drive on their second offense possession and was forced to punt and Plainville would again take advantage.

The Cardinals put together a 10-play 85 yard drive that was capped off by a one yard Friend touchdown run giving Plainville a 14-0 lead with less than two minutes to play in the first quarter.

The defenses would dominate the game over the next three quarters resulting in a 14-0 win for Plainville.

Friend had a game-high 129 yards on 24 carriers and two touchdowns for the Cardinals. Riley Nyp added 92 yards rushing. Plainville outgained Smith Center 267 to 109 total yards.

Plainville Coach Grant Stephenson

Smith Center finishes the season 9-3 and for the second straight year falls in the sub-state championship game.

Plainville improves to 11-1 and will take on Troy in the Cardinals first title game appearance since 1985.

Saturday’s kickoff is set for 1p.m. from Lewis Field on the Fort Hays State campus

High School Football Scores

StateFarmSCOREBOARDFOOTBALL

Friday’s Scores
By The Associated Press
PREP FOOTBALL
Class 6A State Tournament
Sub-state
Blue Valley 35, SM East 34, OT
Derby 49, Lawrence Free State 21
Class 5A State Tournament
Sub-state
Goddard 50, Great Bend 21
Mill Valley 14, St. Thomas Aquinas 13
Class 4A Div-I State Tournament
Sub-State
Bishop Miege 52, Basehor-Linwood 0
Buhler 27, Maize South 7
Class 4A Div-II State Tournament
Sub-State
Pratt 21, Holcomb 14
Topeka Hayden 20, Holton 8
Class 3A State Tournament
Sub-state
Hesston 35, Hoisington 19
Rossville 27, Nemaha Central 22
Class 2-1A State Tournament
Sub-state
Plainville 14, Smith Center 0
Troy 28, Pittsburg Colgan 0

FHSU men’s soccer advances to Super Regional with overtime win over Lindenwood

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State got a goal two minutes into overtime to win 1-0 over No. 20 Lindenwood Friday night at the FHSU Soccer Complex to earn a spot in the national quarterfinals of the NCAA Division II Men’s Soccer Championship.

Michael Cole found the back of the net off a pass from Mauricio Castorino in the 92nd overall minute of play.

Between the pipes Michael Yantz stopped six shots to earn his first win of the NCAA Tournament.

The 16th-ranked Tigers (14-4-1) will face Rockhurst for the second straight year in the round of eight with a 1 p.m. kickoff Sunday at the FHSU Soccer Complex.

FHSU women’s soccer falls in Central Regional finals

ALLENDALE, Mich. – Central Missouri scored early in the second half to advance 1-0 over Fort Hays State and earn a spot in the round of eight at the NCAA Division II Women’s Soccer Tournament.

Hannah Pyle netted a goal for the Jennies, her 11th of the season, to give her squad the lead in the 52nd minute of the game. In goal Ana Dilkes stopped all six shots that found their way on frame to get her fourth shutout win of the postseason.

No. 3 Central Missouri (21-1) will face off with Grand Valley State for the second straight year in the round of eight at 1 p.m. on Nov. 20 from Allendale, Mich.

The 24th-ranked Tigers (15-5-3) end their season end their season with the most wins in program history.

MIAA

Mason helps No. 7 Kansas pull away from Siena

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Frank Mason III scored 18 points to lead a late-game charge, Carlton Bragg added a career-high 15 points and 11 rebounds and No. 7 Kansas beat pesky Siena 86-65 on Friday night.

Devonte Graham added 13 points and nine assists, and Lagerald Vick scored 12 points off the bench, as the Jayhawks (2-1) extended their winning streak to 42 straight at Allen Fieldhouse.

The Saints (1-2) never made it easy.

Marquis Wright hit three straight 3-pointers midway through the second half, and the gritty senior guard’s three-point play got coach Jimmy Patsos’ team within 63-58 with about 7 1/2 minutes left.

Vick answered with back-to-back baskets for the Jayhawks, kicking off the game-defining 16-2 run that would put the game away. Mason added a 3-pointer and a couple foul shots, Graham got into the act, and the Jayhawks — so accustomed to dominating inside — leaned on their guard play to seal the win.

Fort Hays overcomes sluggish start to win 88-73

By Dustin Armbruster

St. Cloud State took advantage of a sluggish Fort Hays State women’s basketball team to take a nine point lead three different times in the first seven minutes of Friday’s game in St. Cloud, Minnesota. The Tigers finally found traction in the first quarter to go on a 10-0 run on points from five different players to end first quarter leading 18-17.

The Huskies found their three point shooting stroke over the first two minutes of the second quarter to regain a 25-20 advantage. Like they did in the first quarter, Fort Hays finished the quarter strong with a 12-0 run to take their biggest lead of the first half 42-30. St. Cloud State hit a three to end the half and trim the lead down to 42-33.

Coach Tony Hobson

Fort Hays pushed their lead to ten when Jill Faxon took over in the third quarter scoring nine in a row and pushing the Tiger lead to 21 at 59-38. For Hays outscored the Huskies 26-9.

The Tigers pushed their lead to 25 points with 8:52 remaining, looked to be cruising to a victory. St. Cloud State had other ideas though as they cut the Tiger lead down to six at 76-70. The Huskies went on a 23-4 run over a period of six and a half minutes including five three pointers. Niki Kacperska though broke the run with a three pointer that started a 12-3 run to end the game with an 88-73 win.

Highlights

Fort Hays improves to 3-0 on the season and will play Saturday afternoon against Bemidji State at 2:00. Emma Stroyan was a perfect 9-9 from the field and 2-2 from the free thrown to lead the Tigers with 20. Jill Faxon added 18. St. Cloud State falls to 1-2 they will play Northland College in the final game of the Huskies Classic.

Man sentenced for killing Kansas man with a pool cue

Cooper- photo Johnson Co. Sheriff
Cooper- photo Johnson Co. Sheriff

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A 33-year-old man faces about seven years in prison for killing another man with a pool cue at a Johnson County bar.

The Kansas City Star reports that Gregory B. David Cooper was sentenced Friday to seven and a half years in prison. He pleaded no contest earlier to second-degree murder in the death of 23-year-old Tyler Knudsen.

Knudsen was fatally injured in December inside an Edgerton bar.

Cooper’s attorney argued that his client was leaving the bar as another man was challenging him to fight when he felt someone “contact” his back. That’s when he swung the cue, striking Knudsen in the neck.

Testimony showed Knudsen was not involved in the altercation.

Pompeo’s CIA nomination opens fight for Kan. congressional seat

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — President-elect Donald’s Trump’s nomination of U.S. Rep. Mike Pompeo for the top CIA job would put up for grabs the congressional seat in the south-central district.

Pompeo says in a statement that he is “honored and humbled” to accept the nomination, calling the decision to leave his congressional seat difficult. He says the opportunity to lead the CIA is a call to service he could not ignore.

Before starting the job, Pompeo would have to be confirmed by the Senate.

Pompeo was elected to the 4th District congressional seat during the tea party wave of 2010, and easily won re-election this month.

A special election would be required to fill the post. There is no primary.

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