Today Partly sunny, with a high near 42. Calm wind becoming south 5 to 9 mph in the afternoon.
Tonight A slight chance of rain before 10pm, then a slight chance of snow between 10pm and 11pm, then patchy snow and freezing drizzle after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 30. South wind 7 to 12 mph increasing to 13 to 18 mph after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Friday Patchy freezing drizzle before 7am. Partly sunny, with a high near 50. South wind 10 to 16 mph becoming west northwest in the afternoon.
Friday NightMostly clear, with a low around 21. West northwest wind 3 to 8 mph.
SaturdaySunny, with a high near 48. Light and variable wind becoming south southeast 6 to 11 mph in the afternoon.
Saturday NightA 30 percent chance of showers after 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 36.
Christmas DayA chance of showers, then showers and thunderstorms likely after 7am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 58. Windy. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Sunday NightA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 7pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 23. Windy.
KANSAS CITY – Law enforcement authorities in Kansas City are investigating an attempted car jacking and shooting.
Just before10:30 p.m. Wednesday night police responded to the area of U.S. 40 hwy and Interstate 70 after report of a woman who had been shot and was the victim of an attempted armed carjacking that just occurred in the parking lot of Burlington Coat Factory, 11910 E. U.S. 40 in the Kansas City suburb of Independence, according to a media release.
A Jackson County Sheriff’s Deputy who was driving along US 40 Hwy found the woman in her car.
No arrests have been made.
The suspects are described as three black males. The victim was transported to an area hospital.
Anyone with information about this crime is asked to call the Tips Hotline at (816) 474-TIPS or Independence Tips at 325-7777 or emails [email protected]
WICHITA, KAN. – A federal grand jury returned an indictment Wednesday charging a Wichita woman with bank robbery, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.
Christina A. Messerschmidt, 25, Wichita, Kan., is charged with one count of bank robbery. The indictment alleges that on Dec. 16, 2016, Messerschmidt robbed Intrust Bank at 1544 S. Webb in Wichita. Court documents allege she gave a teller a note written on a deposit slip saying, “Give me $1,000 or I will shoot you.” She told the teller, “If you push it, I’ll do it.”
Bank employees told police they recognized the woman as a customer who had opened an account in November and they provided police with her address, leading to her arrest.
If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000. The FBI and the Wichita Police investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Alan Metzger is prosecuting.
While on a trip in Colorado, Merle Loewen, Ellinwood, purchased a scale-model car, at his wife’s urging, for his desk. The model is a red and white 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air, a car Loewen and his wife owned brand new in 1957 — and a car he last saw in 1967 and never thought he would see again.
But that all changed earlier this year when he was contacted by Chris Miller, owner of Auto Tech in Hays, who told him he had the classic 1957 Chevrolet and it has been in Hays for 15 years, just 75 miles away.
In 2001, Chris Miller purchased the classic from a car collector in Wichita. Miller is only the third owner in the car’s history.
The car is an all-original red and white 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air two-door hardtop. According to Miller, the engine and transmission have been rebuilt but everything except the tires are still original, just like it came from the factory in 1957.
Miller said it is rare to find classic cars in this good of shape. It won the “Best Original Award” at a car show in Hays this year.
He began searching through the car and found an original warranty sheet in the glove compartment with the original owners’ names on it — “Merle and Betty Loewen.”
“I got me thinking,” Miller said. “I wonder if he’s still around.”
Over the years, Miller would search the internet on occasion for Loewen but was never able find anything — until January of this year, when Miller found the obituary for Betty Loewen. Loewen had passed away from cancer in December 2015.
Miller reached out the Loewen’s son and, a short time later, Loewen called Miller and they talked for almost an hour. Miller said Loewen expressed interested in seeing that car again, so they were able to set up a meeting for this month.
On a cold December day last week, Loewen and a friend, Dennis Carson, also of Ellinwood, made the trip to Hays to see the car Miller calls a “true survivor.”
Miller had Loewen help him remove the car cover in the garage at Auto Tech, 600 Vine, and he immediately remembered the two identical dents on the top of the cars tail fins left by a garage door that fell on the car one morning at their home in Topeka.
Loewen, who worked as a teacher for more than three decades, said they purchased the car new in 1957. The car came straight from the factory and was delivered April 4, 1957, according to the warranty sheet.
While looking over the car, Loewen also recalled taking the car on a road trip with his family and driving to the A&W in Topeka. They had seat belts – which were not a standard option – installed to make it safer for the kids to ride in. The seat belts were removed by the second owner, who Miller called a “purist.” But the anchors are still there.
Loewen said his family lived in Topeka while he attended Washburn and also lived in Emporia, where Merle taught at Emporia State University, and in the Wichita area.
In 1967, the car had nearly 80,000 miles on it and they decided to sell it to a man in Wichita — a decision Miller said he regrets.
“It wasn’t until later you discovered what an interesting vehicle you had,” he said.
Loewen said after paying $3,000 for the car when it was new, he sold it for $400 or $500.
“Well, it was good for Howard anyway,” Miller said with a laugh, “because he’s the one who got the big check.”
According to Miller, the car has 96,763 miles on it now.
Miller told Loewen and Carson to climb in as they went for a drive around Hays, much to all three’s delight as they smiled from ear to ear.
On multiple occasions when seeing the excitement on Loewen’s face, Miller said, “I’m having just as much fun as you are.”
Following their ride around town, Loewen got a chance to sit behind the wheel of the car for the first time in 50 years. Loewen said with smile, “50 years,” as he placed his hands on the steering wheel.
Miller said this is definitely a rare story; one where an original owner is reunited with the car. He said it may happen after 30 years, “but not 60.”
The two men said they hope reconnect again and might drive it in a local parade in the future.
MANHATTAN, Kansas — Kamau Stokes scored a season-high 18 points and Kansas State used an 18-1 late first-half run to defeat Gardner-Webb 67-54 on Wednesday night.
While Kansas State (11-1) was 5 of 7 from the field during that late first half stretch, Gardner-Webb (7-6) struggled from the field as they missed all 11 shot attempts in the final 7:02 of the first half.
Stokes and DJ Johnson were the only Wildcats to score in double figures on the night. Johnson scored 16 points and was a perfect 8 for 8 from the field in the victory.
Jamaal Robateau scored 17 points and Tyrell Nelson 14 to lead the Runnin’ Bulldogs.
UP NEXT
Gardner-Webb: The Runnin’ Bulldogs next game is their conference opener as they host High Point on December 29.
Kansas State: Kansas State will host Texas in the first game of Big 12 Conference play on December 30.
CHEROKEE COUNTY -A Monday morning house fire claimed the life of a rural Kansas boy.
At 6:37 a.m., emergency personnel responded to 8543 Northeast Scammon Road in Cherokee County where a two-story home was completely engulfed in flames, according to a media release.
Three year-old Jesse Walker died in the fire. His mother and a 10 month old infant were able to escape.
The cause of the fire is under investigation by the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office and the Kansas State Fire Marshal’s Office.
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Kansas freshman center Udoka Azubuike will miss the rest of the season because of a left wrist injury.
Jayhawks coach Bill Self said Wednesday that Udoka tore ligaments to his wrist in practice Tuesday and will need surgery.
The 7-foot Azubuike, from Nigeria, averaged 5.0 points, 4.4 rebounds and 1.6 blocks this season.
“We all feel bad for Udoka,” Self said. “He has worked so hard and has put himself in a position to have a tremendous impact on this year’s squad. “This is a blow to our team but I know that we will rally around this and Udoka will work hard to insure a full recovery.”
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback says he’s not rethinking his support for a Kansas law that will allow concealed guns on state college campuses starting in July.
Brownback told reporters Wednesday that he’s “not inclined to think about” revising the law enacted in 2013.
The law expanded the rights of gun owners to carry concealed weapons into public buildings, but allowed campuses to exempt themselves for four years.
The state Board of Regents last week approved policies for how the state’s six public universities will implement the law.
The law has been criticized by students, faculty and administrators. Legislators are expected to debate changing it after convening their 2017 session next month.
Brownback is a conservative Republican and strong supporter of gun rights, and he reiterated that position Wednesday.
At Villa St. Francis in Olathe, about 70 percent of the 170 residents rely on Medicaid to pay for long-term care. The facility has turned to the Catholic Archdiocese for financial support because of delays in the Kansas Medicaid application process. ANDY MARSO / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR
The Medicaid application backlog in Kansas is on its way back up, threatening months of progress on a coverage problem that has vexed health care providers across the state.
For more than a year, providers that rely on Kansas Medicaid, or KanCare, have been stung by delayed payments as they wait months for eligibility determinations that by federal rule are supposed to take no more than 45 days.
Nursing homes have been particularly hard hit, because about half of Kansans living in nursing homes rely on Medicaid to pay for their long-term care after their savings run out, and the long-term care applications are the most complex type within Medicaid.
Rodney Whittington, CEO of Villa St. Francis in Olathe, said news that the backlog is increasing again is frustrating given how much time he has spent chasing Medicaid reimbursements this year for the assisted living facility.
“It’s taking a lot of my efforts and energy away from things that really could make a difference when this (Medicaid eligibility) system used to be automatic,” Whittington said. “We could count on payment and we could worry (instead) about the operations of the facility to improve the lives of our residents.”
The backlog began in the summer of 2015 with the rocky rollout of a new computer system for processing applications called the Kansas Eligibility Enforcement System, or KEES.
It grew at the end of 2015 when Gov. Sam Brownback made an administrative change that funneled all Medicaid applications through a single KanCare Clearinghouse run by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
The Kansas Department for Children and Families, which had been processing complex long-term care applications for elderly and disabled Kansans, handed off thousands of those applications to Clearinghouse workers who had little experience processing them.
Within months the backlog burgeoned to almost 11,000, in part due to a rush of new applications that were referred to the state during the open enrollment period for the federal Affordable Care Act.
The state hired new workers and brought over some from DCF to help process applications and gradually reduced the backlog during the summer of 2016. State officials estimated it would be eliminated by the end of September.
That didn’t happen.
The state trimmed the backlog to 1,486 applications — most of them for long-term care — in September, but since then the numbers have been climbing.
The most recent data available shows 2,247 applications pending 45 days or more. The number of new applications — those pending 15 days or less — also has grown substantially since open enrollment period for ACA insurance began Nov. 1.
Download the KDHE Chart: Kansas Medicaid Application Backlog
Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita, warned months ago that if the state had not cleared the backlog by the time open enrollment started this year, it might never get caught up. He reiterated his concerns last week.
“So now exactly what I said back in August and then again in early November has come to pass,” said Hawkins, who chairs the Robert G. (Bob) Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight. “That we didn’t get caught up, that our situation is now increasing and it’s going to continue to increase now.”
Meanwhile, the financial strain of coverage delays is starting to radiate from nursing homes to other state services, local governments and even the Catholic Church.
Growing reluctance
Leavitt Partners, a health policy consulting shop, released a report on KanCare last month that touched briefly on the application backlog.
The report — commissioned by the Kansas Hospital Association, Kansas Medical Society and Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved — stated that interviews with medical providers found the cost burden for the backlog shifting to areas like Adult Protective Services, or APS.
APS is a Kansas Department for Children and Families program that seeks to remove vulnerable adults from situations in which they are being physically or emotionally harmed or financially exploited and refer them to a safe place — sometimes a nursing home.
Theresa Freed, a spokeswoman for DCF, said via email that there’s no evidence of cost-shifting from Medicaid to APS.
“We have no reason to believe, nor is there any reliable data showing, that last summer’s eligibility delays were causing increased costs to the Adult Protective Services (APS) program,” Freed said. “KDHE has been very receptive in working with APS on crisis cases to get Medicaid eligibility established.”
But some nursing home administrators say bad experiences with Medicaid applications have their facilities more reluctant to take in elderly Kansans referred by APS if they don’t have a secure payment source.
“We’ve just had some real nightmares of episodes,” said Cindy Luxem, president and CEO of a nursing home advocacy organization called the Kansas Health Care Association.
Crystal Peterson, owner of Peterson Nursing Home in Osage City, said her facility took in an elderly man referred by APS who applied for Medicaid in May and was not approved until last month.
She said the backlog was only part of the problem. The man’s application also required financial documentation, but APS closed his case and ignored her requests for help.
“We had no power to get to any of these documents he needed,” Peterson said. “APS was the only one who had the power. … I’ve just never had two systems fail so poorly for one gentleman.”
Denise Hoback, the billing specialist for Brookside Retirement Community in Overbrook, said her home took a referral from APS last year of an elderly woman whose children had taken all her money.
The woman applied for Medicaid in December 2015 and received a denial letter stating she was not eligible financially because she had assets that she had given to her family.
Hoback said that in the past, when long-term care Medicaid applications were processed by DCF, the workers processing the woman’s application would have known that the APS referral meant she had been financially exploited by her family.
But that information had not made it to KDHE and its contractors.
“I really honestly believe at this point … the individuals processing the applications had no understanding of what APS was,” Hoback said.
Brookside cared for the woman without pay for eight months until her Medicaid coverage was approved. Hoback said the facility ultimately received back payments, but cash flow was tight because seven of the facility’s other 71 residents also were waiting months for Medicaid coverage at the time.
“I was at my wit’s end,” Hoback said.
It took direct intervention by Luxem to help get the eight covered, and Brookside’s response has changed when APS asks for a referral.
“Let’s get their Medicaid approved, and then we’ll look at it,” Hoback said. “You can only take so many for the team. You can’t staff a nursing home and have everybody be in a no-pay status.”
Hoback said she would not be surprised if other nursing homes are following suit, leaving APS with fewer referral resources.
Robin Arnold-Williams, one of Leavitt Partners’ principal researchers, said that’s what her team heard while conducting interviews with hospital officials in May, June and July.
In a recent phone interview, Arnold-Williams said the hospitals reported abused adults staying longer as APS struggled to find them a nursing home placement. She said the Leavitt report should have more clearly stated that the costs to APS were indirect — that the agency wasn’t paying for the extended hospital stay but was expending resources while contacting multiple nursing facilities.
“It does imply that APS was paying for services, and I think it’s more that APS is trying to get access to services and the delay that was caused there,” Arnold-Williams said.
Church filling the gaps
Whittington, the head of Villa St. Francis, said providing a safe, clean home for elderly Kansans regardless of their wealth is part of the home’s mission as a Catholic institution.
But he said “there’s no reliability any more” in the Medicaid application process, and cash flow concerns have forced him to make decisions that run counter to the mission.
“There’s a point at which you still have to do business,” Whittington said. “So we have stopped saying yes to Medicaid-pending people.”
Few facilities rely more on Medicaid than Villa St. Francis, where about 70 percent of the 170 residents have no other method of payment.
Whittington said he has delayed improvements like kitchen updates and replacement of some flooring this year while he waits on Medicaid coverage for residents.
“It’s financially been hampering us all year long,” he said.
At one point, his facility was owed about $1.3 million for 40 residents whose Medicaid applications were pending.
He saw some progress after Hawkins and other members of the KanCare oversight committee expressed displeasure about the backlog to KDHE officials in August.
But he said he still has more than 20 residents with pending applications and about $750,000 in bills outstanding.
The state has established a process for homes to apply for half-payments for Medicaid-pending residents whose applications appear likely to be approved.
Whittington said he applied for the funds when his facility still had more $1 million in Medicaid bills.
“I’m expecting a big check of like $600,000, and I actually got $70,000 and a bunch of denials,” Whittington said.
Angela de Rocha, a spokeswoman for state agencies, said via email that she was glad Whittington used the advance payment system and it worked properly.
“The denials were a result of the applicants not meeting the financial qualifications for Medicaid and several duplicate applications,” de Rocha said via email. “The agency cannot authorize care and/or services to individuals who are not eligible. So his $1.3 million is not really a ‘backlog’ issue, as much as it is a financial eligibility issue relative to the applicants.”
Whittington said he believes the residents are all eligible for Medicaid. He added that in his 18 years as a nursing home administrator, he’s never had so much trouble getting Medicaid approvals.
In the absence of Medicaid payments, he’s been relying more and more on the generosity of church parishioners.
“Honestly, the only reason we make it is due to the support of the Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City,” Whittington said. “They’ve helped keep us afloat.”
Local government help
Salem Home, a small nursing facility in the central Kansas town of Hillsboro, doesn’t have the backing of the Catholic Church.
So its leaders turned to their city government for help in October.
The city’s Public Building Commission owns the local medical center and leases space in it to the nursing home.
“What we agreed to do is just subsidize (the rent) for six months,” said Hillsboro Mayor Delores Dalke.
Peter Mungai took over as Salem Home’s new director in October and faced cash flow issues that he told a local newspaper were due in part to delayed Medicaid payments and state budget cuts .
Dalke said the break on the rent was a gesture of goodwill for Mungai as he tries to improve the facility’s financial picture.
“We were in a position to do it, and with them changing administrators and everything we felt like it was the right thing to do,” Dalke said.
She added that with only two nursing homes in town and an aging population, city leaders want to make sure Salem Home remains financially viable.
But Dalke said she wasn’t aware that nursing homes across the state are having similar problems getting payments for Medicaid residents.
The rental subsidy for Salem Home amounts to about 2 percent of the city’s total operating budget, and Dalke said legislators would be hearing about it if the Medicaid application process doesn’t improve.
“What I’m going to have to do,” Dalke said, “is tell the people over here to raise more Cain in Topeka.”
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
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — An eastern Kansas woman was sentenced to four months in federal prison for embezzling more than $500,000 from the bank where she worked.
A federal judge in Kansas City, Kansas, also sentenced 29-year-old Ashley Blacketer of Leavenworth to four months of home confinement under electronic monitoring after her prison release. She also must repay the stolen funds.
Blacketer already had pleaded guilty to one count of embezzlement by a bank employee.
She admitted that during a six-year period while working at Exchange National Bank & Trust in Leavenworth, she covered up the crime by falsifying a ledger showing the amount of cash in the bank’s vault.
Authorities say the embezzlement was discovered during an audit after she left the bank for another job.
LILBURN, Ga. – The Fort Hays State women’s basketball team moved up three spots in the receiving votes category of the latest WBCA NCAA Division II Coaches’ Poll, released Wednesday (Dec. 21) by the organization. The Tigers picked up 21 points in the voting process, good for the 10th spot among those also receiving votes, up from five points and the 13th position in the category last week.
It is the third time the Tigers have been recognized in the poll this season, reaching as high as 25th in the poll after their 6-0 start.
Fort Hays State is joined in the polls by four other MIAA schools, making it the best-represented conference in the poll. No other league has more than three teams listed in the latest rankings. Pittsburg State and Emporia State held their positions in third and fifth, respectively. Central Oklahoma jumped into the top 25 for the first time this year after a 10-0 start, sitting in 19th heading into the break. Central Missouri is also listed in the “others receiving votes” category, two slots behind the Tigers.
Fort Hays State will look to wrap up a perfect 9-0 non-conference record after the holiday break when they host Kansas Christian on New Year’s Eve. First tip is set for 2 p.m. inside Gross Memorial Coliseum.
Below is the WBCA Division II Top 25 Coaches’ Poll for December 13, 2016.
Rank
School (First Place Votes)
Record
Points
Last Week
1
Ashland (21)
13-0
597
1
2
California (PA)
11-0
570
2
3
Pittsburg State (1)
11-0
551
3
4
Bellarmine
10-0
511
4
5
Emporia State
11-1
476
5
6
Virginia Union (2)
9-0
467
6
7
Angelo State
9-0
452
7
8
Alaska-Anchorage
10-1
430
8
9
Colorado State-Pueblo
12-0
418
9
10
Lincoln Memorial
11-0
369
11
11
California Baptist
13-2
360
10
12
Bentley
10-2
323
11
13
Seattle Pacific
10-0
290
14
14
Drury
10-2
270
13
15
Arkansas Tech
7-1
245
17
16
Winona State
10-2
224
19
17
Lewis
10-2
149
23
18
Wheeling Jesuit
8-1
130
24
19
Central Oklahoma
10-0
121
RV
20
Florida Southern
8-3
86
16
21
Grand Valley State
8-3
84
22
22
Clayton State
9-2
78
15
23
Columbus State
7-0
72
NR
24
North Georgia
10-1
71
RV
25
Northern State
8-2
63
18
Others Receiving Votes: Minnesota State-Moorhead (9-1) 42; Regis, CO (10-1) 34; Saint Mary’s, TX (10-2) 30; Limestone (7-3) 28; Caldwell (10-2) 26; Queens, NY (9-3) 26; Saginaw Valley State (8-2) 26; North Alabama (9-0) 26; Eckerd (9-2) 24; Fort Hays State (10-2) 21; West Texas A&M (8-4) 13; Central Missouri (10-1) 12; Adelphi (9-2) 11; Chowan (10-2) 8; Simon Fraser (10-2) 5; Anderson, SC (8-2) 4; Glenville State (9-1) 4; Point Loma Nazarene (9-2) 4.
Midwest Energy is offering a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person(s) responsible for the break-in and theft of items from Midwest Energy’s Hays Service Center, 600 E. 11th, between 5 p.m. Dec. 20 and 9 a.m. Dec. 21.
Anyone with information is asked to call the Hays Police Department at (785) 625-1011.
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — Johnson County authorities have determined police officers did not violate Kansas law when they shot and killed a man outside a suburban Kansas City retail store.
Police said 50-year-old Walter R. Echols of Cypress, Texas, was shot last month outside a Wal-Mart after he hit an officer with a long wooden rod during a disturbance outside the store. Police also say officers tried to subdue him by non-lethal means before he was shot.
The Kansas City Star reports that Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe said Wednesday that after reviewing reports about the shooting that the use of deadly force by officers was justified under Kansas law.