We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Police: Kansas man dies after road rage shooting

RoadRage_740SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a fatal, road rage shooting.

Just after 12:30 a.m. on Saturday officers with Topeka police responded to a local hospital after report of a gunshot victim who had arrived by personal vehicle, according to a media release.

The victim, Michael Sadler, 28, Topeka, was suffering from critical injuries and died.

Police identified a potential crime scene in the 1300 Block of SW 29th Street. They say Sadler was a passenger in a vehicle traveling near the intersection of SW 29th and SW Burlingame Road, became involved in a road rage argument.

Police say suspect vehicles include a dark blue Chevy SUV or a red or orange motorcycle with unknown occupants. The involved parties did not know each other prior to the incident, according to police.

Police: Kansas teen arrested for clown threat toward high school

police emergencyCOWLEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Cowley County are investigating a teen for criminal threat.

Just after 8 a.m. on Friday, Police received information about a possible threat directed toward Arkansas City High School, 1200 W. Radio Lane, according to a media release.

The information came from a social media post associated with clowns.

An investigation into the post began immediately, culminating at 2 p.m. when officers located a possible suspect in the case at a home in Arkansas City.

The 17-year-old juvenile was processed by officers and released to the custody of a parent, pending case review by the Cowley County Attorney’s Office.

Ellis High School staff and students to clean up community during service day

Ellis HSBy GARRETT SAGER
Hays Post

ELLIS — On Oct. 17, students and staff of Ellis High School will take the day away from the classroom, putting their pens and pencils down to help clean up their community.

On the fifth annual Ellis High School Community Service Day, students and staff work on general cleaning and maintenance projects throughout the community.

“We looked at this as a way to give back to our community,” Corey Burton, Principle of Ellis High School said.

Burton would like the elderly to take advantage of this service day, as well as the people who physically are unable to do the work.

Burton
Burton

“It’s really about the elderly for an event like this,” he said. “Any way we can help out those who cannot do the general maintenance work.”

Burton estimated there will be approximately 160 volunteers from the EHS family, noting nearly everyone in the school participates.

The groups are divided into their seminar groups. Seminar groups at EHS consist of 12 to 14 students who can spend up to 35 minutes with teachers outside of regular class time to get help with homework. The groups include all grade levels.

“The seminar groups will go out with their teacher and perform their task, whatever that might be, return to school for lunch and then go back out,” Burton said.

Most of the work that is done is yard work, he said, which is why the service day is being held in conjunction with the Oct. 19 citywide cleanup day in Ellis.

“We wanted to hold it before the citywide clean up day to make it easier for the trash pickup and also so those residents do not have to pay for scheduled  pickups,” Burton said. “Most of the work is mowing, raking leaves, picking up sticks or trimming bushes.”

In past years, groups have cleaned churches, helped clean the Good Samaritan house,and picked up trash.

“We also do general things that just do not get done such as washing windows or dusting,” Burton said.

The organizing committee met this week to discuss projects in which the staff and students will take on.

“As of now, we do not have a lot of projects on hand, but it is still early in the process,” Burton said.

EHS will be accepting project requests up to Oct. 14. Burton would like people to consider the safety of the EHS students when they request a project to be completed.

“The safety of the project is big in whether we will allow our students to do it or not,” Burton said.

Comm Service Flyer 2016Burton says such projects that require students to step on a high ladder or perform a duty near a power line are just few examples in past years in which the task could not be completed because of the safety concerns.

To schedule a project, contact Burton at EHS at 785-726-3151 or Leonard Schoenberger at 785-726-1278.

 

BEECH: Donate nutritious foods for food drives

Linda Beech
Linda Beech
Community food drives provide an important source of food for families trying to make ends meet. They also give neighbors the chance to help neighbors and instill the values of sharing and caring in children. While food pantries and the people they serve are grateful for any and all donations, giving an assortment of healthy foods will help food pantry users have better diets.

Fall food drives begins this month with the “Trick or Treat So Others Can Eat” campaigns in Ellis on Sunday, October 9 and in Hays on Tuesday, Oct. 11. Food collections often continue throughout the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday season in churches, schools, clubs and other organizations. This is an important time of year for local food pantries to fill their shelves to help those in need.

You can give the gift of better health by providing nutritious non-perishable food items to food drives in your community.

Many Americans eat more calories than they need. But it’s important to realize that although an overweight person may look well-fed, he or she may be filling up on calorie-dense food that doesn’t contain the nutrients his or her body needs.

In the United States today, health conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, and obesity are common.

Unfortunately, the prevalence of these conditions is often higher among people who use food pantries.

The good news is that these conditions can in part be controlled by the foods a person eats. Eating fruits and vegetables, beans, whole grains, lean proteins, and foods that are lower in salt and sugar can go a long way toward improving health and feeling good.

Before you give to your local food drive, think about filling a healthy plate. Use the food groups of the MyPlate as a guide for food drive donations with a healthier twist:

Fruit group: canned fruit in juice or light syrup, 100 percent fruit juice, raisins or other dried fruit.

Vegetable group: Low sodium canned vegetables– especially dark green and deep orange varieties, tomatoes and tomato sauces, low sodium canned soup, dry potato products.

Grain group: whole-grain unsweetened breakfast cereal, whole-grain pasta and crackers, oatmeal, brown rice, popcorn, cornmeal, whole wheat flour.

Dairy group:
nonfat dry milk, evaporated canned milk, shelf-stable milk boxes.

Protein group: canned or dried beans, water-packed canned tuna and salmon, canned chicken, unsalted nuts, nut butters.

For individuals with limited kitchen access, consider single-serve canned pull-tab foods such as fruits, vegetables, pastas, stews, chicken and noodles, etc. and single-serve items such as granola bars, packs of nuts or dried fruit, and individual juice packs or boxes.

Contact your local food pantry to find out what other items they need, such as infant formula, baby food, sugar-free or gluten-free items, or other foods for special dietary concerns.

K-State Research and Extension has developed a new bookmark-size flyer listing healthy options for donated foods.  Use it for your own reference, or share it with others as you prepare for a food drive.  Find it on our Ellis County Extension Office website at www.ellis.ksu.edu.

When donating food for a food drive at holiday time– or anytime– choose foods that provide maximum nutrition from each food group of MyPlate. Your neighbors will eat healthier when you contribute more nutritious foods.

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

Hays Symphony Orchestra continues free concerts Oct. 15

hays symphony posterBy RUTH FIRESTONE
Hays Music Supporter

On Saturday, Oct. 15, at 7:30 p.m. in Fort Hays State University’s Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center, the Hays Symphony Orchestra will perform compositions by Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov under the baton of guest conductor Nicholas Bell.

This second concert in the symphony’s Russian Masterworks Series also includes a pre-concert talk at 6:45 p.m., given by HSO horn player Breanna Ellison. A post-concert reception will give audience and performers a chance to mingle while enjoying light refreshments.

And the best news is, all orchestra concerts this season will be free thanks to the enormous success of the first concert. Tickets will be available at the box office before the show or in advance by contacting the symphony at [email protected].

Russian music is always exciting, and the program will feature a soloist from Uzbekistan, a former Soviet republic. Guest cellist Sunnat Ibragimov has won several prizes as an artist of creativity, passion and technical command. He is sponsored by NAVO, a new organization, whose mission is “to establish world-class level of performances in the Midwest by bringing together (regional) artists and those who have performed around the globe.”

Tchaikovsky’s “Variations on a Rococo Theme,” opus 33, 1886, for cello and orchestra, will begin the program. The composer intended the work as homage to Mozart, but it didn’t turn out exactly as planned. As often happens when a composer doesn’t play the intended solo instrument, Tchaikovsky gave the manuscript to Wilhelm Fitzenhagen, the intended cellist, for technical adjustments.

Instead of sticking to the cello parts, Fitzenhagen rewrote the whole piece, which has become the standard edition. Even so, its seven variations are pleasant, graceful and easy to listen to.

Another composition by Tchaikovsky, “Pezzo Capriccioso” (capricious piece) opus 62, 1887, follows. In contrast to the lightness of “Rococo Variations,” “Pezzo,” which he composed in a single week, is decidedly melancholy in tone, probably due to the death of a friend. The “Capricious” in the title refers to “Tchaikovsky’s fanciful treatment of various aspects” of the work (Wikipedia).

The concert will conclude with Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Scheherazade,” 1888. This, with its beautiful orchestrations and exotic melodies, is one of the most beloved compositions in the entire orchestral repertoire. Scheherazade is a heroic queen who frames the tales of “A Thousand and One Nights” or the “Arabian Nights,” a collection of Middle Eastern and Indian tales.

In this piece, listeners will hear tales of storms and shipwreck, thieves, enchantment and love woven into a colorful musical adventure.

Come one, come all! Free concert, Oct. 15, 7:30 p.m. Refreshments to follow.

HaysMed Hospice to hold volunteer training on Oct. 18

Photo courtesy HaysMed
Photo courtesy HaysMed

Hays Medical Center

HaysMed  Hospice will be conducting a volunteer training session on Tuesday, October 18 from 8:00 am – 5:00 pm.  There is no cost for the training and no obligation for attending.  Lunch and all materials will be provided.  Volunteers must complete the entire session to meet the volunteer requirements.

Hospice offers comfort care through supportive services and pain and symptom management.  Hospice volunteer duties may include providing companionship, listening, reading, running errands, helping with simple tasks and supporting patients and families.

Volunteers are the heart of hospice work, and without volunteers HaysMed Hospice could not provide the many facets of physical, social, psychological and spiritual care that make hospice so special.  The HaysMed Hospice team provides care for those in Ellis, Rooks, Rush and Russell counties.

Registration for training is required and participants need to register by October 12.  To register or for more information, call 785-623-6200 or 1-800-248-0073 or email [email protected].

Kan. Wheat Alliance: Jagger’s double-decade impact

kansas wheat alliance

By ALEX LESSARD

Kansas Wheat Alliance

MANHATTAN – This year marks the 22nd anniversary of Kansas State University’s hard red winter wheat variety, Jagger. This variety has made an impact in several countries, states and individual farms, since its release in 1994. Not only was it one of the most widely-planted varieties, but one of the best parent varieties as well.

Dr. Rollin Sears, a retired wheat breeder for K-State and later AgriPro/Syngenta, made the initial cross for Jagger and several other widely-accepted varieties during his career.

“When I came to Kansas, I noticed that most of the time wheat never ripens in Kansas. It usually dies because of the drought or high temperature. So, I was looking for and making crosses to try to identify wheats that would actually ripen and not die. Jagger was that variety.”

Jagger was named after Minneapolis, Kansas, wheat farmer, Joe Jagger. Prior to that time, K-State had never named a wheat variety after a wheat farmer before, since they were always named after locations. Sears wanted to name the variety after Jagger, but wasn’t sure if it was the right thing to do.

“I asked four or five key wheat breeders, after Joe’s passing, and all of them started to cry because they felt so affectionate for Joe and realized the impact he’d had on wheat, so I knew it was the right decision,” said Sears on naming the variety after Jagger.

Over the past few years, Jagger has been marketed by the Kansas Wheat Alliance (KWA). This variety may not be seen in many fields across the state as Jagger anymore, but it lives on in the pedigree of several current varieties. Those varieties include K-State’s Everest, Joe – KWA’s newest hard white wheat variety released in 2015 – and Tatanka, one of KWA’s newest hard red wheats released this fall. In addition to having a high percentage of pedigrees worldwide, it was also part of the foundation for wheat breeding.

Sears explained the moment he chose the cross for Jagger.

“I could take you to the exact spot where Jagger was selected at Ashland Bottoms. It was just one of those things where you’re just walking along and you’re looking at thousands of rows of wheat and then, all of a sudden, you come to this row, and it’s like love at first sight when you see it, and you know that this is going to be a successful variety of wheat,” said Sears.

Jagger was planted in two foundation fields in its first year. Nine years later, it reached its peak and had nearly 35,000 acres of Certified seed production with 1.3 million bushels of Certified seed produced that year. Even this year, Certified Jagger is still being produced. During the span of 22 years, over 10 million bushels of Jagger Certified seed has been sold in Kansas alone.

In the first spring after Jagger’s release, a series of killing frosts wiped through Kansas, severely injuring many of the Jagger fields. During that time, several farmers had started to give up on Jagger, but after a cool spring with a few good rains, Jagger fields made an astounding recovery. After that, Jagger had a series of good years with successful yields.

Sears recalled knowing that Jagger would be a good variety because he noticed there was something special about this variety, but he never imagined that it would be such a popular variety, accepted in so many different places.

Jagger’s strengths include a fast establishment in the fall, exceptional baking quality, good performance on low-pH soils, very good drought tolerance and moderate resistance to tan spot. On the other hand, Jagger had a few weaknesses. This variety had been known to shatter, have below-average straw strength, is susceptible to leaf rust and Hessian fly, moderately susceptible to stripe rust and had below-average test weight.

This popular variety has been successful across all the Central and Southern Plains. It also has good tolerance to drought and wheat streak mosaic virus in the region.

At the Borlaug Summit convention in 2014, a farmer from the Republic of Georgia, a small country between Europe and Asia, told Sears he had wanted to thank him for a long time because Jagger had saved his farm.

In Jagger’s lifespan, it was planted as a significant variety in 12 countries. It was a hard working variety for farmers because it was dependable and didn’t give up. At one point, Jagger was planted on nearly every acre in south central Kansas.

“It’s humbling to know that at one point you held all the Jagger that existed in the world in the palm of your hand. Then the seed was increased and grown by everybody and got up to over 15 million acres,” explained Sears.

The Kansas Wheat Alliance is a not-for-profit organization formed by wheat producers, researchers, and seed marketers with the goal of maximizing value for wheat farmers by promoting responsible management of new wheat varieties developed by Kansas State University and other wheat-breeding programs. Royalties are used to support wheat research that enhances the profitability of wheat producers.

For more information on KWA, please visit www.kswheatalliance.org.

Mostly sunny, mild Saturday, slight chance of rain late

FileLThis weekend will be pleasant. Abundant sunshine is forecast today with temperatures reaching into the mid 70s. Winds will be from the southwest at 15 to 20 mph. A mild night is on tap tonight with lows in the 40s. There is a slight chance for thunderstorms late tonight into Sunday. Increasing clouds and temperatures in the lower 70s on Sunday. A few showers and thunderstorms are possible Sunday night into Monday.

Today: Sunny, with a high near 75. Southwest wind 6 to 14 mph.

Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 47. South wind 6 to 8 mph.

Sunday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 11am, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 73. South wind 6 to 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Sunday Night: A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 53. South southeast wind around 14 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.

Columbus Day: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 79. South wind 11 to 16 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph.

Ellis Co. restaurant and lodging inspections, 9/25-9/30

Kansas Department of AgricultureLast week’s inspection results from the Kansas Department of Agriculture:


Victoria High School 1107 10th St PO Box 139, Victoria- Sept. 28.

Regular inspection found one violation.

  • Atmospheric pressure back flow device in the mop sink is leaking when the water is turned on.

Chuck’s 507 B W. 7th, Hays- Sept.26

Regular inspection found one violation.

  • The ice machine in the back storage area had black fuzzy substance present on the dispenser.

Taco Grande E. 23rd, Hays- Sept.26

Regular inspection found three violations.

  • In the inside walk in cooler there was a container that held refried beans without a date on the container.
  • Compartment sink using a Quaternary Sanitizing Solution was not reading on the establishments test strip. Establishment is using the concentrated tablets.
  • Sugar and salt were in direct contact with non food grade 5 gallon containers “Heartland 5 Gallon Buckets”.

 

Candidates say Legislature could revisit KanCare carve-out

By ANDY MARSO

Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service Sen. Vicki Schmidt, a Topeka Republican, speaks during a candidate forum this week at the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center. At left is Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Democrat from Topeka, and at right is Candace Ayars, Schmidt’s Democratic opponent in the November election.
Photo by Andy Marso/KHI News Service Sen. Vicki Schmidt, a Topeka Republican, speaks during a candidate forum this week at the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center. At left is Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Democrat from Topeka, and at right is Candace Ayars, Schmidt’s Democratic opponent in the November election.

Senators from both parties predicted a renewed effort to remove disability support services from KanCare during a candidate forum this week in Topeka.

The forum hosted by the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center focused on disability issues and featured candidates for state and federal office.

Mike Oxford, the center’s executive director, asked the candidates if they thought home and community-based services, or HCBS, should continue to be administered by three private insurance companies as part of the state’s managed care Medicaid program.

Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Democrat from Topeka, told the crowd of about 50 that he was part of an effort to keep those services out of KanCare when it was launched in 2013.

“Unfortunately we were not successful in doing that,” Hensley said. “I, for one, would be more than willing to revisit that issue and try to carve that out.”

Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration agreed to leave home and community-based services for Kansans with developmental disabilities out of KanCare for the first year, in favor of a voluntary pilot program. That decision came after disability advocates and service providers argued that the daily support services were fundamentally different from the acute medical care that insurance companies had more experience covering.

Efforts to keep services for people with developmental disabilities out of KanCare past the first year were unsuccessful.

Sen. Vicki Schmidt of Topeka, the lone Republican legislative candidate who attended this week’s forum, said “there was a lot of fear, a lot of unknowns, a lot of questions that we had” about privatizing the services at the time.

The past two years have not dispelled those concerns, she said, citing persistent billing problems and delayed payments from the KanCare companies as examples.

Schmidt said she hoped the next Legislature would discuss separating home and community-based services again.

“Now we have history on our side, and history tells us about how big some of the KanCare issues are,” Schmidt said.
Schmidt’s Democratic opponent, Candace Ayars, is a public health specialist who formerly worked for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.

Ayars said she opposed privatization of Medicaid services because health care is a unique industry with priorities that conflict with profit motives.

“There are probably two places where business has no business,” Ayars said. “One of those is health care and the other is education, and we’ve seen firsthand what trying to put those on a for-profit model does.”

More conservative legislators who have supported KanCare did not attend the candidate forum.

The Brownback administration has said KanCare will save the state $1 billion over its first five years while also improving health outcomes by coordinating care.

Angela de Rocha, a spokeswoman for state agencies, said she had requested information on how much it would cost the state to remove HCBS services from KanCare. Regardless of the financials, she said the state “does not believe it would benefit individuals receiving waiver services.”

HCBS providers have complained about increased billing complexities since the switch to KanCare and recent policy changes they say will cut their reimbursements.

Some people receiving the services have waged public battles against reductions in services. But the three KanCare insurers have produced clients who have praised their administration and expressed gratitude for the work of specific case managers.

Those stories are frequently aired at meetings of the Robert G. (Bob) Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight.

Renae Hansen is a former staffer on that committee who is now the Democratic candidate for Kansas House District 54.

During the forum Hansen said based on what she had heard at the committee meetings, she also favors changes to KanCare.

“There’s all kinds of issues and it really needs to be looked at,” Hansen said.

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

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File