ELLIS COUNTY –Two people were injured in an accident just after 7 a.m. on Saturday in Ellis County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2012 Chevy Traverse driven by Reginald D. Evans, 24, Colorado Springs, CO., was eastbound on Interstate 70 eleven miles west of Hays when the driver fell asleep.
The vehicle drifted left into median and hit and a maintenance crossover that caused the vehicle to go airborne.
The vehicle then struck the guardrail and came to rest on the guardrail and against the bridge pillar.
Evans and a passenger Shawnna Evans, 25, Colorado Springs, Co., were transported to Hays Medical Center.
Three children in the vehicle were transported to the hospital but not injured.
All five were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The government is fining four airlines for failing to have accurate notices explaining compensation for passengers who are bumped from flights or whose baggage is damaged or lost.
The Department of Transportation said Friday that it fined American Airlines $45,000, Southwest Airlines and Alaska Airlines $40,000 each, and United Airlines $35,000.
Under federal rules, airlines must explain potential compensation when they bump passengers from an oversold flight. Rules also generally bar airlines from limiting their liability when they lose, damage or delay a passenger’s bag to less than $3,500.
The department said that during airport inspections, airline agents at gates or ticket counters didn’t have the required notices or had outdated or inaccurate information.
Listen to Mike Cooper interviewing Dr. Manoj and Bryan Noone, from the Sleep and Neurodiagnostic Institute at HaysMed, with the topic of “Sleep” by clicking the link above and then clicking the play button
ELLIS–The Catholic Charities Mobile Outreach Unit will be at the Ellis Family Care Center parking lot, 1000 Washington St., Monday, Aug. 29, 10-11:30 a.m.
Available services will include:
Clothing for men, women, children and infants
Food bags, hygiene items, bathroom tissue
Diapers and baby wipes
Blankets
Emergency Assistance applications
Kansas Loan Pool Project applications
Information and applications for other services
Catholic Charities ministers to families and seeks to reduce poverty for the vulnerable, regardless of their religion.
For more information call the Hays office at (785) 625-2644.
A contractor for the city of Hays began restriping north Hall Street as three lanes Thursday afternoon.
By BECKY KISER Hays Post
Drivers on their Friday morning commute to school or work in west Hays need to pay extra attention.
A contractor for the city began working late Thursday afternoon to restripe north Hall Street between 27th and 41st from four lanes down to three lanes.
Hays Assistant Public Works Director John Braun said Thursday night the middle lane turn arrows may not be placed until Monday.
“It will be an adjustment for drivers,” Braun acknowledged, “although studies show it is a safer traffic configuration.”
He noted that when east 13th Street between Vine and Canterbury was re-striped to three lanes in late 2013, some people complained but have since realized the traffic is more efficient.
Milling and an asphalt overlay on the north section of Hall Street was completed earlier this month.
The Kansas Association of School Boards has released new research showing that while the state’s overall education rank remains high, it has slipped in some key areas.
These changes have taken place while other states have increased school funding much more than Kansas.
The report focuses on educational outcomes reflected by the State Board of Education’s Kansans Can vision; workforce educational needs; and the standards set by the Kansas Supreme Court for constitutional funding.
“This report is an early warning that Kansans can’t be complacent about our historically high levels of achievement,” said KASB’s Associate Executive Director Mark Tallman. “If the state wishes to retain its high rank ‐‐ and improve it to truly lead the world in the success of each student ‐‐ policymakers and other leaders must acknowledge the role funding plays in educational achievement levels not only in Kansas but nationwide.”
Kansas has better educational outcomes on average than its peers ‐ those most like Kansas in terms of student characteristics, adult populations and urban/rural balance ‐ and spends less per pupil. However, peer states have generally been improving faster and increasing funding more than Kansas.
Although Kansas has improved on most education measures, especially educational attainment by young adults, declines on national fourth and eighth grade reading and math tests could indicate future problems if corrective action is not taken.
ABILENE – In partnership with the Chisholm Trail 150 celebration, the Eisenhower Presidential Library will show western movies on Saturday, Sept. 3 and Sunday, Sept. 4. The “Mooovie Marathon” will be held in the Visitors Center Auditorium of the Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home. This movie marathon is just one component of the “Trails, Rails, and Tales: Spirit of the Chisholm Trail” festival set for Labor Day Weekend in Old Abilene Town.
The schedule includes the following movies:
Saturday, Sept. 3: 1:00 – 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 – 9:00 p.m.
1:00 – American Lawmen: Tom Smith ( 1hr., 17 min.)
Using his fists instead of a pistol, professional boxer turned frontier lawman Tom Smith is determined to clean up ‘Hell on Earth.’ This is the little known story of one of the greatest lawmen of the Wild West.
2:30 – Abilene Town (1 hr., 29 min.) Randolph Scott, Ann Dvorak
In the years following the Civil War, the town of Abilene, Kansas, is poised on the brink of an explosive confrontation. A line has been drawn down the center of town where the homesteaders and the cattlemen have come to a very uneasy truce.
4:00 – The Old Chisholm Trail (1hr.) Johnny Mack Brown, Mady Correll,Tex Ritter
Dusty Gardner, bringing a herd up the Chisholm Trail, is looking for water. Belle Turner has water but wants an exorbitant price for it. When Dusty and his men start a well, Belle and her men set out to stop them.
7:00 – Red River (2 hr. 3, min.) John Wayne, Montgomery Clift
After starting his cattle ranch in Texas 14 years ago, Tom Dunston is finally ready to drive his 10,000 head of cattle to market. Dunston is a hard task master demanding a great deal from the men who have signed up for the drive.
Sunday, Sept. 4: Noon – 4:00 p.m.
12:00 – South of the Chisholm Trail (1 hr., 37 min.) Charles Starrett, Nancy Saunders
When the ranchers of Bearcat are plagued by rustlers, Big Jim Grady offers to buy their herds at low-ball prices. Steve Haley suggests that they band together and drive their herds to Abilene and get full price.
2:00 – Showdown at Abilene (1 hr., 20 min.) Jack Mahoney, Martha Hyer
Jim Trask, former sheriff of Abilene, returns to the town after fighting for the Confederacy to find everyone thought he was dead. His old friend, Dave Mosely, is now engaged to Trask’s former sweetheart and is one of the cattlemen increasingly feuding with the original farmers.
For additional details about the Trails, Rails and Tales event, contact the Abilene Convention & Visitors Bureau at abilenekansas.org.
Breezy and partly sunny conditions today will be matched with highs just a few degrees on the cool side of normal for late August. By late this evening, non severe thunderstorms will again be possible, mainly across the northern counties and the interstate 70 corridor through 4 am Sunday morning.
Looking ahead to the next few days, an unsettled weather pattern will keep periodic thunderstorm chances in the forecast, with high temperatures generally in the 80s.
Today: Mostly sunny, with a high near 85. East wind 5 to 15 mph becoming south in the morning.
Tonight: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. South southeast wind 9 to 15 mph.
Sunday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 9am, then a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 88. South southeast wind 8 to 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Sunday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 66. Southeast wind 5 to 11 mph.
Monday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 86. South wind 5 to 7 mph.
Photo by Wyandot Center Kristen Whitney, left, service coordinator for the Cooperative Agreements to Benefit Homeless Individuals grant at Wyandot Center, and Michael DePriest, a case manager, explain a visual representation of chronically homeless people who have gained housing through their programs since January. Each bird has the initials of a Wyandot Center client who now has housing.
Community mental health centers in Kansas are doing more to get homeless people off the streets and into treatment, but limits on Medicaid coverage and a lack of rental housing have slowed their efforts.
Kristen Whitney is service coordinator for the Cooperative Agreements to Benefit Homeless Individuals grant at Wyandot Center in Kansas City. She said Wyandot Center employees can reach out to people who are homeless, encourage them to accept treatment and emergency shelter, assist them with applying for benefits, help them locate a permanent apartment and meet with them weekly to smooth issues that may arise. But that still isn’t enough to meet everyone’s needs, she said.
Some clients require daily check-ins, particularly if they have lived on the street for years and aren’t accustomed to caring for an apartment, Whitney said, while others need someone to bring them groceries or teach them how to use the bus system. In Kansas, Medicaid doesn’t cover those kinds of supports, she said.
States have some control over which services their Medicaid programs cover. Missouri has more permissive rules, allowing community mental health centers to get paid for having someone on staff at all times in a supported housing building, Whitney said. So far, arrests and emergency room visits are down for people receiving the extra support in Missouri, she said.
In Kansas, Medicaid is a privatized program known as KanCare run by three managed care organizations. One of those managed care organizations has shown an interest in investing in supportive housing, said Tom Page, service coordinator for the homeless outreach team at Wyandot Center.
If clients can become more stable and stop cycling through the emergency room, the savings can far outweigh the cost of the housing, he said.
Angela de Rocha, spokeswoman for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services, said changing what Kansas Medicaid covers would require the state to propose a service expansion, which federal officials would have to approve.
The state has put some funding toward housing for people recovering from mental illnesses. In fiscal year 2016, which ended June 30, Kansas community mental health centers received almost $1.3 million in grants related to homelessness. Some of the grants were federally funded, with KDADS distributing the money.
The state recognizes the importance of providing stable housing for people with mental illnesses, de Rocha said.
“Housing is an issue because often individuals with behavioral health problems are homeless. It is hard to recover without a place to live, let alone be able to recover enough to find employment,” she said in an email.
Meeting basic needs
Sherrie Watkins-Alvey, senior director of Wyandot Center, agreed that it’s vital to meet clients’ basic needs before they can begin to focus on their psychological well-being.
Not all mental health centers can provide those services, however, because they can’t bill Medicaid for staff time spent on outreach or supports, like assistance with budgeting, planning meals or working out disagreements with a landlord.
“The first intervention, the most important intervention for them is housing,” she said. “It’s to combat homelessness, but also to increase recovery.”
Grants for housing have been reasonably stable over the years, though they haven’t kept up with inflation, she said. Centers do have to compete for most grants, so they aren’t guaranteed year to year, she said.
The grant to focus on chronic homelessness, for example, lasts three years, Watkins-Alvey said. Right now, Wyandot Center is trying to get qualifying clients on Medicaid and find other funding sources to cover at least some of the services that clients need, she said.
“When we have the funds, we get in, we work hard, we work fast, we try to make connections to community partnerships,” she said. “At the end of the day, if we don’t do it, there’s no one standing in line saying, ‘We’ll do it for free.’”
Housing isn’t just a matter of a roof over someone’s head, however. People need privacy and stability before they can begin working on their mental health needs, said Theresa Douthart, housing specialist at Valeo Behavioral Health Care in Topeka.
“At the (Topeka) Rescue Mission, they have 200 people,” she said. “It’s hard to get your thoughts together and focus.”
Apartment supply is low
Even if funding is available, however, not all Kansas communities have a stock of open apartments.
Sharon Zehr, who leads the homeless outreach team at Bert Nash Community Mental Health Center in Lawrence, said the center has a case manager who encourages people who are homeless and have mental illnesses to enroll for treatment and helps with basic needs like shoes or sleeping bags to help build a relationship.
People who are homeless don’t have to agree to receive therapy or drug treatment before the case manager will assist them with finding housing, Zehr said.
“We try to have a housing-first outlook in that we’ll help people wherever they’re at,” she said.
Bert Nash Center also runs an eight-bed transitional home for people recently released from jail or an inpatient hospital stay. Employees assist the transitional residents, who pay a small amount of rent, as they search for jobs and apply for benefits like food stamps while they continue to receive therapy, Zehr said.
“Having a little more stability while they’re transitioning is helpful,” she said.
It isn’t as easy to find longer-term housing, however. Lawrence has plenty of apartments, Zehr said, but most of them rent to students who can afford more than people trying to leave homelessness behind. Few apartments rent for less than $450 per month and the wait for federal housing vouchers is more than a year, she said.
“That’s more than half of your monthly income on rent” if you rely on disability payments, she said.
Bert Nash Center has worked with the Salvation Army and the Lawrence-Douglas County Housing Authority to increase the number of vouchers, Zehr said. In a few cases, they even put people up in hotel rooms for few days until they could find a more permanent solution, she said.
Other housing challenges
Lawrence isn’t the only city where finding permanent housing can be a challenge. Douthart said Valeo has eight interim apartments available in Topeka for stays of up to six months and four for people who need housing indefinitely. The city of Topeka also offers some housing vouchers for people who accept case management services, she said.
But about half of the landlords in Topeka aren’t interested in taking those vouchers, and it becomes even more challenging if the client has a criminal record, a history of evictions or a substance use disorder, Douthart said.
Some states have laws that forbid landlords from discriminating based on type of payment, like vouchers, but Kansas doesn’t.
Valeo uses a housing-first model, which doesn’t require people to show they aren’t using substances, but many landlords don’t want to take tenants on those terms. Sometimes, the only housing tenants can find is substandard, and the center doesn’t encourage them to take that, she said.
“The landlords that take (vouchers) only have 10 units, and they fill up quickly,” she said. “It’s very hard, in the community, to house someone with a felony” record.
Marilyn Cook, executive director of COMCARE in Sedgwick County, said Wichita has a more comprehensive care system. COMCARE has 64 apartments available with no requirements except that the client allow weekly visits from a case manager, and other organizations also have housing available, she said. Some churches shelter people during the winter and operate day centers where people can shower and take care of other needs.
Still, Cook said the system isn’t meeting everyone’s needs. The most recent point-in-time count found about 575 homeless people in Sedgwick County, she said, and waits are long for subsidized housing. COMCARE employees were able to convince 214 people to accept assistance transitioning off the street.
Despite the challenges, some people have been able to leave homelessness behind. Whitney said the Wyandot team working with chronically homeless people has found housing for 18 of them. Wyandot still is working with 29 people and another 30 are waiting to be screened, but the center only has one case manager for housing programs, she said.
At Bert Nash Center, the case manager met last year with 86 people and 41 agreed to accept services, including some people who had been homeless for long periods, Zehr said. For example, one man who had been camping at Clinton Lake for more than a year recently moved into an apartment, she said.
“We don’t give up on people,” she said.
Megan Hart is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach her on Twitter @meganhartMC
Marketing of the reinstituted early morning flight at the Hays Regional Airport will focus on business travelers.
By BECKY KISER Hays Post
After operating without an early morning flight at the Hays Regional Airport since January 2015, SkyWest/United Express will reinstate the popular 6:40 a.m. weekday departure beginning the first week of January 2017.
The city of Hays received confirmation of the decision by SkyWest August 19.
City Manager Toby Dougherty is delighted about the change. He anticipates the schedule modification will also apply to the weekend.
“When SkyWest instituted services as United Express in Hays in August of 2014, we had a very similar schedule. The plane spent the night here, left early in the morning for Denver, a mid-day turn around, and then came back late at night. In Jan. 2015, SkyWest had to make some modifications in their fleet and they had to move the plane to a place where it could be more lucrative from a business standpoint to spend the night. They chose to move the overnight portion to another airport…the (subsequent) 10 o’clock arrival in Hays and 10:35 departure we have in the morning is about as early as they can get it when the plane doesn’t spend the night here,” Dougherty explained.
“Evidently the decision has been made that it’s more lucrative to put it here in Hays, and I believe, it’s also in hopes of increasing ridership, increasing passengers to Hays Regional Airport.”
Dougherty has the same hope.
“It’s been no secret that we at the city have been a little frustrated by the amount of passengers that have been utilizing the Hays Regional Airport,” he said.
“Back four, five and six years ago, we were approaching 10,000 annual passenger boardings with Great Lakes–a very unreliable airline flying old equipment on a somewhat unreliable schedule. And, it was an extremely expensive ticket because it was always an add-on ticket. You paid your price to get from Hays to Denver and back and then you paid the price of your ticket to somewhere else,” Dougherty pointed out.
Yet, Hays has averaged fewer annual boardings–about 8,000–the past two years with SkyWest.
“SkyWest flies top-of-the-line 50-passenger regional jets, gets to Denver International Airport in 40 minutes. Fares are very competitive with United Airlines. You book your ticket online at United.com. It’s a seamless, dynamic pricing so you’re not paying the leg to Denver and then somewhere else,” Dougherty said.
He understands the schedule can be a challenge if trying to get to some certain destinations, but believes “by-and-large, it was still a good schedule.”
After doing some research, it became apparent the number of business travelers was down more than the numbers of leisure travelers at the Hays airport. A survey of the local business community revealed the lack of an early morning flight was the number one reason for the downturn. Price was mentioned but not as significant.
All of the information was shared with SkyWest by Airport Manager Nathan Marcucci.
For months, the city had already been encouraging local and area businesses to “Fly Hays” whenever possible, sending a message of “use it or lose it.”
“We didn’t dream SkyWest was going to put the early morning flight back in January,” Dougherty said in amazement. “Evidently they see potential and have reinstituted it.”
The city continues to encourage increased ridership, especially for business use.
“I understand a little bit about the economics of what it takes to fly a jet in and out of the Hays Regional Airport and it’s extremely expensive. Even with the Essential Air Service (EAS) subsidies they’re getting from the federal government, you still depend on passengers to make this route profitable.”
During the first five months SkyWest was in Hays and providing the early morning departure, “we didn’t exactly rush back to utilize it as a flying public,” Dougherty noted.
There’s a back story to that.
“We were coming off a couple negatives–negative number one was Great Lakes. Great Lakes was a terrible airline and they did not serve our community very well, especially the last couple years they were here. They had a flight completion percentage of somewhere around 50 percent towards the end–meaning half the flights wouldn’t even go,” Dougherty recalled.
Great Lakes then discontinued its service before SkyWest began its contract awarded by the U.S. Department of Transportation, leaving Hays without commercial air passenger service for four months in 2015.
“We know that had an effect on our flying public and when SkyWest came in under United Express…we were slow to come back and they saw the (financial) possibility of moving the (overnight) plane somewhere else after five months. It was highly unlikely to me they were going to preemptively move it back.
“Evidently they see the potential. They’ve heard the feedback from some of the larger businesses–Fort Hays State University, Hays Medical Center–and they see the potential in what a morning flight could provide.”
Promotion and advertising the use of the Hays Regional Airport will continue and even ramp up, according to the city manager.
“The analogy I used in a recent staff meeting was McDonald’s McRib campaign–‘You asked for it. The McRib is back.’
“Well, Flying Public, you asked for it. The early morning flight is back and that’s what we have to promote.”
Although Dougherty personally has never found it difficult to overcome the mid-morning versus early-morning departure, he understands going some places can be difficult.
“I think some people got caught in the traffic of trying to come back to Hays where you had to be in Denver at noon or 1 p.m. (Mountain Time) in order to catch that last flight back. That’s where it could be really difficult. If you’re coming from an east coast location, it may be difficult to get out of there early enough to get to Denver to come back.
“So, the late arrival that comes with the RON–Remain Over Night–with the plane staying overnight in Hays, that late arrival is just as important to flexible schedules as the early morning departure is. They kind of go hand-in-hand.”
Part of the promotional campaign, marketed by the Hays Convention and Visitors Bureau, focuses on affordability.
“When you take in account the time to drive to Wichita, Kansas City, or Denver, it can be affordable to fly out of Hays. If you’re a leisure traveler with family members, you have to consider the costs of drive time, meals, parking and maybe a hotel stay versus the additional $100 to $200 per ticket.
“If you’re flying on business–usually it’s just one person or maybe two–the business also has to value the employee’s time, the productivity, perhaps paying mileage if the employee has to drive, the expenses that come with travel, the employee being out of the office (for a longer time). Therefore the convenience becomes a lot more affordable for a business.
“It’s been the business community saying this airport is absolutely critical to our success. That’s why this latest outreach has been at the business level….we think they got a little used to driving to other airports and didn’t give Hays the full consideration they should have.”
Hays City Commissioner James Meier
In an email to Hays Post Thursday, City Commissioner James Meier said he’s starting his own marketing campaign.
“I have asked city staff and other city leaders to please stop talking about SkyWest and to start talking about United or United Express so we have a unified, clear message to send to the public.
“I think by talking all these years about ‘SkyWest’ that people are thinking about ticketing and pricing in terms of the old Great Lakes where people had to get a ticket to Denver and then a second ticket to wherever they were going. With Great Lakes it was ‘add-on pricing,’ meaning they paid a fair on United and then another fare to Great Lakes.
“This isn’t the case with SkyWest as SkyWest operates completely under the United system. Flying from Hays now is no different than flying from Wichita, Kansas City, or anywhere else there is United,” reminded Meier. “You may change planes… but it’s all one ticket because it’s all United.”
Meier said he thinks the flying public is checking prices to Denver “because that’s what they’ve always done, and then deciding the price is too high, not realizing they need to price their ticket from Hays to their final destination.”
According to Meier, all the United ticket prices he’s checked “are $350 to $450 round trip to pretty much anywhere in the U.S. from Hays.”
HUTCHINSON -The trial for a Kansas teen accused of the murder of his mother and sister continued Friday with the defense for Sam Vanochen calling their witnesses.
Vonachen is charged with two counts of first-degree murder and aggravated arson after allegedly setting a fire to his family’s home leaving his mother and sister trapped inside. He was 14 at the time of the fire September 26, 2013.
On Friday afternoon, Hutchinson Police Detective Scott Carlson was asked about phone records belonging to the defendant.
It was during that testimony that the defense opened the door for the state to bring in a photo downloaded by Vonachen to his phone the night of the murder, in fact just hours before he allegedly started the fire.
That image from “My Little Pony” which had a picture of the pony with the word murder repeated across the picture in different sizes.
Most of the rest of the defense witnesses called to the stand Friday were character witnesses including the defendant’s grandmother who testified that she never saw anything out of the ordinary and described the relationships among the family as normal.
Prior to the state resting, the defense was also able to call a number of teachers from the Buhler school district. They told the jury that he was quiet, but none indicated that they saw any substantial evidence that he was anti-social.
The state ended their case with Dr. Shelby Evans, a psychologist who also did an evaluation of the defendant and also agrees that he was capable forming intent to commit murder.
After the state rested, the defense asked for a judgment of acquittal, which was denied.
BOSTON (AP) — Eric Hosmer and Alex Gordon homered, and Ian Kennedy allowed one run through five innings as the Kansas City Royals continued their monthlong hot streak with a 6-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox on Friday night.
Kansas City has won 11 of its last 12 games and is 18-6 in August.
Kennedy (9-9) had a chance set a club record by allowing one or fewer runs in six straight outings of at least six innings. But he left with a runner on after 5 1/3 innings and wound up charged for two earned runs in the game. He finished with nine strikeouts.
Kelvin Herrera earned his 10th save.
Lorenzo Cain added a solo homer in the eighth inning.
Steven Wright (13-6) took the loss in his first game back off the disabled list with a right shoulder strain, giving up five runs and seven hits.