HILL CITY – The Ellis girls won the 2A Hill City regional track and field meet and qualified 11 individuals and one relay team for the State Track and Field meet in Wichita.
Alexia Deutscher qualified with the top throw of the state qualifiers in the javelin at 144’1 and in the 100 meter dash and long jump.
Ashley Mattheyer qualified in both the high jump and the 200 meter dash. Cassie Waldschmidt qualified in the 400 meters.
Kelsey Brack qualified in both the long jump and triple jump. Abby Burton also qualified in the triple jump and Haley Reiter in the discus.
The Ellis 4×100 meter relay team has the second best time at 51.35 seconds and the 4×400 meter relay team also qualified for state.
Plainville’s Shania Werner was the lone qualifier for the Cardinal girls qualifying in the long jump, 100 and 200 meter dash.
Trego had two individuals and a relay team qualify in four events. Helen Geifer qualified in both the 1600 meter and 3200 meters. Geifer’s time in the 3200 is the second best in 2A.
Cheyenne Nickelson qualified in the pole vault and the 4×800 meter relay team is also headed to state.
The Hill City girls had four individuals qualify in six events. Allyssa Miller has the top throw in the discus at 147’ and she also qualified in the shot put.
Amanda Conway qualified with the second best time the in 300 hurdles with a time of 46.81 seconds.
Madalyn Nelson qualified in the 100 meter hurdles and the 300 meter hurdles. Lexie McDowell also qualified for state in the high jump.
Plainville boys finished third in Hill City The Plainville boys had five individuals and a relay team qualify in eight events for the State Track and Field meet in Wichita. Plainville finished third at the Hill City Regional meet.
Hayden Friend qualified in both the 100 meter dash and the 200 meter dash at the 2A Hill City meet on Friday. Friend enters the state meet with the second best time, among qualifiers in the 200 meters at 23.72 seconds.
Sam Kaup also qualified in two events for the Cardinals. He has the fourth best time in the 400 meter dash at 51.87 and the 10th best time in the 200 meters.
Willie Wilkerson and Zach Pierson both qualified in the discus with the eighth and ninth best throws in 2A.
Ryan Buresh qualified in the 300 meter hurdles with the 10th best time.
The Cardinals 4×100 meter relay team will head to Wichita with the second best time in 2A at 44.87 seconds.
Hill City had four individuals qualify for the state meet.
Mike Pope in the high jump, Clay Money in the discus, Mekhai Bates in the shot put and Everett Brandyberry in the pole vault.
The Victoria boys had three individual qualifiers and the 4×100 meter relay team qualify for the state tournament in Wichita after Friday’s 1A regional meet in Phillipsburg.
Collin Kisner qualified in the 100 meter and 200 meter dash and Justin Giesbrecht in the 3200 meters.
La Crosse had two individuals and two relay teams qualify for state. Clayton Herdman qualified in the 400 meters and the javelin. La Crosse also had their 4×800 and 4×400 meter relay teams qualify for state.
Stockton had four individuals in six events and two relay teams all qualify for the state meet. Kylar Williams and Brayden Winters both qualified in the 100 meter dash. Williams and Kian Coffey in the long jump. Coffey also qualified in the triple jump. Has best jump at 44’8.25. Joel Green also qualified in the 110 hurdles. Stockton’s 4×400, 4×100 relay also qualified for the state meet.
The Victoria girls had two individuals and two relay teams qualify in five events. Kali Weber qualified in both the 100 and 200 meter dash. Jayden Newbold qualified in the pole vault and the 4×100 and 4×400 relay teams also qualified for the state meet.
La Crosse had three individuals and a relay team qualify in four events. Kacee Klozenbucher qualified in both the high jump and the triple jump. Emma Rues in the 800 meters and the 4×100 meter relay team are also headed to Wichita.
The Stockton girls 4×400 meter relay team also qualified for the state meet in Wichita.
SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect in connection with a fatal car accident
According to Saline County Jail records Patrick Driscoll, 33, Great Bend, was arrested late Saturday morning on multiple charges including murder in the 2nd degree, driving under the influence, reckless driving, improper driving, speeding, and transporting an open container.
Just before 4:30 a.m. on April 27, a Chevy Silverado driven by Driscoll Salina was southbound on North Ohio Street at Stimmel Road in Saline County.
The pickup crossed the centerline and hit a 2011 Hyundai Santa Fe head-on.
Driscoll and the driver of the Hyundai Song Horton, 55, Salina, were transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.
Horton was then transported to a hospital in Wichita, according to police.
The crash closed a portion of North Ohio from Pacific Avenue to Interstate 70 was closed for almost four hours.
Driscoll’s pickup photo Salina Police
At the time of the accident, Saline County Undersheriff Roger Soldan said alcohol was found in Driscoll’s truck and was suspected to be a factor in the deadly crash.
TOPEKA–The Kansas Department of Health and the Environment (KDHE) and the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) have scheduled five public meetings in preparation for renewal of KanCare, the Kansas Medicaid program.
KanCare members, stakeholders and others who are interested in KanCare renewal are invited to attend. The meetings will include the updates on KanCare from state officials and staff, information on potential changes to the program and feedback sessions for public input.
“As we move toward renewal of KanCare in 2018, it is important for us to continue to meet with the people directly impacted. We want to listen to what they have to say and the ideas that they have to move KanCare forward,” said Dr. Susan Mosier. “These public sessions are part of our efforts to make KanCare even better and more effective for beneficiaries and their families.”
The public meetings are scheduled for 1 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 24, in Topeka at the Ramada Hotel and Convention Center; at the same times on Wednesday, May 25, in Wichita at the Marriott Wichita and in Kansas City, KS at the Jack Reardon Civic Center (Hilton Garden Inn); and at the same times on Thursday, May 26, in Hays at the Rose Garden Banquet Hall, 230 E. 8th, and in Pittsburg at Pittsburg State University.
After these public sessions, the agencies plan on drafting the federal renewal application for KanCare and a Request for Proposal (RFP) for the new managed care organization contracts. Public notice of the state’s intention to apply for renewal of KanCare, a comment period and two public hearings will be conducted on the renewal application this coming summer and fall. A final draft of the RFP and the renewal application, incorporating input from participants and stakeholders, will be submitted to CMS in October, 2016.
From November, 2016 through May, 2017, the agencies expect to evaluate the RFP responses, finalize the contracts, incorporate any CMS feedback and submit the contracts to CMS for approval. CMS approval of all elements of renewal is anticipated to be received by December, 2017, in anticipation of launch in January, 2018.
Please see the KanCare website, www.KanCare.KS.gov, for meeting location addresses and additional information on these meetings.
Individuals may request special accommodation by contacting Elizabeth Phelps at (785) 296-4552 or [email protected] and please make your accommodation requests by May 16, 2016.
BARTON COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating a reported Saturday shooting and asking for help to locate suspects.
Phillip Pardo, 35, was shot around 10 p.m. Saturday night in an apartment complex at 3900 Forest Avenue, according to a media release.
The gunshot resulted from a confrontation that took place in the parking lot of the apartment complex. The shooter fled the scene prior to the arrival by police.
Pardo was transported to Great Bend Regional Hospital by Great Bend Fire/EMS, and was later transported to a Wichita hospital with unknown injuries.
Shortly after that report, officers were dispatched to a residence several blocks away where residents said they had found two men in their front yard. Believing that the men were attempting to break into their home, a man at the residence brought a gun out onto his porch to confront them.
The subjects fled southeast from the area along the railroad tracks. Police believe the incident was related to the shooting at 3900 Forest.
Detectives have identified a suspect and are in the process of following up on leads.
Great Bend Police Chief Cliff Couch says the shooting incident is disturbing. “Such reckless and dangerous behavior is obviously very concerning,” Couch said.
“This took place in a very residential area where a lot more people could have been hurt. I hope anyone in the community with any information about the incident will contact the Police Department, so that we can bring the suspect to justice and send a strong message that our community won’t tolerate such behavior.”
If you have any information regarding this case, you are encouraged to call the Great Bend Police Department at 620-793-1920.
MONTGOMERY CITY, Mo. (AP) — Missouri prosecutors plan to pursue the death penalty for a Mexican national in the shooting death of a man a day after he allegedly killed four people in Kansas.
Prosecutors in Montgomery County west of St. Louis submitted court papers Friday saying they will seek capital punishment for Pablo Serrano-Vitorino if he’s convicted of first-degree murder in the March 8 shooting death of Randy Nordman at that man’s New Florence home.
A judge last week ordered Serrano-Vitorino to stand trial in that case. Arraignment is scheduled for June 1
Serrano-Vitorino also is accused in Kansas of killing a Kansas City, Kansas, neighbor and three other men at the neighbor’s home on March 7.
An attorney for Serrano-Vitorino did not return a phone call seeking comment Friday.
PLAINVILLE — Four Rooks County health care professionals were invited to address the Kanas Healthcare Collaborative’s eighth annual Summit on Quality on May 6 in Wichita.
Rooks County Healthcare Center nurses Erin Stahl, Michele Hinger, Pam Harmon and Stockton EMS director Julie Cole delivered a presentation on early recognition and treatment of heart attacks and strokes.
The presentation focused on how RCH staff and county EMS personnel advance their performance improvement efforts concerning ST-elevation myocardial infarctions (STEMI heart attacks) and stroke care. They also shared their on-going focus on measurement, including review of their quarterly Kansas Heart and Stroke Collaborative (KHSC) quality reports through standing committee meetings.
“Kudos go out for the teamwork of all the providers and staff, who all work together to make this happen. We hold some state records on our quick and efficient treatment of our patients for stroke, STEMI and trauma. Other hospitals across the state are watching us and wanting to know how we are succeeding. It was quite an honor to be selected to present at the summit. As always, we are so proud of the commitment of RCH to raise the bar and continue to improve the care we provide,” said Harmon.
The establishment of a monthly meeting between RCH staff and county EMS personnel has led to significant improvements in timeliness of care. For example, a recent patient was identified in the field as having suffered a heart attack, transported to RCH emergency room where the patient was stabilized in 11 minutes, well below the KHSC protocols. With timely transport and coordination with the cardiologists, total time from arrival to RCH’s emergency room to the cardiac catheter lab at Hays Medical Center was under one hour.
Dr. Bob Moser, Executive Director of KHC said with regards to the work RCH is doing, “It was a good overview of how a critical access hospital adapted evidenced based guidelines to their local realities. It shows the value of performance improvement using time dependent measures in managing a time critical diagnosis.”
According to Harmon, the combined commitment of RCH administration, leadership and staff along with the county EMS staff all aid in improving the rapid identification, initial procedures, transport and proper interventions for STEMI and stroke patients.
Back row: Robert Wickham, Dr. Troy Kerby, Carol Groen, Rhonda Klaus, Blakely Hillary, Brian Pfannenstiel Front Row: Jessica Pfeifer, Regina Borthwick, Dorothy Gideon, Lynette Pfannenstiel
HaysMed has received the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Stroke Silver Plus Quality Achievement Award. The award recognizes the hospital’s commitment and success in ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized, research-based guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence.
To receive the Silver Plus Quality Achievement award, hospitals must achieve 85 percent or higher adherence to all Get With The Guidelines-Stroke achievement indicators for at least 12 consecutive months and during the same period achieve 75 percent or higher compliance with five of eight Get With The Guidelines-Stroke Quality measures.
These quality measures are designed to help hospital teams provide the most up-to-date, evidence-based guidelines with the goal of speeding recovery and reducing death and disability for stroke patients. They focus on appropriate use of guideline-based care for stroke patients, including aggressive use of medications such as clot-busting and anti-clotting drugs, blood thinners and cholesterol-reducing drugs, preventive action for deep vein thrombosis and smoking cessation counseling.
“A stroke patient loses 1.9 million neurons each minute stroke treatment is delayed. This recognition further demonstrates our commitment to delivering advanced stroke treatments to patients quickly and safely,” said Terry Siek, vice president of patient care and chief nursing officer. HaysMed continues to strive for excellence in the acute treatment of stroke patients. The recognition from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Stroke further reinforces our team’s hard work.”
HaysMed has also met specific scientific guidelines as a Primary Stroke Center featuring a comprehensive system for rapid diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients admitted to the emergency department.
“The American Heart Association and American Stroke Association recognize HaysMed for its commitment to stroke care,” said Paul Heidenreich, M.D., M.S., national chairman of the Get With The Guidelines Steering Committee and professor of medicine at Stanford University. “Research has shown there are benefits to patients who are treated at hospitals that have adopted the Get With The Guidelines program.”
Get With The Guidelines®-S puts the expertise of the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association to work for hospitals nationwide, helping hospital care teams ensure the care provided to patients is aligned with the latest research-based guidelines. Developed with the goal to save lives and improve recovery time, Get With The Guidelines®-S has impacted more than 3 million patients since 2003.
According to the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, stroke is the No. 5 cause of death and a leading cause of adult disability in the United States. On average, someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke every 40 seconds, someone dies of a stroke every four minutes, and nearly 800,000 people suffer a new or recurrent stroke each year
Widely scattered showers and a few thunderstorms may develop by early afternoon across southwest Kansas, but the more significant threat of severe thunderstorms will occur during the late afternoon near a dryline just east of the Colorado border. A small number of supercells may produce large hail, torrential rain and damaging winds. A brief tornado is possible. The area of thunderstorms will move east during the evening but should weaken before midnight.
Today: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before noon. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 82. Breezy, with a south wind 16 to 23 mph.
Tonight: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 8pm. Increasing clouds, with a low around 61. Windy, with a south southeast wind 20 to 25 mph decreasing to 13 to 18 mph after midnight.
Monday: A slight chance of showers and thunderstorms before 11am, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3pm. Cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 82. West wind 6 to 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
Monday Night: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 3am. Mostly clear during the early evening, then becoming mostly cloudy, with a low around 62. Northwest wind 7 to 10 mph becoming south southeast after midnight.
Tuesday: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 87. South wind 8 to 11 mph.
The Hays Beautification Committee in conjunction with the City of Hays is sponsoring a Water $mart Landscape Award program for 2016 with categories for both Residential and Commercial landscapes.
A Water $mart Landscape is a sustainable and drought-tolerant landscape with low-water use plants and turf to maximize water efficiency.
The goal of the award program is to increase awareness of water conservation in the Hays community by promoting creative low-water (Water $mart) Landscaping.
The Water $mart Landscape Award may be presented to a residential and a commercial Hays water customer with a Water $mart Landscape that exemplifies superior design and follows the seven principles of water smart landscape:
Planning and design
Low-water use plants
Practical turf areas
Efficient irrigation
Soil amendment
Mulches
Maintenance
1. Planning and design includes proper plant groupings and size. Slopes, exposure, soil amendments and water needs must also be taken into consideration.
2. Low-water use plants: Plants materials used should be the correct type for the Hays area.
3. Practical turf areas: Turf areas are to be properly laid out with warm season grasses being used in lieu of fescue/bluegrass.
4. Efficient irrigation: Does the landscape use driplines, high efficiency nozzles or subterranean irrigation.
5. Soil amendment: Soil was amended or tested in the proper manner to provide healthy establishment and healthy growth of drought-tolerant landscape and turf.
6. Mulches: Does the landscape plan have proper use of wood mulches and proper use of rock and gravel outside the planting zones.
7. Maintenance: Was the Water $mart Landscape properly maintained during establishment. At appropriate times, pruning, mowing, fertilizing, watering and insect/disease were completed to maintain a healthy Water $mart Landscape.
Requirements for nomination include that the nominee landscape area is within the city limits of Hays, the selected Water $mart Landscape must be visible to the public, and the Water $mart Landscape must have been installed at least one year prior to the nomination to demonstrate healthy establishment and proper care.
All are encouraged to submit nominations by June 1 to the Hays Parks Department or contact them at (785) 628-7375.
Nominations will be judged by the Hays Beautification Committee. Finalists will be contacted to schedule an on-site visit.
One winner will be chosen from each category, commercial and residential. Winners will be notified by June 30 and will receive an award and a certificate identifying them as a Water $mart Landscape winner. The winners will be presented their award during a regular scheduled Hays city commission meeting in July.
Photo by Jim McLean/KHI News Service Conservative Republican Sen. Forrest Knox faces voters during a “listening tour” stop in Gridley. After the event, Knox said, “The people of Kansas will decide the direction we go: Whether we continue down (the path of) reining in the unsustainable growth in state government, making our state attractive to business, or whether we go back to a faith in government and thinking that we can grow government and solve all of our problems.”
The 2016 election could be a tough one for some Kansas lawmakers hoping to return to the Statehouse.
Polls, editorials and reader comments on news websites indicate that voters are paying attention to what’s happening in Topeka, and many don’t like what they’re seeing.
They’re frustrated by the inability of Gov. Sam Brownback and legislators to solve persistent budget problems that have triggered a downgrade in the state’s credit rating, delayed major highway projects and forced cuts in university budgets and reimbursements to health care providers who participate in KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program.
Some Kansas voters are also embarrassed. The budget problems and culture-war debates over welfare restrictions, guns and a dress code for women working in or visiting the Statehouse have made the state a popular punching bag for comedians and television talk show hosts.
The level of dissatisfaction was reflected in a poll released last week that ranked Brownback the least popular governor in the nation. The Morning Consult poll, for which 66,000 voters nationwide and 650 in Kansas were surveyed, showed Brownback with a 26 percent job approval rating, six percentage points below Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican who has come under withering criticism for his handling of the water crisis in Flint.
The Brownback effect
Practically, the poll numbers may not mean much to Brownback, who won a narrow re-election victory two years ago and isn’t on the 2016 ballot. But they could signal trouble for legislative incumbents who supported the 2012 income tax cuts, which many believe are largely responsible for the budget mess.
Sen. Forrest Knox, a conservative Republican from Altoona, recently was on the receiving end of some voter anger. At a “listening tour” stop in Gridley, a small ranching and farming community in southeast Kansas, he was peppered with questions about the budget problems and his support of the tax cuts.
Jim Ochs, a rancher and retired public school principal, listened politely as Knox talked about the spending cuts and bookkeeping “gimmicks” being used to patch holes in the budget created by continuing revenue shortfalls. Several minutes in, Ochs interrupted.
“The people of Kansas are dissatisfied with our governor, and we’re not happy with what’s going on,” he said. “We’re angry and I think you’re sensing that.” When Knox attempted to respond, Ochs cut him off. “I don’t want to hear it,” he said. “Let me vent and maybe I’ll leave here feeling better.”
After the meeting, Ochs, a lifelong Republican, said he wanted Knox to understand why he was upset about the tax cuts, the persistent budget problems and what he called the “attack on public education.” “I don’t understand why our legislators aren’t listening,” he said. “They seem to be getting different feedback from these meetings than what I hear when I talk to people. Truthfully, I haven’t talked to one person who believes that Governor Brownback is doing a good job. I’m not exaggerating.”
Voters at recent legislative briefings in Topeka and Overland Park expressed similar concerns.
“At some point it’s going to get bad enough that, yeah, we’ll throw the bums out,” said Jim Frost, a moderate Republican who attended a legislative coffee at the Johnson County Library in Overland Park the Saturday after lawmakers adjourned without balancing the budget.
Jan Mach, a Topeka Democrat who attended a legislative event at the Topeka and Shawnee County Public Library, said she was “beyond angry” about the income tax cuts and the damage the resulting revenue declines are doing to public schools and universities. Mach scoffed at Brownback’s claim that the tax cuts will jump-start the Kansas economy if given time to work.
“What business or corporation would move to Kansas just on the basis of low taxes when there is crumbling infrastructure and poor schools?” she asked.
Statehouse shake-up
In an interview after the Gridley meeting, Knox agreed that voters seem more agitated this year. If that persists, he said, it could threaten the majorities that conservative Republicans now hold in both the House and Senate.
“That is the question before us,” Knox said. “The people of Kansas will decide the direction we go: Whether we continue down (the path of) reining in the unsustainable growth in state government, making our state attractive to business, or whether we go back to a faith in government and thinking that we can grow government and solve all of our problems.”
Bruce Givens, of El Dorado, an assistant director of the Butler County Special Education Cooperative, has filed to run against Knox in the Republican primary.
Despite the grilling he got in Gridley, Knox said he doesn’t think that voters will punish him for supporting both the 2012 income tax cuts and large increases in sales and tobacco taxes passed in the final hours of the marathon 2015 session.
“If we can communicate reality and the truth — we being the conservative side — I think we’re fine,” Knox said. “I think my average constituent is solid with my point of view.”
Photo by Amy Jeffries/KCUR Democratic Rep. Nancy Lusk, left, and moderate Republican Rep. Stephanie Clayton deliver a legislative update at the Johnson County Library in Overland Park.
Rep. Stephanie Clayton, a moderate Republican from Overland Park, said she wants end to the dysfunctional politics that has put the state in an unwelcome national spotlight Clayton, one of several moderate Republicans who bested conservative challengers in the 2014 primary, said Kansas did better when it was considered a boring but stable and safe place to live, work and raise a family.
“If I could make a whole campaign theme, I’d say, ‘Let’s return to boring,’” she said. “It’s not really going to get people out to the polls. But honestly, we need to stay off the news. We need to stay in the black. We need government to be just so functional that it rolls along without you guys even knowing that we’re there.”
Noting that a coalition of Democrats and moderate Republicans almost had the votes to reject the budget proposed by Brownback and legislative leaders, Clayton said changes in a handful of seats could shift the balance of power in the Legislature.
Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.