WACO, Texas (AP) — Pilgrim’s Pride has ordered a massive recall of cooked chicken products after consumers and federal meat inspectors found contamination by such foreign material as wood, plastic, rubber and metal.
The recall of more than 4.5 million pounds of fully cooked chicken products announced Tuesday is an expansion of a recall of almost 41,000 pounds of cooked chicken nugget products announced April 7. A statement from the U.S. Food Safety and Inspection Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture says the recall involves products bearing the establishment number “EST.20728” inside the USDA inspection mark.
The items were shipped nationwide for institutional use, and records from the Waco, Texas-based company show schools purchased the products through Pilgrim’s Pride commercial channels.
No confirmed reports of adverse reactions from consumption of the products have been reported.
SALINA – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County have closed an investigation into a Sunday morning shooting death.
An investigation has determined the shooting was accidental, according to Salina Police Captain Chris Trocheck.
Just after 6:30 a.m., Bryant Sanchez, 28, was showing a .40 caliber handgun he had recently acquired other individuals in the driveway of a home in the 1900 block of Dover Drive in Salina.
The gun discharged and struck Sanchez in the head. He was transported to Salina Regional Health Center where he died.
Photo by Jim McLean/KHI News Service Shawn Sullivan, director of Gov. Sam Brownback’s budget office, left, and Raney Gilliland, director of the Kansas Legislative Research Department, spoke Wednesday at a media briefing about revisions to the state’s official revenue projections.
By MEGAN HART
One of the governor’s options to patch a hole in the state budget includes a $35 million cut from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, a move a hospital group says could harm its members.
Gov. Sam Brownback laid out three proposals to patch the budget hole last week after revenue projections for this budget year and the next were lowered by $350 million. One of the options includes the $35 million KDHE cut.
Budget Director Shawn Sullivan said the cut likely would force KDHE to reduce payments to the three managed care organizations that administer KanCare, the state’s privatized $3 billion Medicaid program. The companies likely would pass on those cuts to doctors and hospitals in the form of lower reimbursements, he said.
Medicaid already has lower reimbursement rates than Medicare and private insurers for many procedures, said Cindy Samuelson, spokeswoman for the Kansas Hospital Association. Hospitals often take a loss when treating Medicaid patients, she said.
The association couldn’t estimate the impact of potential cuts without more specific information, Samuelson said, but any reduced reimbursements would harm hospitals.
“We do not think it is a good idea to cut Medicaid provider payments at a point in time we have struggling hospitals in our state,” she said in an email. “As an alternative, the governor should be exploring expanding KanCare to help address the state’s budget shortfall, support KanCare providers and to help working Kansans.”
Cassie Sparks, a spokeswoman for KDHE, said the department is “evaluating the options available to reach the budget proposal.”
Two of the KanCare managed care organizations — Amerigroup and Sunflower State Health Plan — declined to comment on the possible effect of cuts to KDHE. A spokesperson for the third, UnitedHealthcare, couldn’t be reached for comment.
Kansas legislators return Wednesday to the Statehouse to wrap up the 2016 session.
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
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers have again refused to audit the Department of Children and Families to determine if the agency discriminates against same-sex couples in adoption or foster care cases.
The Legislative Post Audit Committee on Tuesday voted 5-4 along party lines not to approve the audit. Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita, sought the audit after several same-sex couple alleged last year that the agency had discriminated against them.
The Lawrence Journal-World reports Wednesday’s vote came after DCF Secretary Phyllis Gilmore issued a statement denying the discrimination allegations. She says the agency has no policies or documents related to same-sex or non-traditional families.
Ward countered that substantial anecdotal evidence shows blatant discrimination against same-sex couples. He called Tuesday’s vote “shameful.
Eagle and Hays Post is offering the chance to see comedian Kathy Griffin live at the historic Stiefel Theatre in Salina.
The performance is scheduled for Sunday, May 22, at 8 p.m.
To enter for a chance to win two FREE tickets to the performance, email a daytime telephone number to [email protected]. Enter “KATHY” in the subject line.
Students from approximately 30 schools from around the state will converge on Fort Hays State University’s Gross Memorial Coliseum Friday, April 29, for the 57th annual Western Kansas Technology Education Fair.
Most will bring with them projects they have been working on throughout the school year.
Students in FHSU’s Technology and Engineering Educators Collegiate Association run the entire fair. They volunteer in different aspects of the event, such as project placement, assisting judges, helping tag ribbons and medals to winning entries, and running various contests.
“It’s so large, we absolutely have to have our students volunteer to help,” said Kim Stewart, chair of the Department of Applied Technology. “They do a great job of volunteering. They realize this is a really big event, not only for our department, but a big event for the middle schoolers and high schoolers and their teachers to be able to bring projects to have evaluated by judges.”
The fair includes several mediums of technology education, including woods, metals, drafting and multi-pupil projects. Contests include communication, metric 500 racing, tech challenge (quiz bowl) and problem solving.
Students come from as far away as Dexter in southeast Kansas — a four-hour trip from Hays — to participate.
“This is the only project- and contest-based technology fair that I know of,” Stewart said. “Here, they can see the results of students’ year-long projects.”
Students begin bringing projects to GMC Thursday, and the fair is free and open to the public beginning 8 a.m. Friday.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Police say a 5-month-old baby has died while taking a nap in bed with his mother.
The Wichita Eagle reports that police say it was the seventh time this year that a child has died while sleeping in the same bed as someone else. The practice is called co-sleeping.
Kansas Infant Death and SIDS Network director Christy Schunn says babies are safest sleeping alone, on their backs in a clutter-free crib. Some parents view co-sleeping as a way to bond with their children. But experts say adult beds can be dangerous for babies because blankets and pillows can suffocate them.
COLUMBUS, Kan. (AP) — Cherokee County commissioners have voted to appeal a Shawnee County judge’s decision that upheld how Kansas awarded a license for a state casino being built in Crawford County.
The Joplin Globe reports that commissioners voted 2-1 on Monday to authorize spending up to $20,000 in legal bills on the appeal.
Commissioners Pat Collins and Robert Myers continue to support a proposal for Castle Rock Casino Resort that didn’t get chosen to be built in Cherokee County.
In a March decision, Judge Larry Hendricks denied petitions for judicial review that sought to restart the casino selection steps.
Kansas Crossing Casino and Hotel, a $70.2 million project, is expected to open in Crawford County next March. Casino officials have said it would create more than 300 jobs.
The Ceramica Clay Club at Fort Hays State University will host its biannual pottery sale, featuring functional work from students, from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 27, in the Memorial Union.
The sale will continue from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday, April 28, also in the Memorial Union.
Funds raised are used to send club members to educational opportunities such as the National Council for Education in Ceramic Arts conference, which the club attended in Kansas City this year.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Latest on severe weather predicted in the central and eastern U.S. (all times local):
3 p.m.
The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch in an area spanning four states and encompassing Dallas, Oklahoma City and Wichita, Kansas.
Forecasters are warning of a “particularly dangerous” widespread event that could subject some areas to grapefruit-sized hail, a few intense tornadoes and damaging winds with isolated gusts as high as 80 mph.
A tornado watch encompassing North Texas, western central Texas and most of Oklahoma is expected to last until midnight. A tornado watch in central and eastern Kansas and southern Nebraska is set to expire at 9 p.m.
Forecasters warn the storms could form rapidly in the next few hours as they roll from west to east.
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2:30 p.m.
Storms with rain, lightning, hail and high wind are creating problems across Missouri.
The National Weather Service says a strong storm is heading east across the state, reaching the St. Louis area in mid-afternoon. Winds of 67 mph were reported at Spirit of St. Louis Airport in suburban Chesterfield.
Power lines and trees were down in several counties, and heavy rain was falling. There are no reports of injuries in eastern Missouri.
In the mid-Missouri town of Columbia, lightning caused a garage fire.
Much of the St. Louis area is under thunderstorm watches and warnings through much of Tuesday evening.
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2 p.m.
Schools in large sections of Kansas have canceled classes and extra-curricular activities to prepare for potentially dangerous storms packing tornadoes, rain and hail.
Wichita State University closed all of its locations at noon Tuesday and postponed baseball and softball games scheduled for Tuesday evening. Schools and other organizations stretching from Arkansas City to Topeka also canceled many after-school activities.
And officials at McConnell Air Force Base evacuated aircraft at the base in Wichita as a precaution. The planes and support personnel were sent to Washington and North Dakota.
The National Weather Service office in Wichita says the storms are expected in the Wichita area Tuesday afternoon and could continue past sunset, carrying possible hail of 3 inches or larger and the potential for nighttime tornadoes.
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1 p.m.
Winds gusting up to 60 mph have downed trees and caused some damage in a central and northern Missouri.
Fire Battalion Chief Michael Hawkins says the winds also damaged a roof at a plumbing company in Sedalia, 90 miles east of Kansas City. No injuries have been reported
Kansas City Power & Light says about 2,700 homes and businesses in Sedalia are without power.
Strong winds and some minor flash flooding have been reported in Clay County in northern Missouri, where winds of up to 60 mph damaged two docks at Smithville Lake.
The National Weather Service says storms early Tuesday brought torrential rains and hail ranging from 1 to 1.5 inches in Kansas City and other northwest Missouri towns, stretching north to St. Joseph.
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12:45 p.m.
Forecasters say the Dallas-Fort Worth area is now in the path of a potentially dangerous storm system that could bring damaging winds, big hail and tornadoes to the central U.S.
The Storm Prediction Center’s latest forecast, issued at midday Tuesday, extends the moderate risk south to include the Dallas area along with much of Oklahoma and Kansas. In all, more than 53 million people live in areas with at least a slight risk of severe weather Tuesday, including those on the East Coast facing a separate storm system.
Storm Prediction Center Meteorologist Stephen Corfidi says the system moving through Tuesday afternoon and evening could produce giant hail and large tornadoes. He says North Texas is now the area most at risk for damaging winds.
An advisory from the center predicts a “widespread multi-episode significant severe-weather event.”
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11:30 a.m.
Some Oklahoma residents are taking steps to secure property from tornadoes, fast-sweeping winds and potentially damaging large hail.
George Eischen says he spent Tuesday morning moving vehicles off the lot at his Chevrolet dealership in the small town of Fairview, about 100 miles northwest of Oklahoma City.
Forecasters are predicting giant hail the size of grapefruits could fall on parts of the Great Plains on Tuesday.
Eischen says he has been lining the new vehicles “bumper to bumper” inside the shop and even the lobby to protect them from the hail, which he calls “the real enemy of the car dealer.”
The 51-year-old Eischen says the town of Fairview has never been hit by a tornado, but it is close to the sites of two large earthquakes recorded earlier this year.
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9:45 a.m.
Officials have removed aircraft from a Kansas military base to prevent them from being damaged during expected heavy storms.
photo McConnell Air Force Base
McConnell Air Force Base spokesman Colby Hardin says the aircraft are being sent to Fairchild Air Force Base in Spokane, Washington, and Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota.
The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, is forecasting severe storms with the possibility of tornadoes and large hail Tuesday, including in the Wichita area. McConnell is about 9 mile southeast of Wichita.
The aircraft and support personnel will return when conditions are safe. The air base is open for business Tuesday.
McConnell currently houses mostly 1950s-era KC-135 refueling tanks. That fleet is being replaced by new KC-46A tankers, which are scheduled to begin arriving next year.
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8 a.m.
The Storm Prediction Center says nearly 50 million people are at risk for severe weather.
Forecasters say giant and destructive hail is likely in parts of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas on Tuesday. The latest forecast says “significant” tornadoes are also possible in those states, but baseball-sized hail or larger will be more widespread.
In the east, Washington, D.C., is now considered at slight risk for damaging winds and hail on Tuesday, along with Baltimore and Philadelphia.
Forecasters say the storms are expected to hit Tuesday afternoon and evening.
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6:50 a.m.
Stormy weather in the eastern U.S. could bring damaging winds to Delaware, Maryland and Pennsylvania, where voters are casting ballots in primary elections.
The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, says Philadelphia and Baltimore are at a slight risk for severe weather Tuesday. Forecasters say a storm system — separate from the one taking aim at Great Plains states — could bring isolated severe thunderstorms, hail and powerful wind gusts to the Mid-Atlantic on Tuesday afternoon and early evening.
Polls close in the three states at 8 p.m. Voters in Rhode Island and Connecticut also cast ballots Tuesday.
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6:15 a.m.
A handful of Oklahoma schools have preemptively canceled classes Tuesday in light of an ominous forecast that’s predicting dangerous tornadoes and giant hail for parts of the Great Plains.
Mid-Del Public Schools in the Oklahoma City suburb of Midwest City called off classes, saying that the safety and security of students and staff was the top priority. That district, along with others across Oklahoma, implemented new tornado safety plans following the 2013 twister that killed seven schoolchildren in Moore.
The Storm Prediction Center says much of the central U.S. is at risk for severe weather Tuesday, including tornadoes and grapefruit-sized hail. In all, nearly 37 million people are at a slight risk or higher for severe weather Tuesday.
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1:20 a.m.
School districts and authorities are bracing for the possibility of a severe weather outbreak that could bring powerful, long-track tornadoes and large hail to the Great Plains.
The weather on Tuesday could include heavy winds, tornadoes and hail as large as baseballs or softballs. The Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma, says the most dangerous weather will likely take aim at an approximately 70,000-square-mile area stretching from southern Oklahoma to southern Nebraska.
In all, nearly 37 million people from the Rio Grande River in South Texas to Omaha, Nebraska, and the western regions of Missouri, Arkansas and Iowa are at a slight risk or higher of experiencing severe weather Tuesday.
In the east, a separate storm system could bring thunderstorms, strong winds and hail to Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., but the risk of severe outbreaks is low.
GIRARD, Kan. (AP) — A mother is charged with aiding her son and another man in a southeast Kansas jail escape.
The Pittsburg Morning Sun reports that 57-year-old Marlene Louise McAfee, of Arma, is jailed in Crawford County on $50,000 bond.
After her son, Shaun Steven Simpson, and fellow inmate Steven Ray Barnes escaped Saturday from the Crawford County Jail, surveillance video from a nearby hospital showed them getting into McAfee’s sport utility vehicle and leaving.
Authorities continued searching Tuesday for the men. The 33-year-old Simpson was being held on kidnapping and other charges, while the 26-year-old Barnes was jailed on a parole violation.
Barnes and Simpson
McAfee said at a bond hearing Monday that she is “cooperating with everyone.” Her attorney, Jason Wiske, didn’t immediately return a phone call from The Associated Press seeking comment.
A Fort Hays State University Leadership 310 team called “Express Love Over Violence” is collaborating with Hays-based “Jana’s Campaign” in an exhibit that will be featured during Friday’s Hays Arts Council Spring Art Walk.
Team members Jessie Carmichael, Matthew Eikelberger, Adara Erickson, Noël Servais Leach, Taylor Hanus and Rebecca Stegman are currently doing their Fieldwork in Leadership with Dr. Christie Brungardt.
Jana Mackey
Twenty-five year old Jana Mackey, Brungardt’s daughter, was killed by her ex-boyfriend in Lawrence in 2008. Jana’s Campaign, now a national effort, was created by Christie and Dr. Curt Brungardt, Jana’s stepfather, as an education and violence prevention organization with the single mission of reducing gender and relationship violence.
The Express Love Over Violence art event will be in the corner storefront at 11th and Main Friday, April 29, from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.
“Our mission is to align with the goals of Jana’s Campaign, working to raise awareness and educate our community on the topic of dating and relationship violence,” said Stegman in a news release.
She talked about the incidence of such violence in the United States, with statistics compiled by Jana’s Campaign and the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NACDV).
“Domestic and relationship violence is a major issue in the United States. Statistics show that 70 percent of all women, and 30 percent of all men will experience violence in their lifetime (janascampaign.org). In the U.S., an average of 20 people are physically abused by intimate partners every minute (ncadv.org). These acts of violence not only impact the victims, but also their employers, families, and sometimes pets.
The group is soliciting artwork from area high schools and other FHSU students that will be featured in their exhibit.
“As of now, we have five high schools participating: Hays, TMP, Ellis, Palco and LaCrosse. There were no limits put on the students; all we asked is that they reflect what they think domestic violence is to them through their art work–anything from paintings, drawings, poems, creative writing, and forensics, to music.
“Before the students started on their art pieces, the teachers were given the option to either have Dr. Brungardt come and speak with the class to tell them what domestic violence is or watch a video that we sent them about domestic and relationship violence.
“We are excited to see how they express themselves through their artwork,” Stegman said.
The Leadership team is also sponsoring “Purple Friday” on April 29.
“We ask the students at Fort Hays State University and the people of the community to wear purple to show support and raise awareness of domestic and relationship violence,” Stegman added.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback says Kansas is withdrawing from the federal government’s refugee resettlement program because of safety concerns.
Brownback announced Tuesday that he notified President Barack Obama’s administration of his decision.
Brownback’s move means Kansas will reject federal funds to provide cash and health care coverage to any refugees who resettle in Kansas. The federal aid amounts to between $1.6 million and $1.8 million annually.
But Executive Director Micah Kubic of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas says the move is largely symbolic because federal officials probably will find another group to run the program in Kansas. He said the state also can’t prevent refugees from coming.
Brownback said Tuesday that federal officials haven’t given him adequate assurances that refugees are being screened thoroughly enough to protect communities.