WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas attorney general says any legislation that would allow Sedgwick County residents to cast another vote on allowing slot machines at the Wichita Greyhound Park would breach the Kansas Lottery’s contract with the Kansas Star Casino in Mulvane.
The Wichita Eagle reports Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt said Friday the courts would likely block any law to allow a revote in Sedgwick County. See his full opinion here.
In 2007, Sedgwick County voters rejected placing slot machines in the county and also rejected a destination casino. Sumner County residents approved a casino, leading to the opening of the Kansas Star Casino in 2011.
Wichita Rep. Mark Kahrs, who opposes gambling and requested Schmidt’s opinion, says the opinion end debate on whether there should be a revote in Sedgwick County.
DICKINSON COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just after 7 a.m. on Sunday in Dickinson County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Jeep Grand Cherokee driven by Larry J. Velasquez, 69, Mission, was eastbound on Interstate 70 one mile east of Abilene.
The Jeep traveled off the road, down thru ditch, up an embankment, struck a cedar tree, and rolled back down into ditch.
Velasquez was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Danner Funeral Home.
He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.
The Muscular Dystrophy Association and the Kansas Collegiate DECA chapters are hosting a car show with all proceeds benefiting MDA from noon to 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 7, at Big Creek Crossing, 2918 Vine St., Hays.
“This is the first car show in the country that will be raising money for MDA in collaboration with Collegiate DECA,” said Felix Albl, president of Fort Hays State University Collegiate DECA. DECA and MDA have a relationship that spans over four decades.
“Join us for an afternoon full of cars, food, music and fun,” said Albl.
Registration for vehicles is $30. Participants who register vehicles by April 25 will receive a free 2016 MDA Car Show T-shirt. T-shirts will also be for sale at the car show.
HUTCHINSON — A Reno County judge sentenced a Kansas man on Friday to over 22-years in prison.
Fredrick Lemons Jr., 21, Hutchinson was convicted in connection with a home invasion, robbery from May of 2105 in the 3400 block of North Waldron in Hutchinson.
The victim testified at trial that he still suffers from his injuries that included having a tooth knocked out, stitches on his lip and other lacerations to his head. He had testified that he hasn’t been able to work since October and still has sufferers pain each day.
Lemon was charged with aggravated kidnapping, aggravated robbery, aggravated burglary, two counts of aggravated battery, criminal threat and two counts of criminal damage, however the judge set aside one of the criminal damage counts because of a bad jury instruction and the state then announced that they would dismiss that count.
Lemons apologized for what happened, but still maintained his innocence and plans an appeal.
Five Fort Hays State University professors will present “Pecha Kucha” — a series of topics presented in 20-second segments — at the Science Café at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 26, at Gella’s Diner, 117 East 11th St.
“Pecha Kucha” features 20 slides of various images, shown for 20 seconds each.
The presenters are from FHSU’s Physics Department: Dr. Gavin Buffington, professor; Dr. C.D. Clark III, assistant professor; Dr. Eric Deyo, assistant professor; Dr. Jack Maseberg, associate professor; and Dr. Kent Rohleder, instructor.
The presentation is sponsored by FHSU’s Science and Mathematics Education Institute and is free and open to the public.
Fire at the motel during Saturday’s gun battle -photo courtesy WIBW -TV
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say four federal agents suffered non-life-threatening injuries after being shot while trying to make an arrest at a Kansas motel.
Police say two U.S. marshals and an FBI agent were shot and suffered non-life-threatening injuries Saturday night in Topeka. A fourth federal agent also suffered the same injuries, but it was not immediately clear to which agency the officer is assigned. All four were taken to hospitals.
WIBW-TV reports that the four agents descended on the Country Club Motel shortly before 10 p.m. Saturday and were trying to locate an unidentified suspect. Authorities say gunshots were exchanged with the agents.
Police say a fire broke out at the motel during the shootout, and firefighters worked to douse it.
Police say it’s unclear whether the suspect had escaped.
A slight chance of severe thunderstorms will be possible across portions of central and south central Kansas this evening. Large hail and winds over 60 mph will be the main concern. High temperatures this afternoon will be in the mid 70s to around 80.
Looking ahead, high temperatures will be in the 70s on Monday, with another chance for thunderstorms Tuesday and Wednesday.
Today: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Otherwise Mostly sunny, with a high near 80. Breezy, with a southwest wind 14 to 20 mph.
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 48. Southwest wind 8 to 16 mph becoming northwest after midnight.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 76. North northwest wind 9 to 16 mph.
Monday Night: A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 10pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 51. East wind 9 to 11 mph.
Tuesday: A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 75. East wind 11 to 15 mph becoming south southeast in the afternoon.
Students taking vocational classes in the Iola school district are remodeling a school bus as a ‘traveling bistro’ where children who may not have access to healthy food during the summer can get lunch. Tabletops will be installed on the metal posts. COURTESY IOLA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT 257
Delivering meals to low-income people is a long-standing way to improve nutrition, but a project in Iola Unified School District 257 will bring the whole diner.
Kathy Koehn, nutrition and wellness coordinator at USD 257, said students taking vocational classes in the district are working to remodel an older school bus as a “traveling bistro” where children who may not have access to healthy food during the summer can get lunch.
The students are building tables and turning half the seats to create restaurant booths, as well as decorating the bus and adding space to carry books, she said.
The Meals and Reading Vehicle, or MARV, will stop in three low-income neighborhoods in Iola and at sites in the towns of Gas and LaHarpe to serve lunch on weekdays during the summer, Koehn said. The southeast Kansas district also offers meals through its summer programs at some of the schools, she said.
Many parents work and may not be able to bring their children to a central location for a healthy lunch, Koehn said, making it important to take the food to where the kids are in summer.
“There’s a lot of kids that still need to have access to these meals,” she said.
‘Way beyond food’
The Kansas State Department of Education and nonprofit groups are encouraging communities to get creative in finding ways to feed children during the summer. In recent years, Kansas has ranked at or near the bottom of states based on the percentage of qualifying children who receive summer meals.
Kelly Chanay, assistant director for child nutrition and wellness at KSDE, said the meal sites can attack several problems, including hunger, lack of opportunities for socialization and physical activity, and accidents when children try to prepare meals for themselves. Some also offer mentoring and enrichment activities, she said.
“If the children aren’t well-nourished during the summer, it impacts their ability to learn when school starts up,” she said. “The summer food service program goes way beyond food.”
Schools, nonprofits and government agencies can sponsor meal sites and receive reimbursement from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If more than half of the children in an area are eligible for free or reduced-price school lunches, USDA will reimburse all meals. Children from a family of four are eligible for reduced-price meals if their annual family income is less than $44,955, or 185 percent of the federal poverty line.
In areas with less poverty, a site can only be reimbursed for meals to qualified children, requiring more record keeping.
The state has made some progress in increasing access to summer meals, Chanay said. In 2014, 44 of the 105 Kansas counties didn’t have a meal site, but that number fell to 35 in 2015. Still, that left a third of the state’s counties without a site, with the northwest corner and rural areas particularly lacking.
Transportation is one of the biggest challenges in rural areas, Chanay said. KSDE encourages potential host sites to look at areas where children might congregate in the summer, such as libraries, swimming pools and athletic programs, she said.
KSDE proposed a pilot project in 2015 to increase meal access in rural areas by setting up 10 sites where children could have a meal and take home shelf-stable food for several days, decreasing the number of times parents would have to make trips for food.
USDA said it didn’t have any additional funds for pilot projects that year, but Chanay said KSDE is talking with Kansas congressional representatives and is optimistic the project could move forward.
Grants available
Nonprofit groups also are encouraging communities to start or expand meal sites, and some are offering small grants. Rebekah Gaston, childhood hunger initiative director at Kansas Appleseed, said the group is offering grants ranging from $100 to $1,000 for start-up costs related to new summer meal sites or for “innovative” projects to increase the number of children receiving meals at existing sites. The grant funding came from the Kansas Health Foundation.
USDA reimburses the cost of meals at a fair rate, Gaston said, but it doesn’t pay for children’s activities or meals for parents. Activities tend to reduce children’s concerns about being identified as poor if they go to a meal site, while offering meals to parents increases the odds they will bring their children, she said.
“Some of the extras that help bring kids to sites aren’t always covered,” she said.
The United Methodist Health Ministry Fund also is offering up to $2,000 in grants to member congregations that host a meal site or assist community groups in running one. The congregations can decide how involved they want to be, including whether they want to add other activities, said Katie Schoenhoff, program officer at UMHMF. They also don’t have to have the meal site in a church building if they could better reach children at other locations, such as a park or a Boys and Girls Club, she said.
Congregations that participated last year “really talk about the need for community cooperation,” she said. “One of the key pieces is getting community involvement so you find kids where they’re at.”
Source Kansas Dept. of Education –Click to EXPAND
Debbie Makings, who attends Larned United Methodist Church, said their congregation was too small to consistently field enough volunteers to run a meal program but was able to provide food and a building. Groups such as the Lions Club, National Honor Society and city employees then stepped in as volunteer cooks and servers for a week, and that kept the site going for the summer, she said.
“We never had a problem with too few people showing up,” she said.
They served about 75 children per day last summer and hope to serve more this summer, Makings said.
“I would say, just jump in and do it,” she said.
Applications to host summer meal sites are due to KSDE by May 1.
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 – Kansas students gathered recently at the Statehouse to protest bills requiring transgender students to use public school bathrooms according to their sex assigned at birth.
House Bill 2737 and its companion bill Senate Bill 513 have been dubbed the Student Physical Privacy Act. They would apply to students using restrooms, locker rooms and showers in public and postsecondary schools.
“I think it definitely has the potential to drive people away from public schools in Kansas,” said Marisa Pecoraro, a sophomore at the University of Kansas, who participated in the protest.
The bills are identical and say “parents have a reasonable expectation that public schools in this state will not allow their minor children to be viewed in various states of undress by members of the opposite sex, nor allow their minor children to view members of the opposite sex in various states of undress.” The bills would allow transgender students to request alternative facilities, with permission of parents or guardians. Schools would then evaluate the request and make accommodations “to the extent reasonable,” which might include access to single-stall or unisex bathrooms.
The bills define sex as “the physical condition of being male or female, which is determined by a person’s chromosomes, and is identified at birth by a person’s anatomy.”
The bills also provide that any aggrieved student who encounters someone of the opposite sex in a school bathroom or locker room can receive up to $2,500 in damages, plus monetary damages for emotional or psychological harm suffered and compensation for attorney’s fees.
Jacob Moyer, a student activist from Shawnee Mission North in Overland Park, said the demonstration was organized to coincide with the Day of Silence, a national event where silent demonstrations are held in public spaces to protest bullying and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students in schools. Demonstrators placed rainbow-colored duct tape over their mouths during the protest.
“It is symbolic because of all of the people who have been silenced by bullying against the LGBT community,” Moyer said.
Moyer also said the students participating in the Day of Silence went to school on Thursday with duct tape over their mouths because the Shawnee Mission and Olathe school districts had Friday off.
Topeka transgender activist Stephanie Mott praised the students for protesting and joined the group of 30 on the north lawn. Mott is currently suing the Kansas Department of Health and Environment for not amending her gender to female on her birth certificate.
Traffic passing by occasionally honked in support of the protesters while some drivers made obscene gestures.
“That’s the kind of hate we’re trying to end here,” Moyer said. “There’s still a lot of hate in the state of Kansas.”
Protest organizer Caleb Bishop, a student at Olathe North High School, said he didn’t expect such a large turnout.
“We deserve a place where we can feel like we belong and where we can feel safe within our own communities,” Bishop said.
Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R–Shawnee, defended the bills, saying that safety is imperative for Kansas students in bathrooms.
“Every student has a right to have their physical privacy protected. Women and girls, in particular, need to know that the opposite sex is not going to walk in on them when they are in a stage of undress,” Pilcher-Cook said.
Kansas is one of 28 states without protection from discrimination in employment, housing or public accommodations based on gender identity or sexuality.
HB 2737 has been referred to the Committee on State and Federal Affairs, and SB 513 has been referred to the Committee on Education. The bills were introduced in mid-March, about a week before the legislature went into recess. Lawmakers return to Topeka on April 27.
Tom Beall , Acting U.S. Attorney for District of Kansas
Each year, more than 600,000 individuals return to our neighborhoods after serving time in federal and state prisons, and another 11.4 million people cycle through local jails. Nearly a quarter of Americans have had some sort of encounter with the criminal justice system – mostly for relatively minor, non-violent offenses.
In law enforcement, we have a duty to make our criminal justice system fairer, more efficient, and more effective at reducing recidivism and helping formerly incarcerated individuals contribute to their community. That is why I am joining U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch in inviting Kansans to observe National Reentry Week during April 24 through April 30.
The U.S. Probation and Pretrial Services offices in Kansas work to assist people who have struggled with the laws and legal system. Any person convicted of a felony understands that nearly every aspect of life will be more difficult than before. Probation officers work with people on probation or supervised release, offering substance abuse treatment, mental health treatment, assistance finding housing or employment or both, educational opportunities or other life-changing programs. For anyone willing to make the effort, probation officers and staff are ready and willing to help. Likewise the federal Bureau of Prisons in Kansas works to provide drug treatment, vocational training and other programs aimed at reducing recidivism.
At the Department of Justice, supporting successful reentry is an essential part of our mission to promote public safety. By helping individuals return to productive, law-abiding lives, we can reduce crime across the country and make our neighborhoods better places to live. I am proud of the strides we have made and I will continue to support and advance reentry programs that promote opportunity and give formerly incarcerated individuals a better chance to rejoin our communities.
Tom Beall is the Acting United States Attorney for the District of Kansas.
Salvador Perez hits a 2-run homer in the Kansas City Royals home game against the Baltimore Orioles. (Photo by Jason Hanna/Kansas City Royals).
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chris Davis homered and had four hits, Manny Machado extended his hitting streak to 16 games and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Kansas City Royals 8-3 on Saturday night.
Mark Trumbo had three hits and four RBIs for the Orioles, and Tyler Wilson (1-0) won his first start this season.
Davis, who led the majors with 47 home runs last season, hit his sixth homer in the second inning and had an RBI single during the Orioles’ four-run fourth. He tied a career high for hits and hiked his average from .192 to .246.
Machado singled in his first at-bat and doubled in a run in the fourth. He entered hitting an American League-leading .397.
Salvador Perez hit a two-run homer for the Royals in the second to tie the game 2-2. Alcides Escobar drove in the other run in the fifth.
Kris Medlen (1-1) allowed seven runs on nine hits and three walks in 3 2/3 innings.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. –Fort Hays State will be the No. 7 seed for the MIAA Softball Tournament and open with No. 2 seed Northwest Missouri State in the opening round. The Tigers tied for sixth with Central Missouri in the final standings but the Jennies owned the tiebreaker and get the higher seed.
The MIAA Tournament has a new home this year, the famed ASA Hall of Fame Stadium complex in Oklahoma City. The tournament will be held Thursday through Saturday (April 28-30). Hall of Fame Stadium is home of the NCAA Division I Softball World Series. The stadium field has three other fields next to it, so all four fields will have opening round games on Thursday starting at 5 pm.
Missouri Western went 23-3 in the league and won the MIAA regular season title and shored up the top seed. The Griffons will face eighth seeded Southwest Baptist in the opening round.
Third seeded Central Oklahoma will open their tournament against sixth seeded Central Missouri. In the final first round match-up it is fourth seeded Pittsburg State taking on fifth seeded Northeastern State.
Complete schedule below…
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Game 1: #1 Missouri Western vs. #8 Southwest Baptist (Stadium) 5 p.m.
Game 2: #4 Pittsburg State vs. #5 Northeastern State (Field 2) 5 p.m.
Game 3: #3 Central Oklahoma vs. #6 Central Missouri (Field 3) 5 p.m.
Game 4: #2 Northwest Missouri vs. #7 Fort Hays State (Field 4) 5 p.m.
Game 5: Loser Game 1 vs. Loser Game 2 (Field 2) 7:30 p.m.
Game 6: Loser Game 3 vs. Loser Game 4 (Field 3) 7:30 p.m.
Game 7: Winner Game 1 vs. Winner Game 2 (Field 4) 7:30 p.m.
Game 8: Winner Game 3 vs. Winner Game 4 (Stadium) 7:30 p.m.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. Loser Game 8 (Field 2) 11 a.m.
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. Loser Game 7 (Stadium) 11 a.m.
Game 11: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10 (Field 4) 1:30 p.m.
Game 12: Winner Game 7 vs. Winner Game 8 (Stadium) 4 p.m.
Game 13: Winner Game 11 vs. Loser Game 12 (Field 4) 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Game 14: Winner Game 12 vs. Winner Game 13 (Stadium) 11 a.m.
Game 15: Winner Game 14 vs. Loser Game 14 (Stadium) 1:30 p.m. (If neccessary)
KEARNEY, Neb. – The Fort Hays State softball team secured a spot in next week’s MIAA tournament with a doubleheader sweep at Nebraska-Kearney Saturday. The Tigers (19-28, 13-13 MIAA), who needed one win to lock down a bid, won the first game 4-2 then took the second contest 7-6 in eight innings.
Fort Hays State scored all of their runs in the first two innings in game one. Tori Beltz, who set a new FHSU career record for walks with her 80th in the first inning, hit a bases-loaded double to push the lead to 4-0 in the second. Paxton Duran scattered eight hits with five strikeouts in the complete game win. The Lopers only runs came on a couple of solo home runs in the fourth and sixth innings.
The Tigers erased a 5-0 deficit in the second game with a run in the fifth, two in the sixth and three in the seventh to take a 6-5 lead. UNK scored a run in the seventh to force extra innings, but the Tiger offense stayed hot and scored the decisive run in the eighth.
In the eighth, Rilee Krier reached by error and a Claudia Vazquez bunt single put runners at the corners with one out. Beltz hit a ball deep to left center field for a sacrifice fly RBI to score Krier from third and put the Tigers back in front.
Paxton Duran, who was one strike away from picking up the save in the seventh before giving up a game-tying single, shut the door on the Lopers in the bottom half of the inning, retiring the side in order to give FHSU the win.
Fort Hays State will play a non-conference doubleheader with Nebraska-Kearney on Sunday in Hays to close out the regular season. It will be Senior Day at Tiger Stadium with games starting at 2 pm. It will be the final home games for seniors Paxton Duran, Tori Beltz, Courtney Dobson, Rilee Krier and Erin Elmore.