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

Kan. woman arrested for employee theft at women’s specialty store

Pell
Pell

SALINA- Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a Kansas woman for alleged theft and forgery.

Police arrested Candice M. Pell, 34, Salina, on Wednesday for making six false merchandise returns while working at Marices in the Central Mall and pocketing the money.

Pell is alleged to have made the returns between January 10th and January 25th, totaling $1,106.73. Two transactions were made in someone else’s name, according to police.

The store’s loss prevention department made the discovery.
Pell was booked into the Saline County Jail on requested charges of felony theft, false writing, and forgery.

New Kansas Medicaid Expansion Plan Introduced

By JIM MCLEAN

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, moved Tuesday to introduce a Medicaid expansion bill in the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. CREDIT SUSIE FAGAN / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR
Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, moved Tuesday to introduce a Medicaid expansion bill in the House Federal and State Affairs Committee.
CREDIT SUSIE FAGAN / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR

Committees in the Kansas House and Senate have introduced Medicaid expansion bills modeled after a plan implemented last year in Indiana.

The identical measures, drafted by the Kansas Hospital Association, would provide coverage to approximately 150,000 low-income but non-disabled adults by making them eligible for KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program.

Tom Bell, president and chief executive of KHA, said the proposal was written with input from Kansas lawmakers, who he said wanted something patterned after Indiana’s “consumer-driven plan.”

“Our proposal isn’t exactly like Indiana’s, but it does have a lot of the same elements,” Bell said.

The Indiana plan was crafted by conservative Republican Gov. Mike Pence and approved by that state’s Republican-controlled Legislature. It requires beneficiaries to pay up to 2 percent of their monthly income and locks them out of coverage if they fall behind.

The Kansas plan, which KHA is calling “The Bridge to a Healthy Kansas,” also requires people earning above the federal poverty level to make monthly payments into a personal health care account and, like the Indiana plan, terminates coverage for those who fall behind in their payments.

“The idea is to create some personal investment,” Bell said.

The Kansas proposal, which was introduced Tuesday by the House Federal and State Affairs Committee and its Senate counterpart, also would make participants responsible for a $25 co-pay if they go to the emergency room for non-emergency care.

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, made the motion to introduce the bill in the House committee, which traditionally honors such requests from members without requiring debate and a vote. However, Concannon and others don’t anticipate the bill will remain in the committee long enough for hearings. Rather, they expect House Speaker Ray Merrick, a Stilwell Republican and expansion opponent, to refer the bill to a new committee and work to keep it from coming to a vote on the House floor.

“It will be assigned to another committee and probably will not be worked this year,” Concannon said. “But at least we have a bill and opportunity for discussion. Whether it’s in committee or outside of committee, we have a bill and we can have some discussion.”

Concannon was one of several lawmakers that Merrick removed from the Health and Human Services Committee prior to the session because of their support for expansion.

Both versions of the expansion bill will be given numbers Wednesday when they are formally introduced on the House and Senate floors.

‘Beyond budget neutral’

Kansas hospitals have been urging passage of expansion for several years without success. The bill they backed last year, which merely authorized Republican Gov. Sam Brownback to craft an expansion plan and negotiate its approval with federal officials, received a hearing but no vote in either the House or Senate.

Brownback opposes expansion but has said he might be willing to discuss a plan that meets certain requirements. Among other things, he has said, it must be budget neutral.

Bell said the KHA plan meets that requirement. He said it includes funding mechanisms that would generate more than the estimated $55 million annual cost of expansion.

“It is beyond budget neutral,” Bell said.

The savings and revenue-raising measures called for in the plan would generate an estimated $183 million in 2017 and $217.7 million in 2018. The total would increase to $240 million by 2020, according to KHA estimates.

The proposal creates several special funds to pay for expansion. One would collect premiums from beneficiaries that are expected to total $16.4 million in 2017 and grow to $20.5 million by 2020.

Between $7.9 million and $8.9 million a year from a drug rebate program would flow into another fund. A third fund would capture a portion of the privilege taxes paid by the KanCare managed care organizations. That is expected to total $20.3 million in 2017 and average between $15 million and $15.8 million annually through 2020.

In addition to the new revenue sources in the bill, the hospital association estimates that expansion would create opportunities to save up $113 million by reducing the need for KanCare services for which the state is now paying.

Brownback and other Republicans have said any expansion plan should require that beneficiaries work. However, federal officials have consistently rejected expansion plans that contained a work requirement. So The Bridge to a Healthy Kansas proposal requires only that recipients be referred to an employment assistance program.

“That’s as far was we can go,” Concannon said. “But studies have shown here that many of those 150,000 are working Kansans. They’re our working poor.”

Despite efforts to appease Brownback and Republican legislative leaders, KHA and other expansion advocates face an uphill fight.

For one thing, the bill doesn’t address one of Brownback’s top priorities, the elimination of waiting lists for Kansans with physical and developmental disabilities. Currently several thousand Kansans with disabilities are receiving medical care under KanCare but are wating for support services to help them live independently.

Key legislators share Brownback’s objection to extending health benefits to non-disabled Kansans until the waiting lists are eliminated.

“The state has a responsibility to provide a health care safety net to the poor, disabled and elderly. My concern begins when we expand that to able-bodied adults,” said Rep. Dan Hawkins in a recent blog.

Hawkins, a Wichita Republican, chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee.

Expansion advocates are hoping that the closure last fall of Mercy Hospital in Independence and the financial struggles of other Kansas hospitals will add urgency to the debate and win over some rural lawmakers. They say the hundreds of millions of additional federal dollars expansion would bring to the state could help offset reductions in Medicare reimbursements triggered by the Affordable Care Act and federal budget reductions.

Brownback isn’t persuaded. In his State of the State address earlier this month, he restated his opposition to expansion.

“It was Obamacare that cut Medicare reimbursements to rural hospitals,” Brownback said, referring to the Affordable Care Act. “It was Obamacare that caused the problem. We should not expand Obamacare to solve the problem.”

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

2 SW Kansas men hit, killed after earlier semi crash

FatalAccident3GRAY COUNTY- Two Kansas men died in accident just after 5 a.m. on Thursday in Gray County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported the two men were standing on the westbound shoulder of U.S. 50 near a disabled vehicle involved in an earlier accident five miles east of Cimarron.

A westbound 2012 Dodge pickup driven by Darrell Wright II, 27, Woodward, OK, attempted to avoid the disabled vehicle, drove on the shoulder and hit both men Christopher Louis Conrardy, 27, Cimarron, and Chris Alan Hamilton, 50, Garden City.

Wright, Conrardy and Hamilton were transported to Western Plains Medical Center. Conrardy and Hamilton died.

Just before 5 a.m., a 2007 Chevy pickup driven by Conrardy was westbound on U.S. 50 five miles east of Cimarron.

The pickup traveled left of center and struck the 4th and 5th axle of an eastbound semi driven by Hamilton.

A portion of U.S. 50 between Dodge City and Ingalls was closed due to an accident, according to the Kansas Department of Transportation.

Kansas senators consider firearms non-discrimination act UPDATE

State House capitol

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Olathe shooting range co-owner William Basore says he faced discrimination when he couldn’t get insurance for his new car last fall because of his business.

A bill reviewed Thursday by a Kansas Senate committee would protect Basore and any others businesses “engaged in the lawful commerce of firearms or ammunition products” from discriminatory practices by businesses such as banks, payment processors or insurance companies.

Gun-rights advocates spoke in favor of the bill at a Senate Committee on Federal and State Affairs hearing. But the measure was strongly criticized by lobbyists who wanted to include amendments or feared that it would create potential liabilities. Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri lobbyist Elise Higgins said the bill should protect organizations that offer health care for women.

————

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Olathe shooting range co-owner William Basore says he faced discrimination when he attempted to insure his new car but was denied coverage last fall.

A bill being reviewed Thursday by a Kansas Senate committee would protect Basore and any others “engaged in the lawful commerce of firearms or ammunition products” from discriminatory practices by service providers such as banks, payment processors or insurance companies.

The Kansas firearms industry non-discrimination act is sponsored by the Committee on Federal and State Affairs. It also would allow victims to file a lawsuit against companies within two years of the discriminatory act.

The bill is one of several initiatives around the nation that would outlaw discrimination against the firearms industry. Proposals are also being considered in Georgia and Alabama.

Tigers In Service volunteers in Texas

Fort Hays State University Marketing and Relations

Fort Hays State University’s Tigers In Service made its alternative winter break service trip to the Texas panhandle. The majority of the week was spent doing volunteer work at the Faith City Mission in Amarillo and Palo Duro Canyon State Park in Canyon.

Students making the trip were:

CHINA: Yidi (Wendy) Qin, Luoyang, graduate student; Chenfan (Jerry) Zhao, Zhengzhou, graduate student.
CONCORDIA: Kirstyn Dvorak, freshman.
GEM: Hailee Spresser, junior;
HAYS: Jessie Carmichael, sophomore; Armando Correa, junior; Rachel Moravek, freshman.
HIGHLANDS RANCH, Colo.: Tiffani Clark, senior.
HILL CITY: Paige Thompson, junior.
HUTCHINSON: Jared Ridder, junior.
HUGOTON: Zane Littell, junior.
MACKSVILLE: Karissa Langlois, junior.
OZAWKIE: Kailee Gibson, junior.
PRATT: Whitney Tilley, junior.
SEDGWICK: Evynn McGinn, sophomore.

Students were advised by Dr. Justin Greenleaf, assistant professor of leadership studies. The upcoming alternative spring break service trip will be to Boulder, Colo., where students will be assisting with flood-relief projects.

FHSU softball picked eighth in MIAA preseason poll

FHSU Athletics

Fort Hays State Softball was picked eighth in the MIAA Preseason Coaches Poll, released on Thursday (Jan. 28). Fort Hays State is picked in the same position it finished in the regular season last year when it went 14-12 in conference play.

The Tigers enter their second year under head coach Adrian Mohr’s guidance. FHSU finished with an overall record of 26-27 in 2015, but continued its run of making the MIAA Tournament every year since joining the conference in 2006-07. The Tigers had a rollercoaster season, twice putting together win streaks of four games, but also saw one five-game losing streak.

FHSU has most of its starting lineup back from last year, which includes five All-MIAA selections. All five returning were honorable mention selections last year. The list includes pitcher Paxton Duran, first baseman Tori Beltz, outfielder Samantha Villarreal, and infielders Courtney Dobson and Kylie Strand. Dobson is a three-time All-MIAA selection, while Duran, Beltz, and Villarreal have two all-conference selections to their credit.

The Tigers open the season on February 12 at the 8-State Classic in Bentonville, Ark., where they’ll play six games in the span of three days.

Below is the MIAA Preseason Coaches Poll for the 2016 season.

2016 MIAA Softball Preseason Coaches Poll
1. Central Oklahoma (4)            157
2. Pittsburg State (6)                154
3. Central Missouri (3)              149
4. Missouri Western (1)            142
5. Northwest Missouri               111
6. Emporia State                      106
7. Washburn                              96
8. Fort Hays State                      92
9. Northeastern State                  76
10. Nebraska-Kearney                 57
11. Southwest Baptist                 52
12. Missouri Southern                 35
13. Lindenwood                          34
14. Lincoln                                 13

KFIX Rock News: Bruce Springsteen Adds Dates to The River Tour; KC, Denver Included

springsteen riv tour(1)Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s 2016 The River Tour will keep flowing a bit longer than originally planned.

The North American trek, which initially had been scheduled to wind down with concerts on March 15 and 17 in Los Angeles, has been extended through an April 23 and 25 stand in Brooklyn, New York.

The newly added run of dates kicks off with a third L.A. concert, on March 19, and includes stops in Portland, Oregon; Seattle; Denver; Oklahoma City; Dallas; Kansas City, Missouri; and Baltimore.

In addition, Springsteen and company have announced a March 28 makeup date for the show at New York’s Madison Square Garden this past Sunday, January 24, that they postponed because of the blizzard that struck the city. Tickets for the January 24 event will be honored on the new date.

Bruce and his group also have lined up one international gig as part of The River Tour, a May 19 headlining appearance at Portugal’s Rock in Rio Lisboa festival. Visit BruceSpringsteen.net to find out when tickets will be available for the new concerts.

Each performance on the current trek features Springsteen and the E Street Band playing the Boss’ 1979 albumThe River in its entirety, as well as other select songs from Bruce’s catalog.

The tour was organized in conjunction with last December’s release of The Ties That Bind: The River Collection, a multiple-disc box set containing a remastered edition of The River, an early 10-song single-CD version of the album, a variety of outtakes, a making-of documentary, a vintage concert video and more.

Here are all of the upcoming dates on Springsteen and the E Street Band’s 2016 tour:

1/27 — New York, NY, Madison Square Garden Arena
1/29 — Washington, D.C., Verizon Center
1/31 — Newark, NJ, Prudential Center
2/2 — Toronto, ON, Air Canada Centre
2/4 — Boston, MA, TD Garden
2/8 — Albany, NY, Times Union Center
2/10 — Hartford, CT, XL Center
2/12 — Philadelphia, PA, Wells Fargo Center
2/16 — Sunrise, FL, BB&T Center
2/18 — Atlanta, GA, Philips Arena
2/21 — Louisville, KY, KFC Yum! Center
2/23 — Cleveland, OH, Quicken Loans Arena
2/25 — Buffalo, NY, First Niagara Center
2/27 — Rochester, NY, Blue Cross Arena
2/29 — Saint Paul, MN, Xcel Energy Center
3/3 — Milwaukee, WI, BMO Harris Bradley Center
3/6 — St Louis, MO, Chaifetz Arena
3/10 — Phoenix, AZ, Talking Stick Resort Arena
3/13 — Oakland, CA, Oracle Arena
3/15 — Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena
3/17 — Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena
3/19 — Los Angeles, CA, Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena*
3/22 — Portland, OR, Mode Center*
3/24 — Seattle, WA, KeyArena at Seattle Center*
3/28 — New York, NY, Madison Square Garden Arena+
3/31 — Denver, CO, Pepsi Center*
4/3 — Oklahoma City, OK, Chesapeake Energy Arena*
4/5 — Dallas, TX, American Airlines Center*
4/7 — Kansas City, MO, Sprint Center*
4/10 — Greensboro, NC, Greensboro Coliseum*
4/12 — Columbus, OH, Schottenstein Center*
4/14 — Auburn Hills, MI, The Palace of Auburn Hills*
4/18 — University Park, PA, Bryce Jordan Arena*
4/20 — Baltimore, MD, Royal Farms Arena*
4/23 — Brooklyn, NY, Barclays Center*
4/25 — Brooklyn, NY, Barclays Center*
5/19 — Lisbon, Portugal, Rock in Rio Lisboa*

* = new concert.
+ = rescheduled from January 24.

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

“Like” KFIX on Facebook.

Kan. massage parlor owner sentenced on prostitution charge

Liu- photo Sedgwick County
Liu- photo Sedgwick County

WICHITA – A Kansas massage parlor owner was sentenced Wednesday to time served (10 months) for trying to recruit a Chinese-speaking woman to perform sexual services at a massage parlor in Wichita, according to U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom.

She also will serve five years on federal supervised release.

Ping Liu, 44, Wichita, pleaded guilty to one count of attempted coercion and enticement to prostitution. In her plea, she admitted that during a phone conversation conducted in Mandarin Chinese she arranged for a woman posing as a job applicant from New York to come to Wichita to work at Q Massage, 3833 W. 13th in Wichita.

Liu told the applicant that the job included providing sexual services to customers. Liu told the applicant she would pick her up at the airport in Wichita.

In her plea, Liu also admitted twice offering to perform sexual services for undercover Wichita police officers who came to the massage parlor posing as customers.

Grissom commended the Wichita Police Department, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason Hart for their work on the case.

Increased police presence after on-line threat at Kansas high school

TOPEKA – Law enforcement and school district officials are investigating an on-line threat Wednesday at Topeka High School, according to a media release.

In response to the threat, USD 501 has dramatically increased security measures at the school building.

 

 

 

An additional three Topeka Public School officers as well as two Student Resource Officers from the Topeka Police Department were at the school Thursday morning, in addition to three Topeka Public School police officers typically in the building on a daily basis.

The eight police officers are on the interior of the building and on school grounds.

Topeka Police have also supported the school by adding six motorcycle unit officers who are working around the areas adjacent to the school.
A similar set up is planned for Friday, according to the school district.

Courthouse renovation contractor: ‘It hasn’t felt like a chore’

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The move-in is on.

Ellis County District Court employees are moving back into their permanent home as a 13-month remodel project winds down at the Ellis County Courthouse.

Project site superintendent Mike Wilson of MW Builders, Kansas City, was on his hands and knees late Wednesday morning as he finished installing a vinyl runner at the base of the long counter in court clerk’s office. Other MW employees were installing the access controls for card readers on doors to various offices.

“We’re just fine-tuning now, finishing the small stuff, and cleaning up as we go,” Wilson said. Workers from other companies were busy in the courtrooms installing video and sound systems.

The courtroom of 23rd Judicial District Judge Glenn Braun underwent the most renovations, according to Wilson, who calls it his “favorite room.”

“We had to remove two-foot-thick limestone vault walls to make the jury box. Those were load-bearing walls holding up the third floor ceiling,” he explained. As a result, several ceiling beams had to be added. “We spent more time in here than anywhere else.”

Other major work included removal of the old heating and cooling system and installing a modern HVAC system.

“We had to cut through 18-inch thick limestone walls to install the air ducts. This is the biggest remodel project I’ve ever done,” Wilson said.

Wilson will be on hand for Monday’s ribbon cutting and open house. The project, started in Dec. 2014, has required many modifications along the way. Wilson has taken it all in stride, staying in constant contact with Ellis County Commissioner Dean Haselhorst, who became the volunteer construction liaison.

“I love Hays–the people and the weather,” claimed Wilson, a native of Long Beach, Mississippi. “It’s one of the better places I’ve worked.

“Dealing with Ellis County hasn’t felt like a chore. I felt like I was helping them get what they need in this building.”

Starting Monday, what has been the main entrance of the courthouse building since it was built–the west side facing Fort Street–will be permanently locked, and become an emergency exit only. The public as well as employees will now access the building from the 12th Street parking lot on the building’s south side.

Notification signs of the change are posted on the west doors, which have often been unlocked during the remodel process. “We’ve had people coming in those doors all along,” Wilson laughed, “even after they stood there and read the sign to go around the building.”

Kearney Movers, the company hired by the county to move most of the court’s equipment and furniture, began the process last week. Court staff are also working to finish the work of transferring everything from their temporary home at the former N.E. W. building on south Commerce Parkway back into the renovated courthouse at 1209 Fort Street.

Ellis County District Court Administrator Phil Fielder said Monday the court system will still hold hearings at N.E. W. through Thursday afternoon, but the courts’ calendars have been cleared and will be closed Friday.

Courts will also be closed Mon., Feb. 1, for the open house and ribbon-cutting ceremony which starts at 10 a.m. Building tours will continue until 8 p.m.

According to Fielder, the first jury trial in the courthouse is scheduled for Wed., Feb. 3.

The Hays Police Department and the Ellis County Sheriff’s Department will remain at the former N.E.W building until the jail portion of the remodel project is completed.

Kan. Supreme Court hearing lawsuit against proposed Sunflower coal plant UPDATE

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An environmental group is asking the Kansas Supreme Court to require state limits on greenhouse gas emissions for a new coal-fired power plant in southwest Kansas before it is built.

The court heard arguments Thursday from attorneys in a lawsuit filed by the Sierra Club in 2014 after the state Department of Health and Environment signed off on the $2.8 billion project.

Sunflower Electric Power Corp. wants to build the facility next to an existing coal-fired plant outside Holcomb.

KDHE issued a permit in 2010, just before the federal government began regulating greenhouse gas emissions. Environmentalists challenged it and in 2013, the Supreme Court sent the permit back to KDHE.

The department issued what it calls an addendum to the 2010 permit and contends greenhouse gas emissions limits aren’t required.

—————-

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is reviewing a lawsuit filed by an environmental group to block construction of a $2.8 billion coal-fired power plant in the state’s southwest corner.

Attorneys representing the Sierra Club and the state Department of Health and Environment were arguing Thursday before the high court.

The Sierra Club filed its lawsuit in June 2014 after the department issued a pollution-control permit needed by Sunflower Electric Power Corp. The utility wants to build an 895-megawatt facility next to an existing coal-fired plant outside Holcomb.

The Sierra Club contends the permit wasn’t valid because the state wouldn’t regulate greenhouse gas emissions and because KDHE isn’t imposing adequate limits on other pollutants.

The agency argues the plant would meet federal and state pollution rules in place at the time.

68K motorcycles recalled over stalling risk

RecallDETROIT (AP) — Suzuki is recalling more than 68,000 motorcycles in the U.S. because the battery charging system can fail and cause the bikes to stall.

The recall affects 15 models from the 2008 to 2012 model years.

The company says in documents filed with U.S. safety regulators that the problem was traced to a circuit board in the charging system. One customer filed a complaint in the U.S., but more than 200 complaints were received from other countries.

Dealers will replace the charging system regulator-rectifier to fix the problem. Suzuki will notify owners and begin the recall repairs in early March at no cost to owners.

Braun to become Chief Judge of 23rd Judicial District

District Judge Glenn Braun
District Judge Glenn Braun will become Chief Judge of the 23rd Judicial District.

23rd Judicial Dist.

On January 21st, 2016, Kansas Supreme Court Chief Justice Lawton R. Nuss announced that the Honorable Glenn R. Braun, Hays, will become Chief Judge of the 23rd Judicial District for a two year term ending Dec. 31, 2017.

Chief Judge Edward Bouker, 23rd Judicial District
Chief Judge Edward Bouker, 23rd Judicial District

Judge Braun is succeeding the Honorable Edward Bouker who announced he is retiring from the bench at the end of his term in January 2017. The timing of this appointment will allow Judge Bouker to mentor Judge Braun in the duties and responsibilities of chief judge.

The 23rd judicial district includes Ellis, Rooks, Trego and Gove counties.

“I look forward to this new challenge and appreciate Judge Bouker’s advice and guidance during this transition. Our judicial district is blessed with excellent clerks and staff who will lend valuable assistance in the future,” said Braun.

Braun has been District Judge since 2012. Before becoming judge, he was in private practice for 31 years, having also served two terms as the Ellis County Attorney, the City of Hays prosecutor, and 7 years as a commissioner with the Kansas Racing and Gaming Commission. Braun was previously elected by his fellow lawyers as President of the Kansas Bar Association and is admitted to the United States Supreme Court, Kansas and Federal courts.

Braun and his wife, Amy were both born in Hays and are the parents of 5 children.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File