LANSING, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas prison worker has pleaded no contest to smuggling methamphetamine.
The Kansas City Star reports that prosecutors announced Wednesday that 60-year-old Jacqueline Doty, of Fort Scott, had entered a plea in the case.
Court documents say she was arrested in June 2014 after she was searched at the Lansing Correctional Facility and found to be carrying about 14 bags containing meth.
Prosecutors said the bags were hidden in a “girdle-type undergarment” Doty was wearing, with large bandages wrapped around her midsection to hide them. One of the bags held about 14 grams of meth.
Doty told investigators that she had brought drugs into the prison on multiple occasions.
Pictured is a rendering of the Cambridge North Patient Tower before KU Hospital announced it would add four more floors. CREDIT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HOSPITAL
Anticipating strong patient demand, The University of Kansas Hospital plans to add four floors to the Cambridge North Patient Tower now under construction just northeast of the hospital complex in Kansas City, Kan.
The tower was originally conceived as a seven-story building with 92 beds and 12 operating rooms expected to be completed in 2017. In a statement, Bob Page, KU Hospital’s president and CEO, said that when the new floors are completed in 2018, one floor with 32 beds will be ready for immediate patient occupancy. The other three will be finished as future demand dictates.
The expansion will add $50 million to the original $270 million tab for the
Image Univ. of Kansas Medical Center- click to ENLARGE
building, which is at 39th and Cambridge streets. The hospital, however, said it will not up the ante on the $100 million it’s seeking in private philanthropic money to help foot the bill.
So far, it said, private donors have pledged more than $42 million.
The building will house two of the hospital’s fastest growing specialties, neurosciences and surgical oncology.
Dan Margolies, is editor of the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.
LA CYGNE, Kan. (AP) — Federal officials are investigating after a worker fell 33 feet at an east-central Kansas power plant.
The U.S. Department of Labor said in a news release Wednesday that the worker was demolishing a filtration device called a precipitator when he fell Tuesday at KCP&L’s La Cygne Power Plant. The release said the man remains hospitalized. He works for Brandenburg Industrial Service Company of Chicago. No one from the company immediately returned a phone message from The Associated Press seeking comment.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration will lead the investigation. Judy Freeman, of OSHA, says falls are one of the leading causes of workplace deaths and injuries. But she stressed that they are “very preventable” when workers have proper protective equipment and training.
MANHATTAN–The From the Land of Kansas Annual Conference and Trade Show will be held Feb. 25-26, 2016, in Manhattan, Kan. The conference includes the annual meeting for members, partners and farmers’ markets. It will feature general sessions, specialized workshops and a wholesale trade show for all attendees. This year’s theme, “Sharing the Vision,” embraces how members from the trademark program and farmers’ market groups can learn to make their companies and programs more successful.
“The annual meeting is an opportunity to network with other Kansas entrepreneurs in the ag industry,” said Jackie McClaskey, Kansas Secretary of Agriculture. “In addition, sessions will cover a diversity of topics and presentations by experts in the industry for continued learning and growth.”
The keynote speaker will be Doug Worgul from Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que, whose presentation, “Finding Your Brand,” will share his business experiences. Participants in the conference and trade show also will be able to hear from other experts in the agriculture, marketing and food industries. Topics which will be featured in sessions and workshops include:
· Business management, employee relations, succession planning
· Food industry updates
· Marketing tools for soliciting and reacting to reviews and managing social media
· Partnership organizations and resources
The From the Land of Kansas trade show is designed to give buyers and retail stores the opportunity to have a multitude of Kansas companies in one location. The trade show will feature high-quality products including bakery, soup and dip mixes, dairy products, granola and snack mixes, sauces, marinades, rubs, seasonings, proteins and more. If you are interested in registering as a buyer, exhibiting in the trade show or becoming a sponsor of the conference, visit FromtheLandofKansas.com/tradeshow for more information. Registration information is on the website at FromtheLandofKansas.com/AMeeting.
From the Land of Kansas is the state’s agriculture trademark program in the Kansas Department of Agriculture (KDA). The program works to promote and support Kansas farmers, ranchers and agribusinesses that grow, raise or manufacture agriculture products or products for agriculture use.The KDA is committed to its mission to help make Kansas businesses more successful, grow rural communities and expand markets for Kansas agricultural products.
If you have questions, please contact Lynne Hinrichsen, agribusiness development director, at (785) 564-6757 or [email protected]. To learn more about From the Land of Kansas, find local Kansas food, products or services or to become a From the Land of Kansas member, visit FromtheLandofKansas.com.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Health care advocates in Kansas are strongly criticizing a proposal from Republican Gov. Sam Brownback for decreasing prescription drug costs for the state’s Medicaid program.
They told the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee on Wednesday that the governor’s proposal could deny needed medications to people with chronic conditions and severe mental illnesses.
The committee took testimony on a bill eliminating the state’s ban on so-called step therapy with prescriptions in the Medicaid program.
In step therapy, patients are required to try less-expensive drugs first and have the treatment fail before obtaining more expensive prescriptions. Supporters say allowing Medicaid to use step therapy makes sense.
Brownback’s administration projects savings of nearly $11 million for the fiscal year beginning July 1. The state must close a projected $190 million budget shortfall.
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The University of Kansas has unblocked limited information about two fraternities that were placed on probation for hazing.
But the Lawrence Journal-World reports that most of the information it sought when it initially requested documents from the school in October remains redacted. The paper raised concerns in December about the redactions with an open records appeal.
The university responded by provided a slightly less-redacted version of one of the five documents initially given to the newspaper. But the newspaper reported that all information remains hidden about the nature and severity of hazing behaviors by the Delta Tau Delta and Phi Beta Sigma fraternities. The fraternities have said some members have been disciplined.
The university says it met its obligation under the law to provide information without compromising student privacy.
SHAWNEE COUNTY- Three adults and a child were injured in an accident just after 7a.m. on Wednesday in Shawnee County.
The Kansas Highway patrol reported a 1999 Ford Ranger driven by William Ernest Jernberg, 17, Tecumseh, was eastbound on Kansas 4 at 46th Street.
The driver failed to stop and collided with a 2012 Chevy Malibu driven by Bailey J. Zobel, 28, Topeka, that was stopped, yielding to turn left onto Northeast46th.
The Malibu was pushed into oncoming traffic, striking a 2004 Chevy Silverado head-on.
The Silverado driven by Amanda Marie Butler, 38, Meriden, also hit a 2013 Kia Forte driven by Veanna K. Unruh, 65, Topeka, that was stopped at the stop sign on Northeast 46th.
Zobel, Butler and Unruh were transported to Stormont Vail.
A passenger in the Malibu Kranston Lee James Haehn, 5, Topeka was transported to Children’s Mercy.
Jernberg was not injured.
Zobel was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.
Vernon “Vern” Herrman, age 86, died Wednesday, January 27, 2016, at Hays Medical Center.
He was born May 1, 1929, in Liebenthal, Kansas,to Raymond and Lucy (Steckline) Herrman. He married Dorothy (Huber) on May 10, 1951, Hays, Kansas.
He was owner and operator of Vern Herrman Motor Supply since 1954, a total of 62 years in downtown Hays. He attended St. Joseph Catholic Church and was a member of the Kansas National Guard. He helped manage his son’s band for a number of years–The Tempests–a Hays band from the 1960’s. The Tempests were inducted into the Kansas Music Hall of Fame at Lawrence in March of 2013. He enjoyed trapshooting, hunting, fishing and camping.
Survivors include his wife, Dorothy Herrman, of the home; four sons, John Herrman and wife, Terri, St. Louis, MO; David Herrman and wife, Deanna, Hays, KS; Ron Herrman and wife, Cheryl, Russell, KS; Marc Herrman, Hays, KS; one son-in-law, Kevin Schukman, Hays, KS; one brother, Raymond Herrman and wife, Katie, Lawrence, KS; one sister, Luella Bieker, Hays, KS; one sister-in-law, Donna Herrman, Phoenix, Arizona; ten grandchildren and 21 great grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his parents; one daughter, Kathleen Schukman; one brother, LeRoy Herrman; and one brother-in-law, Clarence Bieker.
Services are 11:00 A.M. Friday, January 29, 2016, at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601. A private family inurnment will be at St. Joseph Cemetery Hays, Kansas.
The family will receive friends from 9:00 to 11:00 A.M. Friday, at Cline’s Mortuary of Hays.
Memorials are to the Kansas Music Hall of Fame. Condolences can be sent via e-mail to [email protected].
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is investigating an outbreak of norovirus, shown here, at the New Theatre Restaurant in Overland Park. CREATIVE COMMONS / PUBLIC DOMAIN IMAGES
By DAN MARGOILES
More than 100 people who attended the New Theatre Restaurant in Overland Park on Sunday, Jan. 17, reported becoming ill, according to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
In a news release Wednesday, the agency says it’s investigating an outbreak of norovirus infection. Symptoms of the extremely contagious virus include diarrhea, vomiting, nausea and stomach pain.
KDHE says it’s conducting a confidential online survey of people who attended the matinee and evening performances staged that day at the popular dinner theater.
Rob McGraw, the New Theatre’s vice president of marketing, said the theater got a call from one of its patrons on Tuesday and immediately contacted KDHE.
He described the virus as very common. “You can catch the flu anywhere,” he said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says norovirus is the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis in the United States, causing 19 million to 21 million illnesses annually. It’s also the most common cause of foodborne-disease outbreaks.
Dan Margolies, editor of the Heartland Health Monitor team, is based at KCUR. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies.
Phillipsburg resident, Connie L. Shea, passed away January 26, 2016, at the Christian Homes in Holdrege, NE, at the age of 72. She was born March 29, 1943 in Colby, KS, the daughter of Doyle & Frances (Tubbs) Erwin.
Survivors include her husband John of Phillipsburg; her son, Randie Shea of Phillipsburg; 2 daughters, Bonnie Ewing of Phillipsburg and Tonia Driggs of Manhattan, KS; her sister, Bonnie Siruta of Winona, KS and 10 grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held Saturday, January 30 at 10:30 a.m. in the First Lutheran Church, Phillipsburg, with Pastor Joel Hiesterman officiating. Burial will follow in the Fairview Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 12:00 to 9:00 Thurs. & 9:00 to 9:00 Friday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be made to Christian Homes.
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A judge will hear arguments next month on the request to dismiss the lawsuit filed by a Wichita mathematician who is seeking to audit voting machine results after finding statistical anomalies in election counts.
A hearing has been set for Feb. 18 in Sedgwick County District Court.
Wichita State University statistician Beth Clarkson wants the tapes to check the error rate on electronic voting machines used at a Sedgwick County voting station during the November 2014 general election.
Sedgwick County contends it is statutorily prohibited from producing the voting machine tapes, which it contends are not open records. It also argued the issue was settled in an earlier lawsuit.
But Clarkson’s attorney, Randall Rathbun, disagrees. He said Wednesday issues raised in the past are not being litigated in this case.
SALINA -The Kansas Bureau of Investigation has released details on the death of man who was in police custody.
According to the release, Salina Police officers were dispatched to a report of a disturbance in the 2000 block of Norton Street just before 5:30 p.m. Monday evening. When officers arrived, they located a woman with injuries. 50 year-old Scott A. Brunson was then taken into custody on allegations of domestic battery and resisting arrest. He was subsequently transported to the Saline County Jail.
Once at the jail, Brunson was allegedly involved in an altercation with jail staff. Two Saline County Sheriff’s Office deputies were injured in the altercation. Brunson and both deputies were transported to Salina Regional Health Center. Brunson was pronounced dead early Tuesday morning. One of the deputies was treated and released, and the other was kept for treatment and observation.
The KBI is conducting an investigation into the in-custody death. For the sanctity of the investigation, the KBI will be releasing no further information until the investigation is complete and has been reviewed by the Saline County Attorney’s Office.