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Fire hydrant inspections in south Hays Friday

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CITY OF HAYS

The Hays Fire Department will be inspecting and flow testing fire hydrants Fri., March 31, 2017 in the area from Main St. to Canterbury Dr. between Highway 40 By-pass and 13th St.

Firefighters will also work in the area of south of Highway 183 between Commerce Parkway to the airport and between Reservation Road to Highway 183, which includes include Countryside Mobile Home Park.

This is part of a coordinated effort by the city to inspect all fire hydrants in Hays and flush all water mains annually.

Inspecting fire hydrants ensures the valves operate properly and there is no damage or obstructions that will prevent or interfere with the prompt use of fire hydrants in an emergency.

The firefighters are also checking the pressure and volume of water mains in each neighborhood for firefighting purposes. The associated flushing of water mains allows chlorine to be distributed throughout the system to eliminate bio-filming in the water mains.

Slight discoloration of the water supply may be encountered although there will be no health risks to the consumer. All reasonable efforts will be taken to minimize the inconvenience to the public. Drivers are asked to avoid driving through water discharging from a fire hydrant during the short flushing period.

For more information please contact the Hays Fire Department at (785) 628-7330.

Veta Squier

Veta Squier, age 87, of Ransom, passed away Thursday, March 30, 2017.

Services are pending with Fitzgerald Funeral Home, Ness City.

Marcella Baumgartner

baumgartner-marcella-picMarcella Baumgartner, 88, WaKeeney, passed away Monday, March 27, 2017, at Trego County Lemke Memorial Hospital.

She was born October 2, 1928, in Ellis, Kansas to John and Rosie (Gaschler) Bollig. She attended school in Ellis and graduated from Ellis High School in 1946. She earned a teaching certificate and taught school at Maple Grove in Trego County. She married Adolph Baumgartner in May 1947. They were married for 56 years before his death in 2003. They ran a service station in Brownell, Kansas, farmed south of Cedar Bluff Lake and eventually moved to WaKeeney in 1958. Marcella took a job in the kitchen at Trego Hospital in 1961 and through hard work and schooling became the head of the dietary department. She retired in 1996. Marcella enjoyed cooking, baking, gardening and golf.

Survivors include son, David (Patty) Baumgartner, Mission, Kansas; daughters Janet and Betty Baumgartner, WaKeeney; grandson, Nick (Violet) Baumgartner, Topeka, Kansas; great-grandchildren, Jake (Allie) and Marisa (Michael) as well as many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, John and Rosie Bollig.
Mass of Christian Burial will be Monday, April 3, 2017 at 10:30 a.m. at Christ the King Catholic Church, WaKeeney. Burial will be in the Kansas Veterans’ Cemetery.

Visitation will be Sunday, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the funeral home in WaKeeney.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to VFW Ladies Auxiliary, CTK Altar Society or Big Creek Golf Assn. Donations may be sent to Schmitt Funeral Home, 336 N 12th St. WaKeeney, KS 67672.

Condolences may be sent online at www.schmittfuneral.com.

SCHUMACHER: Kicking the KPERS can down the road

Tim Schumacher
Tim Schumacher

It comes as no surprise that the House budget panel will undoubtedly make the decision to hold back a few hundred million dollars in retirement contributions “at this stage” in the budget crafting process. At this stage! What other stage is there? How many years have legislators been kicking the can down the road?

Rep. Henry Helgerson, a democrat from Wichita, expressed the fact that “this is not an enhancement, this is a debt. If this is put off for too long, the state is financially vulnerable to bankruptcy”. And yet, the mindset for years has been, “We’ll deal with this later.”

Landlords can attest to the fact that when a tenant gets behind on their payments, 99 times out of 100, there is not a happy ending. Instead of one month’s rent payment, it becomes two, then three, and in most cases it’s just a matter of time before an eviction or a “midnight exit” takes place. The state of Kansas delayed a quarterly payment in 2016, and will do the same in 2017. Current law stacks an 8% interest payment on top of the expected contribution. In fact the state has been paying less in contribution rates than needed, according to actuarial assessment, for the last 20 years. Unfortunately, with the state of Kansas, pension recipients can’t evict representatives, and being accountable only while they’re in office allows them to put off proper funding with the mindset that someone else can worry about it– until it’s too late.

The KPERS representatives are firm on the fact that providing pension benefits to its employees is a contractual guarantee that has to be paid. And they will continue to assert that right up to the time that the state pension plan runs out of money.

Jeff King, a former representative from Independence, led the Senate KPERS Committee several years back and at least made a stab at correcting this situation. Most of his efforts have either been reversed or worsened, and he did not run for re-election. This not only includes not making the expected contributions on time, but more desperate moves like issuing a one billion dollar pension bond. His parting words to the decision makers were “This kind of news makes me feel a lot better about what I’ll be doing next year.”

When governor Brownback was questioned by reporters on the KPERS situation, he stated, “Where we were when I started-we were 52 or 54% funded, and we’re 67% funded today. We are in so much better shape on KPERS today than when I came in as governor.” Well, Governor Brownback, in most people’s grade book, 67% is still a flunking grade. So little Sammy is still flunking, just not as bad. And if we use assumptions used by neutral entities, like the Pew Center, instead of the decision- makers’ lofty assumptions, we’re in bigger trouble than they will admit.
However, all of this cannot be blamed on our current governor, because this has been the mindset of our legislators for years.

We no longer only read about bankrupt pension plans in Greece or far-away places. It’s happening in these United States and it’s high time our state government stops kicking the can down the road and address these issues for the sake of the hundreds of thousands that are depending on them in their retirement.

Tim Schumacher represents Strategic Financial Partners in Hays.

Winners of Brews on the Bricks tickets will be announced Friday!

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Tickets for the second annual Brews on the Bricks sold out last month in 11 minutes — but four lucky winners will get a chance to join the fun.

The Furniture Look and Diamond R Jewelry in downtown Hays are partnering with Eagle Communications to give away two sets of two VIP tickets and two sets of two general admission tickets.

The winners will be announced on Facebook Live via Hays Post on Friday. Two winners will be drawn at The Furniture Look at 10 a.m., and two more will be drawn at 2 p.m. at Diamond R Jewelry. Brews on the Bricks will be April 8 in downtown Hays at 10th and Main.

Tune in!

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Holocaust survivor to bring his story, message of compassion to FHSU

Gene Klein, Holocaust survivor
Gene Klein, Holocaust survivor
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

In the spring of 1944, a teenaged Gene Klein and his family were taken from their village in Hungary and thrown into the infamous Nazi extermination camp known as Auschwitz.

He will bring his story to Fort Hays State University’s Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 13. The public is invited. Admission is free.

His father was taken straight to the gas chamber. Klein was forced into slave labor until liberated in the spring of 1945, and he spent two years as a refugee before his and other family members were allowed to immigrate to the United States.

Now 89 and living in The Villages, Fla., Klein has been speaking out about the Holocaust for more three decades. Writing for The World Post in July 2016 as a memorial to Elie Wiesel, Klein noted that he, unlike Wiesel, was silent for decades about the Holocaust.

“Eventually, I decided that, like Wiesel, I needed to be public about being a survivor and that, in my own small way, I should contribute to the mission of educating the world about the Holocaust,” he wrote.

“I will tell our story,” he continued, “and I will speak — especially in these times — about the tolerance and compassion necessary to prevent what happened to us from happening to others.”

“He has traveled all over the world for decades sharing his Holocaust experiences, but has not yet visited Kansas,” said Hollie Marquess, instructor of history at Fort Hays State University. “Gene is excited to see Kansas for the first time and is happy to share his experiences with students and our community.”

His visit to Hays is an outgrowth of a world civilization class Marquess was teaching in the fall 2016 semester. They were reading “We Got the Water: Tracing My Family’s Path Through Auschwitz,” a book by Klein’s daughter, Jill Gabrielle Klein.

This coincided with a proposal for a trip to the National Campus Leaders Summit in January as part of the Embrace Difference campaign of the university’s Center for Civic Leadership. The summit was scheduled the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., and one requirement for attendance was a proposal to the museum for a project in keeping with the museum’s mission and purpose.

Marquess’s students were “expressing an amazing response” to Klein’s book, she said, so “I located Gene Klein’s email and proposed that he visit our campus as a part of this project, and he accepted.”

She and Dr. Paul Niencamp, assistant professor of history, led five students on the trip to Washington in late January. The students represented the disciplines of history, political science and leadership studies.

“The Holocaust Memorial Museum has been supportive of this project since our proposal,” said Marquess. “It is an incredible opportunity for my students who have read this book to then get to meet him and visit with him, and it is also a wonderful opportunity for the community to hear his story and his message.”

Klein has inspired audiences around the world with his powerful and touching presentation on the continuing relevance of the Holocaust and the necessity of fostering the capacity for empathy, instead of allowing hate to flourish.

He is a frequent contributor to national and international media outlets, including CNN, The Guardian, and HuffPost Live.

Get your jam on Saturday

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The monthly Hays Community Acoustic Jam session will be held Saturday, April 1, from 2:00-4:00 p.m. at the Hays Arts Center Annex, 1010 Main in downtown Hays. The sessions are held on the first Saturday of each month.

The local acoustic jam is a fun place for people of all skill levels to play acoustical instruments (guitars, banjos, fiddles, harmonicas, bass guitars, etc.) and to invite friends to enjoy music, whether you’re playing, singing, or listening.

All are welcome to listen or participate as little or much as you’d like!

For inquiries, please contact [email protected].

DSNWK Kid-Link receives grant for children’s books

dsnwk logoDSNWK

Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas has received a $349 dollar Community Fund Grant from Midwest Energy.

According to Development Director Steve Keil, the grant award will be used to purchase children’s books that share and encourage healthy eating to foster developmental milestones.

The books will be given to children who receive services through DSNWK’s Kid-Link program. It benefits families in the counties of Norton, Phillips, Smith, Rooks, Osborne and Russell who receive early intervention for developmental delays in their natural living environment.

Softball falls twice to Missouri Southern

HAYS, Kan. – Missouri Southern handed Fort Hays State its first two home losses of the season on Thursday, March 30 at Tiger Stadium. The Lions swept a conference doubleheader by scores of 12-3 and 5-4, moving to 15-24 overall and 4-6 in the MIAA, while the Tigers moved to 9-25 overall and 2-6 in the MIAA.

Game 1: Missouri Southern 12, Fort Hays State 3

Following a scoreless first inning by both teams, Missouri Southern erupted for 11 of its 12 runs over the second and third innings to put the first game away early. Tess Gray had a terrific game at the plate with three RBI, nearly missing a total of five by a couple of feet.

After Missouri Southern scored three runs in the second inning on back-to-back doubles with two outs, the Tigers were just a couple feet from tying the game back up in the bottom half of the inning when Tess Gray drove a ball deep to left field with a pair of runners on. Unfortunately, it hit the top of the wall and turned into just a double in what looked like a potential game-tying home run as it left the bat. The smash double off the wall scored one and left runners at second and third with one out.

That is when Fort Hays State’s recent repetitive struggles at driving in runs with less than two outs returned, unable to get more runs across with a comebacker to the pitching circle and a foul pop up just to the left of home plate. Missouri Southern escaped the second with a 3-1 lead.

Following the missed opportunity, Missouri Southern chased Tiger starting pitcher Carrie Clarke from the game. Clarke was unable to record an out in the the third, facing five batters that all recorded hits (four singles and a double). In the blink of an eye, the Tigers trailed 6-1. Lexie Kimminau relieved Clarke and struggled to find outs as well. She chose to throw home on a sacrifice bunt attempt by the first batter she faced and was too late as another run crossed, making it 7-1. Another single made it 8-1 before the Tigers recorded an out in the inning. Then a pair of wild pitches scored two more runs and then a fielding error was responsible for the eighth run of the inning. When the dust settled, Missouri Southern led 11-1 heading to the bottom half of the third. Another RBI single by MSSU in the fourth made it 12-1.

Gray wound up with all three RBI in the game for FHSU by hitting a two-run home run in the fourth to make it 12-3. If the hit in the second inning were a bit higher, she could have had a two-homer, five-RBI game to that point. Bailey Kennedy also had a pair of hits for FHSU in the game, while Candace Bollig had one. The Tigers had runners at first and second with one out in the fifth, but a double play ended the threat and game as the run-rule went into effect.

Clarke finished with eight runs allowed on 10 hits in two innings of work. Kimminau allowed four runs (three earned) in an inning of work. Hailey Chapman recorded the final six outs of the game, holding the Lions scoreless.

Sydney Koch went the distance for Missouri Southern, allowing three runs (two earned) on five hits and two walks. She struck out two.

Game 2: Missouri Southern 5, Fort Hays State 4

Missouri Southern led twice before coming back a third and final time with a run in the sixth to break a 4-4 tie. Abi Corbett’s two-out RBI single was the difference in a sweep for the Lions.

Missouri Southern took a 1-0 lead in the first on an unearned run, but Fort Hays State responded with doubles by Bailey Kennedy and Veronica Knittig in the bottom half of the inning to even the score.

The Lions scored twice in the second inning, but the Tigers finally received clutch two-out hitting from Bailey Boxberger and Candace Bollig. Boxberger had a double off the left field wall to score one run, then Bollig dropped a two-RBI single down the right field line to push the Tigers in front 4-3.

Kylie Wesbrooks of MSSU knotted the score for the second time in the game with an RBI double in the fourth.

The Tigers had chances to pull ahead again with runners in scoring position in both the fourth and fifth innings with less than two outs. The missed chances were costly when Corbett laced the game-winning RBI single through the left side in the sixth. Veronica Knittig had a one-out double in the seventh, but a strikeout looking and comebacker to the mound ended the game.

Sydney Koch, who won the first game for MSSU, picked up the save in the nightcap by getting the final two outs of the game. Starter Taurean Guzman picked up the win in 6.1 innings of work. She allowed 10 hits and a walk, while striking out two.

Hailey Chapman took the loss for FHSU, despite throwing a complete game. She allowed five runs (four earned) on 11 hits and four walks. She struck out four.

The Tigers host Pittsburg State in a conference doubleheader on Friday. The doubleheader will serve as the annual “Jam Pack Tiger Stadium” game. An enhanced concession lineup will be available with burgers, brats and chips.

FHSU Sports Information

TMP soccer open season with win over Wichita Independent

The TMP-Marian girls soccer team opened their season with a 10-0 win over Wichita Independent Thursday afternoon in Hays.

Aubrey Koenigsman netted three goals and Megan Koenigsman scored twice in the win. The Monarchs also got goals from Ashley Ostrander, Kayla Vitztum and Deonna Wellbrock.

TMP travels to Wichita Independent Saturday.

TMP baseball games with Abilene moved to Hays

The TMP-Marian baseball team will open their season Friday afternoon at home against Abilene.

The games were originally scheduled to be played at Abilene but due to poor field conditions the games has been moved to Hays.

Game time is at 4:00 at the Monarch Baseball Complex.

Brownback Veto: Medicaid Expansion Battle With Legislature

By MEG WINGERTER & STEPHEN KORANDA

Gov. Sam Brownback on Thursday morning vetoed a bill to expand Medicaid eligibility in Kansas, spurring a short veto override effort in the Kansas House that likely will continue next week.

House Bill 2044 earlier was approved three votes short of a veto-proof majority in the House and two short in the Senate. An estimated 300,000 Kansans would qualify for coverage under expansion, though only about half that number would enroll in the first year, according to estimates.

KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, doesn’t serve childless adults without disabilities and only covers adults with children if they have incomes below 32 percent of the poverty line, or about $3,800 annually.

 

 

 

Brownback’s veto message echoed his previous objections to the bill, which he said prioritized the newly eligible adults over those with disabilities.

“I am vetoing this expansion of ObamaCare because it fails to serve the truly vulnerable before the able-bodied, lacks work requirements to help able-bodied Kansans escape poverty, and burdens the state budget with unrestrainable entitlement costs,” he said.

Read the veto message from Gov. Sam Brownback

Disability Advocate Disputes Statement

But Mike Oxford, executive director of the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, said Wednesday he was “pissed off” by Brownback’s statement that KanCare expansion would harm people with disabilities. He spoke at a TILRC event, where members celebrated the bill passing the House and Senate.

About 20 percent of people who would become eligible for insurance under KanCare expansion have a disability, Oxford said, and others may have chronic health conditions. While there are some exceptions that allow people with disabilities to work and earn more money, the most straightforward way for them to qualify for KanCare is to show they aren’t able to work and have less than $2,000 in assets.

People with disabilities also would benefit from expansion if the workers who provide personal care services to them became eligible for KanCare, Oxford said. Most personal care workers earn about $10 an hour and can’t afford health insurance, so they leave for better-paying jobs, he said.

“Maybe (expansion) would make it easier for people to find good health and keep good help,” he said.

In his veto message, Brownback also said he disliked that Planned Parenthood could receive more funding under Medicaid expansion. Federal law prohibits using taxpayer money to fund abortions, but the clinics could receive Medicaid reimbursements for services like gynecological cancer screenings.

“I will not support this legislation that continues to fund organizations that undermine a culture of life,” Brownback said.

‘When Is The Right Time?’

Just more than an hour after the governor’s veto announcement, members of the Kansas House began a contentious, emotional debate on whether they should override the veto.

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, said legislators shouldn’t let concerns about possible changes at the federal level to the Affordable Care Act stop them from expanding KanCare.

“If this isn’t the right time, when is the right time? Are we going to wait for some more hospitals to close?” asked Concannon, referring to the closure of a hospital in Independence.

Rep. Leonard Mastroni, a LaCrosse Republican, said expanding Medicaid would boost struggling hospitals. Losing medical facilities would have a ripple effect through towns like his in western Kansas, he said.

“If we don’t support Medicaid expansion, you’re going to put a dagger right through the heart of our small communities,” Mastroni said.

Rep. Dan Hawkins, chairman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, was among critics of expansion who echoed Brownback’s financial concerns.

“This one piece of legislation could chart a course of financial disaster for us for a long, long time,” Hawkins said.

Other lawmakers said the state’s health care system has priorities that should be funded first, like improving reimbursement rates to encourage more health care providers to accept Medicaid patients.

Rep. Brenda Landwehr said there aren’t enough Medicaid providers to accommodate thousands of new recipients.

“Fund the current commitments first before you go out and expand a program that can’t handle that expansion,” said Landwehr, a Wichita Republican.

Lawmakers eventually voted Thursday to delay the veto override debate until next week.

Meg Wingerter is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service.

Cloudy, cool Friday with a chance of overnight storms

Today Patchy fog before 9am. Otherwise, cloudy, with a high near 50. East wind 6 to 14 mph.

screen-shot-2017-03-31-at-5-27-12-amTonight Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after 1am. Cloudy, with a low around 41. East wind 11 to 15 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch, except higher amounts possible in thunderstorms.

Saturday Showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 10am, then showers between 10am and 1pm, then showers and possibly a thunderstorm after 1pm. High near 45. East northeast wind around 14 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Saturday Night Showers and possibly a thunderstorm before 1am, then a chance of showers. Low around 39. Northeast wind 8 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

SundayMostly cloudy, with a high near 59. North northwest wind around 8 mph.

Sunday NightMostly clear, with a low around 39.

MondayMostly sunny, with a high near 66.

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