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Skoglund wins big league debut, beats Verlander, Tigers

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Eric Skoglund pitched 6 1/3 innings of two-hit ball in his major league debut, helping the Kansas City Royals beat Justin Verlander and the Detroit Tigers 1-0 on Tuesday night.

Skoglund, a 2014 third-round draft pick out of Central Florida, struck out five and walked one. The left-hander was promoted from Triple-A Omaha when the Royals placed Danny Duffy on the disabled list Monday with an oblique strain.

Kelvin Herrera pitched the ninth for his 12th save in 14 opportunities.

Verlander (4-4) left after seven innings, allowing one run and six hits.

Sunny, warm Wednesday with a chance for thunderstorms

car-zone-enjoy-the-drive

Today A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 85. Light south southeast wind becoming southeast 6 to 11 mph in the morning.

Tonight A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61. South southeast wind 9 to 11 mph.

ThursdaySunny, with a high near 87. South wind 8 to 14 mph.

Thursday NightMostly clear, with a low around 62. South wind 8 to 13 mph.

FridayA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 86. South wind 7 to 14 mph.

Friday NightA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 1am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 63.

SaturdayMostly sunny, with a high near 87.

Kansas man dies after ATV rolls down embankment

HODGEMAN COUNTY- A Kansas man died in an accident just before 8:30p.m. Tuesday in Hodgeman County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Polaris ATV driven by Jeffrey C. Hahn, 55, Hanston, was traveling just east of 230th Ave and W road ten miles north and two miles east of Hanston. The ATV traveled down and embankment and rolled.

Hahn was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to Beckwith Mortuary.  He was not wearing a helmet, according to the KHP.

Kansas woman dies in 3-vehicle crash

DICKINSON COUNTY- A Kansas woman died in an accident just before 7p.m. Tuesday in Dickinson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Infinity QX driven by Ron R. Larsen II, 32, Enid, OK., was southbound on U.S. 77.

The driver failed to stop at the stop sign at U.S. 56 and collided with a westbound 2001 Buick Century driven by Ellen F. Granzow, 54, Herington, that was just entering the intersection.

The collision caused the Buick to enter a private yard.

The Infinity continued southbound and collided head-on with a 2011 Nissan Murano driven by Lori L. Fruechting, 55. Marion, which was stopped at a stop sign.

Granzow and Larsen were transported to the hospital in Herrington where she died.

Fruechting was not injured. She was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

1 hospitalized after I-70 rear end crash

GOVE COUNTY – One person was injured in an accident just after 9p.m. Tuesday in Gove County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2016 Hyundai Elantra driven by Kyler R. Dannelley, 27, Broomfield, Co., was westbound on Interstate 70 five miles east of Quinter.

The Hyundai rear-ended a 2012 Honda Accord driven by Mason W. Wolf, Jr., 61, Kansas City.

Both vehicles came to rest in the median.

A passenger in the Hyundai Cynthia Rigaud, 30, Lafayette, CO., was transported to Gove County Medical Center.

Dannelley and Wolf, Jr., were not injured.

All were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Suspect jailed for Kansas apartment arson fire

Davis-photo Shawnee Co.

TOPEKA, Kan. – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect in connection with an alleged arson a Kansas apartment building.

Just before 4p.m. Tuesday, the Topeka Fire Department Responded to a structure fire located at 618 SW 8th Avenue in Topeka, according to a media release.

Upon arrival, fire crews discovered smoke coming from apartment 3 of the two-story wood framed multi family dwelling.

Firefighters were able to quickly extinguish the fire, keeping it confined to the structure of fire origin. Firefighters performed a search of the apartment of fire origin and confirmed all occupants were out. No injuries were reported at this incident. Preliminary investigation indicates the fire cause to be intentionally set.

With the assistance of the Topeka Police Department, Investigators were able to identify a suspect related to this incident. 50-year-old Donald R. Davis was arrested and booked into the Shawnee County Department of Corrections for aggravated arson.
Estimated dollar loss – $2,000.00 (Two Thousand Dollars); $1,000.00 (One Thousand Eight Hundred Dollars) structural loss and $200.00 (Two Hundred Dollars) contents loss.

Evel Knievel Museum opens in Topeka

KDWPT

TOPEKA – Among the many exciting attractions that Kansas has to offer, visitors to northeast Kansas can add a new museum to their must-see list of experiences – The Evel Knievel Museum at Historic Harley Davidson in Topeka. The museum held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday, May 26.

The $5 million, 13,000 sq. ft. museum features Evel’s motorcycles, leathers and helmets, his fully-restored Mack truck dubbed “Big Red” and his personal and never-before-seen memorabilia. The two-story museum also features several interactive experiences including a virtual reality 4-D motorcycle jump, “Broken Bones” interactive with Evel’s actual X-rays, “Plan Your Jump” challenge, “Engine and Suspension” interactive and a “Snake River Experience Room” featuring Knievel’s actual X2 Skycycle.

The museum was made possible, in part, by an $88,000 Attraction Development Grant from the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT). The program works to assist the development of sustainable, market-driven travel experiences in Kansas that will attract visitors and create long-lasting economic benefits from the creation of jobs, capital investment, revenue and visitation.

During its two-week soft opening, forty-six percent of the museum’s visitors were from out of state, including 13 states and four foreign countries, so the museum is quickly becoming a destination.

“We are tremendously excited to have the Evel Knievel Museum join the large number of amazing attractions in Kansas,” said Linda Craghead, KDWPT Assistant Secretary for Parks and Tourism. “We congratulate Historic Harley Davidson and all the dedicated people and organizations that helped make the museum possible, and we’re proud that the state could play a role in bringing it to Topeka.”

The Evel Knievel Museum at Historic Harley Davidson is located at 2047 SW Topeka Blvd., Topeka, KS 66612. For information, call (785) 215-6205, or visit www.EvelKnievelMuseum.org.

A grand opening celebration will be held June 30 and July 1. Tickets for the grand opening are limited and can be purchased online at www.eventbrite.com.

Autopsy: Kan. toddler electrocuted at carnival by fencing

Presley-photo Gofundme

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — An autopsy report concludes that a toddler fatally injured at a carnival in Wichita, Kansas, died after grabbing an electrically charged fence.

The report says 15-month-old Pressley Bartonek of Conway Springs was diagnosed as being brain dead five days after being shocked May 12.

According to the report, the toddler was at a small carnival on a parking lot when she grabbed metal fencing and became unresponsive by the time her father freed her hands.

The report says that a test by an electrical company showed about 300 volts coming from the fence.

The carnival operator, Evans United Shows based in Plattsburg, Mo., has not publicly commented about the matter.

Wichita police are investigating.

Kansas man jailed for alleged baseball bat attack

Wagner

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for a weekend assault.

A 39-year-old Salina man was arrested after he allegedly threatened a neighbor before hitting another with a metal baseball bat, according to Police Capt. Paul Forrester.

Just after 7p.m. Sunday, Latishia Ford, 29, and Nicholas Albany, 38, both of Salina, were sitting on a porch at a home in the 400 block of Baker in Salina, according to Police Captain Paul Forrester.

A neighbor, George Wagner, came out of his house with what appeared to be a black handgun and allegedly threatened Ford before going back inside his home.

Albany went to confront Wagner and knocked on his door. Wagner answered the door swinging a metal baseball bat and allegedly hit Albany in the face, according to Forrester.

Police arrested Wagner and booked him into the Saline County Jail on two counts of aggravated assault and one count of aggravated battery. Authorities also found a black BB gun and two metal bats in his residence, according to Forrester.

Welfare Spending Drops; Fewer Kansans Receive Cash Assistance

By MEG WINGERTER

Kansas is on track to spend less than a third of what it did six years ago on cash assistance and to serve a third as many low-income people, according to a state budget office memo.

Gov. Sam Brownback signed a welfare reform measure in 2015 that included lower lifetime limits on cash assistance for low-income Kansans. Since 2011 the state has incorporated work requirements for some anti-poverty programs.
FILE PHOTO / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Those numbers have been falling steadily since Gov. Sam Brownback took office in 2011, when Kansas began incorporating work requirements for programs like cash assistance and food stamps in an effort to break what the governor described as “cycles of dependency.”

The work requirements are similar to elements of President Donald Trump’s recently proposed budget, which would tighten eligibility for anti-poverty programs.

Kansas officials say the number of people receiving cash assistance has dropped because of a new emphasis on transitioning them to work, but evidence of their employment is inconclusive and the state’s poverty rate hasn’t fallen as fast as the national average during that period.

An April budget memo shows the state will spend about $14.9 million on cash assistance for 11,000 Kansans in the current fiscal year, down from about $52 million on cash assistance for roughly 39,000 Kansans in 2011. Spending this year includes about $300,000 from the state general fund, while much of the rest comes from the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grant.

Download the April memo from the Kansas Budget Office.

The budget memo suggests the downward trend will continue in Kansas. It predicts total spending on cash assistance will fall about 15 percent in fiscal year 2018, to $12.8 million, and another 16 percent in the following fiscal year, to $10.8 million. Both projections are lower than Brownback’s proposed budget anticipated in January.

The estimates come as lawmakers are struggling to fill a projected shortfall of nearly $900 million over the next two budget years while complying with a court order to increase funding for schools. The reductions in cash assistance aren’t likely to make much difference in the overall budget picture, however, because the state general fund only provides a small percentage of the program’s funding: projected at $118,000 in 2018 and $105,000 in 2019.

Effect On Families?

Theresa Freed, spokeswoman for the Kansas Department for Children and Families, said the department expects the number of Kansans receiving cash assistance to drop below an average of 10,000 per month in the 2018 fiscal year that starts in July and 8,000 per month in the following year.

Freed attributed the reduction to more Kansans getting jobs rather than being dropped from the cash assistance program. She said DCF received reports of 40,000 former cash assistance recipients getting jobs since 2011. However, that number may not account for former recipients who did not report when they got a job or others who may have reported several jobs as they cycled in and out of the program.

“Policy changes in recent years have incentivized employment and self-reliance,” she said in an email. “These effective and widely supported improvements to discourage dependence on government assistance have helped Kansas families.”

Those who did find work earned an average of $10.14 per hour, Freed said. At 40 hours a week, that’s an annual salary of about $21,000 before taxes, about 129 percent of the federal poverty level of $16,240 for a two-person family.

Annie McKay, president and CEO of Kansas Action for Children, said she is concerned that parents who are no longer eligible for cash assistance haven’t found family-supporting jobs.

“I don’t see the same corresponding decline in indicators that would corroborate the claims regarding employment — like homelessness data from schools, or free and reduced lunch figures, or Kansans accessing food pantries, or kids living below the poverty line,” she said.

The number of children in families receiving cash assistance has fallen from about 26,000 in 2011 to about 8,500 in the current fiscal year.

According to the most recent data, about 18 percent of Kansas children were in families with incomes below the poverty line in 2015. About 16 percent were below the poverty line in 2011.

Kansas’ overall poverty rate decreased from 13.8 percent in 2011, when welfare changes began rolling out, to 13.0 percent in 2015, the most recent year with data. That’s a drop of about 5.8 percent, although the poverty rate decreased faster nationwide and in Missouri, Oklahoma and Colorado during the same period.

Lower Lifetime Limits

Kansas officials have incorporated a combination of administrative and legislative changes to reduce access to cash assistance and encourage people to rejoin the workforce.

In late 2011, the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services began suspending cash assistance if parents failed to participate in job training or to name a non-custodial parent so the department could collect child support. SRS was later reorganized as DCF, with some services going to other departments.

Rob Siedlecki, then secretary of SRS, said the department would help parents with child care assistance and other services they needed to resume working. He also likened losing cash assistance to breaking an addiction.

“We want (families) to be successful,” he said in November 2011. “I don’t want them on the welfare rolls. It’s like a narcotic, if they keep on taking the program without trying to help themselves.”

Brownback signed bills passed by the conservative-led Legislature adding restrictions over the next five years. The changes reduced the cash assistance time limit to four years in 2011, and then to three years in 2015 under the HOPE Act.  A follow-up bill in 2016 lowered the lifetime limit to two years.

DCF estimated about 200 families lost access to cash assistance when the three-year limit took effect, and another 424 lost access due to the two-year limit. Many families cycle in and out of the cash assistance program, however, so it isn’t clear how many will ultimately hit the limit.

Community programs that assist low-income Kansans say demand has grown or stayed steady as the state changed its cash assistance program.

Tawny Stottlemire, executive director of We Fight Poverty in Topeka, said more people have sought help with rent, utilities and food in recent years. The organization doesn’t track whether clients previously received cash assistance, she said, but the number of people seeking help is higher than it would expect, given the relatively stable economy.

“Over the past three years, we’ve seen steady increases over normal” requests for help, she said.

Timi Myers, housing director for Southeast Kansas Community Action Program, said she wasn’t sure if more people have sought help paying their rent since the restrictions passed.

“We continue to have a steady flow of people seeking rental assistance,” she said.

Meg Wingerter is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of kcur.org, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @MegWingerter

Kan. man hospitalized; motorcycle swerved to avoid archery target in road

SEDGWICK COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating an injury accident

Just after 4:30p.m. Monday, police were dispatched to the intersection of Kellogg and Woodlawn in Wichita, according to Tuesday’s media briefing.

The investigation determined a motorcycle driven by a 59-year-old man was westbound on Kellogg. A large archery target fell out of the bed of a westbound pickup. The motorcycle rider swerved and hit the retaining wall. He was transported to local hospital in serious condition, according to police.

Officers eventually were able to speak to the pickup driver. There is no word of possible charges in the accident. Police reminded drivers to make certain they tie down items they are transporting to avoid similar accidents.

Name of the driver and victim were not released.

LETTER: Thoughts on the USD 489 bond process

By Chris Dinkel

School district bonds can be contentious issues because they directly affect two of the most important aspects of our lives – our kids and our money. For parents who worry about their kids attending schools without safe entrances or with inadequate educational space, opposing a bond to save money is inconceivable, yet for individuals without kids or who live on a fixed income, extra taxes levied for schools is tantamount to theft. Both sides make sense, and both sides need to be considered. The beauty of our democratic system is that both sides can be heard, and that’s been one of the most positive aspects of the work the USD 489 Vision Team has done over the past several months.

From the first Vision Team meeting, the conversation has been dynamic and evolving with significant contributions coming both from people who supported and opposed the last bond. It takes a lot of guts and conviction to be one of the few dissenting voices in a room full of enthusiasts, so I want to commend the people who came to every meeting despite being in the minority. Having supported the last bond, I made a point of sitting with several of its vocal opponents in order to make sure their reservations remained part of the conversation. It’s easy for a super-majority to dismiss the minority in the room, but I hoped that by cooperating with the individuals who expected to be side-lined, we would develop a better plan. To the Vision Team’s credit, they listened, and fiscal responsibility and long-term solutions became guiding principles for the whole process.

As a result of the cooperation among a broad range of Hays citizens, I believe we’re close to developing a plan that not only casts a positive vision for the future of USD 489 but also reflects the values of the Hays community. That couldn’t have happened without cooperation among individuals from a variety of perspectives, and I believe that the end result of this process will be as positive as the process has been.

Just as many people will vote Republican or Democrat regardless of the candidate, with an issue like this some people will support any plan, despite its downfalls, and some will oppose any plan, regardless of its merit. Even so, most people stand somewhere in between and need to see the value that a bond issue like this would bring to the community before supporting or opposing it. I supported the last bond issue, but I believe that community made the right choice in voting it down. The Vision Team is still working to hammer out the details of a plan to present to the School Board, but even in its unfinished state, I believe that the current plan will be excellent and one that the Hays community can proudly support.

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