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Jeffery Lynn Harris

Jeffery Lynn Harris, age 47, of Russell, Kansas passed away Saturday, July 8, 2017 at Russell Regional Hospital due to a traffic accident on I-70 in Russell County. He was born August 14, 1969 in Clay Center, Kansas to Beryl Orin and Janice Jolene (Valeka) Harris. He earned an Associates of Applied Science from Northwest Kansas Technical College in Goodland. He married Cindy (Warren) April 4, 2009 in Lansing, Kansas.

He was working for A & D Towing of Russell and had just started his own transport business, DVB Transport Services. He also did automotive and diesel mechanic work as well as siding and roofing. He enjoyed collecting and repairing trucks, cars and boats, riding and working on motorcycles, woodworking, home remodeling, leathercraft work, drawing, tattoo artist, being outdoors and grilling.

He is survived by his wife, Cindy Harris of Russell; his father, Beryl Harris of Plainville, KS, a son, David Orin Harris of Great Bend; a daughter, Ariel Marie Jager of Great Bend; a step-daughter, Bridgett Reed and husband Nate of Houston, TX; five brothers, David Harris of Texas, Jerry Harris of Pittsburg, KS, Tommy Dowling of Russell, Robert Harris of Russell and Neil Harris of Plainville; two sisters, Bonnie Harris and Rose Hare; two step-sisters, Jodi Wolfe and Starla Conner and two grandchildren, Heaven and Nevaeh Jager as well as his pets, Daisy, Brutus and Violet.

He was preceded in death by his mother, Janice Dowling, and a step-mother, Lori Ann Winslow.

A celebration of life service will be 10:30 AM Tuesday, July 11, 2017 at the Otterbein United Methodist Church in Russell. Private family inurnment will be at a later date.
Memorial contributions are suggested for a Memorial Fund for Jeff Harris.

Arrangements in care of Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601.

Condolences may be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or emailed to [email protected]

Norton, Larned sites of Reentry Week celebration

Gov. Sam Brownback signs a proclamation designating July 10-14 Reentry Week.

KDOC

The Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC) will celebrate Reentry Week July 10-14, 2017. Events will be held across the state, in facilities and parole offices, to spotlight the evidence based work done by staff, contract providers, volunteers, mentors, and community partners, which has led to a reduction in recidivism (returns to prison) in Kansas from over 55% to 35%.

On June 23, Gov. Sam Brownback proclaimed July 10-14, 2017 Reentry Week, to acknowledge, appreciate, and provide the public with information about this work. This week provides an opportunity to highlight the work of KDOC staff and partners, and provide the public with more information about the importance of this work.

More than 5,000 offenders are admitted and released from Kansas prisons each year. Through evidence-based programs, core effective correctional practices, robust reentry and discharge planning, treatment and services from community providers, and the support of natural supports and mentors, more offenders are better prepared than ever to return to Kansas communities and become productive and law abiding citizens. Reentry needs include housing, transportation, employment, behavioral health treatment, financial needs, and pro-social supports and influences.

Open house events will be held across the state to share information, show the work done in reentry, and celebrate the work of reentry staff, partners and volunteers. Media interested in attending any of the events listed below should contact the KDOC Communications Office at [email protected] by July 7.

REENTRY WEEK SCHEDULE
Monday, July 10, 2017
9 am-1 pm Lansing Correctional Facility
1-3 pm Kansas City Parole Office
1-3 pm Olathe Parole Office
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
9 am-1 pm Topeka Correctional Facility
9 am-1 pm Kansas Juvenile Correctional Complex
9-11 am Lawrence Parole Office
1-3 pm Topeka Parole Office
3:30-7 pm Pittsburg Parole Office
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
8 am-noon Ellsworth Correctional Facility
noon-3:30 pm Larned Correctional Facility
10 am-2 pm Norton Correctional Facility
Thursday, July 13, 2017

9 am-1 pm Winfield Correctional Facility
noon-4 pm El Dorado Correctional Facility
2-5 pm Wichita Work Release Facility
2-5 pm Wichita Parole Office
Friday, July 14, 2017
noon-2 pm Hutchinson Parole Office

Sheriff: Search crews find body of missing Kansas man

Leroy Fouts- courtesy photo

OSAGE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities reported Sunday that search crews found the body of a missing Kansas man.

On Saturday, the Osage County Sheriff asked for assistance to find 65-year-old Leroy L. Fouts of Overbrook, according to a media release. He had last been seen at 2p.m. on July 5 near 205th and Shawnee Heights.

He was leaving his residence and heading to an unknown destination in a red 1998 Jeep Cherokee with Kansas tag 385GFH. The Jeep has a KSU wildcat front plate and rust spots on back passenger door.

The sheriff released no additional details.

Larks score season-high 25 runs in rout over Haysville

HAYSVILLE, Kan. – The Hays Larks bounced back from a series opening loss to Haysville Friday by scoring 44 runs in the final two games of the series. Sunday night they plated 25 runs on 28 hits in a 25-4 rout.

The Larks (22-10, 22-9 Jayhawk League) led 10-2 after three innings then added three in the seventh and 11 in the eighth. Colin Simpson had five of the Larks 28 hits including two doubles. Clayton Harp hit three doubles and drove in five. Clayton Rasbeary also doubled and drove in five. Trevor Boone, Mikey Gangwish also had four hits games.

Alex Lopez (5-1) allowed four runs on six hits over five innings and picks up the win.

The Larks are alone in second place in the Jayhawk League, one-game back of Derby who’s won nine-straight after a 13-6 win in Oklahoma City. Liberal lost 10-8 in Great Bend and was swept by the Bat Cats and falls to third, two-games out.

The Larks will play eight games over the next six days starting with a doubleheader at home with Dodge City on Tuesday.

Handing over cash not always best help for hitchhikers

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

During spring and summer, you may see a common sight at 45th and Vine — people holding up signs asking for money.

Some claim to be having car trouble or being hungry. One recent visitor to Hays claimed to have a spaceship in need of repair.

The transient population in Hays can be diverse, and many are in need.

However, as much as local residents may feel the tug on their heart string, stopping and opening your wallet may not be for the best.

Local law enforcement said transient traffic through Hays has been an issue for years and is often linked to its proximity to Interstate 70.

Hays Police Chief Don Scheibler urged residents to contact the police department if they have concern about a person who may be homeless or in need of other assistance.

If you wish to have law enforcement check the welfare of a transient person, you can call the police department’s 24/7 non-emergency number 785- 625-1011.

The HPD works with non-profit First Call for Help to aid transients. First Call assists with fuel, bus tickets, food, a hotel or other shelter.

First Call has trained volunteers who work with transients to determine their needs and help them access resources. Members of the HPD will do standbys if necessary.

Linda Mills, director of First Call for Help, said a donation to First Call for Help can be an alternative to a direct donation to a transient.

“I don’t discourage people from helping if that is what they want to do,” she said. “If it is something they feel empathy toward that person standing out there in the heat but don’t want to stop and give them money, supporting First Call for Help is also an excellent way to help those folks if you don’t feel comfortable doing it on their own.”

If you wish to donate or volunteer, call 623-2800 or visit the organization’s website at www.firstcallEllis County.com.

There are several reasons handing money over to transient may not be the best first option. Some transients have mental health problems and may act adversely to being approached by strangers.

Sgt. Sheriff’s Sgt. Tim Deines said about 60 percent of the transients the sheriff’s department deals with have some type of mental health issue.

Others could have criminal records or be under the influence of drugs or alcohol, according to law enforcement officials.

Still others may not be truthful about their needs.

HPD Lt. Brandon Wright said some transients panhandle for a living.

“We have had officers approach individuals about assistance and been told they don’t want help with a hotel because they are making good money and they can pay for their own hotel. They want us to go away and leave them alone,” he said.

Hitchhiking is illegal on the interstate. Hitchhikers can be along the on ramps to the Interstate. It is not illegal to hitchhike or panhandle in the city of Hays as long as the individual is not in the roadway or obstructing traffic.

The Ellis County Sheriff’s Office will do transports of transient individuals in need when possible.

There are no shelters between Salina and Denver. Western counties have set up a relay system to transport needy individuals across the western portion of the state.

Ellis County Sheriff Sgt. Garrett Brening said if Russell County will transport an individual to the Ellis County border and an Ellis County deputy is available, Ellis County will transport the individual to the Trego County border.

The Sheriff’s Department is doing about 100 of these transports per year.

Both the sheriff’s department and police department said they often see an annual migration of the transient population. Individuals tend to go west and north in the summer and east and south in the winter.

The sheriff’s department has started to track those that it assists and will not give transport to people who repeatedly seek to use the department’s services.

“Some people use us as a taxi service,” Brening said. “They come through here in the spring and the fall. We won’t do transports for them.”

Deines said the department tries to determine who really is in need.

Brening said about 90 percent of the department’s transports are people trying to go west to Denver. Brining and Scheibler both suggested traffic west may be linked to the legalization of marijuana for recreational use in Colorado.

Brening said one man he recently transported said he was going to Denver from Texas because Veterans Affairs in Texas would not give him his prescription medication if he had marijuana in his system.

If law enforcement finds an individual in possession of marijuana or other illegal drugs, they are arrested and transported to jail.

If law enforcement makes contact with a transient, they will attend to determine their identification. Not all transients carry ID, so this can be challenging. The HPD or Sheriff’s Department then runs a check for warrants.

“If you have a question, call us and we can check it out,” Brening said. “There are a lot of people who are down on their luck and need help, but you never know.”

“It is hard to know who is who,” he said.

Deines said on the check of one individual, he found the person was under surveillance by the Secret Service. It was determined he had not broken any laws, and he was allowed to go on his way.

The number of calls the HPD recorded for transient aid had been on a steady increase since 2012, when the HPD received 231.

The number of calls peaked in 2015, the year after Colorado implemented Colorado Amendment 64, legalizing recreational marijuana. That year the PD received 332 calls for transient aid.

That number dropped to 296 in 2016. The PD has responded to 129 calls for transient aid so far this year.

The HPD sometimes receives more than one report about a person.

Mills said often people her organization deals with just have difficult circumstances. Mills noted only about 5 to 10 percent of individuals who make it to First Call have legal issues. Those offenders that First Call does encounter usually have warrants for minor offenses, such as driving on a suspended license.

It could be a person who was traveling across country with a friend. They get in a fight with their friend, and they just leave them in Hays, she said.

She said she has also worked with individuals who have been working for a contract company that is temporarily in town. The company finishes its job, closes up shop and lays off all its staff. The worker has no way to get home.

Scheibler said he thought the system Hays and Ellis County has in place serves the needs of the transient population in the area. He said he did not think Hays needs a homeless shelter.

He argued more transients would stop in Hays if they knew there was a shelter here.

However, Mills noted there is a difference between the transient population who is traveling through Ellis County and local homeless. She had a different view on a shelter.

Providing hotel rooms for transient and homeless individuals and families is expensive and is a very temporary solution.

Those who have ties to Hays — family, jobs, children in school — can struggle to find permanent housing after an unexpected loss of housing.

First Call for Help is seeing challenges assisting those who do need temporary shelter. First Call served 268 individuals last year, 117 of those needed shelter. First Call had been housing people in the Budget hotel and the Ambassador. Both of those are now closed.

The remaining hotels are more expensive, which has meant an increased costs for hotel vouchers. The organization is paying almost twice what it was for hotel stays.

“Hays in my opinion needs a shelter,” Mills said. “Maintaining people for one night in a motel room is expensive.”

Some local homeless try to maintain temporary shelter in a motel by paying on a weekly basis, but the cost makes it very difficult for an individual or family to save enough for a deposit for a rental.

Sending homeless individuals to Salina or Garden City can take an individual or family away from a job, family members, school and other supports.

Mills tried to encourage the people of Hays to not judge transients based on their lifestyle or appearance.

“We as middle class don’t understand why people would choose to live that way. It is a different lifestyle — one that we may not agree with. A lot of people are travelers. They don’t stay in one place, and they don’t earn a regular living.

“We work hard to be non-judgmental. A lot of the people have substance abuse problems and other types of issues — a lot have mental health issues that go untreated. There may be funding issues for them accessing care. We work with everyone to find what we can do to help.”

Clinkscales Elder Law Practice announces new associate attorney

Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A. announced last week that Adam C. Dees recently joined its team of professionals. Dees joins the firm as an Associate Attorney and will focus on estate planning and elder law.

“We are excited that Adam has joined our team,” says Randy Clinkscales, Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A. founder and attorney. “He brings passion and elder law expertise that will truly benefit our clients.”

Dees brings a broad range of legal and practical experience to the practice. Most recently, Dees practiced law in Goodland, Kansas and worked at the local, county, and state levels. He is a 2008 graduate of Southwestern College and a 2011 graduate of the University of Kansas School of Law, where he earned his Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree and a certificate in business law and tax law. While at KU, he also served as a staff editor for the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy. He currently resides in Hays, Kansas with his wife, Alyssa, and two daughters, Kay and Rachel.

Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A. is a law firm focused on elder care issues, serving clients throughout Central and Western Kansas. The firm specializes in helping families dealing with chronic illness and has staff to lead them through the chronic illness or aging process. Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A. is a founding member of the Life Care Planning Law Firms Association, and is its only member in Kansas. Clinkscales Elder Law Practice is housed in Hays, Kansas and has been practicing elder law since 2004. For more information about Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A., please visit www.elderlawkansas.com.

— Submitted

NORWOOD: Assisting offenders reintegration into communities

Joe Norwood, Secretary of Kansas Department of Corrections

Every year, more than 5,000 adult men and women who have been incarcerated are released from Kansas prisons and return to our communities. This process, called reentry, is important because we have the opportunity to set these men and women up for a successful transition back into society.

In Kansas, these offenders are assisted through this difficult transition by reentry staff of the Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC) and partner organizations. I am proud to announce that Gov. Sam Brownback recently designated July 10-14 as Reentry Week in the state of Kansas to celebrate the work of staff, contract providers, mentors and volunteers in this process. As Secretary of KDOC, I observe on a daily basis the essential role these staff play in the security of Kansas communities.

Offenders who don’t have natural supports, job skills, a positive environment or the skills to navigate treatment and service systems are at risk of returning to crime and prison. This return to incarceration is known as “recidivism.” The goal of our reentry programs is to reduce recidivism and ensure successful transitions back into society.

Through evidence-based programs, core effective correctional practices, robust reentry and discharge planning, treatment and services from community providers, and the support of family, friends and mentors, Kansas has cut recidivism from over 55 percent to about 35 percent since 1999. Offenders who participate in KDOC’s Mentoring 4 Success recidivate at just 8.7 percent during their first 12 months after release, a testament to the great work of volunteer mentors who assist in the reentry process.

Today more than ever, offenders are leaving prison with more preparation, job skills, pro-social supports, connection to services, and a continuum of care. This leads more offenders to a law-abiding life, increases their chance of success, increases public safety and results in fewer victims.

Open houses at all Kansas correctional facilities and parole offices are scheduled for July 10-14 to provide the public with more information about the importance of this work. Check the schedule of events and feel free to visit and learn more about reentry programs. And take the opportunity to thank KDOC’s reentry staff, partner organizations and volunteers for making Kansas a safer place to live.

Joe Norwood is Secretary of the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Sunny, hot Monday

Today Sunny and hot, with a high near 103. Southwest wind 7 to 11 mph.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 72. South southeast wind 9 to 14 mph.

Tuesday Sunny and hot, with a high near 102. South southwest wind 8 to 15 mph.

Tuesday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 73. South wind 10 to 15 mph.

WednesdayMostly sunny and hot, with a high near 100. South southwest wind 9 to 13 mph.

Wednesday NightA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 70.

Thursday A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 96.

Oakley 911 center manager: Don’t let kids play with disconnected cell phone

OAKLEY- Law enforcement authorities in Oakley are reminding parents not to give children a disconnected cell phone as a toy.
In a social media post, Chief Communications officer reminded parents the phones are still able to dial 911. Once children figure out that this phone can actually call a number they keep dialing it over and over.
These calls ring in to the 911 center and have to be answered. Most of the time the dispatcher can’t get any information and if we can get a good location we try to send units to make sure everything is ok. This is a drain on resources.

If you do give your children cell phones, please make sure they know about 911 and when to use it. Not only will it reduce hang up 911 call volumes but it will teach children about 911 safety and what information they would need to give in an actual emergency.

Police investigating after vehicle hits 10-year-old in Hutchinson

HUTCHINSON – Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Sunday accident.
Just after 6:30 p.m. first responders were dispatched to the area of 8th Avenue and Main Street in Hutchinson on the report of a vehicle vs. pedestrian accident, according to a social media report from police.

Officers determined that a vehicle traveling west on 8th Avenue struck a 10-year-old girl who was in the roadway. The collision occurred about mid-block and it is currently unknown if the child was playing in the street or if she was crossing the street.

The driver of the vehicle spoke with an investigator of the Police Traffic Bureau. The child was transported to HRMC by Reno County EMS and was transferred to Wesley Medical Center by Eagle Med helicopter.

Local students named to Benedictine College Honor Lists

SUBMITTED

ATCHISON– Benedictine College has recognized those students who have distinguished themselves academically during the last semester. Those recognized were on the President’s List or the Dean’s List for the spring semester, which ended in May.

Of the 1,924 full time undergraduate students on the Atchison campus, 557 made the Dean’s List and 132 made the President’s List. To make the Dean’s List, a student must carry a minimum of 12 credit hours and a grade point average of 3.5 or above for the semester. To make the President’s List, a student must have a perfect 4.0 grade point average for the semester with a minimum of 12 credit hours.

Makayla Crawford of Victoria (67671) was named to the Dean’s List.

Laura Krug of Hays (67601) was named to the Dean’s List.

Bethany Kuhn of Hays (67601) was named to the Dean’s List.

Jordan Pfannenstiel of Hays (67601) was named to the Dean’s List.

Founded in 1858, Benedictine College is a Catholic, Benedictine, residential, liberal arts college located on the bluffs above the Missouri River in Atchison, Kansas. The school is proud to have been named one of America’s Best Colleges by U.S. News & World Report as well as one of the top Catholic colleges in the nation by First Things magazine and the Newman Guide. It prides itself on outstanding academics, extraordinary faith life, strong athletic programs, and an exceptional sense of community and belonging. It has a mission to educate men and women within a community of faith and scholarship.

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