Listen to Mike Cooper interviewing Dr. Jenna Sloan, MD; from the Center for Women’s Health at Haysmed, by clicking the link above and then clicking the play button
Month: December 2017
🎥 ECTV Forum: Allen Schmidt; Recently reappointed to the State Civil Service Board
Listen to the Holthus Hotline with ‘Voice of the Chiefs’ Mitch Holthus
Now That’s Rural: Tyson & Emily Mullen, Next Door

Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development
Down the main street of town comes the Christmas parade, including a combine covered in Christmas lights. That’s a sure sign that this is happening in rural Kansas. Along the parade route, shops are open late – including a gift shop owned by an innovative young Kansas couple. In small town Kansas, wouldn’t it be nice if we could do our holiday shopping in a local business? For example, right next door? Today we’ll learn about this couple in rural Kansas who has opened a convenient gift shop – and it is literally named Next Door. This is a special holiday edition of Kansas Profile.
Last week we learned about Tyson and Emily Mullen who own and operate Grant County Drug in Ulysses, Kansas. Tyson serves as the pharmacist while Emily does the books.
Emily grew up on an Angus farm in south central Kansas where she was actively involved in the family show cattle business. She went on to Hutchinson Community College where she met Tyson in an organic chemistry class. “He tutored me in the class,” Emily said. Apparently, their chemistry was good because the two got married.
Tyson went to pharmacy school at KU where Emily got a degree in Human Biology and later received her nursing degree from Fort Hays State. In July 2013, they bought Grant County Drug and moved to Ulysses.
Next door to the drugstore was a building which had housed a now-closed hair salon. Eventually Tyson and Emily decided to buy this building also. “We really wanted to benefit the community,” Emily said.
They decided to utilize this building as a gift shop to complement the pharmacy. Because of its location, they came to call it simply Next Door. Emily and some friends went to a big market in Dallas to acquire specialty products. In July 2015, Next Door opened for business in downtown Ulysses.
“This is a boutique store which carries a little bit of everything,” Emily said. “We have baby gifts, wedding gifts, soaps, greeting cards, clothing, toys, and many other things.” Emily and Tyson have two little girls of their own, so they are very aware of products that are well-suited to children.
The store carries brand name products such as Mud Pie and Under Armor children’s clothes, Melissa & Doug toys, and much more. During the holidays, the store is beautifully decorated for Christmas.
“It has really worked out well,” Emily said. “The pharmacy’s waiting area is pretty small, so now customers can go next door and browse while they wait for their prescription. It’s fun for people.”
This keeps people entertained while they wait and enables them to use their time productively. “Often people will browse through the store and pick up a card or a gift while they’re there,” Emily said. She also helps with community initiatives such as a “shop the town” project. When the local John Deere dealer hosted a ladies’ night out at the dealership, Emily helped with that as well.
“Our community is very supportive,” Emily said. “Our chamber director, Marieta Hauser, is great.”
One of the community’s major projects is special events during the holidays, including a big lighted parade complete with Santa Claus. “Every float has to have lights,” Emily said. One person decorated a golf cart to look like Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.
Only in rural Kansas would one see a giant combine driving down the street while covered in Christmas lights. Ulysses is a town of 6,161 people. Now, that’s rural. “We stay open late during the parade and for times like Black Friday and Small Business Saturday,” Emily said.
So where are you doing your holiday shopping? Wouldn’t it be convenient if you could do your shopping right next door? We commend Emily and Tyson Mullen for making a difference by enhancing their community through opening this shop. When it’s time to shop in Ulysses, where does one go? Next Door.
And there’s more. The Angus family in which Emily was raised is one of the leading Angus cattle seedstock producers in the nation. We’ll learn about that next week. Happy Holidays!
Task Force Hears That Some Issues With Kan. Foster Care System Aren’t New
BY MADELINE FOX
Descriptions of an underfunded, under-resourced foster care system short on child placement options sounded familiar to Kansas lawmakers and child welfare advocates at a task force meeting this week.

MADELINE FOX / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
But the events described this week actually played out 30 years earlier, when a 1989 class-action lawsuit — alleging that the state’s foster care system violated the rights of Kansas children — raised issues that eventually led to the current privatized system.
Rochelle Chronister, former secretary of the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (now the Department for Children and Families), said she believes privatization of the foster care system in the late 1990s made sense although it was a tumultuous process.
“I hope none of my colleagues are going to come up here and tell you it was a smooth transition, because it wasn’t,” Chronister said. “Oh my, any day I wasn’t on the front page of the Topeka Capital-Journal was a good day.”
Lawmakers and advocates are revisiting that privatization decision, and other changes to Kansas foster care in the last 20 years, as part of a multiyear review of child welfare that the Legislature approved earlier this year.
Tuesday’s meeting offered a grim view for task force members, as former SRS administrators and others described the problems they hoped to fix with privatization: understaffing and inadequate funding, the same issues that have been highlighted in recent cases when children died in foster care or ran away from foster care placements.
“It’s the same story over and over and over,” said Dave Ranney, a court-appointed special advocate for children in the foster care system who was a reporter for the Wichita Eagle and the Lawrence Journal-World during the privatization process.
However, former SRS commissioner Teresa Markowitz said she has noticed an improvement in the high percentage of children placed with family members now.
“Here’s the good news for people who are only interested in money, and the good news for people that are only interested in good outcomes for kids,” said Markowitz, now vice president of the Center for Systems Innovation at the Annie E. Casey Foundation, a national child welfare organization. “Keeping a kid with a family member is most cost-effective, and it has the best outcomes.”

CREDIT MADELINE FOX / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
Markowitz said placements with relatives are generally far less disruptive for children, who don’t have to adjust to unfamiliar adults and are often able to stay within the same community.
So far this fiscal year, nearly 33 percent of Kansas children in out-of-home care have been placed with relatives.
Markowitz was shocked to learn, though, that relatives taking care of Kansas foster kids were paid only $3 per day on average. Licensed foster care parents who care for non-relative children are eligible for a higher reimbursement rate of close to $20 per day for kids who don’t require specialized care.
Relatives who do go through formal licensing, including a 10-week, 30-hour training course, are eligible for the higher reimbursement rate. But Markowitz said paying relatives more, even without the formal training, would still save the state money down the road, as less-disruptive placements with relatives help prevent children from needing more social services later in life.
Placements with family members and non-relatives such as teachers, coaches or other adults who have a relationship with the child are among the fixes the task force has examined during its review of the child welfare system.
The task force will submit final recommendations to the Legislature in January 2019.
Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox.
HHS to launch student-run radio station

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post
Hays High School will be on the air with its own student-run radio station starting next semester.
Two HHS juniors have spearheaded an effort to start a web-based radio station at the high school.
Juniors Isaiah Schindler and Jackson Stanton went to their adviser Dan Balman and suggested the school start a radio station. Balman charged the students with developing a plan to present to the administration that would include what type of equipment the school would need, its cost, the space needed for the radio studio and the licensing required.

“We didn’t want to go to Walmart and get the cheapest stuff we could,” Stanton said. “If we were going to do it, we wanted to make it so it would last and be worth the effort. We didn’t want to make a sub-par program.”
The administration approved about $900 for the purchase of a mixer, three microphones and stands, and a computer and software for the program to be paid out the high school’s regular audio/visual program budget. Balman predicted it will cost about $1,000 per year to keep up the cost of subscriptions and licensing for the station.
Eventually Balman said he hoped the students will sell advertising to help support the program.
“They took the ball and ran with it,” Balman said of the two students. “It is a big deal they were able to do something with it.”
Although the students will be gaining practical experience running a radio station, Balman said the skills they are learning in communication may be even more important.

“They had to use their communication skills,” Balman said. “I am not talking about technology. I mean face-to-face.”
Kansas Education Commissioner Randy Watson has said school programs in all areas of study should build communication skills, Balman added.
“As these students go out in the business world, whether they go into radio or not or go to college or not, this is going give them an advantage. They have had to give a presentation and listen to what other people say. I am proud of them.”
Schindler has been involved in radio for several years, doing his own programming on short wave and Caster.fm. He said radio/TV may be his future profession and this a good way to gain some practical experience.
Stanton said the radio station will let him explore his passions.
“For all my life music has been a giant passion of mine. I also love technology and computers. Radio just sums all that up and lets me listen to the music I like to listen to and the equipment I like to use and use the computer programs I like to use. It is just like the perfect scenario for me,” he said.
Radio may be his passion, but not his profession. Stanton said he thinks he would rather study herpetology in college.
The station will play music from local musicians as well as classic rock from ’80s and ’90s and maybe some current pop. Stanton said getting the licensing for the music was the most challenging aspect of the project. The students are continuing to grow their catalog. Stanton is a big classic metal fan and looks forward to pumping out some Black Sabbath on the new station.
The station, which will air from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. will also include some talk programming and sports casts. The students hope to interview students, teachers and administrators as well as broadcast HHS sports, such as football and basketball.
The students are still waiting on some computer equipment and expect they will need more training before they are ready to go live. They should hit the internet in mid-January or February. There should be a link to listen to station on the HHS website once the station goes online.
Licenses buyers soon to enjoy auto-renew and 365-day licenses
PRATT – Take care of those who take care of you, right? Well, staff at the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) are doing their best to ensure hunters, anglers, and other license buyers are taken care of in a big way in 2018 and for many years to come.
For the first time, Kansas licenses buyers will soon have the ability to auto-renew some of their favorite annual licenses and permits. And, many of those will be valid (beginning Jan. 1, 2018) for 365 days from date of purchase.
Previously, Kansas’ outdoor licenses and permits were set to expire Dec. 31 of each calendar year, regardless of purchase date. But that’s about to change. Kansas license buyers will soon be able to enjoy more season for their money, without any additional cost.
Both the auto-renew option and 365-day licenses will be available beginning Dec. 15, 2017. While these new features are implemented, 2018 licenses and permits purchased between Dec. 15 and Dec. 31, 2017 will not be valid until Jan. 1, 2018. Once valid, the item purchased, if eligible, will then be valid for 365 days.
For a complete list of licenses and permits that will be valid for 365 days, visit ksoutdoors.com/License-Permits/365-Day-Licenses
For instructions on how to enroll in auto-renew, visit ksoutdoors.com/License-Permits/Auto-Renew.
“Never Miss A Memory” afield with KDWPT’s new auto-renew and 365-day license options.
High school basketball scores Dec. 15
Girls
Western Athletic Conference
*Colby 19 Hays 44
* Goddard-Eisenhower 36 Dodge City 47
*Hutchinson 50 Great Bend 41
*Liberal 47 Perryton TX. 57
Mid-Continent League
TMP 54 Oakley 28
Plainville 65 Stockton 79
Phillipsburg 29 Hill City 58
*Ellinwood 23 Ellis 52
Central Prairie League
Kinsley 52 Ness City 24
Otis-Bison 47 LaCrosse 51
Northern Plains
Chase 18 Lakeside 37
Rock Hills 18 St. Johns-Tipton 55
Lincoln 36 Wilson 55
Natoma 18 Thunder Ridge 50
North Central Activities Association
Republic Co. 43 Russell 59
Beloit 37 Ellsworth 47
Northwest Kansas League
Dighton 39 Wallace Co. 32
Greeley Co. 35 Quinter 59
Central Kansas League
*Central Plains 79 Larned 13
Western Kansas Liberty League
Northern Valley 47 Logan 34
Triplains 58 Western Plains 31
Great Western Kansas League
Hugoton 45 Goodland 38
Boys
Western Athletic Conference
*Colby 45 Hays 84
* Goddard-Eisenhower 88 Dodge City 76
*Hutchinson 54 Great Bend 48
Mid-Continent League
TMP 82 Oakley34
Plainville 72 Stockton 31
Phillipsburg 45 Hill City 25
*Ellinwood 57 Ellis 42
Central Prairie League
Kinsley 32 Ness City 88
North Central Activities Association
Republic Co. 57 Russell 48
Beloit 37 Ellsworth 47
Northwest Kansas League
Dighton 52 Wallace Co. 45
Greeley Co. 52 Quinter 39
Central Kansas League
*Central Plains 61 Larned 41
Western Kansas Liberty League
Northern Valley 64 Logan 68
Weskan 57 Wheatland-Grinnell 69
Triplains 53 Western Plains 23
Great Western Kansas League
Ulysses 40 Holcomb 52
Hugoton 52 Goodland 53
TMP boys/girls dominate in Oakley
By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post
Girls: TMP 52, Oakley 25
OAKLEY, Kan.-TMP used a couple of big first half runs to take commanding leads early. The Lady Monarchs had a 10-0 first quarter run followed by a 11-0 second quarter run which pushed TMP to a 23-11 lead at the half. Savannah Yost and Emily Schippers led TMP in the half with eight points while the Lady Monarch defense forced 15 Oakley turnovers.
TMP came out with more defensive pressure in the second half and extended their lead to 18 points, 36-18, after three quarters of play. The Lady Monarchs outscored Oakley 16-7 in the fourth quarter and picked up the 52-25 victory. TMP forced 30 Oakley turnovers to help with the victory.
Kayla Vitztum led TMP with 18 points, 11 of those coming in the third quarter. TMP improves to 5-1 overall and 2-0 in the Mid Continent League. The Lady Monarchs are off until January 5th when they will host Ellis.
GIRLS HIGHLIGHTS
ROSE MCFARLAND INTERVIEW
Boys: TMP 82, Oakley 34
OAKLEY, Kan.-TMP built an early 10 point lead (14-4) and didn’t look back as they picked up the 82-34 win in Oakley on Friday night. The Monarchs led by 10, 23-13, after the first quarter and extended it to as many as 22 in the second quarter. TMP settled for a 40-23 lead at the break thanks to 11 points each from David McFarland and Creighton Renz.
The Monarchs came out sizzling in the third quarter and put the game away outscoring the Plainsmen 25-7 with 15 points coming from Luke Ruder. TMP held a 35 point lead and the fourth quarter was a running clock. TMP improves to 4-2 on the year and 2-0 in the MCL. They are now off until January 5th when they host Ellis.
BOYS HIGHLIGHTS
JOE HERTEL INTERVIEW
Hays basketball sweeps Colby
Girls
Hays 44 – Colby 19
After shooting near 70% on Tuesday night, Hays struggled to find the bottom of the basket in the first quarter on Friday night against Colby. The Indians led just once in the first frame at 2-0. Colby hit three, three point field goals during an 11-2 run that build that Eagle’s lead to 11-5. The big lead for Colby came with 2:30 left in the first quarter. Hays allowed just two points the remainder of the half during a 25-2 run. The strong finish to the first half gave the Indians a 30-13 lead.
Highlights
Hays continued to hold Colby nearly scoreless during the third quarter as the Eagles tallied just two more points during the eight minutes. The Indians then held Colby to four free throws in the fourth quarter. The Indian’s run that was at 25-2 at half time grew into the fourth quarter to 39-4. Hays won by the final score of 44-19.
Coach Kirk Maska
Savannah Schneider led the way for Hays with 13 points. The Indians are 5-1 on the year with a #9 ranking in 4A-1. Colby falls to 2-3.
Boys
Hays 84 – Colby 45
Hays had little trouble with Colby on Friday night, opening the game on a 21-2 run. Hays missed their first shot and then followed that up with making their next seven shots including four three pointers. The Indians led 32-10 after the first quarter and pushed the lead up 53-27 at half time.
Highlights
The Indians led by 40 points after three quarters 77-37 after outscoring Colby 24-10. Leading by more than 30 points the clock in the fourth quarter was run continuously leaving Hays with an 84-45 victory.
Hays shot 48% from the field and knocked 12 three pointers. Four scored in double figures for Hays. Cole Murphy and Kyler Koenke each scored 14. Tradgon McCrae and Peyton Kieffer eache tallied 13.
Coach Rick Keltner
This Indians improve to 4-2 on the season. Colby drops to 1-4. Hays is off until after the Christmas break when they will face Liberal on January 5th to open Western Athletic Conference play.
Police find illegally altered shotgun, potential explosive during Kan. traffic stop

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects on multiple charges following a routine traffic stop.
Just before 8p.m. Thursday police stopped a silver Toyota Camry for traffic violations in the area of SW Huntoon and Clay in Topeka, according to Lt. Colleen Stuart.
During the traffic investigation, officers located an illegally altered shotgun, methamphetamine, drug paraphernalia and checks not belonging to the occupants of the vehicle. A potential explosive device was also located and the TPD Bomb Squad was called to further investigate and deemed it a homemade firework device.
James Harris, 33, was transported to the Department of Corrections on traffic related charges and Felon in Possession of Firearm.

Candice King, 34, was transported to the Department of Correction on warrants, drug related charges and identity theft charges.
NOTICE: Changes made to Gregory A. Brown auction
Jim VonFeldt of Hamit Land and Auction has announced the Gregory A. Brown auction of 560 acres has been postponed until a later date.
However, the home in Luray will be selling Tue., Dec. 19 at 10 a.m. at the Luray Community Center as planned, as will the farm machinery auction on Sat., March 24, 2018.
Look for brochures soon.
10 from Kansas, Missouri indicted in 100-pound meth conspiracy
KANSAS CITY – Ten Kansas City area are defendants have been indicted by a federal grand jury for their roles in a conspiracy to distribute at least 100 pounds of methamphetamine, according to Tammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri,
Juan Rodriguez-Rivera, also known as “Juan Carillo,” “Armando Garcia,” and “Luis Rodrigues,” 32, a citizen of Mexico, Rafael Elodaid Baylon-Palma, also known as “Eli,” 27, Mauricio Daniel Dominguez, 34, and Rolando Segura, age unknown, all of Kansas City, Mo.; Jesus David Baylon-Palma, also known as “Raul,” “Fathead,” and “Primo,” 29, and Esmeralda Contreras-Fernandez, 27, both of Raytown, Mo., Jose Carlos Baylon-Carrasco, age unknown, a citizen of Mexican residing in Grandview, Mo., Eduardo Luna-Avina, 26, a citizen of Mexico, and Jose Santana-Chavez, 36, both of Kansas City, Kan., and Rory Sanchez, 32, address unknown, were charged in a five-count superseding indictment returned under seal on Dec. 14, 2016, by a federal grand jury in Kansas City, Mo. That indictment has been unsealed and made public upon the arrests and initial court appearances of several defendants.
The federal indictment alleges that all 10 defendants participated in a conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine from Jan. 1, 2013, to Dec. 13, 2016. The indictment also alleges that all 10 defendants participated in a money-laundering conspiracy during that time.
The indictment contains a forfeiture allegation, which would require the defendants to forfeit to the government any property derived from the proceeds of the alleged drug-trafficking conspiracy, including a money judgment of $700,000 (based on a sale price of $7,000 per pound of methamphetamine and distribution of at least 100 pounds of methamphetamine), a 2007 Land Rover, a 2008 Ford F-250, a 2010 Ford TCN van and a 2016 Chevrolet Silverado.
In addition to the drug-trafficking and money-laundering conspiracies, the indictment charges Rodriguez-Rivera with illegally entering the United States after previously being deported following his conviction in Kansas for possessing cocaine.
Sanchez is also charged with possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime and with being a felon in possession of a firearm. Sanchez allegedly was in possession of a loaded AA Arms 9mm assault pistol.
Dickinson cautioned that the charges contained in this indictment are simply accusations, and not evidence of guilt. Evidence supporting the charges must be presented to a federal trial jury, whose duty is to determine guilt or innocence.


