We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Ellis VFW seeks donations to build walkway to honor those who served

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

ELLIS—Ellis VFW Post 9139 is sponsoring an effort to build a memorial walkway for service men and women in Memorial Park in Ellis.

The park already features a memorial to those who gave their lives in the service of their country serving in the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force and Coast Guard.

However, Post Commander Bill Hansen said there are so many more service men and women who served and came home who need to be honored.

The walkway will initially have space for 300 bricks, but could be widened for more bricks at a later date. It will start at the existing memorial and will run east to the sidewalk along Washington Street.

The VFW is trying to have something in place by Memorial Day.

Bricks will cost $30 each. Characters are limited to 12 per row with three rows possible. Forms are circulating in Ellis and the VFW is asking each brick contain the first and last name of the service person, grade/rank and branch of service.

Forms and donations can be mailed to VFW Post 9139, P.O. Box 71, Ellis, KS 67637.

Those with questions can contact Hansen at 785-737-3081.

Brian Gross

Brian Gross, 57, Streetsboro, Ohio, died Saturday, January 6, 2018 in Parma, Ohio.

He was born February 16, 1960, in Hays the son of Norman and Erma (Leiker) Gross. He attended Munjor Grade School, Lincoln Grade School and graduated from Hays High School and Salina Vo-Tech with a degree in mechanics. In his youth, he was a newspaper carrier for the Hays Daily News and he also worked for Hays Land and Cattle. He worked for UPS for many years in Hays and Salina, and he opened a Greek’s Pizzeria in Hutchinson, Kansas. For nearly the last twenty years, he worked for Ultimate Wash in Streetsboro, Ohio as a mechanic. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus Council #40166 in Schoenchen.

Survivors include his mother and stepfather; Erma and Jim Dinges of Hays, a sister; Sharon Gross of Overland Park, a step-brother; Mark Dinges and wife Tina of Kansas City, five step-sisters; Helen Werth and husband Vince of Munjor, Belinda Braun and husband Andy of Victoria, Judy Mulford and husband Matt of Lawrence, Sherry Stettinger and husband John of Great Bend, and Stephanie Heil-Grover and husband Mark of Portland, CT, and numerous step nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his father; Norman Gross, grandparents; Leo and Angela Leiker, and Martin and Amelia Gross, step-brother; Harry Dinges, step-nephew; Dan Braun, and many aunts and uncles.

Mass of Christian Burial will be at 10:00 am on Monday, January 15, 2018 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Munjor with Fr. Jarett Konrade officiating. Burial will follow in the St. Francis Cemetery.
Visitation will be from 4:00 pm until 8:00 on Sunday and from 8:30 am until 9:30 on Monday, all at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine Street. A Daughters of Isabella rosary will be at 6:00 pm, a vigil service will be at 6:30, and a Knights of Columbus rosary will be at 7:00, all on Sunday at the funeral home.

Memorials are suggested in Brian’s memory to the St. Francis Cemetery Fund, Smoky Hill Pheasants Forever, or for masses, in care of the funeral home. Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com.

LETTER: The first trillionaire


One hundred years ago, John D. Rockefeller became the world’s first billionaire (in dollars). Other “robber barons” soon followed, and as of today, there are roughly 2,000 billionaires in the world. Already living the opulent lifestyle of their dreams, their goals in life have evolved from improving their quality of life to winning a highly exclusive game of real-life monopoly.

Their life aspirations become oriented around pursuing the ultimate symbol of success, the top of the Forbes 500 list, with Bill Gates currently leading the pack and Kansas’ richest native sons, the Koch brothers, shortly behind. Their strategies include channeling strategic campaign contributions to the right combination of legislators and presidential candidates with the goal of a profitable return via regressive taxation, made feasible in part by cutting expenditures that do not benefit the upper classes (Medicaid, Social Security, Children’s Health Insurance Program, public education).

Although their growth in wealth has been impressive since President Obama took office, the liberal economic policies of progressive income taxation and the estate tax have worked to redistribute much of their massive, accumulated wealth back down to the lower and middle classes, a policy economic conservatives believe has unfairly impeded their progress.

But good news! The conservative tax legislation recently passed by our Republican legislators will greatly lower their income, corporate and estate taxes, making the new “brass ring” feasible within the lifetimes of many of these younger billionaires, becoming the world’s first trillionaire. The latest tool in their arsenal, getting the government to borrow hundreds of billions of dollars to fund tax relief for them, barring the pittance they designate for the middle class, a strategy enabling them to describe the legislation as “tax relief for working families.” The actual beneficiaries of this tax policy work on a three-martini lunch.

Real working Kansans will only laugh, or in my case curse, at Jerry Moran’s assertion that these borrowed billions will be used to hire more employees or increase wages, or that targeting billionaires for tax relief will stimulate the economy. As happened in Kansas, U.S. wages and employment will not go up, only the national debt. Billionaires like Charles Koch and Donald Trump will see big returns as they invest their tax savings overseas in the many rapidly industrializing countries with growing economies.

In Hays, where the state and federal governments channel tax relief to the rich and high local sales taxes cut the spending power of the poor, the economy will continue to stagnate.

Gary Brinker, Hays

HPD Activity Log Jan. 10

kbyw-november16

The Hays Police Department responded to 3 animal calls and conducted 20 traffic stops Wed., Jan. 10, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Suspicious Activity–2200 block Gen Custer Rd, Hays; 4:31 AM
Suspicious Activity–300 block W 7th St, Hays; 4:43 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–2300 block Canal Blvd, Hays; 8:12 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–200 block E 25th St, Hays; 9:09 AM
Parking Complaint–600 block Main St, Hays; 3:27 PM
Found/Lost Property–27th and Canal, Hays; 3:53 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–1200 block E 27th St, Hays; 1/9 2 PM; 2:40 PM
Civil Dispute–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 4:50 PM
MV Accident-Private Property–3300 block Vine St, Hays; 6:57 PM

kbyw-november16

Wild swing: Wintery weather on Thursday, record high temps on Wednesday

Thursday morning in Hays

Northwest Kansas awoke Thursday to a blustery winter day, with blowing snow forcing several schools to either cancel or delay classes.

But Wednesday was quite a different story. According to the K-State Ag Research Center, Hays had a record-setting high temperature on Wednesday, breaking the record of 72 set in 1986 and 1999.

The mercury topped out at 77 degrees Wednesday, and then plunged all the way to 15 degrees overnight.

That low was balmy, however, compared to the record of -22 degrees set in 1918.

According to K-State, just more than a half-inch of snowfall was recorded overnight and into Thursday morning.

Kansas lawmakers troubled by Brownback budget math

 CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN
Kansas News Service

Fellow Republicans on Wednesday characterized Gov. Sam Brownback’s spending plan — more than $6.6 billion a year — as a beeline return to deficits and an abdication of responsibility in a budding crisis.

A state senator looks over Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposal to boost school spending without a tax cut, something lawmakers were quick to criticize as unworkable.
CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

The governor, poised to leave for a spot in the Trump administration, unveiled a five-year, $600 million increase in school funding Tuesday evening. When lawmakers dug into that proposal Wednesday, they griped about key details.

For one, they found irony in Brownback relying on a two-year $1.2 billion tax hike passed last year. After all, the governor vetoed it and forced his own party’s leaders to muster an override.

For another, even that money isn’t enough. It’ll only edge up toward Brownback’s school funding goal in the first two years. By the summer of 2019, the state would stare down another deficit. The governor’s plan doesn’t explain where Kansas would find even more school dollars in years three, four and five.

“This is not balanced,” said Republican Rep. Troy Waymaster, head of the House budget committee. “We’re going to have to find a way to balance the budget.”

Sen. Laura Kelly, a Democrat on the Senate budget committee who is running for governor, called it “mean-spirited” to make lawmakers clean up the mess.

“We’re going to have to be the bad guys,” she said.

Salina conservative J.R. Claeys, one of the Republican representatives who stood by Brownback’s 2012 signature tax cuts when others united to undo them last summer, tweeted that Brownback had “waved the white flag of surrender from the dome, and tossed every ally he had left under the bus.”

Brownback long touted the principles of small government and economic growth through tax cuts, but is now promising schools a growing piece of a pie made bigger through tax hikes.

The governor proposed to spend a combined $325 million more across the state budget between now and mid-2019.

His budget director, Shawn Sullivan, credited the “Trump economy” for the expectation of rising state revenues.

“That is in stark comparison to what we’ve had the last couple years,” he said. “So Hopefully that continues and picks up even more with (recently passed federal) tax cuts.”

He also acknowledged that last year’s tax hike made a difference.

Brownback’s $600 million school funding proposal — meant to end a long-running school finance lawsuit  — is closer to a $500 million increase, lawmakers learned, because it includes money they already promised to schools.

The money-for-schools problem dwarfs all other friction points politicians will war over in the months ahead, but the state budget has other far-reaching ramifications. Among the moves Brownback proposed for the two-year spending plan:

  • Increasing Medicaid reimbursements to hospitals and nursing homes by $40 million. That would broaden access to health care without expanding Medicaid to cover more low-income adults, an effort that Brownback vetoed last year.
  • Paying Kansas teachers, by 2023, better than what their counterparts earn in all four neighboring states. Average pay is $47,775, about $200 behind Missouri, and $3,500 behind Nebraska, Kansas is already well ahead of Colorado and Oklahoma.

Teacher pay in Kansas  rose an estimated 4 percent this year because of court-ordered funds, but districts say the real key to hiking salaries beyond that would depend on the state sending them more money year after year.

  • Letting students take 15 college-level credits for free while still in high school, and offering them the ACT college entrance exam or a similar work-skills test for free. If 80 percent of students take the state up on its offer, it would cost a little more than $25 million.

The college credit idea is similar to a 2012 Brownback initiative that let high-schoolers into technical colleges for free. The program grew rapidly and is now underfunded, so the governor wants to fix that with an infusion of $15 million.

  • Graduating 95 percent of high-schoolers by 2023 in exchange for the school funding boost — and doubling the number who pursue post-secondary studies.
  • Promising $1.5 million in raises to the more than 1,300 state employees who fell through the cracks last year when the legislature increased pay. State workers fought for raises for years, and many had received none since 2008. Another $8 million would go toward prison worker pay after prison riots last year revealed crisis-level understaffing.
  • Putting $3 million toward the state’s first school of dentistry housed at the University of Kansas in Kansas City, Kan.
  • Adding $2 million for combating crimes against children and new staff at the Attorney General’s Office and Kansas Bureau of Investigation.
  • Using $16 million to hire more child welfare staff and tackle a laundry-list of problems with the state’s foster care system, including a skyrocketing caseload and children going missing 
  • Giving another $8 million to the National Institute for Aviation Research and National Center for Aviation Training to bolster the skilled workforce there. Sullivan said the goal is to support Spirit Aerosystems’ plan to invest $1 billion and add 1,000 jobs in Wichita over the next five years .

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Cats, dogs die in Kansas fire but 2 residents escape

As many as 10 animals died in Wednesday house fire -photo courtesy KWCH

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Several dogs and cats died in a Wichita house fire but two residents managed to escape with minor injuries.

Firefighter responded Wednesday afternoon to the fire, which caused several small explosions in a garage.

Medics treated two residents for minor injuries, but firefighters weren’t able to save two dogs and several cats. Neighbors say firefighters put an oxygen mask on at least one cat that escaped the house.

About 10 pets lived in the home.

Wichita Fire Department Battalion Chief Lane Pearman says the fire probably started in the garage, where there were small explosions as items stored in that area caught fire.

The fire destroyed the house.

Ag Department will host farmers’ market workshops in Hays, Great Bend

Donna Krug
As I am writing this column, temperatures are dropping again and snow is predicted. While we need the moisture desperately, it seems a little early to talk about fresh garden produce and farmers’ markets. Yet that is exactly what I want to do today. I am happy to share information about a Regional Workshop for Farmers’ Market vendors that is just around the corner.

Farmers’ markets are growing across the state and continue to be an important source of fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, dairy and other agricultural products. In 2017, 85 farmers’ markets were registered with the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Central Registration of Farmers’ Markets.

The Regional Workshop we are hosting in Great Bend is set for Friday, February 2nd, from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church – Fellowship Hall, 2701 24th Street. I would encourage current and prospective farmers’ market vendors to attend this event. The Great Bend regional workshop will cover the following topics:

• Marketing and pricing tips
• Growing in high tunnels 101
• Regulations on selling meat, eggs & poultry direct to consumer
• SNAP Program and sales tax for vendors
• Vendor marketing and communication
• Food safety inspection requirements
• Kansas Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program Certified Farmer Training *
*The Kansas Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program Certified Farmer Training session is required for all new farmers who wish to participate in the KSFMNP. All farmers must complete training and submit an annual agreement with KDHE. Visit www.kdheks.gov/sfmnp for details.

Vendors may also bring their sales scale to get tested and certified for FREE by the Kansas Department of Agriculture.

Registration for the workshop is $20 per participant, which includes lunch. Lunch cannot be guaranteed for those registering after January 19th. Participants may register online at FromtheLandofKansas.com/FMConference or you may stop by either of the Cottonwood Extension District offices at 1800 12th Street in Great Bend or 601 Main Street in Hays.

There are a total of five Regional Workshops for Farmers’ Market vendors across Kansas. The dates and sites include: Colby, February 1; Wichita, February 3; Olathe, February 9; and Chanute, February 10. Sponsors for the workshops include: K-State Research & Extension, Kansas Department of Agriculture; Kansas Department of Health and Environment and From the Land of Kansas. The From the Land of Kansas and Farmers’ Market Annual Conference will be March 1-2 in Manhattan. This conference is for Kansas based businesses and farmers’ market managers.

Donna Krug is the Family & Consumer Science Agent and District Director with K-State Research & Extension – Cottonwood District – Great Bend Office. You may reach her at [email protected] or (620)793-1910.

Eugene D. ‘Gene’ Hotz

Hays, Kansas – Eugene D. “Gene” Hotz, age 85, died Wednesday, January 10, 2018, at Hays Medical Center, Hays, Kansas.

Services will be held next week at. Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601.

Terry Lee Kaiser

Shawnee, Kansas – Terry Lee Kaiser, age 52, died Monday, January 8, 2018, in an auto accident in Wyandotte County Kansas.

He was born May 30,1965, in Hoxie, Kansas to Leroy and Carol (Wiesner) Kaiser.

He was a senior structural engineering technologist for Alfred Benesch & Company in Kansas City, Kansas for 14 years and a member of West Lenexa Seventh Day Adventist Church. He was a 1983 graduate of Hays High School and earned his degree from Northwest Technical College in 1985. He was active in his church and was an avid Royals and Chiefs fan. He enjoyed the outdoors and kayaking.

Survivors include his parents, Leroy and Carol Kaiser, Hays, KS; two brothers, Kevin Kaiser, Ayer, MA; Cory Kaiser and wife, Lisa, Olathe, KS; one sister, Brenda Thompson and husband, Steve, Haysville, KS; two nephews, Austin Oetting and wife, Amy; Jackson Kaiser; one niece, Holly Oetting; two great nephews, Cyrus Morris and Abel Morris; one great niece, Zippora Oetting; numerous uncles, aunts and cousins.

He was preceded in death by his grandparents, Frank and Susanna Kaiser; John and Mary Wiesner.

Services are at 2:00 P.M. Saturday, January 13, 2018, at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601. Burial will be in Saint Joseph Cemetery, Hays, Kansas.

Visitation is from 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. Friday, and from 1:00 to 2:00 P.M. Saturday, all at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays.

A memorial service will be held at the Seventh Day Adventist Church in Kansas City at a later date. Memorials to the West Lenexa Seventh Day Adventist Church or the St Jude Childrens Research Hospital.

Condolence can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or can be sent via e-mail to [email protected].

Neil A. Kuhn

Victoria, Kansas – Neil A. Kuhn, age 77, died Wednesday, January 10, 2018 at his home in Victoria, Kansas.

Services are pending at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary, 412 Main Street, Victoria, Kansas 67671.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File