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HPD Activity Log Feb. 7

kbyw-november16

The Hays Police Department responded to 2 animal calls and conducted 9 traffic stops Wed., Feb. 7, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Domestic Disturbance–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 9 AM; 9:14 AM
Theft (general)–1300 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 9:54 AM
Drug Offenses–1300 block Pine St, Hays; 9 AM; 9:50 AM
Animal At Large–1300 block E 13th St, Hays; 11:29 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–500 block W 24th St, Hays; 1:31 PM
Motorist/Vehicle Assist–200 block W 8th St, Hays; 2:35 PM
Civil Dispute–600 block Oak St, Hays; 3:16 PM
Found/Lost Property–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 2/4 4:06 PM; 2/7 4 PM
Suicidal Subject–300 block E 11th St, Hays; 4:44 PM

kbyw-november16

🎥 City establishes Hilton hotel/convention center TIF District

City Finance Director Kim Rupp speaks during a public hearing for the establishment of the Hays Hotel Hilton Garden Inn TIF district.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

There were no comments during the public hearing nor from Hays city commissioners Thursday night as they unanimously approved an ordinance establishing the Hays Hotel  LLC Hilton Garden Inn Redevelopment (or TIF) District.

City Finance Director Kim Rupp first reviewed the developer’s economic incentive requests for the hotel and convention center project on West 43rd Street just west of Walmart.

“The developer is requesting tax increment financing (TIF), a community improvement district (CID), and a rebate of the city’s five percent transient guest tax (TGT) generated by the project,” said Rupp.

The public hearing and ordinance were the next steps on the process required under state law to approve TIF financing for the project. The TIF district is also known as a redevelopment district.

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“The primary effect of passing the ordinance tonight is locking in the base year assessed valuation of the project site.  After the ordinance is effective, any future increase in property tax generated within the TIF district  boundaries will accrue to the TIF fund,” Rupp explained. The TIF fund will be held separately by the city in order to reimburse the developer for TIF-eligible project costs on a pay-as-you-go basis.

The proposed hotel/convention center TIF district is in red. (Click to enlarge)

The developer estimates the TIF would generate approximately $3.7 million in revenues over a 20-year term.

Rupp told city commissioners the “developer has indicated they cannot complete the improvements without the TIF.”

The Hays USD 489 school district and Ellis County both have the right to veto the TIF district within 30 days by a resolution stating the district would have an adverse effect on their taxing entities.

Assistant City Manager Jacob Wood has met with the school board and county commissioners. Neither group is expected to object to the TIF.

The next steps would include negotiation of a TIF project plan and a project plan with the developer. Those would be subject to commission approval at later meeting.

Phase One of the project involves construction of a full-service four-story Hilton Garden Inn with 100 rooms, an 8,400 square foot conference center/event space,  a restaurant and lounge, and infrastructure improvements required to serve the site, including water, sewer, street, utilities, and pedestrian infrastructure. The developer will finance costs of 43rd Street improvements.

Phase Two of the project involves construction of a new restaurant and/or other commercial retail on the two outparcels of the project site. There is no specific time frame set for Phase Two.

Extension offers weed control update for field crops

Cottonwood Extension District

Farmers, come and join us for a “Weed Control Update Meeting” featuring K-State Research & Extension Weed Control specialists Dallas Peterson & Curtis Thompson.

Covering topics of required Dicamba applicator training for growing Dicamba resistant soybeans, Weed control updates for field crops, Troublesome weeds…Palmer Amaranth, Marestail and More! As always, there will be time for your questions & answers. In addition, Certified Crop Advisor continuing ed. units have been applied for.

The “Weed Control Update” is on Thursday, February 15 at the American Ag Credit Building, 5634 10th Street, Great Bend, Kansas. Registration begins at 2:30 with the program kicking off at 3 p.m. and concluding at 6 p.m. with a light supper.

RSVP requested for meal count by Tuesday, February 13; call Cottonwood Extension Office, Great Bend at 620-793-1910 or email Brenda [email protected]

Jury: Suspect guilty in Manhattan man’s murder during robbery

By 

GEARY COUNTY — A jury has convicted a Kansas man of murder.

Craig-photo Geary Co.

A Geary County District Court jury found Joseph Crag guilty in the January 2016 shooting death of David Phillips, 23, Manhattan., at a West 12th Street Apartment in Junction City. 

During the preliminary hearing in this case there was testimony that indicated that Phillips had been shot in the head three times.

Craig was also found guilty of Intentional Second Degree Murder, Conspiracy to Commit First Degree Murder, Conspiracy to Commit Aggravated Robbery, Aggravated Robbery, and Felon in Possession of a Firearm, According to Geary County Attorney Krista Blaisdell,

Williams-photo Geary Co.

Sentencing in the case is set for April 17th at 2 p.m.

A second defendant in this case, Gabrielle Williams, has been scheduled for sentencing February 20th at 10 a.m. According to the County Attorney Williams pleaded guilty to Conspiracy to Commit First Degree Murder.

Kansas delegation votes to reopen government; budget deal approved

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House including moved swiftly early Friday to reopen the federal government and pass a $400 billion budget deal, overcoming opposition from both liberal Democrats and tea party conservatives to endorse enormous spending increases despite looming trillion-dollar deficits.

All four member from Kansas voted in favor of the measure.

Activity on the House floor early Friday -image CSPAN

The 240-186 vote came in the pre-dawn hours, putting to bed a five-and-a-half hour federal freeze that relatively few would notice. Many who did quickly labeled it a pointless, head-scratching episode. The shutdown was the second in three weeks.

The breakdown came largely in the Senate, when after a day of inaction, Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky went rogue and stalled a vote in protest over his party’s willingness to bust the budget. But Democrats also had their divisions and wrangling, largely with liberal upset the measure were not tied to any plans to assist the “Dreamer” immigrants.

Most Democrats opposed the measure, following the lead of Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who tried and failed to use the moment to secure a promise for a separate vote on immigration. Up to the final minutes, it was not clear the bill would pass and many Democrats held their votes, allowing the tally to creep slowly and giving no indication which way it might fall.

House Speaker Paul Ryan urged Congress to avoid a “second needless shutdown in a matter of weeks — entirely needless.”

There was far less drama in the Senate, where the measure sailed through by a 71-28 tally. President Donald Trump has promised to sign the bill into law.

The White House was forced to order the government shutdown shortly after midnight, but leaders quickly hustled to move before federal employees were due back at work, hoping to minimize the disruption. A shutdown essentially cuts the federal workforce in half, with those dubbed non-essential not allowed to work, while military and essential workers remain on the job.

The House vote ensured most employees would report for work as usual.

The White House kept its distance from the quarreling on Capitol Hill. Trump did not tweet and aides did not try to assign blame.

Senate GOP leaders, however, were clearly irked by the debacle. In his attempt to sway Paul to relent, Sen. John Cornyn of Texas declared his fellow Republican was “wasting everyone’s time” and prompting a shutdown for “no good reason.” But Paul, the resident contrarian, repelled suggestions to stand aside.

“I didn’t come up here to be part of somebody’s club. I didn’t come up here to be liked,” Paul said.

The budget agreement is married to a six-week temporary funding bill needed to keep the government operating and to provide time to implement the budget pact.

The bill includes huge spending increases sought by Republicans for the Pentagon along with a big boost demanded by Democrats for domestic agencies. Both sides pressed for $89 billion for disaster relief, extending a host of health care provisions, and extending a slew of smaller tax breaks.

It also would increase the government’s debt cap, preventing a first-ever default on U.S. obligations that looms in just a few weeks. Such debt limit votes are usually enormous headaches for GOP leaders, but the increase means another vote won’t occur before March 2019.

Senate leader had celebrated the budget deal a sign they had left behind some of their chronic dysfunction. Just three weeks ago, Senate Democrats sparked a three-day partial government shutdown by filibustering a spending bill, seeking relief for “Dreamer” immigrants who’ve lived in the country illegally since they were children.

Senate Democrats had no appetite for another shutdown.

House GOP leaders shored up support among conservatives for the measure, which would shower the Pentagon with money but add hundreds of billions of dollars to the nation’s $20 trillion-plus debt.

House Democratic leaders opposed the measure — arguing it should resolve the plight of Dreamers — but not with all their might. Pelosi made it plain she wasn’t pressuring her colleagues to kill the bill, which is packed with money for party priorities like infrastructure, combating opioid abuse and helping college students. She continued to press Ryan for a promise to bring an immigration measure sponsored by Reps. Will Hurd, R-Texas, and Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., up for a vote. But many Democrats back the measure without that assurance.

Ryan said again Thursday he was determined to bring an immigration bill to the floor this year — albeit only one that has Trump’s blessing.

The episode was a clear defeat for those who had followed a risky strategy to use the party’s leverage on the budget to address immigration. Protection for the Dreamers under former President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, formally expires next month and there’s no sign that lawmakers are making progress on an agreement to extend the program.

Republicans, too, had their disappointments. Many were sheepish about the bushels of dollars for Democratic priorities and the return next year of $1 trillion-plus deficits. But they pointed to money they have long sought for the Pentagon, which they say needs huge sums for readiness, training and weapons modernization.

“It provides what the Pentagon needs to restore our military’s edge for years to come,” said Ryan.

Beyond $300 billion worth of increases for the military and domestic programs, the agreement adds $89 billion in overdue disaster aid for hurricane-slammed Texas, Florida and Puerto Rico, a politically charged increase in the government’s borrowing cap and a grab bag of health and tax provisions. There’s also $16 billion to renew a slew of expired tax breaks that Congress seems unable to kill.

“I love bipartisanship, as you know,” said Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz. “But the problem is the only time we discover bipartisanship is when we spend more money.”

Kansas man dies after Cadillac hits a tree

EDWARDS COUNTY — A Kansas man died in an accident just after 9 p.m. Thursday in Edwards County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Cadillac DTS driven by Michael C. Jones, 71, Kinsley was southbound in the 800 block of Colony Street in the city limits of Kinsley.

The Cadillac left the roadway to the right, traveled through three private yards, crossed over a sidewalk, through a wooden fence and hit a tree.

Jones was transported to Edwards County Hospital where he died. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Cold, windy Friday

Today Cloudy, with a high near 25. Blustery, with a northeast wind 16 to 23 mph.

Tonight Patchy flurries and freezing drizzle after 9pm. Cloudy, with a low around 10. Wind chill values as low as -7. North northeast wind 15 to 17 mph.

Saturday A 50 percent chance of snow after noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 17. Wind chill values as low as -5. North northeast wind around 11 mph. New snow accumulation of less than one inch possible.

Saturday Night Snow, mainly before midnight. Low around 9. Wind chill values as low as -3. North northeast wind 6 to 10 mph becoming west northwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New snow accumulation of 1 to 3 inches possible.

Sunday Sunny, with a high near 37. West northwest wind 6 to 8 mph becoming southwest in the afternoon.

Sunday  NightMostly clear, with a low around 14.

Monday Sunny, with a high near 43. Breezy.

Gillum, Cooper lead Tigers to double-overtime win at Northeastern State

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

TAHLEQUAH. Okla. – Hadley Gillum and Marcus Cooper both recorded double-doubles to lead Fort Hays State to a 98-89 double-overtime win at Northeastern State. It’s the Tigers (14-9, 7-7 MIAA) first overtime win in four tries this season and their first road win since December 9th.

Gillum scored 35 points and pulled down 11 rebounds with six assists in 48 minutes. Cooper added 20 points and 17 rebounds with five assists in 42 minutes. The two combined for 7-of-10 shooting beyond the arc and 20-of-24 from the free throw line.

Brady Werth added 14 points and nine rebounds. Aaron Nicholson hit three 3-pointers and scored 11 points.

Mark Johnson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

The Tigers led by five at halftime and quickly pushed the lead to 12 with 15:55 to play but the RiverHawks (7-16, 3-11 MIAA) answered with a 28-10 run over the next eight and-a-half minutes to go up six.

The Tigers responded with a 15-4 run capped by back-to-back Hadley Gillum 3-pointers and led by five with one minute to play.

Jamir Andrews hit two threes in the closing minute for Northeastern to force overtime.

Lucas Antunez missed a shot in the lane which could have won it for the RiverHawks in the first overtime.

The Tigers scored the first five points of the second OT and never let NSU any closer.

Russell USD 407 again cancels classes, activities due to illness

USD 407

RUSSELL – Due to the extreme illness that our staff and students are currently experiencing, Russell County, USD 407 will not be in attendance Friday, February 9th. There will be no evening or weekend activities.

As of Thursday, Feb. 8 at 2:30 p.m., the following percentage of student absences due to illness by building were reported:

Simpson Elementary-32%
Bickerdyke Elementary-23%
RMS-19%
RHS-8%
District 20.5%

USD 407 will continue to work closely with Russell County Health Officials to monitor and work through this situation. After consultation with the County Health Nurse on Friday, a determination regarding school on Monday, Feb. 12 will be made.

Russell schools were also closed Wednesday due to illness.

Pomeroy, bullpen carry Tigers to victory in home opener

HAYS, Kan. – A five-RBI day from Dayton Pomeroy helped the Fort Hays State baseball team knock off Newman in its home opener Thursday (Feb. 8), 13-9. The Tigers move to 4-1 on the year, while Newman is now 0-1 on the year.

The senior first baseman collected all five RBI in the first two innings, helping the Tigers quickly turn a 4-0 deficit into an 8-4 lead.

Fort Hays State collected its 13 runs on nine hits and three Jet errors, while Newman used 14 hits, including three home runs, and one Tiger miscue to score nine times.

The Jets pushed four runs across in the first inning, but FHSU quickly responded. Clayton Basgall was first to reach base, sending a single to center. Pomeroy came through with his first big hit after Alex Weiss reached on a dropped fly ball, lifting a towering home run just inside the left field foul pole to trim the deficit to one, 4-3.

After starter Tanner Smith worked out of trouble in the top of the second with a lineout double play and a strikeout, the Tigers added five runs in the home half of the inning to take the lead for good. The first eight runners all reached base safely in the inning for FHSU. Ryan Grasser led things off with a walk, quickly advancing to third on a stolen base and a wild pitch. Marcus Altman tied things up at 4-4 with a single to right before Jason Nicholson reached on an error.

Basgall put the Tigers in front when he went the opposite way with a two-run single to right. Dayton Pomeroy helped FHSU double its lead to 8-4 when he crushed a pitch off the wall in right center, scoring Basgall and Weiss.

The Tigers appeared poised to keep building their lead after the next two batters reached base, loading the bases with no outs. However, the Jets worked out of trouble and got out of the jam with two groundouts and a strikeout.

Newman responded with a pair of runs in the third inning, but FHSU added three runs after batting around for the second inning in a row to maintain a big lead. Addison Kaasch drove in the opening run with a bases-loaded single up the middle, scoring Basgall. Jordan Wilkerson made the score 10-6 when he reached on a botched sacrifice fly to right, plating Weiss. Pomeroy came around to score in the next at bat when Cody Starkel drew a bases-loaded walk, putting the Tigers in front 11-6 after just three innings.

Both sides went down in order in the fourth inning before getting back to their scoring ways in the fifth inning. Newman closed within 11-8 in the top of the inning, but FHSU got both runs back in the home half of the frame when Wilkerson crushed his second home run of the year over the fence in left.

Nursing a five-run lead, the Tiger bullpen did its job down the stretch, holding the Jets to just one run over the next four innings. Ryan Ruder (1-0) started things off by quieting the Newman bats over 3.2 innings of work, giving up the two fifth-inning runs while striking out five.

Easton Palmer then came in to mow through the lineup, allowing just one base runner over his first two innings of work. Newman scored one run on three hits off the righty in the ninth, forcing the Tigers to go to Cody Rottinghaus to close things out. With the bases loaded and the tying run at the plate, the Seneca, Kan. native secured the win after completely fooling the Newman nine-hole hitter, striking out Turner Lace on four pitches. Rottinghaus earned his first save of the year in the process.

Pomeroy finished the day 2-for-3 with five RBI and three runs scored. Basgall and Weiss also scored three runs each while Wilkerson drove in a season-high three RBI.

The Tigers will now travel to Wichita, Kan. to take on the Jets in game two of the series Friday (Feb. 9) at 2 p.m.

The teams have also announced that game three of the series will be played at Larks Park on Monday (Feb. 12) with first pitch set for 3 p.m.

Strong second quarter carries Tiger win to win over RiverHawks

By GERARD WELLBROCK
Hays Post

TAHLEQUAH. Okla. – For a fourth straight game the second quarter was kind to the Fort Hays State women’s basketball team. They used an 18-3 run to build a 15-point lead and beat Northeastern State 71-53 at the NSU Event Center. It’s the Tigers (19-4, 10-4 MIAA) second seven-game win streak of the season, matching their 7-0 start.

Tony Hobson Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Emma Stroyan led three in double-figures with 14 points. Taylor Rolfs and Carly Heim both added 10 points. Heim had five rebounds, three assists and two steals in 32 minutes.

Tatyana Legette was held to eight points but pulled down a game-high 11 rebounds.

Joi Bertrand was the only RiverHawk to reach double-figures with 14 points.

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