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Maurice Arthur Annis

Maurice Arthur Annis, age 77, of Oakley, surrounded by loving family, passed away on Wednesday, February 28, 2018, at his home in Oakley. He was born on September 7, 1940 in Salina to Richard and Charlotte (Mullender) Annis. He was a financial advisor with Waddell & Reed in Oakley.

Maurice graduated from Kansas State University with a B.S. degree in Mathematics. He married Ruth Ellen Sherbert on June 18, 1961 in Salina. They have two sons, Thomas and Douglas. They were members of the Oakley Country Chapel and were involved in many church and community activities over the years. He obtained Eagle Scout honors and worked many hours with the Boy Scouts. Maurice was a member of the Oakley Lions Club, Associated Grocers Board of Directors, Waddell & Reed Circle of Champions Crest Qualifier, and was very involved with the Logan County Healthcare Foundation. He liked to travel and loved his grandkids and enjoyed getting involved with anything that they were doing.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Richard and Charlotte, and two sisters: Alberta Davis and her husband, Von, and Margaret Hirsch.

Maurice is survived by his wife, Ruth, of the home, two sons: Thomas (Suzy) Annis and Douglas (Denise) Annis, all of Oakley, four grandchildren: Eric and Josiah of Oakley and Luke and Sarah Annis of Omaha, NE. Also surviving are his sister, Marjorie Carol Annis of Wichita, his brother, John Annis (Lynn) of Drums, PA, and brother-in-law, Glenn Hirsch of Minneapolis, MN.

A Celebration of Life will be held at 3:00 p.m. Saturday, March 10, 2018, at the Buffalo Bill Cultural Center, Oakley, with Phil Beesley officiating. Interment will follow in the Oakley Cemetery. Visitation will be on Friday, March 9, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Cultural Center. Memorials to the Oakley Country Chapel, Hospice Services of Northwest Kansas, and Logan County Healthcare Foundation may be sent in care of Kennedy-Koster Funeral Home, PO Box 221, Oakley 67748.

Online Guestbook www.kennedykosterfh.com

Ellis to talk sales tax business incentives

ELLIS – The Ellis city council will discuss a Sales Tax Business Incentive Program during their meeting tonight, and will also hear updates on activities in several city departments.

The complete agenda follows.

 

AGENDA

March 5, 2018

REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF ELLIS

City Hall – Council Meeting Room

 

BILLS ORDINANCE REVIEW WORK SESSION BEGINS AT 7:00 P.M.

ROLL CALL AND MEETING CALL TO ORDER AT 7:30 P.M.

PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE

AMENDMENTS TO AGENDA (if needed)

  • CONSENT AGENDA
    1. Minutes from Regular Meeting on February 19, 2018
    2. Bills Ordinance #2040
    3. Manual Journal Entries for December 2017

(Council will review for approval under one motion under the consent agenda.  By majority vote of the governing body, any item may be removed from the consent agenda and considered separately)

PUBLIC COMMENTS 

(Each speaker will be limited to five minutes.  If several people from the group wish to speak on same subject, the group must appoint a spokesperson.  ALL comments from public on agenda items must be during Public Comment.  Once council begins their business meeting, no more comments from public will be allowed.)

  • PRESENTATIONS OF AWARDS, PROCLAMATIONS, REQUESTS & PETITIONS (HEARINGS)
    1. Presentation of Citizen’s Awards – Campground Committee
  • SPECIAL ORDER
    1. Discuss Code Definitions and City Procedures – Mark Flax
  • UNFINISHED BUSINESS
    1. Consider Digital Advertising Package from Hays Daily News
    2. Update on Progress of Cited Violations at 211 E. 11th Street
  • NEW BUSINESS
    1. Consider Declaration of Unfit Structures
    2. Discuss Sales Tax Business Incentive Program
  • REPORTS FROM CITY OFFICIALS
    1. Administrative
      • Public Works
        • Comparative Water Report
        • Department Update
      • Police
        • Monthly Activity Report for February
        • March Staff Calendar
        • Department Update
      • City Clerk
        • December Financial Statements
        • Minutes from City Committees
        • Department Update
      • Attorney
        • Update on Status of Code Violation Cases
      • Mayor Update and Announcements

EXECUTIVE SESSIONS

  • ADJOURNMENT

FHSU Spring Choral Concert March 13

FHSU

The choirs of Fort Hays State University will present their Spring Choral Concert at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 13, 2018 at the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center in Sheridan Hall on the FHSU campus. Ticket prices are $6 for adults, $4 for senior citizens and free for students.

The Concert Choir of 54 voices and the Fort Hays Singers of 20 voices will both appear, singing a wide variety of choral repertoire. The Fort Hays Singers will reprise their program from earlier in the semester when they appeared at the KMEA Convention in Wichita on February 23rd. Both ensembles are conducted by Dr. Terry Crull, and accompanied by Pam McGowne.

As the Fort Hays Singers are taking a concert trip to Austria in June, special activities at the Spring Choral Concert will include a moment of thanks for those who are financially helping them secure the funds for Austria, a raffle of the beautiful music quilt made by Pam McGowne, and recognition of longtime members of both choirs.

BOWERS: 2018 Senate Scene Week 8

36th Dist. Sen. Elaine Bowers (R-Concordia)

PRESENTATION ON K-12 EDUCATION FUNDING

On Friday February 23rd, Dr. Lori L. Taylor gave a preliminary presentation to a joint session of the Kansas Senate and House of Representatives on the methods, data, and analysis plan for her research on K-12 education funding in Kansas. Dr. Taylor was hired by the Legislature in December to act as an expert witness and to investigate whether Kansas’ K-12 funding is adequate. This comes after the Kansas Supreme Court declared the current funding level is not enough and gave the legislature an April 30th deadline to create a new funding system. The school districts that are suing the state claim that $600 million more is needed to properly fund schools. The legislature hopes Dr. Taylor’s report will show that funding is adequate and help end years of school finance litigation between the courts and legislature.

Taylor, a native Kansan, holds a BA in economics and a BS in business administration from the University of Kansas and received her PhD in economics from the University of Rochester.

She is currently a professor at the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University and works as the Director for Mosbacher Institute for Trade, Economics, and Public Policy. Taylor’s research is focused in school finance and she has consulted for numerous state legislatures and state and federal agencies on the topic.

During Friday’s presentation, Taylor outlined her study’s objective to estimate the level of spending required to produce a given outcome within a given educational environment. Taylor explained that she is looking at many different factors of school finance such as differences in spending, student outcomes, student needs, labor costs, geographical differences, and many other variables. One major variable Taylor will investigate in her research is student achievement relative to spending per pupil. Taylor is expected to deliver her results to the Legislature by March 15th, a few weeks before the court mandated deadline.

TASK FORCE ON SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER

On Thursday, Governor Jeff Colyer issued an executive order creating a task force addressing substance use disorder. The objective of the task force is to gather information regarding substance abuse in Kansas, particularly regarding the growing number of opioid and heroin overdoses in the state along with methamphetamine addiction. The task force will work to find useful resources and initiatives to fight drug abuse. It will also examine practices for prevention and treatment along with recovery options for at-risk individuals through early detection and education. The task force will be chaired by Dr. Greg Lakin, Chief Medical Officer at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. Membership will be comprised of heads from numerous state agencies, legislators, and professionals in industries such as education, law enforcement, hospitals, and more.

Since 2012, more than 1,500 Kansans have died from opioid or heroin overdoses and more than 100 Kansas residents continue to die each year. In 2016, drug poisoning was the cause of death to more than 300 people in Kansas, with 95 deaths caused by methamphetamine alone. The task force acknowledges that substance abuse is an illness which not only impacts the lives of those addicted but also their families and surrounding communities.

AVIATION DAY

The Kansas Department of Transportation Division of Aviation along with the Kansas Commission on Aerospace Education (KCAE) held their 4th annual Aviation Day event Thursday. The day began with an economic development training event for city officials on how to best harness state and local resources to boost the aviation industry. During the Aviation Day event, legislators, manufacturers, suppliers, and aviation organizations gathered to discuss industry growth and opportunities and addressed development potentials for Kansas economic stakeholders. The Kansas Commission on Aerospace Education highlighted industry development opportunities throughout the day, spreading awareness regarding STEM and aviation education through KCAE.

FROM THE STATE LIBRARY

Consumer Health Complete covers all areas of health and wellness. Did your doctor prescribe a new medication? Recently diagnosed with diabetes? Look it up here. Designed for the everyday consumer, this online database offers popular reference books, medical encyclopedias, fact sheets, and magazine articles. This full text database covers topics such as aging, nutrition, cancer, fitness, drugs & alcohol, even yoga. You can find more information at https://kslib.info/ConHealth.

FOLLOW THE KANSAS LEGISLATURE

Both the House and Senate have taken historic steps towards the promotion of open government. For the first time, you can view video streaming of both chambers via the Kansas Legislature YouTube page. In addition, many committees are now audio streamed.    YouTube Streaming: https://bit.ly/2CZj9O0   Committee Hearings: https://sg001-harmony.sliq.net/00287/Harmony/en/View/Calendar/ 

Kansas residents can access information on legislation, legislative procedure, state government, public policy issues and more by calling 1-800-432-3924.  Calls are answered by experienced reference/research librarians at the State Library of Kansas and kept confidential.  Lines are open weekdays 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.  Callers can also leave brief messages to be delivered to legislators as well as request copies of bills, journals, and other legislative documents.  In addition to calling the hotline, residents can also text questions to 785 256-0733, email or instant message at kslib.info/ask.  The State Library is located on the 3rd floor, north wing of the Capitol. 

THANK YOU FOR ENGAGING

Thank you for all of your calls, emails, and letters regarding your thoughts and concerns about happenings in Kansas. I always encourage you to stay informed of the issues under consideration by the Kansas Legislature. Committee schedules, bills, and other helpful information can be easily accessed through the legislature’s website at www.kslegislature.org. You are also able to ‘listen in live’ at this website. The House meets at 11:00 a.m. and the Senate at 2:30 p.m. Please do not hesitate to contact me with your thoughts, concerns, and suggestions. An email is the best at this point in the session.

Thank you for the honor of serving you!

Senator Elaine Bowers
Kansas State Capitol Building
Room 223-E
300 SW 10th St.
Topeka, KS 66612
[email protected]
785-296-7389

Extension offers Chinese culinary workshop

COTTONWOOD EXTENSION

New food experiences can open us to new cultures and new communities. The Hays office of the Cottonwood Extension District will host a Chinese Culinary Workshop on Wednesday, March 14 from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Hays First Presbyterian Church, 2900 Hall Street in Hays. The cost is only $5 per person.

This hands-on Chinese cooking class will serve as an occasion for restaurant professionals, food inspectors, and the community to interact with each other. The workshop is co-sponsored by the K-State Confucius Institute, inspectors of the Kansas Department of Agriculture, and K-State Research and Extension specialists.

Chinese chefs will demonstrate cooking techniques and KDA inspectors will share proper food safety and food handling practices.

This class is designed for local restaurant staff, culinary students and the public. The registration fee includes class instruction and tasting. Class size is limited to 20 people. For questions or to register, contact the Hays office at 785-628-9430.

Exploring Kansas Outdoors: Remember when it used to snow?

Steve Gilliland

We are a fickle people; we bellyache when it rains too much, we moan when it rains too little, we wail when it snows too much and we gritch when it doesn’t snow at all. Is anyone else besides me old enough to remember when it used to snow here in the winter? Now I know I’m exaggerating as it hasn’t been that long, but it sure seems like forever since we’ve had a snowfall worthy of winter.

I grew up in central Ohio, where snowstorms and the occasional blizzard were just part of winter. Our house set back nearly 200 yards off a gravel road. The field on one side of the drive and the pasture on the other side each had a couple high spots in them, but the driveway had been cut through those high spots, leaving it straight and flat, but also leaving the ground on either side of it higher than the drive at those two places. The driveway ran north and south, so a pure north wind during a snowstorm cleaned out the driveway. But any wind from the west or northwest piled snow in those two places by the foot. Many a winter we had to leave the car or truck for a few days at the end of the drive next to the road where we had scooped out a parking place, or we had to drive through the pasture and climb the fence to get to the house.

Over the years I’ve had a love-hate relationship with snow. I used to like snow until I began working in the maintenance department at the local nursing/retirement home. There, the battle cry concerning snow removal was “If it’s covered, we will move it.” We maintenance guys had snow shovels in hand and snow blowers idling before the first flakes ever hit the ground. My supervisor and I never saw eye-to-eye when it came to snow removal; I understand he had to take his stand because of liability issues, but I always argued if people couldn’t manage to drive through a few inches of snow, they should stay home in the first place. Anyway, one of the things I looked forward to when I retired two years ago was sitting in my recliner in front of my big picture window drinking a cup of hot chocolate while it snowed and blew like crazy outside, all the while knowing my buddies at the retirement home were bustin’ their humps pushing snow shovels. You see how that worked out!

Snow in measured amounts can be great for outdoorsmen. Our ground is often so hard in the fall when setting coyote traps that tracks are barely visible unless the ground is sandy. Tracks play the major role in telling me where to set traps. The terrain can be textbook perfect for coyote travel, but if there are no tracks it’s probably not worth my effort to set a trap there. Snow solves that problem. A couple inches of fresh snow are absolutely perfect for showing hunters and trappers tracks and other critter signs we can’t see in the dry soil. Coyotes like to travel frozen creeks and streams, and I remember following a set of coyote tracks down the middle of a frozen drainage ditch a couple years ago. I could see every step the coyote took, everywhere it stopped to nose around where it entered and exited the ice. I would never have seen any of that without a little snow. Ditto for deer hunters; a nice tracking snow will show things we can’t otherwise see, like where deer might be routinely jumping fences or bedding down & entering or exiting thickets or swamps.

Snow is wonderful moisture, as it seems to contain elements from the atmosphere beneficial to everything green. Snow is also a wonderful insulator, often insulating and protecting the new wheat when temperatures remain sub-zero for a spell. From my youth, I remember some of the biggest snows of the season coming in March, and an April snowfall is certainly not out of the question here. On years like this when warm weather seems very premature, wildlife nurseries can be full earlier than usual also, and late season snow and ice can be very harmful to nesting or already hatched upland birds. For moisture, spring snows are just as beneficial as actual winter snows, but are usually very wet and hard to move. I guess what I’m thinking as I write this is maybe, just maybe we’ll get some snow yet, and hopefully when that hard April freeze hits, there will be snow on the wheat to protect it. Either way, continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors!

Steve Gilliland, Inman, can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Extension offers Chinese culinary workshop

New food experiences can open us to new cultures and new communities. The Hays office of the Cottonwood Extension District will host a Chinese Culinary Workshop on Wednesday, March 14, from 5:30-7:30 pm at Hays First Presbyterian Church, 2900 Hall. The cost is only $5 per person.

This hands-on Chinese cooking class will serve as an occasion for restaurant professionals, food inspectors, and the community to interact with each other. The workshop is co-sponsored by the K-State Confucius Institute, inspectors of the Kansas Department of Agriculture, and K-State Research and Extension specialists. Chinese chefs will demonstrate cooking techniques and KDA inspectors will share proper food safety and food handling practices.

This class is designed for local restaurant staff, culinary students and the public. The registration fee includes class instruction and tasting. Class size is limited to 20 people. For questions or to register, contact the Hays office at 785-628-9430.

FHSU graphic design students highlight cooperation in SYMBIO show

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Fort Hays State University graphic design students are highlighting the importance of collaboration in their annual show titled SYMBIO at the Moss-Thorns Gallery of Art.

“SYMBIO is the mutually beneficial relationship that we, as students, have come to know and live by. It is the act of combining different backgrounds, ideas, insights and resources to create unique connections with one another. SYMBIO adapts to perfect the balance of individuality and unity in order to create something beautiful,” the students said in their artists’ statement.

Graphic design work of 16 senior graphic design students is on display at the gallery through Friday, March 9. Gallery hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. The show is a culmination of all the students’ work toward graduation. Show catalogs, which the students also designed, are available at the gallery that discuss more about the students’ projects.

Michael Stueve, Erin Pascal and Jhoselin Dominguez created a 20-minute video that illustrates the students’ creative process and collaboration in creating projects for the show. The video is shown on a loop in the gallery during exhibit hours.

“We took the narrative of what it is like to receive projects and what the process is with them. We took the process of where people find inspiration … and the majority of the project is where they find inspiration and how they think through it. Our show (is) SYMBIO, which is taken off the scientific term symbiosis, which is a mutually beneficial relationship between two different animals. In people’s look for inspiration, they found inspiration most in each other.”

The video is also meant to showcase all of the students’ digital works.

Through setting up the show, Stueve said he learned cooperation and collaboration. He said he found, “the relationship we have with each other and the ability we have with each other and to inspire better, fresher ideas and talents from each other.”

Dominguez said she learned to better appreciate her fellow students’ work through creating the video.

Stueve said, “This whole show has allowed us to get closer to each other now than before, and we hang out more now. It is just a testament to that shared experience that we have here— the long nights and just often grueling work. There is a lot we have to do and a lot that is expected of us and a legacy that we have to uphold both in our work individually and in the show.”

Libby Reimer, Erin Pascal and Kollette Keeton created a branding project for a craft beer. They dubbed it Malster, the term for a brewer in medieval times.

The students used a medieval theme and horses for the beer packaging. They sandblasted the bottle and used a paper wrap for the outer packaging. The carrier resembles a barn and includes a drinking game called Drunkin’ Stallion with punch-out pieces on the rear of the box. The students also incorporated a green motif into their design to symbolize the green branch medieval brewers would place on top of their doors to signify the brew was ready.

“I think we worked really well together as a team,” Pascal said. “I have worked with other people before, and I think that this group was a really good combination of ideas, and I think we all have very similar work ethics.”

Ashley Hildebrand, senior, created CD packaging for the SWMERS “Drive North” album.

She was inspired by illustrator Jay Ryan, who has a cartoon style that often includes animals. The inside of the album opens up accordion-style to reveal a road heading north with various stops along the way denoting the track titles. The final stop on the road is Oakland, California, where the band was formed. The CD itself forms a setting sun in the package.

Hildebrand said her dream job would be to work in the music industry designing album covers, advertising and merchandise for bands.

“It helped me realize what I am most passionate about in design and what I want to strive for when I graduate,” she said.

Graphic design professor and exhibit director Karrie Simpson Voth said she was proud of the amount and quality of the work for this show, especially considering this year’s small senior class. She said the students learn much from putting on the show. They design and organize every aspect of the show, including creating tags and posters, taking photos and recruiting sponsors.

“The students learn professionalism and work in a team,” Simpson Voth said.

Students featured include Julia Blasdel, Jhoselin Dominguez, Rebekka Flax, Abby Garrett, Yichao “Rocky” Guo, Adily Hendricks, Jenice Hernandez, Ashley Hildebrand, Bryce Irvine, Kollette Keeten, Kaylea Nelson, Erin Pascal, Libby Reimer, Corbin Robinson, Michael Stueve, and Patrick Twiss. The graphic design professors also included Chaiwat Thumsujarit.

Fire hydrant testing continues this week

(Click to enlarge)
CITY OF HAYS

The city of Hays Fire Department will be inspecting and flow testing fire hydrants on Mon., March 5, 2018 in the area from Thunderbird Dr. to Highway 183 Alt. between 41st St. and Fairground Rd. and the area of General Hays Rd. and Roth Ave. between 48th and 55th St.

This is part of a coordinated effort by the city to inspect all fire hydrants in the city and flush all water mains annually.

Governor issues disaster declaration because of SW Kan. wildfire

Fire crews working another blaze over the weekend-photo courtesy Stevens Co. Emergency Management

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer has signed an emergency disaster declaration in response to a fire in the southwest part of the state.
The declaration issued Sunday stems from a fire in Stevens County. The Kansas Department of Emergency Management said in a news release that additional counties may be added to the declaration as the response operations continue.
The size of the fire wasn’t immediately known. Officials with the county and state didn’t immediately return phone messages from The Associated Press seeking comment.
Forecasters are warning of a high risk of wildfires across much of the state because of strong winds and dry conditions.

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