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HPD Activity Log June 20

The Hays Police Department responded to 7 animal calls and conducted 16 traffic stops Wed., June 20, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

 

Disturbance – General–500 block E 16th St, Hays; 12:30 AM; 1 AM
Disorderly Conduct–700 block Elm St, Hays; 1:56 AM; 2 AM
Suspicious Activity–1800 block Milner St, Hays; 6:14 AM
Mental Health Call–2200 block Canterbury Dr, Hays; 7:17 AM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–3700 block Vine St, Hays; 7:32 AM
Dead Animal Call–7th and Vine St, Hays; 9:07 AM
Disturbance – Noise–1300 block Haney Dr, Hays; 9:39 AM
Assist – Other (not MV)–2700 block Augusta Ln, Hays; 9:53 AM
Juvenile Complaint–300 block W 12th St, Hays; 9:56 AM
Animal At Large–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 10:22 AM
Death by Natural Causes–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 11:34 AM
MV Accident-Private Property–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 11:50 AM
Animal At Large–Hays; 1:17 PM
MV Accident-Private Property; 3600 block Vine St, Hays; 1:32 PM

Public health warnings for Sebelius, Webster Lakes

KDHE

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), in conjunction with the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT), has issued public health warnings for Sebelius (Norton) Lake and Webster Lake for the upcoming weekend and week.

If a lake is under a public health warning for blue-green algae, activities such as boating and fishing may be safe. However, direct contact with water (i.e., wading, skiing and swimming) is strongly discouraged for people, pets and livestock. The lakes currently under a public health advisory:

Warning: Sebelius (Norton) Lake, Norton County
Warning and Beach Closed: Webster Lake, Rooks County

Watch: Colwich City Lake, Sedgwick County

The warning for Topeka’s Central Park Lake (Pond) has been lifted.

Lakes under a warning are not closed. Marinas, lakeside businesses and park camping facilities are open for business. If swim beaches are closed, it will be specifically noted. Drinking water and showers at parks are safe and not affected by algae blooms. Boating and fishing are safe on lakes under a warning, but contact with the water should be avoided. It is safe to eat fish caught during a harmful blue-green algae outbreak, if the fish are rinsed with clean water. Only the fillet portion should be consumed, and all other parts should be discarded. Hands should also be washed with clean water after handling fish taken from an affected lake. Zoned lakes may have portions fully open for all recreation even if other portions are under a warning.

Kansans should be aware that blooms are unpredictable. They can develop rapidly and may float around the lake, requiring visitors to exercise their best judgment. If there is scum, a paint-like surface or the water is bright green, avoid contact and keep pets away. These are indications that a harmful bloom may be present. Pet owners should be aware that animals that swim in or drink water affected by a harmful algal bloom or eat dried algae along the shore may become seriously ill or die.

When a warning is issued, KDHE recommends the following precautions be taken:

  • Lake water is not safe to drink for pets or livestock.
  • Lake water, regardless of blue-green algae status, should never be consumed by humans.
  • Water contact should be avoided.
  • Fish may be eaten if they are rinsed with clean water and only the fillet portion is consumed, while all other parts are discarded.
  • Do not allow pets to eat dried algae.
  • If lake water contacts skin, wash with clean water as soon as possible.
  • Avoid areas of visible algae accumulation.

KDHE samples publicly-accessible bodies of water for blue-green algae when the agency receives reports of potential algae blooms in Kansas lakes. Based on sampling results, KDHE reports on potentially harmful conditions.

For information on blue-green algae and reporting potential harmful algal blooms, please visit www.kdheks.gov/algae-illness/index.htm.

House vote on immigration bill stalls changes to ag guestworker visas

By BEN KUEBRICH & ESTHER HONIG

The U.S. House voted down an immigration bill Thursday that would have addressed one of the biggest concerns of American farmers: updating the agriculture guestworker visa program known as H-2A.

David Petrocco at his farm in Greeley, Colorado. He says the guestworker program should prioritize U.S. workers but also be fair to farmers and foreign laborers.
ESTHER HONIG / HARVEST PUBLIC MEDIA

“Without this agriculture guestworker visa, our economy in Kansas will come crumbling down,” said Rep. Roger Marshall, a Republican from Kansas. “It’s very, very important,”

Created in 1952, the seasonal worker program is intended to help farmers facing local labor shortages. In 2017, more than 200,000 guestworkers, mostly from Mexico, came to the U.S. on an H-2A visas — a nearly 15 percent increase from the previous year, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

The conservative immigration bill, which was defeated 231-193, would have allowed visa-holders to work year-round and in a wider number of industries, including dairy and meatpacking.

While the visa changes had support from some Republicans and the American Farm Bureau federation, many farmworker groups opposed them because of verification requirements and a cap on visas at 450,000 per year. The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates there are 2.5 million agricultural workers in the U.S.

“There’s never been a cap on H-2A and … it’s not fair to the (agriculture) producer,” said Colorado vegetable farmer David Petrocco.

Petrucco first hired guestworkers in 2008. Since then, he said, local labor shortages have grown more severe and he’s had to increase the number of guestworkers on his farm. He said access to labor is vital to farmers who risk losing crops when there aren’t enough workers to harvest them.

But the visa changes may not dead. Marshall said he hopes another bill that addresses the guestworker visa will be introduced next month.

Thursday’s vote on the conservative bil; led to a delay on the so-called compromise immigration legislation, which is now scheduled for a House vote Friday.

Ben Kuebrich is a Kansas News Service reporter. Follow him on Twitter: @Ben_Kuebrich

Esther Honig is a Harvest Public Media reporter in conjunction with the Kansas News Service. Follow her on Twitter: @estherhonig

FHSU’s Olliff recognized for exemplary leadership

Dr. Kenton Olliff

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Kenton Olliff, assistant vice president for student affairs at Fort Hays State University, recently received the Chamberlain-Rapp Exemplary Leadership Award.

The award, presented by the Kansas Consumer Advisory Council for Adult Mental Health Inc., is given annually to a Kansas mental health provider who exhibits outstanding leadership skills on behalf of the state’s consumers and recovery movement.

Olliff accepted the award earlier this month at the Kansas Recovery Conference-Moving Forward Through Change in Park City.

Sunny, warm Friday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today Mostly sunny, with a high near 86. North northwest wind 5 to 8 mph becoming east in the afternoon.

Tonight Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 11pm. Some of the storms could be severe. Increasing clouds, with a low around 61. East wind 5 to 11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Saturday Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. Northwest wind around 6 mph becoming west southwest in the morning.
Saturday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 65. Southwest wind around 7 mph becoming east southeast in the evening.

Sunday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 88. Southeast wind 6 to 14 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph.

Sunday Night Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly before 1am. Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 65. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New rainfall amounts between 1 and 2 inches possible.

FHSU alum honored for work with the KBI as polygraphist

Roger Butler (center) accepting the 2018 Life Membership Award. Pictured with Jim Wardell (AAPP Chairman) and Derek Piasecki (AAPP President).

By COLE REIF
Great Bend Post

Roger Butler grew up in Claflin and worked in law enforcement between schooling at Barton Community College and Fort Hays State University. After serving as Police Chief in Claflin and as a member of the Great Bend Police Department, Butler decided to go to polygraph school near Los Angeles, California.

Barton instructor Gary Pedigo encouraged Butler to take polygraph training, and 38 years later it has turned into a good decision and career with the Kansas Bureau of Investigation for the Great Bend resident.

Roger Butler Audio

The modern polygraph, or lie detector, was invented in 1921 and Butler says the technology in his more than three decades with the KBI has taken the original analog systems to more detailed computerized charts.

Butler was recognized with the 2018 William J. Taylor Life Membership Award at the recent American Association of Police Polygraphists convention June 3 – 8 in Louisville, Kentucky. The award is for “outstanding and extraordinary service to the AAPP.”

Roger Butler Audio

The Life Membership Award is given to one member annually that is nominated by a two-thirds majority of the Board of Directors and approved by a majority vote of the memberships at the annual meeting.

The AAPP was created in 1977 to promote ethics, training, and professionalism in the area of law enforcement polygraphs. Polygraphs are used heavily in preliminary investigations to help investigators determine who good suspects are and helps resolve the case if a good polygraph can result in a confession to a crime.

Lt. Gov. Mann in Hays Friday morning

Kansas Lt. Gov. Tracey Mann (R)

OFFICE OF GOV. COLYER

TOPEKA –  Kansas Lt. Governor Tracey Mann will be touring northwest Kansas, including Hays, Friday, June 22.  The schedule of stops is listed below.

 8:00-8:45 a.m.

 K-State Agriculture Research Center

 1232 240th Ave, Hays

11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.

Meet and Greet at the Sheridan County Public Library

801 Royal Ave, Hoxie

1:30-2:00 p.m.

Tour Midwest Energy

Veterans Memorial Dr., Colby

 

Police: Kansas man hospitalized after hit by vehicle

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an injury accident.

First responders at the scene of the accident -photo courtesy WIBW

Just before 9:30 a.m. Thursday, police responded to the intersection of 29th and Gage in Topeka, according to a media release.

A man had walked into traffic and was struck by a vehicle that was driving westbound on Gage Boulevard. An ambulance transported him to an area hospital with critical injuries, according to police.

Police did release the name of the man or the driver involved.

Larks get walkoff win at home

HAYS, Kan. – The Hays Larks split the home and away two-game series with the Dodge City A’s last night getting the 6-5 victory in dramatic fashion. With the game tied at 5-5 going into the bottom of the ninth inning, Wyatt Divis lead off the inning with a hit down the first base fline for two bases. After Dodge City pitcher Brock Knoten struck out Jared Martin, the A’s wanted no part of Easton Kirk who had homered and singled in his previous two at bats, sending him to first on an intentional walk. With two on and no outs, Clayton Rasbeary would take a walk in five pitches leaving the bases loaded for pinch-hitter Matt Munoz. After getting ahead 0-2 in the count, Knoten threw a pitch past pitcher Anthony Marquez and Divis came in to score giving the Larks the win.

Frank Leo Postgame Interview

Dodge City took a 2-0 lead after the first inning thanks to a solo home run by Adam Hollar and a run scored on a fielder’s choice. The Larks would not get a run until the bottom of the third when Martin hit a RBI double scoring Daryl Meyers. The A’s would get that run back in the top of the fifth with a run scored on an error by first basemen John Rensel.

The Larks answered in the bottom of the fifth with singles by Meyers and Divis. Martin would take a pitch on the body to load the bases for Easton Kirk who launched his second grand slam of the week into right field, giving the Larks the 5-3 lead. Larks pitcher Mason Myrhe, who replaced starter Nick Skeffington in the second inning, walked the first two batters in the top of the seventh. Fabian Muniz would come in for Myhre after those walks but both runners would score to tie the game going into the eighth inning. Muniz would be flawless in the next two innings and set up the Larks for the walkoff win.

Muniz picks up the win giving up two hits in three innings with no runs, no walks and five strikeouts. Wyatt Divis was 3-4 with two doubles and two runs scored. Easton Kirk was 2-4 with four RBI’s and a run scored.

The Larks are now 13-4 overall and 7-3 in Jayhawk League play. They go on the road for three straight games in Derby before coming back home on Monday to take on Dodge City again.

 

Jayhawk duo selected in the 2018 NBA Draft

(Kansas Athletics Media Relations)

BROOKLYN, N.Y. – Kansas guards Devonte’ Graham and Svialoslav Mykhailiuk were among the 60 players selected in the 2018 NBA Draft at Barclays Center in Brooklyn Thursday night. Graham was the first Jayhawk taken at No. 34 of the second round by the Atlanta Hawks and was later traded to the Charlotte Hornets. Mykhailiuk was the 47th overall selection of the Los Angeles Lakers.

Historically, the duo gives Kansas 82 all-time NBA Draft selections, including 24 in the Bill Self era which began in 2003-04. It marked the eighth time under Self the Jayhawks have had multiple draftees.

Graham was the 2018 Big 12 Player of the Year and Kansas’ 30th Consensus All-America First Team selection. The Raleigh, North Carolina, guard broke two KU single-season records in 2017-18 with 282 assists and 1,474 minutes played. Also this season, Graham was the only player in the NCAA to averaged 17.0-plus points (17.3), 7.0-plus assists (7.2), 1.6-plus steals (1.6) and less than 3.0 turnovers per game (2.8). Graham concluded his career No. 13 in points (1,750), No. 5 in assists (632), No. 2 in 3-point field goals made (296), No. 7 in steals (197) and No. 2 in minutes played (4,498).

A two-year starter for KU who was an All-Big 12 Second Team selection in 2018, Mykhailiuk broke the Kansas single-season record for 3-point field goals made with 115 in 2017-18. The Cherkasy, Ukraine, guard, who was also a two-time Academic All-Big 12 honoree, was second on the KU team with a 14.6 scoring average and was the only player to rank in the Big 12 in the top three in 3-point field goals made (third at 2.9) and 3-point field goal percentage (second at 44.4). Mykhailiuk concluded his career No. 4 on the 3-point field goals made list at 237, No. 5 on the 3-point field goals attempted list at 579 and No. 41 in scoring with 1,181 points.

Kansas posted a 31-8 overall record in 2017-18 and advanced to its 15th Final Four. KU won its 14th-straight, 18th Big 12 and NCAA-leading 61st overall conference regular-season championship with a 13-5 league record. KU’s 14 consecutive titles, which began in 2004-05, set record for the most in NCAA history.

Wichita State’s Shamet selected by Sixers in first round of NBA Draft

(Wichita State Sports Information)

BROOKLYN, N.Y. – Landry Shamet’s professional journey will begin in Philadelphia. The former Wichita State standout was selected by the 76’ers with the 26th pick of Thursday night’s NBA Draft.

Shamet – a 6-foot-5 point guard from Kansas City — is WSU’s 23rd NBA Draft pick but the first to be taken in the opening round since 1985 when Xavier McDaniel went No. 4 overall to the Seattle Supersonics.

Shamet’s selection also ends a 33-year drought for Shocker guards, stretching back to the same 1985 draft when the Chicago Bulls used a second-round pick (No. 34 overall) on Aubrey Sherrod.

He’ll become the sixth Shocker in as many seasons to make an NBA regular season debut, joining: Gal Mekel (2013), Toure’ Murry (2013), Cleanthony Early (2014), Ron Baker (2016) and Fred VanVleet (2016).

Shamet declared for the draft on March 29 forgoing his final two seasons of eligibility. He’s WSU’s first early-entry draftee since 1982 when junior Cliff Levingston went No. 9 overall to the Atlanta Hawks.

In just over two seasons as a Shocker (a foot injury cut his freshman year short after three games), Shamet piled up 914 points and twice earned first team all-conference honors.

His 288 assists rank 20th on WSU’s all-time list and are the second-highest total ever for a Shocker at the end of his sophomore season (six more than VanVleet’s underclassman total). He ranks seventh all-time in three-point field goals (159), second in three-point percentage (.437) and second in assist-to-turnover ratio (2.64) behind VanVleet.

As a redshirt sophomore in 2017-18, Shamet earned first team All-AAC honors and was an honorable mention Associated Press All-American for a Shocker team that finished 25-8, was ranked wire-to-wire in the AP Poll, and earned a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Shamet averaged a team-high 14.9 points, hit a school-record 2.62 threes per game and ranked 13th nationally in three-point percentage (.442). He also led the American Athletic Conference in assists (5.2) and assist-to-turnover ratio (2.5).

With Shamet guiding the offense, WSU finished third nationally in assists per game (18.5) and posted its highest scoring average (82.8 points) in 39 years. The Shockers went wire-to-wire in the national polls and earned a No. 4 seed in the 2018 NCAA Tournament.

As a redshirt freshman in 2016-17, Shamet became just the second rookie to land first team All-Missouri Valley Conference honors in the era of freshman eligibility, joining former Creighton standout Doug McDermott.

Shamet helped lead the Shockers to a 31-5 finish, a share of the MVC regular season title, an MVC Tournament Championship and a first-round win over Dayton in the NCAA Tournament.

Kansas group won’t give details on immigrant children it has

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — An eastern Kansas nonprofit that shelters troubled children wasn’t providing details Thursday about immigrant children staying at its group homes, including whether any of them were separated from their parents in a crackdown on illegal crossings of the U.S-Mexico border.

The lack of information on the children housed by The Villages prompted two state lawmakers to schedule a Statehouse news conference Friday to demand more transparency. They said The Villages told them it needed two weeks’ notice for a tour of its Topeka homes.

“We don’t know what the arrangement is — that’s the thing,” said Democratic state Rep. John Alcala, of Topeka, one of the lawmakers calling the news conference. “It was the non-transparency that concerned us the most.”

The Villages, based in Topeka, has a contract with the federal government to house and provide services for 50 “unaccompanied children” ages 6 to 18, Joseph Wittrock, its president, confirmed Thursday. The nonprofit operates five group homes on 400 rural acres just outside Topeka and two others in Lawrence. The seven homes can house a total of 80 children.

Wittrock made his comments and issued a lengthy statement about The Villages’ history, mission and commitment to helping immigrant children following a media report that the group was housing children separated from families at the U.S.-Mexico border as part of a “zero tolerance” immigration policy in place since April.

But Wittrock wouldn’t say how many children in the care of The Villages were separated from families at the border during the recent crackdown and how many entered the country without family members as unaccompanied minors. He noted that the federal government classifies them all as unaccompanied children.

He also would not say how many of the 50 spots for immigrant children were filled Thursday. He said The Villages seeks to reunite them with their families and has had “great success.”

An online federal database shows that The Villages’ contract for the federal Unaccompanied Alien Children Program has been worth a total of more than $5.9 million for two years. The database showed an award of $2.16 million on May 4, which Wittrock described as an annual contract renewal.

 

The Villages was founded in the 1960s by famed psychiatrist Dr. Karl Menninger, who pushed psychiatry into the mainstream of American life and led a world-renowned clinic in Topeka until his death in 1990.

“There is no secret — The Villages is proud of our heritage and history of success of helping children in need, irrespective of background or circumstance,” Wittrock said in his statement.

Kansas Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Topeka Democrat also participating in Friday’s news conference, said he doesn’t worry about the children’s care but wants to know about plans for reuniting them with their families.

Lori Ross, president and CEO of Foster Adopt Connect, a Kansas City, Missouri-based placement agency, said no plans exist and that concerns child welfare advocates nationally. She said they worry the children will become “legal orphans” in the U.S. with no chance of being reunited with their parents.

 

Prosecutors: Kansas man guilty of mistreatment of mother

LYONS  – A Hutchinson man was found guilty of mistreatment of an elder person, according to Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

Bruce J. Colle, 61, pleaded guilty yesterday in Rice County District Court to one felony count of mistreatment of an elder person. The case stemmed from a joint investigation by the attorney general’s Consumer Protection Division and Fraud and Abuse Litigation Division, which discovered that between December 2013 and December 2015, Colle served as his mother’s power of attorney and made personal purchases with his mother’s funds instead of using the money to pay for her care at a nursing home. As part of the plea, Colle agreed to pay $45,765.46 in restitution to the victim.

District Judge Mike Keely took the plea and scheduled sentencing for September 19 at 11 a.m.

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