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Woman dies, 2 children injured in Kansas crash

SUMNER COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 11:30p.m. Thursday in Sumner County.

The Kansas Turnpike Authority reported a 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee driven by Darcie R. Nettifee, 31, Clear Lake, IA., was southbound on Interstate 35 just north of the Oklahoma State line. The driver lost control of the SUV when she swerved to avoid slowing traffic.

Nettifee was transported to the hospital in Wellington where she died.

Two children ages 10 and 4 were also injured. The KTA did not report where they were transported for treatment.

All three were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KTA.  

Jury: Kansas man guilty of Title Loan Store robbery

RENO COUNTY — A jury found a  Kansas man guilty for the 2015 robbery at a Title Loan store in the 1500 Block of 17th Avenue in Hutchinson.

Anderson-photo KDOC

An all-female jury deliberated just over six hours Thursday in the case against 32-year-old Jerry Anderson, Jr.

According to police, in May of 2015, Anderson walked into LoanMax Title Loans and demanded money at gunpoint. According to the state, he got away with about $1,400.

Sentencing for aggravated robbery is scheduled for July 20.

It has also been confrimed that the federal charge against Anderson has been dismissed. He was accused of entering the Meritrust Credit Union at 2900 S. Oliver in Wichita and robbing them of approximately $3,100.

Security image courtesy Wichita Police

The U.S. Attorney’s office filed the motion on June 1. The judge agreed to dismiss without prejudice, meaning they could refile and seek another indictment at some point in the future.

Early bird discount deadline nears for annual AHSGR Convention in Hays

By KEVIN RUPP
AHSGR Sunflower Chapter

If you’re planning to attend the AHSGR Convention in Hays from July 30 to Aug. 2, it’s time to get registered.

After June 15, registration increases from $100 for members/$120 for nonmembers to $125/$145.

Registration information is available at ahsgr.org. You can buy tickets through our online store, but make sure to watch your email for an information form after you register and fill that out; we need one form for each attendee. This is information regarding your ancestral villages and surnames, volunteering, and so on.

There also are options to register for individual days of the convention if you can’t attend the whole thing. And there will be Kindertag, a youth heritage day, Aug. 1. More information about that is available at https://echshays.org/2018-2/kindertag/.

We’re very excited about the list of presentations planned. There still may be a few tweaks here and there, but here’s the current itinerary:

Maggie Hein: Finding Your Ancestors’ German Origins
Terry Needham: When I Was a Child – the Story Behind the Story
Ulrich Merten: The German Russian Communities in the Age of Stalin’s ‘Great Terror’
Patty Nicholas (FHSU Ethnic Studies): A Roomful of History – The Volga Germans of Ellis and Rush Counties in Kansas
Olga Litzenberger: Germans in Russia: History Milestone (Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the Volga Germans’ Autonomy)
Masterpieces of German Religious Architecture on the Volga
Eric Schmaltz: Remembering a ‘Ravaged Century’: The German Colonies Caught in ‘The Storm’ of the Russian Revolution (July 31 keynote)
Letters to Pauline (Schlegel) Lehl: Volga German Family Correspondence from Russia to Oklahoma, 1913-1937
Lee Macklin: DNA I: The Basis of Life
DNA II: Analyzing Your DNA Results
Peggy Goertzen: Ethnic Clothing for Mennonites and Other Germans from Russia
Panel title: Mennonites in Russia after the Revolution
Norma Pipkin: The Immigrant Woman
Terry Batt: Dutch Hop: Music of the Volga Germans
Michael Wanner: History of HFDR (Historical Research Association of Germans from Russia)
Alex and Nancy Herzog: Lives of Ethnic Germans in Soviet Exile during and after WWII
Tanja Nyberg: 80th Anniversary of Sandamokh Massacre
Sisters Alice Ann Pfeifer, Mary Ann Schippers & Mary Elise Leiker: Religious Persecution of Germans in Siberia
Michael Brown, Sue Nakaji, Peggy Goertzen and Christina Zahn panel discussion: Effects of Russian Revolution on German Colonies
Brent Mai: Volga Famine Relief
Karen Schutt: Book talk

In addition to the presentations, of course, the convention will feature our AHSGR Bookstore, Research Room and Heritage Hall. There will be tours of historical and cultural sites in Hays; you have to register separately for those, and some have participant limits. We’ll also have music, food and lots of time for fellowship and networking with your fellow GRs.

The American Historical Society of Germans from Russia is hosting their International Convention July 30 through August 2. You can find convention and registration information at AHSGR.org.

In association with the AHSGR and our local AHSGR Sunflower chapter, Ellis County Historical Society is hosting a Kindertag, a Youth Day that will focus on German traditions. Children ages 5-14 are invited to spend August 1 with us at ECHS to learn about German music, dance, and games; folktales and German words; daily life for the early Volga German settlers in Ellis and Rush counties; and German recipes. Many hands-on activities will give the participants experience, including making and eating grebble.

🎥 Dinkel resigns; Hays city commission seat open

Hays Projects Manager John Braun shakes hands with City Commissioner Chris Dinkel who is resigning to move to New York City.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Hays City Commissioner Chris Dinkel announced his resignation, effective June 20, 2018, during Thursday night’s commission work session.

Dinkel has been accepted to Columbia Law School and will move with his family, wife Ervis and son Liam, to New York City to start classes this fall.

In a letter to Mayor James Meier which he read aloud, Dinkel said he “chose to vacate my seat early to allow the commission to select my replacement before this year’s budget process begins rather than as it ends.”

Dinkel said he originally intended to serve through the end of the 2019 budget process, but must be in New York prior to the final budget vote.

“I hope that the timing of my resignation will allow whomever you choose to fill this seat to feel that they have had ample opportunity for input in the budget process before voting on the finished product in August.”

After thanking Dinkel for his service and wishing him well, the other four commissioners discussed how to fill the vacant seat.

Previously, vacancies have been dealt with by appointment or through an application process. The commissioners decided to ask for interested Hays residents to contact one of them.

“There are a number of people in the community that have been voicing lots of opinions about what we’re doing and how we’re doing it, and maybe there’s people that would like to apply,” said Commissioner Sandy Jacobs.

Both Vice-Mayor Henry Schwaller and Commissioner Shaun Musil said they’d already been contacted by people who are interested.

“I’m happy to talk to anybody,” said Meier. “I’m not going to ask anybody. If this is something you want to do, then you need to express an interest in doing it, and not expect somebody to reach out to you.

“Being a commissioner is a responsibility to serve, and not just showing up,” Musil added, although he noted that sometimes missing a meeting was unavoidable. “It’d be nice to get somebody who really cares about the community, wants to do good for the community. And we all come in different shapes.”

Dinkel is the marketing coordinator for High Plains Mental Health Center, Hays, and also an adjunct professor of history at Fort Hays State University.

Interested persons should contact a city commissioner by June 20. Email addresses are available on the city’s website. Kansas statutes require a vacancy of the city commission to be filled within 10 days of the leaving commissioner’s official written resignation.

City Manager Toby Dougherty said Dinkel’s replacement could be seated at the June 28 commission meeting.

According to Hays City Clerk Brenda Kitchen Dinkel’s term ends in 2020.

SPONSORED: Jackie Creamer’s The Dance Studio summer camps, classes

Jackie Creamer’s The Dance Studio has scheduled the following summer camps and classes for the coming weeks.

• Princess Dance Camp
June 18 to 22
9 to 10 a.m.
Performance Friday at noon
$50 per dancer, includes T-shirt

Cheer Pom Dance Camp with a KU Rock Chalk Dancer
June 18 to 22
10 to 11 a.m.
Performance Friday at noon
$50 per dancer, includes T-shirt

Couples Social Dancing
July 18 and 19
6 to 8 p.m.
$50 per couple

Vision Dance Company Camp and Auditions also are scheduled for Aug. 7 to 9.

For more information, call (785) 623-1939 or email [email protected].

Candidate chides Kan. governor for not signing tax pledge

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Conservative Republican Kris Kobach is making tax cuts a cornerstone of his campaign for Kansas governor and publicly chiding GOP Gov. Jeff Colyer and other rivals for not joining him in signing a pledge not to increase taxes.

Kobach, who is currently Kansas secretary of state, is promising to push for lower income and sales tax rates and tighter controls on local property taxes a year after bipartisan supermajorities in the state Legislature rolled back past income tax cuts championed by former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback. Last year’s tax increase came after persistent budget woes soured many voters on Brownback’s tax-cutting experiment.

Kobach’s aggressive stance ahead of the Aug. 7 primary election demonstrates the enduring appeal of tax cuts for the GOP’s conservative base even after Brownback’s experiment caused other states to look at Kansas and take a more cautious approach on taxes.

Colyer, who was Brownback’s lieutenant governor for seven years before Brownback resigned to take an ambassador’s post, also promises to work with legislators to ease the tax burden without making specific promises and he questions Kobach’s commitment to lowering taxes.

But Kobach argued Thursday that the mistake “the Brownback-Colyer administration” made was not cutting spending aggressively enough.

“When you cut taxes, you must also cut spending,” Kobach said. “Colyer is spending like a drunken sailor.”

Kansas expects the spending on general government programs and services financed with state tax dollars to rise 4.5 percent under its next annual budget. It’s largely because the state plans to phase in a $548 million increase in funding for public schools over five years in response to a Kansas Supreme court mandate.

Campaign spokesman Kendall Marr pointed to Colyer’s leading an overhaul of the state’s Medicaid health coverage for the needy while he was lieutenant governor as an example of how Colyer helped Kansas control its spending.

And another Colyer aide, Kara Fullmer, dismissed Kobach’s goading over the Americans for Tax Reform pledge that Kobach signed on April 17, the annual income tax filing deadline.

“Actions speak louder than words,” Fullmer said.

She pointed to a vote Kobach made in 2000 as an Overland Park City Council member to boost the city’s excise tax almost 21 percent. It’s paid by developers on each square foot of land to help cover the cost of sewers and streets in new housing subdivisions.

Kobach called it a fee paid by a limited group and said raising it allowed the city to keep property taxes down for all home and business owners.

The other two major GOP candidates, Insurance Commissioner Ken Selzer and former state Sen. Jim Barnett, a Topeka physician, also have not signed the anti-tax pledge.

Barnett, appealing to moderate Republicans, predicted that Kobach’s push for tax cuts would “tank the state’s budget.”

As for signing an anti-tax pledge, he said: “It would be reckless on the part of the governor to tie his or her hands.”

Selzer said he would “lean in” on government costs and “focus on making Kansas grow.”

“Kansas needs to grow or we’ll never be able to adequately invest in the things we need at the state level,” Selzer said.

Meanwhile, the three major Democratic candidates — ex-Wichita Mayor Carl Brewer, state Sen. Laura Kelly of Topeka, and former state Agricultural Secretary Joshua Svaty — are attacking Brownback’s fiscal legacy. They’re attempting to tie Colyer to it and see Kobach as doubling down.

___

HPD Activity Log June 7

The Hays Police Department responded to 16 animal calls and conducted 37 traffic stops Thu., June 7, 2018, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Abandoned Vehicle–100 block W 18th St, Hays; 12:38 AM
Animal At Large–400 block E 21st St, Hays; 8 AM
Animal At Large–100 block E 17th St, Hays; 8:02 AM
Drug Offenses–400 block E 5th St, Hays; 6/7 9:45 AM; 10:32 AM
MV Accident-Private Property-Hit and Run–500 block W 27th St, Hays; 11:03 AM
Abandoned Vehicle–2700 block Sherman Ave, Hays; 11:23 AM
Disturbance – Fight–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 11:49 AM
Found/Lost Property–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 12:40 PM
Animal At Large–200 block W 5th St, Hays; 1:23 PM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 3:34 PM
Phone/Mail Scam–1300 block Golden Belt Dr, Hays; 3:45 PM
Animal Cruelty/Neglect–2000 block Milner St, Hays; 4:16 PM
Dead Animal Call–1400 block Hall St, Hays; 4:47 PM
Drug Offenses–1500 block E 17th St, Hays; 5:19 PM
Intoxicated Subject–3400 block Vine St, Hays; 6 PM
MV Accident-Co Road/St Hwy–1300 block Vine St, Hays; 6:20 PM
Theft (general)–500 block E 8th St, Hays; 6/6 5:30 PM; 6 PM
Harassment (All Other)–400 block E 8th St, Hays; 5:30 PM; 5:40 PM
Suspicious Activity–8th St and Vine St, Hays; 9:44 PM
Suspicious Activity–3400 block Vine St, Hays; 11:31:59 PM

Chapman, A’s break through in 6th to beat Royals

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) – Matt Chapman doubled in the go-ahead run in the sixth inning to make a winner of Paul Blackburn in his first start of the season, and the Oakland Athletics beat the Kansas City Royals 4-1 on Thursday night.

Matt Olson hit his 13th home run, Stephen Piscotty singled three times and Marcus Semien added two hits and an RBI to help the A’s to their third win in four games against the Royals over the past seven days.

Blackburn (1-0) was reinstated from the disabled list before the game after missing the first two months of the season with a strained right forearm he suffered late in spring training. The right-hander yielded three hits, including Alcides Escobar’s home run in the third and induced 11 groundouts over six innings.

Kansas City’s Jason Hammel (2-6) matched Blackburn until Oakland broke through for three runs in the sixth.

After Hammel retired Jed Lowrie on a fly ball, Khris Davis singled and moved to second when Olson walked. Chapman then hit a towering fly ball that hit near the top of the wall. Royals center fielder Paulo Orlando appeared to have a good jump on it but got twisted around near the wall before the ball ricocheted off the fence, allowing Davis to score.

Semien and Piscotty followed with back-to-back RBI singles.

Lou Trivino and Yusmeiro Petit retired three batters apiece for Oakland. Blake Treinen pitched the ninth for his 14th save.

Oakland finished with nine hits. In doing so, the A’s avoided becoming the first team since the 1910 Chicago White Sox to go 14 consecutive games at home with seven or fewer.

Hammel allowed four runs on eight hits in six innings against his former club. He struck out six and walked one.

The Royals have lost five straight.

Olson’s home run off Hammel in the fourth extended his hitting streak to a career-high seven games.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Orlando was recalled from Triple-A Omaha before the game and took the roster spot left vacant when Jon Jay was traded to Arizona in exchange for a pair of minor leaguers Wednesday.

Athletics: Catcher Bruce Maxwell was optioned to Triple-A Nashville. … OF Boog Powell (sprained right knee) was transferred to 60-day disabled list. … RHP Santiago Casilla (shoulder strain) is expected to come off the DL soon.

UP NEXT

RHP Frankie Montas (2-0, 0.64 ERA) pitches for Oakland on Friday night. Montas has allowed one run over 14 innings since being called up from the minors May 27. The Royals counter with RHP Jakob Junis (5-5, 3.62).

Larks rally past Great Bend

HAYS, Kan. – Matt Munoz double with one out in the eighth inning scored John Renzel with the go-ahead run to lead the Hays Larks to a 4-3 comeback win over the Great Bend Bat Cats Thursday night at Larks Park. The Larks improve to 5-1 overall and 2-0 in the Jayhawk League. Great Bend falls to 2-3 overall and 0-3 in the Jayhawk League after suffering their second straight one-run loss.

The Larks tied the game with two outs in the sixth on an Easton Smith balk with the bases loaded. The Ellis native allowed two earned runs on six hits over five innings and left with the game tied at three.

Toby Scoles pitched 3 2/3 innings of scoreless relief for the win. Fabian Munoz worked a perfect ninth with two strikeouts for the save.

Devin Hagar and Wyatt Divis both had two hits to lead the Larks 10-hit attack.

Starter Walter Pennington allowed three runs on four hit with eight walks and a couple of strikeouts.

The Larks open a three-game series with El Dorado Friday night beginning at seven. Free admission courtesy of Nex-Tech Wireless.

Sunny, hot Friday

Today Sunny, with a high near 93. South southeast wind 7 to 13 mph.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 67. South southeast wind 7 to 14 mph.

Saturday Sunny, with a high near 98. South wind 8 to 16 mph.

Saturday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 70. South wind 11 to 14 mph.

Sunday Sunny, with a high near 99. Breezy, with a south wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 17 to 22 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 33 mph.

Sunday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 72. Breezy.

MondaySunny, with a high near 91.

EPA finalizes action for greater transparency on chemicals used in cleaners, detergents

EPA

WASHINGTON  – This week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is finalizing a rule to add a category of thirteen specific nonylphenol ethoxylates (NPEs) to the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). This addition ensures the most up-to-date information is easily accessible to the public.

“We are taking an important step to provide communities with additional information about toxic chemicals being released to the environment,” said EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt. “By making information about industrial management of toxic chemicals available to the public, community members, researchers, industrial facilities, investors, and government agencies can make more informed decisions that impact human health and the environment.”

The finalized rule, which received public comment, is effective for the 2019 TRI reporting year with the first reporting forms due July 1, 2020. Facilities that meet TRI reporting thresholds will begin collecting information on January 1, 2019.

A valuable tool for communities, industry, and government to track chemical releases across the country, the TRI enhances knowledge about chemicals in the environment through understandable, interactive online charts and maps. This transparent database of information promotes progress towards the overall goal of responsibly managing chemicals and reducing toxic releases.

Background

NPEs are nonionic surfactants used in a wide variety of industrial applications and consumer products such as adhesives, wetting agents, emulsifiers, stabilizers, dispersants, defoamers, cleaners, paints, and coatings. Short-chain NPEs are highly toxic to aquatic organisms, and longer-chain NPEs, while not as toxic as short-chain NPEs, can break down in the environment to short-chain NPEs and nonylphenol, both of which are highly toxic to aquatic organisms.

TRI collects and tracks the management of listed toxic chemicals that may pose a threat to human health and the environment. The database includes annually reported information on chemicals released to the environment and otherwise managed through recycling, treatment, and recovery. The information submitted by facilities, which is compiled and made available to the public, helps support informed decision-making by companies, government agencies, non-governmental organizations and the public. TRI also creates a strong incentive for companies to reduce pollution and be good neighbors in their communities.

For more information on the TRI, see https://www.epa.gov/toxics-release-inventory-tri-program.

For more information on the final rule to add a NPE category to the TRI chemical list, see https://www.epa.gov/toxics-release-inventory-tri-program/addition-npes-category-tri-list-final-rule.

To learn more about NPEs, see https://www.epa.gov/assessing-and-managing-chemicals-under-tsca/risk-management-nonylphenol-and-nonylphenol-ethoxylates

Kansas man sentenced for 2012 high-speed crash

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A man has been sentenced to prison for causing a high-speed crash in a Lawrence residential neighborhood that resulted in injuries to two people.

First responders on the scene of the crash in 2012 file photo courtesy Lawrence Journal World

A judge sentenced 45-year-old Justin Crawford on Wednesday to nearly 3.5 years in prison, with credit for 10 months already served. The Topeka man will also serve two years’ probation and pay more than $5,800 in restitution to a crime victim compensation fund.

Crawford pleaded no contest to felony aggravated battery for seriously injuring two women in the car he hit Sept. 7, 2012. Prosecutors say he had been driving at high speeds after being given pain medication from several hospitals earlier that day.

Crawford’s attorney says he accepts responsibility for the crash and injuries.

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