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UPDATE: Some lawmakers not pleased with Trump-Putin conference

WASHINGTON (AP) — Key members of Congress, including some Republicans, are criticizing President Donald Trump’s performance at a press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin as “bizarre,” ”shameful” and a “missed opportunity” to stand up to Russia.

 

House Speaker Paul Ryan delivered a strongly worded statement, saying there’s “no question” that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election, and noting that U.S. intelligence agencies and a House panel agreed.

“The president must appreciate that Russia is not our ally,” Ryan said, in what was, for the mild-mannered speaker, akin to a reprimand. Ryan said Russia “remains hostile to our most basic values and ideals.”

Other high-profile Republicans also expressed dismay.

“I never thought I would see the day when our American President would stand on the stage with the Russian President and place blame on the United States for Russian aggression,” tweeted Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz. “This is shameful.”

Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., called it “bizarre” and “flat-out wrong” for Trump to suggest that both the U.S. and Russia are to blame for the deteriorated state of the two countries’ relationship.

Even Trump’s sometimes ally Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina called the summit a “missed opportunity by President Trump to firmly hold Russia accountable for 2016 meddling and deliver a strong warning regarding future elections.”

Image courtesy White House

Graham quipped that Trump ought to check a soccer ball Putin gave to Trump for listening devices, “and never allow it in the White House.”

The Republican rebuke from Capitol Hill came largely from those lawmakers who have been willing to openly criticize the president. But key Republicans, Democrats and others in Washington appeared stunned that Trump refused to publicly condemn Russian interference in the 2016 election or warn against future meddling during the joint press conference with Putin in Finland.

Trump appeared to take the Russian president’s denial of interference at face value while calling the U.S.’s own Justice Department special counsel’s probe as a “disaster.” That U.S. investigation, led by special counsel Robert Mueller, unveiled an indictment Friday against 12 Russian intelligence officers accused of hacking Democratic emails during the 2016 campaign.

At the joint appearance in Finland with Putin, Trump repeated the Russian leader’s denials about involvement in the election.

“He just said it’s not Russia,” Trump said of Putin. “I will say this: I don’t see any reason why it would be.”

Former intelligence chiefs who served under President Barack Obama were scathing in their criticism of his remarks. John Brennan, who served as CIA director between 2013 and January 2017, called the president’s comments “treasonous.”

“Donald Trump’s press conference performance in Helsinki rises to & exceeds the threshold of ‘high crimes & misdemeanors.’ It was nothing short of treasonous. Not only were Trump’s comments imbecilic, he is wholly in the pocket of Putin. Republican Patriots: Where are you???” Brennan tweeted.

James Clapper, who was director of national intelligence under Obama between 2010 and 2017, described Trump remarks as “truly unbelievable.”

“On the world stage in front of the entire globe the president of the United States essentially capitulated and seems intimidated by Vladimir Putin,” Clapper told CNN. “It was amazing and very, very disturbing.”

Clapper described Putin as an “arch enemy of the United States” who seeks to undermine its democracy and elections. “He has got to be celebrating on the way home to Moscow.”

Democrats sounded similar alarm. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, tweeted, “For the President to side with Putin over his own intelligence officials and blame the United States for Russia’s attack on our democracy is a complete disgrace.”

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the minority leader, says never in the history of the country has a president supported an American adversary the way Trump supported Putin. “For the president of the United States to side with President Putin against American law enforcement, American defense officials, and American intelligence agencies is thoughtless, dangerous, and weak.”

Yet while Trump’s remarks drew criticism in both parties, the reaction was more muted from the Republican side. Key GOP lawmakers at least initially refrained from directly attacking Trump’s performance, and at least one echoed the president’s criticism of the special counsel probe.

Rep. Darrell Issa of California he takes the charges filed by Mueller’s team seriously, but added, “I personally would neither rule in nor rule out the validity of a very interesting and odd-timed indictment of people who can never be brought to justice.”

___
4:10 p.m.
The one-on-one meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin is running overtime and has now passed the two-hour mark.

A Finnish official said the two leaders were still meeting as of 4:09 p.m., two hours after they began their meeting in the Gothic Hall of the Presidential Palace in Helsinki. The White House had scheduled 90 minutes for the meeting, in which only translators are present.

It’s not the first time the presidents’ talks have gone long. In their first meeting last year, they ended up talking for more than two hours. Midway through, first lady Melania Trump was sent in to help wrap things up. Trump and Putin continued to talk for another hour.
___
———-

President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are meeting privately, joined only by translators, in the Finnish Presidential Palace.

The two leaders entered the Gothic Hall with serious expressions, moving quickly to two ornate wooden chairs set before American and Russian flags. Trump sat upright as Putin appeared to lounge in his chair.

Trump deferred to Putin to make opening remarks, nodding along as his comments in Russian were translated. Trump predicted that the pair will have an “extraordinary relationship.”

Trump initiated a brief handshake with Putin, as the assembled press jostled to capture the moment.

Putin appeared to smirk as Trump ignored shouted questions about whether he would warn the Russian leader against meddling in the 2018 midterm elections.

___

 

President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin arrived Monday at Helsinki’s presidential palace for a long-awaited summit, hours after Trump blamed the United States, and not Russian election meddling or its annexation of Crimea, for a low-point in U.S.-Russia relations

The drama was playing out against a backdrop of fraying Western alliances, a new peak in the Russia investigation and fears that Moscow’s aggression may go unchallenged.

“Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse,” Trump tweeted Monday morning, blaming “many years of U.S. foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt!”

The summit, which was being closely watched by rattled world capitals, was condemned in advance by members of Congress from both parties after the U.S. indictment last week of 12 Russian military intelligence officers accused of hacking Democrats in the 2016 election to help Trump’s presidential campaign. Undeterred, the American president was set to go face to face with Putin, the authoritarian leader for whom he has expressed admiration.

Trump was greeted at the palace by Finland’s president. The summit was starting later than scheduled because Putin arrived in Helsinki about a half hour late in another display of the Russian’s leader famous lack of punctuality. Trump seemed to return the favor by waiting until Putin had arrived at the palace before leaving his hotel. Putin has been late for past meetings with the pope and British Queen, among many others.

Trump and his aides have repeatedly tried to lower expectations about what the summit will achieve. He told CBS News that he didn’t “expect anything” from Putin, while his national security adviser said the U.S. wasn’t looking for any “concrete deliverables.” Trump told reporters during a breakfast Monday with Finland’s president that he thought the summit would go “fine.”

The meeting comes as questions swirl about whether Trump will sharply and publicly rebuke his Russian counterpart for the election meddling that prompted a special counsel probe that Trump has repeatedly labeled a “witch hunt.”

In his tweets, Trump continued to undermine the investigation and blamed his predecessor, Barack Obama, for failing to stop Russia’s efforts to sway the 2016 election in Trump’s favor. He claimed Obama “was informed by the FBI about Russian Meddling, he said it couldn’t happen, was no big deal, & did NOTHING about it.”

The Obama administration did, in fact, take action, including confronting Putin in person as well as expelling nearly three dozen Russian diplomats the U.S. said were actually intelligence operatives and imposing new sanctions.

While Trump was eager for a made-for-TV moment that will dominate headlines like his sit-down with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last month, the Kremlin’s primary mission was simply to have the summit happen. Putin hopes the meeting, mere hours after he presided over the World Cup finals, will help him forge good personal ties with Trump and focus on areas where Moscow and Washington may be able to find common ground, such as Syria.

The two leaders first meet one on one in the Finnish presidential palace’s opulent Gothic Hall, then continue their discussions with an expanded group of aides and over lunch in the Hall of Mirrors, once the emperor’s throne room. The leaders will conclude by taking questions at a joint news conference.

Observers have raised concerns about the fact that the leaders will be alone during their first meeting, but for a pair of interpreters, meaning there will be no corroborating witnesses to accurately represent what was said during the conversation.

Putin will likely not be shooting for official recognition of Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea or easing of the crippling U.S. sanctions, aware that the U.S. Congress would never allow such action. But he would welcome a symbolic end to Western protests over Crimea and Moscow’s attempts to destabilize elections and traditional Western alliances and norms.

Trump unleashed his own attacks on those very institutions before arriving in Finland.

In an interview with CBS News that aired Sunday, Trump described the European Union, a bloc of nations that includes many of America’s closest allies, as a “foe.”

That attack on the alliance came on the heels of Trump’s jarring appearance at a NATO summit in Brussels, where he harshly criticized traditional allies over “delinquent” defense spending only to later confirm his commitment to the military alliance that has long been a bulwark against Russian aggression.

“NATO is now strong & rich!” Trump wrote in a celebratory tweet Monday morning. During his breakfast, he said NATO had “never been more together” and said the summit had been “a little bit tough at the beginning, but it turned out to be love.”

Prior to meeting Putin, who has cracked down on the free press, Trump unleashed fresh attacks on the news media, including from aboard Air Force One as it descended into Helsinki.

“Unfortunately, no matter how well I do at the Summit, if I was given the great city of Moscow as retribution for all of the sins and evils committed by Russia over the years, I would return to criticism that it wasn’t good enough – that I should have gotten Saint Petersburg in addition!” Trump tweeted. “Much of our news media is indeed the enemy of the people and all the Dems know how to do is resist and obstruct!”

“Russia has done nothing to deserve us meeting them in this way,” said Nina Jankowicz, a global fellow at the Wilson Center’s Kennan Institute who specializes in Russia, Ukraine and disinformation. For Putin, she added, “not only is this a P.R. coup no matter what happens, Trump could say nothing and it would help to legitimize his regime.”

Hovering over Helsinki is the specter of the 2016 election interference and ongoing special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and Russia.

Trump said in Britain last week — another chaotic stop on his European tour — that he would raise the issue of election meddling with Putin even as he played down its impact.

“I don’t think you’ll have any ‘Gee, I did it. I did it. You got me,'” said Trump, invoking a television detective. “There won’t be a Perry Mason here, I don’t think. But you never know what happens, right? But I will absolutely firmly ask the question.”

Trump also said in the CBS interview that he had given no thought to asking Putin to extradite the dozen Russian military intelligence officers indicted this past week in on charges related to the hacking of Democratic targets.

But after being asked about that by his interviewer, Trump said “certainly I’ll be asking about it” although extradition is highly unlikely. The U.S. doesn’t have an extradition treaty with Moscow and can’t force the Russians to hand over citizens. Russia’s constitution also prohibits turning over citizens to foreign governments.

Putin is likely to strongly reaffirm his denial of any meddling and cast the U.S. charges as unfounded.

The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected last week’s indictment as part of a “shameful comedy” staged by those in the U.S. who try to prevent the normalization of Russia-U.S. ties, arguing that it doesn’t contain evidence to back the accusations.

On Syria, a possible deal could see Moscow helping mediate the withdrawal of Iranian forces and their Hezbollah proxies from the areas alongside Syria’s border with Israel — a diplomatic coup that would reflect Russia’s carefully cultivated ties with both Israel and Iran.

While both Putin and Trump spoke about the need to discuss arms control issues, they are unlikely to make any quick deals. They may underline the importance of continuing the discussions, setting the stage for discussions on expert level.

Strategic Doing workshops offered in two locations

Betty Johnson at a Strategic Doing in Hays

The Dane G. Hansen Foundation announces two workshops open to the public to learn more about the Strategic Doing process.

Since April of 2017, the Hansen Foundation has contracted with Betty Johnson, a certified Strategic Doing facilitator, to work with northwest Kansas counties to assess their needs and develop solutions using Strategic Doing. Many positive changes are underway as a result of this work.

The process is one that can be used over and over again in a community. It is offered as a tool to help communities continue creative and innovative work.

The workshop will teach participants how to better utilize local networks, strengthen collaborations, guide conversations for better understanding, how to promote action and ultimately, engage in successful projects.

Strategic Doing teaches how sharing values and building trust can be used to create strategic opportunities, while doing away with hierarchies and turf battles that impair progress in our communities.

The workshops will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on August 16th at the Student Union at NCK Tech in Beloit, and again on August 22nd at the Student Union at Colby Community College in Colby.

Facilitators will be Betty Johnson and Tara Vance, director of the Norton County Community Foundation.

There is no cost to attend, however reservations are required. RSVP to: [email protected]. Be sure to note which workshop you will attend.

For more information on the content of the workshops, contact Betty Johnson, Betty Johnson & Associates, at [email protected] or 785-313-3632.

CAC Garage Sale July 17

Community Assistance Center Garage Sale, 12th and Oak, Hays

Tue., July 17 from 8 a.m. – 11 a.m.

As always your support helps provide food and other items to those in need in Ellis county. We accept donations daily from 7:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and Saturday afternoon 1-3 p.m.

Please bag items that you put in the outside Drop Box.

Thank you!

United Way Day of Action is July 26

The United Way of Ellis County will be having their Second Annual Day of Action on July 26th and once again, the United Way is calling on our communities to help collect supplies that will benefit the partner agencies. The United Way will be accepting donations at their offices, 205 E. 7th – Suite 111.

Last year the United Way used the Pacesetter Kick-off to establish their first Day of Action. They had accepted over 700 donated office supply items for the partner agencies. This year they hope to surpass that number.

Examples of items needed are pens, staples, paper, paper towels, toilet paper, Kleenexes. For more information go to www.liveunited.us/day-action.

New behavioral health crisis stabilization facilities opening in Kansas

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS) has signed contracts to provide funding to Community Mental Health Centers (CMHCs) in Salina and Manhattan for the creation of two new crisis stabilization facilities to care for individuals experiencing a mental health or substance use crisis, according to a media release from the KDAADS.

“Kansas communities face the continual challenge of helping those who are struggling with mental illness as families deal with the ongoing anxiety of trying to maintain stability and safety, while also meeting the needs of their mentally ill loved ones,” Governor Jeff Colyer, M.D., said. “Crisis services such as these will allow communities to divert those in mental crisis from emergency rooms, county jails and the state hospitals to a setting where they can be properly cared for and diagnosed.”

“We believe these new centers will significantly improve care for the mentally ill in their communities, and comfort their families as well,” said KDADS Secretary Tim Keck. “We hope to expand this community-based care model to more parts of Kansas in the near future. It has worked well beyond our expectations in the Kansas City metro area, Topeka and South-Central Kansas, and we believe it will be equally as successful in these very different and more rural areas.”

Kyle Kessler, Executive Director for the Association of Community Mental Health Centers, said “The leadership by Governor Colyer and Secretary Keck in supporting the existing community crisis centers and establishing these new ones has been very valuable to our state’s mental health system.”

“Key partnerships among community stakeholders and legislators were also major factors in creating these programs that provide a ‘port of calm’ for individuals who need something more than outpatient treatment but not quite an admission to a state mental health hospital,” Kessler added.

With funding flexibility provided through the CMHCs, KDADS has contracted with Central Kansas Mental Health Center in Salina to serve Saline, Dickinson, Ellsworth, Lincoln and Ottawa counties, and Pawnee Mental Health Services in Manhattan to serve Riley, Potawatomie, Geary, Clay, Cloud, Washington, Republic, Mitchell and Jewell counties.

Crisis stabilization units are a direct response to the need of persons with mental health and substance use problems to be treated in a less restrictive setting. They offer individuals in crisis a continuum of assessment and stabilization services in a single location and provide them ongoing access to other community-based services.

Individuals experiencing a crisis will be served and supported in their local community, which is more desirable for patients and their families. In addition, these units relieve law enforcement and county jails of the need to provide individuals with a kind of care they are often not equipped to deliver. The ability to treat individuals in the community rather than transferring them to one of the state hospitals for inpatient care is a cost-effective way to get them the care they need.

KDADS is providing $85,000 to fund the facility in Salina, and $725,000 for the Manhattan facility.

HaysMed receives ‘Get With The Guidelines-Stroke Gold Plus’ quality achievement award

HAYSMED

HaysMed, part of The University of Kansas Health System, has received the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines®-Stroke Gold Plus Quality Achievement Award. The award recognizes the hospital’s commitment to ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized, research-based guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence.

HaysMed earned the award by meeting specific quality achievement measures for the diagnosis and treatment of stroke patients at a set level for a designated period. These measures include evaluation of the proper use of medications and other stroke treatments aligned with the most up-to-date, evidence-based guidelines with the goal of speeding recovery and reducing death and disability for stroke patients. Before discharge, patients should also receive education on managing their health, get a follow-up visit scheduled, as well as other care transition interventions.

“HaysMed is dedicated to improving the quality of care for our stroke patients by implementing the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Stroke initiative,” said Erin Hemphill, Hospitalist and Medical Director of the Stroke Program at HaysMed.   “The tools and resources provided help us track and measure our success in meeting evidenced-based clinical guidelines developed to improve patient outcomes.” 

HaysMed additionally received the association’s StrokeSM Elite Plus) award. To qualify for this recognition, hospitals must meet quality measures developed to reduce the time between the patient’s arrival at the hospital and treatment with the clot-buster tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA, the only drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat ischemic stroke.

“We are pleased to recognize HaysMed for their commitment to stroke care,” said Eric E. Smith, M.D., national chairman of the Get With The Guidelines Steering Committee and an associate professor of neurology at the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada. “Research has shown that hospitals adhering to clinical measures through the Get With The Guidelines quality improvement initiative can often see fewer readmissions and lower mortality rates.”

According to the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, stroke is the No. 5 cause of death and a leading cause of adult disability in the United States. On average, someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke every 40 seconds and nearly 795,000 people suffer a new or recurrent stroke each year.

 

Ellis city council to discuss days allowed for fireworks discharge

ELLIS – Ellis city council members plan to rethink the days fireworks are allowed to be discharged in town. Currently, the city of Ellis allows fireworks July 3-5 from 8 a.m. to 12 a.m.

The city of Hays allows the sale and discharge of fireworks July 2-4 from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. The Ellis County Commission allowed the same hours and days for fireworks use this year in unincorporated areas of the county.

Other agenda items for tonight’s meeting include opening of bids for a city land lease.

The complete agenda follows.

 

AGENDA

July 16, 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 July 2, 2018
    2. Bills Ordinance #2049

(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)
  • SPECIAL ORDER
    1. Opening of Bids for City Land Lease
    2. Fire Department Monthly Report – Chief Dustin Vine
  • UNFINISHED BUSINESS
  • NEW BUSINESS
    1. Consider Approval of Application for License to Sell Cereal Malt Beverages – Ellis Volunteer Fire Department
    2. Consider Approval of Noise Permit Application and Event Request for Traffic Control – Ellis Jr Free Fair
    3. Discuss Dates of Discharge for Fireworks
  • REPORTS FROM CITY OFFICIALS
    1. Administrative
      • Public Works
        • Comparative Water Report
        • Department Update
      • Police
        • Department Update
      • City Clerk
        • Health Insurance Savings Report for June
        • Department Update
      • Attorney
        • Update on Status of Code Violation Cases
      • Mayor Update and Announcements

EXECUTIVE SESSIONS

  • ADJOURNMENT

USD 489 Hays enrollment open for 2018-19 school year

USD 489

Online Enrollment for USD 489 has opened as of today. Below you’ll find steps for completing enrollment forms and paying the enrollment fees. There’s also information about when you can come in person to meet your enrollment needs.
 
There are two steps for enrolling your student/students at USD 489.
 
The first step is to complete the online forms that are accessible through your PowerSchool Parent Account. Once you are logged in you will click on Ecollect Forms in the menu along the left side of the screen. This will take you to a list of forms that are required for enrollment. You can fill these out at your convenience before Aug. 1 or you can come to Hays High on Aug. 1 or 2 during our Central Enrollment and use district devices to fill out the forms. Instructions on how to progress through the forms are attached to this email as well as on the USD 489 website, www.usd489.com

 The second step is to pay the enrollment fees. This can be done online through our district store (3.61 % convenience fee is applied) or you are can go to the Central Enrollment at Hays High School on Aug. 1 and 2 to pay by either cash or check. The district online store is accessible at https://hays.revtrak.net or on the USD 489 website link above. Instructions on how to maneuver through the online store are attached as well as available on the USD 489 website. If you choose to fill out the forms online and pay by cash or check at the Central Enrollment, there is a Speedy Checkout line that will get you in and out quick.
 
USD 489 Central Enrollment will be from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Aug. 1 and from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 2 at the Hays High School cafeteria. At Central Enrollment, you can speak with any of the building administrators, get building-specific information, speak with our Nutrition Department, our Special Education Department, and many other services as well as community information.
 
If you have any questions, contact the Rockwell Administration Center, 785-623-2400, or your student’s school.
Hays High School 785-623-2600
Hays Middle School 785-623-2450
Lincoln Elementary 785-623-2500
O’Loughlin Elementary 785-623-2510
Roosevelt Elementary 785-623-2520
Wilson Elementary 785-623-2550
 
If you have problems going through the enrollment steps, you may contact Amy Arnhold at [email protected] for assistance.

Please also note any families with new students or incoming kindergarten students should attend central enrollment in person on Aug. 1 or 2.  Information regarding enrollment and the 2018-2019 school year can be found at https://www.usd489.com/?p=5559.

 

It’s easy to vote in upcoming Kansas primaries, but register now

The deadline to register before the Aug. 7 primaries is Tuesday, July 17. Fear not, registering is easy.

FILE PHOTO
CELIA LLOPIS-JEPSEN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

So is finding your polling location, or voting in advance. Read on.

First, check if you’re already registered and have a party affiliation.

All you need is your birth date, county of residence and full name to check online.

Easy, right?

You’ll also see whether you have declared any party affiliation. Your address needs to be current, so pay attention to that detail. Even if you just moved within your apartment building or block.

You need a party affiliation to vote in the primary. You can still pick Republican or Democrat by re-registering — or you can declare at the polls. But if you already have one and were hoping to switch, it’s too late to do so for the primary.

Not registered yet or want to update your registration?

Online, mail and in-person options will all work in time for the July 17 deadline. You don’t need to include copies of citizenship documents, such as a passport or birth certificate, as was the case in the past.

IN PERSON: Visit your county election office, which is easy to find. If you happen to be at your local DMV to get or renew your driver’s license, you can do it there, too.

ONLINE: Register online using the state form on the Kansas Secretary of State’s website. Some civic groups have been recommending filling out the federal form on the third-party website KSvotes.org instead, for reasons related to a protracted and convoluted legal showdown between the League of Women Voters and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach. (It’s a long story.) Either form will get you fully registered to vote in local, state and federal elections. Just remember to leave enough time for the internet to do its magic by midnight July 17.

BY MAIL: You can print a state form or federal form and send it by good old snail mail. As long as it is postmarked July 17 or earlier, it counts.

Vote in advance or from home if you want!

IN PERSON: You can vote at your county election office before noon, Aug. 6 during the week leading up to the election. Voting starts earlier in some counties. The evening of July 17 the Secretary of State’s Office will post those counties and their extended dates.

BY MAIL: Request a ballot from your county election office by July 31. Fill it out in your kitchen or wherever and mail it back postmarked no later than election day. As long as it reaches the county by the Friday after the election, it will be counted.

Or, heck, go to the polls on election day!

Don’t forget you need to take ID to the polls in Kansas. Your driver’s license or concealed carry permit will work, among other things.

Polls open at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. on Aug. 7. Check your voting location.

But who’s even running?

Your online registration record will show you the districts you live in. For example, “State Board of Education 4” and “Kansas Representative 46.” You can see who’s running in State Board of Education District 4 or any other position by pulling up the complete candidate list.

What to make of the candidates? You’ll have to do your own homework on that.

If you have a criminal record

If you’ve been convicted of a misdemeanor, you can vote. If you’ve been convicted of a felony, you can vote, too, once you have completed any prison, probation and parole time you received.

You may need to re-register, so remember to check now whether you are registered.

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

New competency hearing for Kan. woman charged in beheading

SEDGWICK — A competency hearing for the woman accused of decapitation her ex-boyfriend’s mother is set for Monday afternoon in Wichita.

Hilyard-photo Sedgwick Co.

The hearing for 35-year-old Rachael Hilyard was moved from Wednesday before Judge Bruce Brown, according to a media release from the Sedgwick County Attorney’s office.

In January, a judge ruled a Hilyard was not competent to stand trial.

She was ordered returned to Larned State Hospital for more treatment and her status would be re-evaluated.

Hilyard is charged with first-degree murder in the April 2017 death of 63-year-old Micki Davis. Hilyard is the ex-girlfriend of Davis’ son. Sedgwick County District Attorney Marc Bennett said a hospital evaluation found that Hilyard could regain competency if she continues treatment.

Prosecutors say Davis was attacked when she went with her 9-year-old grandson to a home to get property. The boy was able to run away and call 911.

Davis’ decapitated body was found in the garage and her head was in the kitchen sink.

Donna Jo Warhurst

Donna Jo was born on December 14, 1949, in Auburn, NE. During her freshman year in high school she moved to Oakley, KS and began living with Dr. James and Paula Marchbanks. She graduated from Oakley High School in 1967, attended Colby Community College, and then attended Cosmetology School in Salina, KS where she met the love her life, Robert “Bob” Warhurst. They were married on January 5, 1969 and would be celebrating their 50th anniversary this coming January. Donna Jo worked at the Oakley Police Department for 32 years and retired in 2007 celebrating her retirement on her birthday.

Donna Jo is survived by her loving husband Bob, her daughter Kathy Boeger, husband Chris and granddaughters Ashley Boeger and Devan Savner (Kyle), and daughter Heather Wilson, husband Paul and grandchildren Dodge, Dixie, and Shelby Ellegood and Audrey Wilson, mother Paula Marchbanks, her very special and close sister Rhonda Warhurst and brother-in-law Frank, siblings Carol Weiser (Randy), Joseph Vontz (Eleanor), Kathy Redger (Dale), Leslie Marchbanks, Ronald Marchbanks (Valerie), and Charles Marchbanks (Paula) along with many nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by father Dr. James Marchbanks, very best friend Betty Webber, and brothers Roger Maurer and Kenny Ray Maurer.

The family has chosen cremation. Graveside services will be 10:00 A.M., Wednesday, July 18, 2018 at Prairie Mound Cemetery in Solomon. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorials be given to the Gove County Medical Center. Memorials may be dropped off or mailed to Carlson-Becker Funeral Home, P.O. Box 308, Solomon, Kansas 67480.

Vivian Ann (Long) Herrmann

Vivian Ann (Long) Herrmann was born December 21, 1937 in her grandparents’ home in Union Township, Sheridan County, Kansas to John and Ura (Launchbaugh) Long. She attended one-room school in Waverly, Kansas and then earned a Bachelor’s of Science degree in Education from Emporia State University.

She married her husband of 47 years, John Herrmann, on December 27, 1958. After her graduation, John and Vivian moved to California where she taught middle-school Home Economics until the birth of their son. Vivian then focused on raising her family and added a daughter. Once her children entered high school, Vivian returned to work as a Quality Assurance Specialist for Rockwell International, working on the B1A and B1B Bombers. She returned to college and earned her Master’s degree in Business Management.

When Vivian retired in 1994, she and John returned to the family acreage in Sheridan County where they built their dream home. Vivian was an active and wholehearted member of the McGraw Methodist church, serving as pianist and treasurer for more than 20 years. Throughout her life she enjoyed sewing and crafting and always had a book of anacrostic puzzles in the works. She delighted in her flower garden, koi pond and animal friends of all kinds but without question, her greatest joy was her grandchildren.

Vivian passed away on July 9, 2018 in Hays, KS at the age of 80. She was preceded in death by her brother, Vernon Long, her husband, John, and her son David Herrmann. She is survived by her daughter, Kelly Smith, and her husband Adam, and grandchildren, Kyle Broxson of Yuba City, CA, Noah, Levi, and Emily Smith of Hays, KS; her daughter-in-law, Diane Herrmann, and granddaughter Sara of Oketo, KS; and nieces Jeanne Brooks and Joanne Long and nephews Jeff Long, Joe Long, and Jim Long.

Funeral services will be held 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, July 17, 2018 at McGraw United Methodist Church, with burial following in the Hoxie Cemetery. Visitation will be from 1:00 p.m. until 7:00 p.m. Monday, July 16, 2018 at the funeral home. Arrangements were made by the Mickey-Leopold Funeral Home.

🎥 Northeast Ellis County sees flash flooding after 5 inches of rain


2300 block of Feedlot Road Courtesy video

By CRISTINA JANNEY 
Hays Post

Northeast Ellis County experienced flash flooding Monday morning after a storm dumped 5 inches of the rain on the area.

Bill Ring, Ellis County public works director, said he was called out about 4:30 a.m. by deputies who reported water running over roads in the county.

Ring and the sheriff’s office said as of 9 a.m. the water was quickly receding. No roads were reported closed, but some portions of roads could be blocked with cones.

Ring said drivers should continue to be cautious as streams could still cause problems as runoff funnels into waterways. He also said some roads could be damaged because of the flood waters. He urged local residents to call the county public works department at 785-628-9455 to report damage.

No major property damage was reported and no one was injured, Ring said.

The official rain report for the last 24 hours for Hays from the K-State Research and Extension station was a trace of rain.

Ring urged drivers to continue to always follow the motto, “Turn around, don’t drown.”

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