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Kansas offers paid leave to more than 17K state employees

TOPEKA (AP) — Outgoing Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer has signed an executive order giving paid parental leave to more than 17,000 government employees.

The Wichita Eagle reports that Colyer signed the order Wednesday. It creates a policy that all state employees under the governor’s jurisdiction will be eligible for paid leave after the birth or adoption of a child. Primary caregivers will receive six weeks of paid leave, while secondary caregivers will receive three weeks.

Under the police, employees will receive 100 percent of their regular salary during leave.

The order doesn’t apply to the Legislature or judicial branch. Agencies headed by other elected officials, such as the secretary of state’s office, also aren’t included. With the order, Kansas becomes one of 15 states, including Missouri, to provide paid parental leave to employees.

Esports integrity chief concerned about Fortnite gambling

By JAKE SEINER
AP Sports Writer

The commissioner of the Esports Integrity Coalition says skill-based betting on battle royale games like Fortnite and PlayerUnknown’s Battleground could be vulnerable to cheating.

Esports gambling website Unikrn announced plans last month to bring legal skill-based betting to the U.S., allowing players to wager on themselves. Users would link their game to the Unikrn platform, and Unikrn will generate odds for the player based on his or her profile within the game.

ESIC Commissioner Ian Smith says such wagering is likely to be popular, but he’s concerned the industry is not yet prepared to govern it. In particular, he’s skeptical operators like Unikrn have the ability to ensure the skill ratings of the bettor match the abilities of the person manning the controls.

For instance, what would stop a player from placing a Fortnite bet using his or her account, then handing the controller over to a more talented friend? Or, what would prevent talented players from hustling the system by nuking their game profile before placing a series of big bets?

“I’m not certain that the tools exist yet that would properly identify the person playing the game is the same person who normally ran that account,” Smith told The Associated Press.

Unikrn, a betting partner of the ESIC, believes its Connekt platform can prevent such fraudulent betting.

“We have thousands of players playing thousands of matches which we use to understand the competitive ecosystem of a game and the players themselves,” Unikrn CEO Rahul Sood said in a statement to the AP. “We pride ourselves on giving users the best experience, which we can only do with a personal knowledge of how they enjoy gaming. That same personal knowledge is key to ensuring integrity in all wagering elements of our platform.”

The risk that cheating may go unnoticed is higher in battle royales than in other competitive video games. Battle royales are last-man-standing clashes between many competitors — Fortnite and PUBG host up to 100 players per game — and have more volatile outcomes than multiplayer games like League of Legends or Overwatch.

Publishers and operators can use algorithms to flag unusual performances in games like League of Legends because those games are complex and luck is not a factor.

“Just like we’re able to flag suspicious activity from an esportsbook customer, we get a deep understanding of our players by the data in their games,” Unikrn chief product officer Karl Flores said in a statement to the AP. “Basic elements, such as checking for suspicious IP address changes, and more complex game information are together used to build player models and create gamer fingerprints.”

Data from games like Fortnite or PUBG may be less reliable, though, because battle royales have less predictable outcomes. It’s not unusual for a talented player to be eliminated in the early moments of a Fortnite match, or for less experienced players to luck into a high finish.

“The battle royale games pose particular problems because they don’t actually lend themselves to traditional esports formats, and therefore to traditional betting formats,” Smith said.

The volatility is also an issue for odds-based betting on Fortnite or PUBG. Traditional sports books have successfully featured odds for major events in games like League of Legends, DOTA and Counter-Strike for years in Asia and Europe. Unikrn hopes to widen the breadth of wagers available, capitalizing on the fact that most esports lend themselves well to prop bets and in-game wagering.

Battle royales are an exception, because gamblers can essentially only bet on the final outcome.

“The betting on tournament play is evolving slowly and nobody’s making much money out of it,” Smith said. “Everybody’s interested, obviously … but offering interesting and good markets is very, very difficult at this stage.”

Smith believes illegal esports betting in the U.S. is at least a $1 billion industry, much of it going to offshore books or the dark web. Unikrn is working to bring legal esports odds betting to most of the U.S., but skills-based betting is already legal in 41 states.

Peer to peer betting is still in its infancy, and Smith believes the next step is convincing potential bettors they’ll get a fair shake on such wagers.

“If people feel they’re getting ripped off by boosters and smurfers and guys who play well above their rating in terms of a match-making system, they’re simply going to stop doing it, aren’t they?” Smith said. “There is a risk to the operator in that sense. What he really needs to do is provide a credible platform so that when you go on and play, you feel like you’re playing against somebody of roughly your level and therefore there’s a decent contest of skill involved.”

If Unikrn or another operator can successfully create that platform, the payoff could be huge. Smith expects legitimate skill-based betting would be wildly popular.

“I think if they do that right, it’ll be enormously profitable,” Smith said. “Because there’s so many people playing this game, and having something at stake beyond your pride is always attractive, whatever game you look at. From guys playing snooker or golf or any game, putting a bit of money on a handshake generally adds something to that situation, and I see no reason why that wouldn’t be true of Fortnite.”

KZ Country Cheesy Joke of the Day 11/23/18

khaz cheesy joke logo 20110802A Little Help

An elderly man is walking down the street one day when he notices a very
small boy trying to press a doorbell on a house across the street.
However, the boy is very small and the doorbell is too high for him to
reach.

After watching the boy’s efforts for a moment, the man crosses the
street, walks up behind the little fellow, leans over and gives the
doorbell a solid ring.

“Ding Dong”

Crouching down to the child’s level, the old man smiles and asks, “And
now what, my little man?”

To which the boy replies, “Now we run!”

 

Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

 

 

 

BELL: It pays to shop small in your community

Bell

By WAYNE BELL
U.S. Small Business Administration

The 2018 Holiday Season is rapidly approaching or already begun depending on your perspective. As we are finalizing menus and guest lists for Thanksgiving Day meals, maybe you are already thinking ahead about the friends and family you will be shopping with or for on that notorious biggest shopping weekend of the year. You might already be scouting Black Friday deals, making your plans to be efficient and get the most bang for your buck. But have you thought about how your local community can get the most bang for your buck?

Your community gets more return on your dollar when you shop small and local. Small businesses are the glue that holds our communities together. They create jobs and boost the economy. In fact two of every three new jobs are created by small business. How does that add up? In Kansas that amounts to 99.1 percent of all businesses are small and 51 percent of Kansans either own or are employed by small businesses.

During this holiday season, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) hopes you will celebrate the more than 250,000 small businesses in Kansas that ignite our local economies and enrich our communities throughout the year by shopping and dining local and small on Small Business Saturday this November 24. What is Small Business Saturday? It is a day for each of us to acknowledge those businesses that deliver essential goods and services to our communities 365 days a year by shopping or dining with them while we are out and about in our communities, shopping, dining, or just enjoying a visit over a cup of coffee with family and friends.

Last year, Small Business Saturday generated approximately $12 billion in spending and four in ten American adults reporting having shopped or dined small on that day. Why did shoppers and diners make that kind of commitment last year? In Kansas 64 percent of survey respondents shared they enjoyed supporting their local communities and 48 percent said that staff and owners at independently-owned businesses often provide better customer service – and we all know how critical that can be to keep our spirits up and the holiday mood joyous during busy shopping days!

I encourage you to join me and more than 100 million Americans that will shop and dine small this Small Business Saturday, November 24. Show your support for the Kansas small businesses that keep us all going not only throughout the Holiday Season, but all year long. Be sure to share your great stories and where you’re shopping via social media using #ShopSmall. And from our whole SBA team in Wichita, we hope you have a safe and prosperous Holiday Season.

Wayne Bell is District Director of the Wichita District Office, U.S. Small Business Administration.

Sebelius: Coalition building key to Democrat Kelly’s success as Kan. governor

Former Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (right) campaigned with former Republican Gov. Bill Graves for governor-elect Laura Kelly on the eve of the election. Kansas News Service

By JIM MCLEAN
Kansas News Service

They say it takes one to know one. As Kansas governor-elect Laura Kelly soon will be, former governor Kathleen Sebelius was a Democrat leading the state while Republicans controlled the Legislature.

Jim McLean of the Kansas News Service spoke with Sebelius about the support from Republicans that helped Kelly overcome competition from Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach and independent Greg Orman in the governor’s race and what will make her successful in office.

Did the cross-party endorsements of Laura Kelly by prominent Republicans make a difference in the governor’s race?

Bill Graves — my predecessor, moderate Republican, two-term governor … he didn’t endorse me. He had not endorsed a Democrat running for governor. For him to come out right after the primary and make that first endorsement was hugely significant. …

[Former U.S. Senator] Nancy Kassebaum had not endorsed me. She’s a friend I’d worked with her, but this was a unique situation for both of them and for her, again, to say to a lot of her supporters, women independents, moderate Republicans, ‘I’m with Laura.’ …

And then … to add [former Republican Gov.] Mike Hayden to that chorus was very significant.

How well will Kelly’s reputation for bipartisanship serve her as governor?

I think what she brings is a lot more than a reputation. She has hands on experience in the Legislature, building consensus and building coalitions. She has relationships with a lot of the people who she will be serving with and continuing to serve with. And she also has been elected as a legislator. She knows what that takes, what they’re telling their constituents back home, what they need to produce in Topeka.

I always felt that … it was a huge advantage to me to be a governor who had served in the Legislature because you know the job very well and you know what the committees are like and you know how to get things done. Laura [Kelly] has that in spades.

She also is one of the key budget experts in the whole Legislature. She knows where the money is, what the framework is. …

And what she knows very well is even if all the Democrats vote for all the legislation she proposes, she loses every fight, so she has to have a way to put a coalition together. … It’s a different [coalition], depending on what the issue is — school finance issues may be one group of people; something on criminal justice reform may be a very different group of people; economic development and building roads and bridges may be a third.

But … knowing what that coalition might look like, knowing how to get that done … [Kelly] does not need training wheels for this job. She’s ready to go.

How has the political climate changed since Sebelius was governor of Kansas herself?

I definitely think the atmosphere is more partisan and more poison.

I do think Kansas both in 2016 with a turn to a more moderate Legislature and then again in 2018 have said, ‘we really are not sure we want to be part of that mix.’

… And Laura [Kelly] will be the beneficiary of that, of people saying ‘we want to get some things done,’ ‘we do believe that the state was headed in the wrong direction under the Brownback administration.’

Kris Kobach embraced [Brownback’s agenda] fully and then added some Trumpian features, but the [governor’s] race was really about whether or not the policies put in place by [former Gov.] Sam Brownback and [Gov.] Jeff Colyer should continue or whether we needed to move in a new direction.

And I think the voters pretty overwhelmingly said, ‘new direction.’

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks.

KDWPT approves fee increases, fishing regulations at Russell hearing

RUSSELL – The Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Commission conducted a Public Hearing at their November meeting on Nov. 15 to hear recommendations on Park fees and fishing regulations. The meeting agenda, briefing and a recorded video of the proceedings can be found HERE.

In response to rising utility costs, commissioners approved a staff recommendation to increase recreational vehicle seasonal (long-term) camping permit fees by $150 per month at five state parks (Clinton, Milford, Sand Hills, Tuttle Creek and El Dorado) and $100 per month at most others (KAR 115-2-3). Commissioners also approved repealing the regulation requiring a Trail Access Pass (KAR 115-2-5), which will allow access of the Prairie Spirit Trail without a permit. Visit www.ksoutdoors.com, “State Parks” for a complete listing of state park fees.

In other business, the Commission approved an amendment to the regulation governing the take and use of baitfish or minnows, increasing the maximum mesh size on dip or cast nets used to catch baitfish to 1 inch (KAR 1150-7-3). Common carp and koi were removed from the list of live species allowed to be sold for bait (KAR 115-17-2), and finally the marbled crayfish (Procambarus virginalis) was added to the list of species that may not be imported or possessed (KAR 115-18-10).

The next meeting of the Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Commission is scheduled for Dec. 13, 2018 at the Great Plains Nature Center, 6232 E 29th St. N, in Wichita. The afternoon session will be begin at 1:30 p.m., and the Public Hearing will begin at 6:30 p.m. Items to be voted on at the December Public Hearing include setting Free Park Entrance an Free Fishing Days; establishing a Backcountry Access Pass; fishing regulations, including methods of take, possession, and creel and length limits for various water bodies; the fall turkey season, bag limits and permits; and the spring turkey season, bag limit, permits and game tags.

First lady to take part in town hall on opioids

Melania Trump
WASHINGTON (AP) — Liberty University has announced that first lady Melania Trump will participate in a town hall discussion at Liberty University next week about the opioid epidemic.

Also participating in the Nov. 28 event will be Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Dianna Hart, whose daughter Demi Lovato was hospitalized over the summer after a reported drug overdose. The discussion also will include former Fox News host Eric Bolling, whose college-age son died last year of a mix of cocaine and the painkiller fentanyl.

Bolling tweeted Wednesday that the first lady would join him “for an intimate and important one-on-one discussion” at the town hall in Lynchburg, Virginia.

Addressing the opioid epidemic is part of the first lady’s “Be Best” campaign.

Police say woman injured holding onto door of stolen pickup

WICHITA (AP) — Authorities say a 31-year-old woman was injured while holding onto a door of a stolen pickup truck in Wichita.

Police say the pickup was reported stolen Wednesday morning. The woman and a 30-year-old male with her apparently learned later that the pickup was seen at a Lost Sock laudromat.

Their pickup was still there when they arrived, and an argument soon broke out between them and a person sitting behind the wheel.

Police say the man fired his gun several times as the person in the truck tried to drive away. The woman grabbed onto the driver’s side door but let go when one of her legs struck a street sign.

No arrests have been reported, and it’s unclear whether the driver was struck by any of the bullets.

Police haven’t released the names of those involved.

HaysMed offers winter session of Athletic Edge

The Winter Session of Athletic Edge at HaysMed, part of The University of Kansas Health System, will run from Dec. 3 through Feb. 23.  This program is designed for ages 10 – 18 to increase their skills in a fun, positive environment.  Our certified professional trainer will determine your individual strengths and weaknesses and then guide you through an intense program.  Workouts are designed to motivate and challenge athletes while providing age-level safe and appropriate techniques and corrections that set a foundation for good life-time habits.  We will also teach you how to decrease your chance of injury so that you’re able to stay in the game as long as you want.  Whatever your sport of choice is, we can help you turn small gains into big results.

Workouts are held every Monday and Thursday from 6-8 pm and Saturdays from10 am to noon. There are three program options to choose from.

The Weights & Gym Workout is a full 2 hours per session.    It consists of a signature workout program plus individualized weight training program.  The training is deal for inexperienced lifters who need more guidance.  This option is also great for highly motivated athletes who want to supplement their school’s weight training with a more sport-specific or need-specific program.  The cost of the program is $200.

A second option, Gym Workout only is a 1 hour per session.   This option is ideal for athletes who are already involved with weight training at their school but want to supplement their program with our speed and agility workouts.  This option also works well for younger athletes who do not feel they are ready for weight training.  The fee is 125.

The third program is the Weights Workout only which is 1 hour per session.   This option is great for athletes who want an individualized weight training program that is sport specific.  For athletes who are busy with school workouts, open gyms and rec games, our weight program offers a great way to

still improve strength and ability while avoiding burn out.  In addition, our certified strength and conditioning specialists focus on proper lifting techniques to avoid injury.  Cost for this program is $125.

There is a special discount offered for those families with multiple kids enrolled in the program.  The first child is full price and all other kids receive $25 off the session they are enrolled in.

In addition to the three programs the Athletic Edge also offers individual and small group training session.  If you’d like a one on one training program at a great price or a small group training program with friends, please contact us for more information and pricing and dates/times available.  You can contact The Center for Health Improvement to sign up or for more information can contact me @785-623-6369 or [email protected]

— HaysMed

Kansas Originals will have open house Sunday

WILSON — The Post Rock Opportunities Foundation announced this week that Kansas Originals will have an open house from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday at the Wilson location.

Guest artist Joan Searles will be throwing pottery on a wheel, and Michelle Weigel will demonstrate how she paints her exceptional ornaments.

Both artists make their items from start to finish.

— Submitted

Teen who was abducted at gunpoint in Topeka found safe

TOPEKA (AP) — Authorities say a 16-year-old who was taken at gunpoint from a Topeka apartment has been found safe and two men have been arrested.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that an Amber Alert was issued for the 16-year-old after the abduction was reported around 12:30 a.m. Thursday. Topeka police Lt. Manny Munoz says the assailants left after brandishing a silver handgun and “ordering everyone on the ground.”

Several hours later, police announced that the 16-year-old had been located in “good health,” along with one of the suspects. Police say that suspect and another suspect were later booked into jail on suspicion of aggravated burglary. Both of the suspects are 19.

It wasn’t known where the 16-year-old was found.

KRUG: Celebrate your family

Donna Krug
The saying, “A picture is worth 1000 words” is so true. In the case of our four grandchildren the texts and FaceTime minutes help us manage in between visits. Still nothing compares to actually seeing, hugging and interacting with the kids. As we enter the holiday season, families across the country hardly need a reminder that the week of Thanksgiving is designated as National Family Week.

National Family Week got its’ start in Canada and was adopted in the U.S. during the Regan administration. It embraces the premise that children live better lives when their families are strong, and families are strong when they live in communities that connect them to economic opportunities, social networks, and services. These “connections,” celebrated during National Family Week, include access to reliable transportation, employment opportunities, education, child care, housing, health care, and support from community networks and institutions.

When America’s diverse families and children are healthy, our nation prospers. That is why we hope everyone will take time during National Family Week to honor the connections that support and strengthen families year round.

I am reminded of parenting classes I have led in the past and the need to encourage families of all kinds to provide a nurturing and safe environment for their children. Putting struggles from the past behind them and starting fresh with new ideas to build self- esteem and good communication skills is a worthy goal.

We have an excellent resource titled, “100 Ways to Celebrate your Family.” If you feel like you need some fresh ideas to try out with your family, stop by for your free copy of this poster that is appropriate to share throughout the holiday season.

Something else I want to mention in my column space today is that the Cottonwood Extension District has a Family and Community Wellness position open. Our offices are in Great Bend and Hays and the primary location for this position will be the Hays office. The person in this position will provide programming related to: strengthening families and individuals, building community capacity, family and community health and wellness, and local volunteer development. Follow this link for more information and the application procedure: www.ksre.ksu.edu/jobs

Donna Krug is the Family & Consumer Science Agent and District Director for the Cottonwood Extension District. You may reach her at: [email protected] or (620)793-1910.

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