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Deputy arrests 2 Kan. women on drug charges after traffic stop

RENO COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspects after a traffic stop west of Hutchinson.

Smith -photo KDOC

On Monday, a Reno County Sheriff’s Deputy stopped a vehicle  in the 14,000 block of West 4th. The vehicle was traveling 67 mph in a 55 mph zone.

Deputies arrested 40-year-old Kerri Simmons for driving on a suspended license, possession of marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

They also arrested 31-year-old Ashley Smith, 31, for more serious charges including possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia, with intent to distribute and possession of a narcotic drug. She has five previous convictions that include forgery, obstruction and drug charges.

Simmons was able to post bond while Smith remains jailed on an $18,000 bond.

FHSU’s Hobson breaks coaching record, keeps Tiger basketball fans smiling

Coach Tony Hobson, left, discusses strategy with his assistant coach, Talia Kahrs, center, and graduate assistant Paige Lunsford, right. Photo by Ryan Prickett

By DIANE GASPER-O’BRIEN
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

FHSU’s Hobson breaks coaching record,
keeps Tiger basketball fans smiling

By Diane Gasper-O’Brien
University Relations and Marketing
HAYS, Kan. –

Fans of Fort Hays State University women’s basketball won’t see Tony Hobson smile much on the sidelines.

On the court, Hobson is as intense as they come. He doesn’t often take a seat beside his assistant coaches, and when he does, he doesn’t stay sitting long. He paces back and forth past the Tigers’ bench with a look of total concentration on his face.

FHSU Athletic Director Curtis Hammeke did get a smile out of his record-setting women’s basketball coach last Thursday when they met at midcourt before the Tigers’ game with Northeastern State (Okla.).

Hammeke – along with Dr. Helen Miles, former women’s basketball coach, and Dr. Tisa Mason, president of FHSU – presented Hobson with a basketball imprinted with Hobson’s latest accomplishment: setting a new career coaching record for the FHSU women’s basketball program.

Coach Tony Hobson diagrams a play for his team during a timeout. Photo by Ryan Prickett

Even then, Hobson seemed a little antsy and appeared relieved to get back to his team’s bench – partly because he doesn’t like calling attention to himself and partly because he and the Tigers had a game to win.

That fierce passion for the game of basketball has paid off in a big way for Hobson and the Tigers.

FHSU, undefeated and the top ranked team in all of NCAA Division II in the D2SIDA media poll, heads into this week’s road games with MIAA intrastate rivals Emporia State (Wednesday) and Washburn (Saturday) with a 15-0 record.

It’s the best start to a season in the history of the Tiger women’s program, which is on pace to set a lot of new marks this season.

One of those came on a road trip earlier this month.

In a Jan. 3 victory over defending national champion Central Missouri on the Jennies’ home floor, Hobson tied Miles for the most career coaching victories at Fort Hays State. Two days later, the Tigers beat Southwest Baptist (Mo.) to give Hobson his 218th victory at FHSU midway through his 11th season in Hays. Miles was 217-154 from 1971-86.

Hobson (now 220-92 at FHSU) shrugs his shoulders while talking about the record that has brought him a lot of praise since the turn of the new year, including a loud ovation at the pregame presentation on Jan. 10.

“All those things are nice, and I don’t want to make light of it because those things are important to the history of the program,” he said. “To get records like this, you have to have a good solid program and have to sustain it. That’s a good thing.”

Then the normally serious Hobson said something that made him smile.

“What it took to get the record is more important,” he said.

What it took to get that record was a lot of hard work through his first nine seasons that has seen Hobson elevate Tiger women’s basketball to new heights.

FHSU won the NAIA national championship with a 34-2 record in 1990-91, then moved to NCAA Division II the next year.

The Tiger program was anything but lean over the next couple of decades, with just one losing season.

But when Hobson joined the Black and Gold in 2008, FHSU women’s basketball got a new spark.

A former standout athlete himself, Hobson had made a name for himself at Hastings College while guiding the Broncos to three NAIA national championships and a 211-40 overall record in seven years.

Before that, Hobson had played and coached at Barton Community College in Great Bend, Hammeke’s hometown.

“I’d known about Tony for a long time, and I knew of his strong work ethic,” Hammeke said.

Hobson also was impressed with Hammeke.

“I knew Fort Hays State’s athletic director was a really solid person,” Hobson said. “He was honest with me, and that’s so important. You have to feel comfortable with who you work with.”

Hammeke definitely was comfortable with Hobson.

“He’s a good recruiter and an excellent basketball coach,” Hammeke said. “We thought he was the right one for the job.”

Was he ever.

Fort Hays State University women’s basketball coach Tony Hobson and his players watch action on the court during a home game earlier this season. Photo by Bob Duffy

It didn’t take Hobson long to make a successful jump from NAIA to NCAA.

After a 39-43 record during Hobson’s first three years, the Tigers have strung together seven consecutive 20-win seasons. They are just six wins away from making that eight in a row. Before Hobson, FHSU posted only eight 20-win seasons in nearly 40 years.

The Tigers are also in the running for finishing near or at the top of the MIAA and making a fourth NCAA tournament appearance in five years.

Hobson points to the addition of two standout players – 6-foot guard Katelyn Edwards and 6-4 center Kate Lehman – during the 2011-12 season in helping get the program over the hump.

Edwards, who was from Crete, Neb., had transferred to FHSU after one year at the University of South Dakota, and Lehman joined the Tigers after a stellar high school career in Newton. Both went on to earn all-conference honors every year for the Tigers, and Lehman finished as the second-leading scorer and top rebounder in FHSU women’s history during her All-American senior year when the Tigers advanced to the top 16 of the playoffs.

“Then it was game on,” Hobson said.

Hobson learned early on at FHSU that the Hays area community likes watching good, competitive basketball.

“People want a winner,” he said. “If you give them something good to watch, they will come.”

Consequently, the Tiger women’s program has ranked second in the nation in attendance for NCAA D-II the past four years with an average of more than 2,000 fans per game.

Even though students have not yet returned to campus for the second semester, more than 2,200 fans showed up for Thursday’s game.

Gradually through the years, Hobson started to notice a shift in the recruiting landscape, too.

“I had a lot of players from Nebraska early on, because I couldn’t recruit against Emporia State and Washburn,” he said.

Hobson paused, an ever-so-slight smile crossing his face.

“It’s not like that anymore,” he said.

Hobson and the Tigers have enjoyed a bumper crop of top-notch recruits the past few years, so much so that this year’s team is so deep that bench players lead the team in various categories on any given night. Six different players have led the Tigers in scoring. No one averages more than about 12 points a game, but six players average at least eight points a game, and the team puts up more than 80 points per contest.

“We’re pretty deep at every position,” he said. “You always have plenty of players. Do you always have plenty of players who can play at the level you need them to? This year, we do.”

Two or three of FHSU’s starters surely could score more, but the Tigers have bought into the team-first philosophy.

“We’ve had the most unselfish group of people I’ve ever been around,” Hobson said. “They sacrifice for each other for the good of the team; they all play their role. They want to win.”

Assembling that type of team starts long before the first tipoff in November.

“A lot of it is recruiting the right type of kids – high character kids,” Hobson said. “We do a better job of accomplishing that than some. Those type of kids are easier to get the point across to.”

Now, the Tigers’ roster features the daughter of a Division I coach and a former D-I player.

Sophomore Madison Mittie, part of that super-sub group for Fort Hays State, is the daughter of Kansas State University head coach Jeff Mittie, one of the winningest active coaches in NCAA Division I with more than 500 career wins.

“I’d never coached a college coach’s daughter,” Hobson said. “When you have a coach take a look at your program and think ‘That’s a good program for my daughter to be in,’ that’s an ultimate compliment when parents feel good about their daughter being in your program.”

Junior Lanie Page, a former prep standout from Wamego whose dad was the coach for the Raiders, had decided to concentrate on academics when she stepped away from the K-State basketball program two years ago.

But senior Tatyana Legette, who knew Page from high school all-star games, talked Page into visiting FHSU.

When Page was in Hays for an FHSU football game in the fall of 2017, she watched a Tiger basketball practice, and she immediately liked what she saw.

“Coach is a lot like my dad in his coaching style and just his personality, honestly,” she said. “He cares about his team a lot and would do anything for them, but he also knows when to be tough and when to push us so that we can see what we’re capable of.”

Talia Kahrs, Hobson’s top assistant coach, agreed.

Kahrs played for Hobson at Hastings, then followed him to Fort Hays State. Following her playing career, Kahrs served as a student assistant for the Tigers for a season, then became Hobson’s head assistant in 2012.

Kahrs said she has learned a lot from Hobson after so many years of being around him on the court. One thing has never changed.

“He just likes to win,” Kahrs said. “Losing is not an option.”

Hobson admitted he is not happy with losing but does accept getting beat by a better team.

“We could play a really good game, and if someone plays better, they’re going to beat you,” he said. “Losing is playing less than what you are capable of, and that bothers me. Losing is different than getting beat.”

Kahrs is well aware of what her job is.

“I think I do a good job of balancing him out,” she said. “I’m more mellow, so I’m the calm to his intensity.”

That intensity barometer will raise a notch or two this week when the Tigers take to the road for those two huge road games.

Saturday’s men’s and women’s games with Washburn have been selected for this week’s D-II Basketball Showcase, with the featured games beginning at 1 p.m. (women’s) and 3 p.m. in Lee Arena in Topeka.

But for now, Hobson is concentrating on Wednesday’s contest with Emporia State.

“People live too much in the past or too much in the future,” he said. “You can’t dwell on last year, or the last game even. And you can’t look too far ahead.”

Victories this week would help keep alive No. 1 on the Tigers’ long-term list of goals for this year – “MIAA champs.”

The final goal on that list is “to host and win regionals.”

“That means you have to be the No. 1 team in the region,” he said, “and that’s 42 teams.”

“We set our goals pretty high,” admitted Hobson, who then broke one of his own rules of looking ahead.

“We’d like to make the elite eight and give it a run,” he said.

Now, that would make a lot of people smile, including Hobson.

Cold, wet Wednesday

Wednesday A slight chance of snow between 1pm and 3pm, then a chance of drizzle and snow. Patchy freezing fog before noon. Cloudy, with a high near 30. East wind around 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%.

Wednesday Night A 30 percent chance of snow, mainly before 8pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 24. East northeast wind around 7 mph becoming west northwest after midnight.

Thursday Mostly sunny, with a high near 44. West wind 5 to 7 mph becoming south southeast in the afternoon.

Thursday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 28. Southeast wind 5 to 13 mph.

FridayA slight chance of rain and snow before noon, then rain likely between noon and 5pm, then rain and snow likely after 5pm. Cloudy, with a high near 40. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible.

Friday NightSnow, mainly before midnight. Low around 14. Windy. Chance of precipitation is 80%.

SaturdayPartly sunny, with a high near 19. Windy.

3 quakes in 24-hours shake portions of Kansas

SUMNER COUNTY — A third earthquake measuring 3.9 or greater in less than 24 hours shook portions of Kansas.

Image Kansas Geological Survey

Just after 9:30p.m. Tuesday, a 4.0 magnitude quake rattled residents east of Caldwell in Sumner County, according to the Kansas Geological Survey. It follows quakes measuring 3.9 and a 4.4 at 7:28 a.m. Tuesday approximately one hour south of Caldwell near Perry, Oklahoma.

There are no reports of damage or injury, according to the Sumner County Sheriff’s Department.

Clark appointed Deputy Sec. of KDC

KDC

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Commerce is announcing today that Patty Clark will serve as Deputy Secretary of KDC.

Clark has spent her career in public service with an emphasis on rural policy and government operations. Clark served both the Graves and Sebelius Administrations in the Kansas Department of Commerce, first as Division Director for Ag Marketing and Community Development and then as Deputy Secretary. She served as State Director for USDA Rural Development and most recently returned to the Kansas Leadership Center as Vice-President, later becoming Acting President from September 2017 through March 2018.

“Patty will make an excellent Deputy Secretary,” said Acting Department of Commerce Secretary David Toland. “Her years of public service speak for themselves. She is a real leader and will bring a wealth of experience to both the job and the Department.”

TMP girls advance to MCL semifinals with win over Oakley

The TMP Lady Monarchs held Oakley to single digits in the second and third quarters and had two players score in double-figures as they beat the Lady Plainsmen 42-27 Tuesday in the quarterfinals of the MCL tournament at Al Billinger Fieldhouse.

Rose McFarland postgame interview

TMP opened the game on an 8-4 run but led by just one at 10-9 after the first quarter.

The Monarchs build a five-point lead to open the second quarter on back-to-back Jillian Lowe field goals at 14-9. Oakley answered with three straight points to cut the lead back to two at 14-12. But that was all the offense they could muster the entire quarter.

The Plainsmen offense struggles continued in the third scoring just two points while the Monarchs scored 14 points in the third quarter that allowed the Monarchs to build a 31-14 lead.

Oakley was able to outscore TMP in the fourth quarter, 13-11 but it wasn’t enough to overcome the Monarchs lead as TMP claims the 42-27 win.

Jillian Lowe finished with a career-high 16 points and Adell Riedel scored in double-figures for the fourth time in the last five games with 10.

Game highlights

TMP improves to 7-3 and will take on Norton in the MCL semifinals after the Blue Jays beat Phillipsburg 47-34 Tuesday.

Oakley is 5-5 on the season.

Kan. nurse going to prison for Medicaid fraud, drug charges

KANSAS CITY, Kan. –– A Kansas nurse has been sentenced to 21 months in prison after pleading guilty to Medicaid fraud and related charges, according to Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

Whitlow-photo Wyandotte Co.

Erin Grae Whitlow, 29, of Lansing, pleaded guilty in November to one count of Medicaid fraud, one count of felony possession of a controlled substance and two counts of felony mistreatment of a dependent adult. Wyandotte County District Judge Jennifer L. Myers on Thursday sentenced Whitlow to 21 months in the Department of Corrections. Convictions such as this one may also result in a period during which the defendant is prohibited from being paid wages through a government health care program.

The charges stemmed from an investigation by the attorney general’s Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Division and the Bonner Springs Police Department, which revealed that Whitlow stole morphine from vials during a time she was employed as a nurse by a Bonner Springs nursing facility. The crimes occurred between July and August 2017.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant Attorney General Ed Brancart of Schmidt’s office. The Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office also assisted with the investigation.

This was the first conviction stemming from a statewide sweep by the attorney general’s office cracking down on illegal and harmful activity in Kansas facilities that receive Medicaid funding, which was announced in September. Charges against nine additional defendants remain pending.

Delton finishing up career at TCU

It appears former Kansas State quarterback Alex Delton’s days in the Big 12 are not over. Delton, who announced over Christmas that he would be playing his senior year at UTEP, tweeted out yesterday that he will play for Gary Patterson and the TCU Horned Frogs this fall.

 

 

 

The former Hays High Indian played in 20 games for the Wildcats, throwing for 1,200 yards and five touchdowns while rushing for 868 yards and 11 touchdowns.

Feds: 2 homicides linked to large meth ring in Kansas City

KANSAS CITY (AP) — Federal authorities say two homicides in northwest Missouri last year were linked to a large methamphetamine trafficking ring based in Kansas City.

Sparks -photo MDC

A search warrant affidavit filed in U.S. District Court cites the death of James Hampton, whose body was found in the trunk of a burned-out car in August in Lafayette County. It also cites the death of 28-year-old Brittanie Broyles, who was shot to death in Kansas City.

Authorities have charged a dozen people in the alleged drug ring led by 29-year-old Trevor Scott Sparks.

Investigators say Hampton and Broyles were associates of some of those people but no one has been charged in the homicides.

Federal charges allege the trafficking ring sold more than 1,000 pounds of methamphetamine and made $8.5 million.

Judge rules Somalis targeted in Kansas bomb plot can testify

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Somali immigrants can testify at the sentencing this month of three militia members convicted of plotting to bomb their apartment complex in a southwest Kansas city, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.

Gavin Wright, Curtis Allen and Patrick Stein were convicted for their role in the bomb plot

Defense attorneys had hoped to block the 20 short videos of victim testimony from being played at the Jan. 25 sentencing hearings. In a 34-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Eric Melgren also allowed sentencing enhancements for hate crimes and terrorism.

Patrick Stein , Gavin Wright and Curtis Allen were each convicted in April of one count of conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction and one count of conspiracy against civil rights. Wright was also found guilty of lying to the FBI.

The weapon of mass destruction charge carries a possible maximum sentence of life in prison, while the civil rights violation could add a decade more behind bars. Prosecutors are seeking life terms for all three. The sentencing enhancements for terrorism and hate crimes bolster the government’s recommendations.

The attack , planned for the day after the 2016 general election in Garden City, was thwarted by another member of the group who tipped off authorities about escalating threats of violence. Garden City is about 220 miles west of Wichita.

Prosecutors said the men formed a splinter group of the right-wing, anti-immigrant militia Kansas Security Force that came to be known as “the Crusaders.”

Defense attorneys argued that the Somalis weren’t victims because no one was hurt. Prosecutors countered that the defendants are trying to de-personalize their crimes and that federal law guarantees every victim the right to be heard at sentencing.

Melgren found that their testimony is relevant at sentencing to determine the overall impact of the crimes, saying he would not be unduly influenced by them since he heard all the evidence at trial. He said the intended victims are entitled to have their statements heard.

“Defendants have not demonstrated that, even if the residents are not entitled to testify, that the Court is stripped of its discretion to hear the testimony,” according to the ruling.

Shirley M. Sarver

Shirley M. Sarver, age 83, of Plainville, Kansas, died Monday, January 14, 2019, at the Good Samaritan Society of Hays. She was born on August 28, 1935, to Paul and Stella (Purder) Doty. She married Elmer Lee Sarver in 1952, at Natoma, Kansas. He preceded her in death on June 1, 2013.

She was a homemaker and lived most of her life in Plainville, Kansas. She moved to the Good Samaritan Society of Hays in 2017. Shirley was raised on a farm in Rooks County and graduated from Natoma High School.

Survivors include one son, Mikel E. Sarver, Hays, KS; and five grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband; and one daughter, Teresa Sarver; one brother, Leroy Doty and one sister, Pauline Finch.

A private family inurnment will be at the Plainville City Cemetery, Plainville, Kansas.

The family suggests memorial to the Good Samaritan Society of Hays in care of the mortuary.

Services are entrusted to Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd Street, Hays, Kansas 67601.

Condolences can be left by guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or can be sent via e-mail to [email protected]

Kan. man convicted in death connected to botched marijuana deal

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 20-year-old Wichita man has been convicted in the shooting death of another man in what police say was a botched marijuana deal.

Police on the scene of the fatal shooting-photo courtesy KWCH

Mark Holley III was found guilty Monday of first-degree felony murder in the death of 18-year-old D’Shaun Smith. He was also convicted of six other charges.

Holley will be sentenced March 13.

Police have said Smith and an 18-year-old woman connected with Holley met him in a residential neighborhood to buy drugs. Smith later was found dead in the woman’s car.

Holley is facing life in prison on the murder charge.

————

SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a murder of a teenager and have a suspect in custody.

Just after 1p.m. Monday, police responded to the 6200 Block of East Orme Street in Wichita after report of a shooting, according to Wichita Police Lt. Todd Ojile during Tuesday’s online media briefing.

Officers found a wounded 18-year-old identified as D’Shaun Smith in a vehicle. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Investigators learned that Smith and a woman in the vehicle had gone to the location to meet an unknown suspect to purchase marijuana.

During the transaction, the suspect attempted to rob the victim, fired a gun, and fled on foot.

Police developed a suspect in the case, set up surveillance at a residence in the area and made an arrest. A suspect identified in the Sedgwick County arrest report as Mark Lewis Holley III, 18, was booked into jail on requested charges of first-degree murder and aggravated robbery, according to police.

Investigators expect to present the case against Holley to the district attorney on Wednesday, according to Ojile.

UPDATE: Kan. governor expands ban on anti-LGBT bias to contractors

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new Democratic governor on Tuesday reinstated a ban on anti-LGBT bias in state agencies’ employment decisions that a Republican predecessor had repealed, and she also expanded the policy to cover government contractors.

Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order was her first official action since taking office Monday and fulfilled a promise she made repeatedly during her successful campaign last year. It bars state agencies from discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity when hiring workers or deciding whether to promote, discipline or fire them.

The move came after a historic wave of victories by LGBT candidates across the nation. In Kansas, Sharice Davids won a congressional seat and state Reps. Susan Ruiz and Brandon Woodard were elected as the Legislature’s first openly lesbian and gay members. All three are Kansas City-area Democrats.

Kelly’s order will apply to departments under Kelly’s direct control, which have about 19,000 employees. But she also extended the policy to companies that have contracts with the state, telling reporters later that if they do work for the state, they ought to follow its rules.

“In a perfect world, we wouldn’t need executive orders like this,” Kelly told reporters during a Statehouse news conference. “It’s important that, until we become a perfect world, that we make sure that we’ve got the kinds of things in place that move it towards perfection.”

Kelly’s move instantly drew praise from national LGBT-rights groups. It came after new Democratic governors in Michigan and Wisconsin issued such orders, as well as Ohio’s new GOP governor.

“They can be open an authentic about who they are, about who their families are and who their loved ones are without fear of retribution of losing their employment,” said Tom Witt, executive director of the LGBT-rights group Equality Kansas, saying he personally knows of seven state workers who lost jobs after previous protections were rescinded.

But extending the anti-discrimination policy to government contactors could prompt a backlash in the Republican-controlled Legislature. House Speaker Ron Ryckman Jr., a conservative Kansas City-area Republican, said lawmakers will probably review the order because it applies to private businesses.

“I absolutely think that is a decision the Legislature should be making,” said conservative Rep. Blake Carpenter, a Wichita-area Republican.

Kelly reinstated a policy against anti-LGBT bias in state government that Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius imposed in 2007 through an executive order.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, a vocal opponent of same-sex marriage, rescinded Sebelius’ order in 2015, arguing that state lawmakers should set such a policy. It was clear at the time that the GOP-dominated Legislature and its conservative leaders would not.

The Kansas law barring discrimination in housing and private employment doesn’t cover bias based on sexual orientation or gender identity.

Half a dozen local governments have enacted their own anti-LGBT bias policies, including two Kansas City-area suburbs in December, but the Williams Institute, a think tank at UCLA’s law school focusing on sexual orientation and gender identity policy, said only 12 percent of Kansas residents fall under them.

Woodard and Ruiz said after Kelly’s news conference that they are drafting a bill that would expand the state’s anti-discrimination law.

But expanding the state’s anti-discrimination laws is likely to be a hard sell in the Legislature.

Some conservatives have argued that such an expansion would be used only as a legal club against conservative people of faith. They’ve also questioned whether such a law is necessary and whether anti-LGBT bias is pervasive in employment and housing.

State Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a conservative Kansas City-area Republican, called Kelly’s order “anti-liberty” and said it is “degrading to reduce individuals” to their “sexual inclinations.”

“These laws cause divisions in communities and can have serious detrimental and unintended consequences because of their subjective nature,” she added.

Former Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer replaced Brownback last year when Brownback resigned to become U.S. ambassador at large for international religious freedom and signed a measure providing legal protections to adoption agencies that cite faith-based reasons for refusing to place children in homes that violate their religious beliefs.

The legislative debate centered on agencies that won’t place children in LGBT homes. Supporters saw it as religious liberties measure, but Kelly has called it an “adoption discrimination law” and has said she will see whether she legally can avoid enforcing it.

Demonstrating social conservatives’ influence, the Kansas Republican Party adopted a platform last year that declares, “We believe God created two genders, male and female.” The platform also called for an amendment to the U.S constitution barring same-sex marriage, drafted so “judges and legislatures cannot make other arrangements equivalent to it.”

————–

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas’ new Democratic governor has reinstated a ban on anti-LGBT bias in hiring and employment decisions by state agencies and extended it to state government contractors.

Gov. Laura Kelly’s executive order Tuesday fulfills a promise she made repeatedly in her successful campaign last year and restores a policy that had been rescinded by a conservative Republican predecessor. It was Kelly’s first official action since taking office Monday.

In 2007, Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius issued an executive order against anti-LGBT bias in state government. In 2015, conservative Republican Gov. Sam Brownback rescinded Sebelius’ order and argued that state lawmakers should set such a policy.

Kelly’s order applies to state agencies under her direct control, which have about 19,000 employees. But it’s broader than the Sebelius policy because it applies to contactors.

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