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Connie Sue Anderson

Connie Sue Anderson, 74, of Osborne, KS passed away on March 14, 2019 at her home in Osborne after a long battle with cancer. She was born on August 19, 1944 in Paradise, KS to Carl & Anna C. (Webster) Anderson. Connie was one of several children.

Connie graduated from the Paradise Schools and then from the Willcox Beauty Academy in Dodge City, KS. She worked in beauty shops in Russell and Lincoln, KS. While she was working in Lincoln, she met her future husband, John Anderson. They were married and had 3 children.

While John was in the service, they lived in Pensacola, FL, Norfolk, VA and Bethesda, MD. After John was discharged from the service, they moved to Osborne, KS and made it their home. She later worked as a retail clerk in several businesses in Osborne.

Connie was a member of the Portis United Methodist Church. She was also an active member in the Osborne VFW Aux. #7743.

Connie was preceded in death by her parents.

Connie is survived by her husband John of Osborne; daughter: Shawn (Mark) Lofing of Kinsley, KS; sons: Christian (Mellisa) Anderson of Wamego, KS; Charles (Schanee) Anderson of Wichita, KS; 7 grandchildren; sister: Anita Swartz of Kansas City, KS; brothers: Jerry Webster of Landenburg, PA; Alvin Webster of Russell, KS.

Click HERE for service details.

Robert ‘Bob’ Ward

Phillipsburg resident Robert “Bob” Ward passed away March 15, 2019 at the Hays Medical Center, Hays, KS at the age of 64. He was born Dec. 14, 1954 in Phillipsburg, the son of Carl & Hazel (Meyer) Ward.

Survivors include his wife Roxie of the home; his son, Westley of Columbus, OH; 2 daughters, Holly Ward of Tipton, KS and Ember Ward of Phillipsburg; 2 brothers, Doug of Glade & John of Phillipsburg; his sister, Shirley Robinson of Hoxie and one grandson.

Cremation is planned. A Memorial Service will be held Friday, March 22 at 2:00 p.m. in the Olliff-Boeve Memorial Chapel, Phillipsburg, with Pastor Blake Stanwood officiating.

Memorial contributions may be made to his grandson’s education.

William (Bill) Joseph Moriarity

William (Bill) Joseph Moriarity, 90, of Loveland, CO, died March 16, 2019 with his wife and family at his side.

He was born in Missouri Valley, Iowa on July 12, 1928 to Charles Edward Moriarity and Chloe Hazel (Hatcher) Moriarity. He was raised and attended school in Missouri Valley, Iowa. The day after high school graduation, he enlisted and served in the U.S. Navy from 1946-48. He graduated from Creighton University with a BS in Marketing in 1952. He was employed in merchandising 1952-1954 in Nebraska, Colorado and then in Colby, Kansas from 1954-59. In 1959, Bill helped organize the Colby Medical Clinic where he was administrator for 23 years. This experience led him to HMO Health Care Plus as an Account Executive from 1983-1985 in Salina, KS and Oklahoma City, OK. In 1985, he returned to Hays, Kansas as Public Relations Outreach Liaison of Northwest Kansas for St. Anthony Hospital in Hays, Kansas until his retirement in 1992.

In 1956, he met Ruth May Grace in Colby, Kansas. They were married Nov 3, 1956.

Bill is survived by his wife Ruth; daughter Mary Eileen Moriarity Madrid and husband Anthony (Tony) Madrid, of Loveland, Colorado; grand-daughter Amalia (Molly) Madrid, of Wichita, Kansas, and many loved nieces, nephews, grand nieces and nephews.

Bill was preceded in death by his beloved sons, Patrick Joseph and William Joseph; his parents; two brothers, Maurice and Ed (Charles) and two sisters, Catherine Sigler and Margaret Hassett.

Bill valued his memberships in the Knights of Columbus (past Grand Knight), Lions International Club, (local, district, and state offices), and the American Legion. While living in Colby he served as Scoutmaster in the Coronado Boy Scouts of America for years. He then organized an Explorer Scout Troop at his daughter’s request.

Bill was always an active member of the Catholic Church. At Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, Hays, KS he served for many years as sacristan, server, and Eucharistic minister.

Also in Hays his volunteer service included eight years in the Area Agency of Aging SCHICK Program, AARP Tax Aide 18 years, Hays Senior Citizens Center board member 3 years, Ellis County Council on Aging for 13 years (Chairman 5 years), and on the Kansas State Advisory Board on Aging for 8 years. He enjoyed being a Docent and Attendant at the Sternberg Museum of Natural History.

Bill spent retirement with family and friends. He enjoyed Church, travel, golf, and other volunteer and leisure activities. In 2015, he and his wife Ruth relocated from Hays, Kansas to Loveland, Colorado to be closer to their daughter Mary and Tony Madrid. Bill’s greatest joy in life has always been his family and his Catholic faith.

Funeral services will be held Saturday, March 23rd, 2019 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Colby, KS. There will be a rosary at 9:30 followed by the Funeral Mass at 10:00. Burial with military honors will occur following the Mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Cemetery.

Bill will always be remembered for his faith, devotion to family, loyalty, and service to his community. He was a gentle, humble, kind, caring man who always did “his very best”. He will be remembered.

One tough winter for crop and livestock producers

Chuck Otte

By Dewey Terrill
JC Post

Geary County Extension Agent Chuck Otte says this winter has been the roughest he has seen in his 37 years in this area.

“It’s been constantly wet since October, even before that. Fertilizer didn’t get applied last fall, trying to get it on this spring. We’ve got wheat, we’ve got brome grass that needs to be fertilized, should have been fertilized a month ago. Everything is too wet to get in there.”

Otte noted farm producers will have to do the best they can. Field work would normally have begun by now along with fertilization for the corn crop. Everyone is in a holding pattern.

When it comes to livestock the situation has been difficult. “The livestock producers have got it very, very rough right now, especially the folks with cow-calf herds. The storms, the extreme cold, we had below zero for a couple of days in early March. There’s way above average death of calves.”

The mud has also been challenging, leaving a lack of dry places for livestock. “And it was a short hay year in addition to that. So my heart goes out to them because it has been a very rough winter.” Frost just went out of the ground last week so there is some drainage and drying that is beginning to occur. But it has been one tough winter!

Man dies in Kansas City-area house fire

MISSION HILLS, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a man in his 50s has died in a fire in a suburban Kansas City home. Johnson County Consolidated Fire District No. 2 says the fire broke out early Tuesday in Mission Hills, Kansas. Chief Tony Lopez says the man’s mother was able to escape the blaze and seek help from a neighbor.

Fatal fire in Mission Hills Monday night photo courtesy KCTV

The mother told fire officials that she was in her second floor bedroom when she heard a smoke alarm. When she went downstairs to the main level of the home, she saw her son in the burning living room. She tried to put out the fire using a coat but was forced back by the heat.

The victim’s name wasn’t immediately released. The fire is under investigation.

HAWVER: Debate heating up in Kansas Legislature

Martin Hawver

It took quite a while, but we’re finally getting to the part of the session where most of the boys would be advised to wear protective cups as debate sharpens over school funding, taxes, the budget…and Medicaid expansion.

Things heated up last week when the Senate passed to the House what is the governor’s proposal to appropriate $92 million to the State Department of Education that the governor and (at least publicly) the Senate believes will meet the Kansas Supreme Court order to adequately finance K-12 schools.

The Statehouse grew hotter when the Senate bought some minor House amendments to its major corporate/individual income tax cut bill and sent it to the governor for a (bet on it) veto.

And the session flashed when both the House and Senate (the Senate more artfully) reached into their separate “Mega” bills–the major appropriation legislation of the session–to take the $14 million Gov. Laura Kelly proposed to expand Medicaid (we call it KanCare in Kansas) health care to more than 100,000 mostly poor Kansans.

That flash point on Medicaid expansion is probably the most insider politically interesting. Kelly put in her budget that $14 million, the state’s first-year pricetag of Medicaid expansion, that will create a system in which the state will pay 10 percent of health-care costs for poor Kansans and the federal government will pay 90 percent of those bills.

The Legislature passed Medicaid expansion in 2017, saw former Gov. Sam Brownback veto the bill, and was unable to override that veto. But the numbers were big, back then. The Senate mustered 25 votes for the measure, the House 81. But 81 votes weren’t enough to override the veto.

This year, it appears that the Senate and House might have votes to expand Medicaid and don’t have to worry about a veto. Getting that expansion bill to the floor for debate is the problem.

So, with conservative leadership in both chambers opposed to Medicaid expansion…what happens to that $14 million that Kelly put in her budget…that $14 million that will draw more than $500 million in federal money for health care for Kansas’ poor?

The House Appropriations Committee just took that money that Kelly proposed for starting the program and tossed it back into the all-purpose State General Fund. Nope, there’s no policy bill on the horizon that would expand Medicaid, but at least that $14 million would have allowed Kansas to operate the program if it found its way to the governor’s desk.

The Senate? It’s Ways and Means Committee was a little more politically clever. A majority of that panel doesn’t want Medicaid expansion, but chose to take that $14 million the governor wants and keep it within the Department of Health and Environment…for a different purpose.

Now, Health and Environment isn’t exactly a cuddly agency, but the Senate committee took that $14 million and appropriated it for an increase in the fees it will pay physicians for care of the poor. Two years ago, the Legislature cut doctors’ KanCare payments by four percent. Restoring that four percent costs about $14 million.

So, the Senate can say it favors health care for the poor, just not a whole lot more of them, as some doctors are now refusing to care for Medicaid clients because of low reimbursement. The Senate panel is voting to pay doctors more to keep them in the Medicaid system, which sounds relatively socially progressive, doesn’t it?

Of course, none of that $14 million juggling matters if Medicaid isn’t expanded. And that’s one reason to watch the budget bill—which can’t be amended to include Medicaid expansion–to see whether that $14 million sliver pops the budget…

Syndicated by Hawver News Company LLC of Topeka; Martin Hawver is publisher of Hawver’s Capitol Report—to learn more about this nonpartisan statewide political news service, visit the website at www.hawvernews.com

Hays Wrestling Club fares well at state championships

Hays Wrestling Club had 22 wrestlers competing in Topeka in the Kansas Folkstyle State Championships on March 16 and 17.

Twelve wrestlers placed in the top six. Below are the results:

Team Results
13th place as a team out of 176 teams.

8 and Under
52lbs
Jack Schumacher 0-2 DNP
55lbs
Kade Simon 4-2 4th place
80lbs
Trevon Dickinson 3-2 4th place
88lbs
Myles Archer 0-2 DNP
95lbs
Brian Prough 2-2 DNP
110lbs
Kenneth Walker 1-2 DNP

8 and under Girls
33lbs-42lbs
Lili Balandran 4-1 3rd place
50lbs-52lbs
Avryn Bieker 2-1 State Runner Up

10 and under
52lbs
Gaven Deneault 2-3 6th place
61lbs
Grady Lind 3-3 6th place
73lbs
Holden Lind 3-1 State Runner Up
82lbs
Brant Pfannenstiel 0-2 DNP
150lbs
Jaxson Chartier 4-1 3rd place

12 and under
92lbs
Dalton Meyers 0-2 DNP
100lbs
Harley Zimmerman 4-1 3rd place
190lbs
Kendall Walker 4-2 5th place

14 and under
95lbs
Ben Schumacher 0-2 DNP
105lbs
Cyrus Vajnar 1-2 DNP
205lbs
Gavin Meyers 4-0 State Champion

14 and under Girls
98lbs – 108lbs
Sara Zimmerman 3-1 3rd place

High school Division
120lbs
Trevor Carroll 0-2 DNP
250lbs
Connor Staab 1-2 DNP

Three vintage base ball games scheduled at Historic Fort Hays

On July 31, 1878, the commander of Fort Hays issued Special Order #4: “Enlisted men are prohibited from walking on the grass of the parade ground except on duty, this order is not intended to interfere with ball playing; but the base must be changed each time of playing.”

From this order. you can see how important ball playing was to the soldiers stationed at Fort Hays. The first game reported at Fort Hays was played in 1869, 150 years ago, although few details are known.

Soldiers stationed at various forts in Kansas played base ball (originally spelled as two words) to break the monotony of their daily routine and for the pure fun of the sport. Games were played by soldiers stationed at the forts, whose opponents included other soldiers, civilian teams, and even American Indians. Occasionally, troopers on patrol, including companies of the Seventh Cavalry, played each other, with pickets posted “to prevent being surprised by Indians.”

On Saturday, March 30, visitors to Historic Fort Hays will have the opportunity to view three vintage base ball games. Late 1800s rules and uniforms will be used, as well as terms for the game. Players are ballists, a batter is the striker, pitches are hurlers, and spectators are cranks. The three games and their starting times are:

10 a.m.: Post Nine (Historic Fort Hays Team) vs. CVBBA (Colorado Vintage Base Ball Association, Denver, CO)

1 p.m.: Westerns Base Ball Club of Topeka vs. CVBBA (Colorado Vintage Base Ball Association, Denver, CO)

3 p.m.: Post Nine (Historic Fort Hays Team) vs. Westerns Base Ball Club of Topeka

These games are free and open to the public. Please bring your lawn chair and enjoy the excitement of old-fashioned base ball. Food will be available on site.

‘Donut Boy’ visits officers in Kansas on his trip to all 50 states

SEDGWICK COUNTY —The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office and the Wichita Police Department hosted 11-year-old Tyler Carach known as “The Donut Boy” Monday afternoon.

The event at the Law Enforcement Memorial, at 455 N. Main Street in Wichita, Kansas. included law enforcement agencies from across the region.

Tyler, who lives in Florida and his mother are on a Spring Break trip this month and his mission is to deliver donuts and thank you cards to law enforcement officers in every state. So far Tyler has visited 43 states.

Tyler has been on the Steve Harvey Show and the Today Show. For more information on Tyler please visit his Facebook Page “I DONUT need a reason to THANK a cop, Inc.”

Sandra Gail Wiederstein

Sandra Gail Wiederstein was called to be with the Lord on Friday, March 15, 2019. She was surrounded by family and friends.

Born to Merle and Leona (Waymire) Wiederstein on November 10, 1959 in Garden City. She graduated from Garden City High School in 1977 and later earned a B.S. from Fort Hays State University. She lived in Garden City her whole life. She worked 41 years caring for adults with special needs in Southwest Kansas. 15 years ago, she co-founded Karis with the dream of creating compassionate care for those she cared so deeply about.

Sandra was a member of New Life Community Church, Girl Scouts of America, and the American Red Cross. She survived cancer. There wasn’t a person or animal in need that Sandra wouldn’t help. She loved camping, hot air balloon rides, boating, and traveling. She had spontaneity down to a science. Sandra touched so many hearts and lives during her time here. What a blessing from God.

Sandra is preceded in death by her grandparents Myron & Pauline Waymire and Harry and Helen Wiederstein, and her father Merle in 2015. She is survived by her mother Leona, aunts, cousins, friends, co-workers, and God children.

A Celebration of Sandra’s life will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 20, 2019 at the First Assembly of God in Garden City with Pastor Jeff Mitchell officiating. Burial will follow at Valley View Cemetery in Garden City. There will be no calling hours. Memorials may be made to New Life Community Church, St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital, Compassion International, or the Finney County Humane Society all in care of Garnand Funeral Home of Garden City.

Ellis County Commission gives approval to Blue Sky Acres

Following a second vote before the Ellis County Commission the Blue Sky Acres residential subdivision will be allowed to move forward.

The Ellis County Commission voted 3-0 Monday to approve the final plat of the proposed subdivision south of Hays.

The plat failed to pass a previous commission.

The approval allows development to move forward

Check back with HaysPost.com for more.

LETTER: Save tax money — use paper ballots

Dear Ellis County Commissioners Haselhorst, Schlyer and Roths:

This letter is to ensure that you are aware of the unreasonable, unreliable and dangerous machine voting in Ellis County elections and ask that you agree to budget only for paper ballots. Please do all in your power to persuade the County Clerk to scrap any plan to use machines.

The last election highlighted this issue. It was discovered that the existing machine-based voting system was expensive, not well-maintained, easy to hack and unnecessary.

See the 2007 Evaluation & Validation of Election-Related Equipment, Standards and Testing (EVEREST)” study initiated by the Ohio Secretary of State due to public concerns regarding election equipment such as used in Ellis County. This review was performed by three different well-respected bodies and all three identified and confirmed critical flaws in terms of security and reliability.

The EVEREST study reports that election systems in question, “uniformly failed to adequately address important threats against election data and processes. Central among these is a failure to adequately defend an election from insiders, to prevent virally infected software from compromising entire precincts and counties, and to ensure cast votes are appropriately protected and accurately counted.”

The study makes it abundantly clear that the voting equipment, and others, are at the very least insecure and pose many dangers to both voter privacy and election accuracy.

Ellis County is not immune to these dangers. In the 2018 Kansas House of Representatives election for the 111 th District, it was realized that there were large discrepancies in certain voting districts that almost never happen. Precinct reports came back showing that voters within certain precincts would vote for a certain candidate around 65-70% of the time on paper and in that same precinct the voters supposedly voted for that candidate as low as 43% of the time via machine. Ellis County showed signs of major anomalies in voter behavior and any political expert or analyst would tell you that many of these events just do not happen on their own. Sadly, because of the system used, nothing could be done.

At the very best, the machines, having been sloppily handled, not properly calibrated, not recently maintained, and demonstrably inaccurate, were the cause of deep distrust in the system. The solution is not another expensive set of machines. It is, very simply, to do as we did for decades, conduct our elections using paper ballots.

Ellis County deserves an election free of skepticism and irregularities. When a voter casts their vote, they want to feel like the vote is being properly counted, they want to know that their voice is precisely heard and for this to happen, we need to use an election system that is reliable and accurate. Paper ballots have never resulted in any significant question of the accuracy of election results here.

In “How Voting-Machine Lobbyists Undermine the Democratic Process” an article by Sue Halpern published January 22, 2019 in The New Yorker, Halpern explains many of the multiple issues that arose in Georgia and Delaware because of choosing to stick with machine voting equipment and allowing salesmen and lobbyists to control the voting process,

“Georgia’s Secure, Accessible & Fair Elections Commission voted to recommend that the state replace its touch-screen voting machines with newer, similarly vulnerable machines, which could be produced by E.S. & S. at an estimated cost of a hundred million dollars. In doing so, the panel rejected the advice of computer scientists and election-integrity advocates, who consider hand-marked ballots to be the “most reliable record of voter intent,” and also the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, which recommended that all states adopt paper ballots and conduct post­-election audits. The practice of democracy begins with casting votes; its integrity depends on the inclusivity of the franchise and the accurate recording of its will. Georgia turns out to be a prime example of how voting-system venders, in partnership with elected officials, can jeopardize the democratic process by influencing municipalities to buy proprietary, inscrutable voting devices that are infinitely less secure than paper ­ballot systems that cost three times less.”

Elections conducted by vote machine systems come at a great cost and even greater risk. Evidence suggests that through systems like we have now, elections can be bought and stolen, and through paper this is just not possible.

Oregon is the “gold standard” when it comes to voting procedures. It performs an entire election, with 2. 7 million registered voters, all by mail because its elected officials, both Republican and Democratic, agreed that the cost is low, and the risk of hacking or tampering is even lower. Not only has going paper created a stronger line of defense against hacking and election fraud, Oregon is also having tremendous success in Voter Turnout and has even seen its demographic least-likely to vote, voters 34 and under, cast votes in record breaking fashion.

Ellis County has the opportunity to become the “gold standard” for Kansas counties and show that a safe and affordable election is possible, even in the face of growing technological concerns. By going paper we will be eliminating the threat of cyber hacking and tampering with our elections, gaining the potential to increase Voter Turnout and saving Ellis County money while doing it.

Although Ellis County has set aside hundreds of thousands of dollars to replace our current voting equipment, blindly deciding to replace it with a newer yet just as vulnerable system is not the answer. Do not allow this mistake to be made. Officials from various states are promoting going paper because it is the safest and most cost-effective form of voting and Ellis County needs to as well.

I ask that you use your budget process to make it clear to the County Clerk that the money presently earmarked for yet another recipe for election malpractice be used to pay down the Ellis County deficit, instead. To paraphrase Everett Dirksen, Republican Senator, “a thousand dollars here and a thousand dollars there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.”

This is your chance to show that fiscal conservatism starts at the local level. Do the taxpayer, the voter, and all citizens the favor of safeguarding their right to have their votes counted properly while safeguarding their tax dollars, too.

Thank you for your immediate attention to this.

John Bird, Hays

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