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Kan. foster care agency has new rules for dealing with child-on-child sexual assault

A new law standardizing Kansas’ response to child-on-child sexual assault could cost $126,000 and result in more than 3,200 treatment referrals a year.

The Kansas Department for Children and Families estimates the new guidelines will result in 3,264 hotline calls being referred to treatment.
ANNA LANGOVA / PUBLIC DOMAIN

The new statute also requires the department to document whether treatment was provided to the child accused of abuse, the reasons for needing it and the outcome.

The agency estimates 3,264 children a year would need to be referred to treatment. That estimate includes both foster children in the agency’s care and children who are the subject of reports from the DCF child abuse hotline.

Agency officials say the added counseling work means DCF will have to hire two more staff members at a cost of more than $126,000 per year for salary and benefits. The Legislature did not appropriate additional funding to pay those costs this year.

Republican state Sen. Molly Baumgardner of Overland Park introduced the bill after stories broke last year of foster children assaulting other children in DCF custody. She pressed to make sure the agency had a consistent response to such incidents.

“It was very disconcerting to me, learning that there wasn’t a set process,” she said. “We need all of our kids to be safe.”

Baumgardner said she was inspired by a similar law that passed in Missouri in 2015, requiring the state’s Children’s Division to perform assessments and offer voluntary services after receiving a report that one child sexually abused another.

The Kansas law also states that the services for children who commit abuse are voluntary — unless DCF determines that the risk of future sexual behavior problems is high if the child does not receive treatment. It defines “a child with sexual behavior problems” as a minor who has allegedly committed sexual abuse against another child.

DCF says it already has procedures in place for handling reports of abuse allegedly committed by children. In an email, a department spokesman said a worker first determines whether a report of abuse is substantiated and what kind of treatment might be needed. The information is also passed to a committee, who makes a final decision on the reliability of the report and the need for treatment for the child who allegedly committed the abuse.

Currently, law enforcement is also required to conduct an investigation of reported sexual abuse of a child.

Alicia Johnson-Turner, a special assistant to DCF secretary Laura Howard, said  DCF would only provide referrals, rather than direct treatment. She said the agency may pay for treatment on a case-by-case basis.

Johnson-Turner said two organizations in the state, in the Kansas City and Wichita areas, provide evidence-based treatment for children with problematic sexual behavior. She said children who live outside those areas may be referred to community mental health centers for psychotherapy.

“That might be targeted at sexual behavior,” she said. “It just wouldn’t be one of the evidence-based models.”

The Metropolitan Organization to Counter Sexual Assault, based in Kansas City, Missouri, treats Kansas children who demonstrate age-inappropriate sexual behavior.

Such behaviors are different than a child’s curiosity about their own body, or consensual sexual behavior between teenagers of the same age, said MOCSA’s director of counseling services, Rene McCreary. It’s often caused by sexual abuse, early exposure to pornography or other types of trauma, such as witnessing domestic violence.

Children who demonstrate problematic sexual behavior — such as exposing themselves, touching other children’s genitals, using inappropriate language or gestures, or touching themselves in public — are unlikely to repeat it, she said.

“When kids act out in a sexual way, it’s pretty unusual for them to do it again,” McCreary said. “Especially after receiving treatment.”

But it’s still important for children to learn the social skills and impulse control taught at MOCSA’s 18-week program, she said. The treatment involves both group and individual therapy for children and their families. Children round out the program by writing an apology letter.

“It’s really important to us,” McCreary said, “to provide this model in the way that it’s been studied and proven to work.”

Foster children are at risk of developing inappropriate sexual behaviors due to their living conditions and their exposure to trauma and abuse, said Heidi Olson, a pediatric sexual assault nurse at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City.

Olson told lawmakers that almost half of the sexual assaults treated at Children’s Mercy in the past several years were committed by minors, with 11- to 15-year-old boys being the most likely to do so.

“Those kids aren’t even old enough to drive, and yet they are acting out with this sexually harmful behavior,” Olson said in an interview. “The way to approach this is to get kids into therapy and treatment that really works and addressing those behaviors, versus them being adjudicated and going to jail.”

It’s essential for treatment to be administered at a young age so a child can heal and learn about boundaries, she said.

For adults, “the recidivism rate is much higher,” Olson said, “so I think this is really significant.”

Nomin Ujiyediin is a reporter for the Kansas News Service.  You can reach her on Twitter @NominUJ.

Wilma ‘Bill’ Nadine Yoke

Longtime Goodland, KS resident, Wilma “Bill” Nadine Yoke, 81, passed away on Saturday, April 13, 2019 at her home in Goodland surrounded by her family.

Wilma was born on March 15, 1938 in Hoxie, Kansas to Ray and Myrna (Batchelder) Spillman. She was one of five children. Wilma attended school in Hoxie and graduated from Hoxie High School in 1955.

On July 30, 1955, Wilma married Ken Yoke in Amarillo, TX on the home plate of a baseball field. To this union, four children; Nancy, Pam, Les and Mike were born. In 1969, the family moved to Goodland.
Wilma was a member of the First Christian Church. She enjoyed spending time with her children and grandchildren, gardening and reading.

Preceding her in death were her parents and her three brothers and sister-in-laws; Lloyd and Ardith Spillman, Arlen and Opal Spillman, and Doren and Doris Spillman.

She is survived by her husband Ken of the home in Goodland, her children; Nancy (Cliff Nolan) Yoke, Pam (Arlen) Riesen, Les (Debbie) Yoke and Mike Yoke. She is also survived by her sister Lois (Ken) Smith, six grandchildren; Rick (Jenni) Roeder, Kasi (William) Shephard, Thomas Riesen, Travis (Cayla) Riesen, Sydney Yoke and Aubrey Yoke, and four great grandchildren; Blake Roeder, Preston, Hayden and Bryna Shephard.

Memorial services for Wilma will be held on Saturday, April 20, 2019 at 10:30 AM MT at Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland with Pastor Doug Amend officiating. Inurnment will follow at 1:00 PM MT in the Hoxie Cemetery, Hoxie, Kansas.

Memorials may be designated to the NWKS Animal Shelter and may be left at the services or mailed to Koons-Russell Funeral Home, 211 N. Main Ave., Goodland, KS 67735.

Online Condolences for the family may be left at www.koonsrussellfuneralhome.com.

Funeral service arrangements have been entrusted to Koons-Russell Funeral Home in Goodland.

HAWVER: Key report will set the tone for Kan. budget for two years

Martin Hawver

Thursday will be, well, not quite the same as a puff of white smoke emerging from the Vatican to signal selection of a new Pope, but close for us habitués of the Kansas Statehouse.

It’s the day that the Consensus Revenue Estimating (CRE) Group posits just what the state will book in revenues for the remainder of this fiscal year (to June 30) and for the upcoming fiscal year.

That estimate becomes the basis for every dime in spending that the Kansas Legislature will approve for the rest of this, and all of the next, fiscal year.

It’s the bank account. Don’t over-spend, and at the same time, don’t not spend enough to provide Kansans the services that they want their state—and its governor and Legislature—to spend on them.

The group, professors and economists and such, looks at virtually every tax number available. Then they estimate just how much of that will wind up in the State General Fund, and then the governor and legislators spend it.

This year’s CRE will provide the first good look at the “trickle down” of the December 2017 federal income tax cuts, which presumably freed up more money for the state to levy taxes against.

Businesses—those with overseas interests—that have been pushing for $130 million in income tax cuts to keep their tax bills level may or may not be able to recalculate just how much in the way of tax breaks they need to keep their profits stable or growing. Then they just have to squeeze it out of the Legislature.

And individual income taxpayers? Not sure, but the CRE will likely tell us how those federal income tax changes—lower rates—will work to make more of their income taxable by the state. Remember, Kansas income tax calculations start with what’s left over after you’ve paid your federal income taxes.

While the rate reductions are a key to that CRE computation, it may well tell legislators just how those new and higher federal standard deductions ($12,000 for single filers, $24,000 for marrieds filing jointly) will work with the state’s standard deductions. Remember, because the Legislature hasn’t “de-coupled” those standard deductions, if you can’t top the federal standard deduction then you are stuck with the Kansas standard deduction–$3,000 for singles, $7,500 for marrieds filing jointly.

What might we learn Thursday? Well, it starts with CRE predicting enough revenue to finance government, and probably pick up some of those services that have been squeezed the last few years because revenues were lower than hoped.

And if the estimate is for more money than needed for those basics? Well, after saving a dab for fiscal safety, there’s likely to be some room for tax cuts—possibly even this legislative session.

Of course, then the fight over the tax cut bill that Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed starts again, but at least there would be an identifiable amount of money that can be spent on tax cuts—after the social welfare, education, transportation and administrative pieces of the state budget are taken care of.

How much will be floating around? We’ll know Thursday.

And who gets that loose change in the state’s pocket? Corporations? Probably not. Individual income taxpayers? That’ll be fun to watch. Give it to the poor and middle-class or give it to the wealthier Kansans. As we recall, each of those folks gets one vote, and there are more Kansans in the lower brackets than at the top.

That CRE puff of white smoke? It might blow in a lot of directions…

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

Theodora (Teddy) W. Tull

Theodora (Teddy) W. Tull, 91, passed away April 14, 2019 at Hodgeman County Health Center, Jetmore.

She was born February 7, 1928 in Larned, Kansas, the daughter of Theodore Cecil and Fay Amanda Muck Cossman. A lifetime area resident, she was a beautician.

She was a member of the United Presbyterian Church, United Presbyterian Women, Jetmore Senior Center, American Legion Auxiliary and the Red Hats Society, all of Jetmore.

On September 10, 1945 she married William Edward Tull in Burdett, Kansas. He died January 30, 1996.

Survivors include: two sons, Don Eugene Tull, Garden City, Ron Edward Tull, Houston, Texas; two daughters, Leatrice Waconda (Tull) Tacha, Loveland, Colorado, Vonda Nadine (Tull) Borger, Jetmore; ten grandchildren; twenty great grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.

She was preceded in death by a brother, Keith Cossman and two sisters, Ernestine Crockett and LaZora Daughenbaugh.

Funeral will be 10 a.m. Friday at United Presbyterian Church, Jetmore with Rev. Mark Durham presiding. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday at Beckwith Funeral Home, Jetmore. Burial will be in the Fairmount Cemetery, Jetmore.

Memorials may be given to United Presbyterian Church or American Legion Auxiliary in care of Beckwith Funeral Home, Box 663 Jetmore, Kansas 67854.

Norton man accused of wife’s murder makes court appearance

Shields is being held on a $1 million bond, according to the Norton County Sheriff.

NORTON COUNTY — A Norton man accused in the murder of his wife made his first court appearance Monday afternoon, according to the Kansas Attorney General’s office.

Damien L. Shields, 42, Norton, is charged with the first-degree murder of 38-year-old Lori Shields. She was found dead April 7 in her home in Norton, according to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

Shields was arrested the following day in Cape Girardeau, Mo., when police responded to a hotel after receiving a call for help.

Shields was hospitalized in Cape Girardeau for injuries that appeared to be self-inflicted. He was later booked into the Cape Girardeau County jail and then extradited to Norton on April 13, according to the sheriff’s department.  He remains jailed on a $1 million dollar bond.

Lori Shields photo GoFundMe

He has three previous convictions for domestic battery, aggravated battery and violation of a protection order, according to the Kansas Department of Correction. He is scheduled for a preliminary hearing April 29.

Lori Shields was a secretary at Eisenhower Elementary School in Norton. Friends have established a GoFundMe account to assist her three children.

Alison Krauss schedules Stiefel performance

Alison Krauss to perform in the Stiefel Theatre this summer. Photo courtesy Stiefel Theatre

SALINA – A prolific and award-winning musician is coming to the Stiefel Theatre in July.

Jane Gates, Executive Director of the Stiefel Theatre, said Tuesday morning, that multiple Grammy Award winner Alison Krauss is scheduled to perform in the Stiefel Theatre at 8 p.m. July 1.

Tickets start at $89 and go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday. Buy tickets direct from the Stiefel in person or by calling 785-827-1998. Box office open Monday through Friday, noon-5 p.m. or three hours before the show on weekend show-days. Buy online through ticketmaster or at stiefeltheatre.org.

Since 1985, Krauss has released 14 albums including five solo, seven with her longtime band and musical collaborators Union Station, and the Robert Plant collaboration Raising Sand, which was certified platinum and won five Grammys, including Album of the Year and Record of the Year.

She’s sold more than 12 million records to date, and her honors include 27 Grammys, nine Country Music Association awards, 14 International Bluegrass Music Association Awards, two Academy of Country Music Awards, and two Gospel Music Association awards.

Krauss frequently collaborates with artists from numerous genres, including Dolly Parton, Taylor Swift, Kenny Rogers, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Vince Gill, The Chieftains, James Taylor, The Cox Family, Yo-Yo Ma, Johnny Mathis, Cyndi Lauper, Heart, Bad Company and Phish. She has recorded and toured with Willie Nelson, whom she honored with a performance during the 2015 Gershwin Prize Tribute Concert. She will reunite with Nelson this summer on a co-headlining tour throughout North America.

Whiskey Lullaby, a duet that she performed with Brad Paisley, won two CMA Awards in 2004. She has also produced albums for Alan Jackson, Nickel Creek and The Cox Family.

Some of these collaborators were also formative to Krauss and she lists influences including Tony Rice, Ricky Skaggs, Dolly Parton, Larry Sparks, The Cox Family, and Ralph Stanley.

Jester nominees announced for area high school theater productions

“Bright Star” by Hays High performers. Photo courtesy Brenda Meder

18th annual Jester Awards will be May 5

WICHITA – Music Theatre Wichita’s Jester Awards program, which has been honoring outstanding achievements by Kansas high schools in the field of musical theatre since 2002, is adding a brand new element to its annual awards event. On Sunday, May 5, as part of the 18th annual Jester Awards Ceremony, Leading Actor and Leading Actress awards will be determined through live performances by the nominees, which will be evaluated by a team of professional judges.

Hays High School has been nominated for best overall production for its production of “Bright Star,” which also received nods for best director (Alex Underwood), best leading actress (Caitlin Leiker), best leading actor (Cade Swayne), best ensemble/chorus, best vocal musical direction, best stage crew and best design guest.

Thomas More Prep’Marian production of “Oklahoma!” received nominations for best supporting actor (Dylan Werth), best choreography/staging, best scenic design and best lobby display.

Russell High School earned nominations for its production of “Once Upon a Mattress” in the production number and choreography/staging categories.

Click here for a full list of nominations.

“Oklahoma!” by TMP-M performers. Photo by Cristina Janney

Since the inception of the program, trained volunteer judges have been attending and evaluating dozens of performances across south central Kansas, and the judges’ scoring has determined the award recipients in two dozen categories. This year, 72 judges viewed 115 performances of 38 productions, involving more than 2400 students and extending as far as Liberal, Hays, Salina, Pittsburg, and Topeka, in addition to the greater Wichita area.

This year, for the first time, each of the 20 Leading Actor and Actress nominees will perform a brief solo from the show in which they appeared, and the professional judges’ scores will determine the awards given in these categories, as well as who will receive two monetary scholarships. The ten school productions which have been nominated as Outstanding Overall Production will also each perform an excerpt from their school production, with additional entertainment provided by The Trust Company of Kansas Music Theatre Wichita Teen Choir.

The Jester Awards Ceremony will take place at Century II Performing Arts Center’s Convention Hall in Wichita on Sunday, May 5, 2019 at 4pm. Honorees in 24 categories will be announced during the ceremony, and several of the honorees will perform. Scholarship awards will be presented to three students, lead male and female honorees and a technical theatre recipient. Tickets to the ceremony are $10 each in advance (online only), or may be purchased the day of the show for $15 each. Black Hills Energy is sponsoring the awards ceremony, and ongoing support for the program is provided by founder Belden Mills and his wife Anna, and the Lois K. Walls Jester Fund at MTWichita.

Alumni of the Jester Awards program can be seen onstage and backstage at Music Theatre Wichita this summer, as well as on Broadway and in regional theatres across the country. MTWichita Board President Michelle Moe Witte says: “As students study theatre, they learn a new discipline and develop empathy by exploring the thoughts and feelings of other people, including the very characters that they play on the stage. These are core life skills. Some will go on to theatrical careers, but others will simply benefit from the life skills developed on a high school stage. That alone is worth celebrating. The Jester Awards is our opportunity to honor the musical theatre art form and the hard work, collaboration, creativity, and dedication of the young people who brought these productions to life.”

Julius J. Suppes

Julius J. Suppes, age 92, of Otis, Kansas died Monday, April 15, 2019, at Via Christi Hospital St. Francis, Wichita, Kansas.

He was born May 13, 1926, in rural Otis, Kansas to Adam and Anna Maria “Mary” (Herrman) Suppes III. He married Elsie Jane (Holzmeister) on April 11, 1959, at Pfeifer, Kansas.

Julius was a farmer and worked part time jobs as well. He grew up in rural Otis, Kansas and attended Otis High School. He was a member of St. Ann’s Catholic Church in Olmitz, Kansas, a Eucharistic Minister, also attended St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Loretto, Kansas and was a member of the LaCrosse Knights of Columbus Council No. 2970.

Julius was a faithful Christian role model always thinking of others, enjoyed KU basketball, Kansas City Royals, going to dances and he loved to Polka. He was an attentive grandfather that loved to hold and play with his grandchildren.

Survivors include his wife, Elsie Suppes, of sixty years, Locust Grove Village Care Center, LaCrosse, KS; three sons, Patrick Suppes and wife, Kathleen, Otis, KS; Glen Suppes and wife, Rita, Lindsborg, KS; Jesse Suppes and wife, Lori, Salina, KS; one daughter, Wanda Diets and husband, Bob, Smith Center, KS; one twin brother, Eugene Suppes and wife, Alma, Great Bend, KS; one sister-in-law, Mary Louise Suppes, Otis, KS; 14 grandchildren and 20 great grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents; four brothers, Tony Suppes and his wife, Agnes, Primus Suppes and his wife, Delores, Reinhold Suppes and his wife, Ruby, Clarence Suppes; two sisters, Helen Schuckman and her husband, Herbert, Ruth Engel and her husband, Eddie and three infant grandchildren.

Funeral services are at 10:00 A.M. Thursday, April 18, 2019, at Holy Cross Catholic Church, Pfeifer, Kansas. Burial in Holy Cross Cemetery, Pfeifer, Kansas.

A vigil service is at 7:00 P.M. Wednesday followed by a LaCrosse Knights of Columbus rosary at 7:30 P.M. both a Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd, Hays, Kansas.

Visitation is from 6:00 to 8:00 P.M. Wednesday, at Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays
and from 9:00 to 10:00 A.M. Thursday, at Holy Cross Catholic Pfeifer, Kansas.

In Lieu of flowers the family suggests memorials to Holy Cross Charities Inc. and masses.

Services are entrusted to Cline’s-Keithley Mortuary of Hays, 1919 East 22nd St, Hays, Kansas 67601. Condolences can be sent via e-mail to [email protected] or left at guestbook at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com

Sheriff: Speed a factor, passenger ejected in Kansas crash

SALINE COUNTY — Two people were injured in an accident just after 2p.m. Monday in Saline County.

Photo Saline Co. Sheriff

A 1997 Ford Ranger driven by Jared Oehlert, 30, Salina, was traveling in the 6500 Block of South Woodward, according to Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan.

The driver lost control of the pickup. It left the road, rolled and a passenger Dylan Stevens 26, Salina, was ejected.

Oehlert and Stevens were transported to the hospital in Salina.  Stevens was later transferred to a hospital in Wichita. Speed was believed to be a factor in the accident and the occupants were not wearing seat belts, according to Soldan.

Mildred Mae Demoret

Mildred Mae Demoret, 105, passed away April 15, 2019 at Hodgeman County Long Term Care Center, Jetmore.

She was born February 5, 1914 in Dodge City, the daughter of Clark O. and Alta Wilson Orebaugh. A lifetime area resident, she was a homemaker/farmer.

She was a member of the United Presbyterian Church and United Presbyterian Women, both of Jetmore. She was a loving mother and grandmother and enjoyed cooking.

On August 3, 1932, she married Clarence Johnson Demoret in Dodge City. He died September 14, 2007.

Survivors include: two sons, Larry (Ramona) Demoret, Dodge City, Gene (Marilyn) Demoret, Jetmore; daughter, Joan Kirchoff, Garden City; a brother, Clark Orebaugh Jr., Wichita; sister-in-law, Opal Eichman, Jetmore; eighteen grandchildren; fifty-nine great grandchildren and seventy-six great-great grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by a son, Melbourn Demoret; daughter-in-law, Dixie Demoret; son-in-law, Jim Kirchoff; three brothers, Lloyd, Leo and Melvin Orebaugh and three sisters, Fern Wintamute, Jean and Phyllis Orebaugh.

Funeral service will be 10 a.m., Saturday at United Presbyterian Church, Jetmore, with Rev. Mark Durham presiding. Visitation will be from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday at Beckwith Funeral Home, Jetmore. Burial will be in the Maple Grove Cemetery, Dodge City.

Memorials may be given to Hodgeman County Long Term Care Center, Jetmore in care of Beckwith Funeral Home, Box 663 Jetmore, KS 67854.

Multiple injuries reported in Kansas house fire

Tuesday morning house fire -photo courtesy KWCH

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say two people have been critically injured in a Wichita house fire.

Sedgwick County dispatchers say the fire was reported around 4:40 a.m. Tuesday. The Wichita Fire Department said in a tweet that emergency crews are treating multiple patients and that two of them are critical.

The blaze is under control. No information has been released about what caused the fire or where it started.

Celebration of 2018-19 FHSU women’s basketball season Thursday night at Robbins Center

HAYS, Kan. – Fort Hays State Athletics and the FHSU Foundation will be hosting a Celebration of the 2018-19 FHSU Women’s Basketball season on Thursday evening on the Fort Hays State University campus. The gathering will be from 6-7 pm in the Eagle Communications Hall inside the Robbins Center.

Courtesy FHSU Athletics / Ryan Prickett

The public is invited to the event, where the team will be signing autographs from 6-6:30 pm. Fans are welcome to bring their own items to be signed, but photos for signatures will also be provided to those in attendance.

Following the autograph signing session, a highlight video will recap the Tigers’ great 2018-19 run to the MIAA Championship, MIAA Tournament Championship, and NCAA Central Regional Final, finishing 32-2 overall. It was the best record in the program’s NCAA Division II history and second time the team reached 30 wins in a season in the last five years. Head coach Tony Hobson will also say a few words about the season.

Humming down I-70 at 700 mph? That might not be science fiction

Photo courtesy of Virgin Hyperloop One

By BRENT MARTIN
St. Joseph Post

A state senator representing northwest Missouri will be part of a panel reviewing whether a “hyperloop” between Kansas City and St. Louis is feasible.

Senator Tony Luetkemeyer of Parkville has been appointed to serve on the Blue Ribbon Panel on Hyperloop.

“This is new, cutting-edge technology,” Luetkemeyer tells St. Joseph Post. “Missouri, if we were to get the project, would be the first state in the country to have this type of technology deployed. And so, I’m excited to get to explore the issue further and to be part of that process.”

The so-called hyperloop is a different type of transportation. Passengers would ride in pods enclosed in a tube levitating along a magnetically-charged rail at amazing speeds along I-70, perhaps as fast as 700 miles an hour.

The company Virgin Hyperloop One is testing the technology in Nevada.

Missouri is being considered, because I-70 between Kansas City and St. Louis is relatively flat and the I-70 corridor has enough right of way access to build the hyperloop.

Several questions must be answered before Luetkemeyer gives his endorsement, with the state senator stating safety is his top concern, closely followed by security. He says a hyperloop would immediately become a prime target for terrorists.

Also, Luetkemeyer wants to explore the economic feasibility of the proposal by Virgin Hyperloop One.

“What is it that they are wanting in order to come to Missouri?” Luetkemeyer asks. “Will there be a sufficient economic benefit to the state to justify any types of incentive programs that they might need in order to pick Missouri?”

Luetkemeyer cautions against dismissing the concept as science fiction.

“You think back in the mid-1960s, we were sending a man to the moon,” Luetkemeyer points out. “The notion that we went from where we were technologically to having a man on the moon in a relatively short period of time, that seemed very fanciful and something that was out of fantasy, but we obviously made that a reality.”

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