Street flooding at 27th and Thunderbird in Hays May 21.
By BECKY KISER Hays Post
May was a wet month in Hays, with a little more than eight inches of rain recorded.
According to official statistics from the K-State Agricultural Research Center south of town, Hays received 8.06 inches of rain last month. That’s just less than two and half times the average 3.24 inches for May.
Year-to-date moisture is at 11.69 inches.
That puts Hays already ahead of the amount usually recorded by the end of June, which is 11.27 inches according to the 151 year average.
The forecast from the National Weather Service office in Dodge City calls for a chance of daily rain through Thursday.
Patricia Elaine “Patty” Nutz Enslinger, 61, of La Crosse, Kansas, our beloved wife, mother, grandmother, sister, and friend passed away and left this Earth far too soon on Saturday, June 1, 2019 at Select Specialty Hospital in Wichita, Kansas.
Patty was born August 29, 1957 in Washington, Kansas, the youngest child of Walter and Bertha (Sedam) Nutz. She was a 1975 graduate of North Central High School in Morrowville, Kansas and graduated from Fort Hays State University in Hays, Kansas in 1978 with a Bachelor’s Degree in Education.
On October 28, 1978, Patty married her best friend and love of her life, Lynn Enslinger, at the St. Michael’s Catholic Church in La Crosse, Kansas. They settled in and created their life together in La Crosse and have loved working and residing there for the last 40 years.
Patty’s first passion in life was being a mother to her two children, Dustin and Melissa, and a grandma to her 9 grandchildren. She loved them fiercely and was so proud of everything they did. She and Lynn loved creating memories and took their children on many fun and educational family vacations across the U.S. She continued to make memories with her grandchildren with week long stays at Grandma’s house, pool parties, foot rubs, and even buying them a bounce house.
Patty’s second passion in life was being a teacher. She was a teacher for 28 years with USD 395 in La Crosse. Before her retirement in 2016 she had the opportunity to touch the lives of hundreds of students who remember her and her teaching styles fondly.
Patty was a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church and the Gamma Zeta Sorority. She spoke often of her deep love and the sisterhood she felt with those women.
Patty is survived by her husband, Lynn Enslinger of La Crosse, Kansas; one son, Dustin Enslinger (Heather) of Enoch, Utah; one daughter, Melissa Minge (Shawn) of Hanover, Kansas; nine grandchildren: Jack, Zander, Katelynn, Maxxim, and Delaney Enslinger and Gillian, Audrie, Kolbi, and Trisha Minge; three brothers: Jerry Nutz, Wayne Nutz, and Lawrence Nutz; and five sisters: Bonnie Elliott, Wanda Henderson, Linda Falk, Mabel Comstock, and Leila Zenger. She was preceded in death by her parents, two brothers, David Nutz and Ed Nutz, and one sister, Ruth Pralle.
Visitation will be Wednesday, June 5, 2019, from 4-8 p.m. at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas, with the family receiving friends from 6-8 p.m. A vigil service and rosary will be at 7 p.m.
Church visitation will be Thursday, June 6, 2019, from 9-9:50 a.m at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, followed by the funeral service beginning at 10 a.m. with Father Eric Gyamfi officiating. Interment will be in the La Crosse City Cemetery in La Crosse, Kansas.
In lieu of flowers or plants, the family requests memorials to St. Michael’s Catholic Church in La Crosse, Kansas or donations to a scholarship fund to benefit future teachers.
Condolences or memories may be shared with the family at www.charterfunerals.com/locations/janousek-lacrosse.php.
Arrangements were by Janousek Funeral Home, 719 Pine Street, P O Box 550, La Crosse, Kansas 67548, 785/222-2517.
Last week’s inspection results from the Kansas Department of Agriculture:
Burger King 1212 Vine, Hays – May 28
An inspection following a complaint found no violations.
Smallcakes 4320 Vine, Hays – May 28
A routine inspection found two violations.
No paper towels or other hand drying provisions at the kitchen handwashing sink.
On the shelf below the prep table, there was an opened gallon container of disinfectant and deodorizer cleaner present directly next to oil and dry goods. No evidence of leaking was observed.
Earlyne Ann (Cooper) Hearld passed away Sunday, June 2, 2019 at Wesley Medical Center in Wichita, Kansas at the age of 76. She was born October 10, 1942 to Earl and Viola (Arment) Cooper in Phillipsburg, Kansas.
Earlene worked for more than 30 years at Redbud Village, formerly known as Rooks County Nursing Home until her retirement. Earlyne was united in marriage to Thomas Hearld on July 2, 1976 in Stockton, Kansas. He preceded her in death on July 25, 2014.
Earlyne is survived by a sister-in-law Susan Cooper of Plainville, her care-givers Ted and Laura Cole of Plainville, and 2 nieces. She was preceded in death by her parents; husband Thomas; two brothers Jim Cooper and an infant; and one infant sister Teala Cooper.
Graveside services are planned for 10:00 a.m. Wednesday, June 5, 2019 at Plainville Cemetery. Visitation will be Tuesday from 4:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. at the funeral home. Memorials are suggested to the Kansas Soldiers’ Home in Fort Dodge, Kansas and may be sent in care of Plumer-Overlease Funeral Home, 320 SW 2nd, Plainville, Kansas 67663.
Dr. Roger Marshall, R-Great Bend, is the First District Kansas Congressman.
Friends,
Great News from The Environmental Protection Agency
We received some great news from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) last week. They are going to be granting approval for gasoline comprised of up to 15% ethanol (E15) to be sold year round. This has the potential to increase the demand of corn by 100-200 million bushels in the short term, and up to 2 billion bushels in the long term.
EPA also announced they are finalizing regulatory changes to modify certain elements of the renewable identification number (RIN) compliance system under the RFS, in order to bring greater transparency to the market and deter price manipulation. The changes include public disclosure if a party’s RIN holdings exceed certain thresholds and additional data collections to improve EPA market monitoring capability.
This is all great news for rural America and I am extremely pleased that the Trump Administration followed through on this action that will be so helpful to our farmers and drivers across the country.
Trade Aid Update
President Trump and USDA Secretary Perdue recently authorized $16 billion in programs to further help farmers and ranchers impacted by the ongoing trade negotiations with China.
USDA is working overtime to finalize the rulemaking and I will continue to encourage them to release more details and specific payment levels to provide farmers more clarity as they move forward with planting and crop decisions. Below are the details we have been provided thus far:
The aid package includes $14.5 billion in direct payments to farmers through the Market Facilitation Program (MFP). USDA will combine all Title 1 crops planted to create one payment for all acres planted and certified with the Farm Service Agency (FSA) prior to July 15th. These acres cannot exceed total acres planted in 2018 and the payment will not be dependent on the output or production of those acres. Dairy producers will receive a per-hundredweight payment on production history. A second and third round of payments will be announced in November and early January, if the trade dispute continues.
In line with the U.S.’s continued mission of growing trade opportunities, USDA will also be allocated $100 million to help develop new markets for U.S. agriculture goods around the world.
Additionally, $1.4 billion in surplus commodities will be purchased for distribution in food pantries and school nutrition programs.
Serving Those Who Served Us
Every day my office works to protect our current and former service members.
Since taking office in 2017, my office has helped hundreds of constituents who are experiencing issues with the Veterans Affairs (VA) Administration or the Department of Defense (DOD).
My staff recently had the opportunity to help a son honor his late father, Murrell Thomas. Mr. Thomas was a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army during WWII. He was captured in Sicily and endured 960 days in a war camp and was eventually sent home with no recognition for his time as a POW. Earlier this year, my office helped Mr. Thomas’s son, Robert, obtain his late father’s Prisoner of War medal and military service records. The medal is now proudly displayed in the Cloud County Historical museum in Concordia. Second Lieutenant Thomas is an American hero and my staff and I were proud to assist in ensuing he received the recognition he earned in service to our country.
Making Sure We Are Prepared
Stories of natural disasters sweeping across the country, including devastating tornadoes and flooding right here in Kansas, have been front page news. Last Thursday, Katie Moore from my office visited the Federal Emergency Management Administration’s (FEMA) Regional Office in Kansas City. She had the opportunity to meet with Regional Administrator Paul Taylor, Defense Coordinating Officer Col. Isaac Johnson, who coordinates defense support of civilian authorities, and David Gervinho, the Federal Coordinating Officer for the recent Kansas declaration. They shared resources related to emergency declarations, emergency preparedness, and provided overviews of how the team in Kansas coordinates federal agencies with state and local partners for disaster response.
They also discussed FEMA’s cell phone app, which gives the user information on how to prepare in the event of a disaster. It also includes information about emergency shelter locations during a crisis, disaster recovery centers following an event, and provides real-time alerts for up to five locations nationwide. The app is available for free on both the Apple and Android app stores. Recent events have highlighted the need for all of us across the state and country to be weather aware and prepared, especially going into summer months with more extreme weather systems!
If you would like to get more information or want to download the app Click Here.
Meeting with the Kansas City Chamber
Katie Moore and Tyler Mason from my staff attended the Kansas City Chamber’s annual Spotlight on KC event. This program is designed to highlight the federal priorities and opportunities in this unique region for staffers from both the Kansas and Missouri delegations, focusing on issues related to workforce development, transportation, infrastructure, and trade. While there are many differences between Kansas City and the towns across Western Kansas, many of the challenges they’re facing also are impacting folks back home. From workforce shortages to the need for investments in roads, bridges, and other forms of infrastructure, these conversations are beneficial to finding a solution to problems facing all Kansans. Kansas City is an important partner for much of what we do in the district. It is important that we stay engaged, as these connections often have an impact on businesses, economic development, and opportunities throughout the Big First. It was a great forum and I’m glad staff from both my DC and district offices were able to participate!
Good Luck to Kansan Auctioneers
The 2019 World Livestock Auctioneer Championship will be taking place on June 7th and 8th and I am pleased to say that there will be three contestants from the great state of Kansas. Niel Bouray from Webber, Dakota Davis from Caldwell, and Lynn Langvardt from Chapman will be among the 31 contestants seeking to bring home the title.
The competition will have two parts, an interview portion and a live sale portion. For the interview competition contestants must prove their understanding of livestock marketing history and show that they are able to express what they know in a clear and concise manner. During the sale portion, contestants will actually sell to bidders and will be evaluated based on their presentations, chant, execution of sale, and how willing the judges would be to hire the auctioneer.
Good luck to our Kansas contestants! I will be routing for you and wish you all the best in the upcoming competition.
Dr. Roger Marshall, R-Great Bend, is the First District Kansas Congressman.
WASHINGTON — Eagle Communications Inc. has been selected by the National ESOP Association as the winner of the 2019 Total Communications, More Than 250 Employees, Annual Award for Communications Excellence. The Total Communications award recognizes overall excellence in efforts to educate the public and employee owners about a company’s ESOP and ownership culture.
Eagle was also selected as the runner-up winner for two other awards: Videos and the Employee Ownership Marketing category.
The Videos award distinguishes excellence in the use of original, printed materials to explain or promote the company’s ESOP to employee owners, customers, or the community. Eagle’s final nomination, in Employee Ownership Marketing, recognizes excellence in advertising and marketing the benefits of employee ownership to customers, the community, and the public.
Andrea Clinkscales
Individually, Andrea Clinkscales was recognized as a finalist for National “Employee Owner of the Year.” She was recipient of the Heart of America “Employee Owner of the Year” Award in 2018.
“The great educational curriculum for employee owners includes ESOP 101 content, information discussed on weekly bulletin videos, a weekly revenue call, an ESOP Facebook group, eight educational videos, and a pre-retirement seminar. A leadership program is a great development opportunity for employee owners looking to take a greater role. The company also engages in local Chamber of Commerce events to share about the company and employee ownership,” commented the AACE judges.
The AACE awards are sponsored each year by the Association to recognize the outstanding communications and educational programs of its members. The awards are presented each May at the Association’s National Conference in Washington, DC to companies who have excelled in communicating the ESOP and its meaning to the company’s employees.
Gary Shorman
AACE Award winners are chosen by a panel of five judges made up of both management and non-management employee owners, each of whom has demonstrated active experience and interest in the field of ESOP’s and employee ownership communications.
Gary Shorman, CEO of Eagle Communications, is Chairman of the National ESOP Association.
“The National Conference brings together some of the best employee owned companies in the country,” he said. “For us to be represented as award winners shows the passion of our Eagle team for providing great customer service and “no excuses” employee ownership in the communities we serve.”
Eagle Communications is the parent company of Hays Post.
SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal weekend shooting and have a suspect in custody.
Phillips photo Sedgwick Co.
Just after 11:45 p.m. Saturday, police responded to report of a shooting in the 400 Block of North New CT. in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson.
At the scene officers found a 29-year-old man identified as Ivell Ray of Wichita in the street with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
An investigation revealed Ray and a suspect identified as 34-year Isaac Phillips of Wichita were involved in a disturbance. Phillips fired a handgun multiple times striking Ray. On Monday, Davidson reported police arrested Phillips on a requested charge of first-degree murder.
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SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal weekend shooting.
Just after 11:45p.m. Saturday, police responded to report of a shooting in the 400 Block of North New York CT. in Wichita, according to officer Charley Davidson. At the scene officers found a 29-year-old man with multiple gunshot wounds. He died at the scene.
Davidson did not release the victim’s name and police have not reported an arrest.
James Lynn Applegate, beloved son of Ellis Wayne and Margie Lillian (Houghton) Applegate, was born in Norton, Kansas on July 30, 1946, and passed away at his home in Norton on May 28, 2019, at the age of 72.
Jim grew up in Norton and graduated from Norton Community High School. On May 31, 1968, Jim and Phyllis Holeman were united in marriage and to this union three children were born. They later divorced.
Jim was a member of the Maple Grove Church of the Brethren. He enjoyed bailing hay and even did custom bailing. He also enjoyed reading Louis L’Amour books and coaching wrestling. His greatest love was his family especially his children and grandchildren.
Survivors include: three children, Amanda, and husband, Stephen Davis; Kelli, and husband, Justin Pachner; Jamie, and husband, Jim Ulrich; one brother, Stan, and wife, Carolyn Applegate; eight grandchildren; his beloved dog, Lady; several other relatives and friends.
Jim was preceded in death by his parents and his dog, John Henry.
VISITATION – Thursday, June 6, 2019 from 5:00 PM until 7:00 PM
PLACE – Enfield Funeral Home – Norton, Kansas
FUNERAL SERVICE – Friday, June 7, 2019 – 10:30 AM
PLACE – Enfield Funeral Home – Norton, Kansas
INTERMENT – Norton Cemetery – Norton, Kansas
MEMORIALS – James Applegate Memorial Fund
PARKVILLE, MO – Park University’s Cherry Point North Carolina Marine Corps Air Station Campus held its commencement ceremony on May 30 at Cherry Point Base Chapel. The University had 53 students eligible to participate in the ceremony — one student received a master’s degree, 48 students received a bachelor’s degree, one student received two bachelor’s degrees, one student received a bachelor’s degree and associate degree, and three students received an associate degree.
Associate of Science
• Sinjin A. Smith, Management, Havelock, N.C., is a 2010 graduate of Hays [Kan.] High School. Smith also attended Fort Hays State University.
ELLIS – The Ellis City Council will tonight consider approval of the Planning Commission’s goals and objectives for the Ellis Comprehensive Plan.
Other meeting agenda items include approval of Freedom Choice Health Insurance provisions and Vision Care Direct Plan for city employees.
The complete June 3 agenda follows.
AGENDA
June 3, 2019
REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF ELLIS
City Hall – Council Meeting Room
BILLS ORDINANCE REVIEW WORK SESSION BEGINS AT 7:00 P.M.
ROLL CALL AND MEETING CALL TO ORDER AT 7:30 P.M.
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
AMENDMENTS TO AGENDA (if needed)
CONSENT AGENDA
Minutes from Regular Meeting on May 20, 2019
Bills Ordinance #2070
(Council will review for approval under one motion under the consent agenda. By majority vote of the governing body, any item may be removed from the consent agenda and considered separately)
PUBLIC COMMENTS
(Each speaker will be limited to five minutes. If several people from the group wish to speak on same subject, the group must appoint a spokesperson. ALL comments from public on agenda items must be during Public Comment. Once council begins their business meeting, no more comments from public will be allowed.)
PRESENTATIONS OF AWARDS, PROCLAMATIONS, REQUESTS & PETITIONS (HEARINGS)
SPECIAL ORDER
Discuss Mowing Violation – Kellie Crnkovich
UNFINISHED BUSINESS
Consider Approval of Freedom Choice Health Insurance Provisions and Vision Care Direct Plan
NEW BUSINESS
Consider Approval of Planning Commission’s Goals and Objectives for the City Comprehensive Plan
Consider Purchase of Water Sealer for Mt. Hope Cemetery and the Swimming Pool Buildings
Lois June Holopirek, 88, of McPherson, KS and formerly of Rush Center, KS, passed away peacefully on Thursday, May 30, 2019, surrounded by family at Hutchinson Regional Medical Center, Hutchinson, KS. Lois was a homemaker and custodian at Timken Elementary School in Timken, KS.
Lois was born on July 23, 1930, in La Crosse, KS, the daughter of Ernest and Zelma (Moore) Hallett. She graduated from La Crosse High School. Lois was united in marriage to Eugene Roland Holopirek on October 14, 1948, in Rush Center, KS. He preceded her in death on August 27, 2014.
She was a member of Hope Lutheran Church in Rush Center and the Monday Evening Club in Timken.
Survivors include: her daughter, Sharon Johnson (John) of McPherson, KS; granddaughter, Dee Erway-Sherwood (Ryan Sherwood) and three great-grandchildren, Cody, Cole, and Lauren Sherwood, all of McPherson, KS; sisters, Norma Kelley of Lawrence, KS and Charlotte Peters (Bill Ford) of La Crosse, KS; sisters-in-law, Roberta Terry of Quincy, IL and Lilah Hallett of Rush Center, KS; and numerous nieces & nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, and siblings, Dotty Kober, Eugene Hallett, and Lloyd “Punk” Hallett.
The family will receive friends from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM, Tuesday, June 4, 2019, at Stockham Family Funeral Home, McPherson, KS. The funeral service will be held at 11:00 AM, Wednesday, June 5, at Hope Lutheran Church, Rush Center, KS. Burial will be held in La Crosse Cemetery, La Crosse, KS.
Memorial donations may be given to Rush County Emergency Medical Services in care of Stockham Family Funeral Home, 205 North Chestnut, McPherson, KS 67460.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration’s first broad testing of food for a worrisome class of nonstick, stain-resistant industrial compounds found substantial levels in some grocery store meats and seafood and in off-the-shelf chocolate cake, according to unreleased findings FDA researchers presented at a scientific conference in Europe.
FDA lab in Silver Springs Maryland -photo courtesy FDA
The FDA’s disclosure is likely to add to concerns raised by states and public health groups that President Donald Trump’s administration is not acting fast enough or firmly enough to start regulating the manmade compounds, called “forever chemicals.” A federal toxicology report last year cited consistent associations between very high levels of the industrial compounds in peoples’ blood and health risks but said there was not enough evidence to prove the compounds as the cause.
The levels in nearly half of the meat and fish tested were double or more the only currently existing federal advisory level for any kind of the widely used manmade compounds, which are called per- and polyfluoroalykyl substances, or PFAS.
The level in the chocolate cake was higher: more than 250 times the only federal guidelines, which are for some PFAS in drinking water.
Food and Drug Administration spokeswoman Tara Rabin said Monday that the agency thought the contamination was “not likely to be a human health concern,” even though the tests exceeded the sole existing federal PFAS recommendations, for drinking water.
As a handful of PFAS contaminations of food emerge around the country, authorities have deemed some a health concern but not others. The agency considers each discovery of the compound in food case by case, including the kind of food, levels of contamination, frequency of consumption and latest scientific information, Rabin said.
“Measuring PFAS concentrations in food, estimating dietary exposure and determining the associated health effects is an emerging area of science,” the FDA said.
PFAS, created by DuPont in 1938 and put into use for tough nonstick cookware, now exists in an estimated 5,000 varieties. Industries use the product to keep grease, water and stains off countless consumer items, including in food packaging, carpets and couches, dental floss and outdoor gear.
The chemicals also are found in firefighting foam, which the Department of Defense calls irreplaceable in suppressing jet-fuel fires. Especially around military bases and PFAS facilities, decades of use have built up levels in water, soil and some treated sewage sludge used to fertilize non-organic food crops and feed for livestock.
They’ve been a topic of congressional hearings, state legislation and intense federal and state scrutiny over the past two years.
The federal toxicology review last year concluded the compounds are more dangerous than previously thought, saying consistent studies of exposed people “suggest associations” with some kinds of cancers, liver problems, low birth weight and other issues.
Because the tough compounds are predicted to take thousands of years to degrade, and because older versions have been found to accumulate in peoples’ bodies, PFAS has acquired the name “forever chemicals.”
The Environmental Protection Agency earlier established a nonbinding health advisory threshold of 70 parts per trillion for two-phased out forms of the contaminant in drinking water.
Trump’s EPA said it would consider setting mandatory limits instead in the wake of the federal toxicology report and after federally mandated water sampling found high levels in many drinking water systems around the country. The administration has called dealing with PFAS contamination a “potential public relations nightmare” and a “national priority.”
Impatient for federal action, several states have moved to regulate the chemicals on their own, including setting standards for groundwater or drinking water.
In the FDA study, conducted in October 2017, researchers oversaw market basket testing for more than a dozen PFAS, drawing on samples of food on sale in three undisclosed mid-Atlantic cities.
FDA researchers discussed the results at the annual conference by the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry in Helsinki, Finland, last week.
Two environmental groups, the Environmental Defense Fund and the Environmental Working Group, obtained written results and charts from the FDA presentation and provided them to The Associated Press.
PFOS, an older form of PFAS no longer made in the U.S., turned up at levels ranging from 134 parts per trillion to 865 parts per trillion in tilapia, chicken, turkey, beef, cod, salmon, shrimp, lamb, catfish and hot dogs. Prepared chocolate cake tested at 17,640 parts per trillion of a kind of PFAS called PFPeA.
The FDA presentation also included what appeared to be previously unreported findings of PFAS levels — one spiking over 1,000 parts per trillion — in leafy green vegetables grown within 10 miles (16 kilometers) of an unspecified eastern U.S. PFAS plant and sold at a farmer’s market.
It also previewed test levels for a previously reported instance of PFAS contamination of the food supply, in the feed and milk at a dairy near an Air Force base in New Mexico.
The FDA said the contamination in that milk was a health concern. It said it would release detailed data on that soon.
The FDA in 2015 and 2016 revoked approval for some older versions of PFAS in food packaging, although it was one of those versions that was found in high levels in its testing of meat and seafood.
In its statement, the FDA noted studies suggesting newer forms may also pose a health risk. It said it was working with other federal agencies to determine appropriate next steps.
“What this calls for is additional research to determine how widespread this contamination is and how high the levels are,” Linda Birnbaum, director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, said separately in an interview. “We have to look at total human exposure — not just what’s in the water or what’s in the food … or not just dust. We need to look at the sum totals of what the exposures are.”
Birnbaum added, “Nobody is exposed to just one form of PFAS in isolation. You’re exposed to a whole mixture.”
It’s unclear what human health risks are posed by the presence of PFAS chemicals in foods, said Jamie DeWitt, a toxicologist at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina, who studies PFAS compounds.
The discovery of PFAS contamination in wells and land around a Chemours Co. manufacturing plant near Fayetteville has made North Carolina one of the focuses of study for exposures.
“Drinking one glass of contaminated water is unlikely to be associated with health risks, as is eating one slice of contaminated chocolate cake,” DeWitt said. “Individually, each item is unlikely to be a huge problem, but collectively and over a lifetime, that may be a different story.”
Sally Brown, a University of Washington researcher who supports the use of treated sewage sludge by agriculture, said the FDA’s findings were “not a major concern.”
“If you are worried about this type of compound it makes sense to ban the cookware and the dental floss” treated with PFAS, Brown said.
Near Fayetteville, neighbors of the Chemours PFAS facility are making plans for a Fourth of July parade float dedicated to warning others just how widely PFAS was turning up in the area.
The float will feature men fishing in a contaminated pond and vegetables growing in a contaminated garden, said Michael Watters, who lives a mile (1.6 kilometers) from the plant. Watters said he has stopped consuming well water and vegetables from his own land.
99 KZ Country is celebrating Beef Month by giving you the chance to win a $200 Beef Bundle from Bird’s Family Market in Quinter.
Listen for the cows on KHAZ weekday mornings May 13 – May 31, 2019. That’s the cue to call 785-628-2995 to register for the drawing. One registration per person per day. No age requirement to register.
Bird’s Family Market in Quinter
Monday-Friday: 8 am to 7 pm
Saturday: 8 am to 5:30 pm
Sunday: closed
231 Main Street, P.O. Box 454, Quinter, KS 67752
Phone: 785-754-3791
Bird’s Family Market has a new full-time meat cutter and a fully stocked meat department just in time for the summer grilling season.