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Bruce Paul Lopez

Memorial Mass for Bruce Paul Lopez, 61, Lawrence, will be held at 10:00 a.m. Saturday, October 12, 2019 at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Lawrence. Bruce passed away Thursday, October 3, 2019. A Rosary will be recited Friday, October 11th at 5 p.m. with a visitation to follow until 7 p.m. at Warren-McElwain Mortuary in Lawrence.

Bruce was born on July 3, 1958, in Garden City, Kansas, the son of Paul and Antonia (Blea) Lopez. Bruce grew up in Garden City, Kansas. He attended Thomas More Prep high school and University of Kansas.
He was the Director of Sales for a collection services company.

He married Mary Katherine Holter on June 8, 1996, in Lawrence, KS. The center of his life was his family, and he especially treasured his four grandsons and embraced every moment with them. He never met a stranger and was blessed with wonderful friends and coworkers who he considered his second family. Bruce will be dearly missed and forever in our hearts.

Bruce is survived by his wife, Mary, his daughter, Jessica Dwyer, Olathe, KS; son, Brian(Jessica) Dwyer, Wichita, four grandsons, Devon (9), twin grandsons, Travis and Brooks (6), and Easton (6 weeks); his father, Paul Lopez, Garden City, KS; sisters Patsy Ramirez Blackburn, Holcolm, KS; Paula Lopez Stevenson, Cimarron, KS; brother, Alexander Ramirez, Garden City, KS; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his mother, Antonia Lopez.

Memorial contributions in Bruce’s memory may be made to Thomas More Prep-Marian, Jr./Sr. High School, c/o Advancement Office, 1701 Hall St., Hays, KS 67601 or to the Bruce Lopez Memorial Fund for his grandsons’ education and may be sent in care of Warren-McElwain Mortuary, 120 W. 13th Street, Lawrence, KS 66044.

Wastewater treatment plant reconstruction complete

Hays wastewater treatment plant construction on Sept. 18. (Photo courtesy city of Hays)

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

The 17-month, $28.4 million project to rebuild and upgrade the Hays wastewater treatment plant is complete.

Hays city commissioners will hear a final report during their meeting Thursday. Earlier in the day they’ll tour the reconstructed facility at 755 General Custer along with Kansas Department of Health and Environment representatives.

Work on the plant, formally known as Chetolah Creek Water Reclamation and Reuse Facility, began in May 2017 in order to meet future effluent requirements mandated by KDHE and the EPA.

Throughout the project, representatives of HDR Engineers, the city’s owner’s representative, has presented regular progress updates to the commission.

In other business, Jesse Rohr, public works director, will discuss the Ellis County floodplain remapping project.

The Kansas Division of Water Resources (DWR) and FEMA began the project in February, 2018, to update the 1986 maps currently in use.

According to Rohr the new Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) are expected to be at least 10 times more accurate and will utilize digital tools when evaluating properties for flooding risk.

Draft maps will be available for public feedback during an open house  2 p.m. to 7 p.m. Nov. 6 at Sternberg Museum.

After approval, the final floodplain maps are scheduled to become effective by the summer of 2021.

The complete Oct. 10 agenda is available here. The meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. in Hays City Hall, 1507 Main.

 

 

 

Police: Search continues for 2nd suspect in deadly Kan. bar shooting

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The hunt continues for a second suspect in a weekend Kansas bar shooting that left four dead and five wounded after officers searched two homes in the area without finding the fugitive.

Hugo Villanueva-Morales photo KCK Police
Alatorre photo KCK Police

On Tuesday, police looked for 29-year-old Hugo Villanueva-Morales first at a duplex that is less than 1 mile away from the Tequila KC bar. Gunfire erupted there early Sunday about two hours after Villanueva-Morales got into an argument and was forced to leave. Police Officer Jonathon Westbrook says police also searched a second home before determining Villanueva-Morales wasn’t there.

Villanueva-Morales and 23-year-old Javier Alatorre are charged with four counts of first-degree murder. Alatorre was arrested later Sunday in Kansas City, Missouri. Police say Villanueva-Morales should be considered “armed and dangerous.”

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Man sentenced for 27 armed robberies in Kansas, Missouri

KANSAS CITY – A man was sentenced in federal court Tuesday for his role in a three-months-long conspiracy that included more than 27 armed robberies, culminating in the armed robbery of a Walgreens in Blue Springs, Missouri, in which a suspect was fatally shot by law enforcement officers.

Thomas-Mo. Dept. of Corrections

Shannon R. Thomas, 29, Kansas City was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Greg Kays to life in federal prison without parole, followed by a consecutive sentence of 72 years in federal prison without parole.

On May 9, 2019, Thomas was found guilty at trial of participating in the conspiracy as well as participating in 10 armed robberies. He was also found guilty of 10 counts of brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a violent crime, and one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. The life sentence was imposed for Thomas’s conviction of brandishing a firearm during the Walgreens robbery that resulted in the death of Jermon Seals.

Thomas and co-conspirators robbed 27 businesses in Blue Springs, Independence, North Kansas City, Raytown, and Kansas City, Missouri, and in Kansas City, Kansas, at gunpoint from Jan. 2 to March 24, 2016. In addition to the armed robberies charged in the indictment, evidence was introduced during the trial of other, uncharged robberies that were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy. Victim businesses included convenience stores, pharmacies, and other businesses.

The robberies followed a similar pattern: Two or three conspirators entered the business armed with handguns, wearing gloves, hoodies, and/or masks. The hoodies were drawn tightly over their faces to obscure their features. The employees were forced at gunpoint to hand over money from the cash register and the safe. The thieves wore the same hoodies in nearly all the robberies; Thomas wore a blue Kansas City Royals hoodie for the majority of the robberies he committed.

The spree of robberies culminated on March 24, 2016. Thomas, along with co-defendant Deonte J. Collins-Abbott, 25, of Grandview, Missouri, and Jermon Seals of Shawnee, Kansas, robbed the Walgreens at 7 Highway and Duncan in Blue Springs. Thomas placed a Springfield Armory .40-caliber semi-automatic pistol to the back of an employee’s head and took money from the front register. Collins-Abbott and Seals went over the pharmacy counter and took prescription grade cough syrup at gunpoint from the pharmacist. They left the business but were confronted by law enforcement officers as they were walking back to the vehicle. They failed to comply with the officers’ commands; Seals turned towards the officers, pointing a gun in their direction. Officers returned fire and Seals was fatally struck in the exchange. Thomas and Collins-Abbott were apprehended by officers after a short foot chase.

Collins-Abbott pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 25 years in federal prison without parole. Collins-Abbott admitted that he committed eight armed robberies between Feb. 3, 2016, and March 24, 2016.

Parrise K. Black, also known as “Kilo,” 27, of Grandview, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison without parole. Demetrius Nelson, 26, of Kansas City, Missouri, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight years in federal prison without parole. Co-defendant Kevin T. Thompson-Randell, 24, of Kansas City, Missouri, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years in federal prison without parole.

Frank A. Garner, Jr., 25, of Grandview, pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 18, 2019.

FHSU events are always celebration time for Honorary Alumni Family

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

Holidays and Fort Hays State University sporting events are nearly one and the same for the Mark and Patti (Covington) Griffin family.

Avid sports fans, the Griffins have worked at their alma mater for 31 years. Their two sons virtually grew up on campus and began attending Tiger sporting events and other campus activities from the time they were babies.

While Homecoming is one of those events where both sides of their families usually meet up, Homecoming 2019 will have a special twist to it.

The Covington/Griffin family has been named Honorary Alumni Family of the Year for 2019. The distinction, in its third year, is sponsored by the FHSU Alumni Association.

About 25 family members, ranging from 2 to 81 years, are expected to ride in the 11 a.m. parade down Main Street Saturday on a trailer behind the university car carrying FHSU President Tisa Mason.

“I am really looking forward to it,” said Dixie Covington, Patti’s mother, who lives in Galva with her husband, Don. “Oktoberfest, the parade, tailgating, everything.”

Nearly 40 members of Mark’s and Patti’s extended family have attended FHSU, including their sons, Thayne and Kellen.

Thayne took some classes at FHSU while in high school but opted for a career in actuarial science and graduated from Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa. However, his wife, the former Kristen Fleharty, is an FHSU grad. They plan to come to Hays for the weekend and celebrate with their 2-year-old son, Parker.

“He still considers himself a Tiger,” Patti said of her oldest son, whose wedding was held in the Fort Hays State quad. When Thayne was in college at Drake, he often made the three-hour drive to Kansas City to watch the FHSU basketball teams in the MIAA tournament.

Both Kellen and his wife, Quillen (Eichhorn), are Fort Hays State alumni. And all three of Patti’s siblings and their spouses earned degrees from FHSU.

The ones who started it all more than 60 years ago will be present for the weekend festivities. In fact, Stan and Neva Griffin called off a trip to Tennessee when they learned their family was being honored this weekend.

Stan and Neva were high school sweethearts in Bunker Hill. After graduating in a class of seven in 1956, they came to Fort Hays State to further their education when their principal, Elmer Dougherty – also a successful farmer in the area – paid their tuition for the first year.

Stan chuckles when thinking about the cost of tuition back then: $55 a semester. It was the jump start he needed to get a college education. The couple was married in 1957, and Neva decided to join the workforce so Stan could finish his degree in teacher education.

After several years in the education field, Stan landed a position as manager of the computer center at a bank in Kansas City. He worked there for 32 years before retiring in 1999.

All the while, Stan and Neva have remained involved with Fort Hays State. Stan served on the board of directors for the Alumni Association for four years, and the couple regularly attends alumni events in the Kansas City area.

“I have a buddy who graduated from Pittsburg State, but I’ve converted him to a Fort Hays State fan,” Stan says proudly.

Patti’s dad is a retired Southern Baptist minister, so her family moved around a lot during her grade school days.

After graduating from Northern Valley High School in 1983, Patti followed her older sister, Pam, to Fort Hays State. Mark chose FHSU mostly because his cousins Ken and Kevin Shaffer had made the decision earlier. Both Ken and Kevin are alums.

He also liked the wide open spaces and has fond memories of making trips from Kansas City to Bunker Hill and Russell to visit relatives while growing up.

“I have always loved the country more than the city,” Mark said. “I love going back to KC to visit, but I sure like living out here.”

Both Mark and Patti were involved with intramurals as FHSU students and actually met on the softball fields. The gal from the tiny town of Almena and the city boy from Kansas City married in 1987, a week after their FHSU graduation.

“The rest, I guess,” Mark said, “is history.”

That strong FHSU family tradition proved to be just getting started.

To date, 34 FHSU degrees have been earned by family members, including numerous first cousins and their spouses.

Mark graduated with a degree in computer information systems, and Patti’s bachelor’s was in communication.

They moved to the Kansas City area after graduation but returned to Hays a year later when Mark was offered a job as a system administrator in FHSU’s computing center.

The Griffins were so excited about returning to their alma mater that when the phone call came to offer Mark the position, Patti answered and accepted the job for Mark.

“I’d lived a lot of places during my lifetime,” she said. “I was eager to get back to Hays, closer to family. And I knew Fort Hays State would be a great place to work.”

Patti took a temporary job on campus and began work on her master’s. She then earned her Ph.D. from Kansas State University and soon afterward was hired as the first director of academic advising at FHSU, a position she has held ever since. She is also an associate professor of communication studies.

Mark continued to advance in the computing center and now is assistant vice president and chief information officer for Technology Services. He also is a familiar face in other campus arenas. After volunteering to help run the scoreboard at a Tiger football game back in 1988, the job was his permanently. He runs the shot clock for FHSU basketball games as well.

Patti has also been involved with numerous activities, including advisor for Tiger Wild, member and president of the University Athletic Association and a board member for academic advising networks on the state, regional and global levels.

Both have served as co-chairs for the FHSU Foundation Campus Drive and volunteer for various events on campus.

Kellen said he has fond memories of Fort Hays State, dating all the way back to childhood when he often would come to campus after school and hang out in his parents’ offices.

Along about his junior year in high school, Kellen decided he wanted to become a teacher. He knew the perfect place to pursue an education degree.

“The education program at Fort Hays State is phenomenal,” said Kellen, now a math teacher at Shawnee Heights High School east of Topeka. “So it was the perfect place to be.”

It still is. Kellen is working on his master’s in mathematics education through FHSU’s Virtual College and on-campus classes during the summer months.

The Griffins have seen a lot of change at Fort Hays State through four decades, but the constant is the people.

“Good, solid, Fort Hays State people,” Mark started slowly, then paused when he got choked up.

“You hear people use the word family a lot when they are talking about Fort Hays State,” he said. “But it’s true. This really is a family.”

Ellis Co. discusses the future of failing county road

BY JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

Ellis County Public Works crews are looking into how to improve the condition of the Ellis Blacktop, or 120th Avenue south of Ellis.

Public Works Director Bill Ring told the county commission Monday the 5 miles at the south end of the road are in poor condition and are getting worse.

“It’s pushing out on the sides in areas,” Ring said. “The problem with a road that old and that wore out is you can’t just put patch on it anymore.”

Ring said they have talked about repairing it in the past and believe there is only two options. The first would be to repave the road, but that would be extremely expensive, he said.

Ring said paving it again “would be probably a multi-million dollar expense which neither the county nor the Public Works Department feels would be a viable thing to do.”

The less expensive option would be to taking the road back to the rock and gravel base like many of the county roads are now.

Ring said he had a contractor give him an estimate as to what it would cost to mill a portion of the road and mix it back down with rock. The contractor’s estimate was more than $100,000, not include the county’s expenses.

“That’s not a projected expense in this year’s budget,” Ring said. “We could look at the budget deeper to see where we may be able to possibly move some money over.”

According to a traffic count done in April by the Kansas Department of Transportation, approximately 138 vehicles travel the road per day. Ring said it has remained nearly the same for the past five traffic counts.

The road goes back to dirt and sand at the Rush and Ness County line.

Ellis County Commissioner Dustin Roths said it could be dangerous with the way it turns from the asphalt surface to dirt and sand.

He also questioned why it was paved as far south as it is.

“It’s one of those where I wonder why the heck we have a paved road that far out in the middle of nowhere that we have to take care of,” Roths said. “I don’t think multiple million (of) dollars are in our future to try and fix that problem.”

Commissioner Dean Haselhorst said he was contacted about the condition of the road over the weekend. Later that day, that person’s daughter was involved in a rollover accident on 120th just south of Munjor Road. The girl was briefly hospitalized but did not suffer any injuries.

Ring said that accident occurred north of the area that is in disrepair.

CLARIFICATION: The mother of the accident victim told Hays Post on Wednesday that the contact with the commissioner was made earlier in the week, and clarified that the accident was not caused by road conditions.

Public Works crew recently worked to improve that area and a couple of miles just to the south of the town of Ellis.

The commission instructed Ring to look for what the best options would be to improve the road condition and come back to the commission.

In other business, the commission:

• Heard a legislative update from State Sen. Rick Billinger, R-Goodland, and State Rep. Barbara Wasinger, R-Hays.

• Approved the reclassification of a pair of positions within the Register of Deeds office.

• Approved the sale of an extra spray truck to Osborne County and approved a revision of the personnel policy.

BOOR: Seminar will focus on freezer cooking

Alicia Boor

What’s for dinner? This question probably gets asked in most households every night by every family member. If you are the preparer, you may even ask this question. The Women on the Farm group would like to help take the guesswork out by offering a Freezer Cooking Workshop on Nov. 2 at the Haas Building at the Pawnee County Fairgrounds in Larned.

Freezer Cooking is when you cook a bunch of meals at one time to put in your freezer and then pull out as need be. Each participant will walk away from the day with 8 meals to put in their freezer. Each meal will serve 5 people with some left overs.

We will be making Honey Rosemary Chicken, Green Chile Pork Tacos, Beef & Creamy Potato Casserole, Chicken Pot Pie, Cheesy Ham & Potatoes, Swiss Steak & Veggies, Breakfast Casserole, and Pizza Casserole. Each participant is asked to bring a knife, cutting board, measuring spoons, liquid measuring cup, and a box/cooler to take all of your meals home in! This will be a productive morning and a great way to get all of your week’s cooking done! An added bonus is we are doing all of the grocery shopping for you.

This method of cooking is a great way to save time and money. Because we are buying in much larger quantities, we can stretch the food dollar. By spending a morning as a large group making this happen, it will help free up your evenings to relax or get to a project you have been meaning to do!

We will have people register at 8:30 a.m. and start cooking at 9:00 a.m. We hope to finish around noon. Please RSVP by October 28th to Pawnee County Extension at 620-285-6901. Space is limited and there is a 75.00 fee to cover the costs.

Alicia Boor is the Agriculture and Natural Resources agent for Barton County K-state Research and Extension. One can contact her by email at [email protected] or calling 620-793-1910

Kansas Farm Bureau Insight: Collision course

By JACKIE MUNDT
Pratt County farmer and rancher

Like many children, I once dreamed of becoming President of the United States. A big, old White House and a high-power job were awe-inspiring.

When I was 13 years old, President Clinton was impeached, and that shiny vision cracked a little. The following trial set a different tone for my generation’s relationship with politicians. As we have grown, that vision has completely disappeared with a string of dishonest politicians with messed up personal lives and poor decision-making abilities.

Discrediting a political rival has become the high stakes poker of politics. If you can find the right piece of dirt, you can end a career. However, someone may call your bluff or trump your allegation with even more dirt to defeat your own candidate. The worst part of this base practice is the American public loves the drama.

Enter President Trump. Now, instead of spending time ratifying an important trade agreement that would help farmers and other industries with USMCA, Congress is spending time on impeachment inquiries into a politician who was trying to dig up dirt about another politician.

I’m not taking a position on the President’s guilt or innocence. My point is voters played an important hand in all this. Americans chose a divided government in 2018 and set the county on this collision course.

An impeachment inquiry for charges of “high crimes and misdemeanors,” where the term high refers not to the magnitude of offense but the level of authority of the office should cause us to reflect on our own part in this. What responsibility do we bear in the current norms of our political system, and how do they affect who enters life in the public eye?

Good people who would be great public leaders have no interest in public service because it is a thankless job. The pay and benefits cannot make up for the heartache of ineffectiveness. There is no joy in watching your family and your own reputation being drug through the mud; and, if elected, there is constant, personal criticisms being freely and violently launched.

The inability to separate personal feelings and surface judgments are pulling our country apart. We need to change our paradigm about politics and politicians. If we actually want to “Make America Great Again,” it has to start with us.
Start learning about what is actually happening in our political system beyond the headlines. Have conversations with your family, friends and neighbors to learn what matters to each of you. Be sure to argue on some things and do not hold it against someone who takes an opposing view. Sometimes that opposing view can be the key to a great solution for everyone.

Talk to your elected representatives. Not only does this help them understand your viewpoint, it also holds them accountable to the people they represent. If you think they aren’t representing you well, run for office yourself or find another candidate to support. Remember they should be earning the authority to be a leader.

Most importantly stop following the sensationalized stories. Our system of government is not broken; we just haven’t been doing our part. If we own our opinions and start actively participating in the political process, this country has a chance to overcome our differences and live up to its potential.

“Insight” is a weekly column published by Kansas Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization whose mission is to strengthen agriculture and the lives of Kansans through advocacy, education and service.

Prairie Doc Perspectives: The cost of health care

Dr. Tom Dean

By DR. TOM DEAN

Health care costs too much. The U.S. spends twice as much as other wealthy nations and yet we have poorer outcomes. Patients in this country visit physicians less frequently and spend less time in hospitals than residents of other wealthy countries. So, why such high costs? It’s a complex issue with no simple answer.

Experts have identified three major factors contributing to this situation. The most significant is higher prices, followed by costly administrative complexity and finally, the use of ineffective or overly aggressive medical interventions that provide little benefit to patients.

What about prices? The average U.S. hospital discharge costs over $29,000 compared to $18,000 in the Netherlands and $16,000 in Canada. The average MRI price in Australia is $350 compared to $1145 in the U.S.  Prices, especially drug prices keep going higher. Lantus insulin introduced nearly 20 years ago at about $35 per vial now sells for $260. The U.K. price is $26. Gleevec, a remarkably effective drug for leukemia, introduced in 2001 at $26,000 per year, more recently sells for $120,000. The generic form sells for $96,000.

Trying to control costs in the U.S., both the government and insurance companies have applied complex regulations resulting in the addition of administrative staff and steadily increasing expenditures. Studies show that 20 to 30 percent of health care expenditures now go to cover admin costs, a much higher rate than other countries.

What to do? As a society we have depended on market forces to control prices. This is effective when selling groceries and gasoline but in health care it has failed. The simple explanation is that health care providers do not compete based on price. Even when patients have comparative cost information, they all too often do not select the most cost-effective approach.

Too little incentive exists for providers, especially physicians, to seek out the most efficient approach to care. In fact, existing financial incentives often push physicians and other providers in the opposite direction – the more you do the more you are paid.

Bottom line: As a society we in the U.S. have never figured out where health care fits in the spectrum of economic activity. Is it a commercial product like automobiles and blue jeans where those with more resources can purchase more elaborate products, or is it a basic human service like public education or fire protection to be made available to everyone?

In the words of the late Professor Uwe Reinhardt, one of the giants of health policy analysis, what we have is a philosophical and ethical challenge not an economic one.

Tom Dean, MD of Wessington Springs, South Dakota, is a contributing Prairie Doc® columnist who has practiced family medicine for more than 38 years. He served as a member of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission. For free and easy access to the entire Prairie Doc® library, visit www.prairiedoc.org and follow Prairie Doc® on Facebook, featuring On Call with the Prairie Doc® a medical Q&A show streamed most Thursdays at 7 p.m. central. 

Police attempt to identify man wanted for lewd behavior on KU campus

Photos courtesy KU office of public satety

DOUGLAS COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating after two female students on the University of Kansas campus reported a man exposed himself to them Tuesday morning, according to a media release from the university office of public safety.

The incident occurred on a sidewalk between Hashinger and Lewis Halls. Authorities released security camera images of the suspect who left the area in a dark 4-door vehicle.

Police need help identifying the suspect. If you have information, call police.

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