OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas business executive with political ties to former Republican Gov. Sam Brownback has officially kicked off her campaign to challenge freshman Democratic Rep. Sharice Davids.
Amanda Adkins courtesy photo
Amanda Adkins made the announcement Monday. It was expected after she filed paperwork last week with the Federal Election Commission creating a campaign committee for a run for the GOP nomination in the Kansas City-area 3rd Congressional District.
Her move sets up a contested GOP primary for the right to challenge Davids. Former National Down Syndrome Society CEO Sarah Hart Weir opened her campaign in July.
Adkins is a vice president for the medical computer systems firm Cerner Corp.
She managed Brownback’s successful U.S. Senate re-election campaign in 2004 and was Kansas Republican Party chairwoman when Brownback was elected governor in 2010.
Mirroring its movement in the AFCA Top 25 Poll released on Monday, Fort Hays State dropped 14 spots in the D2Football.com Media Poll released on Tuesday (Sept. 10). The Tigers moved from No. 8 in the poll down to No. 22 after their loss in the season opener at Central Missouri.
Fort Hays State is one of four MIAA teams in the latest D2Football.com Poll. Northwest Missouri State held steady at No. 6. Central Missouri jumped into the poll at No. 20, and Pittsburg State is right behind FHSU at No. 23.
The Tigers look for their first win of the young season on Thursday night (Sept. 12) when they play host to Missouri Western. Kickoff at Lewis Field Stadium in Hays is set for 7 pm.
Below is the D2Football.com Top 25 Media Poll for September 10, 2019.
ROOKS COUNTY – The Kansas Bureau of Investigation and the Rooks County Sheriff’s Office are investigating a homicide that occurred near Plainville, according to a news release issued Tuesday afternoon.
The KBI said that the Rooks County Sheriff’s Office requested KBI assistance at approximately 10 a.m. Monday, and special agents and the Crime Scene Response Team responded.
The Rooks County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call around 9:10 a.m. Monday morning when a family member went to 2610 19th Road in rural Rooks County and found 56-year-old Mark E. Reif deceased inside his home. Deputies arrived at the residence around 9:20 a.m. and discovered that Reif had died from gunshot wounds.
Anyone with information about this crime is asked to call the KBI at 1-800-KS-CRIME, or the Rooks County Sheriff’s Office at (785) 425-6312. Callers may remain anonymous.
Racquel Stucky is a family medicine physician in Finney County who specializes in preventative medicine. CORINNE BOYER / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
GARDEN CITY— As a nurse, Betsy Rodriguez interviews teenagers who are sexually active and often shockingly ignorant about sex.
“So if I sit here and ask a teenager, ‘Have you had oral or vaginal sex,’” Rodriguez said, “some of them cannot tell me what oral or vaginal sex is.”
Few places in Kansas, much less the country, draw people from so many places and such dire circumstances. From one apartment complex to the next block, the dominant language can change — dozens of times.
But while immigrants and refugees that man the region’s beefpacking plants often come from places that lack modern health care, it’s far from the only contributing factor. There’s drug abuse, sex trafficking, gaps in sex education classes for teens and a laundry list of cultural taboos all leading to an environment where gonorrhea, syphilis, chlamydia and, now, HIV spread quickly.
Rising STD rates
Since 2015, sexually transmitted diseases have climbed in Kansas along with national rates. A 2017 study from the Centers for Disease Control noted a rise of syphilis, including among the newborns of infected mothers.
More gonorrhea cases were reported, and the report states that’s particularly worrisome because the agency is “running out of treatment options to cure” emerging strains of drug-resistant gonorrhea.
Kansas Department of Health and the Environment Secretary Lee Norman, a physician, said the state saw nine cases of babies who contracted syphilis from their mothers in the womb in 2018. That congenital syphilis can cause developmental delays — even death — in newborns.
For a decade, Norman said, there were no reported cases of congenital syphilis. Within the last several months, he said, “we had a pair of twins born both with congenital syphilis and both died.”
From January to June 2019, Finney County has seen a higher rate of reported chlamydia cases than it did during the same period in 2018.
In 2017, Kansas Health Matters compiled the state’s STD data, which showed Finney County having the second highest rate in the state behind Wyandotte County.
Rodriguez said that new HIV infections are also on the rise.
Betsy Rodriguez is a staff nurse at the Finney County Health Department and says sexually active young people in the area are uneducated about sex. CREDIT CORINNE BOYER / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE
“A lot of people believe that HIV and syphilis aren’t a thing anymore, but they’re both coming back,” she said. “There are different risk factors for these things, but it applies to everybody — it doesn’t just apply to men having sex with men or bisexual people or transgender people.”
Finney County HIV rates rose from zero to four new cases in 2018.
“To have four new cases identified in 2018 in a small county like Finney,” Norman said, “is troublesome.”
Drug use and the sex trade
Risky behaviors such as unprotected sex and needle sharing still contribute to new infections. Norman said the uptick in opioid and methamphetamine use tracks with the escalation of HIV and syphilis cases.
“Health is not top of mind,” Norman said. “Access to drugs is top of mind.”
Norman said trading sex for drugs isn’t new, but it’s particularly common among people who are poor and mentally ill.
“You talk about, you know, somebody that’s having three or five sexual contacts a day, when they themselves are infected, just in order to get their drugs,” he said. “That’s a public health nightmare.”
Anytime a patient admits to using drugs to Garden City physician Racquel Stucky, she makes sure that patient is tested for STDs. And she worries whether the person might be forced to sell sex for money.
“A lot of times, you’re kind of looking back and you’re like, ‘Oh, my goodness, I wonder if that person is involved in that and will they ever come back and will I ever be able to step in and help in a way?’” Stucky said.
Uncomfortable conversations
Garden City public schools teaches one unit of reproductive health in English in both middle and high school. The classes are abstinence-based. Students’ parents can opt their kids out of those classes.
“Abstinence is the only 100% effective way to prevent pregnancy or the spread of sexually transmitted diseases,” Superintendent Steve Karlin said.
Students are taught about methods of contraception. But Karlin said they are not taught how to use condoms.
Despite rising STD rates, the number of pregnancies among 10- to 19-year-olds in Finney County dropped from 145 in 1995 to 45 in 2018.
Forty languages are spoken in Garden City schools, but reproductive health is taught only in English. Norman said materials should be provided in different languages.
Sister Janice Thome with Dominican Sisters Ministry of Presence has served people from 26 countries in her 22 years with the ministry.
“In most of the countries that our immigrants and refugees come from, you only go to the doctor when you’re sick,” she said. “There’s no such thing as a well-baby checkup or whatever.”
Before coming to the U.S., immigrants and refugees undergo a physical and mental health screening by a doctor, said Rosa Norman, a spokeswoman for the CDC. The checks include tests for leprosy, gonorrhea, syphilis and tuberculosis.
“These are considered inadmissible conditions under federal regulations and must be treated prior to U.S. arrival,” the CDC official said in an email.
Stucky speaks Spanish and uses a phone translation service. Still, she said translating medical terms may feel invasive to some of her patients.
“Even with a translator, you were saying, ‘You know, do this or use a condom.’ And that might be socially, culturally, just not even a thing that you’re allowed to do,” she said.
Stucky, Lee Norman and some state legislators want to attack the problem more aggressively. If a person tests positive for an STD, they want the freedom to treat their sex partners even if they’ve yet to be infected. That approach, called expedited partner therapy, is illegal in Kansas.
A bill approving the treatment passed in the Kansas House this year, but stalled in the state Senate.
“If they have chlamydia, it will be treated,” Norman said. “If they don’t have chlamydia, they haven’t done themselves any harm.”
Corinne Boyer covers western Kansas for High Plains Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @corinne_boyer or email [email protected].
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on the health and well-being of Kansans, their communities and civic life.
Patricia “Pat” Fisher, age 61, of Hays, Kansas passed away Monday, September 9, 2019, at Hays Medical Center. She was born December 27, 1957 in Hays, Kansas to A.P. and Catherine (Kuhn) Leiker.
Pat graduated from Hays High School in 1975. She married Darrell “Munch” Fisher on September 14, 1985, in St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Ellis, Kansas. Pat was a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church of Hays. She enjoyed sewing, baking and especially family time.
She is survived by her husband, Darrell “Munch” Fisher of Hays; two daughters, Chelsey Dawson and husband Eric of Hutchinson, Kansas and Natalie Ellis and husband Brian of Hays; three sisters, Norma Arnhold of Wichita, Kansas, Susan Kosinski of Huntsville, Alabama and Pam Middleton of Hoisington, Kansas as well as three grandchildren, Koen Dawson, Penelope Ellis and Aspen Dawson.
She was preceded in death by her parents; a sister, Betty Smith and a brother, Pete Leiker.
Funeral services will be 10:00 AM Thursday, September 12, 2019, at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Hays. Burial will follow services in St. Joseph Cemetery.
Visitation will be Wednesday 6 PM – 8 PM with a parish vigil at 7:30 PM all at St. Joseph Church, Hays.
Memorial contributions are suggested to the MS Foundation or to St. Joseph Church. Arrangements in care of Brock’s-Keithley Funeral Chapel and Crematory 2509 Vine Hays, KS 67601.
Condolences may be left by guest book at www.keithleyfuneralchapels.com or by email at [email protected]
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — New York Giants cornerback Corey Ballentine has testified at a preliminary hearing about the fatal shooting of his best friend and former Washburn University teammate.
Corey Ballentine photo Washburn Athletics
Ballentine testified Monday, a day after making his NFL debut. He was wounded April 27 in Topeka in the shooting that killed 23-year-old Dwane Simmons, just hours after the Giants drafted Ballentine.
Ballentine testified in a preliminary hearing for 18-year-old Alejandro Mendez, of Topeka, who is charged with first-degree murder and 11 other counts. He recounted how he, Simmons and others were standing outside a house when a car stopped nearby and began firing at the group.
Simmons, a defensive back who would have been a senior this fall, was killed. Ballentine was shot in the buttocks.
After the hearing, Mendez was bound over for trial.
KANSAS CITY (AP) — A teacher who lost her job at a Catholic school in Kansas City, Missouri, after becoming pregnant has testified that she believed administrators decided not to renew her contract because she wasn’t married but created a paper trail of evidence to justify their decision.
Michelle Bolen testified Monday in her lawsuit against the former principal of St. Therese Catholic elementary school and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. Bolen had worked for the school for nearly 15 years when she lost her job in July 2015.
Bolen now works at another school. Her attorney said the former principal had never failed to renew a teacher’s contract after having overseen 330 performance reviews over nearly a decade.
A lawyer representing the diocese has said the case wasn’t about her pregnancy, and that Bolen was intent on getting “revenge.”