Chad R. Sharpe, 54, of Oakley, died Monday, April 8, 2019. He was born June 6, 1964, in Scott City, KS, to Harley and Ora Sharpe.
Chad married Rebecca Buffington on January 31, 1998. He was good at building things and worked in construction. Chad enjoyed fishing, hunting and playing cards. His favorite thing was playing with his grandchildren.
Chad was preceded in death by his grandparents, Clive and Nellie Sharpe and Ed and Lottie Smith; father-in-law Ken Buffington and granddaughter Evelynn.
He is survived by his parents, Harley and Ora Sharpe; wife Becky; children, Collin, Curtis, Chase, Corbin and Ryley Sharpe; brothers, Calvin and Dale Sharpe; sister Susan Smith; mother in-law Vera Buffington and 3 grandchildren.
Cremation was chosen and no services are scheduled at this time. For more information or condolences visit www.baalmannmortuary.com
Joyce Willene Phillips was born October 7, 1937 in Peach Orchard, MO, to Earnie and Carry (McGinty) Bratcher. She passed away January 27, 2019, in Tulsa, OK.
Joyce attended grade school in Missouri and then Porterville High School in California. She also had special training in short hand and computers. Joyce worked in farming at an early age and was a Med Aid in 3 states including Colby, KS. She also was a team truck driver with late husband George Phillips along with other odd jobs. Joyce’s hobbies were playing bingo, casinos, bowling and socializing with her many friends
Survivors include her son Jerry; 5 daughters, Janice, Rhonda, Jackie, Laurie and Penny; numerous grandchildren; great grandchildren; 3 great-great grandchildren; sisters, Linda Miller, Martha Griffin, Carolyn Caudill, and Tina Allred; brother Dewayne Bratcher; many nieces, nephews and loved ones and her beloved friends, Danny and Beverly Barker, Don Kernal and mother Anni Kernal, Pastor Jim and Tammy Kent, Gene Duke, Nita Grimes and many others.
She was preceded in death by loved ones, George Phillips, Jessie Lee Rosales and Jimmy Dean Rosales.
There will be a memorial service at 4:00 p.m. Thursday, April 18, 2019, at New Beginning Family Ministry, 305 S. Saddler, Poteau, OK 74953. A graveside service will take place at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, May 16, 2019, at Beulah Cemetery, Colby, KS. Flowers, cards and monetary contributions may be sent to either the church or Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby, KS 67701.
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A third person is charged in the fatal shooting of a 17-year-old Olathe student.
Bibee -photo Johnson Co.
18-year-old Matthew Lee Bibee Jr., is charged with first-degree murder in the March 29 death of 17-year-old Rowan Padgett of Overland Park.
A 17-year-old boy and a 16-year-old girl also are charged with first-degree murder in Padgett’s death. Prosecutors are seeking to try both teens as adults.
Authorities say Padgett’s killing in an Olathe neighborhood occurred during a drug deal.
Bibee was arrested March 31 after he became a suspect in a robbery. Police say Bibee shot at a police officer and missed. The officer returned fire, hitting Bibee, whose injuries were not life threatening. Bibbee faces an attempted capital murder charge and several other charges in that case.
HaysMed CEO Edward Herrman, Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers and Dr. Jeff Curtis talk during a tour of HaysMed on Tuesday.
By CRISTINA JANNEY Hays Post
Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers said Medicaid expansion is not just an economic issue, it’s a moral issue, as he made a stop at HaysMed Tuesday morning for a discussion on health care.
Medicaid expansion legislation has passed in the Kansas House, but has yet to pass in the Senate. Medicaid expansion was a central piece of Rogers’ and Gov. Laura Kelly’s campaign platform.
In Ellis County, Medicaid expansion would insure 731 more residents, create 20 new jobs and have an economic impact of almost $4.9 million.
Rogers, as well as local health care professionals, gathered for a group discussion. The majority agreed Medicaid is needed to provide preventive health care for rural Kansans and maintain rural hospitals and health care clinics.
“We know Medicaid expansion won’t necessarily save a hospital, but we know it is one of the major indicators that has created problems,” he said.
About 30 Kansas hospitals are on a very vulnerable list, two rural Kansas hospitals have closed in the last 45 days, and two more have closed in the last year.
“Really what this does is Medicaid expansion takes 150,00 Kansans away from the highest cost medical service — emergency care— and puts them into preventive care, where they can have many of their services paid for in advance,” Rogers said.
“We see it as a very budget neutral situation now that we have a $25 per person per month fee and what it saves us in other state agencies it could really mean some really good things for the state of Kansas.”
The fee for families for Medicaid expansion would be capped at $100. These fees would generate about $20 million to $25 million of the $30 million cost to the state of Kansas for Medicaid expansion. The federal government currently pays 90 percent of Medicaid expansion. The House bill also stipulates if that federal match would be eliminated, the state would end Medicaid expansion.
HaysMed CEO Edward Herrman and Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers and Dr. Jeff Curtis talk about health care during a tour of HaysMed on Tuesday.
Walt Hill, executive director of High Plains Mental Health, said Medicaid expansion would be a great boon to preventive mental health care. High Plains sees 6,000 patients per year in its coverage area. Out of a $10 million budget, $1 million a year is services provided to the uninsured.
“We have to find alternative sources of funding,” Hill said. “We often provide services on the backs of our staff who are very difficult to recruit and retain in the area.”
Rogers said in looking at mental health services in the state, the Sedgwick County jail is the third largest provider of mental health services only behind the two state mental health hospitals.
“We as taxpayers are spending $10 to $12 million on mental health services that probably would be covered under Medicaid,” he said.
Rogers and Hill both noted competition is high for health care recruiting. As Nebraska expands Medicaid, there is concern that qualified health professionals will continue to move out of state for more competitive wages.
Edward Herrman, HaysMed CEO, said although the amount rural hospitals would receive from Medicaid expansion doesn’t seem like much, it may be the difference between those hospitals breaking even.
Health care providers and local leaders gather for a discussion on health care with Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers at HaysMed on Tuesday.
“I can tell you that we know for sure that there are a few facilities that even if it is only $100,000 or $150,000 in benefit they would see, that is literally what they are missing in having a margin. …
“There are more people in the larger areas, but the actual impact is much larger in the rural areas. $100,000 in bottom line revenue means a heck of lot more to a Rush County hospital than $1.5 million on the bottom line for a St. Francis or the University of Kansas hospital.”
Herrman also noted during polls, three-quarters of Kansans said they are in favor of expansion.
Kansas is one of 14 states that has not expanded Medicaid. Kansans pay taxes to support Medicaid expansion, but the funds go to other states, he added.
“Most importantly, it is 150,000 Kansans who are falling in the gap and we are not even providing basic primary care for them,” Herrman said. “They do end up showing up in our ER in the most expensive place you can possibly receive care as well as many times not the appropriate place to receive your care.”
Bryan Brady, First Care Clinic CEO, said the clinic takes care of about 7,000 patients — 1,600 of those are uninsured. The clinic estimates about 1,000 of those patients would qualify for health insurance under Medicaid expansion.
“That would mean about $400,000 to our facility directly,” he said. “That is a huge amount. What we do is keep those patients out of the emergency room — the most expensive method of care.”
Dr. Heather Harris, family medicine provider with HaysMed, said a lack of insurance results in individuals waiting to get care until a health problem is acute and costs more to treat.
“Not only do they not come in for acute things, but they wouldn’t dream of coming in for anything preventive,” she said. …
“They come in late. They can’t afford the medicines. We have trouble giving them the education they need about food and exercise and smoking. If you can treat the parents, you can hope you will have healthier kids. It is just this continued trend. You can barely get them well for their acute things. You are never going to get them preventive care.”
Rogers said keeping people healthy, productive and employed benefits the state of Kansas.
First Care Clinic Medical Director Christine Fisher said Medicaid expansion would help the working poor.
“These are productive people, God help them, who are trying really hard, but they just need that extra bit of help that will make them even more productive members of society,” she said. “By making them healthier, you will only increase productivity and what you gain from the health care aspect will be very far reaching. If you give a person insurance, they will get their preventive care done, and if you don’t, they simply will not.
“If you don’t do primary care and preventive care, health care is extremely expensive down stream.”
HaysMed Cardiologist Dr. Jeff Curtis described himself as a “red doctor,” but he said he supports Medicaid expansion as a people issue and a patient issue.
“In the short term, I am in favor of Medicaid expansion, not just for our hospital, but for everything in western Kansas. It is a Band Aid until we can figure something else out. If we don’t get it and we don’t have it and we see all the other states around us getting it, that means people in our state are suffering.
“If we have it, we can expand the services in our bigger hospital — new equipment and new services — so patients don’t have to go to Kansas City, Wichita, Denver or Kearny. It helps us attract high quality health care workers, which is a challenge out here.”
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – For the first time this outdoor season, Fort Hays State track and field’s Brett Meyer has been named the MIAA Co-Track Athlete of the Week. The award was announced Tuesday (April 8) from the conference office.
At the Colorado Invitational in Boulder over the past weekend, Meyer captured his first NCAA automatic qualification of the season. With a fifth place finish in the 1,500-meters, Meyer clocked a time of 3:49.65. However, due to altitude modifications, his time was adjusted to 3:44.18, giving him the automatic mark. The time now sits Meyer at third on the NCAA DII national performance list.
During the indoor season, Meyer achieved the MIAA Track Athlete of the Week three-consecutive weeks.
Meyer will be back on the track next this weekend as the Tigers travel to MIAA foe in Nebraska-Kearney.
BEAVERTON, Ore. – Fort Hays State women’s basketball senior Tatyana Legette picked up a second All-America honor this week, earning a spot on the third team of the 2019 Women’s Division II Bulletin All-American list. Legette is the fourth All-America selection in the program’s history and first since Kate Lehman in 2015. Legette adds this honor to her great list of accomplishments this year after being named WBCA All-America Honorable Mention, MIAA Player of the Year, MIAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player and a D2CCA All-Region First Team selection.
Legette led Fort Hays State in points, rebounds, and assists, helping the Tigers to a stellar 32-2 overall record and advance to the NCAA Central Regional Final. She averaged 13.4 points, 8.4 rebounds, and 3.3 assists per game, while ranking second on the team in blocks per game (1.5) and third in steals per game (1.4). She scored in double figures 24 times, compiling 10 double-doubles in the process. Legette was named MIAA Athlete of the Week three times this year.
For her career, the Topeka, Kan. native has amassed 1,256 points, ranking 11th on the all-time list at FHSU, and 865 rebounds, good for fourth in program history. She ranks fifth in program history for blocked shots (126) and free throws made (352), sixth in free-throw attempts (487), and 10th in field goal percentage (50.3 percent).
Legette helped lead the Tigers to a 30-1 record entering the NCAA Championship Tournament, the fewest losses in the regular season in program history. She helped FHSU capture both the MIAA regular season and MIAA tournament championships, becoming the first team to do so since 2012. The Tigers earned an automatic bid into the 2019 NCAA Division II Women’s Basketball Championship, their fifth trip to the big dance. The Tigers were the No. 1 seed in the Central Regional of the tournament.
KANSAS CITY (AP) — Kansas City Chiefs offensive lineman Ryan Hunter has tackled the halls of government.
Ryan Hunter -photo courtesy KC Chiefs
As part of the NFL Players’ Association’s Externship program, the pre-law graduate from Bowling Green State University worked for Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, of Missouri. He focused in part on helping improve rural internet access.
The Players’ Association promotes the externship program online as the “premier opportunity for NFL players to gain valuable experience with top organizations across the country.” Participants work in both political and business settings for several weeks in February and March.
Hunter entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Chiefs in 2018. He didn’t appear for the team last season.
RILEY COUNTY —Just before 9a.m. Tuesday, the Riley County Police Department received reports of shots fired by a man walking down the street with a gun in the 300 block of Eleventh St in Ogden.While responding to the scene, RCPD officers requested local schools be placed into secure campus mode, according to a media release.
At approximately 9:00 AM, the Riley County Police Department dispatch center received an updated report that the man with a gun had entered an occupied business in the 200 block of Riley Avenue in Ogden.
RCPD officers arrived on scene and took the man Justin Bauer, 40, Ogden, into custody without further incident. There were no injuries.
Bauer is being held on a $13,000 Bond on requested charges of aggravated assault, unlawful discharge of a firearm and criminal possession of a weapon.
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RILEY COUNTY—Just before 9a.m. Tuesday, the Riley County Police Department received a report of an armed individual in the 200 block of Riley Avenue in Ogden.
Google map
Police took the subject into custody. While responding to the scene officers requested the local elementary school be placed into temporary lock out.
Police asked that the public avoid the area while officers are on scene.
Authorities released no additional details.
UPDATE:
The suspect has been apprehended by Riley County Police. The all clear has been given and the lockout is over.
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RILEY COUNTY—Just before 9a.m. Tuesday, the Riley County Police Department received a report of an armed individual in the 200 block of Riley Avenue in Ogden.
Google map
Police took the subject into custody. While responding to the scene officers requested the local elementary school be placed into lock out, according to a media release.
Police asked that the public avoid the area while officers are on scene.
The public is invited to Fort Hays State University at 10 a.m. Thursday when the largest single gift ever made to the university is announced at a news conference in the Memorial Union’s Sunset Atrium.
FHSU President Tisa Mason, President Emeritus Edward H. Hammond, Athletic Director Curtis Hammeke, and FHSU Foundation President and CEO Jason Williby will celebrate and honor the lives of donors Earl and Nonie Field and present details on how the Fields’ gift will be used to improve the lives of FHSU students for generations to come.
Beverages and light refreshments will be provided immediately following the news conference.
DOWNS — Duane D. Teselle, 68, passed away April 7, 2019. He was born November 18, 1950 in Beloit, the son of John and Virginia (DeBey) Teselle.
He was a retired marine mechanic.
He is preceded in death by his parents.
Survivors include his children: Seone Hunter (Jeremy) of Kensington, Leslie Cosgriff (Casey) of Lincoln, NE., Elizabeth Stokesbury (Anthony) of Jacksonville, FL and Matthew Teselle (Lacey) of Smith Center; siblings: Joyce Nicholson of Jewell, Janet Alflen of Puyallup, WA, Jerry Teselle (Judy) of Downs, Dorine Stuart of Downs, 8 grandchildren, 1 great grandchild, and numerous nieces and nephews.
Graveside service will be held Friday, April 12, 2019 at 11:00 a.m. at the Downs Cemetery. No visitation.
Memorials may be given to Kansas Department of Wildlife & Parks-Youth Programs in care of Domoney Funeral Home, PO Box 127, Downs, KS 67437
ST. LOUIS (AP) — A Mexican national accused of killing four people in Kansas and one in Missouri in 2016 died Tuesday after being found hanging from a light fixture in his St. Louis jail cell.
Serrano-Vitorino- photo Montgomery Co.
Pablo Serrano-Vitorino was found alone in his cell at 2:02 a.m. He was pronounced dead at a hospital about an hour later, said Koran Addo, spokesman for St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson.
Addo declined further comment but St. Louis Public Safety Director Jimmie Edwards said that Serrano-Vitorino hanged himself and left a note written in Spanish. Edwards was out of town and didn’t know if Serrano-Vitorino was on suicide watch or when jailers had last checked on him.
Serrano-Vitorino, 43, who was in the U.S. illegally, was accused of fatally shooting four men at a home in Kansas City, Kansas, on the night of March 7, 2016. He was arrested a day later and 170 miles away in Montgomery County, Missouri, where he was accused of killing Randy Nordman of New Florence. He was charged with first-degree murder in all five deaths.
He was being held in St. Louis awaiting an October trial in Nordman’s death on a change of venue. Missouri prosecutors were seeking the death penalty.
He had tried to take his own life before, with a safety razor, shortly after his arrest while jailed in Montgomery County. After a hospitalization he was returned to the jail.
Authorities say the shooting spree began when Serrano-Vitorino gunned down his Kansas City, Kansas, neighbor, 41-year-old Michael Capps, and three other men at Capps’ home — brothers Austin Harter, 29, and Clint Harter, 27, and 36-year-old Jeremy Waters. Before dying, one of the victims managed to call police.
Authorities have not disclosed a possible motive.
Serrano-Vitorino then allegedly fled in his pickup truck into Missouri. Authorities say he killed Nordman, 49, at Nordman’s rural home near Interstate 70 about 70 miles (113 kilometers) east of St. Louis. He was captured hiding face-down in a ditch a few miles from Nordman’s home, and had a rifle with him, the Missouri State Highway patrol said at the time.
A lawsuit filed in Kansas City, Kansas , by the father of one of the victims accused U.S. immigration officials of missing two chances to detain and deport Serrano-Vitorino.
Serrano-Vitorino was deported to Mexico after he was convicted of a felony in 2003 but illegally re-entered the U.S. He was arrested in 2014 and 2015.
After his 2014 arrest in Kansas for battery, Wyandotte County jail officials notified ICE he was in custody. But Serrano-Vitorino was released after the federal agency didn’t send an agent to the jail, according to the lawsuit.
Serrano-Vitorino was fingerprinted in Overland Park, Kansas, Municipal Court in September 2015 after he was cited for traffic infractions. ICE officials asked that he be held in custody but sent the paperwork to a different jail in Johnson County, Kansas, the lawsuit contends. He was once again released from custody.
Teresa Eileen Ehmke, age 72, passed away on Saturday, March 30, 2019 at the Lane County Hospital in Dighton, Kansas.
She was born on June 10, 1946 in Garden City, Kansas.
Memorial services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Monday, June 10, 2019 at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas, with Leland Jackson presiding. A full obituary will be available in June.
MANHEIM, Pa. – The Fort Hays State wrestling team had six individuals earn All-Academic honors from the National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA). In order for a student-athlete to be nominated to the Division II All-Academic Team, he must have a minimum 3.2 cumulative grade point average on a 4.0 scale, with that benchmark at 3.0 for those who qualified for the 2019 NCAA Division II Wrestling Championships. The athlete must also be in at least a second full semester at his school and have competed in a minimum of six dates of competition.
Senior Micquille Robinson, junior Brandon Ball, redshirt-freshmen Jonathan Ball, Anthony Scantlin and Conrad Vajnar, and true freshman Isaiah Luellen were all named to the All-Academic team.
Micquille Robinson earned All-Academic honors for his work within the Construction Management realm. The Wichita, Kan. native completed his senior season with an overall record of 35-10 and went 15-8 against Division II opponents. Robinson wrestled in the 184-pound weight class.
Brandon Ball earned a spot on the All-Academic team for his work within the Technology Studies field. Ball completed his junior year as an All-American after finishing fourth at the NCAA Division II Championships in the 141-pound weight class. Ball finished the year with a 28-2 overall record, including a 25-2 clip against Division II competition.
Jonathan Ball makes the All-Academic team for his dedication in the Finance field. The redshirt-sophomore finished the season with a 19-10 overall record.
Anthony Scantlin earned All-Academic honors for his work in the Technology Studies realm. Scantlin finished the season with a 4-7 overall record.
Conrad Vajnar earned a spot on the All-Academic team for his work in the Accounting field. Vajnar finished the year with an 8-10 overall record.
True freshman Isaiah Luellen earned the honor in the Spanish realm. Luellen wrested in the 165-pound weight class. Luellen finished the season with a 22-4 overall record.