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High Plains Mental Health Center named exemplary workplace for third year

High Plains Mental Health Center has been recognized on a national level as an exemplary workplace environment for achieving high levels of staff satisfaction.

The certificate of excellence was presented to Executive Director Walt Hill on Feb. 20 at the MHCA national conference in Florida. This is the third time High Plains has received this recognition for best practices regarding staff satisfaction. MHCA is a national association of innovative behavioral health care organizations that distributes annual awards to recognize excellence in the customer satisfaction management system.

“It is an honor for us to receive this recognition for a third year,” Hill said. “The important community mental health services we provide in northwest Kansas would not be possible without our caring and hard-working staff. We appreciate everything they do to provide exemplary client care, and High Plains is committed to taking care of our staff in return.”

High Plains employs approximately 140 staff members throughout its 20-county service area in northwest Kansas. With a main office building in Hays, High Plains also has full-time branch offices in Colby, Goodland, Norton, Osborne and Phillipsburg. Community outreach services are available in almost all of the other 20 counties served. To learn more about High Plains Mental Health Center and to see current job openings, visit www.hpmhc.com or search on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

High Plains Mental Health Center is a licensed community mental health center dedicated to the aggressive pursuit of providing a comprehensive mental health program to the citizens of Northwest Kansas. Embodied in this pursuit are fundamental principles of establishing quality services as close to home as possible, at an affordable fee, and delivered in the least disruptive manner available. Such services will offer a continuum of care so that treatment can be individualized, and our staff can respond quickly and compassionately to those reaching out to us. We’re Here for You.

Police: 29-year-old Kansas man shot multiple times

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Friday night shooting in Wichita.

Police on the scene of the shooting investigation -photo courtesy KWCH

Just after 11 p.m. police were dispatched to the 7900 block of E. Indianapolis in Wichita for a shooting call, according to officer Kevin Wheeler.

Upon arrival, officers located a 29-year-old male victim inside of the residence, who had been shot multiple times. He was transported to a local hospital and remains hospitalized with non-life threatening injuries, according to Wheeler.

The preliminary investigation shows that there was a disturbance that took place at the residence just before the shooting. This does not appear to be a random incident and there were no additional injuries and no one is in custody early Saturday, according to Wheeler.

USD 489 staff, students win Kansas Head Start awards, scholarships

USD 489

The following USD 489 students, parents and staff received Kansas Head Start awards and scholarships.

• Dr. Michael Hattan—Family Leader of the Year Award

• Kelli Riley—Support Staff of the Year Award

• Karla Bixenman, Teacher of the Year Award

• Alexandria Hagerman—Head Start Alumni High School Senior Scholarship

• Katelyn Proberts—Head Start Parent Post Secondary Education Scholarship

Public invited to Dane G. Hansen Museum annual meeting

Hansen Museum

DHM

LOGAN – The Dane G. Hansen Museum invites the public to their Annual Meeting, held in the Dane G. Hansen Community Room on April 14, 2019 at 2:00 p.m.

Enjoy refreshments, tour our current exhibit, then join the throng in our Community Room as Dr. Kelli Berg presents her “Travel Tales Across North America”. Actively traveling across America for her career, Dr. Berg immerses herself in the variety of cultures she encounters, taking awe-inspiring photos along the way. From the Yukon Province in Canada to Utah and Maine, Dr. Berg will share her medley of experiences with all in attendance.

Current Exhibit: Eckman Fine Art – Cast Paper Sculptures. Sculpting from their home in the Black Hills of South Dakota, Allen and Patty Eckman are internationally recognized as masters in this intricate medium.

Marine veteran Allen Eckman’s attention to his Cherokee heritage pairs wonderfully with Patty’s detailed awareness of natural beauty, especially wildlife and flowers. As Allen and Patty’s sculptures are typically unpainted, this purity lends itself wholly to the intricate detail of these exquisite pieces. In addition to this main theme, Allen has included several sculptures that reflect his military background, while Patty includes some of her oil and acrylic paintings of nature and the timeless west.

Eckman Fine Art – Cast Paper Sculptures is on display through June 2, 2019.

For more information, please contact Director Shari Buss at 785-689-4846.

The Museum is open weekdays 9-12 and 1-4; Saturdays 9-12 & 1-5; Sundays and holidays 1-5. We are closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. The Museum is handicap-accessible and thanks to the generosity of the Dane G. Hansen Foundation, there is never an admission fee.

Beanie Babies store back at Lincoln with addition of Furbie

Submitted

Teacher Monica Dreiling and one of her students prepare for Beanie Babie sales.

Monica Dreiling’s fifth-grade class at Lincoln Elementary School is learning about marketing and community service.

Students have created a Beanie Babies store at Lincoln Elementary School (inside the main entrance) and have brand new with tags Beanie Babies (about 7 to 8 inches) to sell.  The store will also be selling Furbies. Buy one for a quarter and get one free.  All proceeds will go to the food pantry and other local organizations.

The Beanie Babies/Furby store hours are open to the community and are as follows:

Monday, March 25 – 7:30-7:45 a.m. and 3:05-3:30 p.m.

Tuesday, March 26 – 7:30-7:45 a.m. and 3:05-3:30 p.m.

Wednesday, March 27 – 7:30-7:45 a.m. and 3:05-3:30 p.m.

Thursday, March 28 – 7:30-7:45 a.m. and 3:05-3:30 p.m.

Friday, March 29 – 7:30-7:45 a.m. and 3:05-3:30 p.m.

Need More Social Workers In Kansas? Advocates And Providers Say Loosen Standards

Social workers can perform a myriad of tasks. Some check on children in abusive homes and some train foster families. Others support patients through medical procedures like kidney dialysis or provide talk therapy to mental health patients.

But there are too few of them in Kansas.

Aspiring licensed clinical social workers in Kansas must go through 4,000 hours of supervised training, and often pay for it out of pocket.
CAMILO RUEDA LOPEZ / (CC BY-ND 2.0)

An array of health care providers, state agencies and nonprofit organizations that employ social workers say low pay and emotionally challenging work make it hard to hire and retain qualified social workers — especially in the wake of years of declining state funding.

Advocates say Kansas’ uncommonly high standards make the problem worse. The state has stringent requirements for granting the most advanced social work certification and for allowing people certified elsewhere to practice in Kansas.

Now lawmakers are considering a bill that would lower those standards, bringing them closer to requirements in most other states.

“Currently there’s a chronic (worker) shortage,” said Becky Fast, executive director of the Kansas chapter of the National Association of Social Workers, “in rural medical care, in mental health and in child welfare.”

Currently, Kansas requires aspiring licensed clinical social workers to pay for 4,000 hours of supervised experience with clients and 150 hours of direct contact with a supervisor. Most other states require between 3,000 and 4,000 hours of client experience and less than 110 hours of supervisor contact.

The state also requires social workers, counselors and other professionals who were licensed outside of Kansas to have worked at least 60 out of the last 66 months before applying for a license in Kansas.

A bill pending in the Legislature would reduce those requirements, instead asking for 48 months of work experience out of the preceding 54 months. It would also reduce the work requirement for licensed clinical social workers from 4,000 to 3,000 hours.

The state Senate approved the bill unanimously last month. It now awaits a vote from the House of Representatives.

Advocates and employers say the reductions would motivate more social workers to seek jobs or clinical certification in Kansas and would make it easier for nonprofits, state agencies and health care providers to recruit.

Laura Howard, the newly appointed secretary of the Kansas Department for Children and Families, has said she wants to make hiring social workers a priority for the department. She said on KCUR’s Up to Date that her agency has been able to fill more vacancies since Gov. Laura Kelly came into office, and that recent interns have expressed interest in staying with the department.

“This is the hardest work that someone can do,” Howard said in the interview. “We have some aggressive recruitment campaigns with the schools of social work across the state.”

But Kansas employers often lose out to neighboring states with lower standards for clinical social worker certification, said Fast. One reason: the cost of paying a clinician to oversee training time, which can be as much as $70 an hour.

“Most social workers now have to pay for that clinical supervision because agencies can’t afford to lose that billable time,” Fast told lawmakers. “You’re paying several thousand dollars. Many just give up and say, ‘I’m going to move to Missouri.’”

Fast told legislators that it took her two years to get her clinical license in Missouri, while her colleagues working in Kansas needed three or four years to complete the required hours.

She called the requirements “a primary barrier” to recruiting social workers from nearby states.

In an interview, Fast said she doesn’t have an exact number for open social work positions in Kansas, but she said employers routinely send her job postings and tell her that they have trouble hiring workers. The impending retirement of Baby Boomer social workers and the mobility of the millennial workforce have made things worse.

“There’s a real generational shift right now,” she said. “Today’s young professionals want to live in many states and want to move across state lines. And how do you meet that changing workforce need?”

Fast said the shortage of licensed clinical social workers has a particular impact in rural western Kansas, where patients rely heavily on Medicare. Among the variety of social work and counseling positions, only clinical social workers and psychologists can bill Medicare.

There are only 79 licensed clinical social workers in the western half of the state, Fast said. “It is at (a) crisis point in rural areas of Kansas.”

Christie Appelhanz, executive director of the Children’s Alliance for Kansas, said in an interview that the shortage reduces social workers’ ability to manage their caseloads and help their clients.

“It’s really about fulfilling the needs that each individual has on a day-to-day basis,” she said. “Social workers are definitely feeling the stress.”

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

Fort Hays State will offer free hearing screenings in Great Bend

FHSU University Relations

Great Bend will be the second of three free hearing screenings, funded by the Kansas Masons, offered again this spring in western Kansas communities by Fort Hays State University.

“The FHSU Herndon Clinic in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders is very fortunate to have received a large grant from the Kansas Masons to support adult speech, language and hearing services in Western Kansas,” said Marcy Beougher, speech-language pathologist and an instructor in the department.

The grant is continuing to provide numerous opportunities for individuals of all ages in western Kansas to receive important health screening services that are currently scarce or difficult to access.

“With Mason support and funding, we have visited 16 different communities in two and a half years and have screened nearly 600 people,” said Beougher. “We are thankful to the Masons for the opportunity to help provide free hearing screenings in Western Kansas and to make necessary and important medical and audiological referrals. We are also very grateful for the clinical hours these screenings provide for our graduate students.”

The screening will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, April 5, at the Barton County Health Department, 1300 Kansas Ave., Great Bend.

Appointments are encouraged to be scheduled ahead of time, but walk-ins will be welcomed on a first-come, first-served basis. Each site will have four stations, with each screening lasting approximately 15 minutes. Results, follow-up information and free ear plugs will also be provided. There will be no hearing aid sales.

Screenings are provided by graduate students from the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders. Beougher will organize the screenings.

The last screening of the spring 2019 semester will be in Belleville. Time, date and actual screening site will be announced later.

“FHSU’s CSD Department feels this is truly a win-win situation as our graduate students receive valuable clinical hours and experience serving the public at these screenings, and many individuals benefit from the knowledge they receive about their hearing, as well as helpful follow-up information,” said Beougher.

“We are grateful as always to the Kansas Masons, who welcome us to their communities and support this endeavor financially so we can provide this much-needed service for no charge.”

To schedule an appointment for the Great Bend screening, contact Greg King at 620-617-3634 or [email protected].

For more information, visit fhsu.edu/herndon-clinic/ or contact the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at 785-628-5366.

Partly cloudy, breezy Saturday, chance of rain

Today
A chance of showers and a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms after 3pm. Cloudy, with a high near 56. East southeast wind around 15 mph becoming south in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 30%.
Tonight
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 8pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 37. Northwest wind 8 to 15 mph.
Sunday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 60. Northwest wind 9 to 11 mph.
Sunday Night
Mostly cloudy, with a low around 39. North northeast wind 8 to 13 mph.
Monday
Mostly cloudy, with a high near 54. North wind 6 to 8 mph becoming east in the afternoon.
Monday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 38.
Tuesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 68. Breezy.
Tuesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 51. Breezy.
Wednesday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 73. Breezy.

Police: Bicyclist hit by vehicle in Kansas has died

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A bicyclist has died after being struck by a vehicle in Overland Park, Kansas.

The accident happened Friday morning. The bicyclist was taken to a hospital and died Friday afternoon. Overland Park police have not released any information about the bicyclist, pending notification of relatives.

Police say the vehicle and bicyclist were heading in the same direction when the accident happened just after 9:30 a.m. The bicyclist was not wearing a helmet.

After tragic loss of their teen son, couple finds solace through Healing Hearts

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Neal Younger is trying to spread the word about a resources he said made all the difference to he and his wife when they lost their 16-year-old son, Cody.

Younger and his wife have been longtime members of the the Healing Hearts support group.

The Youngers joined Healing Hearts nine years ago when they lost their son, Cody, in a tragic car crash. Another teen in the car also died in the crash.

“Without this support group, I don’t know where my wife and I would be,” he said.

He said his faith, talking about Cody and talking to other people helped him get through the grief.

The Youngers joined the support group within a month of Cody’s death and have never left.

“We got to talk to people who have been in the group before us,” he said, “and it was soothing. We asked what they did — what they did in their grief as they went through the healing process. That helped us a lot and just talking about our son — not just forgetting and going on. …

“They are helping us, and now we are at the point where we are helping other people in the group who come in.”

Younger said being able to connect with other people who were experiencing the same type of loss was important. He said friends and family often have a difficult time approaching someone who has lost a child. They don’t know what to say or how to help.

When his son died, Younger said he and his wife talked to other support group members about what they wanted people to say to them as they grieved. They talked about things they did not want people to say.

“You are going to have people who are your best friends who are probably not going to be your best friends,” he said. “There will be strangers who will come up and say, ‘Did you not lose?’ … To us that was soothing. To have a stranger come (up to us), it felt like they do care.”

Younger said talking about his son really helped him and his wife through the grieving process.

Neal said his son was an ornery teenager. He loved to be outdoors and go hunting with his dad or go to the lake. In the last year before his death, Cody was following in his dad’s footsteps and becoming more involved in the farm.

“He was a good all-around kid,” he said. “I miss him … always.”

Younger acknowledged not everyone may feel comfortable talking about their deceased child.

“Everybody heals differently,” he said. “Everybody grieves differently.”

The Center for Life Experience sponsors three grief support groups — Healing Hearts for parents who have lost children, Healing After Loss of Suicide (HALOS) and Healing After Loss, which is a general grief support group.

The CLFE groups are true support groups. They are not facilitated by clinicians, but are made up of people with similar experiences.

Younger said he and his wife, who is on the CFLE board, both strongly believe the support groups need to stay in the community.

“(I want them to know) if they are struggling and not grieving to come to these groups. It would be very soothing. Everybody who is in there is in the same situation, so we can talk amongst each other and help them get through this.”

The Center for Life Experience was launched 18 years ago in the Hays First Presbyterian Church, with donor funds specified to benefit the community, not the church.

Last May, the Session of First Presbyterian determined it could no longer financially support CFLE.

In November CFLE became a stand-alone, community-based not-for-profit 501(c)(3) and in late December, CFLE moved to the second floor of the Hadley Center in downtown Hays.

Younger along with the CFLE board are seeking donations toward the long-term sustainability of the CFLE and its mission. Any donation amount is appreciated.

“All the merchants in Hays have been excellent,” Younger said. “I can’t believe it. I am just amazed how our community can kick in when needed.”

The CFLE support groups also provide an important resource for NCK Tech and FHSU students who observe the support groups as part of the their nursing or social work programs.

You can send donations to the CLFE at 205 E. Seventh, Ste. 251, Hays, KS 67601.

You can learn more about CFLE and its programs on its website.

See related story: Center for Life Experience moves; same purpose remains

Graphic courtesy CanStockPhoto.com

Use of portable blinds on public lands to be discussed by KDWPT

KDWPT

PRATT – The Kansas Wildlife, Parks and Tourism Commission will conduct a public meeting on March 28, 2019, at the Capitol Plaza Hotel, Emerald Rooms, in Topeka. The public is encouraged to attend the meeting, which will begin at 1:30 p.m. Time will be set aside for public comment on non-agenda items at the beginning of both the afternoon and evening sessions.

The first items for discussion in the afternoon include a report on agency fiscal status, a 2019 legislative session update, and tourism update. The General Discussion session will start with the redrawing for one Commissioner Big Game Permit, followed by discussions on: fees, threatened and endangered species regulations, an update on upland birds, and backcountry access passes.

Workshop Session items – items that will be voted on at a future Commission meeting – include U.S. Coast Guard navigation rules, unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), e-licensing, e-bicycle use on trails and in parks, public land regulations, furbearer regulations, webless migratory bird regulations, waterfowl regulations, deer season on Fort Riley, and antelope season.

The Commission will recess by 5 p.m. and reconvene at 6:30 p.m. to conduct a Public Hearing and vote on the following items:

  • Removing fees for duplicate licenses
  • Squirrel hunting regulations; use of calls
  • Public lands regulations; use of portable blinds
  • Hunting, fishing, furharvesting license and state park permits; removing requirement for trail pass
  • Elk; open season, bag limit and permits
  • Big game regulations; legal equipment and taking methods
  • Big game permit applications; adjusting resident permit application periods
  • Deer season; open season, bag limit and permits

The Commission will also hear deer permit allocations for Secretary’s Orders.

If necessary, the Commission will reconvene at 9 a.m. at the same location, March 29, 2019, to complete any unfinished business. Should this occur, time will again be set aside for public comment on non-agenda items.

Information about the Commission, as well as the March 28, 2019 meeting agenda and briefing book, can be downloaded at ksoutdoors.com/KDWPT-Info/Commission/Upcoming-Commission-Meetings.

Live video and audio streaming of the meeting will be available at ksoutdoors.com, and live updates of the Public Hearing will be tweeted on the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism’s (KDWPT) Twitter account, @KDWPT.

If notified in advance, the Department will have an interpreter available for the hearing impaired. To request an interpreter, call the Kansas Commission for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing at 1-800-432-0698. Any individual with a disability may request other accommodations by contacting the KDWPT Commission secretary at (620) 672-5911.

The next KDWPT Commission meeting is scheduled for Thursday, April 25, 2019 at the Colby Community Building, 285 E. 5th St., in Colby.

Monarch softball splits season opening doubleheader with Colby

HAYS, Kan. – The TMP-Marian softball team split their season-opening doubleheader with Colby Friday at the TMP Field. The Eagles rallied to take the opener 12-7. The Monarchs came back to win game two 13-7.

Emilee Augustine hit a two-run homer in the first inning of game one then had a two-run double in the third and scored on Sophia Coulter’s double as the Monarchs built a 5-1 lead after three innings. They led 6-2 after four innings when the Eagles struck for 10 runs in the top of the fifth.

Kyleigh Allen allowed 12 runs on 18 hits with seven strikeouts and four walks and suffered the complete game loss.

After giving up a run in the top of the first inning of game two, the Monarchs scored three in the bottom of the inning and six in the second to build a 9-1 lead. Colby answered with four in the top of the third but TMP added two in the fifth and sixth to hold them at bay.

Lexi Gottschalk had three hits and Emily Schulte drove in three runs. Annie Wasinger allowed five runs (two earned) on four hits over the first three innings. Kyliegh Allen came in relief and gave up two runs (one earned) on four hits with five strikeouts and two walks over the last four innings.

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