Q: What did the triangle say to the circle?
A: You’re pointless!
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Q: What did the triangle say to the circle?
A: You’re pointless!
Join fans of 99 KZ Country on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/99KZCountry

By STEPHEN KORANDA
Kansas News Service
TOPEKA — A top Republican in the Kansas Senate said he’s designed a Medicaid expansion plan that aims to walk a fine line — one that can win over conservatives without losing support from moderate Republicans and Democrats.
But the proposal also risks satisfying neither faction.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning outlined a proposal this week that would grow the Medicaid health care plan to cover an added 150,000 or so low-income Kansans.
His strategy includes a mix of policies inspired by ideas from Republicans and Democrats. But the plan also adds in the private insurance market, with the goal of stabilizing the federal health care exchange in Kansas where people without Medicaid buy private coverage.
The would-be bill passed an initial hurdle Wednesday. A special Senate committee recommended the plan get further study during the coming legislative session that kicks off in January.
Denning said the ultimate goal is securing health care coverage for as many Kansans as possible.
“There’s things to like about it on both sides of the fence,” Denning said.

It comes after years of wrangling over the issue. Supporters have failed to overcome opposition from leadership in the past. Coming into this session, some Republican leaders said they’re going to work on the topic.
To try to attract Democrats and moderate Republicans, the bill would expand health coverage. But it doesn’t take the simple path Democrats have pushed for of expanding Medicaid to cover people with incomes up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.
Many of the new people covered would go into the regular Medicaid health care program. But the bill would also use private insurance for some low-income Kansans.
It would leverage $50 million in tobacco and vaping taxes to make plans sold through the federal health care exchange — established through the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare — more generous and affordable. That’s intended to draw more people to that market.
Doing that could help stabilize costs on the health care exchange, Denning hopes.
“The exchange is in a death spiral,” Denning said, “and if we can leave those patients there and bring in new patients, we can probably save it.”
The blueprint would also require some people to pay 5 percent of their household income in premiums. If they fall too far behind, they’d be locked out of Medicaid coverage for six months.
Some conservative lawmakers want work requirements to be part of any expansion plan. Denning’s bill doesn’t include strict work rules, but people working fewer than 20 hours per week would be referred to a state program aimed at connecting them to jobs.
“Let’s find out why they’re not working and see if we can get them working,” Denning said.
That’s a good compromise to Republican Sen. Molly Baumgardner, who likes that it can inform unemployed people about services they might not know exist.
Baumgardner doesn’t support strict work requirements because she’s concerned it might create problems for people like single mothers, who may have to leave children in unsafe conditions or in unlicensed child care to meet a work requirement.
“What we see far too often is when a single mom is trying to work and care for children, that’s when the problems occur,” Baumgardner said.
Other Republicans would like a requirement insisting that at least some of the people getting health care through Medicaid get employment.
“If you don’t have children and you have an able body, I’d like to see effort for work,” Republican Sen. Ty Masterson said.
Masterson said the lack of stronger works rules and concerns over the cost mean he’s not backing the bill.
Expanding Medicaid would cost over $1 billion per year. Federal taxpayers would cover 90 percent of that, state money would pay for the rest. New fees on health care providers would help cover the cost under Denning’s plan.
The bill faces opposition from some Democrats. Adding private insurance into the plan adds additional complications, and Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley said that will lead to delays if the federal government doesn’t approve it.
Hensley wants to vote on a bill that simply expands Medicaid without adding other issues like private insurance.
“That ought to be the first step,” Hensley said. “That ought to be the only step that this Legislature passes this session.”
Denning’s bill includes a fail-safe. If the federal government doesn’t approve the private insurance proposals, the bill directs the state to submit a Medicaid plan without them.
Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly urged lawmakers last month not to over-complicate Medicaid expansion. She didn’t give Denning’s plan a warm reception.
“We don’t need to create extra bureaucratic red tape, raise taxes, and create more hurdles to access to health care,” Kelly said in a statement.
Advocates for Medicaid expansion are still digesting all the details in Denning’s proposal, but they’re feeling upbeat that lawmakers who previously opposed expansion are now bringing forward ideas.
“It looks like this is a good-faith effort,” said April Holman, executive director of the group Alliance for a Healthy Kansas. “We’re encouraged that we’re seeing this conversation happen.”
Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio and the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda or email [email protected].
Charles Douglas “Charlie” Hall, 66 of Olivet, passed away Saturday, October 19, 2019 at the Coffey County Hospital in Burlington, Kansas.
He was born March 10, 1953 in Eureka, Kansas the son of Charles Willis and Alpha Celona Butler Hall. Charlie attended Eureka High School and graduated with the Class of 1971. He would go on to earn a Biology Degree from Emporia State University. He married the love of his life, Barbara “Amy” Long on July 14, 1973 in Eureka, Kansas.
During the summers of 1975 and 1976 while attending Fort Hays State University, Charlie worked as a fee ranger for the Corps of Engineers at Wilson Lake. He would complete his Masters in Range Management and serve as a 404 Tech from 1977 until moving to Iowa in July of 1979.
Charlie served as a park ranger at Rathbun Lake until May of 1980 when he and Amy made their home in Olivet, Kansas. Charlie took a position as a park ranger at Melvern Lake until transferring to the Corps of Engineers Kansas City District Office in the early 2000’s. He retired from the Corps of Engineers in 2016 and began working for FEMA as a disaster site planner, preparing environmental impact assessments.
Charlie held dual membership in Fidelity Lodge #106 AF & AM of Eureka and Lebo Masonic Lodge #152 of Lebo. He was an avid bird watcher and took every opportunity to travel and go camping with his wife Amy. His love for nature and the earth’s bounty was a gift that he proudly shared with his children and grand children. Charlie served as Scoutmaster for Troop #150 of Melvern for 20 years and achieved his Wood Badge certification, the highest level of training a scout leader can obtain.
He will live on in the hearts and memories of his wife, Barbara “Amy” Hall of their home in Olivet; a daughter, Heather Hall and her partner Matt Donnelly of Lawrence; sons, Nathan Hall and his wife Fleur Hopper of Portland, Maine and Matthew Hall of Lawrence; grandchildren, May Ann Donnelly, Ella Heikkila-Hall and Maxwell Hall; brothers, Allen Hall and his wife Sheridan of Eureka and Ron Hall and his wife Melinda of Eureka; numerous extended family and a host of former coworkers and dear friends. He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother, Larry Hall.
Cremation is planned with a memorial gathering and service is scheduled for 2:00 P.M., Saturday, October 26, 2019 at the Jones VanArsdale Funeral Home. Private family inurnment will take place in Eureka Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 1:00 P.M. until service time, Saturday at the funeral home.
The family requests that memorial contributions be made to the Kansas Chapter of The Nature Conservancy and sent in care of the Jones VanArsdale Funeral Home at P.O. Box #43, Lebo, Kansas 66856.

Kansas faces a prison crisis of crowded facilities and escalating costs to taxpayers. Fixing that requires addressing mental health, and the grim reality that our approach to the mentally ill is often to imprison them.
In fairness, America has evolved on this issue. Historically, states often forced the mentally ill—especially the poor—into state-run institutions where they faced involuntary sterilization. In Kansas, from 1913 to 1961, the state sterilized over 3,000 individuals, mostly with mental illnesses.
In the 1960’s, states started to deinstitutionalize the mentally ill, shifting the care burden to families, nursing homes, or other community-based settings. But states often failed to follow through on promises to fund these alternatives. This meant that more people with mental illness lacked access to adequate care, which often resulted in homelessness and incarceration.
As the state mental health apparatus withered in Kansas, the burden of care shifted to local communities that varied in their ability to meet that challenge. In many communities, county jails became the default mental health providers, and law enforcement officers increasingly became first responders to mental health crises.
Kansas also started imprisoning more people with mental illness. In 2018, the Kansas Department of Corrections reported that 33 percent of the nearly 10,000 inmates in state prisons were diagnosed with serious to severe mental illnesses, and 65 percent had some degree of mental illness. By comparison, the department reported that in 2006 only 38% of inmates were mentally ill.
Compounding that problem, experts show that mentally ill offenders are more likely to receive extended sentences and other punishments in prison due to behavioral incidents, and many return post-release because of incidents explicitly related to their illnesses.
Kansas also faces the challenge that companies contracted to provide prison services have often failed to meet contractual obligations. Local media reported earlier in 2019 that Corizon Health, which the Brownback administration hired to provide health services in Kansas prisons, had failed to provide adequate staffing and medication to cover mental health needs of prisoners.
Are there solutions?
First, Kansas has a patchwork of mental health services—and strong mental health advocates—that can help address the issue. Those providers need policy and financial support from local, state, and federal policymakers.
Second, some Kansas communities have trained law enforcement on defusing mental health crises. But how many do this and the effectiveness of that training is uncertain.
Third, as some politicians recognize, prison alternatives merit consideration. Other states have explored criminal justice reforms such as mental health courts, pretrial diversions that emphasize supervision and treatment over prosecution, and expanding services for offenders post-release to avoid reentry. Adapting those reforms to Kansas is worth exploring.
Fourth, some states have started reverting privatized prison services back to state functions. Some states have found that implementing services like mental health care effectively themselves is cheaper than contracting with corporations that require additional oversight, and that may botch program implementation in ways that increase state costs.
Yes, this costs money. But, the system now incurs great costs and sets many mentally ill Kansans up to fail. For both politicians and citizens, it is often easier to say that we care about mental illness, but harder to act on that financially. If we had cared financially decades ago, today’s prisons might not be leading mental health providers.
Patrick R. Miller is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Kansas.
SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Kansas man on child sex charges and have made an arrest.

Just before 6p.m. Tuesday, a police officer was attempting to contact 50-year-old Larry F. Brannan at a residence in the 11600 block of E. 71st Street South in Wichita, regarding an outstanding warrant for aggravated indecent liberties with a child, according officer Charley Davidson.
The officer located Brannon and attempted to take him into custody. Brannon resisted, battered the officer and nearly struck the officer with his vehicle.
The officer eventually arrested Brannon with the assistance of the his K9.
Brannon was treated at a local hospital for minor injuries from a dog bite and then booked into jail on requested charges of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, simple battery on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest and the outstanding Sedgwick County Warrant.
He was held on a bond of $100,000, according to online jail records and is no longer in custody.
CHEYENNE COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident just after 9:30p.m Thursday in Cheyenne County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Land Rover driven by Lorie L. Wood, 56, Johnstown, CO., was southbound on Kansas 27 sixteen miles north of U.S. 36.
The vehicle blew a tire on the rear trailer, rolled and came to a rest in the northbound lane on its side.
A northbound Lincoln LS driven by Irene R. White, 80, Haigler, NE., hit an animal running from the Land Rover after it rolled. The Lincoln stopped in time to avoid collision with the Land Rover.
EMS transported Wood to the Cheyenne County Hospital. White was not injured. Both drivers were properly restrained, according to the KHP.

FHSU University Relations
Dr. Janet Stramel, associate professor of teacher education, received a grant from the National Science Foundation to work with former FHSU Noyce Scholars who now teach. In Fort Hays State’s efforts to serve rural Kansans, this grant provides training to rural Kansas teachers of middle-to-high school students to teach how mathematics and science is applied to real-world experiences.
The grant, High Flying Math and Science, included a day of project-based learning (PBL) training for teachers during the spring semester 2019.
Dr. Sarah Broman Miller, assistant professor of teacher education, provided the training.
Ten former FHSU Noyce Scholars, now Teacher Leaders in their schools, participated in the training and toured the National Weather Service in Dodge City to see the community connections of mathematics and science.
A follow-up to that training was a PBL project with their own students, culminating in the launch of a high-altitude balloon. Middle and high school students prepared a payload of sensors, cilantro seeds, sea-monkey eggs, and a GoPro camera in order to collect data to analyze so that students could see the connections among mathematics, science, and the real world.
Katie Flax, a science teacher at Trego Community High School, WaKeeney engaged her high school students in a PBL lesson with a balloon launch on Sept. 16.
Science teachers Julie Weber, Wamego Middle School, and Thomas Broxterman, Royal Valley High School, Hoit, collaborated on a joint PBL with their students. Their balloon launch was at Wamego Middle School on Oct. 1.

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FAIRPORT — There will be a customer appreciation event at Kimmy’s Place in the Russell County community of Fairport beginning at 5 p.m. Nov. 2.
The public event will feature a whole hog roast and participants are urged to bring a side dish and lawn chairs.
Back2Back will perform from 5:30 until approximately 7:30 p.m.
Click HERE for more information on the event.

LAWRENCE, Kan. – The Fort Hays State Men’s Basketball team opened the 2019-20 campaign with an exhibition contest at the University of Kansas on Thursday night at Allen Fieldhouse. Down by 11 at half, the Tigers trimmed the lead inside 10 for the first five minutes of the second half, but the No. 3 ranked team in NCAA Division I pulled away over the final 15 minutes to win by a score of 86-56.
Fort Hays State hung around for a good chunk of time. The Tigers held a 9-5 lead out of the first media break and then led by five, 12-7, after a Jared Vitztum 3-pointer at the 14:16 mark. The Jayhawks bounced back into the lead quick with an old-fashioned 3-point play and then a 3-point field goal. By the second media break, FHSU was still within two just over eight minutes into the game. Kansas slowly built a lead from that point, up 11 points at halftime, 36-25.
The Tigers punched back quick early in the second half with three consecutive 3-point field goals, completing a 9-0 run to open the half. Triples from Nyjee Wright, Calvin Harrington, and Vitztum instantly trimmed the Kansas lead down to just two, 36-34.
The Tigers remained within five points of the Jayhawks within the first five minutes of the second half, but the Jayhawks used a 12-0 run over a nearly two-minute span to gain separation once again, leading 53-36 with 13 minutes to go in the game. FHSU never got closer than 15 points the rest of the way and Kansas went on to win the game 86-56.
Vitztum was the only Tiger to reach double figures in scoring at 11 points, while Devin Davis and Nyjee Wright each had eight. Wright led the Tigers in assists with three. FHSU shot 35.2 percent as a team from the field and 32 percent (8-of-25) beyond the 3-point line.
Ochai Agbaji led the scoring effort for Kansas, finishing with 21 points. He was 8-of-15 from the field and 3-of-9 beyond the 3-point line, while adding two free throws. Marcus Garrett had 15 points and five assists, while Silvio De Sousa finished with 11 points.
The Tigers will open the regular season November 8-9 in Russellville, Arkansas, where they will face Arkansas Tech and Southwestern Oklahoma State.
The TMP-Marian Monarchs forced five Ellsworth turnovers and freshman quarterback Kade Harris scored four rushing touchdowns on their way to a 31-20 win over the Bearcats Thursday at Lewis Field Stadium.
Jays Harris interview
Game highlights
After forcing Ellsworth into a three-and-out on their first offensive possession the Monarchs put together an 11-play 64 yard drive that was capped off by the first of four rushing touchdowns by Harris to give TMP a 7-0 lead.
On that drive Mark Rack had receptions of 24 and 21 yards, he first two receptions of the season.
After another Ellsworth punt, that set up the Monarchs with a short field, they used just six plays to cover 43 yards that was once again capped off with a Harris touchdown. This one from 11 yards out as TMP took a 13-0 lead.
On Ellsworth next offensive possession Jace Wentling intercepted his first of three passes on the day and took it into the endzone giving TMP a 19-0 lead.
Ellsworth cut the TMP lead to just six in the third quarter when they scored a touchdown off a fumble of an intercepted pass and a blocked to make it 19-13 with just over six minutes left in the third quarter.
Clinging to the one score lead Harris added another rushing touchdown to put TMP up 25-13 with only 16 second left in the third quarter.
He added his fourth and final touchdown of the game early in the fourth quarter to put TMP up 31-13.
Ellsworth got their only offensive touchdown with just over seven minutes to play in the game but TMP was able to hold them off the board after that on their way to the 31-20 win.
TMP forced Ellsworth quarterback Morgan Kelley into five turnovers, four interceptions and a fumble.
Harris rushed for 93 yards and those four touchdowns and was 12-of-23 passing for 178 yards.
TMP improved to 2-6 with the win and 1-4 in district play. They will travel to either Ellinwood or Lyons next Friday night.
Ellsworth drops to 5-3 and will travel to Lakin next week.

HAYS, Kan. – After mulling over a 2-0 deficit at halftime, the 23rd-ranked Fort Hays State men’s soccer team stormed back in the second half with three goals to top Harding Thursday evening (Oct. 24), 3-2. The rally helped Fort Hays State preserve the longest active home winning streak in NCAA Division II, now at 22 matches.
Fort Hays State improves to 9-4-1 overall and 8-1-1 in GAC action with the win, two games clear of second place Harding (7-4-2, 6-3-1 GAC).
The Tigers sent a barrage of shots towards the net in the second 45 minutes, attempting 17 shots after halftime. FHSU finally broke through in the 56th minute thanks to a quick reaction from Alonso Rodriguez. Santiago Agudelo attempted a shot from outside the box that was blocked by a defender and quickly bounced towards Rodriguez. The sophomore wound up and sent a shot screaming past the keeper on his first touch, putting the Tigers within one.
The Black and Gold kept the pressure on, taking shot after shot that narrowly missed the target. Fort Hays State finally leveled the score with just over 17 minutes remaining after a fantastic connection between Agudelo and Moises Peralta. Agudelo won possession in the box and dribbled towards the corner, waiting for things to materialize around the net. The senior made a quick turnaround pass into the six-yard box directly to Peralta, who headed it home inside the near post to tie things up at two.
A Bison defender was sent off soon after when he accumulated a second yellow card in the 76th minute, forcing Harding to finish the match with just 10 players. The Tigers took advantage in the 85th minute, recording the game winner on a rocket off the right foot of Rogelio Lopez. After a long Ross Boyd throw in was fought over in the penalty area, the ball found its way to Arsenio Chamorro just outside the 18-yard box. The junior used one brilliantly controlled touch to set up Lopez 25 yards out. The keeper had no chance as Lopez sent a missile screaming into the upper left corner, giving the Tigers their first lead of the day with just over five minutes to play.
Harding took an early lead in the first half when Christian Ramos took a quick free kick around the wall and past a diving Cullen Fisch nine minutes in. Donnell Bowes doubled the Bison lead with a header off a corner kick from Oliver Callado in the 16th minute.
The Tigers had a staggering 25-7 advantage in shots taken, including a 17-3 edge after halftime. Fort Hays State attempted seven corners, while the Bisons took two corners in the match.
Fisch’s lone save came with 25 seconds left after a desperation shot from 30 yards out. The senior improved his record to 4-3-1 on the year with the victory.
The Tigers will look to inch closer to the GAC regular season title when they host Ouachita Baptist on Saturday (Oct. 26) at 11 a.m.