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Unemployment rate in northwest Kan. remains extremely low

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Preliminary estimates reported by the Kansas Department of Labor and Bureau of Labor Statistics show a seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of 3.4 percent in May. This was unchanged from April and down from 3.6 percent in May 2017.

“The number of unemployed Kansans looking for work dropped below 50,000 for the first time since May of 2000,” said Secretary Lana Gordon.

Northwest Kansas jobless rates remain extremely low, with unemployment rates in Ellis County at 2.3 percent. Trego, Rooks and Ness posted unemployment rates slight above 3 percent, while Norton and Logan counties reported a flat 2 percent jobless rate.

Seasonally adjusted job estimates indicate total Kansas nonfarm jobs increased by 1,900 from April. Private sector jobs, a subset of total nonfarm jobs, increased by 1,800 from the previous month.

“Preliminary estimates for May are encouraging. Job growth over the year matched the U.S. growth rate at 1.6 percent,” said Senior Labor Economist, Tyler Tenbrink. “The state added 7,100 jobs over the last 12 months in the professional and business services industry, an industry with an average wage of over $27 per hour.”

Since May 2017, Kansas gained 22,700 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs and 20,700 private sector jobs.

Health Department changes on agenda at Ellis Co. Commission meeting

By JONATHAN ZWEYGARDT
Hays Post

The Ellis County Commission will consider staff changes within the Health Services Department at Monday’s meeting.

Health Services Administrator Kerry McCue said he is looking to change the Public Health Billing Coordinator position to the Medical Billing Specialist. The person will be in charge of all medical billing for Health Services.

The commission will also hear a budget request from the West Kansas Child Advocacy Center and consider purchasing a replacement spray truck.

The commission will meet as the Public Building Commission at 5 p.m. with the regular commission to follow at 718 Main St.

Exploring Outdoors Kansas: The circle of life

Steve Gilliland

Its spring in the Kansas outdoors and all the critters are on the prowl around chicken coops, corrals and even backyards looking for quick easy meals to feed dens and nests full of youngins’.

I’ve already had a call from a local sheep farmer asking me to come trap coyotes and a bobcat hanging around his sheep pens. Those coyotes and that cat would undoubtedly be hanging out there anyway, but usually at night, unseen. This time of the year emboldens predators to hunt and prowl during the day when they would otherwise never think of it. A reader from Abbyville contacted me over the weekend telling me they have lost most of their chickens to what she believes to be a fox, which by the way, do quite well living in towns or on the outskirts of towns in our part of the state.

In late spring a few years ago, my friend was busy in the big round top shed that sits toward one corner of his yard, when his little Blue Heeler dog began raising cane from outside. He stuck his head out the door to see what was agitating the dog and noticed the roosters and the rest of the chickens in his chicken pen crowing, cackling and nervously milling about. He glanced behind the barn nearest the pen and noticed something bounding around wildly just behind the corral, less than fifty yards away.

He headed around the barn and through the corral and found a whitetail doe jumping and dodging frantically around something in the field drive ahead. That “something” turned out to be a pair of coyotes with a small whitetail fawn pinned to the ground between them. My friend ran toward the melee shouting and waving his arms, the doe retreated into a nearby patch of weeds and the coyotes scattered toward parts unknown, leaving the lifeless looking fawn on the ground before him. Even though only a few scratches were apparent, the fawn lay there limp and listless. He said that as he stroked its small spotted body, the light suddenly came back into its eyes. It jumped to its feet and after getting its bearings, instinctively headed for cover. As he watched from a distance, the doe joined the fawn and they disappeared into a thicket some distance away.

Like springtime on the farm, springtime in the wild is a season filled with babies everywhere. Just as that whitetail doe had her fawn to protect and feed, you can bet those coyotes had a den full of hungry little mouths to feed also. It is no coincidence that there is more prey available in the form of young, easily caught critters at this time each year, just exactly when every wild animal needs extra prey to feed its young.

Isn’t it amazing how everything seems to come full circle back to the fact that God knew exactly what He was doing when he engineered the order of things! Even with the glut of easily caught lunches right now in the wild, predators are still opportunists at heart and will not think twice about grabbing a young farm animal or even cats and kittens if given the chance. As spring turns into July and August, increased predation seen in the spring will slow again, but in the meantime, there are a few extra precautions that can be taken to at least make the opportunists think twice about grabbing’ something from the coop or corral.

Even though you can’t keep an eye on poultry and young farm animals 24/7, giving them a place under roof to spend the night will help dramatically. Giving poultry a place to spend the night behind a closed door is a good thing any time of the year. Remember, despite their willingness to prowl more during daylight right now, a predator’s favorite time to hunt is still after dark. Keeping the grass and weeds mowed around pens will help also, as removing any cover predators can use to sneak close to a barn, chicken house or yard will help deter their presence. Sadly to say, there’s not a lot that can be done in town to deter predators aside from keeping cats, dogs and chickens within a fenced yard or enclosure of some sort.

Playing a radio and keeping a couple lights lit in the barn where sheep and goats spend the night will sound like human activity to a predator and can help deter their presence.

The most effective predator prevention is probably a good watch dog, even if it’s small. Dogs of any size make predators nervous, and even though any coyote, bobcat or raccoon worth its salt can easily overpower most small dogs especially if they catch them out in the open, a noisy little mutt relentlessly yapping away at them as they slink around the barn or sheep pen might at least make them question their plan and probably alert you in the process. Unfortunately a yappy little dog will probably not work well in town, as they might help keep predators at bay, but will surely keep you in hot water with the rest of the neighborhood.

Yup, its spring time in the Kansas outdoors again, and all the critters have families to feed. Unfortunately that means predators too, so as they follow their God-given instincts to protect and feed their young, young farm animals, chickens and even cats and kittens might be taken if the chance arises. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not condoning that, after all, I’m a coyote trapper. But I am saying that understanding why it happens helps me look at it from a slightly different perspective ….Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors!

Steve Gilliland, Inman, can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Styles Dance Centre will have fundraiser Saturday

Styles Dance Centre will be hosting an event this weekend to raise money for the SDC Scholarship Fund, which helps dancers who may otherwise be prohibited from participating in dance due to financial hardship.

“Dance is a gift that should be accessible for everyone,” studio officials said in a news release. “Dance provides encouragement for personal growth, potential for college scholarship money, and an avenue for a professional and fulfilling career.”

Come down and help out the community while enjoying Laser Tag, NERF, midway games, door prizes provided by local community businesses, and free food provided by Pasta Jay’s at Styles Dance Centre, 1501 Main in Hays on Saturday, June 23, from 1-5pm.

Audit report to be presented to Ellis City Council

ELLIS – The 2017 audit report by Adams, Brown, Beran & Ball, will be presented during the Mon., June 18, Ellis city council meeting.

Funding requests for 2019 will be made by Walter P. Chrysler Home and Museum and Ellis Railroad Museum.

In other business, Ellis County Fire Chief Darin Myers will have an update on installation of storm warning sirens and an application for local financial incentives from Shear Heaven Beauty Nook will be considered.

The complete agenda follows.

 

AGENDA

June 18, 2018

REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF ELLIS

City Hall – Council Meeting Room

 

BILLS ORDINANCE REVIEW WORK SESSION BEGINS AT 7:00 P.M.

ROLL CALL AND MEETING CALL TO ORDER AT 7:30 P.M.

PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE

AMENDMENTS TO AGENDA (if needed)

  • CONSENT AGENDA
    1. Minutes from Regular Meeting on June 4, 2018
    2. Bills Ordinance #2047
    3. April Manual Journal Entries

(Council will review for approval under one motion under the consent agenda.  By majority vote of the governing body, any item may be removed from the consent agenda and considered separately)

PUBLIC COMMENTS 

(Each speaker will be limited to five minutes.  If several people from the group wish to speak on same subject, the group must appoint a spokesperson.  ALL comments from public on agenda items must be during Public Comment.  Once council begins their business meeting, no more comments from public will be allowed.)

  • PRESENTATIONS OF AWARDS, PROCLAMATIONS, REQUESTS & PETITIONS (HEARINGS)
    1. 2019 Budget Request – Walter P. Chrysler Home and Museum
    2. 2019 Budget Request – Ellis Railroad Museum
  • SPECIAL ORDER
    1. Presentation of 2017 Audit Report – Adams, Brown, Beran & Ball, Chtd.
    2. Fire Department Monthly Report – Chief Dustin Vine
    3. Update on Storm Siren Installation – Ellis County Fire Chief Darin Myers
  • UNFINISHED BUSINESS
    1. Review Amended Ordinance Extending Time to Comply with Tree Trimming Regulations
    2. Consider Approval for Repairs to Roofs at Campground and Swimming Pool
  • NEW BUSINESS
    1. Consider Approval of Application for Local Incentives – Shear Heaven Beauty Nook
    2. Consider Ratification of Invoice for Purchase of Pea Gravel
    3. Consider Approval of the Purchase of Tires for Sanitation Truck
    4. Consider Approval for the Purchase of Asphalt
    5. Consider Approval of Campground Reservation
    6. Consider Approval of Disposal of Records
    7. Consider Approval of Appointment to Ellis Industrial Development Corporation
  • REPORTS FROM CITY OFFICIALS
    1. Administrative
      • Public Works
        • Department Update
      • Police
        • Department Update
      • City Clerk
        • Health Insurance Savings Report for May
        • April Financial Statements
        • Department Update
      • Attorney
        • Update on Status of Code Violation Cases
      • Mayor Update and Announcements

EXECUTIVE SESSIONS

  • ADJOURNMENT

 

MADORIN: Country living catastrophe

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

I was visiting with a girlfriend today about cat behavior and how despite being domesticated house pets share wild counterparts’ behaviors. This discussion retrieved a nearly forgotten memory involving two kids, a bike, a cat, and a mouse.

The adventure began on one of those sensational spring evenings when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun sinks slowly into the horizon making your system vibrate so that even though you’re tired, you aren’t ready to settle down. Just as I called the girls inside for their bath, a squall emerged from our rural driveway where our eldest was practicing riding her bike without training wheels. She’d mastered starting, stopping, and turning so I’d gone in to draw their water.

Racing outside, I found her sprawled in gravel. Thankfully there were no broken bones, but after close investigation, I saw pebbles and dirt chunks embedded in her knees and palms. I guided her into the house where she could soak it loose in the tub, making it easier to remove. As I led one sobbing child up the steps, I spied our youngest trying to take something away from the cat. So much for hindsight, I’d think later.

I comforted tear-stained kid 1 while she trickled water over skinned appendages when I heard a shriek from child number 2. She raced into the bathroom with something dangling from her finger. She held it out to show her sis, and I observed a mouse–yes, a writhing rodent attached to her index finger.

Daughter 1 joined little sister’s howls while the mouse wriggled and contributed squeals of its own. However, it didn’t let go. At that point the cat raced in to check on the prize that he’d caught and been tormenting before our fair-haired girl intervened.

At this point, I’m scared the critter will fall into the bathtub furthering injuring daughter 1 so I guided little sis’s bleeding hand over the commode. In turn, she bangs the hitchhiker on the toilet rim. When our feline leapt to recapture his prey, I abandoned our toddler long enough to toss the cat and slam the door. Curiously, that action multiplied the volume in the bathroom, perhaps inducing the mouse to release its vise-like grip and somersault into the toilet.

Someone, and I suspect it was me, flushed the stool. I know I didn’t have a carcass when the thought of rabies flitted across my mind. Of course, my husband was at work and out of reach so I told kid 1 to keep soaking her wounds. I disinfected kid 2’s bite and comforted her as I simultaneously called the emergency room to see if we needed shots.

The good news was we didn’t. The bite victim contentedly sported a Band-Aid on her injured digit while I picked gravel from her sibling. It wasn’t painless, but the extended soak that left daughter 1 wrinkled like a prune made it easier to clean her wounds.

By the time their dad returned, sleep was the last thing on anyone’s mind. We had red badges of courage and stories to tell. The only one in the house still upset was the cat who meowed repeatedly over his lost snack.

Native Kansan Karen Madorin is a local writer and retired teacher who loves sharing stories about places, people, critters, plants, food, and history of the High Plains.

Students give ceramics a spin in summer arts council classes

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Children are getting their hands dirty as they explore the art of ceramics this summer.

Jennifer Younger, Hays High School art teacher, offered three ceramics classes at Hays High School through the Hays Arts Council.

Children ages 6 through 12 were broken into two classes based on their age to explore hand building figures or pots. Youth 11 and older could enroll in wheel-thrown pottery.

Student modeled their figures or threw their pots last week. All students will paint or glaze their pieces this week, so they can take them home at the end of the two-week session.

Students learn about the different properties of the clay and how it is affected by the moisture. Younger took them through the steps of building and curing their creations, including the first bisque firing in a kiln, glazing and then the second firing.

“It is a lot of processes they learn, and they really catch on quick,” she said. “It is really cool to see what they can come up with and how creative they are.”

The wheel-thrown class is a “crash course.” In Younger’s high school class, the students spend two weeks just learning how to center the clay on the wheel.

“For as young as they are, they do really well,” she said. “Sometimes they get frustrated, but we spend weeks in school practicing this and learning this, so they are really doing awesome.”

Younger explained why she thought exposing children to art is important.

“It helps with their creativity. A lot of them are able to use it as an outlet. I feel it is really important,” she said. “It is not quite as serious, and they can let loose and just be creative and use their imaginations. I think that is important in this day and age with all the stressors and high expectations. A lot of kids really enjoy this, and they are able to produce a lot of great things.”

Eleanor Bittel, 11, of Hays, was working on a pitcher on Thursday morning. This was Bittel’s first attempt at throwing on a wheel.

“I have been wanting to do this for a while,” she said. “I have done the hand clay a couple of times, but I have wanted to do this for a really long time.”

She talked about what she learned in the class.

“In this class, I learned that you need strength, because when you center it, you really have to move it and model it,” she said. “It is also sometimes frustrating because it will collapse on you, and you have to start over sometimes. But I really like it. I am really enjoying it.”

Darci Dreiling, 13, a TMP-Marian student, also was taking wheel-thrown pottery for the first time.

“I learned not to be frustrated, she said as she trimmed a pot on Thursday, “because you can always build it up and make it into something new.”

Janet Hugunin, 13, Victoria, is in her third year of taking wheel-thrown pottery through the HAC.

She talked about what she has learned through the classes.

“How to work with the clay and center it and making it even so you don’t have any air bubble in it so when you fire it, it doesn’t explode,” she said.

Hugunin enjoys doing other types of art in her free time.

“It is really calming to me,” she said. “It is something that if I don’t have anything else to do, I can do art … It is just fun to do.”

Students also will wrap up HAC Acting and Theater classes this week with public performances on Friday morning at the 12th Street Auditorium.

There are more HAC youth classes offered through July and a Plein Air Painting Workshop for anyone 16 and older on June 23.

See a complete schedule and information on how to enroll at the HAC website or you can visit the Hays Arts Center downtown at 112 E. 11th St.

Hot, windy Monday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today A 10 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 5pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 95. Breezy, with a south wind 13 to 20 mph.

Tonight A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly between 1am and 3am. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 71. South wind 8 to 13 mph.

Tuesday A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 92. South southeast wind 7 to 13 mph.

Tuesday Night Showers and thunderstorms. Low around 65. South southeast wind 7 to 13 mph becoming north northwest after midnight. Chance of precipitation is 80%. New rainfall amounts between 1 and 2 inches possible.
WednesdayA 50 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 81. West northwest wind 7 to 10 mph.
Wednesday NightA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61.
ThursdayA 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 79.

Immigration to SW Kansas is creating new accent

(Photo courtesy Mirna Bonilla-Salazar, KSRE)
By STEPHAN BISAHA
Kansas News Service

Southwest Kansas has a new accent due to the rapidly growing Latino population in the area.

New research from Kansas State University and its Kansas Speaks Project, which documents language shifts in Kansas, shows younger people in the region have started to take on the characteristics of Spanish speakers, even if they don’t speak Spanish themselves.

“It dispels the myth of the idea that Kansas in a monolingual state,” said Mary Kohn, a linguist at K-State. “That’s never been the case.”

Kohn and her students, Trevin Garcia and Addison Dickens, interviewed more than 90 people across the state for the project.

They found pockets of communities in southwest Kansas, like Liberal, where younger residents say their vowels in a Spanish style, including those without any Hispanic heritage. They also speak in a similar rhythm to Spanish speakers.

Liberal has gone from about 20 percent Hispanic in the 1990s to about 60 percent today.

The developing accent presents an opportunity to see what happens when cultures meet.

“When we talk about language what we’re talking about is culture and history of people,” Kohn said. “Whenever we’re studying language what we’re really studying is people and how they move through the world, and language is a part of that.”

Other communities with large Hispanic populations, like in Texas and Florida, have similar accents, though they’re not exactly the same. Southwest Kansas provides Kohn and her team a unique opportunity to study the early development of a regional dialect.

Kohn said accents are always changing — the only language that doesn’t change is a dead one.

“Language will always vary according to the social constructs that matter in a culture,” Kohn said. “Because we do use language as a way to construct our personal identity.”

Stephan Bisaha reports on education for KMUW in Wichita and the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KMUW, Kansas Public Radio, KCUR and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. Follow him on @SteveBisaha.

KDA seeks participants for beef genetics trade mission to Uruguay

Kansas beef producers (from left) Russ Smith, Galen Fink and Jason Pratt meet with an Uruguayan beef producer (second from left) on a 2016 agricultural trade mission.

KDA

MANHATTAN — The Kansas Department of Agriculture is seeking individuals to participate in a beef genetics trade mission to Uruguay from September 12–17, 2018. This trade mission provides an opportunity for Kansas purebred beef cattle producers and allied industries to develop relationships with livestock producers in Uruguay to increase market opportunities for U.S. and Kansas beef genetics.

Participants will interact with breeders and promote the use of U.S. beef genetics while attending Expo Prado 2018, a major international livestock exhibition in Uruguay. Kansas ranchers and related agribusinesses specializing in the export of Angus and Hereford genetics are invited to participate.

The trade mission is funded by U.S. Livestock Genetics Export, Inc. Selected participants will be eligible for travel stipends for airfare depending upon number of applicants and fund availability. Attendees will be responsible for the cost of hotels, meals, and other incidental expenses.

Individuals interested in participating in the trade mission should complete the application form on the KDA website at www.agriculture.ks.gov/international. Application deadline is July 30.

KDA strives to encourage economic growth of the agriculture industry and the Kansas economy by exploring and expanding both domestic and international marketing opportunities. For more information on the trade mission to Uruguay, please contact Shirley Acedo, KDA agribusiness development coordinator, at [email protected] or 785-564-7467.

Hays Public Library to host ‘Dinosaur Wars’

By CRISTINA JANNEY

Hays Post

The Hays Public Library in cooperation with the Sternberg Museum of Natural History will present “Dinosaur Wars” from 6 to 7 p.m. Monday in the Schmidt Gallery of the Hays Public Library.

 Ian Trevethan, Sternberg outreach coordinator, will discuss the “Bone Wars” or “Great Dinosaur Rush” in the late 1800s.

Samantha Gill, adult department librarian, said the rush to unearth dinosaur bones from beds in Colorado, Nebraska and Wyoming during this period resulted in some of the most complete skeletons in collections today.

“Dinosaur Wars” is also the name of a PBS documentary on early North American dinosaur excavation that aired on PBS in 2011.

Trevethan will have several fossil examples with him during his presentation.

Gill said the event is open to all ages and will have interest for young children all the way through adults.

The event is free and open to the public. Dinosaur-themed snacks and beverages will be severed.

Two movie tickets will be given away during the event.

You can use them to see any movie, but you will have them in time see the release of the new Jurassic Park movie, “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom,” which premiers Friday, June 22. See trailers here.

Arc of Central Plains will have free special needs planning workshop

The Arc of Central Plains is sponsoring a free special needs planning workshop on June 20 at 600 Main in Hays, with sessions at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.

Clinkscales Elder Law Practice, P.A. will be presenting on topics including supplemental needs trusts, the ABLE act, ABLE accounts and planning for those with special needs.

If you are interested in attending this free event, RSVP to Kathy at (785) 628-8831.

Smith earns Excellence in Field Supervision award from KU School of Social Welfare

Gina Smith

FHSU University Relations

Gina Smith, director of the Fort Hays State University Kelly Center, was recently honored with the 2017-2018 University of Kansas Field Education Margo Award for Excellence in Field Instruction-Preceptor.

“Gina is warm, personable, humorous and uplifting,” said Jessica Albin, Hays, the student who nominated Smith for the award. “She has been available to me during our scheduled weekly supervision times (which she did not miss or reschedule even a single time) and anytime throughout the week that I have needed to consult with her.”

Albin said that Smith “strikes the perfect balance between offering support and direction” while also providing students opportunities to find their own way as social workers.

The Margo Awards, awarded through the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare, recognize students and faculty members who demonstrate outstanding achievement in the field of social work. The Excellence in Field Instruction awards are given to instructors and preceptors who have shown superior dedication to teaching and student learning.

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