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Kansas Water office cuts could delay projects

By ANDY MARSO

Budget cuts to the Kansas Water Office should not result in any layoffs but could delay some reservoir maintenance projects, the

Photo by KHI News Service File Recent Kansas budget cuts may mean delays for stream bank stabilization projects that prevent sediment buildup in rivers and reservoirs. Clinton Lake, shown here, is among the reservoirs that help supply water to people living in eastern Kansas.
Photo by KHI News Service File Recent Kansas budget cuts may mean delays for stream bank stabilization projects that prevent sediment buildup in rivers and reservoirs. Clinton Lake, shown here, is among the reservoirs that help supply water to people living in eastern Kansas.

head of the office said this week.

Tracy Streeter, the office’s director since 2004, said he’s still examining the allotments that Gov. Sam Brownback announced last week. But he doesn’t expect his relatively small state agency to lose any staff.

“It will not affect personnel,” Streeter said. “Because the state general fund (appropriation) was reduced, we’ll use other funds to fill the gap temporarily.”

The cuts to the water office were part of more than $80 million in reductions Brownback made after the Legislature passed a budget that did not balance.

At $250,000, the water office cut was small compared to others. But for an agency with a total budget of about $1.15 million, it was proportionately the largest, at close to 22 percent.

Streeter said he had some warning the cut was coming. The water office will absorb the cut in part by using reserve money from a “water marketing fund” that increases during dry years as municipalities and private companies tap the reservoirs the office helps maintain.

The amount of precipitation this year will determine the health of the reserve fund and whether the budget cuts force Streeter’s office to take other actions.

“We might have to delay a stream bank project or two as a result of this, I don’t know yet,” Streeter said. “Right now I’m not counting on that even. We’ll probably take more of a wait-and-see (approach) and see how our water revenue performs this year.”

Streeter said he’s preparing for the reduction in state funding to be for only one year. He said it doesn’t indicate any shifting of priorities for Brownback, who has made enacting a 50-year water plan central to his tenure as governor.

But Rep. Tom Sloan, a Republican from Lawrence who has been one of the Legislature’s strongest voices on water issues, said the cut shouldn’t be interpreted any other way.

“You just can’t say water is a priority and not fund it,” Sloan said. Sloan acknowledged that the governor has formed a Blue Ribbon Task Force to look at ways to fund the state’s water projects but said the state has failed to fund its share of reservoir maintenance projects for years.

The stream bank stabilization projects that may be delayed prevent erosion that sends sediment flowing through rivers and into the reservoirs, lessening the amount of water they can hold.

Capacity can only be restored through dredging projects, like one that just started at John Redmond Reservoir, which are far more expensive than the stream bank projects. Sloan said that the eastern half of the state, which is home to most of the state’s reservoirs, has seen significant rain so far this year, which will lead to more erosion and sedimentation.

Delays to stream bank stabilization in order to balance the budget short-term would be “penny-wise and pound-foolish,” he said, but that’s the approach Brownback and Republican legislative leaders have taken as the state faces continuing revenue shortfalls following income tax cuts signed in 2012. “It’s the Band-Aid approach,” Sloan said.

“We’re no longer looking down the road saying ‘What is it that the state should be doing? What is it that sustains us as a state long-term?’”

Andy Marso is a reporter for KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team. You can reach him on Twitter @andymarso

Kansas Rancher Testifies Before U.S. Senate Ag Committee

Kansan Tracy Brunner Testifies Before the Senate Ag Committee
Kansan Tracy Brunner Testifies Before the Senate Ag Committee

WASHINGTON, D.C. – At this week’s hearing of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, Tracy Brunner, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association President and rancher from Ramona, Kan., testified on the challenges and outlook of the U.S. beef cattle sector.

Agriculture Committee Chairman Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., held the hearing to review the U.S. livestock and poultry sectors.

In his testimony, Brunner discussed the challenges facing the beef industry, including successful passage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the potential reissuance of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Grain Inspection, Packers & Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) rule, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife’s implementation of the Endangered Species Act, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s ‘Waters of the U.S.’ (WOTUS) rule.

“Tracy is not only a true leader for Kansas agriculture but also for the U.S. beef industry,” said Chairman Roberts. “Ranchers across America should be proud to have Tracy as a voice for cattlemen. I thank him for leaving the beautiful Flint Hills of Kansas to testify before the Agriculture Committee.”

Brunner is the fourth generation rancher from Ramona, Kan., and has served as president of his family corporation since its inception in 1988. A graduate of Kansas State University, Brunner manages the feedyard and the yearling grazing operation while overseeing the cattle and grain marketing decisions, commodity risk management, customer relations and financial reports. The Brunner family also operates a seed stock enterprise raising bulls and replacement heifers for many ranchers throughout the country.

Click here to watch Brunner’s opening statement.

Dismissal of lawsuit reversed in Kansas girl’s death

Jayden Hicks
Jayden Hicks

SALINA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Court of Appeals has reversed a judge’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit against the city of Salina by a family whose 12-year-old daughter died several months after being shocked while playing in a rainstorm.

The Salina Journal reports that the court returned the case Friday to Saline County District Court for further deliberations. The appeals court said the matter should not have been decided without a trial.

Attorney James Nordstrom, who represents the city of Salina, told the newspaper that he had no comment.

Jayden Hicks was 11 when she came into contact with the metal cover of an in-ground electrical junction box while playing with friends in May 2013. The box had been installed without a grounding wire and contained damaged wires.

Jayden died that December.

Police: Kan. man arrested for alleged home invasion robbery, assault

Home-Invasion-jpgSHAWNEE COUNTY- Law Enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a home invasion robbery.

On Friday morning, police responded to report of a robbery in progress at a home in the 200 Block of SE Winfield in Topeka, according to a media release.

The homeowner described the suspect’s vehicle as a black Ford Taurus.

After a short pursuit, both occupants fled the vehicle on foot and entered a residence on Southeast Highland. The driver of the vehicle Jared Paneda, 29, Topeka, and other occupants of the residence on Highland were transported to the law enforcement center for questioning. A passenger in the Taurus was not located.

The homeowner who reported the original home invasion was uncooperative with police, refused to allow them to gather evidence or file a report.

Paneda is being held on requested charges of possession of stolen property, weapons and aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer.

The Latest: Kan. leaders battle over court’s ruling on school funding

School funding smallTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on the Kansas Supreme Court’s ruling on school funding (all times local):

8:40 p.m.

The Kansas Senate’s top Democrat is criticizing majority Republicans for not being more generous toward public schools while worrying about accommodating transgender students.

Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley of Topeka said Friday that lawmakers need to respond to the Kansas Supreme Court’s latest order on education funding by boosting aid to poor school districts.

He said they should do so on Wednesday before a brief ceremony adjourning their annual session.

Senate President Susan Wagle of Wichita plans to have her chamber vote on a resolution condemning a federal government directive saying public schools must allow transgender students to use facilities in line with their gender identities.

Hensley said lawmakers should increase education funding rather than “waste taxpayers’ dollars on an election year charade over which bathroom students can use.”

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7:55 p.m.

An attorney for four school districts says Kansas will have to boost education funding by between $17.5 million and nearly $30 million for the 2016-17 school year to satisfy a state Supreme Court order.

Lawyer Alan Rupe said Friday that the Legislature needs to reconvene to address the problems identified by the court.

The court rejected some education funding changes approved earlier this year by legislators.

Rupe said it would cost $17.5 million to increase aid to poor school districts in keeping with the court’s latest order. He said if lawmakers want to keep other districts from losing aid, they’d have to provide an additional $12 million.

The court ruled in a lawsuit filed in 2010 by the Dodge City, Hutchinson, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, school districts.

___

7:35 p.m.

An attorney for four school districts says Kansas will have to boost education funding by nearly $30 million for the 2016-17 school year to comply with a state Supreme Court order.

Lawyer Alan Rupe said Friday that the Legislature needs to reconvene to address the problems identified by the court.

The court rejected some education funding changes approved earlier this year by the Republican-dominated Legislature. It said the entire school funding system is unfair to poor districts and violates the state constitution because of the flaws.

The extra funds Rupe identified would boost aid to poor districts while keeping wealthier ones from losing aid.

The court ruled in a lawsuit filed in 2010 by the Dodge City, Hutchinson, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas, school districts.

___

7:15 p.m.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback says the Kansas Supreme Court is putting children’s education at risk in its latest ruling on state funding.

He also said after Friday’s decision that the court has disregarded the Legislature’s “proper role” in setting education funding policy.

The court rejected some of the education funding changes legislators approved earlier this year. It said lawmakers failed to fully comply with a previous order in February to improve funding for poor school districts.

The court also renewed a threat to not allow schools to open in August if lawmakers don’t act again by June 30.

The conservative Republican governor said in a statement: “The court is engaging in political brinksmanship with this ruling, and the cost will be borne by our children.”

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6:10 p.m.

Kansas House Speaker Ray Merrick is calling the state Supreme Court’s latest education funding ruling “disgraceful.”

The Stilwell Republican said the court’s decision Friday demonstrated that it is “the most political body” in the state and is “holding children hostage.”

The court rejected some education funding changes enacted by the Republican-dominated Legislature earlier this year.

The justices in February ordered lawmakers to make distribution of state aid fairer to poor public school districts.

They concluded Friday that lawmakers did not fully comply and that public schools must remain closed unless lawmakers act again by June 30.

Merrick said legislators acted in good faith.

He also suggested that voters consider ousting justices in November’s election. Five of the court’s seven members face yes-or-no votes on whether they stay on the bench.

___

5:30 p.m.

The Kansas Supreme Court says that if its most recent education funding ruling results in public schools closing, it will be because legislators did not comply with an earlier order.

The high court Friday rejected some education funding changes enacted by the Republican-dominated Legislature. The justices said in an unsigned order that lawmakers did not fully comply with an order in February to improve funding for poor schools.

The court refused to separate the changes it endorsed from ones it accepted, saying they were all part of a single system. The justices said that unless the problems are fixed, the state won’t have an acceptable system for distributing its more than $4 billion in annual aid.

The court said schools would be forced to close if the problems aren’t fixed not because of its decision.

___

5:07 p.m.

The Kansas Supreme Court is threatening again to close the state’s public schools and has rejected some education funding changes enacted by legislators earlier this year.

The court ruled Friday on a law that revised parts of the state’s funding formula but resulted in no change in total funds for most of the state’s 286 school districts.

The justices said legislators didn’t fully comply with an order it issued in February to make education funding fairer to poor school districts. The court said all schools must remain closed unless lawmakers fix the problems by June 30.

The court made the same threat in February, and the Republican-dominated Legislature passed the changes in hopes the court would relent.

Lawmakers were scheduled to meet Wednesday to formally adjourn their annual session.

Expensive security plan to comply with new Kan. weapons law

concealed and carry 2LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The city of Lawrence is creating a security plan to comply with a state law allowing people to carry concealed guns.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that the city attorney’s office has proposed funds in the 2017 budget to install personnel and equipment security at entrances to public buildings in anticipation of the Personal and Family Protection Act’s expiration in 2017.

The act, passed in 2013, allowed Lawrence and other cities to ban concealed weapons for four years before complying with a state law that says concealed firearms are allowed in public buildings unless the structures are equipped with security measures.

The security measures are being considered at City Hall, the municipal court, the public library and the police department’s investigations and training center.

Rape charge filed against 70-year-old Kan. cab driver

Sayed- photo Johnson Co. Sheriff
Sayed- photo Johnson Co. Sheriff

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — A 70-year-old cab driver faces charges accusing him of raping a female passenger in Johnson County.

The Kansas City Star reports Abdul S. Sayed, of Olathe, is charged in Johnson County District Court with rape and aggravated criminal sodomy. A criminal complaint filed Thursday says the alleged assault occurred Dec. 13.

The complaint alleges that the victim was “overcome by force of fear” or was unable to give consent to sexual contact because of intoxication.

Online court records don’t list a lawyer for Sayed, who has a first appearance scheduled for Friday. His bond was set at $500,000.

Sayed was a driver for the Atlas Cab Co. at the time of the alleged assault. The company said Friday that Sayed was fired about three months ago.

Kansas Health Care Providers To Fight KanCare Cuts

BY JIM MCLEAN

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback announced $56.3 million in cuts to KanCare, the state's privatized Medicaid program, as part of reductions aimed at covering budget shortfalls. CREDIT FILE PHOTO
Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback announced $56.3 million in cuts to KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, as part of reductions aimed at covering budget shortfalls.
CREDIT FILE PHOTO

Kansas health care providers will urge federal officials to reject Gov. Sam Brownback’s proposed Medicaid cuts and may challenge them in court.

The recently announced cuts would reduce state expenditures for KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, by $56.3 million and trigger a loss of approximately $72.3 million in federal funds. Combined, the managed care organizations that administer $3 billion KanCare program and the health care and service providers they have contracts with would be forced to absorb more than $128 million in cuts.

Of particular concern to providers is the proposed 4 percent reduction in reimbursement rates, which would amount to about $87 million of the $128 million total.

“In addition to being bad policy, the administration’s proposal to cut provider reimbursement would be inconsistent with state and federal law,” Tom Bell, chief executive of the Kansas Hospital Association, said in a recent letter to Brownback. “It would also be inconsistent with and not permitted by provider contracts in place with all Kansas hospitals. As such, we will challenge these proposed cuts in any appropriate way.”

Reductions of the magnitude being proposed will make it harder for the approximately 425,000 low-income children and families, elderly adults and people with disabilities covered by KanCare to access services, Bell said in an interview.

“The effect of these cuts will be to make providers less likely to participate (in KanCare) and ultimately make it even more difficult for vulnerable people to get the health care they need,” he said. “And why in the world would we want to do that?”

State officials must obtain approval from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to fully implement the cuts. But Brownback administration officials have said the reductions will take effect July 1 regardless of whether CMS has approved them.

“From our perspective, that’s fairly presumptuous,” Bell said. “I think the assumption on the part of the state is that CMS will just rubber stamp this. But our hope is that because so many people are concerned about the effect on access that CMS will take a very serious look at this. This is not your typical state plan amendment.”

Michael Randol, director of the Division of Health Care Finance in the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said regardless of when CMS approves the cuts, they will be retroactive to July 1. If there is significant lag time between the effective date of the cuts and when CMS approves them, it could increase their impact by requiring providers to absorb a year’s worth of cuts in a matter of months.

Randol said he believes the state can legally impose the cuts pending CMS approval.

“I am confident in what we’re doing,” he said.

Julie Brookhart, a CMS spokesperson, said states can implement Medicaid changes while the agency is reviewing them.

“For a July 1, 2016, effective date, the state Medicaid agency would need to submit a state plan amendment by September 30, 2016, as the amendments can be retroactive,” Brookhart said in an email.

Still, those attempting to stop the cuts see timing as a potentially critical issue. Hospital association lawyers are assessing the chances of obtaining a court order to delay the cuts.

“We’re absolutely taking a look at that,” Bell said.

The extent to which the planned reductions in provider reimbursements affect KanCare patients’ access to care will be among the issues that CMS considers. Federal law requires that reimbursement rates be “sufficient to enlist enough providers” to ensure that Medicaid recipients get roughly the same level of services as the general population, Brookhart said.

In defending the cuts, Randol pointed to the 10 percent reduction in Medicaid reimbursement rates ordered in 2010 by former Democratic Gov. Mark Parkinson during the Great Recession. He said Brownback administration officials reviewed those cuts when crafting their plan.

“We tried to maintain some semblance of consistency,” he said.

The current situation doesn’t compare to 2010, said Kyle Kessler, executive director of the Association of Community Mental Health Centers of Kansas

“The cuts under Parkinson were the result of a recession and were temporary,” Kessler said. “That’s not what this is.”

The Brownback Medicaid cuts are the latest in a series of actions taken by the governor and lawmakers to cover chronic budget shortfalls that many believe have been caused by Brownback’s tax policies, specifically the income tax cuts and exemptions he pushed through the Legislature in 2012.

Because the budget problems appear likely to continue, Kessler said providers are concerned the proposed cuts may be permanent.

“Without a plan for restoration, the assumption has to be that they’re indefinite,” Kessler said.

Kansas hospital administrators share that concern, Bell said.

“What we’ve been told is that they are ‘indefinite,’” he said. “I think it’s hard to look at that word and not think that it may also mean permanent.”

Bell also questions whether the cuts are necessary. With a projected ending balance of $87.1 million in fiscal year 2017, Bell said the state could forgo the KanCare cuts and still finish the year with approximately $30 million in the treasury.

The Brownback news release announcing the budget reductions said they were being made to “continue to slow the growth of government” and signaled the possibility of additional cuts to Medicaid and higher education if the Kansas Supreme Court orders the state to increase funding for public schools.

Jim McLean is executive editor of KHI News Service in Topeka, a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

Kan. woman faces intimidation of a witness, aggravated battery charges

Cooprider
Cooprider

HUTCHINSON — A Kansas woman saw her bond increase after she made a first appearance on three serious charges.

Michala Cooprider, 20, Haven, faces potential charges of aggravated battery, aggravated intimidation of witness and aggravated burglary.

Police say on May 23, she entered a home in the 600 Block of East 7th Street in Hutchinson and battered a woman who was still in bed.

The victim had injuries so severe, she was taken to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center for treatment and had to have 15 staples put in for her wounds.

Police believe she was asked to beat the victim, Lacy Lomax, because of her allegedly being a snitch for telling on other individuals for other crimes.

After hearing arguments from the state, Magistrate Judge Cheryl Allen raised Cooprider’s bond from $37,600 to $50,000.

A second person has been arrested in association with this case.

Joshua Bradbury faces the same charges but also is jailed for distribution of drugs, drug paraphernalia and no tax stamp.

Airbag recall for over 12M vehicles; see if your car is on the list

Takata Air Bag Recall Photo Courtesy safercar.gov
Takata Air Bag Recall Photo Courtesy safercar.gov

DETROIT (AP) — Eight automakers are recalling more than 12 million vehicles in the U.S. to replace Takata air bag inflators that can explode with too much force.

Documents detailing recalls by Honda, Fiat Chrysler, Toyota, Mazda, Nissan, Subaru, Ferrari and Mitsubishi were posted Friday by the government. Check the list of vehicles here.

They’re part of a massive expansion of Takata air bag recalls announced earlier this month. Seventeen automakers are adding 35 million-to-40 million inflators to what already was the largest auto recall in U.S. history.

Friday’s recalls include passenger air bags mainly in older models in areas along the Gulf Coast with high heat and humidity.

Takata inflators can malfunction and spew shrapnel into drivers and passengers when exposed to humidity and repeated hot-and-cold cycles.

Police: Kan. suspect arrested in theft of Blue Man Group costumes

photo Wichita Police
photo Wichita Police

SEDGWICK COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a suspect in connection with a theft of costumes from the Blue Man Group while the performance artists were in Wichita in April.

Tips that came in from the photo released by police helped authorities identify the suspect. He was arrested and has been charged for burglary and theft, according to a social media report.

The costumes are worth more than $1,000.

The Blue Man Group was in Wichita for two nights of shows at Century II Auditorium.

Kansas woman tricked by on-line employment scam

onlinescamSALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating an alleged on-line scam.

A Salina woman told police she was job searching online, when she found an offer to pay her $350 a week to place a decal of “Amp” energy drink on her car for three months, according to Police Captain Mike Sweeney.

On May 23rd she placed a check totaling $990 from Merck-Sharp-Dohme in her bank account.

A note with the check instructed her to hold out $390 for her salary and gas money, but there was no decal.

The remaining funds from the check were to be wired to someone in New York.

Following a two day hold on the check by her bank, the woman went to Walmart to wire the rest of the money but was told by an employee it appeared to be a scam.

The woman is out $187 after making purchases from her checking account from money she did not have.

She received another check Thursday with a note with similar instructions.

The envelope that accompanied the check on n Thursday had a return address for Salina Supply at 302 N. Santa Fe.

Sweeney said scammers will place the address of a local business to make the scam look legitimate.

Cause of Kansas church fire under investigation; $250K damage

Damage inside the church following Friday's fire
Damage inside the church following Friday’s fire

HUTCHINSON – Investigators are working to determine the cause of a Friday morning fire at Crossroads Christian Church in Hutchinson.

Crews responded to a fire at the Church just after 4 a.m. on Friday at the intersection of 43rd and Monroe.

That areas was closed to traffic to allow personnel to work the blaze, according to police.

Crews pulled ceilings in the sanctuary and cut a hole in the roof to finish extinguishing the fire. Crews were on the scene for four hours, according to a media release.

Damage is estimated at $250,000 dollars, with extensive damage to the roof structure in the sanctuary. The fire has been ruled electrical in nature.

No one was injured in the fire with the building not occupied at the time.

Screen Shot 2016-05-27 at 9.06.24 AMA church member had come to the church due to high water, found the smoke, and called the fire department.

 

HUTCHINSON – Fire crews responded to a fire at Crossroads Christian Church early Friday.
The intersection of 43rd and Monroe was closed due to the fire apparatus and fire personnel working the blaze, according to police.

They advised commuters to avoid the area.

 

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