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6-year-old Kansas girl dies in pedestrian accident

pedestrian accident ABILENE – A child died in an accident just after 3p.m. on Tuesday in Dickinson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2009 Jeep Grand Cherokee driven by Beverly M. Barnett, 59, Enterprise, was westbound on 6th street.

The vehicle stopped at the stop sign, turned left onto Buckeye and struck Tayla M. Womochil, 6, Abilene.

She was transported to the hospital in Abilene where she died.
Barnett and a passenger in the Jeep were not injured.

The accident remains under investigation.

Clinton to speak at Pittsburg State

Pres. Clinton- Pittsburg State Univ. photo
Pres. Clinton- Pittsburg State Univ. photo

PITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) — Pittsburg State University says former President Bill Clinton will be speaking at the university later this month.

Pittsburg State President Steve Scott said Tuesday that Bill Clinton is scheduled to speak Nov. 23 at the university as part of a speaker series. The Pittsburg Morning Sun reports  that tickets for the event will go on sale Monday.

Clinton, who served as president from 1993 to 2001, is also scheduled to speak at the University of Kansas the same day when he receives the 2015 Dole Leadership Prize.

Kansas official seeks to save funds to treat drug offenders

drugs arrest policeTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Sentencing Commission’s executive director worries that looming budget problems will pressure the state into cutting funding to treat drug offenders and divert them from prison.

Executive Director Scott Schultz told a legislative committee Tuesday that first- and second-time drug offenders who complete treatment programs are far less likely to have another conviction. He said the state also can save nearly $21,000 per offender per year by not putting them in prison.

Schultz said he’s worried about preserving the nearly $6.6 million a year in funding because of the state’s budget situation. State officials and university economists are expected Friday to issue a new, more pessimistic forecast for state revenues.

Spokeswoman Eileen Hawley said Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration has not made any firm decisions about budget issues.

Authorities find 3 people dead at Kansas home

PoliceFREDONIA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are investigating after three bodies were found outside a home in southeast Kansas.

Wilson County Sheriff Pete Figgins says deputies found a married couple and another male relative dead Monday night outside a rural Fredonia home. The discovery was made after another relative asked the deputies to check on their welfare.

Figgins says deputies are not actively looking for any suspects at this time. Figgins declined to release the names of those killed Monday or how they died until autopsies are completed.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is assisting with the investigation.

Fredonia is a town of about 2,400 residents located about 150 miles southwest of Kansas City. Figgins noted that the community is small and expressed his condolences to the families, saying he also hurts.

Kansas man dies after driver runs a stop sign

fatal-accident1ALTAMONT – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 8a.m. on Tuesday in Labette County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2001 Chevy Cavalier driven by Joshua Endo, 24, Parsons, was southbound on Pratt Road two miles east of Altamont.

The driver failed to stop at stop sign, entered U.S. 59 and was struck on driver’s side by a 2012 GMC Sierra driven by Larry Carnahan, 64, Altamont, which was westbound on U.S. 59.

Endo was pronounced dead at the scene.
Carnahan was transported to Labette Health.

Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Kansas man charged in shooting death of his wife

courtWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita man has been charged with murder in the shooting death of his wife.

The Wichita Eagle reports that Pierre Ross Washington is charged with first-degree premeditated murder in the Oct. 28 death of 26-year-old Diana Washington.

Police say Diana Washington at a park. Authorities have not said what led to the shooting.

Washington’s next hearing is Nov. 17. He’s being held in Sedgwick County Jail on $500,000 bond.

He told the judge Monday when he was charged that he plans to hire his own defense attorney but didn’t yet know whom.

Marketplace insurer’s departure creates Kan. enrollment concerns

By JIM MCLEAN

Health insurance doctorGroups working to boost health insurance enrollment in Kansas are concerned their efforts could be undermined by the last-minute departure of one of the state’s largest insurers. Coventry Health Care of Kansas Inc. and Coventry Health & Life Insurance Co. — both subsidiaries of Aetna — abruptly decided to stop offering policies to Kansas consumers in the federal marketplace.

The decision, made two weeks before the start of the open enrollment period, surprised state insurance regulators. “We’re so close to open enrollment, this is very last minute,” said Clark Shultz, director of government affairs for the Kansas Insurance Department.

The open enrollment period started Sunday and runs through Jan. 31, 2016.

Coventry covers approximately 45,000 of the nearly 85,000 Kansans who have obtained coverage through the federal marketplace at healthcare.gov established by the Affordable Care Act.

That means more than half of the state’s marketplace policyholders will have to select new policies by Dec. 15 to maintain their coverage in 2016. That urgency has created unanticipated challenges for the groups seeking to help Kansans explore their options and select a plan.

“My worry is that we’re going to lose a lot of them because of folks just dropping through the cracks. That is my biggest concern,” said Sheldon Weisgrau, director of the Health Reform Resource Project, an initiative funded by several health foundations.

Three of the four remaining marketplace insurers are members of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield family of companies. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas offers a variety of plans. BlueCross and BlueShield Kansas Solutions Inc. is a health maintenance organization (HMO), meaning its plans often are cheaper but have more restrictive provider networks.

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City covers residents of 32 counties in and around the Kansas City metropolitan area, including only two counties — Johnson and Wyandotte ­— in Kansas.

United Healthcare of the Midwest Inc., another HMO, is a new entrant to the Kansas marketplace. Coventry will continue to offer coverage to Kansas consumers outside of the ACA marketplace.

Federal officials also were surprised by Coventry’s exit but said competition among the remaining companies would provide Kansas marketplace consumers with price and coverage options.

“We’re not concerned that people aren’t going to be able to find plans,” said Stephene Moore, director of the regional office of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in Kansas City, Mo.

Premiums going up  

The plans sold in the federal marketplace are given “metal” designations based on cost-sharing. Bronze plans are the cheapest but provide the least comprehensive coverage. Platinum plans are the most comprehensive and the most expensive. Gold and silver plans are somewhere in between.

The second-lowest-cost silver plan in each of the 38 states where the federal government operates the health marketplaces is known as the “benchmark plan.” On average it pays about 70 percent of a policyholder’s health care costs.

Nationally, premiums for benchmark plans are increasing by an average of 7.5 percent. In Kansas, they’re increasing by 16.1 percent. Across all plans, premiums in Kansas are going up between 9.4 percent and 25.4 percent.

They could have been even higher. Marketplace insurers requested increases as high as 39 percent, but Kansas Insurance Commissioner Ken Selzer, a Republican serving his first term, reduced them in August.

“We worked to find the balance between company claims trends and the need to hold down consumer rates,” Selzer said at the time. The number of insurers participating in Missouri’s federally facilitated exchange doubled from four in 2014 to eight in the upcoming enrollment period. Coventry remains an option for Missouri consumers, who will see rate increases between 12 percent and 15 percent.

Kevin Griffis, an assistant HHS secretary, said higher premiums won’t be a problem for most consumers in Kansas and Missouri because the federal tax credits they receive to help cover the cost of coverage also will increase.

“The average consumer is going to be largely insulated from that rate increase by the tax credit,” Griffis said during a recent call with reporters.

Approximately 80 percent of the Kansans who purchased coverage in the ACA marketplace for 2015 qualified for advanced premium tax credits. In Missouri, 89 percent of policyholders received tax credits.

Newly insured older and sicker

Insurance companies had no claims data on the marketplace population when they priced their first policies in 2013 and little more the following year. But they now know that the Kansans purchasing coverage through the marketplace are older and less healthy than the general population.

Linda Sheppard, a former director of health policy and analysis at the Kansas Insurance Department who is now a senior analyst for the Kansas Health Institute, said health insurers initially underestimated the cost of covering the marketplace population.

“Many were people with very serious health conditions who obviously had a pent-up demand for services,” Sheppard said. The ACA established three programs to minimize the financial risk to insurers. Two of them — the reinsurance and risk adjustment programs — appear to be working.

But the third, the risk corridors program, which covers a portion of the difference between premium revenues and the medical costs of policyholders, has paid companies only 12.6 of what they requested. A gap between what Coventry hoped to receive in risk corridor payments and what it got factored into the company’s decision to pull out of the Kansas marketplace, according to Kansas insurance officials.

The rate reductions ordered by Selzer also may have been a factor.

2016 enrollment dates

  • Nov. 1: Open Enrollment started — first day to enroll in a 2016 insurance plan through the health insurance marketplace. Coverage can start as soon as Jan. 1, 2016.
  • Dec. 15: Last day to enroll in or change plans for coverage to start Jan. 1, 2016.
  • Jan. 15, 2016: Last day to enroll in or change plans for coverage to start Feb. 1, 2016.
  • Jan. 31, 2016: Open enrollment for 2016 ends. Enrollments or changes between Jan. 16 and Jan. 31 take effect March 1, 2016.

 

Editor’s note: The Kansas Health Institute is the parent organization of the editorially independent KHI News Service.

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

Kansas man, 44, gets prison, had sex with girl on cruise

jail prisonHOUSTON (AP) — A Kansas man must serve 15 years in federal prison for flying an Ohio girl to Texas, taking her on a spring break cruise and having sex with her.

Paul Francis Grimm of Goddard, Kansas, was sentenced Tuesday in Houston.

The 44-year-old Grimm pleaded guilty to transporting a minor across state lines for criminal sexual activity. Grimm knew the 15-year-old girl when he lived in Ohio.

Prosecutors say Grimm had an online relationship with the teen, paid for her March 2014 flight from Cleveland to Houston, drove her to Galveston and they took a Caribbean cruise.

Grimm was arrested when the ship returned and an officer checking disembarking passengers noticed the man and girl had different last names and weren’t related.

Grimm still faces child pornography production counts in Kansas.

KU Endowment gives university record amount in FY2015

Google image
Google image

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Officials at the Kansas University Endowment say the endowment gave the university $184 million during the last fiscal year.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the endowment gave the university $184.6 million in fiscal year 2015, which is a record amount for the endowment.

Endowment President Dale Seuferling says the current fundraising campaign and major construction projects contributed to this year’s increase. But he also says the endowment’s annual support to the university will continue to increase.

The endowment supplied the university with $124.1 million in 2014, and $119.4 million in 2013.

University spokeswoman Erinn Barcomb-Peterson says the money has a big effect. She says for fiscal year 2015, more than 6,500 students and 190 endowed professors and faculty received support from endowment money.

Gov’t to fine Takata $70M in air bag recall case

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

TOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writer

DETROIT (AP) — A person briefed on the matter says the U.S. government will fine Takata Corp. $70 million for lapses in the way it handled air bag recalls.

The person also says the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will be able to add up to $130 million to the penalty if Takata doesn’t obey terms of a five-year agreement reached over the issue.

Takata’s air bag inflators can explode with too much force, spewing shrapnel into drivers and passengers. So far, about 23.4 million driver and passenger inflators have been recalled on 19.2 million U.S. vehicles sold by 12 automakers.

The person didn’t want to be identified because the agency hasn’t released details. It has scheduled a news conference for 2 p.m. to unveil the fines and agreement.

KBI: Most wanted suspect in custody UPDATE

Screen Shot 2015-11-03 at 7.02.26 AM

SHAWNEE COUNTY-  Law enforcement authorities reported that suspect Stephen Drake was arrested late Tuesday morning near the Shawnee -Douglas County line. His 12-year-old son was with him. Few additional details on the arrest were released by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation.

—————

 

TOPEKA- Law enforcement authorities continue to search for a wanted suspect, Stephen Drake and his 12-year-old son.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation reported at 5 a.m. on Tuesday officers located and confronted Stephen Drake, who was still in custody of his son, Andrew Drake.

The confrontation occurred in the 600 block of SE 34th Street in Topeka.

During the attempt to arrest Stephen, he and Andrew escaped the scene in a two-tone, charcoal over gray, Chevrolet Z-71 4×4 truck, according to a KBI media release.

The KBI considers Stephen armed and dangerous, and considers Andrew in imminent danger.

Please call 911 if either Drake is seen. Please call 1-800-KS-CRIME or 785-331-9870 with any information.

On Friday, The KBI asked the public for assistance in locating Drake and his son.
Stephen is wanted for Aggravated Assault, Aggravated Interference with Parental Custody, and Child Endangerment. Stephen is fleeing from apprehension, has made threatening statements, and is believed to be armed.

The Latest: Royals fans gather for Kansas City celebration

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The latest on celebrations in Kansas City to mark the Kansas City Royals’ World Series victory (all times local):

10:40 a.m.

Kansas City Royals fans are streaming into the city in preparation for a celebration of the team’s World Series championship.

 

 

        Fans took up spots along the 2.3-mile parade route Tuesday morning, hours before the start of the parade, with many playing games and cheering, while some slept. Organizers set up food trucks and provided music to entertain the fans as they waited for the parade to start. The Royals won the World Series Sunday with a 7-2 win over the New York Mets, the team’s first championship since 1985. Steve Templeton, of Lee’s Summit, Missouri, says he’s supported the Royals since 1965. He says he couldn’t attend the 1985 parade and was determined not to miss this one, and he wanted to be sure his 8-year-old son had the experience. ___

12:10a.m. The Kansas City Royals and their fans will throw one of the biggest parties in the city’s history to celebrate the team’s first World Series championship in 30 years. The Royals became World Series champions Sunday with a 7-2 victory in 12 innings over the New York Mets. It was the first championship for the Royals since 1985, which was followed by decades of losing baseball that caused many in the city to abandon the team. City officials said they expect at least 200,000 people to pack into the 2.3-mile parade route Tuesday through downtown Kansas City to cheer as the players, coaches and team officials drive by in a motorcade before a rally at Union Station.    

 

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City officials have announced plans for the 2015 World Series parade and celebration for the champion Kansas City Royals. The city says in a release that the 2.3 mile-long parade starts at noon Tuesday in the Power & Light District in downtown and heads north before ending at Union Station, where the victory rally is planned.


The Royals on Sunday won their first World Series crown since 1985 with a 7-2 win in 12 innings in Game 5 against the New York Mets in New York.

Royals starter Edinson Volquez threw two-hit ball for six innings. He pitched a day after returning from his father’s funeral in the Dominican Republic.

The city says free transportation to the celebration area will be provided from various locations around the city.
City officials said they expect at least 200,000 people to pack into the 2.3-mile parade route Tuesday through downtown Kansas City to cheer as the players, coaches and team officials drive by in a motorcade before a rally at Union Station.

Kansas teen hospitalized after ejected in rollover accident

police accident emergency crashGEARY COUNTY- A Kansas teen was injured in an accident on Monday in Geary County.

The Geary County Sheriff’s Department reported a Chevy Impala driven by Jimmy Burch, Junction City, was westbound on Old Highway 40.

The vehicle made a left turn on Britt Road and struck an eastbound Ford Bronco driven by Jonah Farley, Chapman.

The Ford rolled into the south ditch.

A 16-year-old a passenger in the Ford was ejected from the vehicle.

She was airlifted to the hospital in Salina for treatment, according to the sheriff’s department.

The accident remains under investigation.

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