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1 hospitalized, family pet dies in Kansas house fire

HUTCHINSON – A house fire Friday sent one person from that residence to the hospital for treatment.

Hutchinson Fire Department reported they responded to the 1900 block of North Jackson just before 7p.m. and found heavy fire and smoke coming from the southwest corner of the residence.

The fire was controlled in approximately 20 minutes with units on scene for two hours.

Preliminary damage is estimated at $55,000 with damage contained to one bedroom but high heat and smoke damage was sustained throughout the rest of the residence.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation.

The one occupant of the home was transported to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center for treatment. A family pet was lost in the fire.

Name of the injured was not released.

Police arrest another linked to KSU lockdown, search for 2 more suspects

Carson Buckley
Carson Buckley

MANHATTAN – An additional arrest has been made in connection with a series of robberies and a theft that were reported in the central portion of Manhattan on September 4, that prompted the campus lockdown at Kansas State University.

Detectives with the Riley County Police Department on Friday at approximately 10:30 AM arrested Johnathon Elliott, 20, of Manhattan, for two counts of Aggravated Robbery, Contributing to a Childs Misconduct and Theft. Bond was listed as $130,000.00

Detectives have also identified two additional suspects in this investigation. Both suspects should be considered armed and potentially dangerous.

Janir Vega
Janir Vega

The Riley County Police Department is looking for information on the whereabouts of Carson Buckley, 16, Manhattan, and Janir Vega, 17, Manhattan. Both subjects have also been reported as runaway juveniles.

Buckley stands approximately 6 feet 1 inches and weighs approximately 240 pounds. He has brown hair and hazel eyes.
Vega stands approximately 6 feet 2 inches and weighs approximately 160 pounds. He has black hair and brown eyes.
Police are advising the public to not approach or attempt to apprehend these subjects.

Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Carson Buckley or Janir Vega are encouraged to contact RCPD at 785-537-2112 (call 911 if it is an emergency) or the Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers785-539-7777 or online atwww.ManhattanRileyCountyCrimeStoppers.com. Crime Stoppers is an anonymous service and could qualify you for a cash reward.
Earlier this week police reported that Sean Johnson, 20, of Manhattan was arrested on September 9, 2015 on two counts of Aggravated Robbery, Robbery, Contributing to a Child’s Misconduct and for Theft. Bond for Johnson was listed at $150,000.

Lt. Gov.’s calendar reveals behind-the-scenes role on Kan. Medicaid expansion

By ANDY MARSO

Photo by KHI News Service Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer is Gov. Sam Brownback’s point man on health policy issues, including the switch to managed care Medicaid under KanCare. his appointment calendar during the session, obtained through an open records request, shows he was involved in discussion of Medicaid expansion. -
Photo by KHI News Service Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer is Gov. Sam Brownback’s point man on health policy issues, including the switch to managed care Medicaid under KanCare. his appointment calendar during the session, obtained through an open records request, shows he was involved in discussion of Medicaid expansion. –

Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer met with freshman legislators, hospital officials and even Kansas bishops to discuss Medicaid expansion last session. Colyer, a plastic surgeon and former legislator, is Gov. Sam Brownback’s point man on health policy issues, including the switch to Medicaid managed care under KanCare.

Tom Bell, president and CEO of the Kansas Hospital Association, said convincing Brownback to expand Medicaid eligibility in Kansas will be difficult without Colyer’s support. “My sense is that the lieutenant governor is a big part of the health policy development process in this administration,” Bell said.

Colyer did not testify last session when the Legislature held its first-ever public hearing on expanding Medicaid under the federal Affordable Care Act. But his appointment calendar during the session, obtained through an open records request, shows he was involved in the discussion.

Medicaid discussions

Colyer had a meeting about Medicaid with first-year legislators over the lunch hour on March 9. That was two weeks after Republican House leaders reluctantly agreed to schedule the expansion hearing and a few days after Brownback revealed that he was open to signing on to Medicaid expansion if it was budget neutral.

The hearing on expansion took place nine days after Colyer’s meeting with legislators. Susan Mosier, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, testified that the expansion plan not only had to be budget neutral, the state also had to eliminate Medicaid waiting lists for support services for people with disabilities before expanding Medicaid medical coverage to low-income Kansans.

In an Aug. 20 interview, Colyer said the meeting with the first-year lawmakers was part of a series of educational sessions arranged by House Speaker Pro Tem Peggy Mast, an Emporia Republican.

He said he mainly went over the basics of Medicaid. “A lot of people didn’t understand that Medicaid is not just the medical side, it’s dealing with disabilities, long-term care and getting a lot of those basics there,” Colyer said.

“The feedback we got from people is they want stability in the program, and that means financial stability in the long run. And they want us to continue to work on outcomes within the program.” Colyer said he did not recall talking with the legislators about eliminating the waiting lists for home and community-based support services as a condition of considering Medicaid expansion.

But he said the idea was not new. “That had been a comment for a long time from the administration,” he said. Colyer’s calendar shows that he had a conference call about Medicaid expansion with the four bishops who lead the Roman Catholic Church in Kansas on the morning of April 10. The religious leaders previously declined to weigh in on the matter. Three weeks after the conference call they released a statement offering support for Medicaid expansion, despite reservations about cost and contraception coverage.

Colyer said the bishops did not tell him they were going to come out in favor of expansion during the call, but it was clear they were considering the issue and wanted more information.

“We told them what was going on and what we saw and shared with them some of that information about financial implications … and I think they learned some things from us too,” Colyer said.

The same day the bishops released their statement — April 30 — Colyer met for 45 minutes in the governor’s office with officials from the Kansas Hospital Association to discuss expansion.

The hospital association is a leading proponent of expansion, saying it would bring its members a much-needed infusion of federal cash, while providing medical coverage to an estimated 150,000 Kansans. Bell said the association’s leaders have had a number of conversations with Colyer, including some involving Brownback.

Bell said Colyer was always cordial and willing to talk, but when the issue of Medicaid expansion came up “there was never an overwhelming amount of interest in having that discussion.” Overcoming Colyer’s opposition is almost a prerequisite for moving forward, Bell said.

“I think the short answer is it would be very difficult to do something in the area of Medicaid expansion without the lieutenant governor buying into it,” he said. “We think there’s a lot of things that have been put on the table that he and the governor ought to buy into.”

King v. Burwell prep

Besides Medicaid expansion, the biggest ACA issue for states this year was a U.S. Supreme Court case, King v. Burwell, that threatened to pull federal health insurance subsidies from residents of states like Kansas that had not established their own marketplace to sell plans. Colyer was busy with that last session too.

He was in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 16 to speak at a U.S. Senate health policy “boot camp” titled “Making the States Partners in Health Care Reform.” After the formal presentation, Colyer had a meeting with Brian Blase, a health policy analyst for the U.S. Senate Republican Policy Committee.

The calendar says Colyer and Blase discussed a possible Republican response to the King v. Burwell ruling. If the plaintiffs were successful in the case, the loss of subsidies may have forced millions of Americans to drop their coverage. Nationally, Republicans were in a tricky spot politically.

Most did not like the federal health reform law, but if they didn’t have an alternative ready they risked angering suddenly uninsured voters. The court ruled for the defendants in June, leaving the subsidies in place. But in the run-up to the decision, speculation was rampant as to what political leaders would do for those whose insurance costs would suddenly spike if the subsidies were taken away.

In Kansas, about 77,000 people relied on those subsidies. The Legislature made no move to protect them during the session, but Eileen Hawley, the governor’s director of communications, said Colyer and Brownback stood ready with a “market-based solution” should the subsidies disappear. Colyer said if the King v. Burwell decision had gone the other way, most of the decisions about how to proceed would have to be made at the federal level.

“In many ways we were captive to them, so we just had to be ready for a lot of contingencies,” Colyer said. “There were all sort of discussions in D.C. about what they would do. … We were certainly ready to deal with whatever contingency we would face, but we didn’t know it what it was and there wasn’t one, so it’s all hypothetical.”

Meetings with donors 

In addition to his key role on health policy, Colyer had several meetings with people who donated to the 2014 Brownback-Colyer re-election campaign. His calendar shows he also met with Art Pope, a Republican mega donor, during an April 13 trip to North Carolina.

Colyer was in Raleigh that day to speak about KanCare at a panel discussion about Medicaid reforms hosted by the John Locke Foundation, a conservative think tank. Colyer made three personal loans of $500,000 to the 2014 campaign. The campaign repaid Colyer for two of those loans. But he said late last month he was still owed about $100,000 from the last of the three loans. “Yeah, we’re still working,” he said.

The loans were part of a federal investigation, according the Associated Press. But prosecutors announced in June that they didn’t intend to file any charges.

 

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

New federal food safety rules issued after deadly outbreaks

MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — New food safety rules mean companies must be more vigilant about keeping their manufacturing facilities clean.

The long-overdue rules come in the wake of deadly foodborne illness outbreaks linked to ice cream, caramel apples, cantaloupes and peanuts.

In all those outbreaks, investigators from the Food and Drug Administration investigators found dirty equipment in processing facilities.

The rules announced Thursday will require food manufacturers to submit food safety plans to the government to show that the companies are keeping their operations clean.

The rules were once promoted as an Obama administration priority, but that was before long delays and much uncertainty.

Advocacy groups sued over delays in issuing the rules — which were released under a court-ordered deadline.

From the Land of Kansas showcases Kansas products at state fair

from the land of kansas logoKansas Department of Agriculture

MANHATTAN–Kansas State Fair visitors can expect to try new recipes, discover From the Land of Kansas members goods and learn more about local, Kansas products at the From the Land of Kansas booth at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson Sept. 11-20. The Kansas Department of Agriculture’s trademark program will feature numerous Kansas products and ingredients for fair goers to sample and shop from at the booth.

Kansans visiting the From the Land of Kansas booth will be able to learn how to cook using From the Land of Kansas member ingredients from Chef Alli’s cooking demonstrations on both weekends of the fair. Visitors can also take home a collection of Savor the Season recipe cards. The Savor the Season cards feature fruits and vegetables that can be found at local farmers’ markets and grocery stores and offer nutrition tips and techniques on how to select, store and prepare.

“We are excited to be sharing more of Chef Alli’s recipes featuring more of our member’s Kansas-made products to Kansas State Fair visitors,” said Julie Roller, From the Land of Kansas specialist. “Fair visitors will enjoy sampling Chef Alli’s creations and learning how to incorporate Kansas ingredients into easy-to-make recipes.”

Located in the Pride of Kansas building, the From the Land of Kansas booth will also feature products from:

· Cashmere Popcorn, Topeka
· Fine Vines Artisanal Ketchup, Leawood
· Grandma Hoerner’s, Alma
· Hildebrand Farms Dairy, Junction City
· Jose Pepper’s, Overland Park
· Prairie Harvest Market, Newton
· Thrill’s Kettle Corn, Burlingame
· Tonja’s Toffee, Modoc

From the Land of Kansas team members will be available to answer questions about the program and help in purchasing products.

Providing an environment that enhances and encourages economic growth of the agriculture industry and the Kansas economy, KDA’s From the Land of Kansas program seeks to grow and support Kansas businesses that grow, produce, process or manufacture products in Kansas.

For those who do not make it to the state fair, all products available for sale at the From the Land of Kansas booth can be found at www.ShopFromtheLandofKansas.com. Savor the Season recipe cards are available at your local farmers’ market or from specialty crop growers in your area. Recipes featuring From the Land of Kansas members’ products, along with those created by Chef Alli for the fair, are also available at www.FromtheLandofKansas.com/recipes.

Forecast for Kansas corn crop down from a year ago

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A government forecast on the size of this year’s Kansas corn crop is estimating that growers will bring in 555 million bushels.

The National Agricultural Statistics Service reported Friday that the anticipated 2015 crop in the state will be 2 percent below last year’s production.

That is due partly to fewer harvested acres and smaller average yields per acre.

Kansas is harvesting 3.75 million acres of corn this season, down 1 percent from a year ago. The average yield forecast of 148 bushels per acre is down one bushel from a year ago.

The agency is also forecasting the state will bring in 238 million bushels of sorghum, up 19 percent from last year.

Kansas soybean production is anticipated to be 133 million bushels, down 7 percent from last year.

AG Schmidt: Avoid scams during storm damage cleanup

TOPEKA – Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt is urging Kansans to use caution to avoid scams by transient contractors following Thursday night’s storms that resulted in damage across many parts of Kansas.

“After storm damage, our main priority is to clean up and make repairs as quickly as possible,” Schmidt said. “When considering roofing work on a home or business, it is important that consumers make sure their roofing contractor is properly registered before signing any contract or having any work done. Consumers should request a copy of their roofer’s registration certificate and then should check our consumer protection website to confirm that the registration remains active.”

Staff from the attorney general’s Roofing Registration Unit are working to assist local officials in responding to contractors and consumers.

The requirement to register with the attorney general’s office is in addition to any other local requirements that may be imposed by cities or counties. The online directory of registrations is available at www.InYourCornerKansas.org.

The Kansas Roofing Contractor Registration Act was passed during the 2013 legislative session and took effect July 1, 2013. With few exceptions, the law requires roofing contractors to obtain a registration certificate from the Kansas Attorney General in order to legally provide commercial or residential roofing services for a fee in Kansas. It is designed to ensure that legitimate roofing contractors are complying with state requirements, such as carrying appropriate insurance, and to help prevent fly-by-night operators from taking advantage of Kansas consumers.

Any Kansans who have problems with roofing contractors or other companies that follow storms may file a request for the attorney general’s Consumer Protection Division to investigate at (800) 432-2310 or www.InYourCornerKansas.org. The attorney general requests that Kansans promptly report any unregistered person or company attempting to sell roofing services.

Kansas high school football game cancelled after online threat

police emergencyEL DORADO – Law enforcement authorities in Butler County are investigating a social media threat that forced the cancellation of Friday’s high school game.

According to a media release from El Dorado High School, a threat reported by a student and an inability to confirm or deny its validity prior to kickoff, tonight’s (Friday, September 11, 2015) home football game against Augusta has been cancelled.

The twitter account was suspended just before 7 p.m.  Here is what was said.

We will strike our first target tonight at the football game #eldorado #partofthepride

— Foxhound El Dorado (@foxhoundeldo) September 11, 2015

 

Because of the ongoing police investigation, the district is making no further comment.

Kansas State Fair offers hairy competition

Screen Shot 2015-09-11 at 2.24.21 PMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Mustaches and beards will be judged along with livestock for the first time this year at the Kansas State Fair.

The Wichita Eagle reports that the hairy competition is scheduled for Saturday afternoon at the Nex-Tech Wireless Stage at Lake Talbott on the fairgrounds.

Among the categories in the competition are best in show, natural mustache with no styling, freestyle mustache, and female’s fake facial hair, in which contestants will be allowed to use whatever materials they want.

The competition has room for 10 contestants in each category.

The Wichita Beard and Mustache Club says it has sought for more participants in facial-hair contests in the area and says that the fair is making that happen.

Police identify 2 teens, baby fatally shot in KC home

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Police have identified two teenagers and a baby who were shot to death earlier this week in a Kansas City home.

Police on Friday said the victims have been identified as and 18-year-old Shannon Rollins, 17-year-old Bianca R. Fletcher and her young son, whom police identified as “Baby Boy” Fletcher. Police did not disclose the baby’s age.

Capt. Tye Grant said earlier that a family member returned home late Tuesday and discovered the bodies in the home.

Kansas City has had 65 homicides so far this year. That’s 12 more than the city had at this time last year. Police statistics also show that so far, seven of the 2015 homicide victims have been under the age of 16.

Fans stand by KSU marching band after controversial halftime show

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Fans have started an online fundraising campaign to support the Kansas State University marching band, which drew criticism over its halftime show at a football game.

The school said the band director will miss a Nov. 28 game and that university officials also must approve future halftime shows.

The college added that it will pay a self-imposed $5,000 fine after the Big 12 Conference warned of potential sportsmanship and ethical conduct violations.

The marching band had shaped itself into a rival mascot and what appeared to be a phallus during its Saturday show.

Supporter Sarah Brinkley has started a crowd funding account (see the page here) seeking donations with for the band. The Manhattan Mercury  reports that as of noon Thursday, the account had raised nearly $13,000.

Man pleads guilty to 1997 Kansas homicide

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Wyandotte County authorities say a man already serving a life sentence for murder has pleaded guilty to killing a woman in Kansas City, Kansas, in 1997.

Deputy District Attorney Sheryl Lidtke said in a news release 34-year-old Torry Johnson pleaded guilty Friday to first-degree murder in the October 1997 death of 33-year-old Vicky Ernst inside her Wyandotte County home.

The crime went unsolved until prosecutors and detectives turned up new evidence during a case review. Johnson and Jason L. Rucker were charged in April.

Johnson, who will be sentenced Oct. 16, is serving a life sentence in Missouri for the 2005 killing of a man in Kansas City.

Rucker is being held on $1 million bond in Wyandotte County while his case is pending.

Kan. Advocates Of Mid-Level Dental Providers Cheer Accreditation Decision

dental workBy BRYAN THOMPSON

A decision to accredit so-called mid-level dental providers by a national agency that oversees dental education programs may boost efforts to license them in Kansas.

The Commission on Dental Accreditation says that without national accreditation standards for mid-level dental providers — also known as dental therapists — the requirements would vary from state to state.

The commission assigned a committee to develop the standards that programs training dental therapists would have to meet. A progress report is expected this winter, and an accreditation program for dental therapists could be in place as early as January 2017.

Dental therapists would be trained to a level below that of a dentist but beyond the training a dental hygienist receives. They would be allowed to do some procedures, like filling cavities, that currently can only be done by a dentist.

In Kansas, advocates for allowing dental hygienists with advanced training to perform a broader range of procedures have tried for five years to convince legislators to approve changes in state law. They say the change would expand access to dental services in a state where 95 of 105 counties have a shortage of dental providers.

The United Methodist Health Ministry Fund is among the groups that support licensing mid-level dental providers in Kansas.

“We need to improve access to dental services by having a mid-level, and this decision goes a long way to saying that a branch of dentistry recognizes that can happen — that people can be trained at less than a dentist to do some procedures in the mouth that dentists now do,” says Kim Moore, president of the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund.

Moore says the commission’s decision undercuts the Kansas Dental Association’s argument that dental therapists would provide substandard care.

“What it really means to legislators is that an important organization recognized by the Department of Education to set standards for dental programs has determined that this is a legitimate profession,” Moore says. “They can operate safely when properly educated, and there are going to be national standards that can be used by Kansas to assure itself that we do the proper education.”

Kevin Robertson, executive director of the Kansas Dental Association, says the commission’s decision doesn’t mean Kansas should license non-dentists to do procedures that are now legal for dentists only.

“The policy decisions of the ADA, and certainly the KDA, are not at all influenced by what the commission does,” Robertson says.

The commission can establish training requirements for dental therapists, he says, but that doesn’t mean Kansas lawmakers need to establish a new category of license for them.

“Every state makes their own decision with regard to what dentists and allied dental professionals can do within their state,” Robertson says. “So, it really doesn’t have any validity with regard to suddenly Kansas should accept this position.”

Robertson says the new category of mid-level providers, if created, should be limited in what they could do.

“Their accreditation process does not recognize the ability of this dental therapist to do diagnosis or treatment planning, which are something that the Kansas Dental Association has been opposed to. Nor it does recognize some restorative procedures. We’re also opposed to those, as we believe those are best done by a dentist,” Robertson says.

And Robertson says the American Dental Association has taken much the same position in a statement after the commission’s decision.

Legislation to license registered dental practitioners in Kansas has been introduced every year since 2011 to a relatively cool reception from lawmakers. And while advocates were disappointed the bill never came to a vote in the 2015 session, they were pleased that it at least got a hearing.

Bryan Thompson is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

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