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Brig. Gen. named Sedgwick County manager

Brig. Gen. Michael Scholes -courtesy photo
Brig. Gen. Michael Scholes -courtesy photo

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 49-year-old brigadier general with extensive military experience has been named Sedgwick County manager.

The Wichita Eagle reports  that Sedgwick County commissioners voted unanimously Wednesday to approve Brig. Gen. Michael Scholes as the next county manager. The job is the highest non-elected position in county government, which includes 2,663 active full- and part-time employees.

Scholes replaces William Buchanan, who retired in June after 24 years.

Scholes, a Gulf War veteran and one-star Army general who has served in leadership positions in the southern United States, led combat missions in Iraq and managed peacekeeping forces in the Balkan republic of Kosovo.

He’s expected to start work by November 15, and will have an annual salary of $165,000 in 2016. That will rise to $185,000 in 2017 depending on performance.

Kansas State Fair searches for new general manager

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas State Fair has announced plans to begin reviewing applications for the fair’s general manager position.

The fair said in a release Wednesday that its five-person subcommittee will start reviewing resumes and submissions for general manager on October 1.

The fair’s former general manager, Denny Stoecklein, announced his resignation in June. He had led the fair since 2003.

The Kansas State Fair starts the Friday after Labor Day in September and lasts for 10 days.

Kan. man charged in car explosion that injured son

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man has been charged in a car explosion that injured his 4-year-old son.

Authorities say Jacob Schell and his 4-year-old son, Roman, were injured in the July 5 explosion near Topeka.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Jacob Daniel Schell was booked into the Shawnee County Jail on Wednesday on charges including aggravated battery, aggravated endangering of a child and criminal use of explosives.

He was released on bond.

The fire marshal’s office investigated the incident.

Kansas judge rejects policy imposed on courts by lawmakers

Chief Judge Larry T. Solomon- Kansas Judicial Branch
Chief Judge Larry T. Solomon- Kansas Judicial Branch

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas judge has struck down an administrative policy change imposed on the state’s courts by the Legislature in a legal dispute that became tied to the judicial branch’s budget.

Shawnee County District Judge Larry Hendricks on Wednesday ruled unconstitutional a law changing how chief judges for the trial courts in the state’s 31 judicial districts. Hendricks concluded that the law interferes with the Kansas Supreme Court’s power to oversee the judiciary.

Lawmakers earlier this year tied the judiciary’s entire budget to preserving the policy. It wasn’t immediately clear what happens next.

The law says judges in each judicial district pick their chief judges, taking that power from the Supreme Court.

District Judge Larry Solomon of Kingman County challenged the statute. He is chief judge in the 31st District.

Woman sentenced for conspiracy, kickbacks on firearms from Kan. firm

TOPEKA – A Georgia woman was sentenced to 12 months and a day in federal prison for helping conceal bribes an executive of the company that makes Glock firearms received from a Kansas firearms distributor for preferential treatment, according to U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom.

Lisa Delaine Dutton, 43, Acworth, Ga., pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy.

In her plea, she admitted she assisted her husband, co-defendant James “Craig” Dutton, 43, Acworth, Ga., who was the Assistant National Sales Manager for Glock, to receive bribes from co-defendant John Sullivan Ralph, III, 41, Olathe, Kan. Ralph was owner of Global Guns & Hunting Inc. of Olathe, Kan., doing business as OMB Guns.

Lisa Dutton created a company called Supreme Solutions LLC and used it to receive payments from Ralph to James Dutton. The bribes were to pay James Dutton for helping Ralph to receive preferential treatment over other distributors of firearms, including directing customers to OMB Guns, giving it priority relative to the allocation of limited products, steering government contracts and sales to government agencies of firearms and accessories to OMB , as well as providing confidential Glock information to Ralph and OMB Guns.

Kan. advisory committee begins review of Medicaid mental health drugs

By DAVE RANNEY

An advisory committee charged with helping state officials design a system for regulating the use of prescription mental health drugs for Medicaid patients met for the first time Tuesday.

“This is going to be an evolving process,” said Dr. Vishal Adma, a committee member and president of the Kansas Psychiatric Society.

The nine-member committee spent nearly two hours discussing the pros and cons of “prior authorization” policies that would allow the three private insurance companies that manage KanCare, the state’s Medicaid program, to approve or disapprove mental health drug prescriptions.

Until this year, Kansas law specifically prohibited policies and regulations — such as preferred drug lists or prior authorization requirements — that would have restricted or impeded a physician’s ability to prescribe mental health drugs for Medicaid patients.

Legislators changed the law after Susan Mosier, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, testified that prior authorization would address long-standing safety concerns and likely save $8 million in the fiscal year that began July 1.

Mental health advocates opposed the change, arguing it would add to the system’s administrative costs and delay medications for patients with severe and persistent mental illnesses.

At Tuesday’s meeting, KDHE officials said:

500 of the state’s 260,000 Medicaid patients under age 18 are taking two or more mental health drugs.
450 children age 4 to 6 are taking at least one antipsychotic drug.
3,400 children age 7 to 13 are taking at least one antipsychotic.
Much of the meeting was spent discussing KDHE-proposed criteria for imposing dosing limits and for allowing the KanCare insurance companies to review prescriptions for adults and children.

Three of the four psychiatrists on the committee assured the group that almost all of the children who’ve been prescribed antipsychotics are in the state’s foster care system, have a severe mental illness or both.

Many of these children, they said, have been prescribed one or more psychotropic drugs because all other treatment options have been exhausted and the drugs have proven to be beneficial.

“If a medication reduces a symptom by 20 percent, it’s considered successful,” said Dr. Taylor Porter, a psychiatrist and medical director at Valeo Behavioral Health Care in Topeka.

Porter said he resists prescribing multiple medications but when he does it’s because “not doing it would be worse.”

Porter, Adma and Dr. Charles “Chip” Millhuff, staff psychiatrist at Family Service and Guidance Center in Topeka, each said they would support reviews of cases involving patients taking three or more antipsychotics but asked that the review process not be overly time-consuming.

Millhuff said a KDHE proposal that would require psychiatrists to fill out multi-page forms or to personally explain their decisions to a managed care company’s physician would “add a tremendous amount of administrative work onto us.”

Each of the psychiatrists said having to spend more time on administrative tasks would result in less time with patients.

Dr. Bradley Grimage, a psychiatrist with the VA hospital in Topeka, was unable to attend the meeting.

Much of the discussion was hampered by a lack of data from KDHE about how patients have been affected by taking more than one psychotropic, which medications appear to be most overprescribed and which types of practices — public or private, rural or urban — appear to be doing the most overprescribing.

“It would be helpful to understand the depth of the problems we are talking about,” Adma said.

During the meeting, the 25 people in the audience were not provided copies of the KDHE proposals. Sara Belfry, a KDHE spokesperson, said the policies were in draft form and would be provided later when updated copies are available.

The committee’s next meeting is tentatively scheduled for Oct. 24.

In keeping with the new law, the advisory committee’s recommendations will be forwarded to the state-administered Drug Utilization Review Committee, which will vote to enact or reject the recommendations.

The advisory committee will have the option of amending and re-submitting any recommendations that the Drug Utilization Review Committee rejects.

 

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

 

KSU breaks ground on $25 million student union renovation

MANHATTAN -In April of 2013 over 75 percent of the Student Body at K-State voted to increase the student privilege fee for students taking classes on the Manhattan campus effective fall 2014, in order to fund a renovation of the Student Union.UNION GB FOUR

Over two years later the University has broken ground on that project.

“This is just really another project towards us making sure that our campus, and our facilities are reminiscent of a top 50 public research University,” said Kirk Schulz, KSU President.

The renovation will include a new south facade, updated retail spaces, enhanced dining facilities and even a sports bar, which is something that is starting to become popular at other Universities across the nation according to Andy Hurtig, Kansas State Student Body President.

“I think maybe in the past years it was more of just a sensitivity issue, putting a sports bar in a Union,” said Hurtig. “But we see it as a great draw for students. It will be something that students can get excited about, something that prospective students and their parents can try out when they come to campus and alumni when they come back for game days. It will just be a really cool place that people identify that’s on campus instead of going someplace that is off of campus.”

The renovation is expected to begin on September 8th. The Union will remain open, with certain sections blocked off at certain times due to the renovation.

 

Watchdog: 900,000 vets have pending health care applications

MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — An internal watchdog says nearly 900,000 veterans have pending applications for health care from the Department of Veterans Affairs.

But a report by the VA’s inspector general says “serious” problems with enrollment data make it impossible to determine how many of the 867,000 veterans with pending applications were actively seeking VA health care.

About one-third of those with pending applications are likely deceased, but the report says “data limitations” prevent investigators from determining how many now-deceased veterans applied for health care benefits or when. The applications go back nearly two decades and officials said some applicants may have died years ago.

The report also says VA workers incorrectly marked thousands of unprocessed health-care applications as completed and may have deleted 10,000 or more electronic “transactions” over the past five years.

KDHE testing Dodge City water sites for toxic contamination

DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP) — The state health department has been testing water wells in Dodge City after previous testing found a toxic contaminant.

The Dodge City Globe reports tests conducted last August found a contaminant called tetrachloroethylene or PCE, in a well.

PCE is a liquid commonly used in dry cleaners. The Environmental Protection Agency says drinking water containing excessive levels of PCE for many years could lead to an increased risk of cancer.

Corey Keller, public works superintendent, says the test showed the level was below the federal maximum contaminate level. Keller says the site was tested again, most recently in February when the contaminant was no longer detectable at that site.

Keller says more tests are being conducted to determine if the PCE is still there.

Kansas man dies in 3-vehicle accident UPDATE

Wednesday morning accident west of Hutchinson
Wednesday morning accident west of Hutchinson

RENO COUNTY – A Kansas man died in an accident just after 7 a.m. on Wednesday in Reno County.

The Kansas Highway patrol reported a 2000 Ford Taurus driven by Donald L. Potter, 40, Cunningham, was southbound on Kansas 14 two miles west of Hutchinson.

The vehicle struck the rear trailer of a 2009 Kenworth superload semi and then struck the semi’s escort vehicle, a northbound 2012 Ford F350 head-on.

Potter was pronounced dead at the scene and transported to the Sedgwick County Forensics center.

The driver of the Ford truck Rose M. Fausett, 63, Fort Duchesne, UT., was transported to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center.

The semi driver Jason L. Yowell, 33, Bowie, TX., was not injured.

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

—————

RENO COUNTY – Law enforcement officials in Reno County are investigating a 3-vehicle fatality accident on Kansas 96 west of Hutchinson.

The Kansas Department of Transportation temporarily closed the highway just after 8a.m. from 4th to Wilson Street while emergency crews cleared the scene.

Check Hays Post for additional details as they become available.

Senate approves 3 news members to Kansas Board of Regents

Topeka- Today the Senate Confirmation Oversight Committee approved DaveBoard-of-Regents.jpg Murfin of Wichita, Daniel J. Thomas of Mission Hills, and Dennis A. Mullin of Manhattan to the Kansas Board of Regents, according to a media release.

Each will serve a four year term. These individuals fill the positions vacated by Fred Logan of Leawood, Kenny Wilk of Basehor, and Robba Moran of Manhattan.

“The work of the Regents is important in ensuring our colleges and universities educate our students and prepare them to successfully enter the workforce,” said Governor Brownback at the June 16 announcement of their appointment. “I am grateful to Dave, Daniel and Dennis for their willingness to serve the people of Kansas.”

Dennis A. Mullin currently serves as Chairman and CEO of Steel and Pipe Supply, one of the largest steel service centers in the nation. He is a member of the Business Advisory Council for the College of Business Administration at Kansas State University, and remains active with the Manhattan Chamber of Commerce, Greater Manhattan Community Foundation, and Flint Hills Christian School, and is a board member of the Kansas State Bank of Manhattan.

From the testimony of Regent Mullin: “I am very honored to be asked to serve on the Kansas Board of Regents. As a graduate of Pittsburg State University and a resident of Manhattan, KS, I believe in higher education, and see it as an important economic driver for the state.”

Dave Murfin is the CEO of Murfin, Inc. whose interests include Murfin Drilling Company, Inc. and Murphy Tractor and Equipment Company, one of the largest John Deere construction dealerships in North America. He currently serves on several boards, including the Greater Wichita Economic Development Coalition, Wichita Chamber of Commerce, Kansas Oil & Gas Resources Fund, University of Kansas School of Business Board of Advisors and University of Kansas Endowment.

From the testimony of Regent Murfin: “As a product of Kansas higher education, I feel a great responsibility to uphold the integrity of this 150 year old system.”

Daniel J. Thomas, D.D.S. is a board-certified periodontist practicing in the wider Kansas City area. He is active in several professional associations and serves as the Director of the University of Kansas Hospital Authority Board and the Kansas Arts Foundation Board. Thomas also served as the Chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents Oral Health Task Force in 2011 and has won numerous awards including the 2011 Professional Leader of the Year from the Chamber of Commerce and the 2007 Ellis Island Medal of Honor from National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations.

From the testimony of Regent Thomas: “I am committed to the ongoing excellence of higher education in the state of Kansas, thereby improving the lives of Kansans.”

 

For more information, contact Breeze Richardson at (785) 291-3969 or[email protected].

Kansas Supreme Court won’t take up abortion lawsuit for now

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is refusing for now to review a district court judge’s order blocking the nation’s first ban on a common second trimester procedure.

The high court’s 4-3 decision this week means that the state Court of Appeals first will handle a lawsuit filed by two abortion providers against a law that was supposed to take effect in July.

The law embodies model legislation from the National Right to Life Committee and bans what abortion opponents call “dismemberment abortion.”

Shawnee County District Judge Larry Hendricks in June temporarily blocked the law, and the state appealed.

Both sides wanted the Supreme Court to take the case immediately, but the court declined Monday without explanation. The Court of Appeals on Wednesday set an expedited schedule for its review.

2 Kansas teens hospitalized after vans collide

BONNER SPRINGS – Two Kansas teen were injured in an accident just after 7a.m. on Wednesday in Leavenworth County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Dodge Caravan driven by Elizabeth Ruth Stallbaumer, 15, Linwood, was eastbound on Kansas 32 two miles west of Bonner Springs.

The vehicle attempted to make a left turn onto 158th Street and turned in front of a westbound 2013 Dodge Grand Caravan. The two vehicles collided.

Stallbaumer and a passenger Graham K Stallbaumer, 13, Linwood, were transported to Overland Park Regional Medical Center.

The other driver Mark A. Kreis, 46, Shawnee was not transported to treatment.

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

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