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Police search continues for alleged Kansas church van thief

SEDGWICK COUNTY—Law enforcement authorities are investigating a case of vandalism, vehicle theft and asking the public for help to identify and locate the suspects. Just after 8 a..m. April 4, security cameras observed a man walking onto the property of Bethel Baptist Church, 3600 West 2nd Street North in Wichita, according to a media release.

The suspect described as a white male, 5-foot-10, 170 pounds was wearing a gray overcoat, blue jeans with a hole in the right knee, black shoes and a gray hat.  He began tampering with doors and windows of the church building and church busses and vans.  The suspect threw an object that broke out windows on both vans in the church parking lot, according to the release.

The suspect entered one van and damaged the ignition. He was able to start the ignition on the second van and drove west on 2nd Street.

Anyone with information on the crime is asked to contact Wichita Police or CrimeStoppes.

KSU football player arrested for alleged domestic battery

MANHATTAN —A member of the Kansas State University football team 20-year-old Hunter Andre Rison was arrested just after 2p.m. Friday, according to the Riley County Police Department booking report. He was jailed on requested charges that include Domestic battery; Knowing or reckless bodily harm to family/person in dating relationship on a bond of $1,000, according to the report.

Rison photo KSU athletics

Rison has been suspended indefinitely for a violation of team and departmental policy, according to a statement from KSU Athletics.

“Our program will be one that is built on hard work and integrity and doing things the right way,” said head coach Chris Klieman in the statement. “We have extremely high expectations for our players on and off the field.”

Rison is a red shirt sophomore who transferred from Michigan State and sat out the 2018 season per NCAA transfer rules, according to the online KSU football bio.

Kansas joins The Skillful State Network

KDC

TOPEKA – Kansas has joined The Skillful State Network, a Markle Foundation initiative.

Governor Laura Kelly, along with the governors of California, Connecticut, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, and Pennsylvania have joined the founding states in the Network’s efforts to create a labor market in which skills learned anywhere are valued and people can rapidly and affordably access the information and training needed for good jobs in the digital economy.

Entering its second year, the Skillful State Network fosters collaboration among innovative governors from states large and small, coast to coast and across the political spectrum. The governors in the Skillful State Network have made workforce development a state priority and are committed to acting on proven practices that enable their residents and employers to thrive.

“This is important moment of change for the Kansas economy,” Governor Kelly said. “We must work together to ensure workers have the skills they need to compete in a modern, digital economy. I look forward to collaborating with the Skillful State Network and partner states to transform our labor market and grow our economy.”

“The Skillful State Network acts on the urgent need for leadership to bring the talent of Americans into the rapidly changing digital economy. Governors are joining together to break down the barriers keeping too many people from finding good careers,” said Zoë Baird, CEO and President of the Markle Foundation. “With bipartisan gubernatorial leadership from 26 states across the country, we are giving people greater power in the labor market to pursue rewarding careers.”

The Skillful State Network launched in 2018 to drive transition to labor markets in which skills are valued as well as degrees, and people can access the tools and build the skills necessary to thrive in today’s digital economy. Members share innovative ideas and proven practices each can adopt to achieve workforce goals and growth, for example, effectively aligning education with industry; providing robust data on skills needed to jobseekers; and training employers on skills-based practices to find talent from other sectors or with informal training. The Network is enabling a systems-level change in the labor market.

 

Skillful State Network Members
Arkansas Gov. Hutchinson
California Gov. Newsom
Colorado Gov. Polis
Connecticut Gov. Lamont
Delaware Gov. Carney
Illinois Gov. Pritzker
Indiana Gov. Holcomb
Kansas Gov. Kelly
Kentucky Gov. Bevins
Massachusetts Gov. Baker
Michigan Gov. Whitmer
Minnesota Gov. Walz
Missouri Gov. Parson
Montana Gov. Bullock
New Jersey Gov. Murphy
North Carolina Gov. Cooper
North Dakota Gov. Burgum
Ohio Gov. DeWine
Pennsylvania Gov. Wolf
Rhode Island Gov. Raimondo
Tennessee Gov. Lee
Utah Gov. Herbert
Vermont Gov. Scott
Virginia Gov. Northam
Washington Gov. Inslee
Wisconsin Gov. Evers
For more information about member state involvement, quotes from the governors and examples of workforce initiatives, please visit here.

 

The Network is grounded in Skillful’s work in Colorado and Indiana, where Skillful works directly to align the efforts of the state, employers, educators, and local workforce boards behind a mutually reinforcing strategy. Drawing on its on-the-ground operations, Skillful produced the Skillful State Playbook, a step-by-step guide to help states build a skills-based labor market, which includes tools and resources for implementation. One signature initiative currently operating in Colorado and Indiana, the Skillful Coaching Corps (SCC), is an upskilling program for career coaches. Applying tools and training from the Corps, coaches are better equipped to help job seekers and incumbent workers learn what skills are in demand and how to demonstrate or obtain those skills. The Skillful State Network continues to draw key learnings and practices from Skillful Colorado and Skillful Indiana, and supports transformation at a scale and pace not possible through individual state actions alone.

“We are thrilled to welcome the eight new member states to the Skillful State Network, as well as the newly elected governors from founding member states Colorado, Ohio, Tennessee, Illinois, and Wisconsin. The importance of this issue and the value of the Network transcends changes in administration and even party,” said Beth Cobert, CEO of Skillful. “Workforce development is a nonpartisan issue as every state confronts helping workers transition to digital economy jobs. These new voices will strengthen this already forward-thinking group in this our second year.”

Network members will continue to share assets, foster partnerships, and hone methods of engagement within their labor markets. The free and public availability of the Skillful State Playbook supports the open sharing of key learnings and practices. Skillful State Network members may draw from and contribute tools to the Playbook.

All interested states are invited to join the Network by contacting Skillful CEO Beth Cobert at [email protected], (212) 713-7633.

Download the Skillful State Playbook here.

Find more information about Skillful here.

 

About Skillful

Skillful, a non-profit initiative of the Markle Foundation, is dedicated to enabling all Americans – particularly those without a four-year college degree – to secure good jobs in a changing economy. Skillful, in partnership with Microsoft, is developing skills-based training and employment practices in collaboration with state governments, local employers, educators and workforce development organizations. With its partners, Skillful is working to create a labor market in which skills are valued, and people can more easily access the information and education they need to keep pace with technology’s impact on work. Skillful currently operates in two states, Skillful Colorado and Skillful Indiana, bringing investment, training, tools and innovative methods to augment local workforce development efforts. It formed and facilitates the Skillful State Network, a collaboration among 26 state governors to accelerate the development and deployment of effective skills-based practices to transform their labor markets. Skillful is grateful for support provided by Lumina Foundation and Walmart, and its partnerships with the states of Colorado and Indiana, Purdue University and Purdue Extensions and many great local organizations committed to strengthening their local workforce and creating better opportunities for all.

About The Markle Foundation

The Markle Foundation works to realize the potential of technology to achieve breakthroughs in addressing some of the nation’s most pressing issues. Markle challenges itself and diverse partners to deploy their varied expertise to identify solutions and achieve systemic change. Today as advanced technology and automation change the very nature of work, Markle’s priority is advancing solutions toward a skills-based labor market that will enable Americans to transition to the opportunities of the digital economy. Markle’s workforce initiatives include Skillful and the Rework America Task Force. They follow Markle’s success in creating policy and technology architecture that has enabled improvements in healthcare, national security and access to the Internet. For more information, visit markle.org, follow @MarkleFdn and @ReworkAmerica on Twitter, and read our book, America’s Moment.

 

Kansas to let Farm Bureau health coverage avoid ACA rules

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will allow its state Farm Bureau to offer health care coverage that doesn’t satisfy the Affordable Care Act after Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly on Friday declined to block a Republican-backed effort to circumvent former President Barack Obama’s signature health care law.

Kelly allowed an insurance bill to become law without her signature, and it includes provisions that will exempt the bureau from state insurance regulations in the health care coverage it offers to its members.

Kelly, in a statement, said that while she has “serious reservations” about the measure, she will allow it to become law “as a demonstration of my genuine commitment to compromise.”

Kansas Senate President Susan Wagle, a Wichita Republican, said in a statement that the measure helps “Kansans struggling to afford coverage find new, affordable options.”

Kelly’s fellow Democrats strongly opposed the measure, suggesting it would allow the nonprofit to sell skimpy health care coverage while offering false hope to consumers.

The proposal had overwhelming Republican support in the GOP-controlled Legislature. Kelly had not taken a position publicly before allowing the bill to become law.

The new law takes effect in July. It is patterned after one in place in Tennessee for decades and one enacted last year in Iowa.

Its enactment demonstrated the Farm Bureau’s political clout in Kansas, particularly in rural areas, where Republicans dominate politics. The bill also had the support of most urban and suburban GOP lawmakers who continue to oppose the 2010 federal health care overhaul.

Some Democrats argued that rural communities would be better served by expanding the state’s Medicaid health coverage for poor residents as outlined in the Affordable Care Act, as Kelly has proposed. The House passed a Medicaid expansion plan last month, but the Senate has yet to take it up.

“Unfortunately, leaders in the Kansas Senate continue to prioritize their own political ambitions over the health and security of Kansas families and hospitals,” Kelly said. “Despite the will of both their chamber and their state, these three Senate leaders remain devoutly committed to partisan obstructionism.”

Farm Bureau President Rich Felts said in a statement that Kelly’s action “paved the way for lawmakers to advance a comprehensive healthcare solution that will benefit our entire state.” He said the governor’s Medicaid expansion plan “to help rural hospitals, create new jobs, and expand affordable healthcare to non-KFB members remains a critical piece of that puzzle.”

Farm Bureau officials estimated that about 42,000 people would eventually take its coverage and promised lower rates than plans complying with federal mandates. They believed the takers would be individuals without coverage or struggling to pay for individual coverage.

Bureau officials said they pushed for permission to offer the coverage because the group’s members were asking for more choices. The Farm Bureau’s new coverage will avoid state regulation because the law simply declares that it’s not insurance.

Kansas has seen the number of individual coverage plans offered through the federal ACA marketplace decline to 23 for 2019 from 42 in 2016, according to the Kansas Insurance Department. While average rate increases for 2019 were smaller than in past years, they’ve sometimes previously topped 25 percent, according to annual reports from the department.

Republicans repeatedly have cited premium increases as a reason to repeal the ACA since President Donald Trump’s election in 2016, but a drive in Congress to do it stalled when they couldn’t agree on a replacement. Trump has deferred another push until after the 2020 election.

Critics of the Farm Bureau’s proposal said companies offering traditional health insurance coverage would face unfair competition.

They also focused on how the Farm Bureau would be able to set higher rates or reject coverage for people who have pre-existing medical conditions. They also suggested that coverage could be limited for large expenses, such as a pregnancy or cancer treatment.

KU institute designated lead agency of Kansas’ State Data Center

KU NEWS SERVICE

LAWRENCE — The University of Kansas Institute for Policy & Social Research (IPSR) has been designated the lead agency of the State Data Center for the state of Kansas. In this role, IPSR — under the leadership of Xan Wedel — will work with a network of other Kansas data centers to find out what data users need and how to connect them to U.S. Census Bureau resources.

The State Data Center Program is one of the U.S. Census Bureau’s longest and most successful partnerships. This cooperative program between the states and the U.S. Census Bureau was created in 1978 to make data available locally to the public through a network of state agencies, universities, libraries, and regional and local governments. The State Data Center network provides training and technical assistance to local governments, the business community, researchers and other local stakeholders in their use of Census Bureau data for research, administration, planning and decision-making.

The State Data Centers also provide the U.S. Census Bureau with valuable feedback on data use, the operational aspects of decennial and economic census and survey programs, and the various federal-state-local partnership programs that support U.S. Census Bureau activities. For example, Wedel will review housing counts to make sure newly built homes and group housing like residence halls and nursing homes are accurately counted in the upcoming 2020 census.

In several ways, this designation formally acknowledges IPSR’s longstanding service to Kansas and the U.S. Census Bureau. IPSR has been a coordinating agency in the Kansas State Data Center since the program’s inception and expanded this role to become the Business & Industry Data Center for the state in March 2009.

Wedel, who has worked at IPSR since 1999, worked on efforts to prepare for the census and disseminate data after both the 2000 and the 2010 counts. Wedel was also elected to the National State Data Center steering committee in 2005 and served as secretary and chair during her three-year term.

Further, IPSR coordinates several initiatives that promote the use of census data by local stakeholders. IPSR has been producing the Kansas Statistical Abstract annually for more than 50 years. The Kansas Statistical Abstract is a compendium of state and local data covering state, county and city-level data on topics such as population, housing, education and energy. In addition, IPSR’s work as a U.S. Economic Development Administration University Center — under the leadership of School of Business lecturer and entrepreneurship program director Wally Meyer and IPSR associate researcher Genna Hurd — promotes the use of census data. Meyer and Hurd, along with regional development organizations, have developed a regional data portal available to the public.

Man sentenced for deadly Kan. police pursuit crash

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A 21-year-old man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for killing two passengers in a crash while fleeing from police in Kansas City, Kansas.

Smith photo Wyandotte Co.

Zackery Smith was sentenced Thursday after pleading guilty in February to an amended charge of second-degree murder. As part of the plea, prosecutors dropped several other charges.

Authorities say Smith crashed into a pickup truck in October 2017 as officers were pursuing suspects from a reported shoplifting at a Cabela’s sporting goods store. The victims were identified as 27-year-old Jason Edwards, of Kansas City, and 23-year-old Amber Bledsoe, of Prairie Village.

The pickup truck’s driver was treated at a hospital.

Update: Suspect in Salina shooting in custody

UPDATED 5:21 p.m. Friday: According to Salina Police Detective Sergeant David Villanueva, Zachary Matthew Degraw has been apprehended. In a statement, Villanueva wrote, “With the help of the public and the Wichita Police Department, Zach Degraw is in police custody. Thank you to all that assisted.”

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a Thursday shooting incident in Salina and looking for a person of interest.

Degraw photo Saline Co.

On Thursday evening, police were called to the Hillcrest Apartments, 2140 E. Crawford for the report of a shooting, according to Salina Police Captain Paul Forrester.

Dalton Reinbold, 21, was identified as the victim of the shooting. EMS  transported Reinbold to Salina Regional Health Center and was later released, according to Forrester.

Police identified Zachary Matthew Degraw, 20, as a person of interest in the case.

Degraw is described as a white male 5-foot-7 and 130 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes, Forrester noted. Degraw currently has active warrants for his arrest out of Saline County District Court for aggravated failure to appear, narcotics violations, and various other crimes, he added.

Forrester said Degraw should be considered armed and dangerous. If Degraw’s location is known, do not attempt to approach or contact him, but immediately contact police by calling 911, he added. Additionally, persons who have information about this case are asked to call the Salina Police Department at 785-826-7210 or CrimeStoppers at 825-TIPS (785-825-8477).

Forrester said the Salina Police Department has not been notified by either Russell authorities or the Kansas Bureau of Investigation that the shooting incident in Salina Thursday evening is in any way related to the shooting incident in Russell.

Gov. explains decision on HB 2209

Kansas Governor Laura Kelly (D)

OFFICE OF GOV.

TOPEKA – The following message is from Governor Laura Kelly regarding House Bill 2209:

House Bill 2209 makes sweeping changes to healthcare policy in Kansas. After long and careful deliberation – including in-depth discussions with both opponents and proponents — I continue to harbor serious reservations about this legislation. I believe it is fundamentally wrong to deny health coverage to anyone because they have a pre-existing condition. It troubles me that only two other states in the nation have implemented a model similar to this bill, making the long-term impact uncertain. And I am disappointed that the Kansas Insurance Department chose not to engage with the Legislature to ensure the final product included basic consumer protections and regulatory safeguards. Therefore, as a matter of principle, I cannot sign House Bill 2209.

I also fundamentally believe that governing demands a relentless pursuit of common ground. Proponents of House Bill 2209 brought this legislation forward because healthcare costs far too much. Our rural communities need help. Kansas farmers and ranchers face historic challenges in the wake of declining farm income, severe weather, and a global trade war. They openly acknowledge that this bill will not solve all the complex problems plaguing our healthcare system. In their opinion, an “all of the above” approach stands the best chance of helping the greatest number of Kansans. On these points, I wholeheartedly agree.

With that larger vision and shared goal in mind, I will allow House Bill 2209 to become law without my signature. New ideas always carry a certain level of risk. I believe the potential risks of this legislation can be mitigated if they are coupled with a stable, secure, proven healthcare option: Medicaid Expansion.

In the last decade, Medicaid Expansion has been thoroughly vetted from every imaginable angle, with over 300 studies confirming its effectiveness and necessity. We know with certainty that it will strengthen our economy, save taxpayer dollars, and provide healthcare to roughly 150,000 Kansans. A majority of the Kansas Legislature already voted for my proposal in 2017 or publicly promised to support Expansion in their 2018 campaigns. Over 70 percent of states – with both Republican and Democratic governors – have expanded Medicaid. And 77 percent of Kansans want us to do the same.

Unfortunately, leaders in the Kansas Senate continue to prioritize their own political ambitions over the health and security of Kansas families and hospitals. Despite the will of both their chamber and their state, these three Senate leaders remain devoutly committed to partisan obstructionism.

I will never govern in this manner. My priority will always be the people of Kansas, and I allow House Bill 2209 to become law as a demonstration of my genuine commitment to compromise. I challenge legislators to join me in this good-faith effort, meet me halfway, and enact Medicaid Expansion before the 2019 legislative session adjourns.

Laura Kelly is the governor of Kansas.

 

 

Police shooting of man near Kansas school ruled justified

FAIRWAY, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors have found that police were justified in shooting and wounding a man believed to have been firing shots near a suburban Kansas City elementary school.

Ruffin -photo Johnson Co.

The Johnson County, Kansas, District Attorney’s Office made the announcement Friday after reviewing last month’s shooting of 26-year-old Dylan Ruffin.

Court records say the shooting happened after he exited a house with a gun as children were being dismissed from Highlands Elementary in the Shawnee Mission School District. Extra security was present because shots had struck the school earlier in the day.

As police ordered the man to drop the weapon, parents ran and threw themselves on children. No one else was injured.

Ruffin is charged with three counts of aggravated assault on an officer and discharging a gun in an occupied dwelling.

Colorado trucker charged in deaths of 5 on Kansas Turnpike

LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A truck driver from Greeley, Colorado, is charged with five counts of vehicular homicide for a fiery 2017 crash that killed five people on the Kansas Turnpike near Bonner Springs.

First responders on the scene of the fatal 2017 crash photo courtesy KSHB

Kenny B. Ford, 58, appeared without an attorney Friday in a Leaveworth County courtroom. The misdemeanor charge carries a maximum penalty of one year in jail on each count.

Traffic was backed up due to road construction on July 11, 2017, when Ford’s semi struck an SUV driven by 61-year-old Teresa J. Butler of Urbana, Illinois. Butler and her passenger, 63-year-old Karen Lynn Kennedy of New Palestine, Illinois, were killed.

The truck then struck two other cars, killing an elderly Topeka couple, Sheldon and Virginia Cohen, and 38-year-old Ricardo Mireles of Topeka.

Two-wave US flu season is now the longest in a decade

NEW YORK (AP) — Three months ago, this flu season was shaping up to be short and mild in the U.S. But a surprising second viral wave has made it the longest in 10 years.

CDC Image click to expand

This flu season has been officially going for 21 weeks, according to reports collected through last week and released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That makes it among the longest seen since the government started tracking flu season duration more than 20 years ago.

Some experts likened the unusual double waves to having two different flu seasons compressed, back-to-back, into one.

“I don’t remember a season like this,” said Dr. Arnold Monto, a University of Michigan researcher who had been studying respiratory illnesses for more than 50 years.

The previous longest recent flu season was 20 weeks, which occurred in 2014-2015.

Flu can cause a miserable, relatively mild illness in many people and a more severe illness in others. Young children and the elderly are at greatest risk from flu and its complications. Flu vaccinations are recommended annually for all but the very young.

The current season began the week of Thanksgiving, a typical start time. At the beginning, most illnesses were caused by a flu strain that tends not to cause as many hospitalizations and which is more easily controlled by vaccines.

But in mid-February, a nastier strain started causing more illnesses and driving up hospitalizations.

Not helping matters: The harsher bug is not well matched to the vaccine, said the CDC’s Lynnette Brammer, who oversees flu tracking.

Still, this flu season is not nearly as bad as last winter’s 19-week season, the deadliest in at least four decades. An estimated 80,000 Americans died of flu and its complications last season.

The CDC is estimating that flu-related deaths this season in the range of 35,000 to 55,000.

More good news: Brammer said that although the virus is notoriously unpredictable, signs suggest this flu season should be over soon.

“It’s on the verge” of being over, she said. “If nothing changes.”

Update: Employee injured after explosion at Salina battery plant

SALINA —A 48-year-old woman was injured in an explosion at a local battery manufacturing plant just south of Salina early Friday morning.

Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan said Friday that at 5:58 a.m., emergency responders were called to Exide Technologies, 413 E. Berg Road, for the report of someone injured in an explosion. He said a woman was cleaning in an area that was shut down at the time when a welding torch control box exploded, knocking her unconscious. Soldan said the woman regained consciousness while Salina Fire Department EMTs were treating her.

The extent of the woman’s injuries was not known, however, she did have a small amount of blood on her face and she was transported to Salina Regional Health Center, Soldan added.

Another employee doing the same sort of work was in the area, but was not injured, he said. The incident did not stop production at the battery manufacturing plant, Soldan added.

Exide representatives could not be reached for comment Friday morning.

———–

SALINE COUNTY — Authorities are on the scene of a reported  explosion at the Exide Technologies plant, 413 E Berg Road, in Salina.

Police have released few details. Check the Post for more information as it becomes available.

 

Kansas man sentenced in death of girlfriend’s mother’s boyfriend

JEFFERSON COUNTY— A Kansas man was sentenced Thursday to life in prison for killing his girlfriend’s mother’s boyfriend near a northeast Kansas lake.
Blevins -photo Jefferson Co.

Jonathan Davis Blevins, 23, of Topeka, will not be eligible for parole for 50 years, according to the Jefferson Co. Attorney’s Office.

In March, a Jefferson County jury convicted Blevins of first-degree murder in the death of Taylor Sawyer. He had been shot to death and his body was found in March of 2018 at Perry Lake. Blevin’s girlfriend, Ashlyn Hemmerling was arraigned last month on a charge of first-degree murder in the case. Her mother, Sarah Hemmerling, initially was charged with obstruction, but that charge was dropped.

Ashlyn Hemmerling-Jefferson Co.
Sarah Hemmerling -photo Jefferson Co.

Jefferson County Sheriff Jeff Herrig said previously that authorities believe Ashlyn Hemmerling helped orchestrate the homicide. He said circumstances leading to the homicide may have involved a domestic dispute as well as drug use.

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