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Forecast gives Kansas a little room on Medicaid, tax relief

By JOHN HANNA AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas officials issued a new fiscal forecast Thursday that’s slightly more optimistic about how much tax revenue the state should expect to collect over the next two years, creating a little more breathing room for expanding Medicaid or providing tax relief.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly immediately urged the Republican-controlled Legislature to be cautious. She vetoed a tax relief billchampioned by GOP leaders earlier this month, and some lawmakers want to try again.

Kelly also is pushing to expand the state’s Medicaid health coveragefor the needy to as many as 150,000 additional people. While the idea has bipartisan support, top Republicans have opposed the idea, arguing that it could prove too costly for the state.

The forecasters increased the official projections for tax revenues by less than 1% for the current budget year, the 2020 budget year that begins in July and the 2021 budget year. But the new numbers reflect a view from that group — legislative researchers, university economists and officials in Kelly’s administration — that the economy should remain solid in the short-term.

“What we’re seeing is true, good, solid growth — business growth, income growth. Those are real,” said Larry Campbell, the governor’s budget director and a member of the forecasting group. “We’re hoping that we’re stabilizing out.”

Kansas man dead, 1 hospitalized after van rolls on Kansas Turnpike

BUTLER COUNTY— One person died in an accident just after 3p.m. Thursday in Butler County.

Scene of fatal Thursday crash in Butler County photo courtesy KWCH

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2004 Econoline Van driven by Bryan Garcia-Olvera, 22, Wichita, was southbound on Interstate 135 just north of the Towanda exit.

The van traveled off the road and the driver overcorrected. The vehicle returned to the road and rolled into the ditch.

Garcia-Olvera was pronounced dead at the scene. A passenger Patrick Shane, 29, Wichita, was transported to Wesley Medical Center. They were not wearing seat belts, according to the KHP.

Psychiatrist accused of sex with patients loses license to practice in Kansas

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A suburban Kansas City psychiatrist has lost his license to practice medicine in Kanas after state regulators alleged he had sex with a patient.

Lahey photo Johnson Co.

42-year-old Brian Patrick Lahey, of Overland Park, waived his right to a hearing and agreed Tuesday to an indefinite license suspension.

Lahey’s attorney, Nancy Crawford, said Lahey acknowledged the Kansas Board of Healing Arts had sufficient evidence to prove he violated the state’s Healing Arts Act. The Kansas board suspended Lahey’s license in July on an emergency basis over drug use. At the time, it was investigating whether he had sex with patients and improperly prescribed opioids and other drugs.

Other allegations against Lahey include that he exploited a patient relationship for financial gain. Crawford says the board’s charges remain allegations, not findings.

Kan. woman sentenced for killing cousin’s ex, setting body on fire

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 38-year-old woman has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years in the shooting death of a man whose body was set on fire in rural Lawrence.

Christina L. Towell during a court appearance in Douglas County -photo courtesy Lawrence Journal World

Christina Towell, of Leavenworth, was sentenced Thursday. She pleaded no contest last month to first-degree felony murder for her role in the November 2017 death of 34-year-old Joel Wales of Eudora.

Towell’s cousin, 39-year-old Tria Evans, of Lawrence, was convicted earlier of first-degree murder and other charges in Wales’ death and sentenced to life without parole for 50 years.

 Wales was alone housesitting for his mother when the women broke in, shot him six times and set his body and the house on fire.

Evans and Wales had a child together.

Dog-friendly Kan. restaurant remodeled by chef Ramsay to close

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A dog-friendly Wichita restaurant that celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay remodeled as part of a reality TV show is closing.

Owner Greg Buss posted Wednesday on social media that April 28 will be the last day for the Fetch Bar & Grill. For the past several months, Fetch has been open only on the weekends.

Buss and his wife, Pamela, originally opened Fetch as a place for people to dine with their dogs. The restaurant was struggling in 2017 when they were contacted by producers of “24 Hours to Hell and Back.” The episode featuring the restaurant re-do aired last July.

Buss says the closure is “heartbreaking” but that the location “just isn’t right.” Another Fetch location in the nearby town of Moundridge will remain open.

Governor signs bill increasing funding of child welfare services in Kansas

TOPEKA —Governor Laura Kelly signed House Bill 2103 Thursday injecting millions into Kansas programs that strengthen vulnerable children and families. This bill amends the revised Kansas Code for the Care of Children and enacts statutory previsions enabling Kansas to meet the requirements of the federal Family First Prevention Services Act (FFPSA).

“In the last few years, nothing has frustrated me more than the callous disregard some agency leaders demonstrated towards our vulnerable children and their families,” Kelly said. “This legislation will help to rebuild the Department for Children and Families and provide critical funding for programs aimed at strengthening families and keeping children safe.”

House Bill 2103 allows for an enhanced federal match rate for certain child welfare system evidence-based prevention services and programs beginning October 1, 2019. The bill defines a qualified residential treatment program (QRTP), establishes notice and hearing requirements when a child is placed in a QRTP, requires certain action a court must take when QRTP placement occurs, and places additional documentation requirements on the court in a permanency hearing involving a child placed in QRTP.

“The Department for Children and Families has already begun to connect with community partners across the state to kick off our Family First initiatives,” said DCF Secretary Laura Howard. “The additional federal funds along with these valued partnerships will allow us to introduce evidence-based practices throughout the state that will keep families together and children safe.”

Further, the bill amends the definition of a secure facility and requires a child in need of care petition to have an attached copy of any existing prevention plan for a child. The bill takes effect upon publication in the Kansas Register.

22-year-old Kansas woman jailed for drive-by shooting

SEDGWICK COUNTY—Law enforcement are investigating a Kansas woman in connection with a shooting.

Hernandez photo Sedgwick County

Just after 12:20p.m. Wednesday, police responded to report of a disturbance with shots fired in the 3000 Block of South Clifton in Wichita, according to office Charley Davidson.

Investigators determined that 22-year-old Briaunna Hernandez fired multiple shots at a home while seated in a vehicle. At the time the shots were fired, three individuals known to Hernandez were outside the residence. They were not injured.

Police did locate and arrest Hernendez without incident in the 4100 Block of Ross Parkway. She is being held on three counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and felon in possession of a firearm. Police also recovered a handgun during their investigation.

Police: 14-year-old accused of social media threat at Kan. middle school

FINNEY COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities and USD 457 school district officials are investigating an alleged school threat.

Just after 8p.m. Wednesday, police received information from a student and concerned parent of a potential threat against Horace Good Middle School, 412 North Main, in Garden City, according to Sgt. Lana Urtega. The threat received on social media depicted the general use of firearms to harm students at the school.

In conjunction with the school district, a letter was sent to parents and school staff of the reported threat and of an increased police presence at the school Thursday, according to Urtega.

At 10a.m. Thursday, police identified a 14-year-old middle school student as the suspect who made the threat.

An affidavit has been filed with the Finney County Attorney requesting charges of aggravated criminal threat and criminal false communiation, according to Urtega.

Legislators back landowners fighting wind energy line across Kansas

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Missouri House has passed legislation that could block the developers of one of the nation’s largest wind energy projects from using eminent domain to string a high-voltage power line across the Midwest.

The overview map on this page depicts the route of the Grain Belt Express Clean Line in Kansas- Image Clean Line Energy Partners.- click to expand

The vote Thursday by the House targets a $2.3 billion project that would carry electricity 750 miles from Kansas windmills across Missouri and Illinois before hooking into a power grid in Indiana serving eastern states.

The project won approval last month from Missouri utility regulators. That decision could allow developers to use condemnation to acquire easement rights from landowners unwilling to sell.

The bill blocking that now goes to the Missouri Senate.

The Grain Belt Express power line was proposed by Houston-based Clean Line Energy Partners. It’s in the process of being acquired by Chicago-based Invenergy.

Update: Authorities determine cause of Kansas apartment fire

MANHATTAN — A Wednesday evening apartment fire in Manhattan caused over $140,000 damage to the building and contents and started on the second-floor porch balcony due to improperly discarded smoking materials, according to Deputy Fire Chief Ryan Almes.

Photos courtesy Manhattan Fire Dept.

Just after 9:13 p.m.Wednesday, fire crews was dispatched to 415 Walters Drive Apartment 808 in Manhattan for a report of a structure fire with occupants possibly trapped, according to Almes.

Upon arrival, crews found a two-story apartment building with fire showing from the rear of the building extending into the attic.

Crews searched the building and confirmed that all occupants had exited the structure. The fire reached a second alarm before it was contained.  No injuries were reported.

Apartments 808 and 810 suffered fire damage and apartments 807 and 809 suffered smoke and water damage. 

A total of 14 occupants and 5 pets were displaced from 4 apartment units.  

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MANHATTAN — Officials are working to determine the cause of a fire in an apartment complex in Manhattan.

Just after 9:13 p.m.Wednesday, fire crews was dispatched to 415 Walters Drive Apartment 808 in Manhattan for a report of a structure fire with occupants possibly trapped, according to Deputy Chief Ryan Almes.

Upon arrival, crews found a two-story apartment building with fire showing from the rear of the building extending into the attic.

Crews searched the building and confirmed that all occupants had exited the structure. The fire reached a second alarm before it was contained.  No injuries were reported.

 Apartments 808 and 810 suffered fire damage and apartments 807 and 809 suffered smoke and water damage.The occupants of all four damaged units were displaced.  An estimate on damage was not available early Thursday.

Read the full redacted version of Robert Muller’s report

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Latest on special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on Russia and President Donald Trump (all times local):

Special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on the Russia investigation is two volumes and 448 pages long including attachments.

Read the full Mueller report here.

The report’s first volume details Russian election interference and the second relates to whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice.

The report reveals how Trump repeatedly sought to seize control of the Russia probe.

The 10 episodes scrutinized by Mueller include Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey, the president’s directive to subordinates to have Mueller fired and efforts to encourage witnesses not to cooperate.

The president’s lawyers have said Trump’s conduct fell within his constitutional powers, but Mueller’s team deemed the episodes were deserving of scrutiny to determine whether crimes were committed.

Attorney General William Barr  held a news conference on Mueller’s report before it was released. He said it found no cooperation between Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and Russians interfering in that election.

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren tweeted that it was “a disgrace” for Barr to act like “the personal attorney and publicist” for Trump.

New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand called Barr’s news conference “a farce and an embarrassing display of propaganda” for Trump. And New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker said, “The American people deserve the truth. Not spin from a Trump appointee.”

California Sen. Kamala Harris tweeted that Barr’s news conference was “a stunt, filled with political spin.”

The Justice Department has provided Congress with a redacted version of the report. Democrats want the full report released.

 

Kan. police officer air-lifted to hospital after rear-end crash with school bus

MONTGOMERY COUNTY —A Kansas police officer was injured in an accident just after 4p.m. Wednesday in Montgomery County.

Wednesday school bus accident -photo courtesy Washington County Storm Chasers

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a Coffeyville Police Department Chevy Tahoe driven by Darin R. Daily, 46, Coffeyville, was eastbound on U.S. 166 two miles west of Tyro.

The SUV rear ended Caney Valley USD 436 International School Bus driven by Rosella P. Moreland, 64, Caney, that was stopped at 2354 East U.S.166 to drop off some students.

The  7 students including 4 boys and 3 girls on the bus were not injured.

Officer Daily, a K-9 officer was making a routine drive back from training out of town, according to the Coffeyville Police Department. The patrol K-9 was not seriously injured. Daily had to be cut from the patrol car by the Coffeyville Fire Department jaws of life. He was air-liftedto Freeman Hospital. He was properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Attorney General gives statement ahead of release of Mueller report

WASHINGTON (AP) — After nearly two years of waiting, America is getting some Trump-Russia answers straight from Robert Mueller.

Attorney General William Barr during Thursday’s news conference -image courtesy U.S. Dept. of Justice

Eager to get in the last word ahead of the public release of the special counsel’s report, Attorney General William Barr on Thursday laid out in advance what he said was the “bottom line:” No collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian government hackers.

While Mueller drew no conclusion about whether President Donald Trump had obstructed justice in the investigation, Barr said he and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein personally had concluded that while Trump was “frustrated and angry” about the Mueller probe, nothing the president did rose to the level of an “obstruction-of-justice offense.” Barr said Mueller’s report examined 10 episodes pertaining to Trump and obstruction.

Barr said the president did not exert executive privilege to withhold anything in the report. And he said the president’s personal attorney had requested and gotten a chance to review the report before its public release.

The Justice Department was to release a redacted version of the special counsel’s report later Thursday on Russian election interference and the Trump campaign, opening up months, if not years, of fights over what the document means in a deeply divided country.

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