We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Health advisory, safety tips for Flint Hills burning season

Flint Hills burn

KDHE

TOPEKA – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) reminds Kansans that March and April are a time when large areas of the state’s Flint Hills rangeland are burned. These burns help preserve the tallgrass prairie, control invasive species such as Eastern Red Cedar and Sumac and provide better forage for cattle. Prescribed burning minimizes risk of wildfires and is effective in managing rangeland resources. Smoke from the burns can influence the air quality of downwind areas. The use of smoke management techniques is vital to reduce impacts.

KDHE  activated the Kansas smoke modeling tool on March 1, prior to widespread burning in the Flint Hills. The computer models use fire data and current weather conditions to predict the potential contribution of smoke to downwind air quality problems. On average there are approximately 2.3 million acres burned in the Flint Hills of Kansas and Oklahoma each year.

“We encourage ranchers and land managers to take advantage of this smoke modeling resource to spread out their burns more effectively and mitigate potential air quality impacts,” said Douglas Watson, meteorologist at the KDHE Bureau of Air. “For burns to be safe and effective, weather and rangeland conditions must be ideal. Many landowners will burn at the same time when such conditions are met. Air pollutants from the burns can affect persons in the Flint Hills and can be carried long distances to more populated areas,” said Watson.

Prescribed burns release large amounts of particulate matter and substances that can form ozone. Particulate matter and ozone can cause health problems, even in healthy individuals. Common health problems include burning eyes, runny nose, coughing and illnesses such as bronchitis. Individuals with respiratory issues, pre-existing heart or lung diseases, children and elderly may experience worse symptoms.

Steps to protect your health on days when smoke is present in your community include:

  • Healthy people should limit or avoid strenuous outdoor exercise.
  • People with respiratory or heart related illnesses should remain indoors.
  • Help keep indoor air clean by closing doors and windows and running air conditioners with air filters.
  • Keep hydrated by drinking lots of water.
  • Contact your doctor if you have symptoms such as chest pain, chest tightness, shortness of breath or severe fatigue.

For more information about the burning in the Flint Hills, the Flint Hills Smoke Management Plan, the April burn restrictions and the smoke modeling tool, please visit https://www.ksfire.org.

Police arrest Kansas burglary suspect attempting to pawn stolen items

SEDGWICK COUNTY—Law enforcement authorities are investigating a burglary and have a suspect in custody.

Starbuck -photo Sedgwick County

On February 25, police responded to a suspicious character call at A-Ok Pawnshop, 1525 south Broadway in Wichita, according a social media report.

Upon arrival, officers contacted a 25-year-old male employee who reported a suspect later identified as 41-year-old Patrick Starbuck attempted to pawn stolen items. Officers arrested Starbuck without incident and he was found to be in possession of drugs and drug paraphernalia.

He was booked on requested charges of possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana, possession of drug paraphernalia, burglary and theft.

Through the investigation many stolen items were recovered including items taken from a burglary a few days earlier.  Starbuck remains in custody on a $25,000 bond, according to the online jail records.

 

3-year-old wounded in apparent accidental shooting in Kan. home

ATCHISON, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a 3-year-old boy has been flown to a hospital with an abdominal wound after an apparent accidental shooting in a northeast Kansas home.

Authorities responded Tuesday after the boy’s mother reported that her son picked up a loose gun, which went off as he was handling it.

Atchison Police Chief Mike Wilson said further details on how the boy came to find the gun and who it belongs to can’t be discussed at this time pending an investigation. Wilson says the cause of the discharge appears to be accidental.

The boy initially was taken to Atchison Hospital and flown from there to Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri.

Man sentenced for sex with girl transported by his grandma, mom

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A man has been sentenced for sex crimes involving a 13-year-old Alabama girl who was brought to him by his mother and grandmother.

Michael Collins -photo MDC

Twenty-two-year-old Michael James Collins was sentenced Monday to 15 years in prison without parole.

Investigators say Collins met the girl on a dating website in July 2017. At the time, Collins was a registered sex offender on probation for a previous conviction for sexual misconduct involving a child.

He admitted in November that he paid his grandmother $400 to bring the girl from Alabama to Missouri. His mother was with his grandmother when they picked up the girl.

Collins says he had sex with the girl in a van while the women were taking him to and from work and the Community Supervision Center in Fulton.

Police: Kansas woman fooled by online loan scam

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating an alleged online loan scam.

According to Salina Police Detective Sgt. David Villanueva, a 68-year-old Salina woman on a fixed income needed a loan to help cover expenses.

She received an email from “Mark Lee of Quick Cash Loans” informing her she was eligible for a $10,000 loan. After the funds were deposited into her bank account, she would be required to purchase Google+ cards and provide the card information to loan company, according to Villanueva.

The victim purchased four cards worth a total of $951at two retail locations in Salina.

After providing the card information to the company, the woman’s bank notified her that the deposit from Quick Cash Loans was fraudulent.

Study: Medicaid expand in Kansas would cost $47.4M in first year

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new study says expanding Medicaid in Kansas would have a net cost of $47.4 million in the first year.

Image courtesy KHI.org

The nonprofit Kansas Health Institute estimated in the study released Tuesday that an additional 130,000 low-income adults and children would sign up if the program was expanded. That accounts for adults who already are eligible but may not know it, as well as those who already have insurance but would switch if state assistance were available.

The number is lower than previous estimates that 150,000 would sign up for the coverage. KHI policy executive and lead author Kari Bruffett says that’s because economic improvements have left fewer people uninsured.

Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly has made expansion a top priority, although Republican leaders are opposed.

Kansas woman wins annual trans-Atlantic pancake race

LIBERAL, Kan. (AP) — A pancake-flipping Kansas teacher has bested her trans-Atlantic competitors to win an annual Shrove Tuesday tradition.

Maggie Lapinski ran the 415-yard Liberal, Kansas, leg of the race with a time of 62.98 seconds. That was almost 7 seconds faster than Amy Butler, who ran a similar race in Olney, England, with a time of 70 seconds. Contestants must carry a pancake in a frying pan and flip it at the beginning and end of the race.

The race began in Olney in the 15th century. In 1950, Liberal challenged Olney to an international competition.

Lapinski, who coaches cross country, also won the Liberal leg of the race in 2017, but a winner couldn’t be determined because of a technical glitch in Olney.

Well-known LGBTQ activist in Kansas has died

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Stephanie Mott, a well-known advocate for LGBTQ rights in Kansas, has died.

Pastor Sarah Oglesby-Dunegan of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Topeka says Mott was hospitalized Sunday after apparently suffering a heart attack. She died Monday at the age of 61.

Mott was a mental health clinician at Valeo in Topeka. She led the Kansas Democratic Party’s LGBT caucus, and managed the Topeka chapter of Equality Kansas.

Kansas Democratic Party chairwoman Vicki Hiatt and executive director Ethan Corson said in a statement that Mott was courageous in the face of cowardice while advocating for vulnerable people.

Equality Kansas said in a statement that the group will find solace in the knowledge that Mott’s work will make Kansas a better place for future generations.

Lawmakers could side with KU Hospital to keep transplant livers in Kansas

Physicians at the University of Kansas Hospital perform surgery. Some KU doctors are weighing in on new rules for distributing livers for transplant.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HEALTH SYSTEM

Doctors at the University of Kansas Hospital say a change in the distribution of livers across the country could result in Kansans waiting longer for life-saving transplants.

So they’re backing a bill in the Kansas Legislature that would allow residents who donate their organs to specify whether they want them used to benefit Kansas transplant patients.

“The purpose of the Kansas Donor Rights act is to bring the conversation to the forefront,” said Sean Kumer, a liver transplant surgeon at KU.

Changes in the system used to distribute livers for transplant essentially nationalizing the system have yet to be finalized.

For years, organs have been distributed within regions. That worked well for states, like Kansas, where donor rates were high. It worked less well in states, such as New York and California, where the need for donated organs was high but donor rates were relatively low.

“Here in the Midwest we have a very giving population,” Kumer said, noting that Kansas’ donor rate is consistently around 80 percent compared to 55 percent on the East and West coasts.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ordered the scrapping of the geography-based system after six patients awaiting transplants in California, New York and Massachusetts sued the agency.

“The practical effect of the new policy will be to redistribute livers from states and regions with high rates of organ donation to areas that have historically underperformed,” U.S. Sens. Jerry Moran of Kansas and Roy Blunt of Missouri said recently in a guest commentary in The Kansas City Star.

The new policy would disproportionately affect patients rural areas, the senators said.

“This shortsighted liver allocation policy … will not only mean fewer life-saving organs in our part of the country, but it will also adversely affect health outcomes throughout the Midwest,” they said.

In an interview with Modern Healthcare, Sander Florman, director of transplantation for New York’s Mount Sinai Health System, defended the new allocation system.

“In a system that is fundamentally handicapped by having too few organs for too many patients that need them, decisions need to be made and should favor saving the most lives and helping the sickest of our patients first,” Florman said.

If that is the criteria, Kumer said, preference should be given to regions where higher percentages of patients are dying while awaiting surgery. In Kansas, he said, approximately 20 percent of liver transplant patients die on the waiting list compared to about 8 percent in New York.

“Our (mortality) numbers are going to increase and theirs are going to decrease and that’s just not the way we should be running our system,” Kumer said.

The legality of the Kansas legislation could hinge on whether the courts buy the argument that an organ donation is a personal gift, Kumer said.

“It’s a gift, not a natural resource,” he said. “Donors and their families … should have the choice of where they want their organs to go.”

The bill was introduced late,  but its chances of passing are improved by the fact that it has the backing of Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican.

“It will get a hearing soon and we will address it this session,” Denning said.

Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Kan. woman dead, mother, 2 children hospitalized after house fire

RENO COUNTY — Authorities are working to determine the cause of a fatal Tuesday morning fire in Reno County.

First responders on the scene of Tuesday’s fatal house fire in Reno County -photo courtesy KAKE

Just after 2:30a.m., Tuesday, deputies were dispatched to the area of 9 E Horseshoe Lane, Pretty Prairie, in rural Reno County for the report of a structure fire with possible occupants still inside the residence.

Deputies arrived on scene within minutes of being dispatched and found a single story double-wide residence on fire, according to a media release.

The fire spread quickly to other parts of the structure It was reported that Hannah Lynn Perry, 21, was able to get out of the residence with her two children 2-year-old Charlotte and 1-year-old Wyatt and to the neighbor’s house across the street and call 911.

Hannah reported that her grandmother, 70-year-old Judy Kay Alley was still inside the residence. 

The fire department was able to get the fire under control and found one individual  deceased within the residence. The victim had not been be identified, according to the release.

Hannah and Wyatt were transported to Via Christi St Francis by Reno County EMS and Charlotte was flown by EagleMed to Via Christi St Francis.

 

KBI investigating Kansas police chief over lake house

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is investigating the Kansas City, Kansas, police chief’s use of a county-owned lake house.

The investigation centers on whether Chief Terry Ziegler “double dipped” when he took paid time off work while also charging the county government for work he did on the lake house.

The Unified Government allowed Ziegler to pay little rent on the house on Wyandotte Lake Park if he made repairs on the property. Officials put the lease in writing after a citizen inquired about it.

Ziegler sent an email to police department employees on Monday confirming the investigation. He will continue working during the investigation.

In December, Mayor David Alvey said he thought the arrangement with Zeigler was in the county’s best interests.

Ex-White House counsel, Kansas native calls Robert Mueller ‘American hero’

WASHINGTON (AP) — A former White House special counsel considers special prosecutor Robert Mueller “an American hero.”

Cobb-photo courtesy Hogan-Lovels

Attorney Ty Cobb says he does not share President Donald Trump’s opinion that Mueller’s probe into Russian meddling in the election is “a witch hunt” during an ABC News’ podcast “The Investigation” aired Tuesday

Cobb, a Georgetown University law school alumnus and native of Great Bend, Kansas,  says Mueller is a “very justice-oriented person.”

Cobb does not believe Mueller’s report will harm the president politically. Cobb says there’s no link to Trump or the campaign in an indictment against Russian hackers and says there’s “no reference to collusion” in a sentencing memo for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

Cobb joined the Trump’s White House legal team in July 2017 and left after ten months.

He says Trump should brace himself for upcoming congressional investigations.

1 suspect pleads guilty in Kansas carnival vendors’ deaths

GREAT BEND, Kan. (AP) — One of several people charged in the deaths of a couple at a Kansas county fair last year has pleaded guilty.

Michael Fowler -photo Barton Co.

54-year-old Michael Fowler Jr., of Sarasota, Florida, pleaded guilty Monday to two counts of first-degree murder and one count of theft. In exchange for the plea, a capital murder charge was dropped.

The bodies of Alfred “Sonny” Carpenter and Pauline Carpenter of Wichita were discovered in July in shallow graves near Van Buren, Arkansas. Prosecutors say the Carpenters were killed at the Barton County Fair, where they were vendors. The suspects worked for the carnival company at the fair.

Investigators say one suspect posed as a carnival mafia bossand ordered the other suspects to kill the couple. Police have said the “carnival mafia” does not exist.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File