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Brownback Veto: Medicaid Expansion Battle With Legislature

By MEG WINGERTER & STEPHEN KORANDA

Gov. Sam Brownback on Thursday morning vetoed a bill to expand Medicaid eligibility in Kansas, spurring a short veto override effort in the Kansas House that likely will continue next week.

House Bill 2044 earlier was approved three votes short of a veto-proof majority in the House and two short in the Senate. An estimated 300,000 Kansans would qualify for coverage under expansion, though only about half that number would enroll in the first year, according to estimates.

KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, doesn’t serve childless adults without disabilities and only covers adults with children if they have incomes below 32 percent of the poverty line, or about $3,800 annually.

 

 

 

Brownback’s veto message echoed his previous objections to the bill, which he said prioritized the newly eligible adults over those with disabilities.

“I am vetoing this expansion of ObamaCare because it fails to serve the truly vulnerable before the able-bodied, lacks work requirements to help able-bodied Kansans escape poverty, and burdens the state budget with unrestrainable entitlement costs,” he said.

Read the veto message from Gov. Sam Brownback

Disability Advocate Disputes Statement

But Mike Oxford, executive director of the Topeka Independent Living Resource Center, said Wednesday he was “pissed off” by Brownback’s statement that KanCare expansion would harm people with disabilities. He spoke at a TILRC event, where members celebrated the bill passing the House and Senate.

About 20 percent of people who would become eligible for insurance under KanCare expansion have a disability, Oxford said, and others may have chronic health conditions. While there are some exceptions that allow people with disabilities to work and earn more money, the most straightforward way for them to qualify for KanCare is to show they aren’t able to work and have less than $2,000 in assets.

People with disabilities also would benefit from expansion if the workers who provide personal care services to them became eligible for KanCare, Oxford said. Most personal care workers earn about $10 an hour and can’t afford health insurance, so they leave for better-paying jobs, he said.

“Maybe (expansion) would make it easier for people to find good health and keep good help,” he said.

In his veto message, Brownback also said he disliked that Planned Parenthood could receive more funding under Medicaid expansion. Federal law prohibits using taxpayer money to fund abortions, but the clinics could receive Medicaid reimbursements for services like gynecological cancer screenings.

“I will not support this legislation that continues to fund organizations that undermine a culture of life,” Brownback said.

‘When Is The Right Time?’

Just more than an hour after the governor’s veto announcement, members of the Kansas House began a contentious, emotional debate on whether they should override the veto.

Rep. Susan Concannon, a Beloit Republican, said legislators shouldn’t let concerns about possible changes at the federal level to the Affordable Care Act stop them from expanding KanCare.

“If this isn’t the right time, when is the right time? Are we going to wait for some more hospitals to close?” asked Concannon, referring to the closure of a hospital in Independence.

Rep. Leonard Mastroni, a LaCrosse Republican, said expanding Medicaid would boost struggling hospitals. Losing medical facilities would have a ripple effect through towns like his in western Kansas, he said.

“If we don’t support Medicaid expansion, you’re going to put a dagger right through the heart of our small communities,” Mastroni said.

Rep. Dan Hawkins, chairman of the House Health and Human Services Committee, was among critics of expansion who echoed Brownback’s financial concerns.

“This one piece of legislation could chart a course of financial disaster for us for a long, long time,” Hawkins said.

Other lawmakers said the state’s health care system has priorities that should be funded first, like improving reimbursement rates to encourage more health care providers to accept Medicaid patients.

Rep. Brenda Landwehr said there aren’t enough Medicaid providers to accommodate thousands of new recipients.

“Fund the current commitments first before you go out and expand a program that can’t handle that expansion,” said Landwehr, a Wichita Republican.

Lawmakers eventually voted Thursday to delay the veto override debate until next week.

Meg Wingerter is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service.

Kansas man dies in head-on crash

NEWTON COUNTY, MO – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 2p.m. on Thursday in Newton County Missouri.
The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Hyundai Sonata driven by Alan B. Tash, 23, Riverton, was traveling on Mo. 175 two miles north of Neosho.
The vehicle crossed the center line and struck a 2007 Ford Taurus driven by Kelly R. Fields, 24, Joplin, Mo.,head-on.
Tash was pronounced dead at the scene.
Fields was transported to the hospital in Joplin.
Both drivers were not wearing seat belts, according to the MHP.

Prison death of convicted Kan. sex offender under investigation

Beeson -photo KDOC

LANSING – Officials are investigating a suspicious death at the Lansing Correctional Facility.

James Beeson, 56, died on Sunday, according to statement from the Kansas Department of Corrections and confirmed on the state’s web site.

An autopsy is planned to help determine the cause of death.

Beeson had eight convictions since December of 1998 for a variety of child sex crimes in Osage County.

He had been in held in the El Dorado and Hutchison Correctional facilities until a move to Lansing earlier this month.

Officials canceled visitation at prison this weekend.

Illinois farmers arrive with hay to help Kansas farmers

FAIRMOUNT, Ill. (AP) — A convoy of trucks from Illinois has arrived in Kansas carrying hay to farmers who’ve lost fields in wildfires that have caused widespread damage.

Wildfires have burned more than 650,000 acres in nearly two dozen Kansas counties.

Illinois farmer Vern Rohrscheib tells The (Champaign) News-Gazette it was a conversation topic last week between colleagues and they came up with the idea to take their extra hay to Kansas.

His daughter, Lynn Rohrscheib, says they’re thankful to help out farmers in any way they can. She says after the wildfires, the cattle that are left behind don’t have much to eat. The convoy leaves Thursday morning from central Illinois to the Ashland area in Kansas.

Earlier this week the group had collected 500 bales of hay, along with donated feed.

Congress lets states block some Planned Parenthood money

MARY CLARE JALONICK, Associated Press
ALAN FRAM, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has voted to let states block federal family planning money from going to Planned Parenthood affiliates and other abortion providers.

Senators approved the Republican legislation 51-50. Vice President Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote after two GOP senators, Maine’s Susan Collins and Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski, voted with Democrats against the measure.

The bill erases a regulation imposed by former President Barack Obama that lets states deny family planning funds to an organization only if it is incapable of providing those services.

Some states have passed laws in recent years denying the funds to groups that provide abortions.

Democrats criticized the measure as an attack on women’s rights and abortion. Republicans defended it as a way to let local officials decide where family planning money should go.

Police: 2 jailed after flooding Kansas hotel bathroom

McCuiston-photo Shawnee Co.

SHAWNEE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating two suspects on drug and other felony charges.

Just after 4 :30 a.m. on Thursday, police responded to a disturbance call at the Ramada Inn in the Block of SW Fairlawn in Topeka, according to a media release.

Occupants in the room had flooded the bathroom and would not let staff or police in. The hotel finally allowed police to force entry.

Police arrested Eric Brownlee McCuiston, 38, and Alicia Maria De Leon, 28, on charges of Felony Criminal Damage, Criminal

De Leon-photo Shawnee Co.

Trespass, Criminal Threat, Interference with Law Enforcement, and Possession of Drug Paraphernalia.

 

Police: Intoxicated Kan. felon jailed after attempt to ditch gun

Gilbert

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect on weapons charges.

Just after 11:30p.m. Wednesday, a homeowner called police to report two suspects would not leave his property in the 700 Block of Maple in Salina, according to Police Captain Paul Forrester.

Adam Gilbert, 33, and William Sullivan Jr, 37, both of Salina, were looking for a friend’s house when they accidently stumbled into this yard. The two were intoxicated and refused to leave, according to Forrester.

When officers arrived, one of the suspects attempted to walk away. They then saw him throw a handgun in a neighboring yard, Forrester said. Gilbert and Sullivan were both taken into custody and face trespassing charges. Gilbert, a convicted felon, also faces criminal possession of a firearm.

Kan. House approves controversial, new requirements for abortion providers

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Abortion providers may soon be required to give women detailed information about the physician to perform the procedure using Times New Roman font.

A bill that the House passed Thursday with an 87 to 37 votes also specifies that the typeface must be black and 12-point. A similar bill hasn’t gotten a vote in the Senate.

Abortion opponents say women need information about the doctor’s credentials to make a decision. Abortion rights supporters say it targets providers.

State law already requires that 24 hours before an abortion procedure a woman be given in writing the name of the physician who will perform the procedure. Women also must receive information on abortion risks, the age and characteristics of the fetus and information that may dissuade a woman from having an abortion.

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas already requires abortion providers to inform women about the risks involved in the procedure. Soon, it may also require them to tell women where the doctor performing an abortion went to medical school — in black, 12-point Times New Roman font, no less.

The Kansas House voted 85 to 38 on Wednesday to advance a bill that supporters and opponents believe is the first of its kind.

It would require Kansas providers to give women printed information at least 24 hours before the procedure that includes the name of the physician performing the abortion and information on the physician’s credentials, start date at the clinic, malpractice insurance, hospital privileges, state of residency and disciplinary record.

It even specifies the font type, size and color in which it needs to be written.

Police investigating hit and run I-70 crash

RILEY COUNTY  – Law enforcement authorities in Riley County are investigating an alleged hit and run accident and asking for help to find a vehicle that left the scene of an accident.

Just after 10p.m. on Wednesday, an unknown white truck pulling a trailer on Interstate 70 at Deep Creek Road rear ended a 1991 Mazda Protégé driven by Javier Gali-Rodriguez, 30, Junction City.

The collision pushed the Mazda into a ditch where it rolled. Emergency responders transported Gali-Rodriguez to the hospital in Manhattan, according to Riley County Police.

The truck did not stop.

Police ask that anyone with information contact RCPD or the Manhattan Riley County Crime Stoppers. Using the Crime Stoppers service can allow you to remain anonymous and could qualify you for a cash reward of up to $1,000.00.

Kan. man with 3 dozen theft convictions captured in stolen truck

Gillespie-photo KDOC

SEDGWICK COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Sedgwick County are investigating a suspect for Aggravated Assault and numerous other charges after a brief chase in a stolen vehicle.

Just after 10 a.m. Wednesday, officers contacted a suspect on stolen property and a stolen truck in the 2100 Block of South Rock Road in Wichita, according to Police Sgt. Nikki Woodrow during Thursday’s online media briefing.

While officers were attempting an arrest, holding the 36-year-old suspect identified as Jacob Gillespie, he made his way back to the stolen truck and drove away.

The suspect then drove toward another officer in a patrol vehicle and a pursuit started. The suspect’s truck hit the police vehicle. Officers ultimately arrested him after the truck hit a pole in a residential area near 21ststand Cranbrook Street.

Police on the scene of Wednesday chase, crash scene -photo courtesy KWCH

Gillespie is being held for Aggravated Assault of a Law Enforcement officer, possession of stolen property, Resisting arrest, Criminal Damage to Property, Possession of Meth, Auto Theft and numerous traffic violations, according to Woodrow.

Nobody was injured.

Gillespie has 40 burglary and theft convictions in Sedgwick County since 1998, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Brownback vetoes Medicaid Expansion Plan; veto override vote on hold

Members of the Kansas House delayed a vote Thursday to try to override Brownback’s veto of a plan to expand the State’s Medicaid program.


TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Latest on Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback vetoing an expansion of the state’s Medicaid program (all times local):

Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback has vetoed a bill that would have extended the state’s health coverage for the poor under former President Barack Obama’s signature health care law.

The conservative Republican governor made the move Thursday. He explained that he thinks the expansion would fail to serve the truly needy and would burden the state with what he called “unrestrainable entitlement costs.”

The bill would have expanded Medicaid coverage to as many as 180,000 additional adults.

Legislators gave final approval to the measure Tuesday. It had strong bipartisan majorities in both chambers, but supporters were short of the two-thirds majorities necessary to override a veto. Nevertheless, they are expected to try.

Brownback has been a vocal critic of the 2010 Affordable Care Act, also known as “Obamacare,” and his action was expected.

2 Kansas men await sentencing for child sex crimes

Olivera-photo Barton Co.

BARTON COUNTY- Sentencing is scheduled for two Kansas men convicted in Barton County District Court for sex crimes involving juveniles.

Camerino Rodriguez Olvera was convicted Friday of aggravated sexual battery and sexual battery for crimes that occurred between July 2011 and June 2012, according to the Barton County Attorney’s Office.

A jury also convicted Todd Lane Leech of rape that occurred between June 2010 and June, 2011.

Both men are in jail with bond set at $1 million dollars.

Due to the nature of the crimes, the fact that the victims were juveniles, and to protect the privacy of the victim and the victim’s family, officials released no additional information.

Sentencing for both men is scheduled for May 26.

Woman stranded on I-70 accused of stealing Samaritan’s vehicle

Knox-photo Shawnee Co.

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A woman is accused of stealing the pickup truck of a volunteer firefighter who had stopped to help her while she was stranded along Interstate 70 in Topeka, Kansas, then leading authorities on a chase.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports 23-year-old Erien Knox is charged with possession of stolen property and felony obstruction.

Authorities say a man stopped to help douse a car fire Wednesday morning along westbound I-70 and allowed the stranded female motorist to sit in his pickup truck, which the woman then drove from the scene.

A Kansas Highway Patrol spokesman says a trooper spotted the stolen pickup truck a short time later and gave chase before the woman was arrested in Wabaunsee County.

Online court records don’t show whether Knox has an attorney.

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