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Kansas man hospitalized after ejected when pickup rolls

BARTON COUNTY – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just after 6p.m. on Monday in Barton County.

A 2010 Ford F250 driven by Marcel Pete, 27, rural Ellinwood, was eastbound on Northeast 10 Road just northwest of Ellinwood, according to a media release from the Barton County Sheriff’s Department.

The driver lost control of the vehicle at the crest of a hill. The truck went into a skid, entered the east ditch rolled and the driver was ejected

Eagle Med transported Pete to a hospital for treatment of serious injuries, according to the Sheriff’s Department.

Mental health advocates rally at the state capitol today

susan-lewis
Susan Lewis is president of the Kansas Mental Health Coalition, Topeka.

KMHC

TOPEKA–More than 300 mental health advocates from across Kansas will arrive in Topeka today, Wed., March 15, to urge state lawmakers to build a stronger mental health system.

“The state’s mental health system continues to be overextended and underfunded.  As a result, people with mental illness are not getting the treatment and support they need to recover, or even to weather periods of acute crisis” says Susan Crain Lewis, president of the Kansas Mental Health Coalition, organizer of the event.

“Demand for services continues to increase, and our community mental health centers are asked to serve more people with fewer resources.  This poses a huge challenge given their statutory obligation to serve everyone regardless of ability to pay.  Despite herculean efforts, many people who could be helped before they reach crisis cannot be seen in a timely fashion, and therefore end up in hospital emergency room hallways, jails, or worse.”

“The pressure on all parts of the system, community mental health centers, providers, hospitals, safety net medical clinics, law enforcement officers, emergency responders, advocacy and social service organizations, friends and family, and most importantly, the persons with mental illness themselves is extraordinary, unnecessary and unfair. Mental illness is highly treatable, and the only category of illness in which we deprive people of access to needed treatment until they reach ‘stage 4’- crisis.  This is costly and inhumane, and unacceptable in our state.”

Advocates will gather for a rally at 10:30 a.m. on the south apron of the Capitol. Legislative District Advocates will meet with Legislators during a lunch at noon inside the Capitol. Those scheduled to speak at the rally include Secretary Tim Keck, who heads the Department for Aging and Disability Services, Representative Louis Ruiz, Co-Chair of the Mental Health Caucus, and Representative Joy Koesten, a newly elected advocate for persons with mental illness and Co-Chair of the Caucus.

Throughout the day advocates will also meet with their legislators, drawing attention to these priority issues:

Outpatient Mental Health Services: The coalition supports Mental Health 2020 and urges the Legislature to restore mental health reform grant funding for the state’s 26 Community Mental Health Centers so they can provide the important array of services required to serve Kansans with mental illness, including the specialized services important to children and families. Legislation to improve workforce training and increase the number of clinical professionals should be supported. The Legislature must restore the four percent cuts to Medicaid reimbursement and improve the overall KanCare program to improve timely eligibility approval, incentivize important community based treatment through new reimbursement codes, and reduce burdensome administrative requirements.

Inpatient Psychiatric Services – State Hospitals Crisis: The Coalition recommends the Kansas Legislature fully fund high-quality psychiatric inpatient services to meet the needs of all Kansans who require this care. The current moratorium on admissions at Osawatomie State Hospital is placing people and communities at risk. Specifically, the Legislature should: 1) Restore the 206 beds at Osawatomie State Hospital and end the moratorium on admissions, 2) Pursue re-certification as soon as possible, 3) Provide ongoing funding and support to replicate throughout the state the crisis stabilization services established recently at the former Rainbow Mental Health Facility serving Wyandotte and Johnson Counties and fund them into the future, 4) Empower the Kansas Department on Aging and Disability Services to produce a long-term plan to implement the recommendations of the Adult Continuum of Care Committee, and 5) Provide for continued public/ private partnerships for local psychiatric inpatient beds to alleviate the growing demand for state psychiatric hospital beds. The Coalition does not currently support the RFP to privatize Osawatomie State Hospital because of the lack of information regarding the current proposal.

Medicaid Medication and “Step Therapy”: The Kansas Legislature should protect patient access to mental health medications in the Medicaid program by requiring transparent, effective and research-informed prior authorization policy development by the Mental Health Medication Advisory Committee and careful oversight by the Kansas Dept. of Health and Environment over the implementation by managed care organizations. There should be no step therapy for mental health medications.

Expand Medicaid: The Coalition supports the expansion of KanCare, a move that would make the state’s Medicaid plan eligible to adults with an income at or below 138% of federal poverty guidelines. The federal government will pay between 90% and 95% of the costs. Kansans have difficulty accessing important behavioral health programs in many areas of the state. Expanding Medicaid is one of the best options available to close some of the gaps in our behavioral health continuum of care. Inpatient beds, transition programs, and community based crisis centers struggle to sustain services for a largely uninsured population. These programs also face a workforce shortage. The Bridge to a Healthy Kansas plan expands the number of Kansans with access to quality healthcare, and gives our state a greater share of federal funding to support the programs that provide the care.

Children and Families: The Kansas Legislature should support in its budget services for ALL children who need health, mental health, and substance use treatment. Whether it is inpatient or outpatient, Medicaid or private pay, parents must be able to access the services they need at times and locations that work for families. This is imperative in order to keep children at home and in school, which reduces the need for expensive out-of-home placements – but most importantly, keeps families together while improving the opportunity for growing up healthy. When the adults in the family are able to access housing and employment as well as health care and substance use treatment needs, children are less likely to need long term interventions.

Mental Health and Criminal Justice: The Kansas Legislature must adopt public policy that focuses on: (1) Mental health diversion programs that connect youth and adults with serious mental illness with treatment resources that keep them out of the criminal justice system, including a long-term commitment to Juvenile Justice System Reform passed in 2016; (2) Therapeutic care for offenders who are living with mental illness; and (3) Effective discharge planning to ensure that individuals with serious mental illnesses receive community-based services upon their release.

Sue Lewis is president of the Kansas Mental Health Coalition and may be reached at (913) 244-7585 or [email protected].

The Kansas Mental Health Coalition (KMHC) is a collaborative organization of numerous non-profit organizations, agencies and individuals representing individuals with mental illness or lived experience, families, and providers dedicated to improving the lives of Kansans with mental illness.

 

Fire response: Kan. House passes sales tax exemption for fencing supplies

photo courtesy office of Senator Pat Roberts

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas House unanimously passed a sales tax exemption for supplies and services to repair or construct fencing for agricultural land.

The bill passed Tuesday by the House is in response to fires that burned hundreds of thousands of acres in Kansas last week. The fires destroyed miles of fencing on ranches and farms, mostly in Comanche and Clark counties.

The Wichita Eagle reports (https://bit.ly/2nngeYn ) the legislation exempts from sales tax goods and services purchased to help repair or rebuild fencing.

The House gave the bill early and final approval Tuesday. It now heads to the Senate.

The Legislature passed a similar tax exemption last year after fires in Comanche and Barber counties.

The Kansas Department of Revenue estimates the sales tax exemption would cost the state about $4.6 million.

Man charged in woman’s death near Emporia State campus

Uk -photo Lyon Co. Sherif

EMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — A 30-year-old man is jailed on $500,000 bond after being accused in last week’s shooting death of a woman in Emporia.

The Emporia Gazette reports that Lyon County prosecutors charged Sony Uk on Tuesday with first-degree murder.

During a brief court appearance Tuesday, a judge scheduled Uk to appear for a preliminary hearing April 12.

Authorities allege that Uk killed 38-year-old Mahogany Brooks last Thursday in an apartment building near Emporia State University.

A message left Tuesday with Uk’s attorney, Stephen Atherton, was not immediately returned.

State sues 3 for submitting false claims to Kansas Lottery

Eddie Tipton- photo Polk County

TOPEKA – Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt has filed suit against three individuals accused of submitting false or fraudulent claims for payment to the Kansas Lottery in the form of rigged, winning lottery tickets, according to a media release.

In a lawsuit filed last month, Schmidt asked the Shawnee County District Court to order Eddie Raymond Tipton, Amy Demoney and Christopher McCoulskey to repay a total of about $44,000 they received from redeeming lottery tickets that “won” as the result of Tipton’s manipulation of number-generating software through the multi-state lottery. Tipton, a former computer-security official with the Multi-State Lottery Association, also faces criminal charges in Iowa related to his alleged manipulation of multi-state lottery software. The Kansas lawsuit was served on the defendants last week.

In the lawsuit, Schmidt alleges that in December 2010, Tipton purchased two lottery tickets from gas stations in Overland Park and Emporia, which he then gave to Demoney and McCoulskey to present for payment. Those tickets, the lawsuit alleges, had been rigged to win by Tipton’s software manipulation at the multi-state lottery. In February and June of 2011, Demoney and McCoulskey submitted the tickets to the Kansas Lottery, and were paid a total of $44,008 for the “winning” tickets. They then gave a portion of the proceeds to Tipton.

In addition to seeking repayment of the moneys paid for the rigged winning tickets, the lawsuit asks the court to impose civil penalties for violations of the Kansas False Claims Act.

Neither Tipton nor the Multi-State Lottery Association had direct access to the Kansas Lottery’s internal gaming system. The Kansas Lottery has conducted an internal analysis and investigation into whether Tipton’s activities otherwise affected the Kansas Lottery or its players. Those investigations revealed no indications that Tipton affected the Lottery’s internal systems, security of its games, or manipulated any internal drawings performed by the Kansas Lottery.

In 2009, the Kansas Legislature enacted the Kansas False Claims Act, giving the attorney general authority to file suit against individuals or entities that submit false or fraudulent claims for payment to a state agency or local government. As a member of the Kansas Senate at the time, Schmidt was one of the original proponents of creating a false claims act in Kansas.

Kansas court hears convicted killer’s child porn appeal

Jason Hachmeister- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is weighing an imprisoned convicted killer’s claims that investigators illegally seized his computer, leading to an additional prison term for child pornography.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that an attorney for Jason Hachmeister told the state’s high court Tuesday that the seizure of his client’s computer during the homicide investigation defied common sense.

Hachmeister was sentenced in 2015 to life in prison with no possibility of parole for 50 years in the 2011 killing of 58-year-old Sheila Hachmeister, who was stabbed and strangled.

That sentence was to run simultaneously to the seven-year prison he got for convictions of 105 counts of possession of child porn.

A Shawnee County prosecutor argued Tuesday that the confiscation of the computer and ensuing searches of it were handled appropriately.

Sheriff: Kansas man jailed after 100 mile-per-hour chase

Gantenbein,Adam Paul

SALINE COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a suspect after a Tuesday morning high-speed chase.

Just before 1:30 a.m., a deputy pulled over a 2013 GMC Sierra for improper driving left of center in the 2200 block of Kansas140 Highway, according to Saline County Sheriff Roger Soldan

When the Deputy attempted to approach the vehicle, the suspect fled at a high rate of speed.

The deputy pursued the suspect at speeds of 100-miles-per-hour and turned south on Burma Road

The suspect, identified as Adam Gantenbein, 30, Abilene, eventually pulled over as he approached Smolan Road.

Gantenbein was booked into the Saline County jail for driving under the influence, flee and elude and speeding.

Man sentenced for shooting death of Kansas police detective

Ayers-photo Wyandotte County

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A man who admitted killing a Kansas police detective has been sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Curtis Ayers was sentenced Tuesday in the May 9 shooting death of Detective Brad Lancaster during a confrontation near the Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas.

Prosecutors agreed not to seek the death penalty when the 29-year-old Ayers pleaded guilty in January to capital murder.

Ayers didn’t comment before he was sentenced.

He also was sentenced for nine other felonies, including burglary, robbery, battery, kidnapping, assault and weapons counts, all committed after Lancaster was shot.

He was arrested in Kansas City, Missouri, after he was shot by a police officer while allegedly trying to steal a woman’s car.

Ayers still faces charges in Jackson and Leavenworth counties.

KHP: Teen distracted by cell phone rolls Buick into ditch

BUTLER COUNTY – A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just after 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in Butler County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Buick LeSabre driven by Elija Hankins, 19, Wichita, was westbound on Kansas 254 just east of Butler Road. The driver was distracted on a cell phone.

The Buick glanced off the back of a 2011 Toyota Tacoma driven by Bernard Dette, 80, Rose Hill.

The driver overcorrected and the Buick rolled into the ditch.

Hankins was transported to Wesley Medical Center.

A passenger in the Buick Kaylin Brown, 19, Towanda, was possibly injured but not transported.

Dette was not injured.

Hankins was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

UPDATE: Kan. Town Hall Crowd Gives Jenkins An Earful On Health Reform

By JIM MCLEAN 

U.S. Rep. Lynn Jenkins speaks to a crowd Monday at the Dole Institute of Politics at the University of Kansas.
JIM MCLEAN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Kansas 2nd District Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins was jeered Monday at a town hall meeting in Lawrence for defending President Donald Trump and the Republican plan to replace the Affordable Care Act.

Jenkins, a five-term Republican who has announced that she won’t run for re-election in 2018, maintained a tight smile throughout the raucous meeting at the Dole Institute of Politics on the University of Kansas campus. The crowd, estimated around 350 people, regularly interrupted her with boos and shouts of “that’s not true” as she attempted to defend the American Health Care Act, the ACA replacement bill backed by Trump and GOP congressional leaders.

It was clear from the outset that Jenkins was in for a rough afternoon. The crowd waved red signs that read “disagree” as she mounted her opening defense of the GOP replacement legislation.

“The intent is to provide transition rules so that no one that has health care is thrown off their health care and folks that don’t have coverage are able to get coverage,” Jenkins said.

As she was speaking, members of the crowd were searching their cell phones for a just-released Congressional Budget Office report that estimated the Republican bill would increase the number of uninsured Americans by 14 million in the first year and by 24 million over 10 years.

Read the CBO cost estimate of the American Health Care Act. 

When Jenkins questioned the accuracy of the report, Chris Johnston of Ottawa confronted her for echoing the talking points being used by White House officials and Republican congressional leaders.

“I want to hear you and every other person tell the truth about the Congressional Budget Office,” Johnston said.

In response, Jenkins pivoted to a criticism of the ACA, saying that it failed to live up to promises made by President Barack Obama and its supporters.

“From the very beginning we were sold some lies,” Jenkins said to an escalating chorus of boos. “The lie of the year was, ‘If you liked what you had, you could keep it,’ and that was proven not to be the truth.”

Rising premiums and the diminishing number of insurance companies willing to offer plans in the ACA marketplace are proof that the health reform law commonly known as Obamacare isn’t working, Jenkins said.

Access To Insurance

Several people in the audience challenged that assertion by talking about the importance of their ACA coverage and criticizing the decision by Gov. Sam Brownback to reject Medicaid expansion.

Janella Williams said she wouldn’t have been able to overcome her health problems, start a small business and become “a contributing member of society” without the coverage she was able to purchase in the ACA marketplace despite her pre-existing conditions.

“I have a medical condition that I’ve had since 1995, when I was 29 years old, and if I don’t get treatments every seven weeks, I will lose the use of my left hand, my left side and my right foot,” Williams said.

Jenkins, like fellow Republicans, including Kansas 1st District Congressman Roger Marshall, said restoring state-based high-risk pools would ensure that people with pre-existing conditions could continue to get coverage.

However, Jean Hall, a University of Kansas professor who has written extensively about high-risk pools for several national health policy organizations, said they didn’t work when 35 states, including Kansas and Missouri, operated them prior to the ACA.

“What we found in Kansas was that premiums were very high and coverage was very limited,” Hall said. “So, you have people with chronic conditions who don’t have access to very comprehensive care.”

Unconventional Style

While health care dominated the discussion, it wasn’t the only point of contention. Several people also expressed anger at Trump for making false claims, attacking the media and being unwilling to criticize Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“Trump’s love affair with Putin and Russia is treasonous in my opinion,” said Chad Smith of Lawrence, while asking Jenkins to “put country ahead of politics” by supporting the creation of a bipartisan commission to investigate a series of allegations about Russian involvement in the presidential election.

Jenkins said she would support the establishment of an independent commission, but only if investigations by the House and Senate intelligence committees determined the need for one.

“If they (the committees) think we need to do it, then we need to do it,” Jenkins said, adding that she agreed that “Russia is a problem” and “Putin is a thug.”

More generally, Jenkins defended Trump. She said while he wasn’t her pick for the GOP nomination and that she doesn’t “agree with his early-morning tweeting,” his unconventional style is what appealed to many voters, including a majority in the congressional district that she represents.

“I guess I’m not particularly concerned if we get results, if we get the economy moving, people back to work, fix the health care system,” she said before getting drowned out by boos.

Pam Ensley, a retired teacher from Topeka, was among the last to speak. She criticized Jenkins for sticking to political talking points and not providing detailed answers.

“So, if you have any sway with Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell, who think they know better than we do, tell them people in Kansas are damn mad,” Ensley said to cheers.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of  kcur.org, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Police: Wanted Kan. suspect pulled fake handgun on officer

Long

SALINE COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating a wanted man on assault charges against a police officer.

Just before 1:30p.m. Monday, a Salina police officer recognized Richard Long walking in the 900 Block of Highland Avenue in Salina, according to Police Captain Paul Forrester.

The officer confronted Long who ran and then pulled a handgun on the officer.

After tackling the suspect, it was determined that the handgun was fake.

Long will now face additional aggravated assault charges, according to Forrester.

Long has previous convictions for aggravated burglary, criminal damage to property and unlawful manufacture of controlled substances, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

OSHA investigating after worker killed at Kansas tire plant

Fatal accident at the Goodyear Plant in Topeka early Tuesday morning-photo courtesy WIBW TV

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Federal workplace safety officials will investigate a contractor’s death at a Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. plant in Topeka.

Officials identified the victim of the Tuesday morning incident as 61-year-old James Lay Jr., a worker for Kansas Personnel Services Inc.

Goodyear and Kansas Personnel Services did not immediately offer details about circumstances involving Lay’s death.

Scott Allen, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said investigators with that agency were headed to the plant later Tuesday.

Kansas lawmakers advance budget plan to avoid school cuts

Senator Carolyn McGinn chairs the Ways and Means Committee

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas legislators are advancing a new budget-balancing proposal to allow the state to pay its bills through June without cutting public school spending.

The Senate Ways and Means Committee unanimously endorsed a bill Tuesday that would temporarily short state contributions to public employee pensions and use internal government borrowing to get through June. The full Senate expects to debate the plan Thursday.

The state is facing a projected shortfall of $281 million in its budget for the current fiscal year ending June 30. It faces total budget gaps of more than $1 billion through June 2019.

The plan approved by the committee Tuesday assumes that lawmakers will increase taxes to raise $763 million over two years, starting in July. But new revenue would not flow before July.

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