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Truck driver sentenced for DUI crash that killed Kansas woman

Shaw-photo Platte Co.

PLATTE CITY, Mo. (AP) — A truck driver from Springfield was sentenced to four years in prison after pleading guilty in a crash that killed a Kansas City, Kansas, woman.

Forty-one-year-old Adam Shaw pleaded guilty Friday to involuntary manslaughter in the October 2013 death of 49-year-old Catherine Nienaber.

The four-year prison term was part of his plea agreement.

Prosecutors said Shaw’s tractor-trailer truck struck the minivan Neinaber was in on Missouri 45 in southern Platte County.

Shaw also pleaded guilty to two counts of assault related to injuries suffered by Neinaber’s son and the driver of another vehicle.

Authorities say Shaw was speeding and crossed the center line, hitting Neinaber’s vehicle. His blood alcohol reading was .116, nearly three times the .04 limit for commercial truck drivers.

Americans on Presidents Day: Admiration, protests mark holiday

JULIE WALKER, Associated Press

Thousands of demonstrators across the U.S. have turned out to challenge Donald Trump in a Presidents’ Day protest dubbed Not My President’s Day.

The numbers weren’t close to the million-plus who thronged the streets following Trump’s inauguration a month earlier, but the message on Monday was similar.

Thousands of flag-waving protesters lined up outside Central Park in Manhattan.

In Chicago, several hundred rallied across the river from the Trump Tower, shouting “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Donald Trump has got to go.”

More than 100 demonstrated in Washington, D.C. Dozens gathered around the fountain in Dupont Circle chanting “Dump Trump” and “Love, not hate: That’s what makes America great.”

Dozens marched through midtown Atlanta for a rally named with a Georgia flavor: “ImPEACH NOW! (Not My) President’s Day March.”

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The holiday began as a celebration of George Washington’s birthday, Feb. 22, and its official name remains Washington’s Birthday.

Throughout the 19th century, communities celebrated with parades and fireworks, said Evan Phifer, a research historian at the White House Historical Association. In the late 1800s, Feb. 22 became a federal holiday.

The holiday was moved to the third Monday in February in 1971, creating a three-day weekend for many workers.

“There was fear when the holiday was moved to the third Monday that it would lose the distinction of Washington’s birthday, and people would forget his legacy,” Phifer said.

To some extent, that has happened. Abraham Lincoln’s birthday is Feb. 12, and many people now associate both presidents with the holiday. It has also become a retail holiday, where shoppers can get deals on cars, furniture and other goods during Presidents Day sales.

The Associated Press spoke with people around the country about their ideas about Presidents Day, the presidency and how it is changing.

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Jack Warren is executive director of the Society of the Cincinnati, the nation’s oldest patriotic organization, founded in 1783. George Washington was the first president general of the group.

He calls the idea of Presidents Day “wrongheaded” and said referring to Washington’s Birthday as Presidents Day is a reflection of how out of touch we are with our revolutionary origins.

“The revolution George Washington led created the first great republic since antiquity. It articulated ideals of universal liberty, natural rights and equality that have shaped the entire history of our country and have reached beyond it,” he said.

“We don’t need a holiday to commemorate the presidency. We do need one to commemorate our greatest national leader.”

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Curt Viebranz is president and CEO of George Washington’s Virginia estate, Mount Vernon. He expects between 10,000 and 15,000 people to visit on Monday.

“We wouldn’t have a country without him,” he said. “We wouldn’t have a republic.”

Many of the formal traditions of the presidency that survive today were established by Washington, he said, such as the open-air inauguration. But recent presidents are also different.

“He’s not a man who would have been tweeting, for sure. It’s not going to happen,” he said.

These days, people have a more informal connection to the institution: “It’s sort of the end of leadership as we know it, where the leader sets himself apart.”

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Juathawala Harris, 67, of Baltimore, was on a trip to Dallas that included a visit to the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, which is dedicated to telling the story of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

Harris, who works as a manager for a dialysis unit, said Presidents Day meant more to her in the past.

“We’ve lived through presidencies, and they have always been men that we look up to. That is not so for me now,” said Harris, who voted for Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

“I am fearful now, and I’ve never been fearful in all of my years,” she said, adding that she is scared the country may be moving toward a war.

Presidents Day, she said, now feels tarnished.

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Robin Allweiss, a 56-year-old attorney from Tampa, Florida, considers herself a patriot and takes Presidents Day seriously — especially so this year. She is a Trump supporter and thinks he’s vastly different than any other president in the country’s history.

“He relates to us. He gives us a feeling that he could be our father, our brother, he could be our cousin or our best friend, and that’s what makes him so different. He doesn’t care what anybody thinks. What he wants to do is make America great again,” she said.

“Donald Trump cares about us. And no other president in the history of the United States, or even any foreign leader, has cared about his country as much as Donald Trump.”

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Barbara Perry, presidential studies director at the nonpartisan Miller Center at the University of Virginia, has been fascinated by presidents since she was 4 years old and her mother took her to see John F. Kennedy speak one month before he was elected.

Children as young as 6 have a sense of the president — who he is and what he does — long before they understand Congress or the judiciary, she said, and teaching children about the president is an important way to help them understand our government.

“I still have somewhat of a childlike vision of the presidency,” she said. “I know my faith is not misplaced. I know we have had heroic presidents. Even the ones who were not great still were, by and large, great people.”

The presidency began to demystify under Franklin Roosevelt, who created personal connections with Americans through his radio “fireside chats” in the depths of the Great Depression, she said. That familiarity eventually “ended up breeding contempt, I think, for normal presidents, or traditional presidents.”

“In the end, this has led to a Donald Trump, a populist demagogue in the White House,” she said. “The Trump presidency, based on the baser instincts of people, is painful to me. It feels like a desecration.”

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Deen Brown, 94, of Oakdale, Connecticut, conducted submarine war patrols for the Navy during World War II.

Brown said he has early memories of conversations in his home about Herbert Hoover, president from 1929 to 1933.

“What is most impressive to me, and I still believe this firmly today, is the awe of the momentous decisions that they’re called on to make. It is just beyond belief. And this was true for President Roosevelt and also for President Harry Truman, and it may be coming true today,” he said. “And very often, they don’t get to choose between right and wrong. That’s too simple. … They must choose one of the wrongs and maybe the one that’s least wrong.”

President Donald Trump has already changed the way people see the presidency, he said, because he’s a businessman who is being more decisive than some of his predecessors.

“He certainly deserves the respect of the nation,” he said.

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Rhonda Bicknell, 39, who is in real estate investment, is based in Phoenix but spends most of the year traveling in a motor coach.

She said Presidents Day to her is “really a day to honor that person that actually does a pretty thankless job — not matter what party you are in.”

A Democrat who voted for Hillary Clinton, she said presidents she has admired include Barack Obama and John F. Kennedy.

She feels that President Donald Trump is “disgracing” the presidency.

“I don’t think that this president has much class, or integrity, or even intelligence, to be honest,” Bicknell said. “So I think he’s affected the presidency in a negative way, and I think that the rest of the world feels the same.”

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George Davenport, 23, works two jobs — one as a dishwasher and the other as a street sign-holding Statue of Liberty for a tax preparation service in St. Petersburg, Florida. He has two toddlers, and affordable education is his biggest concern for the future.

Presidents Day doesn’t mean much to him.

“It’s really just another day where I work, and a day off for kids,” he said.

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Wendy Nelson, 59, a hairdresser in Helena, Montana, expects a busy day on Presidents Day, as legislators and government workers come in for haircuts and other services. “They have that day off. I don’t,” she said.

“Presidents Day means a celebration of leadership that we have in this country,” Nelson said. “We have independence, and we pick those people.”

On Election Day, she picked Donald Trump. “I wanted to see change. At first I thought he was kind of a scary guy. But the more I listened to him, the more I realized he’s very independent, too. And that’s what this country’s about.”

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Helen Heenan, 69, was visiting The President’s House on Wednesday. It’s a permanent installation on the footprint of the home and executive mansion of Presidents George Washington and John Adams when Philadelphia was the capital.

Heenan, an American citizen and retired IT worker who lives in London, said Presidents Day is a reminder “that the government is not just the president. It’s the judiciary and it’s the legislature,” she said. “I think that is the lifeblood of the American system and constitution, and the great presidents we have will respect that.”

Heenan, who voted for Hillary Clinton, said she thinks President Donald Trump is testing the idea of the presidency “to the limits” but a positive outcome is that his actions are making people think about the role of the president.

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George Cleveland, 64, of Tamworth, New Hampshire, was born into politics; his grandfather was President Grover Cleveland, who was elected in 1884 and 1892.

He will be spending Presidents Day taking a friend to the hospital to have shoulder surgery.

“What does Presidents Day mean to me? Well, it’s a nice idea to think that we’d all kind of take a day and review American history and the high points and the low points and what some of the presidents did and perhaps didn’t do,” he said. “I’m afraid we don’t do that. Presidents Day right now seems to be really more of a holiday.”

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Nareg Fradjian, 32, a photographer who lives in Pasadena, California, was among the 3,000 people to become a U.S. citizen during a Los Angeles ceremony on Wednesday. Frandjian is from Armenia and has been in the U.S. for the past 16 years.

“Any president, they work super hard. It’s either four or eight years. They live and breathe their job every single day,” said Fradjian.

He said he would have voted for Trump if he had gotten his citizenship in time.

“It’s awesome to have that one designated day just to say ‘Thank you.’ This year, morale is down. We don’t know where we are as a country. It’s crazy,” he said. “Presidents Day is going to be another day for people to do marches, just say a lot of negative things about the current president.”

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Felicia Paul, who lives on the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana, voted for Hillary Clinton.

“My fears and my hopes as a Native person is that he thinks about the Native people, our treaty rights,” Paul said.

What does the holiday mean to her?

“As a Native American, I really don’t call it a Presidents Day holiday,” she said. “I just think of it as an all-chief’s day.”

UPDATE: Rescue teams search Kansas lake for missing teen

google image

BALDWIN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say efforts to find a 17-year-old boy who has been missing since a boating accident Saturday have gone from a rescue to a recovery effort.

The teenager was on a boat that capsized on the Douglas County Lake late Saturday. Another 17-year-old boy on the boat was able to surface and swim to campers, who called 911.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office says a boat was found Monday afternoon but authorities haven’t determined if it is the boat the teenagers were on.

Douglas County underwater divers and the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks are helping with the search.

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LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are searching for a 17-year-old who was on a boat that capsized at the Douglas County Lake.

The Douglas County Sheriff’s office says a second 17-year-old boy in the boat resurfaced and was able to make it to shore.

The search began Saturday evening and stretched throughout Sunday until it was too dark. Searchers were back in the water early Monday.

Police work to identify suspect in Barton Co. armed robbery

Armed robbery suspect-photo courtesy Great Bend Police

BARTON COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Barton County are investigating an armed robbery and asking for help to identify a suspect.

Just before 9:30p.m. on Saturday, police were dispatched to the Subway at 2732 10th Street in Great Bend after report of a robbery.

Employees told officers a suspect entered the store wearing a black ski mask, blue jacket, and dark pants. He pointed a semi-automatic handgun at the employees and demanded money from the cash register.

After receiving the money, he left the store in an unknown direction.
The suspect is likely a white male, approximately six feet tall, weighing 200 to 240 pounds. He may have white facial hair.

Anyone with any information about this case is asked to contact the Great Bend Police Department at (620) 793-4120 or Crimestoppers at (620) 792-1300.

OSHA working with Kan. firm; 3 hospitalized following accident

RENO COUNTY – The Occupational Safety and Health Administration will not take action against a Reno County steel tank manufacturing firm following a November accident, according to OSHA officials in Wichita.

Three employees including Peter Atha, 34; Josh Hull, 28, both of Hutchinson and Shane Oakley, 44 Wichita, were injured when a pressurized water tank exploded at Wifco Steel 8003 North Medora Road northeast of Hutchinson.

Wifco is part of OSHA’s Sharp program which allowed the company a self-reporting safety consultation with OSHA to make sure that the problem was fixed.

OSHA’s On-site Consultation Program offers safety and occupational health advice to small and medium-sized businesses, with priority given to high-hazard worksites. The on-site Consultation services are separate from enforcement and do not result in penalties or citations.

Atha sustained a head injury when the metal plate struck him. EMS transported him to Wesley Medical Center for treatment of critical injuries.

Co-workers transported Oakley and Hull to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center for treatment.

Wifco is a a steel fabrication supplier, storage tank manufacturing firm, according to the company web site.

First democrat enters race for Kansas governor

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Former Wichita Mayor Carl Brewer is entering the race to be the next governor of Kansas.

Brewer, a Democrat, announced his candidacy Monday.  Watch his announcement here.

The 59-year-old Brewer said in a news release that he has the experience and passion to “get the State of Kansas back on track.”

Brewer was Wichita mayor from 2007 to 2015 and also served six years as a city councilman. Since leaving the mayor’s office, he has been in government relations at Spirit AeroSystems.

Brewer pledged to visit every corner of the state. He says he offers new leadership that will restore confidence in state government.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback, who is in his second term, cannot seek re-election because of term limits.

Fate of Kansas tax increase bill up to Brownback

By STEPHEN KORANDA

The Kansas Senate voted 22-18 Friday to send a tax increase bill to Gov. Sam Brownback.
STEPHEN KORANDA

The Kansas Senate on Friday approved a bill that would roll back much of Gov. Sam Brownback’s signature tax policy to help balance future state budgets.

The 22-18 Senate vote sent the plan to the governor’s desk, where it could face a veto.

The bill, approved Thursday by the House, would roll back most of the 2012 tax cuts by increasing income tax rates, adding a third income tax bracket and reinstating income taxes on more than 300,000 business owners. It would bring in more than $1 billion in the next two years.

During debate Friday, Senate Vice President Jeff Longbine said the bill isn’t perfect. However, he supported the plan because it helps balance the budget without making cuts to funding for schools and higher education.

“For those that only want what they want, it’s going to be a difficult session,” said Longbine, an Emporia Republican. “For those that are willing to take something that’s not exactly what they wanted, this is our best option.”

Critics of the plan have blasted it, calling it the largest tax increase in state history. That’s the same criticism Democrats used when arguing against a tax increase that lawmakers approved in 2015 to end the session.

Sen. Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican, did not mince words during the Senate debate. He called the tax increase “a piece of garbage” that will hurt working Kansans.

“This fleeces the working poor,” Masterson said. “We’re trying to make the government’s decision easy and make it harder on the people.”

Senate President Susan Wagle said legislators should address spending issues before tax increases.

“The way we should approach a deficit is the way families approach an unanticipated deficit. You cut spending and then you find a way to get an extra job and bring in some more income,” said Wagle, a Wichita Republican.

However, Wagle said many lawmakers don’t want to make cuts and the vote gave them a chance to weigh in on the plan.

Legislative staff provided a comparison of past, current and future tax rates under the bill.- Click to ENLARGE

Sen. Tom Holland, a Baldwin City Democrat, voted against the bill because he thinks it doesn’t raise enough revenue to balance the budget, but he pushed back against the idea of focusing on spending cuts.

“They’ve had four years to get spending under control,” he said. “How is it supposed to magically happen now if they didn’t have the numbers before to make it happen?”

Sen. Anthony Hensley said he also would have preferred a bill that raised more revenue, but he voted to send the tax plan to the governor.

“Because it is his economic policies that put us in this place that we are today, and we should give him the opportunity to see this bill on his desk,” said Hensley, a Topeka Democrat.

Brownback roundly criticized the bill earlier this week but did not specifically say whether he’d veto it.

“I am opposed to broad-based rate increases on income taxes. I won’t sign that,” the governor said Wednesday. “It’s going against the trend of everywhere in the country, if not in the world.”

Under Kansas law, Brownback has 10 days to consider the bill after it reaches his desk. If he takes no action, the plan will become law without his signature.

If Brownback vetoes the bill, it seems unlikely there would be enough votes for the two-thirds majority needed to override that veto. The House tally was seven votes shy of the 84 needed to override. It could be significantly harder to get the 27 needed votes in the Senate.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for KPR a partner in kcur.org‘s Kansas News Service.

Refugee populations drawing doctors to rural Kansas

Siena Healing Arts building at St. Catherine Hospital in Garden City-google image

GARDEN CITY, Kan. (AP) — Somali refugees who have settled in a Kansas meatpacking town are the cornerstone of an innovative recruiting effort to entice new doctors to rural hospitals.

It’s an effort that grew out of the realization that many millennials graduating from medical schools have a burning passion for international humanitarian work.

Hospitals that are involved in the effort are encouraging doctors to work with immigrant populations and learn the language and culture before heading overseas. They also offer generous time off for medical trips abroad.

Twenty-five Kansas doctors have joined a loose network of physicians working across western Kansas. The group is working to solidify that arrangement by forming a nonprofit group.

Their efforts come amid President Donald Trump’s attempts to restrict the influx of refugees.

Prayer service held as Hesston marks one year since tragedy

HARVEY COUNTY – Residents in Harvey County gathered at a prayer service in Hesston on Sunday evening. They were there to remember those involved in last year’s shooting at Excel Industries.

The event at Hesston High School marked the start of what may be a difficult week for the small town.

Saturday February 25, is the one year anniversary of the tragedy. A gunman attacked the Excel Industries plant that day.

Four people including the gunman were killed and 14 others were injured.

Sheriff: 2 Kansas men hospitalized; crash under investigation

First responders on the scene of Sunday's accident
First responders on the scene of Sunday’s accident

RENO COUNTY – Two Kansas men were injured in an accident just after 4:30p.m. on Sunday in Reno County.

The Reno County Sheriff’s Department reported a Dodge truck driven by Ronald Ediger, 57, rural Hutchinson, was northbound on Buhler Road at 30th Avenue.

The truck collided with an eastbound Pontiac Grand Prix driven by Joseph Thayer, 36, Hutchinson, that failed to stop at the stop sign. The impact of the crash caused the truck to enter the northeast ditch and roll.

Thayer and a passenger David Heim, 40, rural Buhler were transported to Hutchinson Regional Medical Center. Ediger was not injured.

The occupants of the Grand Prix were not wearing seat belts, according to the Reno County Sheriff’s Department.

The accident remains under investigation.

Kan. sheriff, mother investigated for possible voter fraud

Sheriff Ken McGovern-photo Douglas Co.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The Douglas County Sheriff is being investigated for helping his mother obtain a ballot to vote even though she may live in another county, but his actions may not violate Kansas law.

The Lawrence Journal-World reportsthe Kansas Secretary of State’s office is looking into Sheriff Ken McGovern’s actions, but this might be allowed under the state’s broad definition of residency.

Bryan Caskey is director of elections for the Kansas Secretary of State’s office. He says the law allows someone to vote in a county they don’t live in as long as they intend to return to that area.

More than a year before last year’s primary election, Lois McGovern sold her house in Lawrence. It appears that she is living in a nursing home in Johnson County.

UPDATE: 4th Kansas child dies after head-on semi crash

FORD COUNTY – A fourth child has died from injuries in an accident just after 8p.m. on Saturday in Ford County. A Kansas woman and three other children died Saturday night.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Freightliner semi driven by Gregory A. Botwinik,, 41, Osawatomie, was eastbound on U.S. 50 four miles south of Spearville.

The semi went into the left passing lane to pass a Volvo semi.

The Freightliner semi struck a 2002 Chrysler minivan driven by Ankara Romero, 29, Dodge City, head-on.

Romero and a passengers Edward Reynaga, 12; Emily Reynaga, 7; Edwin Reynaga, 1, all of Dodge City were transported to Western Plains Medical Center in Dodge City where they died.

Another child in the van 5-year-old Evelyn Reynaga of Dodge City was transported to Western Plains Medical Center and transferred to a hospital in Wichita. She died on Sunday, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.

Botwinik was also transported to Western Plains Medical Center. The driver of the Volvo semi from Indiana was not injured.

Seat belt use by occupants of the van was unknown, according to the KHP.

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FORD COUNTY – A woman and three children died in an accident just after 8 p.m. on Saturday in Ford County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2011 Freightliner semi driven by Gregory A. Botwinik,, 41, Osawatomie, was eastbound on U.S. 50 four miles south of Spearville.

The semi went into the left passing lane to pass a Volvo semi.

The Freightliner semi struck a 2002 Chrysler minivan driven by Ankara Romero, 29, Dodge City, head-on.

Romero and a passengers Edward Reynaga, 12; Emily Reynaga, 7; Edwin Reynaga, 1, all of Dodge City were transported to Western Plains Medical Center in Dodge City where they died.

Another child in the van 5-year-old Evelyn Reynaga of Dodge City was transported to Western Plains Medical Center and transferred to a hospital in Wichita.

Botwinik was also transported to Western Plains Medical Center. The driver of the Volvo semi from Indiana was not injured.

Seat belt use by occupants of the van was unknown, according to the KHP.

Recall: Dodge Chargers, Chrysler 300s for loose bolts

NEW YORK (AP) — Fiat Chrysler says it is recalling some Chrysler cars because driveshaft bolts can come loose on all-wheel drive models, increasing the risk of a crash.

The automaker says affected cars include 2014-2017 Dodge Charger and Chrysler 300 vehicles equipped with all-wheel drive. Chrysler says it will notify owners, and dealers will replace all eight front driveshaft bolts for the cars, free of charge.

The recall is expected to begin March 31. About 75,000 cars are affected in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.

There have been no reports nor accidents or injuries.

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