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Regents unlikely to suspend social media policy

khaz facebook button 20120228TOPEKA (AP) — The chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents says the board is unlikely to suspend a controversial new policy on social media use by university faculty and staff.

Chairman Fred Logan said Wednesday the policy likely would stay in place while a group of university representatives study its implications.

The regents received a resolution from faculty senate presidents at Kansas universities asking that the policy be suspended until the group completes its work.

The policy allows university administrators to discipline employees, including firing them, for improper use of social media. It was approved in December after a University of Kansas professor tweeted criticism of the National Rifle Association.

Opponents have argued the policy is too vague and restricts free speech rights of university staff and faculty.

One-year-old lion dies at Great Bend Zoo

GREAT BEND — The city of Great Bend announced in a press release this week that a year-old lion at the city zoo has died.

Sakima, a lioness recently acquired from a Pennsylvania zoo, underwent a minor surgical procedure Wednesday. After the surgery, the lion regained consciousness and appeared to be recovering before dying suddenly.

A necropsy was performed and several abnormalities unrelated to the surgery were discovered. Tissue samples were sent to Kansas State University for analysis, the city said.

Sakima arrived from Pennsylvania with a male sibling, which the city said would be closely monitored for health problems.

Text of Brownback address: A Kansas Renaissance

2014 State of the State of Kansas Address
Delivered by Governor Sam Brownback
January 15, 2014

Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

Madame President, Members of the Legislature, the Cabinet, the Judiciary.

My Fellow Kansans,

Welcome.

As had been foretold and promised to us:  God is in Heaven, the Legislature is back and the crane is gone!

Brownback

The Capitol, like Kansas itself, is open for business.

So friends, welcome back.  Welcome back to the fellowship of this assembly.  Welcome back to this special place and welcome back to the work of building a better Kansas.

For there is work to do.

When we gathered here three years ago, we faced two big challenges:  the economy and the budget.

Kansas state government was flat broke.  We had begun the fiscal year with $876.05 in the bank.

The state couldn’t even pay its own bills on time.  Everyone from school districts to service vendors was suffering months of delays, because state government had no cash.

By January, the state budget was illegally in deficit.  Even more daunting, we faced a $500 million pending shortfall, and that was after taxes had been raised.

And even this dire situation understated the full scope of our challenge.  After decades of neglect, Kansas had the second most underfunded pension system in America.

A decade of higher taxes, more spending and bigger government failed to deliver prosperity.  In January 2011, fewer Kansans were working in the private sector than had been in January 2001.

All across Kansas, family budgets were hurting. No government can be more prosperous than its people for long.

The Government was not serving the people.  Unfortunately, it was the other way around.

So we had two big challenges—get people working again and restore fiscal discipline.

We took action, breaking from the failed policies of the past.

In consultation with some of the best minds in America, we developed an action plan.

We streamlined regulations, reformed workers’ compensation and went from the second highest tax burden in our region to the second lowest.

When we took office, we promised Kansans tax relief.  Tax rates for all working men and women in Kansas just went down again at the beginning of 2014. Congratulations are in order.
We stopped counting on government to create prosperity and put our faith in the people of Kansas.

And three years in, we are in a much better position.

Since December 2010, Kansas has added on average, more than a thousand private sector jobs every month and our unemployment rate has gone from 6.9 percent to 5.1 percent tied for the tenth lowest rate in the United States.

We’ve put cash in the bank, we’re paying our bills on time and we’ve balanced three budgets in a row.

And we’ve reversed a decades-long trend, as finally, the personal income of Kansas families is rising faster than government spending.

Simply put…the government is back in its proper place – serving the people.

Not only is Kansas Top 10 in employment, we are listed among the Top 10 best states in which to make a living and Top 10 for the lowest cost of living.

According to the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress, Kansas fourth graders are in one of the 10 best states for reading proficiency.

Mr. Speaker, it is for these reasons and more that I can report to you that the State of our State is strong and getting much stronger!

That’s good work…that’s very good work…but a state is more than its balance sheet.

The 2.9 million souls that call Kansas home cherish a way of life that honors family, values education and embraces positive change.

In fact, by the end of this decade, for the first time in our history, Kansas’ population will surpass three million people.

When that three millionth Kansan is born, what kind of state will we have built for her?

It has been my privilege to serve the people of Kansas as a Secretary, Congressman, Senator and Governor.

I have seen the majesty of this state and the wonder of its people.

They are amazing; infinite in their diversity and yet sharing basic values.

Kansans are decent. Kansans are honest. Kansans care about their fellow man, and they like it here.

If you ask them what kind of state they want to build for our three millionth Kansan, they’ll tell you.

One of the key pieces is education.

We Kansans love our schools and they are great schools.

Start with K-12

Kansas ranks fourth among all states in the percentage of our budget committed to education…more than 50 percent.

When we look at funding from all government sources, Kansas schools receive more than $12,500 per student.

For every classroom of 20 students, that’s a quarter million dollars in taxpayer spending.

A state that cares enough to make that kind of annual commitment also cares enough to see that that money is spent wisely, and the best decisions are usually made by those closest to the students.

So it’s worth noting that school districts across Kansas have made a priority of all-day Kindergarten, even while the state has funded only half.

It seems strange to me that the state counts all of the 12 and only half of the K.

Recently, the State Board of Education came forward with a bipartisan idea to achieve this goal—proposing an increase in the student count for kindergarten age students every year for the next five years.

This proposal is targeted.  It is reasonable.  It will benefit Kansas school kids.

And again, thanks to the growing economy and the work of this Legislature, it is affordable.

For the first time, we can ensure that every Kansas child has access to all-day kindergarten and we should do it now.

For districts who have already taken this step, increased student count will free up resources which can in turn be dedicated to other priorities that they have.

More money, more flexibility, more learning—all paid for out of a growing economy.

But that’s just the beginning.

In the past two years, we have implemented programs to increase the reading abilities of our children, a vital skill for success in school and in life

The first programs were in southeast Kansas where young at-risk students were given extra reading training after school and during the summer.  More than half of the students had significant improvement in their reading abilities.

Based on that success, we now have a Reading Roadmap Initiative for more than 40 schools across the state and are working with non-profit organizations that specialize in education and family engagement.

Our technical education programs are soaring since the State committed to paying for all tech ed courses taken by high school students.

We have seen a 75 percent increase in enrollment in just two years.

With these skills our students will find a path to progress through education and good jobs with good wages. They will form the foundation for their families and the Kansas economy.

The Jobs for America’s Graduates program reaches out to high school students at risk of falling through the cracks.  It helps them build the skills to make the best of their lives.

A Wichita JAG student who has spent most of his life in foster care, describes the program by saying: “JAG is not a program or a class.  JAG is family.”

I have witnessed the impact of the JAG program first hand.  One of our JAG leaders is Mike Munoz, who is working with students at Highland Park High School here in Topeka.

He has joined us this evening.  Mike is an inspiration to all his students and proof that one man can make a big difference in many lives.

Would you join me in thanking Mike for his great work?

Our Kansas universities are critical. We have been making strategic investments in areas of unique excellence and importance to the Kansas economy – and more are included in my budget proposal.

In fact, one of these investments is bearing fruit already.

Years of hard, bipartisan work at both the State and Federal level have paid off, and there is now no doubt that NBAF will be built, and Kansas will be the center of the global animal health industry for generations to come.

In my budget proposal, I will continue to support our universities, community and technical colleges and I am confident they will produce the next generation of Kansas leaders.

A growing economy, a responsible state government, a world class education—these are wonderful legacies for our three millionth Kansan.

But for all the good happening in our state, too many of our fellow Kansans are still struggling.

As we continue our climb from the troughs of the Great Recession, there are still too many Kansans actively looking for work who can’t find it, and others are working harder than ever and just can’t seem to get ahead.

Our challenge is to take this restored growth and fiscal responsibility and make its benefits real for families across our state—to build a state and an economy that works for everyone.

We know the path is through education, employment and family stability.

All we have done – and will continue to do – is done with the goal of building a broad prosperity for all Kansans.

Now if you’ll indulge a farm kid just a little bit, I hope our three millionth Kansan gets to grow up in rural Kansas like I did.

And there are reasons for optimism that she will.

Our Rural Opportunity Zones program is flourishing in a majority of our counties and there will be proposals this year to expand it to even more.

In fact, we now have a housing shortage in many of our rural communities.

In the budget, I will propose an additional $2 Million to address this shortage, focused on moderate income housing.

In addition to housing, rural communities need access to medical care.  My budget will include money for the Rural Bridging Program to bring doctors to rural Kansas.

Cutting edge opportunities in agriculture and animal health are being complimented by an energy Renaissance where every sector from oil to wind and biofuels approaches historic production levels.

But all of these industries, all of our lives, depend on our most precious natural resource—clean water.

If the three millionth Kansan is to stay and build a life here then we must leave her a state with access to our lifeblood, water.  And we are expending the liquid capital of our state.

Fortunately, strong bipartisan majorities of this Legislature took steps to extend the life of the Ogallala Aquifer and encourage best practices towards water usage statewide.

As many of you came into this building tonight, you saw the words of our greatest Kansan, Dwight Eisenhower.

Ike said, “The opportunist thinks of me and today. The statesman thinks of us and tomorrow.”

It’s no coincidence that much of the water infrastructure we’re spending through today was built in Ike’s time.  The fact is that from our reservoirs to our aquifers, we are relying on wise decisions made generations ago.

Those who come after us deserve that same statesmanship.

Throughout this year, people from across our state will gather to develop a comprehensive water strategy—a strategy to secure our water future for the next 50 years.

Without water…there is no future.  Please, as Legislators and citizens, involve yourself in this process.

Next, we owe our three millionth Kansan a safe state.

Last September, the Legislature came together in a bipartisan fashion—strengthening penalties for the most serious crimes in a historically efficient Special Session.

Mr. Speaker….Madam President…Leader Hensley…Leader Davis….    Well done.

This cooperation can serve as a model going forward as we complete the work on Hard 50 sentencing early in this session.

Now if you go just a little bit farther on your journey into this building, you’ll see another quote on the wall.

One from our Kansas Constitution, the one to which all public officers of this state swear an oath.

It reads,

“All political power is inherent in the people.”

That is a distinctly American idea.

In America there would be no kings and queens, no titles of nobility.  Ours is a system of self-government of, by and for the people.

Here, for the first time, a person’s station in life wouldn’t be principally a product of the station of their birth.

In Kansas, you could go as far as your talents, hard work and the good Lord took you.

That freedom, that sovereignty, is also part of what we owe our three millionth Kansan and all who come after her.

One of the ironies, though, of our age is that government has become omnipresent, yet the people have never felt more distant from it.

Too many decisions are made by unaccountable, opaque institutions.

Elected officials are sometimes complicit in this transference of power, because it removes them from accountability.

So let’s be clear.

On the number one item in the state budget – education – the Constitution empowers the Legislature—the people’s representatives—to fund our schools.

This is the people’s business, done by the people’s house through the wonderfully untidy– but open for all to see — business of appropriations.

Let us resolve that our schools remain open and are not closed by the courts or anyone else.

Prosperity, responsibility.

Education, opportunity.

Safety, natural bounty.

Freedom, sovereignty.

Reconciliation.

These are fine things to leave our three millionth Kansan.

But as I conclude tonight, please allow me to add one more.

We owe her our example.

We have with us tonight some wonderful examples of what it means to be a Kansan.

Kansas has a long and distinguished relationship with our nation’s military.

Tonight we recognize – and thank – two brave Ft. Riley soldiers wounded in service to our nation:  Please welcome Captain Adam Cowan and Captain Casey Wolfe.

In Kansas we honor our veterans. We remember their service with gratitude and are humbled by their commitment to this great nation.

Honored by their commitment and sacrifice, inspired by this place, let us dedicate ourselves anew to doing the people’s business.

And let us do so with a return to the virtues and character that allowed God to bless our founders.

Our state motto promises that the Kansas path is a difficult one.

We have been called to blaze the trail for America out of the wilderness on several occasions, with a willingness to stand for what is good, to oppose what is not, and acknowledge when we have been wrong.

Kansas marked the bloody trail out of slavery when the Nation was divided and undecided on whether to do so.

The chains of bondage of our brothers rubbed our skin and our hearts raw until we could stand it no more and erupted into “Bleeding Kansas.”

The Summer of Mercy sprung forth in Kansas as we could no longer tolerate the death of innocent children.

Last year, I traveled with descendants of the survivors of the Pottawatomie Trail of Death to near Mound City to remember, acknowledge and apologize for the barbarous treatment of Native Americans moved to Kansas.

I was at the graveyard at Haskell where Native children, including infants, are buried. Children taken from Native families to be raised as Caucasians under the theme “Kill the Indian. Save the Man.”

I was at the Monroe School here in Topeka where the doctrine of “separate but equal” was once the law of the land.

As Governor, I acknowledge and accept responsibility on behalf of the people of Kansas and I ask forgiveness for these wrongs we have done.

Today, the nation dithers while the path forward seems uncharted.  America can’t decide which way to go.

Yet, the path forward is clear.  Kansas is leading an American Renaissance – a return to the virtue and character that built this state and a great nation in the first place.

The path is NOT uncharted.  We know the way.

We must re-drill the wells that gave us life the first time.  They will refresh and renew us again!

Today, we are growing and moving forward, but not for the sake of growth alone.

We grow because it helps everyone realize their God-given potential.

We rebuild our families so that our three millionth Kansan and all those like her can know the value of a family—none of which is perfect.

Yet we all aspire in them to be better, virtuous, just and righteous…that we might be blessed and a blessing.

Our dependence is not on Big Government but on a Big God that loves us and lives within us.

Our future is bright.  Our renaissance is assured IF we move from dithering to action…IF we listen to our own better Angels and the still, small voice that calls us onward

Yet listen carefully we must to the voice of hope and not to the noise of decline.

Which way to choose?  We know the way.  God wrote it in our hearts.

“Do the right thing, seek the truth, defend the weak, live courageous lives.”

Thank you my fellow Kansans.

Thank you for all you do in service to our state.

May God bless you and may He continue to bless the great people of Kansas.

Brownback sets vision for state’s future in address

TOPEKA (AP) — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback says the state’s path to growth relies on education, family and a sound economy.brownback

Brownback emphasized those themes Wednesday night in his annual State of the State address to a joint session of the House and Senate.

The Republican governor said the recent cuts in the state’s income taxes and other initiatives enacted under his administration have brought Kansas out of the Great Recession.

Brownback also said the budget plan he will release Thursday will include money to pay for all-day kindergarten and stable funding for higher education.

The Democratic response was given by House Minority Paul Davis, who said the policies of the Brownback administration in its first three years have put the state on the wrong path.

Wichita man suspected of impersonating deputy

WICHITA (AP) — Authorities in Sedgwick County say a Wichita man suspected of impersonating a deputy was arrested after calling 911 to say his pickup truck had been stolen.

KAKE-TV reported the incident began around 1 a.m. Wednesday when a man driving a pickup truck with a siren and red-and-blue lights stopped another driver, who was a security guard.

The two men got out of their vehicles and asked each other for identification. The security guard became suspicious and drove away with the phony deputy in pursuit.

Real deputies chased the impersonator’s pickup at speeds up to 110 mph before he lost them. He later called 911 saying his truck had been stolen and he was lost in a field, where officers found him and took him into custody.

NE Kansas man missing since Dec. 31

ATCHISON (AP) — Police in northeast Kansas are asking the public’s help in finding a 70-year-old man missing since Dec. 31.

sandy silver alert

Atchison Police Chief Mike Wilson told KAIR-FM on Wednesday his department has received several leads since a Silver Alert for Garry Clyde Sandy was issued Jan. 10.

Wilson said there was a possible sighting of Sandy’s gold-colored 2005 Dodge Ram 1500 pickup early Saturday in Newton, about 160 miles southwest of Atchison. Investigators are following that lead, among others, while also watching for any financial transactions.

Sandy is described as 5 feet 8 inches tall and weighing 200 pounds, with thinning brown hair. Police said he always wears a Kansas City Chiefs ball cap and jacket and is known to frequent casinos.

He has a heart condition and is diabetic.

Airport funding announced for projects statewide

Kansas Department of Transportation

TOPEKA — Twenty-seven projects have been selected to receive funding to enhance safety and service at public-use airports in the state through the Kansas Airport Improvement Program.

The Kansas Department of Transportation’s Division of Aviation, which manages the program, received 95 applications for projects totaling more than $35 million. The 2010 Kansas Legislature passed the T-WORKS Transportation Program, and gave the Kansas Airport Improvement Program a funding level of $5 million a year.

“Each year, the project selection process becomes more competitive,” said Jesse R. Romo, KDOT director of aviation. “The projects selected have a great geographic spread across the state and continue to preserve our airport system to a level that’s beneficial to the communities.”

Under guidelines of the program, project sponsors are required to pay a minimum of 10 percent of the total project costs, up to a maximum of 50 percent based on project category.

The following is a list of the FY 2015 airport improvement projects and the funding requested:

Western Kansas
Dodge City – Maintain airfield pavements, $9,000
Hoxie – Design reconstruction of runway, $175,750
Hutchinson – Reconstruct ramp areas, $78,138
Osborne – Repair and Overlay Runway, $825,390
Leoti – Repair and overlay runways and ramp, $612,000
Lincoln – Design new runway, $123,500
Montezuma – Reconstruct taxiway section, $170,910
Norton – Tower obstruction mitigation, $22,500
Pratt – Repair and seal taxiways, $162,090
Syracuse – Overlay and remark runway and taxi lane, $646,785
Tribune – Repair and mark runway, taxiway and ramp, $234,567

Eastern Kansas
Fort Scott – Reconstruct ramp, $58,500
Fredonia – Airport Development Plan Phase II, $38,000
Hillsboro – Seal and remark runway, $104,400
Osage City – Repair, seal and mark airfield pavements; replace aprons, $343,800
Neodesha – Seal and mark airfield pavements, $256,500
Olathe New Century – Repair and seal transient ramp, $260,010
Olathe Johnson County – Repair and seal apron, $180,315
Pittsburg – Remove trees in approach area, $96,489
Pleasanton – Airport Development Plan Phase II, $47,500
Wamego – Repair and overlay runway, $212,400
Washington – Repair Airfield Pavements, $69,000

Greater Wichita Area
Augusta – Repair ramp and improve drainage, $225,000
Rose Hill – Seal and mark runway and taxiways; construct taxiway and ramp, $281,700
Benton – Repair taxiways and mid-field turnaround, $50,850

Test kits in high demand during Kansas Radon Action Month

Kansas Department of Health and Environment

TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has seen a high demand for radon test kits offered this month during the state’s ongoing radon awareness initiative.

Radon_Entry_Pic

Because of the positive response during Kansas Radon Action Month, many of the state’s local partners across the state are running low or have distributed all free radon test kits through the KDHE radon program.

To see if your area has test kits available, visit the updated distribution site list at www.kdheks.gov. In Hays, the kits have been distributed at KDHE’s northwest district office, 2301 E. 13th.

Through the volunteer efforts of local partners, nearly 2,000 test kits have been distributed across Kansas during Kansas Radon Action Month. Though free kits are offered this month, radon test kits are available for purchase year-round through Kansas State Extension offices at a discounted rate or through most home improvement or hardware stores.

To more quickly capture the magnitude of the effect of radon on Kansans, KDHE is asking those who picked up a free test kit in January to use their kit before the end of the month. This initiative will allow homeowners to know whether or not radon is a problem in their home, and if so, to take appropriate steps to reduce their radon levels. Radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer after smoking.

Senate passes bill naming Junction facility after WWII vet

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate has approved legislation honoring World War II veteran and Kansan Lt. Gen. Richard “Dick” Seitz. It designates the Junction City community-based outpatient clinic as the Lieutenant General Richard J. Seitz Community-Based Outpatient Clinic.

Lt. Gen. Richard “Dick” Seitz
Lt. Gen. Richard “Dick” Seitz

The clinic provides health care services to veterans.

The legislation was sponsored by Kansas Sens. Jerry Moran and Pat Roberts.

“It is fitting that the nation is recognizing the service of General Seitz by naming this veterans outpatient facility in his honor,” Roberts said. “Dick Seitz received a Bronze Star, a Silver Star, a Purple Heart, a Legion of Merit and a Distinguished Service Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters during World War II. This says all there is to say about his record of valor. After this career of courageous service in the U.S. Army, his retirement was spent in service to the nation’s men and women in uniform. We are grateful for his life and his commitment.”

Seitz was a native of Leavenworth. He died June 8.

“Our country lost a great man, a dedicated soldier, and an American hero when Lieutenant General Dick Seitz passed away,” Moran said. “Dick was a mentor, friend, and someone I hold in extremely high regard. As a native Kansan who settled in Junction City following his military retirement, he never retired from serving. I’m grateful for Lieutenant General Seitz’s commitment to serving Junction City and am delighted that his country is naming this clinic in his honor.”

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs facility provides primary care, behavioral health, personal care, laboratory, prescriptions and psychiatry services for veterans.

Kan. teen accused of planning school shooting (UPDATE)

Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor
Shawnee County District Attorney Chad Taylor

TOPEKA (AP) — A Topeka teenager is charged with four felonies in what the Shawnee County District Attorney calls a planned school shooting.

The 17-year-old was charged Wednesday with four counts of soliciting first-degree murder.

District Attorney Chad Taylor said the teen was planning to shoot two administrators at Topeka West High School, a Topeka police officer and a school police officer working at the high school. Taylor did not release his name.

Taylor said the teenager was arrested Tuesday evening outside Topeka. He has a detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday afternoon.

Taylor wouldn’t release many details about the alleged plan but said the threat was viable and the situation developed in mid-December.

The defendant is being charged as a juvenile but Taylor said he’ll seek to have him tried as an adult.

Kansas group hired to conduct Alaska education assessments

FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — Alaska education officials have hired a new group to create English language arts and math assessments.

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported the state announced it’s leaving Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium, and has hired the University of Kansas Assessment and Achievement Institute.

Alaska has been a member of the consortium since April. But it decided to go with a company that will tailor assessments based on new state standards, which vary from Common Core Standards used by the consortium.

The state sought proposals from vendors, and chose AAI.

The five-year contract will cost Alaska about $5 million annually.

The state has previously worked with another KU group, DLM Consortium, to create a new alternate assessment for students with severe cognitive disabilities.

National agency: Delay ‘carve-in’ for developmentally disabled

By MIKE SHIELDS
KHI News Service

WASHINGTON — Officials at the National Council on Disability have sent a follow-up letter to federal and state officials urging them to hold off on including long-term supports for the developmentally disabled in KanCare.

Jeff Rosen, chairman of the National Council on Disability.
Jeff Rosen, chairman of the National Council on Disability.

The letter lists several steps the advisory group said Kansas should take before securing federal approval for its controversial initiative.

The missive was delivered today to top officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and top officials at the lead Kansas Medicaid agencies.

In essence, the letter calls for Kansas officials to go back to the drawing board and develop a plan that includes more input from those who would be affected by the proposed changes.

The letter also recommends the state operate a regional pilot program over the next 12 months before being allowed to launch its plan statewide.

The list of recommendations also repeated a concern raised earlier by the council that Kansas should not be allowed to include long-term DD supports in KanCare while excluding from KanCare the residents of the so-called intermediate care facilities operated by the state — Kansas Neurological Institute in Topeka and Parsons State Hospital and Training Center.

It also called for Kansas to create a “robust and independent” KanCare ombudsman’s office with more resources than the state currently allows for it. The ombudsman’s office is housed at the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services. The council and other critics of the current structure say the ombudsman shouldn’t be directly employed by an agency that delivers or administers Medicaid services.

The council also called on CMS to require that the managed care companies hired by the state to run KanCare have at least one care coordinator per 40 Medicaid cases that involve developmentally disabled enrollees.

The letter was signed by Jeff Rosen, the council’s chairperson, on behalf of the full board.

Ari Ne’eman, a council member from Silver Spring, Md., said the letter offered specific recommendations for Kansas but was intended to also communicate the council’s thoughts on how Medicaid managed care might be implemented in other states.

The council’s position is that managed care can offer benefits to Medicaid enrollees, if implemented in the right way.

“We look at Kansas as a bellwether on this issue for the rest of the country,” Ne’eman said, “so while we focused in some sense on Kansas, we also articulated it with our broader vision for long-term supports and services in mind.”

Ne’eman said the letter was issued now because the council was aware of ongoing discussions between CMS and Kansas officials and the council was hopeful its recommendations would be a helpful resource in the discussions, serving as a possible blueprint or rule of thumb for the way to handle long-term services for the disabled in a Medicaid managed care framework.

Former Kansas State Rep. Gary Blumenthal, now a Massachusetts resident, is one of the council members. The council is a federal agency that advises the executive branch and Congress on issues dealing with the disabled.

The council sent a letter in December to CMS and state officials urging delay of the Kansas plan. That came just after the council held two days of hearings in Topeka at the Kansas Statehouse.

Officials in the administration of Gov. Sam Brownback responded critically to both letters.

“The latest letter contains comments very similar to NCD’s earlier letter. Our response…is the same as it was in December: that the NCD session on the I/DD waiver in Topeka was not an honest, objective process and did not result in objective recommendations,” said Angela de Rocha, spokesperson for the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services.

“We have been having some very constructive conversations with CMS and our stakeholders over the past two weeks, and in fact CMS has received a number of letters from other national advocacy groups in opposition to NCD’s demands on the State of Kansas,” de Rocha said.

The Brownback administration initially planned to roll long-term DD services into KanCare starting Jan. 1. But CMS withheld approval citing various concerns with the state’s plan.

Administration officials say they working through those as part of ongoing discussions with the federal authorities and expect to have full sign-off from CMS in time to launch their planned expansion by Feb. 1.

Kan. gets U.S. to redeem abandoned savings bonds

WICHITA (AP) — The federal government has agreed to redeem almost $862,000 in abandoned U.S. savings bonds held by Kansas after a 14-year battle waged by the state’s treasurers.

Kansas State Treasurer Ron Estes
Kansas State Treasurer Ron Estes

Current Treasurer Ron Estes says he’s hoping the government will redeem about $151 million more.

The Wichita Eagle reported the 1,447 redeemed bonds include some that date back to World War I. They were recovered from abandoned safe-deposit boxes once rented by Kansas residents.

It’s the first time the federal government has agreed to cash out abandoned bonds. The state doesn’t get to spend the money, but it’s allowed to invest it and keep the interest and earnings.

Estes says the state’s unclaimed property fund now is at $260 million and generates $7 million to $8 million a year for the state budget.

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