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Topeka firms donate services to housing program

TOPEKA (AP) — Four engineering and surveying businesses have donated a combined $20,000 worth of services to Topeka Habitat for Humanity.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports officials of the nonprofit organization announced the contribution Tuesday.

Firms making the donation are Schmidt, Beck and Boyd Engineering; Professional Engineering Consultants; CFS Engineers; and Bartlett and West.

Topeka Habitat for Humanity provides financial education to low-income families and the opportunity to become homeowners through interest-free loans. Students from three Topeka area high schools build the homes for academic credit.

747 landing goof in Kansas described in training video

WICHITA (AP) — The company that landed a Boeing 747 at the wrong airport in Kansas in November says one of the pilots was not sure they were landing at the right place, but kept silent.

The description is in a training video produced by Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings and obtained by Aviation International News. Atlas confirmed the accuracy of the AIN report on Tuesday but declined to provide the video to The Associated Press.

The Atlas pilots landed near Wichita, 9 miles from their intended destination.

AIN reported that one of the pilots abandoned the plane’s instrument-guided approach after spotting a runway to the left and began heading there. It turned out to be the wrong airport. AIN reported that the other pilot was uncertain about the runway but didn’t say anything.

Kansas Farm Bureau releases educational and policy apps

MANHATTAN – Kansas Farm Bureau has released a new educational app based on its best-selling children’s book series.

The free app, which is available for Apple and Android smartphones and tablets, focuses on the popular “Milk Comes from a Cow?” children’s book written by retired KFB CEO Dan Yunk.

Readers can follow Kailey as she learns that milk comes from a cow, not the grocery store. The app comes with a host of bonus features and videos.

“We’ve had tremendous luck with our book series and connecting with children and parents,” Yunk says. “The time was right to move in to the electronic era and build upon what’s worked—telling the story of agriculture in a fun way.”

Also recently released is a Kansas Farm Bureau governmental relations app that includes tools and information on the latest issues affecting agriculture.

Both apps are available in the Apple and Google online stores.

Kansas Farm Bureau represents grassroots agriculture. Established in 1919, this non-profit advocacy organization supports farm families who earn their living in a changing industry.

Boil order rescinded for Kansas community

TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has rescinded the boil water advisory for the city of Thayer in Neosho County.

The boil water advisory was issued Jan. 2 because of a loss of pressure in the water system due to an operational malfunction. Laboratory testing on samples collected indicate no evidence of contamination, and all other conditions that placed the system at risk of contamination are deemed by KDHE officials to be resolved.

Woman sentenced to probation and rehab in thefts

LAWRENCE (AP) — A Lawrence woman was sentenced to a year of probation and inpatient drug treatment for her role in storage unit burglaries that netted the thieves tens of thousands of dollars in loot.

Thirty-four-year-old Cori Nehrbass, who pleaded no contest to felony theft and misdemeanor theft, also will be required to pay restitution. Nehrbass told the court Monday she participated in the robberies because she is addicted to methamphetamine. Her attorney says she will be admitted to rehab in Topeka on Thursday for 30 days.

Investigators say the suspects drove trucks into several storage units in the spring of 2013 and emptied them.

Co-defendant Jacob P. Paine was sentenced in October to two years’ probation. Cases against Travis M. Darrow and Cheri L. Sponholtz are still being decided.

Kansas hospitals leading new push for Medicaid expansion

By JIM McLEAN
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Many uninsured Kansans who Congress assumed would get coverage under the health reform law are instead falling in to what is being called the “Medicaid gap.”

They make too much money or don’t meet other criteria to qualify for the state’s Medicaid program – called KanCare – but don’t earn enough to be eligible for federal tax credits to offset the cost of private insurance.

Those credits are available only to people with incomes between 100 percent and 400 percent of federal poverty guidelines. The federal poverty level is $11,490 a year for an individual and $19,530 for a family of three.

As many as an estimated 85,000 uninsured Kansans fall in the eligibility gap, according to researchers at the Kansas Health Institute, a nonprofit policy and research organization that includes the editorially independent KHI News Service.

These Kansans have incomes that are 33 percent or more of the federal poverty threshold — $6,445 for a family of three — but below 100 percent of poverty guidelines.

Katelyn Winrick, a 26-year-old nursing student from Topeka, recently discovered she falls in the gap.

She had come to the Topeka Shawnee County Public Library to get help purchasing health insurance on Healthcare.gov. But after entering information about the income she earns from a part-time job, Winrick and the navigator assisting her concluded she didn’t make enough to qualify for a federal tax credit. That and the fact that she would have been eligible for Medicaid if Kansas officials had opted to expand the program as originally intended by the authors of the Affordable Care Act were “real eye openers,” Winrick said.

“I’m going to school and that really would have helped me given my income situation,” she said.
‘The only priority’

The Affordable Care Act, as signed into law in 2010, was written to include a nationwide expansion of Medicaid to cover everyone earning up to 133 percent of the federal poverty level — $15,282 for an individual and $25,975 for a family of three. But the 2012 U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld the law held that Medicaid expansion was an option for each state to decide. Policy makers in Kansas and 23 other Republican dominated states so far have chosen against expansion.

The Kansas Hospital Association and a growing coalition of more than 50 organizations are preparing to push Gov. Sam Brownback and leaders in the Republican-controlled Legislature to change their minds and broaden the program.

“It is the only priority,” said Sean Gatewood, the interim director of the Kansas Medicaid Access Coalition. “All we care about is getting the state to accept the money and to cover more Kansans.”

An analysis done for the hospital association concluded that expanding Medicaid eligibility starting this year would have injected another $3 billion into the state economy and create 4,000 jobs by 2020.

Rejecting expansion will cost Kansas an estimated $5.3 billion in federal aid between 2013 and 2022, according to a report released last summer by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

In an effort to get the issue of expansion back in front of legislators, the hospital association has hired Mike Leavitt, former secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to help it craft an alternative plan — perhaps similar to those being advanced by Republican governors in Iowa, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Michigan, which would use federal Medicaid dollars to help low-income people buy private coverage.

“We ought to as a state be having a conversation about whether we can come up with a plan like that and the reality is that conversation just hasn’t happened yet,” said Tom Bell, the hospital association’s chief executive.

Bell said he hopes that Leavitt, a Republican who served under President George W. Bush’s and is a former Utah governor, can help convince Kansas Republicans to seriously consider Medicaid expansion options.

“My sense is that he (Leavitt) is somebody that’s not a big fan of the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare, but he also knows that whether we like it or not we’re all in the implementation business right now,” Bell said.

Rep. Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat, who pushed unsuccessfully last year for Medicaid expansion, said he welcomes the attempt to revive the policy debate by focusing on an approach that relies more on private-sector insurance.

“If that helps some of our more extreme conservative folks to support it, I’m OK with that,” Ward said. “I’m all for anything that gets us an opportunity to participate in Medicaid expansion.”

Time will tell whether the new approach will be the game changer Bell and others seek.

Governor’s leadership

Rep. Ron Ryckman Jr., a conservative Republican from Olathe and chairman of the House Social Services Budget Committee, said any sort of Medicaid expansion likely would be a tough sell unless Gov. Brownback changes his mind and decides to play an active role in the debate.

“I haven’t spent a lot of time researching what other states have done, but it seems to me that the governor has taken the lead in states that have expanded (Medicaid) or that are having these discussions,” Ryckman Jr. said.

Last year, Brownback did not explicitly rule out expansion. But he expressed reservations about the potential cost to the state and said it would be up to the Legislature. The Legislature subsequently passed a budget proviso saying the state could not expand its Medicaid program without explicit legislative support.

Brownback officials recently said they continue to study what other states are doing.

Bell said he was optimistic the governor eventually would support some form of expansion.

“From the very beginning, Gov. Brownback has been very interested in taking a hard look at this — and I think partly because of his concern for those who are less fortunate. I’ve heard him talk about that often, and I do think that it’s a factor for him. There are lots of factors, I’m sure, but I think how we treat those who are the least fortunate among us is something that’s important to the governor — very important to him.”

Four sentenced, one pleads in Dodge gang case

WICHITA — Four members of a Dodge City street gang were sentenced and another pleaded guilty Monday in a federal racketeering case, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom said Monday

Sentenced were:
Gonzalo Ramirez, 28, Dodge City, who was sentenced to life plus 57 years.
Pedro Garcia, 27, Dodge City, who was sentenced to life plus 32 years.
Donte Barnes, 22, Dodge City, who was sentenced to 32 months.
Jesus Flores, 28, Dodge City, who was sentenced to time served of 20 months.

Jayson Vargas, 31, Dodge City, pleaded guilty to one count of unlawful possession of a stolen firearm. In his plea, he admitted that on Aug. 20, 2011, he was driving a car in pursuit of his former girlfriend, who was in another car. During the chase, he pointed a handgun at her. Officers of the Ford County Sheriff’s Office stopped Vargas’ car and arrested him. They seized a .45 caliber handgun.

Vargas is set for sentencing March 24. He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.

Among the defendants who were sentenced:
Gonzalo Ramirez was convicted in a jury trial on count one (conspiracy to commit racketeering), count two (conspiracy to commit murder), count three (murder), count four (attempted murder), count five (assault with a dangerous weapon), count six (possession and discharge of a firearm during a violent crime), count seven (assault with a dangerous weapon), count eight (conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon), count nine (brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence), count ten (conspiracy to commit murder), count 11 (attempted murder), count 12 (assault with a dangerous weapon), and count 13 (possession and discharge of a firearm during a violent crime).

Pedro Garcia was convicted in a jury trial on count one (conspiracy to commit racketeering), count two (conspiracy to commit murder), count three (murder), count four (attempted murder), count five (assault with a dangerous weapon), count six (possession and discharge of a firearm during a violent crime), count seven (assault with a dangerous weapon), count eight (conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon), and count nine (brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence).

Donte Barnes pleaded guilty to one count of attempted murder in aid of racketeering.

Jesus Flores pleaded guilty to one count of assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering and one count of conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering.

The defendants were among 23 members of the Norteno street gang indicted in May 2012. It was only the second time a federal RICO Act indictment (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act) had been filed in Kansas. Twenty two defendants have been convicted. Charges were dismissed without prejudice against defendant Adam Flores.

Grissom commended the Dodge City Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Ford County Sheriff?s Office, the Ford County Attorney’s Office, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lanny Welch and Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Smith for their work on the case.

Junction woman gets probation in Omaha prostitution case

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Kansas woman has been given five years of probation in an Omaha prostitution case.

Omaha television station KETV said Tabatha Ashburn, Junction City, had made a plea deal with prosecutors who had indicted Ashburn and four other people.

Christopher Tierney also was given probation. The station says Ashburn’s mother, Tammy Schuck, Omaha, is serving prison time, as are William Knox and Kim Bivens.

Authorities say Schuck operated three “spas” in Omaha from April 2008 to January 2012 where customers paid for sex acts from workers, rather than receiving legitimate spa services.

Sheriff’s son pleads not guilty in shooting death

LINCOLN (AP) — The son of a Kansas sheriff pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder in the shooting death of a central Kansas man.

Scott Weigel entered the plea Monday in the September death of 21-year-old Keith Ancell of Lincoln. His trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 24.

The Salina Journal reported Weigel is being held in a jail outside of Lincoln County. He is the son of Lincoln County Sheriff Mike Weigel.

He is accused of shooting Ancell on Sept. 9 near downtown Lincoln.

Kansas online tax filing now available through KS WebFile

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TOPEKA – Kansas taxpayers who need to file only a Kansas individual income tax will be able to do so online starting today.

The online filing is only effective for those using the state’s free online application KS WebFile found at www.kansas.gov/webfile and not a third party vendor

The federal government is currently scheduled to begin accepting returns Jan. 31.

The deadline for filing taxes this year is Tuesday, April 15.

Kan. ranchers brave deep freeze to care for cattle

WICHITA (AP) — Kansas farmers are coping with frigid conditions as they look after cattle herds.

Most Kansas ranchers have not begun calving yet. But the lack of snow on the ground means cattle can stay dry and better weather the subzero weather.

But it also means there is little protective cover for exposed winter wheat crops. It will be spring before farmers know the full extent of freeze damage.

The National Weather Service says Garden City and Cottonwood Falls had the state’s lowest temperatures early Monday at minus 12 degrees.

Temperatures elsewhere varied widely, with southeast and northeast Kansas seeing lows around minus 11 degrees. It was minus 5 degrees in Wichita at 6:25 a.m. Monday.

Geary County gets $16M for new Fort Riley school

TOPEKA (AP) — The Department of Defense has awarded the Geary County school district $16 million for construction of a new elementary school at Fort Riley.

The Geary County district maintains buildings on the northeast Kansas Army post. The grant announced Monday is for a 500-student school that will relieve overcrowding and improve facility conditions.

Fort Riley was placed on a priority list for new school funding in 2011, in part because of the increased number of soldiers and families assigned to the post since 2006.

Wisconsin senator sues over Obamacare loophole

WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Ron Johnson is suing to stop the government from paying most of the medical insurance premiums for members of Congress and their aides now required to obtain coverage through the new health care law’s state exchanges.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.
Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis.

The Wisconsin Republican filed a suit Monday in U.S. District Court in Green Bay, Wis., challenging an October ruling by the Office of Personnel Management. The agency ruled that lawmakers and their staffs should continue getting health care benefits covering 75 percent of their premium costs after leaving the health insurance program for federal workers.

Johnson says the lawsuit is about ensuring that Congress receives no special treatment under President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. The exchanges were set up for people who don’t get health coverage through employers.

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