We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Kansas City Casino Opening Next Month At Kansas Speedway

The Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway will open next month if it receives final state approval.

The casino said in a news release Monday that grand opening for the gaming complex will begin about 11 a.m. February 3.

The Hollywood Casino will offer 2,000 slot machines and 52 table games, along with five restaurants.

The Kansas Legislature in 2007 approved the opening of four state-owned casinos. The Boot Hill Casino opened in Dodge City in
2009, while the Kansas Star opened near Mulvane last month. There have been no bids for a casino in the southeast zone in Crawford
and Cherokee counties.

Obama, Congress Begin 2012 In Oil Pipeline Dispute

President Barack Obama and Congress are starting the new year locked in a politically charged dispute over a proposed 1,700-mile oil pipeline from Canada, through parts of Kansas, and on to Texas.

Republicans and some unions say the Keystone XL pipeline will create thousands of jobs. Environmentalists fear it could lead to an oil spill disaster.

The pre-Christmas agreement between Obama and Congress temporarily extending the payroll tax cut included language compelling Obama to make a speedy decision on whether to build the pipeline. The administration says it would rather say “no” than rush a decision in an election year.

The $7 billion pipeline poses a political trap for Obama because it divides his supporters. Environmentalists oppose the project while most labor unions support it.

Republicans say Obama’s stance shows he favors environmentalists over jobs.

Kansas Urges Returning Soldiers To Review Insurance

The top insurance regulator in Kansas says military personnel returning from Iraq should review their life insurance coverage.

Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger also is offering tips to military families in case they consider altering their coverage. For example, she notes that people soliciting insurance sales on military bases must have permission from the U.S. Defense Department.

The U.S. Veterans Administration already offers low-cost life insurance coverage of up to 400,000 to service members on active duty, and it allows them to switch that coverage to a different program for veterans after they leave active duty.

Praeger says veterans who want to supplement that coverage or move to private coverage need to examine whether policies exclude coverage for war-related deaths or deaths that occur in traveling on noncommercial aircraft.

Kansas Man Gets One Year In Jail For 9th DUI Conviction

A Hutchinson man has been sentenced to a year in jail for his ninth conviction for driving under the influence.

The Hutchinson News reports 48-year-old Percy Seamster apologized Friday to Reno County District Judge Trish Rose for his “stupidity.”

His public defender had asked for a minimum 90-day jail sentence for the felony conviction, noting he had never failed to appear in court.

Seamster was arrested April 2 when Hutchinson police found him passed out in the driver’s seat of a vehicle at a local park. Prosecutor Stephen Maxwell pointed out a photo of him with one leg hanging out of a car window and a bottle between his legs.

Kansas law treats fourth and subsequent DUI convictions the same, with a maximum sentence of a year in jail.

Kansas County Looking Into Earthquake Insurance

Shawnee County commissioners have authorized the county’s insurance broker to look into the cost of earthquake insurance.

The topic came up last week at a commission briefing on new quotes for property, automobile and excess workers’ compensation insurance coverage.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that an official with the county’s insurance broker noted that homes in Topeka were rattled in November by an earthquake and several aftershocks in Oklahoma. The official said earthquake insurance is fairly inexpensive.

Commission members said there’s no harm in at least getting proposals for the coverage.

Manhattan Man Found Shot To Death

The Riley County Police Department is investigating the third suspicious death in three days in the city of Manhattan.

The department says in a news release that officers were called to a Manhattan home on a report of shots fired just before 4 a.m. Sunday.

Police say the shooting victim was pronounced dead at a hospital. He’s identified as 21-year-old Frederick Charles Beverly, of Manhattan. The death has been classified as a homicide.

Authorities continue investigating the deaths Friday of a man and a woman at a Manhattan home, although police have not yet said how the two died. The woman, 23-year-old Amanda Victoria Bonner, lived at the home. The man is identified as 26-year-old Kawon Darmet Higgins, whose address was unknown.

Kansas Lawmakers Expect To Debate Illegal Immigration Again

Kansas legislators can’t avoid a debate on illegal immigration after they open their annual session Jan. 9.

Kris Kobach, an architect of get-tough proposals across the nation, serves as secretary of state, and fellow conservative Republicans are eager to raise the issue.

But even Kobach acknowledges that his home state’s lawmakers are likely to concentrate on familiar proposals rather than move as aggressively as legislators did in 2011 in Alabama, which claims the nation’s toughest immigration law.

Instead, Kansas legislators are expected to consider a measure requiring government contractors to use the federal E-Verify system to check the status of their workers.

Another proposal would direct law enforcement officers to check the status of people they suspect of being illegal immigrants after stopping them for other reasons.

Eight Hopefuls File For Kansas GOP Presidential Caucuses

Kansas has a full field of candidates for its Republican presidential caucuses March 6.

The state Republican Party said Friday that eight candidates had filed. The deadline is Saturday, but the party said no other candidates’ campaigns had contacted it, and the Kansas GOP is charging a nonrefundable fee of $10,000 for candidates who want on the ballot.

The field filled out when former Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum filed this week.

They joined former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas congressman Ron Paul.

Georgia businessman Herman Cain also filed, but he has since asked to have his name removed from the ballot because he suspended his campaign.

For First Time Ever, Gas And Other Fuels Are Top U.S. Export

For the first time, the top export of the United States, the world’s biggest gas guzzler, is — wait for it — fuel.

Measured in dollars, the nation is on pace this year to ship more gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel than any other single export, according to U.S. Census data going back to 1990. It will also be the first year in more than 60 that America has been a net exporter of these fuels.

Just how big of a shift is this? A decade ago, fuel wasn’t even among the top 25 exports. And for the last five years, America’s top export was aircraft.

The trend is significant because for decades the U.S. has relied on huge imports of fuel from Europe in order to meet demand. It only reinforced the image of America as an energy hog. And up until a few years ago, whenever gasoline prices climbed, there were complaints in Congress that U.S. refiners were not growing quickly enough to satisfy domestic demand; that controversy would appear to be over.

Still, the U.S. is nowhere close to energy independence. America is still the world’s largest importer of crude oil. From January to October, the country imported 2.7 billion barrels of oil worth roughly $280 billion.

Fuel exports, worth an estimated $88 billion in 2011, have surged for two reasons:

— Crude oil, the raw material from which gasoline and other refined products are made, is a lot more expensive. Oil prices averaged $95 a barrel in 2011, while gasoline averaged $3.52 a gallon — a record. A decade ago oil averaged $26 a barrel, while gasoline averaged $1.44 a gallon.

— The volume of fuel exports is rising. The U.S. is using less fuel because of a weak economy and more efficient cars and trucks. That allows refiners to sell more fuel to rapidly growing economies in Latin America, for example. In 2011, U.S. refiners exported 117 million gallons per day of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and other petroleum products, up from 40 million gallons per day a decade earlier.

There’s at least one domestic downside to America’s growing role as a fuel exporter. Experts say the trend helps explain why U.S. motorists are paying more for gasoline. The more fuel that’s sent overseas, the less of a supply cushion there is at home.

Gasoline supplies are being exported to the highest bidder, says Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service. “It’s a world market,” he says.

Refining companies won’t say how much they make by selling fuel overseas. But analysts say those sales are likely generating higher profits per gallon than they would have generated in the U.S. Otherwise, they wouldn’t occur.

The value of U.S. fuel exports has grown steadily over the past decade, coinciding with rising oil prices and increased demand around the globe.

Developing countries in Latin America and Asia have been burning more gasoline and diesel as their people buy more cars and build more roads and factories. Europe also has been buying more U.S. fuel to make up for its lack of refineries.

And there’s a simple reason why America’s refiners have been eager to export to these markets: gasoline demand in the U.S. has been falling every year since 2007. It dropped by another 2.5 percent in 2011. With the economy struggling, motorists cut back. Also, cars and trucks have become more fuel-efficient and the government mandates the use of more corn-based ethanol fuel.

The last time the U.S. was a net exporter of fuels was 1949, when Harry Truman was president. That year, the U.S. exported 86 million barrels and imported 82 million barrels. In the first ten months of 2011, the nation exported 848 million barrels (worth $73.4 billion) and imported 750 million barrels.

Kansas Taxes $31 Million Above Expectations In December

A new report says Kansas collected nearly $31 million more in tax revenues than expected in December.

The report Friday from the Kansas Department of Revenue was good news for state officials ahead of the Legislature’s annual session. Lawmakers convene Jan. 9, and the new figures brighten the budget picture.

Officials had projected that the state would collect $519 million in taxes in December. Instead, the total was nearly $550 million, or 6% better than expected.

Since the current fiscal year began in July, tax collections have exceeded expectations by $33 million. That’s based on a fiscal forecast issued in November.

Total tax collections for the past six months are about $2.8 billion, about 1.2% more than anticipated.

UPDATE: Missing Boy Found Safe

UPDATE: Authorities have said that a missing six-year-old Kansas City area boy has been found safe, having been found an hour away from his Olathe home in Platte City Friday morning.

This case remains under investigation. Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Olathe Police Department at (913) 971-6950 or (913) 971-7500.

 

Original Story
Olathe police and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation are seeking the public’s help in finding a missing 6-year-old boy and his father.

The KBI said Kalvin Jacob Willis was taken by his father “under duress”.  The father, Aaron J. Willis, is alleged to have taken his son after a fight with his girlfriend.

Authorities said before Willis left, he made several comments regarding possibly harming himself.

Willis was last seen driving a Red 1997 Honda Civic four door with a possible Kansas license of 722-BVS.

Anyone with information on their whereabouts is encouraged to call the Olathe TIPS Hotline at 816-474-8477.

Kansas Attorney General Spends $476,000 Defending New Abortion Laws

The Kansas attorney general’s office has paid outside lawyers $476,000 in defending abortion laws enacted this year.

The office says it has paid nearly $258,000 to a Wichita law firm involved in defending a provision of the state budget that denied federal family planning dollars for non-abortion services to Planned Parenthood. The group is challenging the provision in a federal lawsuit.

The attorney general’s office has paid $138,000 to a Lawrence firm helping the state defend new health and safety regulations for abortion providers. Two Kansas City-area physicians are challenging the rules in both state and federal court.

The same firm also received $80,000 for work in a federal lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union against a law restricting private insurance coverage elective abortions.

Kansas Family Of Crash Victims Sues Helicopter Tour Company

A second wrongful death lawsuit was filed Thursday in a Nevada court against the Las Vegas-based operator of a sightseeing tour helicopter that crashed and killed five people earlier this month.

The lawsuit filed in Clark County District Court in Las Vegas seeks unspecified damages from Sundance Helicopters Inc. on behalf of four children of Delwin and Tamara Chapman, both 49, of Utica, Kan. The Chapmans were celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary when they died Dec. 7 in a remote ravine near Lake Mead.

“It’s horribly sad,” attorney Gary Robb of Kansas City, Mo., said of the effect the crash has had on the Chapman family.

Sundance offered condolences to the Chapman family but didn’t respond to allegations in the lawsuit.

“Sundance will continue to work openly with all parties involved in the investigation,” company chief executive Larry Pietropaulo said in a statement.

Robb filed a similar civil wrongful death lawsuit Dec. 13 in Las Vegas against Sundance on behalf of the families of Lovish Bhanot, 28, and Anupama Bhola, 26, a honeymooning couple from India killed in the crash. That case is pending.

Robb said he plans to consolidate evidence collection for the two cases, but seek separate trials.

The pilot, Landon Nield, 31, of Las Vegas, was also killed. Nield was a devout Mormon who grew up in Wyoming and Utah, and a newlywed. He was married in June.

Robb pointed to radar tracking data made public by the National Transportation Safety Board that showed the six-seat Aerospatiale AS350-B2 aircraft spun into what Robb called an “erratic and abnormal” flight pattern in the last minute before the crash. A final NTSB report on the cause of the crash and possible safety recommendations could take a year.

Robb said he suspected pilot error or mechanical failure.

NTSB officials said the ill-fated helicopter, built in 1989, underwent routine maintenance the day before the crash — including installation of a replacement engine and mechanical devices called servo- actuators in the tail and main rotor.

The aircraft made one test flight and two passenger tours before the fatal last flight. NTSB investigators found evidence the engine was producing power when the aircraft crashed.

Nield made no emergency call before the chopper went down, and a search and rescue team reached the charred scene and determined
there were no survivors.

The wreckage was found in rugged terrain about four miles west of the Lake Mead reservoir behind Hoover Dam on the Colorado River.

The area remained closed Thursday to visitors pending completion of fuel and toxic material clean-up, wreckage removal and landscape restoration, said Andrew Munoz, National Park Service spokesman for the Lake Mead National Recreation Area.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File