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Investigation Continues in the Shooting Death 25-year-old Great Bend Man

By Matt Unruh ~ Great Bend Post

It’s been three weeks since 25-year-old Great Bend resident Damon Galyardt’s body was found near a Barton County road.

Authorities reported that Galyardt was shot to death, and his body was found hours before he was named a suspect by law enforcement in a counterfeit money crime in Lyons.

A female subject was arrested in Lyons in connection to the counterfeit money case. Barton County Sheriff Greg Armstrong reports they’re still investigating Galyardt’s shooting death case.

Barton County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the case as a 1st degree murder, with the assistance of the Great Bend Police Department and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation. No suspect has been named in the case, but they did arrest a person of interest the week following Galyardt’s death.

Officials Investigating Death Of Soldier At Fort Riley

(AP) – Officials are investigating the death of a 22-year-old Fort Riley soldier at the northeast Kansas Army post.

The soldier was identified as Pfc. Michael Webb, of Supply, N.C. The Topeka Capital Journal reports Webb died Thursday. He was assigned to the 1st Engineer Battalion, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division.

The cause of Webb’s death wasn’t available Saturday.

Kansas Supreme Court To Review Smoking Law

(AP) – The Kansas Supreme Court will hear arguments next week in an appeal filed by the attorney general over a case involving the 2010 statewide smoking ban.

The appeal comes from an injunction issued in 2010 by Shawnee County District Judge Franklin Theis in a case filed by the Downtown Bar and Grill in Tonganoxie. The issue is whether a deadline imposed under the ban for granting exemptions under the law to a narrow class of private clubs is constitutional.

Legislators in 2010 set a cutoff date of January 1, 2009, by which clubs had to have licenses to be exempt from the smoking ban. The Downtown Bar and Grill received its license in May 2009.

Theis ruled the statewide ban was constitutional but said the issue needed review.

Kansas Toddler Burned Intentionally By Father’s Girlfriend

(AP) – Prosecutors say a 20-month-old Topeka girl was burned intentionally on her feet before dying, apparently from suffocation.

The information about the abuse suffered by Mireya Carmen Ortiz Rodriguez was revealed Friday during a hearing in which her father’s girlfriend pleaded no contest to her death on August 12th.

21-year-old Johana Iveth Villegas-Gonzalez made the plea to a charge of voluntary manslaughter. The charge was reduced from second-degree murder in a plea agreement.

Villegas-Gonzales will be sentenced Thursday.

Kansas Geological Survey Awarded $11.5 Million To Study Storing Carbon Dioxide Underground In South Central Kansas

(AP) – The Kansas Geological Survey has been awarded an $11.5 million federal grant to study storing carbon dioxide underground in south-central Kansas.

KGS says in a release that the grant from the U.S. Department of Energy will fund a 4-year project that involves capturing carbon dioxide from industrial sources and injecting it underground for long-term storage.

The agency says carbon dioxide is a byproduct of fossil fuel emissions and has been considered a cause of climate change.

KGS says the injection well is in an oil field south of Wichita in Sumner County. The carbon dioxide will be taken from the Abengoa Bioenergy Corporation plant near Colwich. At least 40,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the Abengoa plant will be compressed and injected more than 5,000 feet underground.

Salina Man Reported Missing

Missing Person - Troy Allen Rapp

On November 8, 2011, Troy Allen Rapp, 40, was reported missing.  He was last seen by a friend on the morning of October 24, 2011, in Salina.  He has had no contact with anyone since.

Troy is a white male, 5’4”, 145 lbs, with brown hair, and brown eyes.  He was last seen wearing a green shirt, blue jeans, and white tennis shoes.  Troy does not have a vehicle.

If you have any information about the whereabouts of Troy, please call the Salina Police Department at 785-826-7210.

Obama To Make Visit To Kansas Tuesday

(AP) – The Kansas Democratic Party’s chairwoman says President Barack Obama plans to give a speech Tuesday in Osawatomie.

State Chairwoman Joan Wagnon said she was notified Friday of the president’s visit by the Democratic National Committee.

Wagnon said she had no further details, other than the event is scheduled for 11 a.m. Tuesday.

Osawatomie was the site of the 1910 “New Nationalism” speech by President Theodore Roosevelt hailing government’s role in promoting social justice and protecting the welfare of the poor and underprivileged.

Kansas is a Republican stronghold, having voted for every GOP nominee for president since 1964, including Obama’s opponent in the 2008 election, Arizona Sen. John McCain. But Obama’s 42% of the vote was the best showing by any Democratic nominee in 20 years.

KDHE Accepting Applications for Waste Reduction Grants

Topeka – The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is accepting applications for the Waste Tire and Green School Solid Waste grants. Funds from these two grants will go toward implementing recycling projects in schools and local communities.

Applicants can apply for the following grants:

  • Waste Tire Grants – This grant program stimulates the production and sale of commercial products made from recycled Kansas waste tires including playground cover, park benches and picnic tables. Local units of government and school districts are eligible to apply for funding which will provide up to 50 percent of the total cost to purchase and install eligible products. Waste tire grant applications and guidelines can be found at www.kdheks.gov/waste/forms_grants.html.

 

  • Kansas Green School Solid Waste Grants  – Funds from this grant are used to improve waste management practices in school buildings and grounds (composting, recycling, etc.). Projects are tied back to classroom curriculum. Applications and guidelines can be found at www.kansasgreenschools.org/kansas-green-school-solid-waste-grants.

 

Kansas Toddler Dies Of Suspected Child Abuse

(AP) – A south-central Kansas toddler has died, and her mother’s boyfriend has been arrested on suspicion of child abuse.

Wellington police chief Tracy Heath says the 2-year-old girl died shortly after noon Thursday in a Wichita hospital. The child was taken to Sumner Regional Medical Center Tuesday night and then transported to Wichita in critical condition.

KAKE-TV reported that she was suffering from severe head trauma.

The boyfriend of the child’s mother was arrested Wednesday. His name isn’t being released pending formal charges.

UPDATE: Kansas Officials Protest Proposed Farm Labor Rules

Gov. Sam Brownback and other Kansas officials say proposed rules from the federal government would limit youngsters’ farm work too much.

Brownback and Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt have sent a letter to the U.S. Department of Labor, protesting proposed changes in regulations for young farm laborers. The state’s secretaries of agriculture, labor and commerce sent their own statement, asking the federal agency to revise its plans.

As examples, Brownback and Schmidt say the rules are too strict in limiting the ability of 14- and 15-year-olds to operate tractors and other equipment.

A department spokeswoman says the agency will carefully consider all comments. But in summarizing its proposed rules, the department has said it is trying to prevent injuries and deaths.

Original Story

Agriculture is one of the most hazardous industries, with an increased risk of both fatal and non-fatal injuries. And it’s one of the most hazardous jobs for youth.

The U.S. Department of Labor is proposing new rules for young people employed and working on the farm.

Ellis County KSU Agriculture Extension Agent Stacy Campbell says there is an exemption for children working on their parents’ farm.  But many Kansas farms are operated by two or more generations.

The revisions, the first since 1970, would impact the Fair Labor Standards Act, which bars young workers from certain tasks, and are intended to bring restrictions on young agricultural workers more in line with those that already exist for young people working in other industries.

Specifically, the new rules would prohibit farm workers under age 16 from participating in the cultivation and harvesting. And it would prohibit youth in both agricultural and non-agricultural employment from using electronic, including communication, devices while operating power-driven equipment.

There is also a new non-agricultural hazardous occupations order proposed that would prevent minors under 18 from being employed in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials. Prohibited places of employment would include country grain elevators, grain bins, silos, feedlots, stockyards, livestock exchanges and livestock auctions.

The proposal also would prohibit farm workers under 16 from operating almost all power-driven equipment.

The public comment period ends December 1.

Watch Street Beat Eagle Community TV Channel 14 tonight for more details

 

Student Settles Lawsuit With Kansas Community College

(AP) – Johnson County Community College has settled a lawsuit with a former student who sued after the school asked for $47,000 to meet an open records request.

Marcus Clem and the Student Press Law Center sued the college in October, accusing it of charging excessive fees to produce public documents.

The 21-year-old Clem, of Stiwell, sought seven months of emails between a college employee who had been fired and the employee’s supervisor.

School officials said it would cost $47,000 to compensate for the time and expense of satisfying the request.

This week, the school gave Clem three months of emails. It charged $450, which the law center paid.

Clem, who dropped classes after filing the lawsuit, shared the documents with the college’s student newspaper.

Kansas Pizza Delivery Man Fires Shots At Alleged Robber

(AP) – Wichita police are investigating a report of a pizza delivery driver firing shots at someone he claims tried to rob him.

The Domino’s delivery driver arrived at an apartment just before 10 p.m. Wednesday, but no one answered the door. The driver told authorities he went to his car to get a gun because he was worried about his safety.

Police say a man approached the driver from behind and tried to rob him as the driver opened the trunk of his car.

The driver told police he turned around with a gun in his hand, and the suspect ran away as the driver fired two shots at him.

Police say the driver was interviewed at the scene and released.

Analyst: Expect 2012 Cattle Market To Stay Strong

(AP) – A leading market analyst told hundreds of Kansas livestock producers to expect cattle prices to remain strong for many years.

Randy Blach, the executive vice president of CattleFax, was upbeat in his forecast Thursday at the Kansas Livestock Association annual convention in Wichita.

Blach also predicted lean beef prices will be higher in 2012 as the return of wet weather allows cattlemen to begin rebuilding their herds. He says the number of females slaughtered could drop by a million cows during the next two years.

About a third of the nation’s cattle producing regions suffered from drought this year.

Kansas cattlemen also heard a panel discussion about proposals to restructure the state’s tax structure.

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