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Manhattan woman held on $20,000 Bond for alleged child sex crimes

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RILEY COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on child sex allegations.

Just before 2p.m. Thursday, police arrested Ashley Alaine Bradford, 22, Manhattan, in the 1800 Block of College Avenue, according to the Riley County Police Department booking report.

She is being held on a $20,000 Bond for “Aggravated Indecent Liberties with a Child; Intercourse, Criminal Sodomy; Child>14 & <16 And Indecent Liberties with a Child Indecent liberties  with a child;14<16; Fondle,” according to the arrest report.

Police released no additional details early Friday.


Jobless rate up slightly in Riley County, across the region

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Click to expand

 

Preliminary estimates reported by the Kansas Department of Labor and Bureau of Labor Statistics show a seasonally adjusted unemployment rate of 3.4 percent in June. This was unchanged from May and down from 3.6 percent in June 2017.

“Current trends in the Kansas labor market are strong,” said Secretary Lana Gordon. “Job growth has exceeded the national average and the number of people receiving unemployment benefits is the lowest in ten years.”

Jobless rates across the region showed a slight increase, but the unemployment rate remains extremely low in northeast Kansas.

Riley County unemployment rose from 2.8 percent in May to 3.4 percent in June. The largest increase in the region occurred in Geary County where the jobless rate jumped a full point from 4.9 in May to 5.9 percent.

Pottawatomie County reported a slight increase from 2.7 to 3.1 percent. Clay County increased from 3 to 3.4 percent .

Seasonally adjusted job estimates indicate total Kansas nonfarm jobs increased by 1,900 from May. Private sector jobs, a subset of total nonfarm jobs, increased by 1,600 from the previous month.

“Private sector job growth in Kansas has accelerated throughout 2018,” said Labor Economist, Emilie Doerksen. “June was the 10th consecutive month of private sector job gains in the state, including consistent growth in professional and business services and recent increases in manufacturing and trade, transportation and utilities.”

Since June 2017, Kansas gained 24,800 seasonally adjusted total nonfarm jobs and 22,200 private sector jobs.

Riley County Arrest Report Saturday July 21

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

MICHAEL PAUL FAIRCHILD, 22, Manhattan, DUI; 1ST CONVICTION; BLOOD/BREATH .08 OR>; Bond $750

Alvarez has 2 previous convictions for Theft and one for drugs, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

ELADIO FUENTES ALVAREZ JR, 39, Manhattan, Failure to Appear (2x) Probation Violation; Bond $17,000

BREONTAE BREIONBRE MATTHEWS, 23, Greensboro, NC., BATTERY; PHYSICAL CONTACT IN RUDE, INSULTING; Bond $750 and Failure to Appear; Bond $500

J DONTE TERRELL RICHARDSON, 17, Manhattan, DISPLAY FAKE/REVOKED/SUSPENDED DL 1 INTERFERE LEO;OBSTR/RESIST/OPPOSE MIS WAR; No Bond

LIANA ANGELICA GONZALEZ PADOVANI, 20, Junction City, VIO PROTECTION ORDER; PRETRIAL ORDERS, DOMESTIC BATTERY;KNOWING/RECKLESS BODIL; Bond $2000

SHANE ALEXANDER STOKES, 20, Manhattan, DOMESTIC BATTERY;KNOWING/RECKLESS BODILY; Bond $1000

 

UPDATE: Salmonella outbreak linked to Hy-Vee Spring Pasta Salad

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TOPEKAThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), the Kansas Department of Agriculture (KDA), the Johnson County Department of Health and Environment (JCDHE), public health and regulatory officials in several states, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are investigating a multi-state outbreak ofSalmonella Sandiego infections. Spring Pasta Salad purchased at Hy-Vee grocery stores is a likely source of the outbreak.

As of July 17, the CDC reported 21 people infected with the outbreak strain ofSalmonella Sandiego from five states. On July 20, KDHE and JCDHE identified one infected person, an adult resident of Johnson County.

“Any individuals who have this in their refrigerator should return the recalled Spring Pasta Salad to the store for a refund or throw it away,” said KDHE Chief Medical Officer Dr. Greg Lakin. “Even if some of it was eaten and no one got sick, do not eat it. If you stored recalled pasta salad in another container, throw the pasta salad away. Thoroughly wash the container with warm, soapy water before using it again, to remove harmful germs that could contaminate other food,” Lakin said.

The Spring Pasta Salad was sold in Kansas Hy-Vee stores before Hy-Vee removed it from all its locations on July 16. Kansans should check their refrigerators to ensure they do not eat the recalled pasta salad. The Spring Pasta Salad includes shell pasta, carrots, celery, cucumbers, green pepper, onion and mayonnaise. It was sold in one-pound (16 oz.) and three-pound (48 oz.) plastic containers or may have been scooped at the deli counter into clear plastic containers. The recalled pasta salad was sold in all Hy-Vee grocery stores in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wisconsin. The expiration dates for the recalled pasta salad range from June 22, 2018 to Aug. 3, 2018.

Contact a health care provider if you think you got sick from eating recalled Hy-Vee Spring Pasta Salad. Most people infected with Salmonella develop diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps 12 to 96 hours after being exposed to the bacteria. The illness usually lasts four to seven days, and most people recover without treatment. In some people, the diarrhea may be so severe that the patient needs to be hospitalized. Salmonella infection may spread from the intestines to the bloodstream and then to other places in the body. Children younger than five years, adults older than 65 years, and people with weakened immune systems are more likely to have a severe illness.

 
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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Midwest grocery store chain Hy-Vee Inc. has recalled its store-brand spring pasta salad after 20 people got salmonella in Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Iowa.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday the West Des Moines-based grocery chain discovered potential salmonella contamination on Monday night and pulled the product from its shelves.

The recall includes 16-ounce and 48-ounce containers of Hy-Vee Spring Pasta Salad produced between June 1 and July 13. It was available from deli service cases in the company’s 244 stores across eight states including Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Salmonella can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in the young, frail and elderly.

Kansas Democrats Face Primary Dilemma In Governor’s Race

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By Brian Grimmett

The Kansas Democratic party hasn’t had a gubernatorial primary since 1998. The unfamiliar competition this year is forcing Democrats across the state to wrestle with their identity ahead of the Aug. 7 election.

State Sen. Laura Kelly, former Wichita Mayor Carl Brewer, and former Kansas Ag Secretary Josh Svaty are all competing to be the Democratic gubernatorial candidate.
STEPHAN BISAHA, MADELINE FOX AND BRIAN GRIMMETT

Should their nominee be a candidate who aligns strictly with the progressive ideals of the party platform, or someone with broader appeal? Do they go with experience and name recognition, or youthful exuberance?

Is that former big city mayor Carl Brewer of Wichita? Statehouse veteran Sen. Laura Kelly? Or a fresh face like former Kansas Agriculture Secretary and one-time legislator Josh Svaty?

At the Hutchinson Airport Steakhouse where they meet every month, the Reno County Democratic Women, a group of mostly older women, were still undecided about which way to go with just weeks until the primary.

“I honestly have not made up my mind,” Sandra Gustafson said. “It’s a huge conflict.”

Gustafson is a self-proclaimed women’s rights activist.

“At this point I’m really drawn between voting long-term convictions as a woman for right to choose and the woman candidate,” she said. “And I’m also very much concerned about the lack of new blood in the party and I’m very much attracted to Josh Svaty for that reason.”

Stretching the party platform

Democrat candidates for Kansas Governor attended a debate July 10 in Wichita

At a debate in Wichita in early June, Kelly, the only woman in the race, one-upped the 38-year-old Svaty, who’s 30 years her junior.

“I would veto any new restrictions on women’s reproductive rights,” Svaty said to light applause.

Then Kelly, responding directly to him got a bigger cheer, “Kansas has almost nowhere else to go to restrict women’s access,” she said. “So to just say, I will veto any more, is not enough.”

Another split is gun control.

Brewer has challenged both Kelly and Svaty for having sided with the NRA in the Legislature, and he clipped their tit for tat on the subject from that June debate and other forums into a campaign ad.

“The NRA is not going to support me today and they’re not going to support me any other day because of my position on guns,” the former mayor said in June.

The candidates all agree on pushing for greater access to healthcare and increased education spending — pillars of the party platform the women gathered in Hutchinson subscribe to.

At the airport steakhouse, Bev Ooley described herself as a staunch Democrat, but, said she’s one who’d accept a Democrat with some conservative ideas, if it’s someone who can get people out to vote and win back the governor’s office. For her, that’s Svaty.

“I just like that he was young and exciting and knowledgeable,” she said. “He was just what I would think of a good candidate.”

A moderate in November

In Kansas, where voter registrations tilt heavily toward the Republican party, the Democrat has often played the moderate in gubernatorial elections.

“Democrats in Kansas are relatively in the middle just by definition,” said Kathleen Sebelius, the last Democrat to be elected governor.

Given that political dynamic, Sebelius  predicts it won’t be a “wild-eyed liberal” who emerges from the primary this year.

And, she said, as the GOP veers right, a coalition builder will have the best chance in November.

“Then you would attract 100 percent of the Democrats, a chunk of the independents and a slice of moderate Republicans. That’s the formula that elects a Democrat statewide,” said Sebelius, who was herself elected statewide four times as insurance commissioner and governor.

In 2018, Sebelius is supporting Senator Kelly.

Svaty has his own establishment backing from John Carlin, who was governor from 1979 to 1987.

New energy

It was also Svaty who generated the most of the excitement at the Kansas Young Democrats annual convention in early July. Several of the dozens in attendance said they were even volunteering for his campaign.

“He has the energy that we need to defeat someone, God forbid we face someone like Kris Kobach, he has the energy to take him on,” Nick Hinman of Olathe said.

The few remaining undecideds at the convention in Lawrence said the intra-party disagreements would ultimately be good for the party.

“It’s giving people a chance to dream a little bigger than just having a Democrat,” said Elizabeth Fehr of Chanute. “We can talk more about the direction we’re going.”

Carving up the state

Shawnee County Democratic Party Chairwoman Ethel Edwards thinks most primary voters know the candidates not for their ideology, but because of geography.

“For Sedgwick County folks they’d say Carl Brewer. For Shawnee County folks they’ll say Laura Kelly, for western Kansas the Svaty folks will say Josh Svaty,” she said.

While the candidates are leaning into that —  Svaty has been playing up his rural roots, Brewer his two-terms as mayor of the state’s largest city, and Kelly her tenure in Topeka — the contested primary has also forced them outside of their usual stomping grounds.

Zach Worf, Democratic Party Chairman in Finney County, says western Kansas usually feels forgotten by politicians. He’s been happy to see that each one of the candidates running this year has come out to Garden City at least three or four times already.

“I will support whichever candidate has the best policies closest to lining up with me,” he said. “But understanding what that four- or five-hour drive feels like and knowing that there’s a whole ‘nother side of the state that they have to be aware of is super important.”

But appealing to western Kansans might not matter as much until the general election. More than half of registered Democrats live in either Johnson, Shawnee, Sedgwick, or Wyandotte county.

That math likely favors Kelly.

Brian Grimmett is a reporter focusing on the environment and energy for the Kansas News Service.  Follow him on Twitter @briangrimmett.

Riley County Arrest Report Sunday July 22

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

MARICELA ANNE CORTEZ, 22, Manhattan, DOMESTIC BATTERY;RUDE PHYSICAL CONTACT CRIMINAL DAMAGE PROPERTY; <$1000; Bond $2000

DESHAUN CHRISTOPHER BUSBY, 21, Fort Riley, POSS FIREARM WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE INTERFERE LEO;OBSTR/RESIST/OPPOSE MIS WARR; Bond $2000

Hendrix courtesy Junction City Police

JOHN JAMES LEVALLEY, 29, Manhattan, BATTERY; KNOWINGLY/RECKLESSLY CAUSING BODI; Bond $1000

NADINE NANA DENOYE, 21, Junction City, BATTERY LEO;CITY/COUNTY OFFICER/EMP ON DUTY 1, INTERFERE LEO;OBSTR/RESIST/OPPOSE MIS WAR, DISORDERLY CONDUCT; BRAWLING/FIGHTING; Bond $3000

SHAYLA JAMELLA HENDRIX, 23, Junction City, DISORDERLY CONDUCT; BRAWLING/FIGHTING; Bond $1000

KARRIN DQUAN FRAZIER THOMAS, 23, Manhattan, DOMESTIC BATTERY;RUDE PHYSICAL CONTACT; Bond $1000

JOSHUA DAVID CHATLIN, 24, Liberty, TX, Probation Violation; Held without Bond

TASHA RENEE ERICKSON, 36, Wamego, DOMESTIC BATTERY;KNOWING/RECKLESS BODILY; Bond $1000

DOMINIQUE RAFEAL SAWYER, 34, Midwest, OK., Failure to Appear; Bond $3000

SOFAI TO-A PETELO, 20, Riley, DISORDERLY CONDUCT; BRAWLING/FIGHTING; Bond $1000

NOAH CHRISTOPHER HARDIN, 20, Fort Riley, Failure to Appear; Bond $300

Report: Sports gambling won’t be slam dunk for Kansas budget

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new report finds legalizing sports gambling could boost revenue for states like Kansas, but any windfall is likely to be brief.

Sports gambling began to tempt lawmakers after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling legalized it earlier this year. The report released Thursday from the Pew Charitable Trusts said sports book likely won’t be a magic pill to cure state budget issues.

A court ruling has cleared the way for more states to legalize sports betting, but it may not provide much revenue to government.
(File photo)

Mary Murphy, one of the authors of the study, said tax collections from sports betting may not be new revenue. Rather, it’s likely to be money cannibalized from places such as casinos and the tax proceeds they generate. That’s based on past experiences when gambling has been expanded.

“States could experience short-lived gains followed by downward pressure on revenue as more and more states legalize,” she said.

Because there’s currently very little legal sports gambling, Murphy said it’s hard to estimate what the financial impact of sports betting could be. However, she said states shouldn’t count on a major bonanza.

“The revenue streams will likely be small,” she said.

That’s because sin taxes overall make up a small percentage of state revenues. The report found in Kansas they account for 3.3 percent and in Missouri it’s 4.9 percent. Those numbers include alcohol, tobacco and gambling taxes.

Kansas lawmakers considered bills this year that would have created a framework for sports betting , but they ultimately didn’t pursue legislation.

When the Supreme Court knocked down the federal ban on sports gambling, Republican Senate President Susan Wagle hailed the ruling as a victory for state’s rights.

“The legalization of sports betting will help diminish illegal gambling operations and allow states to bring their regulations into the 21st century,” she said in a statement. “I am confident the Kansas Legislature will act appropriately to regulate sports betting next year.”

Marijuana is another issue on the minds of some state lawmakers. The Kansas Legislature, with a strong block of conservatives, seems unlikely to approve legalization. But the number of other states legalizing medical and even recreational marijuana has grown rapidly in recent years.

Murphy said neighboring Colorado has seen significant, although volatile, revenues from recreational marijuana. Monthly taxes and fees totaled around $2 million in early 2014 and were around $21 million in April 2017.

States that are early to the party may be able to cash in on tourism dollars as people visit to sample legal pot, but that buzz is likely to fade over time.

“As their neighbors … legalize recreational marijuana, the early adopters may see fewer tourism dollars,” Murphy said.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for KPR a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda.

Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission announces grants

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KDC

TOPEKA — The Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission is now accepting applications for its two main grant categories, The Strategic Investment Program and The Arts Integration Program.

The Strategic Investment Program recognizes the important role creative organizations play in building and sustaining cultural and economic vibrancy in Kansas. By funding a variety of professional and organizational development opportunities that impact cultural programming, these grants support initiatives that use the arts to enhance community vitality, revitalize neighborhoods, generate local business, create and preserve job opportunities and impact tourism.

The Arts Integration Programs support the role the arts play in all levels of education, community service, and workforce development. This program provides funding for educational institutions, arts organizations, and community service non-profits to use the arts to increase student success, foster creative thinking, develop critical job skills, and enhance community development.

The first deadline for application submission is September 7, 2018 for projects taking place Oct. 1, 2018 – June 30, 2019. The second deadline for application submission is January 7, 2019 for projects taking place Feb. 1, 2019 – Dec. 31, 2019.

STRATEGIC INVESTMENT PROGRAM

Strategic Investment Program grants are awarded in three categories:

  • Organizational Development: This category provides funding for professional development opportunities for Kansas based arts organizations that help strengthen business practices, increase organizational viability and promote long term sustainability.
  • New and Expanded Works: This program provides funding for new or significantly expanded productions, exhibitions, programs or events by Kansas-based nonprofit arts organizations. Projects should either be an entirely new type of program for the organization designed to diversify its services or an expansion of an existing program designed to significantly enhance the quality of current offerings.
  • Equipment and Technology: This program provides funding to purchase equipment, materials, and/or technology upgrades to expand or improve an applicant’s organization.

Applicants for a grant under the Strategic Investment Program must make a compelling case as to why this particular self-identified activity or opportunity was selected, how it will have a substantial impact on their work and community, and how it will enhance the national reputation of Kansas.

Guidelines and additional information can be found here:
http://kansascommerce.gov/707/Strategic-Investment-Program

ARTS INTEGRATION PROGRAM

Arts Integration Programs are awarded in three categories:

  • Visiting Artists: This category provides funding for eligible organizations to engage and deepen the impact of arts programming on local and underserved audiences through exposure to and interaction with professional visiting arts. Presenters may book artists in any discipline, not just in performing arts. Projects should strive to integrate an arts discipline into non-arts content areas; help interpret an exhibition, performance, or presentation; and support community development goals and objectives. Booking artists on the Kansas Touring Roster allow for a $1,000 credit for the applicant organization: http://www.kansascommerce.gov/705/KS-Roster

o    Note: KCAIC will review applications for roster inclusion in early March. Please check the website at that time for an expanded list and encourage qualified artists to apply. In addition, Visiting Artists grants featuring roster artists will be accepted and reviewed year round up to 30 days prior to proposed activities.

  • Integrated Arts Education: This category supports new or expanded educational programming that integrates arts learning into non-arts curriculum and content areas to address emerging technologies, areas of skills shortages, STEM curricula, workforce readiness, and increase student performance.
  • Innovative Partnerships: This category supports innovative programming between arts organizations and non-arts organizations to impact a variety of community and/or economic development goals. Arts organizations are encouraged to partner with other community entities (hospitals, prisons, etc.) to develop arts-centered programs that address community needs such as public health, transportation, tourism, unemployment, aging, corrections, etc.

Guidelines and additional information can be found at http://kansascommerce.gov/666/Arts-Integration-Program

To review the application process, as well as program and category specific policies and guidelines visit KansasCommerce.gov/CAIC. Applications can be submitted online at https://kansascaic.submittable.com .

Grants will be reviewed by peer panel and awarded at the quarterly commission meeting in April.

All grants are made possible through a partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and are subject to KCAIC and NEA standards and regulations.

For more on the Kansas Creative Arts Industries Commission go to KansasCommerce.gov/caic.


Golden Clover Clue #9

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To celebrate the Riley County Fair once again the Golden Clover has been hidden somewhere within Riley County. No special tools or equipment is needed to find and recover the Clover. Finding the Golden Clover means a gift package worth over $500. So tune in each morning for the new clue or find the clue on the Little Apple Post each day.

Now – Clue #9

Thursday night is a Poyntz parade extraordinaire

Lots of pickups, even Fords, let’s be clear

You might be shocked at how close you’ve come

Only a dunce in the corner would be considered so dumb!

Riley County Arrest Report Monday July 23

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

FREDERICK ALONZO PEOPLES, 51, DUI; 1ST CONV; COMPETENT EVIDENCE OF BLOOD; Bond $750

PRESTON HEATH WAKEFIELD, 21, Manhattan, DUI; 1ST CONV; COMPETENT EVIDENCE OF BLOOD/; Bond $750

Kan. insurance commissioner sues Governor over fund transfer

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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas insurance commissioner seeking the Republican gubernatorial nomination is trying to prevent Gov. Jeff Colyer from taking $8 million this year from a state insurance fund.

Selzer and Colyer during a Johnson County candidate debate earlier this month- photo courtesy KCTV

Ken Selzer has filed a lawsuit seeking a court order to block Colyer from transferring money from an insurance-specific fund into a general fund that pays for the state government’s overall operation. Selzer is the commissioner of the Kansas Insurance Department.

The lawsuit says “consumers will be harmed” by the $8 million transfer because the Insurance Department would have to collect additional fees on insurance companies to make up lost revenue.

Colyer’s office says Selzer agreed to the transfer during former Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration in 2016.

Selzer said Friday the lawsuit is unrelated to the gubernatorial campaign.

Actions announced to alleviate long lines for KS driver’s license

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TOPEKA – Governor Jeff Colyer and the Department of Revenue have announced three new actions designed to alleviate long lines in driver’s license offices.

“Effective July 20, we are moving to end our relationship with QFlow and will replace them with a more effective line management system that better meets our expectations and those of the people it serves,” Governor Colyer said. “I look forward to getting a new system in place quickly that will offer Kansas credential holders a more effective way to get into offices across the state.”

The search for a new queuing system is already underway.

Governor Colyer also indicated that easier access to driver’s license services would soon be available with the expected October launch of the ability to process renewals through the iKan mobile application. When this new service is launched, it will significantly reduce traffic at DMV offices by allowing Kansans to renew their driver’s licenses from their computer or mobile phone.

“This is a long-envisioned move and we are working hard to get it off the ground as quickly as possible,” Governor Colyer said. “It’s vital that we modernize our technology to ensure that Kansans have access to government services in a way that is safe, convenient, and easy to use.”

Governor Colyer and Secretary Williams also announced additional service hours at the Mission and Olathe driver’s license offices. Both offices will now process customers for an additional 14 hours per week, with new hours from 7 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. Monday through Friday until August 20. Service will also be available on Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 11:15 a.m.

“I appreciate Secretary Sam Williams and his team of driver’s license examiners and managers who have stepped up to offer expanded hours,” Governor Colyer said. “I’m thankful for the way everyone involved is invested in coming together to solve this problem and working to provide the best possible service to Kansans.”

Johnson County residents will also have the option to visit a temporary setup at the new tax office in the Rosana Square shopping center at 7600 W. 119th St. Suite A, Overland Park, KS. That temporary space should be available in the next two weeks.

The space for a third Johnson County office is currently under contract negotiations.

(Click to enlarge)

Governor Colyer also urged Kansans to get familiar with the option of Real ID, and to use the Real ID checklist before going in to the office.

“The federal government requires additional documentation to obtain a Real ID driver’s license. While this new credential does take a bit more time, ensuring sure you know which documents are required beforehand can help speed things up.”

The Real ID checklist is found at ksrevenue.org/realid.

Golden Clover Clue #10

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To celebrate the Riley County Fair once again the Golden Clover has been hidden somewhere within Riley County. No special tools or equipment is needed to find and recover the Clover. Finding the Golden Clover means a gift package worth over $500. So tune in each morning for the new clue or find the clue on the Little Apple Post each day.

Now- Clue #10

This is no time for fishing, it’s time to get real

Finding the Clover is kind of a big deal

Looking in the right barns will win you a heap

Approach with care, you’re looking for cows not sheep

Riley County Arrest Report Tuesday July 24

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Cade Hutchinson has previous convictions for Criminal Threat, Burglary, Criminal Damage to Property and Drugs, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

CADE ALAN HUTCHINSON, 29, St. George, Probation Violation; Held without Bond

RAYSHELLA SHAJUAN MURPHY, 29, Kansas City; EXTRADITION OF IMPRISONED PERS; Bond $10,000

ZACHARY DEWAYNE TILTON, 30, Manhattan, Failure to Appear (2x) $4500 Bond

LINDSAY BLAIR HARDY, 21, Manhattan, CRIM USE OF FINANCIAL CARD- <$1000; Bond $2000

Murphy-photo courtesy Wyandotte Co.

RAEGAN MARIE ALEXANDER DOTSON, 16, Manhattan, POSSESSION MARIJUANA; No Bond

Trump tapping $12B to help farmers affected by tariffs

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The government announced a $12 billion plan Tuesday to assist farmers who have been hurt by President Donald Trump’s trade disputes with China and other trading partners.

Farmers Cooperative Elevator in Garden Plain- Google image

The plan focuses on Midwest soybean producers and others targeted by retaliatory measures.

The Agriculture Department said the proposal would include direct assistance for farmers, purchases of excess crops and trade promotion activities aimed at building new export markets. Officials said the plan would not require congressional approval and would come through the Commodity Credit Corporation, a wing of the department that addresses agricultural prices.

“This is a short-term solution that will give President Trump and his administration the time to work on long-term trade deals,” said Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue. Officials said the direct payments could help producers of soybeans, which have been hit hard by the Trump tariffs, along with sorghum, corn, wheat, cotton, dairy and farmers raising hogs.

In Kansas City, meanwhile, Trump told a veterans convention that he was trying to renegotiate trade agreements that he said have hurt American workers, and he asked for patience ahead of key talks.

“We’re making tremendous progress. They’re all coming. They don’t want to have those tariffs put on them,” Trump told the Veterans of Foreign Wars national convention.

(backslash)rump declared earlier Tuesday that “Tariffs are the greatest!” and threatened to impose additional penalties on U.S. trading partners as he prepared for negotiations with European officials at the White House.

Tariffs are taxes on imports. They are meant to protect domestic businesses and put foreign competitors at a disadvantage. But the taxes also exact a toll on U.S. businesses and consumers, which pay more for imported products.

The Trump administration has slapped tariffs on $34 billion in Chinese goods in a dispute over Beijing’s high-tech industrial policies. China has retaliated with duties on soybeans and pork, affecting Midwest farmers in a region of the country that supported the president in his 2016 campaign.

Trump has threatened to place penalty taxes on up to $500 billion in products imported from China, a move that would dramatically ratchet up the stakes in the trade dispute involving the globe’s biggest economies.

__

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street is flooding into the agricultural sector on reports that the Trump administration is preparing a plan that would send billions in aid to U.S. farmers hurt by tariffs.

CF Industries Holding and Mosaic Company both traded up more than 3 percent, while Deere & Co. shot up more than 4 percent after news of the aid package was leaked to The Associated Press by two people briefed on the plan. Shares in Archer-Daniels-Midland and FMC Corp. also rose.

The Agriculture Department is expected to announce details later Tuesday. The plan would attempt to give relief to farmers who have faced retaliation from U.S. trade partners with duties on products like soybeans and pork.

President Donald Trump is in Kansas City Tuesday, the heart of the nation’s farm country.


Golden Clover found!

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The Golden Clover was found by 2 people, Tiana and Tailynn.

The Golden Clover was in a stump in a grove of cedar trees near the Rocky Ford School House.

 

Riley County Arrest Report Wednesday July 25

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The following is a summary of arrests, citations by the Riley County Police Department. Those arrested are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Jones has previous convictions for robbery, theft and battery, according to the Kansas Dept. of Corrections

HENRY MARQUEZ JONES, 32, Manhattan, MANFUFAC DRUG PARA NOT 21-5706B, DUI; 1ST CONV; COMPETENT EVIDENCE OF BLOOD, OPERATE MV W/O VALID LICENSE, POSSESSION MARIJUANA; Bond $4500

SARAH LYNN GONZALEZ, 24, Manhattan, DOMESTIC BATTERY;KNOWING/RECKLESS BODILY; Bond $3000

RALPH JAMES BEHNKE, 22, Salina, Probation Violation (2x) Bond $7000

GENEVA CHISM MUNDY, 59, Manhattan, Failure to Appear; Bond $285

TYMARIO D ROBBINS, 21, Junction City, Failure to Appear; Bond $750

Contract dispute could impact healthcare of 400K in Kansas

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A contract dispute that could disrupt the health care of more than 400,000 Kansans enrolled in the state’s privatized Medicaid program has landed in court.

Amerigroup, one of three companies that since 2013 has managed the delivery of care to low-income, elderly and disabled through KanCare, is contesting a recent decision by state officials to replace it with Aetna when new contracts take effect in January.

The Virginia-based company filed a lawsuit Friday in Shawnee County District Court requesting the new contracts be set aside. It is also wants the court to order the state to rebid the contracts. Such an order would likely force the state to seek federal approval to extend the current program for at least another year.

The company is alleging that state officials involved in the contracting process ignored directives from the Legislature. Specifically, directives aimed at curtailing Gov. Jeff Colyer’s plan to make significant changes to the program as part of his KanCare 2.0 initiative, including adding a work requirement and a lifetime benefits cap.

“We obviously strongly believe that the agencies acted inappropriately and outside their authority by not following the direction of the Legislature,” said Frank Klepper, CEO of Amerigroup Kansas.

Amerigroup included in its court filing copies of email exchanges between the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and the state procurement office that indicated officials knew about but ignored legislation requiring them to make changes in the request for proposals used in the contracting process.

The officials, the lawsuit says, “failed to follow procedure required by law and executed unauthorized contracts … that exceeded their legal authority.”

Jon Hamdorf, the KDHE official in charge of KanCare, said in an email that he couldn’t respond to specific allegations in the lawsuit because the agency hadn’t been served with a copy.

As a general defense, he said all the companies that bid on the new contracts were treated equally.

“All bidders were evaluated on the same criteria,” Hamdorf said. “We consistently conveyed the same (information) to all parties throughout the process.”

The problem, Amerigroup contends in the lawsuit, is that the agency used the wrong criteria. It awarded contracts based on bids submitted for KanCare 2.0 instead of making the changes to the RFP demanded by lawmakers and allowing companies to revise their bids accordingly.

In addition, the company is claiming that KDHE finalized the new contracts before notifying all bidders of its intention to award them, a violation of state procurement rules.

Amerigroup’s lawsuit requests an emergency order because, the company says, uncertainty about whether it will continue as a KanCare MCO is hindering its ability to provide care to its approximately 125,000 Kansas members. Key staff are leaving for more secure jobs and providers are requiring that Amerigroup members switch to a new plan in anticipation of the announced changes.

“The potential health impact from this significant disruption to our membership is quite frankly extremely troubling to me,” Klepper said. “We have members with very vulnerable medical conditions who now have to go through this process essentially because the agency didn’t do what the Legislature told them to do.”

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks.

New rules would cut estimated $13B in student loan relief

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By COLLIN BINKLEY,  Associated Press

Students who are defrauded by their schools would have a harder time getting their federal loans erased under new rules proposed by the Trump administration Wednesday.

U.S. Secretary of Education DeVoss during a June 6, Senate hearing- image courtesy U.S. Dept. of Education

The proposal, which aims to replace a set of Obama-era rules that were never implemented, drew applause from the for-profit industry but sharp criticism from advocacy groups that represent student borrowers.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos said the proposal lays out clear rules schools must follow to avoid trouble, while also protecting students harmed by deception.

“Our commitment and our focus has been and remains on protecting students from fraud,” DeVos said.

Under the proposal, students would be eligible for loan relief if they can prove their schools knowingly misled them with statements or actions that directly led them to take out loans or enroll at the school.

That would be a higher bar than the borrower defense rules finalized under Obama in 2016 after the collapse of two for-profit schools, Corinthian Colleges and ITT Technical Institute. Those rules allowed relief in a wider range of cases dealing with breach of contract.

Education Department documents supporting DeVos’ proposal argue that, while students should be protected from fraud, they also have an obligation to do their research before picking schools.

“Postsecondary students are adults who can be reasonably expected to make informed decisions if they have access to relevant and reliable data about program outcomes,” the department said.

The new proposal is estimated to save nearly $13 billion over the next decade compared with spending estimates under the Obama rules, primarily by reducing the amount of loan relief awarded to students.

Department officials say they have received more than 100,000 fraud claims since 2015, and most are still under review. But the new rules would apply only to loans taken out after July 1, 2019, officials said.

Schools would gain an opportunity to respond to claims of fraud under the new proposal, which says schools deserve to defend themselves against accusations that could damage their reputations and revenue.

It also would allow schools to force students into arbitration agreements barring them from suing the school, a practice used by some for-profit colleges that would have been banned under Obama’s rules.

Opponents blasted the proposal, saying it places schools ahead of students and discourages victims from pursuing financial relief.

“It encourages abusive and predatory institutions to continue to rip off students with impunity, while slamming the door on the debt relief that Congress has instructed the department to provide to cheated students,” said Toby Merrill, director of the Project on Predatory Student Lending at Harvard University.

Bob Shireman, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation and a former education official under Obama, said the proposal “is perhaps the most damaging action Betsy DeVos has taken since assuming office.”

“These changes would effectively strip students of their right to recourse if they believe that a college or university has misled them, making it next to impossible for defrauded students to get the relief they are entitled to,” he said.

But the changes were hailed as an improvement by the for-profit college industry and some Republicans.

Steve Gunderson, president and CEO of the trade group Career Education Colleges and Universities, said previous versions of the rules allowed for “carte blanche approval” of fraud claims, to the detriment of schools and their students.

“The department has undertaken a thoughtful and deliberate approach to this rule, and we applaud their hard work on this important matter,” Gunderson said.

Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Republican from Tennessee and chairman of the Senate education committee, said DeVos’ proposal will prevent taxpayers from footing the bill for “unreasonable or unsubstantiated claims of fraud.”

“The Obama administration went too far in rewriting this provision by setting overly broad and vague standards and as a result, put taxpayers on the hook for too many loans,” he said.

Obama’s education officials created new rules to clarify the debt relief process after thousands of students said they were defrauded by for-profit colleges. Before that, the process was rarely used and relied on a patchwork of state laws to determine if students deserved loan forgiveness.

The updated rules were scheduled to take effect in July 2017, but DeVos delayed them after a California group representing for-profit schools sued to block the regulations. DeVos began the process to replace them soon after.

Meanwhile, the department has only recently begun to process a backlog of fraud claims, announcing in December that it will provide only partial relief to borrowers based on their incomes. Under the Obama administration, students were granted full relief for their loans.

On Wednesday, the department said it will be gathering public input on the proposed for the next 30 days. Along with opinions on the rules, officials are also asking if borrowers still making payments on their loans should be able to apply for forgiveness at all, or if it should be reserved for those who default.

Riley County EMTs make 80th birthday wish come true

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RILEY COUNTY —Two Kansas EMTs went above and beyond their responsibilities Wednesday to make a birthday wish for a woman in Riley County.

Pictured below is Dustin, Joyce, and Blake enjoying some German Chocolate Cake and celebrating together-photo Riley County EMS

Lt. Dustin Cassel and EMT Blake Martin transported Joyce to the hospital on her 80th birthday, according to the Riley County EMS social media page.

She made a comment during their time together about it being her birthday and how she was upset that she’d be spending the day at the hospital and mentioned that all she wanted was some German Chocolate Cake.

Lt. Cassel and EMT Martin took it upon themselves to make her birthday wish come true.

“Thanks to Dustin and Blake for all that you do and Happy Birthday to Joyce.”

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