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Musser Gets NEA’s “Integrity & Courage Award”

Beau Musser
Beau Musser
The St Joseph branch of the National Education Association has honored the St Joe School District’s Chief Financial Officer for integrity and courage. Beau Musser’s lawsuit against the St Joseph School District is still pending, but actions taken over the last couple of week’s indicate the district is angling to settle.

Musser told educators Thursday night that he takes pride in doing what’s right.

“There are those in life who do what they want, and those in life who do what they’re told,” Musser said. “I do take pride in doing what’s right.”

Musser accepted the NEA Integrity and Courage Award Thursday from SJNEA President Todd Brockett. Brockett told members they felt it was a good move for the sake of the taxpayers, the teachers and the students.

Musser filed suit against the district and three officials claiming he’d been placed on administrative leave for blowing the whistle on hundreds of thousands of dollars that had been given to top administrators without the knowledge or approval of the school board. Subsequent investigation unearthed millions of dollars more in stipends and consultant contracts handed out over decades. Some of those were approved after the fact by the board of education.

The FBI, A US Court Grand Jury, and the State Auditor’s Office all launched investigations into the district as the details emerged.

Rep. Graves Votes to Lower Energy Costs and Create Jobs

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representative Sam Graves (MO-06), House Small Business Committee Chairman, released the following statement after voting in favor of H.R. 2, the American Energy Solutions for Lower Costs and More American Jobs Act and H.R. 4, the Jobs for America Act.  Since earning the majority in the House of Representatives, Republicans have pursued policies to take advantage of United States’ energy resources and to improve conditions necessary for economic growth by providing certainty to small businesses. They have passed dozens of bills to expand safe and responsible energy production, ensure all Americans have access to affordable and reliable electricity, and promote efficient new technologies.

“The people of Missouri’s 6th District are feeling the effects of this Administration’s failed economic policies and continued war on energy,” said Rep. Graves.  “Instead of being held captive by unstable and often hostile nations, the U.S. should take advantage of our resources here at home,” he continued.  “Right now, an overbearing federal government is making energy more expensive and stifling economic growth.  Whether it is to address rising energy costs or an economy that continues to be burdened by regulations, common sense solutions are needed to ease the squeeze on middle class Missourians and that is exactly what we did by passing these bills.  I call on Harry Reid and the Senate to quickly do the same so the Preside

Immigration questions to drop, 1700 from Mo. and 700 Kansans from ACA rolls

 

Map showing the number of people, by state, losing coverage they obtained through the health insurance marketplace because they lack immigration/citizenship data.-KHI News
Map showing the number of people, by state, losing coverage they obtained through the health insurance marketplace because they lack immigration/citizenship data.-KHI News

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Discrepancies in immigration status data will cause about 700 Kansans who enrolled in health insurance plans through the online federal marketplace to lose their coverage at the end of the month.

Officials at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said earlier this month they were attempting to contact some 1,800 Kansans whose immigration status was in question because of data differences in their online applications.
he deadline to resolve those differences was Sept. 5. CMS data compiled on Sept. 14 showed that Kansas still had 700 enrollees with outstanding data discrepancies whose coverage will end Sept. 30.

“We’re glad they got ahold of 1,100 of the 1,800, but it’s unfortunate 700 are still going to have their coverage pulled,” said Katrina McGivern, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Association for the Medically Underserved.

About 57,000 Kansans used the online health insurance marketplace, healthcare.gov, to purchase health insurance last year. Coverage under the Affordable Care Act is only allowed for those who have properly documented they are in the country legally.

KAMU received the bulk of the federal grant money provided to train navigators to help Kansans use the federal health insurance marketplace. But McGivern said officials there were unable to do much proactively to help those whose coverage was in question because navigators are barred by law from keeping contact information for those they help enroll.

“There have been some people who come in and get assistance, but the effort to get this information back (to CMS) has been outside of us for the most part,” McGivern said. “It kind of goes back to the whole ‘we can’t keep their information.’ So we don’t know who to reach out to.”

About 1,700 Missourians also will receive notices saying their coverage will end Sept. 30 because of immigration status questions. That state had about 150,000 people use the federal site to enroll in a plan last year.

The data mismatches were a national problem, with CMS reporting almost 1 million such discrepancies nationwide as of May.

CMS outreach efforts helped pare that number month by month, and in August CMS sent notices to about 310,000 people who were still mismatched to let them know the deadline to provide documentation was fast approaching.

“We’ve made progress in resolving these cases,” said an email sent this week by CMS media relations. “We received hundreds of thousands of documents in response to the September 5 deadline, resulting in a decrease from 966,000 as of the end of May to 115,000 as of September 14.”

Those 115,000 — which include the 700 in Kansas and the 1,700 in Missouri — may have an opportunity for a special open enrollment period if they resolve their immigration status data now, according to the CMS email.

Otherwise, they will be unable to sign up for coverage until November, when the general open enrollment period for 2015 begins.

McGivern said her organization hopes that those who have their coverage canceled will work with navigators during open enrollment to get covered again.

Kansans did not need to use a navigator to sign up for insurance through the online marketplace, and it’s unclear how many of those with data discrepancies used a navigator last year. McGivern said problems with the marketplace website may have contributed to the data mismatches.

“When the website wasn’t working, there were issues that occurred with requesting different pieces of documentation more than once,” McGivern said. “There were various problems that occurred, so hopefully some of that gets worked out for the next time if that’s where the issues lie with all of this.”

CMS said it’s also in the midst of sending notices to about 279,000 households nationwide that had income discrepancies in their online marketplace applications.

Income level is key to the applications because enrollees are eligible for tax credits depending on how much money they make.

CMS administrator Marilyn Tavenner urged those who receive notice of income discrepancies to respond with proper documentation by Sept. 30 so her agency can protect the integrity of the tax credit program.

“We are committed to keeping coverage affordable for the millions of Americans who depend on it, and to doing so in an efficient, transparent way that protects taxpayers,” Tavenner said. “It’s critically important that consumers who still owe income-related documents to the Marketplace send them in by September 30 so we can continue to hold down their costs.”

Those who miss the Sept. 30 deadline may see their monthly premium costs change.

It’s South Side Fall Festival Weekend!

ssffThe 26th annual South Side Fall Festival opens Friday. Parade co-Grand Marshall Curtis Malotte says the festival is like a great big family get-together.

Entertainment on two stages will begin at 1 Friday afternoon. Opening ceremonies start at 6 pm at the Hyde Park Gazebo. Fireworks by Aerial FX will begin at 9:15.

The South Side Fall Festival Parade starts at 10 am Saturday. Another Festival highlight, the Q-Country Baby Show, begins at 1 pm Sunday at the Gazebo.

For more information click here.

17-year-old Kansas teen convicted of murder

CourtKANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City, Kansas teenager has been convicted of first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of another teen.

A Wyandotte County jury found the 17-year-old Deaarion Potts guilty on Thursday of murder, car burglary and the criminal discharge of a firearm. He was 15 years old at the time of the shooting but was tried as an adult.

Authorities say Potts fatally shot 17-year-old Ramon Bradley in October 2012. They say both teens were in vehicles and Bradley was killed by shots fired from a car that Potts was driving.

He is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

 

School commission to consider more efficiency proposals

Oneal
Oneal

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A new commission looking for efficiencies within Kansas’ public school system has school consolidation and teacher pay proposals on the agenda as its two-day meeting continues.

The K-12 Student Performance and Efficiency Commission was scheduled to hear a report Friday on why districts carry over unspent money for use in future years. Commissioner member Mike O’Neal says he wants to know why districts’ unspent balances are climbing.

Commissioners also are considering a host of cost-saving proposals. One calls for offering incentives for district to merge or cooperate. Another proposal would change the traditional teacher salary schedule, which ties pay to education and years of experience, to a salary range that takes into account experience and area of expertise.

College president issues video game challenge

Scott Dalrymple
Scott Dalrymple

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — The new president of Missouri’s Columbia will test his video game skills against the winner of a student competition with a year’s worth of free textbooks on the line.

Scott Dalrymple is hosting an online Madden NFL video game tournament next month as part of his inauguration at the private college. The Buffalo Bills fan can be seen in a YouTube video wearing eye black and mildly talking trash to his prospective PlayStation 4 opponents.

 Dalrymple will play the winner of the Oct. 17 tournament. The tournament is open to students at the main Columbia campus and the school’s other branches across the country and overseas.

Jarrell Gets 14 Years For Fatal Beating

Robert Jarrell
Robert Jarrell
A judge on Thursday ordered consecutive sentences totaling 14-years for a man convicted of beating a man to death and abandoning the corpse in the Missouri River. Robert Jarrell was one of five people convicted of charges stemming from the beating death of Jason Daviess in August of 2013.

Davies was fatally beaten with a frying pan and a baseball bat. Then the body was dumped in the Missouri River, where it was found several days later.

A co-defendant, Martin Rilinger, was sentenced to 15 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder. Three other defendants, Patricia Butler, Dollie Williams, and Billy Wilson, were all convicted and sentenced for evidence-tampering charges for helping dispose of the body.

Jarrell was convicted by a jury last month on the lessor-indluded charge of voluntary manslaughter, along with armed criminal action and abandonment of a corpse. The panel recommended seven years for manslaughter, three years for armed criminal action, and four years for abandonment of a corpse. Judge Dan Kellogg imposed those sentences, but ordered they be served consecutively.

Missouri attorney new ambassador to Ireland

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The U.S. Senate has confirmed the appointment of St. Louis attorney Kevin O’Malley as U.S. ambassador to Ireland.

President Barack Obama nominated O’Malley to the post in June. The Senate approved the appointment Thursday on a unanimous voice vote.

 O’Malley is a veteran litigator with the Greensfelder law firm in St. Louis, focusing on medical negligence, federal white collar criminal defense and product liability defense.

He has also served as an assistant U.S. attorney in St. Louis, and as a special attorney for organized crime and racketeering for the U.S. Justice Department.

O’Malley received his bachelor’s degree in 1970 and his law degree in 1973, both from Saint Louis University.

No. 20 Kansas State comes up short against 5th-ranked Auburn 20-14

KSUMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Gus Malzahn squeezed into the ramshackle shed used for postgame news conferences at Kansas State, gripped both sides of the makeshift podium and exhaled deeply.

Fifth-ranked Auburn had just squeezed out a 20-14 victory over the No. 20 Wildcats, and its coach was asked whether it was the kind of nip-and-tuck nonconference game that he likes to play.

“After they’re over and you win, yeah,” Malzahn said. “You do.”

Aubun’s vaunted ground game held in check all night, the Tigers finally pulled away when they went to the air. Nick Marshall threw for 231 yards and two touchdowns, and Auburn forced a trio of turnovers while capitalizing on three missed field goals by the Wildcats.

Still, the game wasn’t over until Marshall found D’haquille Williams running wide open on third-and-9 at the Auburn 37. The completion with 2:06 remaining went for 39 yards, a first down that effectively ended the game, and gave the Tigers (3-0) their first nonconference road win over a ranked team since knocking off Florida State in 1984.

“Our guys found a way,” Malzahn said. “I told them after the game, I think this could be a game that really helps us in the future, because we faced some major adversity tonight.”

Not nearly as much as Kansas State.

Jake Waters threw for 245 yards, but he also tossed two picks — one in the Auburn end zone. The Wildcats (2-1) also fumbled the ball away, and Jack Cantele missed those crucial field goals.

Still, the Wildcats tried to rally in the closing minutes, scoring on a run by Charles Jones out of the wildcat formation with 3:49 left. But after holding the Tigers to third down, Marshall took advantage of one more miscue — a bad call on defense — for a first down to seal it.

“There was a ton of mistakes that we made that impacted the outcome,” Kansas State coach Bill Snyder said. “Auburn is a tremendous football team and we just made too many mistakes.”

The result was Kansas State’s lowest point total in more than three years.

“It hurts a lot,” wide receiver Tyler Lockett said. “We left a lot out there on the field. One of the plays I remember, I dropped a touchdown that turned into an interception. Missed field goals, fumbled the ball. We just made a lot of mistakes today.”

Auburn was the highest-ranked team to play in Manhattan since second-ranked Penn State in 1969, and an overflow crowd started tailgating Tuesday. The festivities continued until shortly after kickoff, when the Wildcats started to throw away opportunities to spring an upset.

The first serious miscue was a fumbled handoff deep in Kansas State territory. Auburn hopped on the loose ball and, four plays later, kicked a 34-yard field goal to take a 3-0 lead.

The second turnover was even more costly. The Wildcats had second-and-goal from the Auburn 2, and Waters zipped a pass that bounced off Lockett’s shoulder pads in the end zone. Rather than an easy touchdown, the ball was picked off by the Tigers’ Jonathan Jones.

“Coach always says you get interceptions on tips and overthrows,” Jones said.

The Wildcats kept buckling down on defense, though, stuffing Auburn’s read-option attack. The Tigers had just 55 yards rushing in the first half, the fewest in the Malzahn era.

The nation’s best team in converting third downs also failed on its first five attempts.

“We knew it wasn’t going to be easy,” Marshall said. “Adversity hit us and we wanted to see how we would respond, and we responded well.”

Kansas State finally scored with 4:56 left in the first half when DeMarcus Robinson scampered in from 3 yards out for his first career touchdown. But the Tigers hurried the other way, capping a 75-yard drive with Marshall’s 40-yard strike to Ricardo Louis for a 10-7 lead.

Cantele pushed a potential tying field-goal attempt wide on the final play of the half, his second miss of the night. He hooked one wide left late in the first quarter.

He made it a frustrating hat-trick midway through the third quarter.

The Wildcats had once again marched downfield, and once again pushed the ball inside the Auburn 5. But after the Tigers stiffened, Cantele was summoned to try a 22-yarder — a mere chip-shot, hardly more than an extra point. He missed it wide right.

The Tigers tacked on a touchdown and a field goal, eventually putting the game out of reach.

“It was a collective team loss,” Kansas State defensive end Ryan Mueller said. “There were some missed opportunities there and that’s all I can really say.”

— Associated Press —

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