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Health care compact article debate heats up

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee-Photo by Phil Cauthon
Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee-Photo by Phil Cauthon

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

OLATHE — Tension built Monday as legislators who supported a health care compact bill that would free Kansas from federal health care regulations made a last ditch-effort to sway a Johnson County advisory board against publishing an article critical of the compact in a county newsletter.
After Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, a Shawnee Republican, expressed concerns at a legislative breakfast last week about the coming article, the Johnson County Commission on Aging invited her to have a follow-up meeting on that specific issue. Pilcher-Cook returned on Monday flanked by 10 other Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Ray Merrick of Stilwell.

The legislators present called the article scheduled for publication in Johnson County’s The Best Times magazine “reckless,” “dishonest,” “irresponsible,” “partisan” and “misleading.”

“I think you have taken a huge jump, a reckless jump, with the article you intend to publish in The Best Times,” Pilcher-Cook said.

All the legislators who attended Monday’s meeting are conservative Republicans who support House Bill 2553 as a repudiation of federal health care changes spearheaded by President Barack Obama. They said the proposed article unfairly portends changes to Medicare as a result of the bill in a blatant attempt to scare seniors.
Members of the commission on aging defended their work, saying they understood the compact well and remain concerned about its potential effect on Medicare, the federal program that provides health coverage to the elderly and some disabled citizens, including about 450,000 Kansans.

“We did our due diligence too,” chairwoman Patti Rule said. “We didn’t immediately put out just a knee-jerk (response).”

Following the meeting, commission on aging leaders said they may tweak the headline to appease the legislators but said they don’t intend to otherwise change the content of the article. They said a demand that the legislators be allowed to run their own concurrent article about the compact was outside their authority.

The Johnson County Commission assumed publication duties of The Best Times last year, but the pages allotted to the commission on aging are provided through federal dollars from the Older Americans Act.

Future implications?

The commission on aging is a group of eight volunteer advocates who advise the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging. They are appointed by Johnson County commissioners.

Sen. Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park, said that publishing the article would anger many area legislators.

“You really need to think about this because one of your objectives is to have a good working relationship with the Johnson County legislative delegation,” Denning said.
During the meeting, Merrick sat off to the side of the conference table next to Dan Goodman, director of the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging.

At one point, Merrick turned to Goodman and said, “This is going to set you guys back.”

Goodman did not respond.

Merrick declined to explain the comment after the meeting.

When asked how he interpreted it, Goodman said “I don’t know how I should take it.” He said his agency receives some state funding to operate an Aging and Disability Resource Center.

When told what Merrick said, Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita who was not at the meeting, said it sounded like a threat.

“This is typical behavior,” Ward said. “Call your opponents names and threaten them. They cannot win the debate on ideas.”

Nine states have signed the health care compact, which petitions the federal government to release them from health care regulations and would allow them to receive the money currently spent on federal health programs like Medicare and Medicaid as block grants.

Proponents said it would liberate Kansas from the mandates of the Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare. Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger and the retirees group AARP testified against the bill, saying it posed a threat to Medicare.

The commission on aging’s article focuses opposition on the compact’s potential to turn Medicare over to the state.

Praeger, in a phone interview Monday, said it is a legitimate concern.

“They have a very serious concern, and I think it’s very appropriate that they raise those concerns, as did AARP, as did several other groups,” Praeger said. “This has kind of flown under the radar, and I think it’s great that it’s finally getting some attention.”

When the bill came to the House floor, Ward offered an amendment to take Medicare out of it, but it failed 57-61.

Rep. Keith Esau, a Republican from Olathe who supported the compact, said the Legislature couldn’t amend the bill because all of the states joining the compact were attempting to approve the same version.

The House passed the compact 74-48 without Ward’s amendment, the Senate passed it 29-11 and Gov. Sam Brownback signed it April 22.

Congress must approve the compact before it can become operational, but constitutional scholars also say the president would need to approve it.

In signing it, Brownback said he would oppose any cuts to Medicare.

Downplaying Medicare concerns

Some legislators sought to assure the commission on aging members Monday that the state had no interest in touching Medicare. But others said the compact could provide a safety net if the state needs to save Medicare from the federal government. Rep. Jerry Lunn, a Republican from Overland Park, said he believed that rising federal debt made a state takeover of the program almost inevitable.

“Does anybody believe that the federal government is not going to make wholesale, major cuts to all programs?” Lunn said. “This would be included. We’re trying to do something to get out ahead of that because this is going to come back to the states to try to manage and fix this mess.”

Peg Deaton, a member of the commission on aging, said she opposed the compact in part because the state doesn’t have a plan for administering the massive federal program. She said she had heard little practical information in general on the compact, including how the state would pay for an advisory commission, mandated by the compact, to make recommendations to member states.

“It has to be funded by the states that are members of the compact,” Deaton said. “How much money are we talking about?”

“It could be minuscule, because they could teleconference,” Pilcher-Cook said.

“And it could be millions,” Deaton said. “Where is that money coming from?”

Eugene Lipscomb, vice chairman of the commission on aging, asked why legislators had not done more to educate seniors about the compact, saying that most people he had talked with had not even heard of it.

“How come you hadn’t talked to them before you wrote it, before you signed it?” Lipscomb said.

Sen. Jeff Melcher, R-Leawood, said the commission on aging should have done that.

“You should be watching legislation that’s important to you and participating in the development of it,” Melcher said. “But to ignore it and abdicate your responsibility and then to come back at the 11th hour and drop an October surprise is partisan and it’s disingenuous.”

Other legislators echoed Melcher’s complaints about the timing of the article, which will publish in October, one month before the general election for all House seats and statewide offices including the governor.

Three Republican senators and about a dozen Republican House members crossed party lines to vote against the compact, deepening a divide between moderate Republicans like Praeger and conservatives who gained control of both chambers and the other statewide offices in part by making their opposition to Obamacare a centerpiece of the last two election cycles.

‘Right for seniors’

Chuck Nigro, chairman of the commission on aging’s legislative committee, said the timing was a function of how long it took for the commission to study the compact bill, write the article and prepare it for publication. Nigro said the commission is nonpartisan.

“Our intent was not to have a big fight over this,” Nigro said after the meeting. “Our intent was just to do what we think is right for seniors.”

Sen. Molly Baumgardner, a Republican from Overland Park who was appointed after the compact was approved, said regardless of the commission on aging’s intent, the article will be used by Brownback’s Democratic opponent, Paul Davis.

“The minute it is printed and distributed, you have published campaign material and get ready to see it in the television advertising and mailers and emails across the state, I guarantee it,” Baumgardner said. “You will be used. I don’t think that’s your intent, but you will be used.”

Baumgardner asked the commission on aging members to consider how that might reflect on the county commissioners who chose them.

“I know that you are not here necessarily from a political standpoint, but keep in mind why are you here and how are you here,” Baumgardner said. “You are appointed.”

After the meeting Deaton said she had been appointed and reappointed by several different county commissioners during her eight years on the commission on aging.

“I’ve got two years more to go, and nobody can fire me,” Deaton said.

Three hospitalized after Andrew County head-on crash

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPST. JOSEPH- Three people were injured in an accident just after 5 p.m. on Tuesday in Andrew County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2006 Ford Escape driven by Michael R. Butterfield, 20, Savannah, was southbound on U.S. 169 one mile north of St. Joseph. The vehicle crossed the centerline and struck a 2008 Ford F 150 driven by Julieanne T. Beahler, 48, Cosby, in the driver’s side before striking a 2011 Chevy Malibu driven by Lisa M. Farmer, 32, Union Star, head on.

Butterfield was transported by Andrew County ambulance to Heartland Regional Medical Center in serious condition. A private vehicle transported Farmer and Beahler to Heartland Regional Medical Center. They were treated and released.

The MSHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Joplin tornado aid worker sentenced for fraud

SPRINGFIELD (AP) – A woman who worked for a southwest Missouri disaster relief agency has been sentenced to prison for a fraud scheme following the deadly Joplin tornado.

The U.S. attorney’s office says Herlana Latham, of Memphis, Tennessee, was sentenced Tuesday to 14 months in federal prison and ordered to pay about $6,700 in restitution. She pleaded guilty earlier this year to wire fraud.

Latham formerly lived in Joplin and worked for a nonprofit organization that distributed aid to landlords who rented housing to people displaced by the May 2011 tornado. She was accused of verifying false landlord applications.

Co-defendants Christopher Smith and John Williams, both also of Memphis, pleaded guilty previously in the scheme. Williams was sentenced to eight months in prison and Smith to three years of probation.

Kansas petitioners work to repeal anti-discrimination ordinance

Screen Shot 2014-09-17 at 5.10.11 AMROELAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — The Johnson County legal department says a petition to repeal Roeland Park’s anti-discrimination ordinance can move forward.

The Kansas City Star reported that the county has approved the ballot language that will appear if enough support is garnered. The City Council must repeal the ordinance or place it on a citywide ballot if 472 registered voters sign the petition.

An attorney representing a former councilwoman who submitted the petition says the decision should be made by the voters, not the council.

The city became the second in the state to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity last month. The measure passed after the mayor broke a 4-4 tie by the council. The law prohibits discrimination in employment, housing and public service.

Lawrence has a similar ordinance.

Special Olympics plans Columbia training center

COLUMBIA (AP) – Special Olympic athletes in Missouri could soon have a training center to rival those of their U.S. Olympic team counterparts.

The proposed Training for Life Campus would offer year-round training at a 44,000-square-foot athletics complex in Columbia. Project boosters with the Special Olympics Missouri organization say the complex would be the largest of its kind in the country.

The organization is hosting a charity bicycle ride on the Katy Trail this weekend to raise money for the project. A pair of two-day rides will begin in Clinton and St. Charles and conclude in Jefferson City, with each route exceeding 100 miles.

 

Missouri Western hires Chris Canady as women’s tennis coach

MWSUMissouri Western State University Director of Athletics Kurt McGuffin has announced the hiring of Chris Canady as Head Women’s Tennis Coach at MWSU.

“I am excited to welcome Chris to our department and family,” McGuffin said. “He is from Missouri and played and coached at MIAA foe Southwest Baptist. He brings a pedigree of having been in successful programs and it is my belief he will build a tradition of excellence both on and off the court with our tennis team.”

Canady replaces Tom Smith, who took over the program in 2013 after a 25 year run as the head men’s basketball coach at Missouri Western. Canady will officially take over the program in October. He becomes Missouri Western’s first full-time women’s tennis coach.

“I want to thank Coach Smith for everything he has done the last few months as tennis coach.  He stepped up and did our department a huge service and has done everything I asked him to do, and more, when he agreed to take this position,” McGuffin said.

Most recently, Canady has been the director of high performance for Upper St. Clair Tennis Development in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Canady is familiar with the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association, having played and coached at Southwest Baptist University.

Since joining USC Tennis Development Program in 2011, Canady worked tirelessly developing a culture that helped produce numerous nationally and sectionally ranked players. Players Canady has worked with in the program have attended some of the top tennis programs in the country.

“Having both competed and coached in the MIAA, I have a clear understanding of what it takes to be successful at this level,” Canady said. “Combining that with all the experience I have gained over the last six years coaching at the Division I level and developing high performance junior players, I am confident we can have MWSU competing for MIAA championships in relatively short order.”

After graduating with a B.S. in recreation from SBU in 2007, Canady worked as a graduate assistant at his alma mater, helping both the men’s and women’s tennis programs claim MIAA championships in 2008. Canady then moved on to Stony Brook University where he assisted both the men’s and women’s tennis programs for two seasons (2008-2010), focusing on player development and domestic recruiting. Since then, Canady has been a volunteer assistant with the California University of Pennsylvania women’s team, primarily working on international recruitment.

— MWSU Sports Information —

Royals’ bullpen struggles in 7-5 loss to Chicago

RoyalsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis both gave up runs for the first time in nearly three months as the Kansas City Royals’ dominant bullpen was touched up Tuesday night in a 7-5 loss to the Chicago White Sox.

Davis replaced Herrera with two on in the seventh inning and walked Jose Abreu to load the bases for Conor Gillaspie, who cleared them with a triple to right-center on a 2-2 pitch to give Chicago a 7-5 lead.

That ended Herrera’s scoreless streak at 30 2/3 innings, dating to June 24. Also snapped was Davis’ shutout streak of 31 2/3 innings, a club record for a reliever, with the first run charged to him since June 25.

The rare bullpen failure prevented Kansas City from gaining ground on AL Central leader Detroit, which lost at Minnesota. The Royals remained 1 1/2 games behind the Tigers, but still lead Seattle for the second wild-card spot.

Kansas City used nine pitchers, a club record for a nine-inning game, in a contest that lasted 4 hours, 16 minutes — the longest nine-inning game in Royals history.

Nori Aoki had his second straight four-hit game, including a sixth-inning single that put the Royals up 5-4, but this time the bullpen couldn’t hold it.

Adam Eaton had four hits, matching his career high, and scored two runs for Chicago.

Royals manager Ned Yost went to his bullpen early when starter Liam Hendriks was pulled after three-plus innings. He gave up four runs on seven hits and a walk.

In his past three outings, Hendriks has allowed 11 runs and 18 hits in 9 1/3 innings.

White Sox rookie right-hander Chris Bassitt also failed to make it out of the fourth. He threw 94 pitches in 3 2/3 innings, allowing three runs on six hits and four walks.

Eric Surkamp (2-0) got the win, and Zach Putnam worked a perfect ninth for his fifth save.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: DH-1B Paul Konerko, who has not played since breaking his left hand on Sept. 2, took extended batting practice. “When he’s fit to play he’ll get some time,” manager Robin Ventura said. “I don’t necessarily want him going out there not having swung a bat in two weeks. He’ll get an at-bat here or there to acclimate him.”

Royals: LHP Danny Duffy, who skipped two starts because of a sore shoulder, threw a four-inning simulated game. “There’s nothing wrong,” Duffy said. “I felt stronger than I did for about the past month.” He is slated to start Monday in Cleveland.

UP NEXT

White Sox: LHP Chris Sale, an AL Cy Young Award contender, starts the series finale. He has trouble with Royals DH Billy Butler, who has a .359 career average against him with three home runs, two doubles and 10 RBIs in 39 at-bats.

Royals: RHP Yordano Ventura has nine made consecutive quality starts, a club record for rookies.

— Associated Press —

Kansas gets $3.8M federal grant for conservation

Screen Shot 2014-09-17 at 5.14.29 AMWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will receive $3.8 million in conservation funding to help landowners protect key farmlands, grasslands and wetlands.

The grant was announced Tuesday by the Natural Resources Conservation Service. It’s part of $328 million the U.S. Department of Agriculture is investing nationwide for conservation easements.

The USDA’s Kansas conservationist, Eric Banks, said conservation easements will help farmers protect valuable farmland from development, restore lands best suited for grazing and return wetlands to their natural conditions.

The 2014 farm bill created the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program. About 18 projects in Kansas were chosen to restore 4,800 acres.

 

Justice Ginsburg: Watch 6th Circuit on gay marriage

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — People looking for clues about how soon the Supreme Court might weigh in on state bans of gay marriage should watch the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg told a Minnesota audience Tuesday that there would be “some urgency” if an appeals court upholds same-sex marriage bans. Such a ruling would run contrary to a legal trend favoring gay marriage.

But Ginsburg says if the appeals court covering Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee falls in line with other rulings, there’s “no need for us to rush.”

She says the nation’s top court will reach a decision point “sooner or later,” while commenting on how much societal attitudes regarding same-sex marriage have changed.

Ginsburg spoke at the University of Minnesota Law School.

Griffon volleyball gets swept by No. 14 Central Missouri

MWSUThe Missouri Western volleyball team battled through three close sets Tuesday night, eventually falling to No. 14 Central Missouri 3-0.

The Griffons dropped the first set 25-23, then lost the second 25-18 before falling 26-24 in the third after allowing the Mules to come back.

MWSU spread offense around but no players finished with double-digit kills. Erica Rottinghaus led the team with nine. Jordan Chohon finished with 27 assists. Sarah Faubel led the team with 12 digs, followed by 11 from Rottinghaus.

The loss dropped the Griffons to 6-3 on the year and 0-1 in MIAA play. They host Emporia State in the MWSU Fieldhouse Friday night.

— MWSU Sports Information —

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