GRANDVIEW (AP) – A 33-year-old man is charged with setting a fire that killed his young daughter and a woman at a home in a Kansas City suburb.
Jackson County authorities on Wednesday charged Stephen Elijah of Grandview with two counts of second-degree murder and one count of first-degree arson. The Sept. 29 fire killed his 14-month-old daughter, whose name authorities did not release, and 37-year-old Anika M. Hobley.
Police say two girls, aged 10 and 6, escaped the house by jumping out of a window.
The Kansas City Star reports court records indicate the fire began in the basement and quickly spread. The Missouri state fire marshal determined that a chemical had been used to ignite the fire.
Court records do not indicate if Elijah has an attorney.
MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — A Fort Riley soldier who is charged in the death of his 5-week-old daughter has been denied a lower bond.
A Riley County judge ruled Tuesday that 22-year-old Alexander McConnell will remain under $200,000 bond. McConnell’s attorney had asked for a reduction to $100,000 so he could post bond and work.
McConnell, an Army specialist, is charged with first-degree murder and child abuse in the February death of his daughter.
The Manhattan Mercury reports that a court affidavit says an autopsy found the baby suffered substantial bleeding in the skull, broken ribs and other internal injuries before her death.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Democratic and Republican parties in Kansas have both gained registered voters since the August primary elections, while the number of unaffiliated voters has fallen.
Tuesday was the registration deadline for the Nov. 4 general election. Preliminary figures released Wednesday by the secretary of state’s office show Kansas gained about 8,400 voters, for a total of more than 1.74 million.
Registered Republicans now number close to 778,000, an increase of 12,000 since August. They account for almost 45 percent of all registered voters.
Democrats picked up 4,800 voters, for a total of 427,000. They are 24 percent of registered voters.
The number of unaffiliated voters decreased by nearly 9,000. The state’s 526,000 unaffiliated voters represent 30 percent of the total registered.
Northwest Missouri State University’s Homecoming celebration continues through the weekend. “A Trip Down Bearcat Lane,” Oct. 12-19, includes activities and events planned for students, employees, alumni and friends of the university.
“Homecoming is a great opportunity for alumni, faculty, students and staff to come together as one to honor our past, celebrate our present and look forward to our future as Bearcats,” said Brooke McBride, interim director of Campus Activities.
Here’s the schedule for the remaining events:
Thursday, Oct. 16
7 p.m. – Variety Show (Ron Houston Center for the Performing Arts)
9 p.m. – Royalty Crowning (Ron Houston Center for the Performing Arts)
8-11 p.m. – SAC event: Paint U (Student Union, Towerview Room)
Friday, Oct. 17
(Walkout Day)
8 a.m. – Bell Ringing (Bell of ’48, south of Administration Building)
9 a.m. – Golden Years Class Reunion: Honoring the Class of 1964 ($20 per person, Alumni House)
11 a.m. – Walkout Day Celebration (Colden Pond)
11:30 a.m. – Golden Years Luncheon (J.W. Jones Student Union)
Noon – Homecoming Golf Classic ($45 per person, Mozingo Lake Golf Course)
2 p.m. – International Flag-Raising Ceremony (Joyce and Harvey White International Plaza)
5 p.m. – Golden Years reception (Alumni House)
6:30 p.m. – M-Club Hall of Fame Banquet and Induction Ceremony ($20 per person, J.W. Jones Student Union Ballroom)
7 p.m. – Variety Show (Ron Houston Center for the Performing Arts)
10 p.m. – Comedy Mentalist Sean Bott (Ron Houston Center for the Performing Arts)
Saturday, Oct. 18
8 a.m. – Homecoming Welcome (Alumni House)
9 a.m. – Parade (starts at the corner of Ray and College avenues)
Noon – Bearcat Zone/Homecoming barbecue ($6.75 per person, College Park Pavilion)
2 p.m. – Bearcat football vs. Pittsburg State ($20 for adult reserved seating, $12 for adult general admission, $10 for K-12 and visiting students with a valid school ID, free for Northwest students with valid University ID, Bearcat Stadium)
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) The push against a Missouri ballot initiative to have student performance play a major role in teacher evaluations continues going strong even after the major group sponsoring the proposal stopped campaigning.
The question on the Nov. 4 ballot would amend the Missouri Constitution to limit teacher tenure and tie student performance data to educator evaluations.
Campaign finance reports filed Wednesday show the Committee in Support of Public Education received more than $1.7 million in the latest quarter to fight the measure and spent about $50,000 on advertising. The group has about $1.4 million.
The initiative’s sponsor, Teach Great, no longer is campaigning because of poor public polling results.
Teach Great was financed by investment firm founder Rex Sinquefield and did not receive any donations in the latest quarter.
Pottawatomie County has seen a surge of pertussis cases this year, with more than 100 to date. The Pottawatomie County Health Department building, on Main Street in Westmoreland, is at far right.-photo Andy Marso
By Andy Marso
KHI News Service
TOPEKA — Even as local health officials prepare for the unlikely event of an Ebola outbreak in Kansas, some have had their hands full trying to convince people in their communities to take basic measures to contain the spread of more prevalent, contagious and preventable diseases like measles and pertussis.
Kansas has seen spikes in both illnesses this year, leading some health officials to issue orders of quarantine and others to ask people to voluntarily stay home.
Those requests were not always well-received.
“People weren’t as encouraged to act for the community good,” Pottawatomie County Health Director Leslie Campbell said of a local pertussis outbreak this year involving more than 100 confirmed cases. “They were kind of bucking that ‘staying-home-for-five-days’ (request).”
Adrienne Byrne-Lutz, interim director of the Sedgwick County Health Department, said her department issued six letters of quarantine to “high-risk exposures” during the summer measles outbreak that spread from Johnson County to sicken 11 people in the Wichita area.
She said the letters were issued to people who were exposed while visiting the area and planned to travel back to their homes in other states. Some already had bought plane tickets, and Byrne-Lutz said the official letters helped the department secure refunds from the airlines and get them time off work.
Byrne-Lutz said the people involved were “not happy” in some cases to be quarantined in Sedgwick County residences, but they were cooperative. They were monitored daily by county health officials, and the effort proved prescient in the end.
“One person who was under quarantine did become ill from measles,” she said.
Byrne-Lutz said the 11 cases in Sedgwick County resulted in one hospitalization but no deaths. The outbreak has since been declared over.
First line of defense
In Kansas, county health officials are the first line of defense. They have the authority to unilaterally order individuals into quarantine to prevent the spread of infectious disease. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, public officials have not exercised that power on a wide scale since the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918.
Jeff Hershberger, public information officer for the Kansas City, Mo., Health Department, said Ebola is not likely to cause a similar reaction because it is spread only through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person.
“It’s highly unlikely we as a health department would be doing any isolating or quarantining of anyone because of Ebola,” Hershberger said.
He said some hospitals might choose to isolate those who already had Ebola, which thus far has not been confirmed any closer to the Kansas City area than Dallas, where two hospital workers have been infected with the virus.
Hershberger said his department is far more likely to order quarantine for those exposed to more contagious diseases like measles, which spreads through the air.
“If you’re not immunized, you can catch measles just by walking through the room where somebody with active measles had been two hours before,” he said.
Measles infected hundreds of thousands of Americans before routine vaccinations began in the 1960s. The potentially deadly disease was nearly eliminated from the country by 2004, when a record-low 37 cases occurred nationwide. Only 55 cases were reported in 2012.
Vaccination rates in some parts of the country have been dropping, though, in part due to concerns about a link between autism and the measles, mumps and rubella shot. Those concerns persist despite a lack of research evidence to support them. As a consequence, measles incidence is up significantly this year, with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reporting 594 cases through September.
Kansas City, Mo., has confirmed 13 cases of measles this year. Hershberger said city health officials always try to convince those exposed to stay home voluntarily, but the prospect of missing work can make that a tough sell.
“Sometimes they will feel a little pushback from their employer, but whenever we call and say they’re staying home because we’re telling them to, they usually roll with it,” he said.
Hershberger said that for food service workers, it helps that the city’s food safety code already bars them from working while ill. Their employers are accustomed to those calls.
Valerie Buell processes medical records at the Pottawatomie County Health Department, based in Westmoreland. With a surge in pertussis cases this year in Pottawatomie County, health workers in Pottawatomie County have stayed busy.-photo Andy Marso
But others are not, and measles complicates the situation because infected people can spread it even when they have no symptoms.
Hershberger said that necessitated some extra explanation when his department asked an entire family exposed to measles to stay home.
“There was an initial feeling of, ‘We shouldn’t have to stay home; we’re not sick,’” he said. “But once we explained to the family with measles you can actually be contagious and give the disease to somebody five or six days before you feel sick, they were like, ‘Oh yeah, we’ll go along with that.’”
In those situations, local and state health officials are authorized to enlist law enforcement help in isolating people who are infected or potentially infected.
Community cooperation
Sara Belfry, spokeswoman for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said the agency had not issued any quarantine orders this year, but KDHE Secretary Dr. Robert Moser would consider the measure if necessary.
“He would issue orders if he found it to be medically necessary and reasonable to prevent or reduce the spread of the disease,” Belfry said via email. “Each case is evaluated in conjunction with local health officials, and a determination would be made with the input of local health officials.”
Before issuing such orders, health officials seek voluntary cooperation from the community. In this year’s outbreaks of measles and pertussis, response to those requests has been mixed.
Campbell, the health director in Pottawatomie County, said most residents became cooperative when informed of the risks of spreading pertussis, commonly known as whooping cough. But there were pockets of resistance, and the outbreak strained the resources of the county health department, which has eight full-time and five part-time employees.
“It has caused us a lot of issues, I can tell you, for my workforce,” Campbell said. “We had to have all hands on deck.”
Pottawatomie County has a population of about 23,000. At the beginning of September, KDHE had confirmed 17 cases of pertussis in the county. Numbers provided by KDHE through Oct. 4 showed 84 cases, and Sarah Fornshell, the county’s communicable disease nurse, said last week that the toll has since surpassed 100.
Both Fornshell and Campbell said mass vaccination efforts and isolation of those exposed now seem to be stemming the tide.
“Yes, we actually haven’t had a new case for a week, so we’re knocking on wood,” Campbell said.
Pertussis causes fits of unrelenting, deep coughs that make it difficult to breathe, thus causing the gasping sound that provides the disease with its nickname of whooping cough.
It disrupts sleep, causes muscle aches and can be fatal, particularly in infants and others with compromised immune systems.
A vaccine for the disease was developed in the 1940s and, now combined with inoculations against tetanus and diphtheria, has helped drive rates far below pre-vaccine levels. According to KDHE’s annual report, Kansas had just 52 confirmed cases of pertussis in 2011.
But the disease appears to be making a comeback, both in Kansas and nationwide. A 2013 study published in the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal) showed that the vaccine, while still far more protective than going unvaccinated, was less effective against pertussis than against tetanus and diphtheria.
According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Kansas had 347 cases of pertussis last year. This year KDHE has confirmed 262 cases, most of them in Pottawatomie County.
The county includes St. Mary’s Academy and College, a community of Catholics who have splintered from the mainstream church and are less likely to vaccinate than the general population.
Fornshell and Campbell also said they occasionally met resistance outside that community to their requests that people exposed to pertussis stay home for five days and take prophylactic antibiotics.
Fornshell said one person threatened to physically harm her and another agreed to stay home only after she explained to him that if he went out and spread pertussis after being warned not to, he could be held legally liable.
Schools a challenge
Stopping the disease as it spread through some county schools also proved a challenge.
“The biggest kickback we probably had was (from) students and teachers,” Campbell said. “The community was more (receptive), but the teachers were really upset about staying home for five days. They only get so much sick leave.
With the help of a school nurse, Kyra Stromgren, the county health department managed to get nearly 100 percent vaccination coverage for Kaw Valley USD 321 public school employees by requiring them to prove vaccination against pertussis or receive the vaccine within 24 hours, take a five-day course of antibiotics or leave work voluntarily until 21 days since the building’s last pertussis case.
“Once we did that, we didn’t see another single case (in the district),” Fornshell said.
Campbell said her department has distributed about 800 free pertussis vaccines — provided by KDHE — since the outbreak began. She said the county has been fortunate that most cases have been mild, and she has received no reports of whooping cough deaths.
In Sedgwick County, Byrne-Lutz said increased vaccination coverage was key to stopping the measles outbreak before any fatalities.
While not foolproof, widespread use of the measles vaccine has generally provided enough “herd immunity” to protect those for whom the inoculation was not 100 percent effective, as well as those who are unable to receive it.
Byrne-Lutz said 10 of the 11 who became ill in her county had not been vaccinated, but some were infants too young to receive the shot.
Among others who could have had the vaccine and opted out, she said the outbreak has changed some attitudes.
“We had adults come through who said their parents didn’t agree with vaccines so they weren’t vaccinated,” Byrne-Lutz said. “But they were getting vaccinated now.”
Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Lorenzo Cain has been selected MVP of the AL Championship Series after helping the Kansas City Royals to a four-game sweep of the Baltimore Orioles with a 2-1 victory Wednesday.
The Royals are headed back to the World Series for the first time since beating the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games in 1985, the last time Kansas City even reached the playoffs.
Along with making a series of splendid defensive plays in center field, Cain had eight hits in the series, matching the franchise record for an ALCS set by Willie Wilson in 1985 against Toronto.
Cain matched a Royals record with four hits in Game 2 on Saturday, and scored Kansas City’s first run in Game 3 on Tuesday night. He also laid down a key sacrifice bunt — the first of his career — that helped the Royals take a 2-0 lead in the first inning Wednesday.
BENTON (AP) – A southeast Missouri man is facing felony and misdemeanor charges after authorities say he provided alcohol and marijuana to minors.
The Southeast Missourian reports the 40-year-old Benton man was arrested Tuesday. He faces two felony counts of distributing a controlled substance to a minor. He faces misdemeanor counts of marijuana possession and supplying liquor to a minor.
The Scott County Sheriff’s Department says it began the investigation on Oct. 6. Authorities say the man confessed to giving the drugs to a 15-year-old and 16-year-old.
A south side break-in early Thursday morning led Saint Joseph police on a foot chase that ended in two arrests and the recovery of several stolen items. Sergeant James Langston says officers on patrol discovered the breakin shortly after it happened at 59 Auto, 6501 59 Highway.
The officers noticed two men in the area. The men took off on foot and were caught a short time later. Sergeant Langston says all stolen items were recovered. Both suspects were arrested for investigation of burglary.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Dozens of solar panels have been installed and thousands more are planned at Topeka Colmery-O’Neil VA Medical Center as part of a green initiative expected to save more than $300,000 a year on electricity.
The Topeka Capital-Journal (http://bit.ly/1xTA8Wn ) reports the $2.73 million project to install about 2,600 solar panels started earlier this month at the Topeka facility. It is part of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ Green Management Program.
The solar panels will produce about 700 kilowatts per day, or roughly 8 percent of the power on the Topeka campus.
The facility is one of three in the region where solar panels are being installed. The others are the Robert J. Dole VA Medical Center in Wichita and the Kansas City, Missouri, VA Medical Center