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Kansas man sentenced in car accident that killed friend

dui 1LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) — A Topeka man has been sentenced to more than three years in prison for a drunken-driving crash that killed his friend.

Twenty-year-old William Kelly III was driving a car that crashed in January 2013 in Leavenworth. A passenger, Lee King, was partially ejected from the car and died after the vehicle landed on him.

Prosecutors say Kelly was speeding and had a blood alcohol content of .11, higher than the legal limit of 0.8, at the time of the crash.

Kelly was convicted in December of involuntary manslaughter while driving under the influence. He was sentenced Friday to three years and five months in prison.

The Leavenworth Times reports defense attorney Kevin Shepherd argued for probation.

Emmy winner visits Northwest Missouri State

RJ Mitte
RJ Mitte

An Emmy-winning actor from the hit TV show “Breaking Bad” brings his message of equality and diversity to Northwest Missouri State University Monday night.

R.J. Mitte played the son of Walter White in the Emmy-winning “Breaking Bad.” He suffers from cerebral palsy in real life just like his character in the show.

His acting career began with small roles in “Hannah Montana” and “Everybody Hates Chris” after he landed in Hollywood in 2005.

His career took off, though, when he gained the “Breaking Bad” role.

 

Mitte was cast to enlighten a broader audience about people with disabilities. In 2014, he also began a recurring role on the Peabody Award-winning ABC Family drama, “Switched at Birth.”

Mitte will share his inspirational message of his transformation from a victim of bullying to Hollywood star during the Student Activities Council’s SAC Speaks lecture series. Mitte will appear at 7 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2, in the J.W. Jones Student Union Ballroom. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Aside from his acting career, Mitte is involved in several organizations that positively impact lives all over the world. He is a youth spokesperson for the National Disability Institute’s Real Economic Impact Tour and “I AM PWD,” a tri-union campaign for actors with disabilities. He is also a spokesperson for “Beyond Diversity: The Future is Now” and works with PACER’s National Center for Bullying Prevention on a national campaign designed to engage and educate people who witness bullying.

As an inspiration to individuals throughout the country, Mitte discusses the complications he has faced from his personal experiences such as being bullied, overcoming obstacles and achieving his goals.

REPORT: Federal government failing to protect children

Scam Alert HOLBROOK MOHR, Associated Press
GARANCE BURKE, Associated Press

The federal government’s failure to enforce the nation’s child protection laws is a “national disgrace” that leaves abused children vulnerable to future harm, according to a three-year study by two child advocacy groups.

The 110-page report released Tuesday identified some of the same failures reported in December by The Associated Press after an eight-month investigation into hundreds of children who died of abuse or neglect in plain view of child protection authorities.

“Our laws are weak. We don’t invest in solutions. Federal laws aren’t enforced. And courts are turning their backs. This creates a trifecta of inertia and neglect,” said Amy Harfeld, policy director at the Children’s Advocacy Institute at the University of San Diego School of Law, which wrote the report with the nonprofit group First Star.

AP’s investigation, published Dec. 18, also revealed a system in crisis, hobbled by weak federal oversight, budget constraints, worker shortages and a voluntary data collection system so flawed that nobody can say with accuracy how many children die from abuse or neglect each year.

The AP found that at least 786 children died of abuse and neglect over a six-year span — many of them beaten, starved or left alone to drown — while agencies had good reason to know they were in danger. That figure represents the most comprehensive statistics publicly available, but the actual number who died even as authorities were investigating their families or providing some form of protective services is likely much higher because antiquated confidentiality laws allow many states to withhold vital information, shrouding their failures.

The federal government estimates an average of about 1,650 children have died annually from abuse or neglect in recent years, whether or not they were known to the child welfare system, but many experts believe the actual number is twice as high. And many more suffer from near-fatal abuse and neglect every year.

“Almost everything that happens to these children is cloaked in endemic secrecy, and most efforts by the media and advocates to provide the public with much needed transparency — which leads to accountability — are thwarted by the very governmental entities and officials who have turned their backs on their official duties to children,” the groups said.

Michael Petit, who was appointed by President Barack Obama to serve on the Federal Commission to Eliminate Child Abuse and Neglect Fatalities and serves as adviser to the advocacy group Every Child Matters, said he agreed with what he has read thus far in the report, entitled “Shame on U.S.”

“The report is saying what a lot of people have been experiencing,” Petit said, who wasn’t speaking on the commission’s behalf. “I share many of those sentiments that the federal government is not providing the kind of oversight needed.”

The Children’s Advocacy Institute and First Star fault all three branches of federal government for failing to protect children.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is responsible for implementing and enforcing federal child welfare laws and programs, but the agency largely takes a hands-off approach, allowing states to self-certify that they are in compliance with federal requirements.

“There is no meaningful oversight and the states know it,” the report said.

Agency spokeswoman Laura Goulding did not immediately return a call and an email seeking comment on the report Monday.

Congress needs to mandate that HHS impose fines, withhold funds or take other punitive actions when states don’t follow federal regulations, the report said.

Because HHS and Congress so rarely hold states accountable for their failings, filing a lawsuit is usually the only way private parties can challenge problems within the child welfare system. But lawsuits are time consuming, expensive and often limited in their reach, covering violations in only one state or county rather than widespread systemic failures, the groups said.

“Federal courts have turned their backs on private attempts to enforce federal child welfare law and Congress has shown little interest in advancing the law itself,” the report said.

Emily Douglas, a child welfare expert at Bridgewater State University in Bridgewater, Mass., called the report’s findings about the judicial branch’s shortcomings particularly revealing.

“When something goes wrong, usually you hear that the state child welfare agency is a wreck or that the governor is stepping in to fire someone,” Douglas said. “But increasingly judges are going to be on the radar about the important role that they play in determining these kids’ safety. Judges are not trained social workers, so are we sure they always know the risk factors when deciding children should be sent back home?”

Governor’s plan leaves end of Kansas income taxes uncertain

TaxJOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback and his top aides can’t predict when Kansas will meet his stated goal of eliminating income taxes under his plan to slow down future, promised reductions to head off predicted budget deficits.

The Republican governor promised in his annual State of the State address that Kansas will continue a “march to zero” on income taxes.

But his new tax proposals abandoned most of the cuts in personal income tax rates scheduled for the next three years. They also divert revenues to a rainy day budget fund ahead of future reductions.

The governor and many of his allies contend he’s being practical amid budget problems that arose after legislators aggressively cut personal income taxes at his urging in 2012 and 2013 to boost the economy.

Just whose Internet is it? New federal rules may answer that

computer broadband  internetANNE FLAHERTY, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Whose Internet is it anyway?

The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission says he’s keeping that question in mind as he pitches the biggest regulatory shake-up to the telecommunications industry since 1996.

Tom Wheeler hasn’t come out with his plan yet, and might not for a few weeks. But he has suggested that Internet service has become as critical to people in the United States as water, electricity or phone service and should be regulated like any other public utility.

Wheeler says he wants “yardsticks in place to determine what is in the best interest of consumers as opposed to what is in the best interest of the gatekeepers.”

That has the industry sounding the alarms and warning consumers of a tax increase on each U.S. wireless account.

Lawmakers examine tuition for veterans in Kansas

Screen Shot 2015-01-30 at 6.31.35 AMBy Austin Fisher
KU Statehouse Wire Service

TOPEKA — The Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs asked the House to consider a bill that would give veterans and their families stationed in Kansas in-state tuition to public colleges, even if they’re not originally from Kansas.

Testifying before the Veterans, Military and Homeland Security Committee, Rep. Becky Hutchins (R-Holton) said the bill would put Kansas in compliance with the federal Veterans, Choice and Accountability Act, also called the Choice Act.

Regardless of formal residence, the Choice Act covers veterans and their spouses or children who enroll in a higher learning institution wherever they’re stationed within three years after the veteran has been discharged from 90 or more days of service. Surviving spouses or children receiving Marine Gunnery Sergeant John David Fry Scholarship benefits can enroll within three years after the veteran has died in the line of duty.

“Say you’re stationed here and your daughter wants to go to KU, it would address some of those issues,” Hutchins said. “If her father is currently a veteran and fighting in a foreign country for our freedoms, I think it’s the honorable thing to do.”

Wayne Bollig, deputy director of the Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs, said the law would mirror a Texas statute that complies with the Choice Act. According to the advocacy organization Student Veterans of America, Texas is one of 27 states that provide in-state tuition to veterans, and the only state that is fully compliant with the Choice Act.

Bollig said veterans received almost $104 million in education benefits and more than $559 million in medical benefits in fiscal year 2014.

Commission Director Gregg Burden said their mission is to assist Kansas’ nearly quarter million veterans and their families with “education, health, vocational guidance and placement, and economic security,” and to ensure Kansas remains a “veteran-friendly state.” Through its State Veteran Services Program, the Commission will assist veterans, relatives, and survivors to obtain the maximum amount of federal and state benefits.

After veterans retire, the Commission provides long-term health care through their Veterans’ Home Program.

Burden, who served in the military for 26 years, was appointed by Gov. Sam Brownback when the Commission replaced the Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs in July 2014.

Pam Rodriguez, chief financial officer of the Commission, said her office is asking the House committee to lift spending caps that currently require the Commission to carry over revenue from veterans’ fees and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to the next fiscal year.

“That’s money that we could be spending on veterans,” Rodriguez said.

Rep. Carolyn Bridges (D-Wichita) said she hopes the new law will encourage out-of-state veterans to stick around after college.

“The idea is that once they get out of school, they will call Kansas their home,” she said.

Austin Fisher is a University of Kansas senior from Lawrence majoring in journalism. He can be reached at austinf.freepress@gmail.com.

Gallup migrating away from phones in favor of online polling

PollLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Gallup has long been known for phone polling, but the company is migrating away from that technology and toward online data collection.

Spokesman Johnathan Tozer told the Lincoln Journal Star that the change is “part of Gallup’s long-term migration plan toward online data collection, in addition to our sophisticated analytics and consulting.”

The company says attrition and transfers or promotions will help Gallup cut back its call center staff in Lincoln and Omaha.

Experts say phone polling has become less reliable as more people drop land lines. A 2012 Pew Research Center study showed that the percentage of households in which polling companies were able to reach an adult by phone fell to 62 percent in 2012 from 90 percent in 1997.

Missouri doctor: Telemedicine could be boon for Kansas

Photo by Andy Marso Roger Cady, a Joplin, Mo., physician, says telemedicine can benefit doctors and patients while also reducing long-term health care costs. - See more at: http://www.khi.org/news/article/missouri-doctor-telemedicine-could-be-boon-for-kansas#sthash.3hLr2Vck.dpuf
Photo by Andy Marso Roger Cady, a Joplin, Mo., physician, says telemedicine can benefit doctors and patients while also reducing long-term health care costs. – See more at: http://www.khi.org/news/article/missouri-doctor-telemedicine-could-be-boon-for-kansas#sthash.3hLr2Vck.dpuf

By ANDY MARSO

A doctor from southwest Missouri told legislators this week that the state could see Medicaid savings if it helped rural physicians connect with national experts through online videoconferencing. Roger Cady, who specializes in headache treatment and primary care in Joplin, told the Vision 2020 Committee that by using telemedicine to improve treatment of just one prevalent health condition, the state could save thousands per physician. “It’s pretty significant when you think about that and choose the right areas of intervention,” he said.

As an example, Cady cited chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a long-term lung ailment that afflicts many current and former smokers.

He said a physician who has unsuccessfully tried many treatments for a COPD sufferer might use telemedicine to consult with a national expert on the disease for the next appointment with the patient.

During a videoconference, the expert could help form a plan of care that would give the physician new ideas on what questions to ask COPD patients and give the patient fresh insights into his or her ailment.

“What happens that’s unique here is the education is being given to everyone,” Cady said.

The collaborative process makes it more likely that the patient will adhere to his or her new plan of care, he said. Over time, that should decrease hospitalizations and thereby decrease costs.

“The idea is it reduces health care costs, it improves health care delivery and it is designed to optimize patient outcomes,” Cady said.

If the state were to incorporate telemedicine in Medicaid, he said, it should be done in four steps:

Establish priorities, focusing on chronic conditions that carry high costs.
Identify physicians interested in using telemedicine to treat those conditions and recruit national experts to participate.
Make sure participating physicians have proper equipment, including a computer with a camera, videoconferencing software and reliable broadband internet.
Start setting up appointments among the physicians, experts, patients and, when necessary, patients’ caregivers.
While Cady said he thinks the costs ultimately would be offset by savings from improved care, he acknowledged there would be some expenses to establish the telemedicine program.

“The million-dollar question is, ‘What about funding?’” he said. “I don’t have an answer.”

Cady suggested the state could set up a fund to help providers purchase the service themselves, explore billing Medicaid for the physician and the expert who participate in the teleconference, partner with the KanCare managed care companies under the assumption that the program will save those companies money or seek grant funding.

Cady was promoting eMentorU, a conceptual software program that he envisions rural physicians using to connect with national experts.

The committee also heard another presentation on telemedicine from a University of Kansas Medical Center research director.

After the presentations, Rep. Barbara Bollier, a Republican from Mission Hills and committee member who is a retired physician, said she had a lot of questions about the practicality of telemedicine given the current national health care reimbursement model. She said insurance companies may not be willing to pay for both physicians involved in a telemedicine call.

Bollier also said some areas of Kansas still do not have broadband service that is reliable enough to support the videoconferencing necessary for telemedicine.

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

Brownback proposes linking school funding to performance

School fundingWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Gov. Sam Brownback has said he wants to tie school funding to student performance.

The Wichita Eagle reports that Brownback discussed the concept Friday while speaking to the Agri-Business Council of Wichita. Brownback said earlier this month that he wanted to ditch the current school-finance formula and fund the state’s districts with interim block grants for the next two years.

In his speech, Brownback elaborated on his plans. He said possible performance markers include whether high school graduates are prepared for college or the workforce. He said that’s what schools are “supposed to get done” and that she should be penalized if they fail.

Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, D-Topeka, questioned the wisdom of rewarding high-performing school districts, which also tend to be the richer ones.

Naked driver leads officers on high-speed chase

Screen Shot 2014-07-03 at 5.13.15 AMHAYS, Kan. (AP) — Authorities are investigating after a naked Lawrence man crashed into a tractor-trailer while fleeing from troopers in western Kansas.

The Salina Journal reports that the 21-year-old suspect is accused of throwing clothes and cash out of his car windows Thursday afternoon during the pursuit on Interstate 70.

Trooper Tod Hileman says the man fled when a trooper tried to pull him over west of Russell for speeding. The chase lasted about 10 minutes until the car’s tires were punctured near Victoria with stop sticks. Hileman says the westbound car kept going on its rims until the driver turned into the median and hit the eastbound semi.

Hileman says the rig had slowed to about 30 mph before the collision. The suspect has been taken into custody.

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