We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Pentagon Sets Up New POW – MIA Office

WASHINGTON (AP) – The Pentagon is taking the first steps to set up a new agency that will direct pow miathetroubled effort to search for America’s missing war dead, two years after an internal report found the current prisoner of war program was mismanaged and wasteful.

Defense officials say they will begin merging two existing agencies into one POW-MIA office that will be more streamlined and effective. The new organization will be running next year.

The decision comes as Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel prepares to leave the Pentagon. Last March Hagel announced he would create a new office to deal with POW-MIA issues that would be more focused and innovative.

The failings of the POW-MIA program were highlighted in 2013 when The Associated Press disclosed a report that called the program acutely dysfunctional.

3 shot at suburban Kansas City gun shop; 1 shot nearby

Police-150x150SHAWNEE, Kan. (AP) — Emergency responders say three people were shot and wounded at a suburban Kansas City gun shop and a fourth person was wounded at a nearby location.

Johnson County MED-ACT spokeswoman Angela Fera says crews were called around 2:15 p.m. Friday to a store called She’s A Pistol in Shawnee, Kansas. Crews transported three people who sustained critical gunshot wounds. Fera says a fourth person at the gun shop sustained minor injuries from an assault.

Fera says crews were called to a second scene more than 1 mile away around 3 p.m. The injuries of the fourth shooting victim weren’t considered life-threatening.

She said the shootings are believed to be connected. She didn’t immediately have the ages or genders of the victims.

Police didn’t immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

Mo. Health Advocates Encouraged By ACA Enrollment Numbers

Healthcare Healthcare.govBy ALEX SMITH, Heartland Health Monitor
At roughly the midpoint of the second Affordable Care Act open-enrollment period, health advocates say they’re happy with the number of people signing up in Missouri.

Ryan Barker, vice president of health policy at the Missouri Foundation for Health, said that more than 102,000 people enrolled in health plans in the first month alone. In the entire first open enrollment period, 152,000 people signed up.

“We are very confident that we will exceed the numbers from last year,” Barker said in a teleconference Thursday with reporters.

About half the enrollees are first-time enrollees and half re-enrolled, according to figures from the Department of Health and Human Services. Eighty-nine percent of Missouri enrollees received federal financial assistance.

The Missouri Foundation for Health, a private entity, leads and funds the Cover Missouri Coalition, which coordinates ACA outreach in the state. State law prohibits publicly funded agencies from being involved with health exchange enrollment or outreach.

Barker said the foundation is closely monitoring King v. Burwell, a pending Supreme Court case challenging subsidies for health coverage purchased on online exchanges operated by the federal government.

If the court upholds the challenge, more than 370,000 Missourians stand to lose federal financial assistance, according to estimates by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Many, if not most of them, will not be able to afford health insurance without the subsidies and will likely have to drop their coverage.

Referring to the strong opposition by Missouri lawmakers to the Affordable Care Act, Barker said a solution at that point would have to come from Congress.

Other health advocates expressed confidence during Thursday’s teleconference that the court will uphold the subsidies.

Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, pointed to a Wall Street Journal video interview in 2013 of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker that has circulated widely on the Internet since Wednesday.

In it, Walker, a Republican, said that there was no meaningful distinction between exchanges run by the states and those run by the federal government.

“And the only distinction is whether or not a state can say that they’re running it, put up a sign that says they are running it,” Walker says on the video. “But, in the end, there’s no real substantive difference between a federal exchange or a state exchange, or the in between, the hybrid, the partnership.”

Pollack said Walker’s explanation demonstrated a broadly held understanding among many governors of the how the exchanges were envisioned by the Affordable Care Act.

“It shows, really, that those governors who were considering this question actually never thought that the implications of that decision would be that it would have an effect on the tax credit premium subsidies that their citizens would receive,” Pollack said.

Pollack said lawmakers never intended the subsidies to be contingent on whether an exchange was state-run or operated by the federal government. If such an intent did exist, he said, Congress would have clearly communicated it to the governors.

“I think it’s absolutely clear that Congress never intended such a distinction, and that’s why the [Obama] administration, I think, feels confident that it will ultimately prevail,” Pollack said.

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

Gov. Nixon on task force’s NFL stadium proposal

NixonGov. Jay Nixon today released a statement regarding the NFL stadium proposal developed by Dave Peacock and Robert Blitz, the task force appointed by the Governor in November to conduct an analysis of options to ensure St. Louis remains an NFL city. The Governor has been briefed by the task force and received their final proposal today.

“I thank Dave Peacock and Bob Blitz for their work to put forward a plan that meets the strict criteria I laid out,” said Gov. Nixon. “As Governor, my primary responsibility is to the taxpayers of our state, which is why I’m pleased that this proposal would impose no new tax burden on Missourians and require significant private investment in developing an asset owned by the public. This proposal would not only protect St. Louis’s status as an NFL city, it would also provide the opportunity to redevelop underutilized areas of the city and create jobs. I spoke with Commissioner Roger Goodell earlier this week and will continue to communicate with the NFL regarding our efforts and the league’s support. As this process moves forward, we will remain committed to our core principles of protecting taxpayers, creating jobs and revitalizing communities.”

Poll shows public support for lowering sales tax on ‘healthy’ foods

FoodBy Jim McLean
KHI News Service
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — A Kansas City-based nonprofit organization says a recent poll shows widespread support for exempting some foods from the Kansas sales tax.

Ashley Jones-Wisner, state policy manager for KC Healthy Kids, says a poll conducted for the Kansas Health Foundation showed that 86.6 percent of Kansans supported exempting fruits and vegetables from the state sales tax.

The Wichita-based foundation is the primary funder of the Kansas Health Institute, the parent organization of the editorially independent KHI News Service. The foundation also helps to fund KC Healthy Kids, a nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing obesity among children.
The poll was designed by RTI International, a North Carolina-based research firm, and conducted last summer by the Docking Institute of Public Affairs at Fort Hays State University.

Jones-Wisner says KC Healthy Kids will lead an effort in the upcoming legislative session to fully or partially repeal the state sales tax on groceries. If Kansas lawmakers balk at the estimated $390 million cost of exempting groceries, she said the group will attempt to win passage of a sales tax repeal on fruits and vegetables.

“We plan to engage with lawmakers about both proposals during the session,” she said, noting that the group has not yet calculated the cost of a partial repeal.

Kansas has the nation’s second highest sales tax on food, trailing only Mississippi’s 7 percent levy. In some Kansas communities, the combination of state and local sales taxes can add as much as 10 percent to grocery bills.

High sales taxes “limit people’s access to healthy food,” Jones-Wisner said.

Kansas’ obesity rate has risen steadily in recent years, increasing to 30 percent from 13.5 percent in 1995, according to a brief produced by the health foundation. Getting more Kansans to substitute fresh fruits and vegetables for high-calorie processed foods would help lower rates of obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease.

A 5 percent reduction in the state’s obesity rate could lower health care costs by as much as $2 billion over 10 years, according to a Trust for America’s Health report cited in the brief.

Public support and potential health benefits aside, the state’s growing budget problems likely will make any sales tax exemption a tough sell. State income tax cuts enacted at Gov. Sam Brownback’s urging have slowed revenue collections and created a $280 million hole in the current year’s budget.

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

Feds reach deal with Kansas to protect prisoners from abuse

kansas dept of correctionsTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division says it has reached a settlement with Kansas that aims to protect women prisoners at the state’s Topeka facility from sexual abuse.

The deal announced Friday in a news release resolves allegations that women held at the Topeka Correctional Facility are subjected to sexual victimization by jailers and other prisoners. The Justice Department found in 2012 several systemic failures that led to a pattern of sexual abuse.

U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom says that the settlement will go a long way toward reducing the harm to women held at the prison. He also commended Kansas for working with the Justice Department.

The Kansas Department of Corrections says the agreement cements reforms that have been completed at the Topeka facility during the past four years.

Blunt to chair Senate rules committee

 BluntJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri will chair the Committee on Rules and Administration during the next session of Congress.
The full Senate confirmed the Republican for the position on Thursday. Committee members voted in favor of Blunt the day before.
Blunt has served on the committee since 2011. He replaces Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York.
The committee deals with rules, procedures and administration of the Senate.
Blunt says he’s confident he can help make Senate debate “more transparent and accountable” to the public.
The senator also serves on committees dealing with terrorism, the budget and the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.

Kauffman Foundation gives $2.5 million in education grants

Kaufman FoundationKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kauffman Foundation has awarded $2.5 million in grants for programs designed to improve Kansas City-area schools.

The foundation announced Thursday that it would invest $1 million in the Kansas City Midtown Community School Initiative’s plan for charter schools and another $1.5 million in 10 college prep and scholarship programs.

The Kansas City Star reports  the initiative for midtown charter schools is a parent-led effort to open two elementary schools in 2016 and expand to a high school by 2027.

The 10 postsecondary education support and scholarship programs include public and private school programs and community-based programs. It benefits schools in Kansas City Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas, as well as several other education initiatives that create college access and support for disadvantaged students.

Mo. man dies after truck hits barn, lands in creek bed

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPPURCELL – A Southwest Missouri man died in an accident just before 12:30 p.m. on Wednesday in Jasper County.

The Missouri Highway Patrol reported a 2001 GMC pickup driven by David L. Bowers, 61, Jasper, was on private property on Route M five miles north of Purcell.

The driver suffered a medical emergency, accelerated the vehicle and hit a barn. The vehicle then crossed Route M and came to rest in a creek bed.

Bowers was pronounced dead a the scene and transported to the Jasper County Coroner’s office.

The MSHP reported he was not wearing a seat belt.

City, Topeka schools settle dispute over school police officers

Dr. Julie Ford - courtesy photo
Dr. Julie Ford – courtesy photo

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Topeka school officials have approved a contract that temporarily ends a dispute over the city providing police officers to the district’s schools.

The school district’s board on Thursday approved a one-year contract requiring the district to pay the city $366,000 fees for 10 school resource officers. The contract is retroactive to Aug. 1 and runs through July 31.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports $366,000 is enough for only four officers. Superintendent Julie Ford says the district will need to find enough money in the next budget to keep 10 officers in the schools.

Topeka Police Chief James Brown and the district had a public disagreement in December because a contract for the officers hadn’t been signed and the district wasn’t paying enough for all the officers working at the schools.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File