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Mo. couple gives $25M to Genome Institute

Longtime philanthropists and civic leaders Elizabeth and James McDonnell have pledged $25 million to endow The Genome Institute. With the gift, the institute will be named The Elizabeth H. and James S. McDonnell III Genome Institute- courtesy photo
Longtime philanthropists and civic leaders Elizabeth and James McDonnell have pledged $25 million to endow The Genome Institute. With the gift, the institute will be named The Elizabeth H. and James S. McDonnell III Genome Institute- courtesy photo

ST. LOUIS (AP) — A St. Louis couple has donated $25 million to the Washington University School of Medicine’s Genome Institute that will help pay for its research on cancer treatment and prevention.
Genome Institute director Rick Wilson told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch the donation by James S. McDonnell III and his wife, Elizabeth Hall McDonnell, is the institute’s first big private donation.

James McDonnell, 78, served as a director of the family-owned McDonnell Douglas Corp. until its 1997 merger with Boeing Co. He and his family also helped the medical center build a pediatric disease research center in honor of their 2-year-old daughter, Peggy, who died of cancer in 1972.

Wilson said the contribution will help researchers study and sift through large amounts of genetic data. It’s a task, he said, that’s needed to help make discoveries about the illness.

Scalia: Constitution silent on torture

Scalia- photo Steve Petteway, Staff Photographer of the Supreme Court
Scalia- photo Steve Petteway, Staff Photographer of the Supreme Court

WASHINGTON (AP) — Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia is joining the debate over the Senate’s torture report by saying it is difficult to rule out the use of extreme measures to extract information if millions of lives were threatened.

Scalia tells a Swiss radio network that American and European liberals who say such tactics may never be used are being self-righteous.

The 78-year-old justice says he doesn’t “think it’s so clear at all,” especially if interrogators were trying to find a ticking nuclear bomb.

Scalia says nothing in the Constitution appears to prohibit harsh treatment of suspected terrorists.

The interview took place at the court on Wednesday, the day after the release of the Senate report detailing the CIA’s harsh interrogation of suspected terrorists. Radio Television Suisse aired the interview on Friday.

Police: School bus hit by car; minor injuries

school busKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police say three middle school students were taken to a hospital as a precaution after their school bus collided with a car.
The accident early Friday involved a bus carrying students from Smith-Hale Middle School in the Hickman Mills District. Police say the children were taken to the hospital to be checked for possible injuries.

Police say the drivers of the bus and car suffered minor injuries when the vehicle hit the side of the bus at an intersection that does not have a stop sign.
An investigation is continuing.

Obama: NFL ‘behind the curve’ on Rice case

ObamaNFL logoJIM KUHNHENN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama says the Ray Rice domestic violence case showed that the National Football League was “behind the curve” in setting policies about athlete behavior. He says new policies now in effect will send a message that there is no place for such behavior.

He says in an interview Friday with Colin Cowherd on ESPN radio that “an old boys’ network” at the NFL that had created “blind spots.”

He says: “You don’t want to be winging it when something like this happens; you want to have clear policies in place.”

He says the Rice case raised awareness about domestic violence and showed men need to change their behavior and “it has to start young.”

Obama was promoting sign-ups for his health care law, which has a Monday deadline.

ACA plays a role in Brownback budget fix

Affordable Care ActBy Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — When Gov. Sam Brownback announced this week a list of stopgap measures to close a $280 million budget hole, one of the biggest chunks was $55 million from a “Kansas Department of Health and Environment Fee Fund Sweep” made possible in part by a federal law the governor has strenuously opposed and criticized.
The $55 million comes from a Medicaid drug rebate program that was expanded as part of the federal Affordable Care Act.
The health reform act, commonly known as Obamacare, increased the refunds that pharmaceutical companies must pay states for prescriptions provided to Medicaid patients and allowed states to collect rebates for Medicaid prescriptions administered by managed care organizations.

“I know the extension to the managed care plans was a big deal, because that’s where states have been moving,” said Stacey Mazer, a senior staff member at the National Association of State Budget Officers. “That piece (of the ACA) was something that was a net gain essentially for states, the fact that it was being applied to the Medicaid managed care plans.”

Mazer, who monitors and studies how federal health care and Medicaid policies affect state budgets, said she could not say how much of a financial gain the legislation represented for specific states.

In addition to allowing states to collect the rebates on prescriptions administered by managed care organizations, the ACA increased the drug rebates. It upped the rebate percentage for most brand-name drugs from 15.1 percent of the average manufacturer price to 23.1 percent, increased the rebate for brand-name clotting factor and pediatric drugs from 15.1 percent to 17.1 percent, and increased the rebate for generic drugs from 11 percent to 13 percent.

The pharmacy drug rebate money was the largest portion of $100 million in “efficiencies” that Kansas Budget Director Shawn Sullivan identified in October as Brownback campaigned for re-election amid concerns about the projected budget deficit.

Sullivan, at the time, credited an increase in Medicaid prescriptions and the three managed care organizations contracted to provide all Medicaid services under KanCare for the windfall.

“The additional revenue from the rebates is the result of higher-than-expected pharmacy utilization among the Kansas Medicaid population and better pharmacy program administration by the MCOs in the state,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan never mentioned the ACA’s role regarding the drug rebate money available to plug the budget hole.

After the governor released his proposal Tuesday, Sara Belfry, a spokeswoman for KDHE, initially said “the ACA doesn’t have a role” in the $55 million, but later apologized, saying she “had gotten incorrect information about the ACA’s role in the pharmacy rebate program.”

The state would not have been allowed to continue collecting the rebates after it switched most of its Medicaid recipients to managed care in 2013 if the Affordable Care Act had not been passed years earlier.

“Section 2501(c) of the Affordable Care Act expanded the rebate requirements to include drugs dispensed to beneficiaries who receive care from Managed Care Organizations, MCOs, effective March 23, 2010,” a spokeswoman from the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services said.

Medicaid Health Plans of America, an advocacy group for private managed care organizations with Medicaid contracts, praised Congress for including the provision in the ACA.

“This ends a long-time disparity in law that disadvantages states from receiving additional rebates for drugs simply because Medicaid beneficiaries are in Medicaid health plans,” the group said in a statement released at the time. “We believe this is a tremendous improvement in the administration of state Medicaid programs and will help improve care coordination and the quality of health care for Medicaid members.”

Julia Paradise, associate director of the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, said prior to the ACA, states that used managed care organizations for Medicaid carved out prescription drugs from the MCO plans and kept them in the traditional state-administered fee-for-service Medicaid plans so the states could continue receiving the drug rebates.

That was not ideal, Paradise said, because the purpose of managed care as articulated in Kansas and elsewhere is to coordinate patient services to avoid unnecessary treatments and prevent health crises.

“Ideally you want services and care to be integrated,” Paradise said. “The fact that states have access to the rebates now also when the drugs are provided through managed care organizations makes it just as (financially) prudent for drugs to be provided through the MCOs, integrated with the rest of the care.”

Full repeal of Obamacare, which several members of the Kansas congressional delegation have advocated strongly for, would roll back that provision and prevent Kansas from collecting drug rebate money for prescriptions administered by the KanCare MCOs in the future.

While the ACA drug rebate increases sent more money to the state, the federal law also levied a new fee on insurance companies, including the three KanCare MCOs.

That, along with caseloads that are rising slowly but steadily, increased the state’s projected Medicaid costs next year above previous estimates.

Sen. Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park, said during a committee hearing Thursday that at least a portion of the $55 million sweep from KDHE to the state general fund will likely have to be repaid.

“It can’t be a permanent sweep,” Denning said. “We may be able to sweep it for a while, but when we get the (updated) caseloads back in April, we might have to put some of that back.”

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

Hackers hit state retirement system website

hackingJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — One of Missouri’s main retirement systems has temporarily blocked online access after discovering attempts to hack into its members’ accounts.
The Jefferson City News Tribune reports that the Missouri State Employees Retirement System sent about 81,000 emails and 20,000 letter to members Thursday explaining the situation.

It says someone gained “unauthorized access” to four members’ accounts and filled out online forms that required the use of the members’ Social Security numbers, retirement ID numbers and passwords.

Retirement system spokeswoman Candy Smith says the FBI and Missouri State Highway Patrol have been notified.

Retirement system members won’t be able to log into their accounts until Tuesday, and then will have to create new passwords.

Atchison railcar explosion UPDATE

Atchison County Sheriff Jack Laurie near the scene of Thursday's explosion
Atchison County Sheriff Jack Laurie near the scene of Thursday’s explosion

ATCHISON, Kan. (AP) — The two people most seriously injured in a railcar explosion in northeast Kansas are improving at a Kansas hospital.

The men were among at least seven people hurt when the railcar exploded Thursday at GBW Rail Services west of Atchison. A spokesman for the University of Kansas Hospital said early Friday that the men’s condition had been upgraded to fair.

No one was killed. The Kansas State Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the cause of the accident.

Atchison County Sheriff Jack Laurie says the rail car exploded inside a building. Laurie says all of the employees in the area at the time were all accounted for after the explosion.

Law enforcement officials near the scene of Thursday's explosion
Law enforcement officials near the scene of Thursday’s explosion

GBW official Jack Isselman said the explosion happened in an area where rail car surfaces are prepared for painting.

Bass Pro to acquire well-known boat manufacturer

Screen Shot 2014-12-12 at 9.06.30 AMSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) — Bass Pro of Missouri plans to acquire the Arkansas company that manufactures well-known bass boats.

Bass Pro Group announced the deal Thursday to acquire Fish Holdings LLS, which manufactures Ranger, Stratos and Triton boats. The terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The Springfield News-Leader reports  Fishing Holdings will continue to operate independently at its headquarters in Flippin, Arkansas. The deal must still receive regulatory approval.

Ranger manufactures more than 40 models of bass, saltwater, aluminum and other boats.

Bass Pro founder Johnny Morris and Forrest Woods, who founded Ranger Boats, both said in statements that the partnership will give the companies and their dealers long-term stability.

Judge limits police tactics during protests in Missouri

courtST. LOUIS (AP) — A federal judge has imposed some limits on what actions police can take during protests in Missouri.
U.S. District Judge Carol Jackson late Thursday granted a temporary restraining order on behalf of protesters involved in demonstrations against the August shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson.
The ruling applies only to Missouri.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that Jackson’s order requires police to warn crowds of impending use of tear gas and provide “reasonable” time for people to disperse before tear gas is deployed. The ruling does not define what is reasonable, leaving that to police discretion.

Protesters testified Thursday that they were subjected to tear gas with virtually no warning. Police testified that they did what was necessary during often unruly protests.

Man convicted of murder of Mo. man sleeping in his car

jailKANSAS CITY (AP) – A Kansas City man has been convicted of killing a man who was asleep in his vehicle in Independence.

Twenty-year-old Chad D. Terry Jr. was convicted late Wednesday of first-degree murder and armed criminal action in the October 2013 shooting death of 33-year-old Erik S. Schwartz of Raytown.

The Independence Examiner reports witnesses told police four people were looking for cars to steal from when they came across Schwartz sleeping in his vehicle in Independence. The thieves reportedly took only his cigarettes.

A second defendant, Charles T. Carr, earlier pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and armed criminal action and is awaiting sentencing.

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