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K-State changes renames computer network iSIS to KSIS

Chief Information Officer Ken Stafford- KSU photo
Chief Information Officer Ken Stafford- KSU photo

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State University is renaming its computer network system to avoid associating with a terrorist group.

Chief Information Officer Ken Stafford said in a news release Thursday that the university will no longer use the abbreviation iSIS for its network handling enrollment, registration and financial aid. Stafford says many people have expressed concern over the network’s name because the acronym is also used by the terrorist group Islamic State of Iraq and Syria. The network will now be called KSIS.

Stafford said it will take considerable time and effort to change the name in all of the school’s references and requested patience while the changes are made.

Several universities use the iSIS program for the integrated student information system, including the University of Colorado and Johns Hopkins University.

Mo. AG stops online payday lenders

payday advance loanJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Eight online payday lenders operated by one man from a South Dakota reservation will repay Missouri consumers who were charged excess fees under the terms of a settlement.

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster’s office announced Thursday that online payday lenders operated by Martin Webb would stop operating in Missouri, repay $270,000 in restitution to consumers and cancel all outstanding balances for Missouri residents.

The settlement says Webb admits no wrongdoing and maintains that a Missouri license was not needed to make the online payday loans.

Koster says as many as 6,300 Missouri residents may have been charged excessive fees.

He says the message to other online payday lenders is that they must follow Missouri law to operate here.

Lobbyist confronts teacher over Brownback mention in speech

David Kensinger
David Kensinger

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A lobbyist who used to work as Gov. Sam Brownback’s chief of staff is defending his confrontation with a Topeka teacher he claims was unprofessional in referencing the governor in her speech at a Model UN competition.

But witnesses tell The Topeka Capital-Journal that David Kensinger’s behavior was rude and hostile toward teacher Jenay Weekly, who says she was upset after being approached.

Weekly reviewed the competition’s history in her Monday speech, noting that organizers were pleased about securing Brownback as keynote speaker one year when he was a senator. She then asked, “Who could have known?”

Teachers say they interpreted the rhetorical question to mean that no one knew Brownback would later become governor.

Kensinger didn’t say how Weekly’s speech was inappropriate in his email to the newspaper.

Homeowners group grants playhouse for young girl with cancer

Make a WishKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A young girl with leukemia who asked for a playhouse in her backyard, but was denied after a homeowners association blocked it, will get her wish after all.

The homeowners group met Thursday to reconsider a “barn-style” playhouse proposal it had turned down for not having enough details. It said in a statement that its board has gathered more information after meeting with a construction group and the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

Although several details still have to be worked out, the group says 6-year-old Ella Joe Schultz can have the playhouse at her Raymore home.

Ella Joe’s father said his daughter, who was in a hospital Thursday, was thrilled when she heard the news and that it turned her day around.

Group Vows To Improve Conditions At State Mental Hospital

State mental hospital  KansasBy DAVE RANNEY

Kansas Sen. Molly Baumgardner thought it’d be great if a dozen — maybe two dozen — people showed up for a town hall meeting she’d convened in Osawatomie to talk about conditions at the state mental health hospital.

“There’s a lot of fear and anxiety, I know,” she said. “People are afraid they’ll lose their jobs if they say anything.”

So it was “wonderful,” Baumgardner said, when nearly 100 people — current and former hospital employees, mostly — turned out for the 90-minute discussion Monday evening in Memorial Hall near the city’s historic John Brown Memorial Park.

“It shows we have some really good people who really care about what’s going on out there,” she said. “And the message, I think, was pretty clear: We need to do something about it; we need information. This won’t be our last meeting. I guarantee you that.”

Baumgardner, a Republican from Louisburg, organized the meeting after state and federal surveyors twice in a span of four and a half months cited the 206-bed hospital for being overcrowded, providing poor care and not doing enough to prevent suicidal patients from harming themselves.

The findings, she said, had in recent weeks fueled long-festering rumors that state officials wanted to close the Osawatomie facility for Kansans with severe and persistent mental illnesses. The state’s other hospital for mental health patients is in Larned.

Baumgardner asked Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services Secretary Kari Bruffett to respond to the rumors.

“There are no plans to close Osawatomie State Hospital,” Bruffett said.

Later asked if KDADS intended to privatize some of the hospital’s services, Bruffett said that was “absolutely not the case.” But she added that the concept of privatization shouldn’t be “taken off the table” if it could improve patient care.

“Our No. 1 goal is to ensure that patients get the best care,” she said.

Bruffett, KDADS Superintendent of State Hospitals Bill Rein and Osawatomie State Hospital Superintendent Jerry Rea asked the audience for help in the agency’s efforts to recruit, hire and retain additional staff.

Their request prompted many in the audience to remind KDADS officials that working conditions at the hospital have been in decline for several years.

Among their concerns:

Nurses and direct care staff often are, without warning, required to work one, two and three overtime shifts per week.
State employee wages have been flat for several years, so experienced direct care workers now earn about 40 cents an hour more than inexperienced employees.
Employees often feel left out of the hospital’s decision-making processes.
Many “really good” employees have been fired or reprimanded for objecting to policies they thought were detrimental to patient care.
New employees are poorly trained.
There’s little communication between the hospital’s front office and its nurse’s stations.
“If you had happy nurses, you wouldn’t have the problems you’re having now,” said Edwina Bastion, a now-retired nurse who worked at the hospital for 41 years. “They don’t feel like they’re communicated with.” Her comment prompted a round of applause.

Rea, Rein and Bruffett each said they were aware of audience members’ concerns and that they were doing what they could to improve conditions.

But Stephen Feinstein, a former superintendent at the state hospital and a past president of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, said if that were the case, KDADS would have a plan in place that clearly defines the role of the state hospitals. Such a plan, he said, doesn’t exist.

“We continue to manage by crisis,” he said. “So two years from now, we’ll be in here talking about the next crisis and how we’re going to fix it.”

A nurse who did not identify herself warned Bruffett, Rein and Rea that expecting her and her co-workers to work two 16-hour shifts in a span of two days had created “a potential disaster here.”

“That’s not good for you,” Bruffett said, referring to the overtime demands. “It’s not good for the hospital, and it cannot be sustained.”

Rein asked the group to understand that much of the demand for overtime was driven by the recent surveys requiring the hospital to conduct more in-person safety checks on patients than in the past.

Finding new ways to recruit, hire and retain workers, he said, should reduce the hospital’s overtime demands.

Rea confirmed that, currently, the hospital is without an on-campus director of nursing. The position, he said, is temporarily being filled by the director of nursing at Parsons State Hospital and Training Center.

“We are trying to fill the (Osawatomie) position now,” Rea said.

The meeting ended with Bruffett agreeing to keep the Baumgardner-led group abreast of KDADS efforts to reduce overtime, enhance training, improve communication and measure the effectiveness of the hospital’s programs.

Also in attendance were Sen. Caryn Tyson, a Republican from Parker whose district includes Osawatomie State Hospital, and Rep. Kevin Jones of Wellsville and Rep. Jene Vickrey of Louisburg, both Republicans.

“We really need to concentrate on creating a work environment that’s rewarding to staff, because it’s the employees that make up the heart and soul of the hospital,” Vickrey said after the meeting. “If we don’t treat them well, we aren’t going to deliver the care that’s so vital to people in the 46 counties who depend on this state hospital.”

Mark Ready, a nurse who worked at the hospital for 38 years before retiring four years ago, said he welcomed that group’s message but doubted its direction.

“Most of what I heard tonight was ‘recruit, recruit, recruit,’” he said. “And that’s fine, they can do that all you want. … I don’t think you’re going to get more people to work out there until you make it a better place to work.”

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

Missouri Senate’s student transfer bill could cost $224M

SchoolJEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A Senate bill intended to fix issues with Missouri’s student transfer law could cost more than $200 million to implement next fiscal year.

Legislative researchers this week estimated the legislation could cost $224 million between state and local government expenses.

The bill would give students in struggling schools more options to transfer to better-performing ones within their home district.

The most expensive provisions would require dyslexia screening and St. Louis County schools to hold students back if they score poorly in English and math.

Those costs threaten the bill’s chances of passing at a time when Gov. Jay Nixon already is restricting spending because of slow revenue growth.

The House has passed a similar bill without as many pricey provisions that’s estimated to cost about $13.5 million next fiscal year.

Report: Suicides by girls and young women continue to climb

CDC logoMIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials say the suicide rate for girls and young women continues to rise, at a pace far faster than for young males.

The suicide rate for boys and young men climbed from 2007 to 2013, too. And it remains three times higher than the female rate for ages 10 to 24.

But the female increase has been steadier and more dramatic. One expert said that may be because more girls and young women are using hanging or other forms of suffocation, which is more lethal than drug overdose — the method used most by younger females.

In 2013, the rate for young females was 3.4 per 100,000. The rate for males was 11.9.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released the report Thursday.

Missouri Senate OKs higher weight limits on livestock trucks

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A measure to set higher weight limits on trucks carrying livestock on most Missouri roads has won Senate approval.

Senators on Thursday voted 33-0 in favor of the legislation, which expands current exemptions for milk trucks.

Livestock trucks could carry as much as 85,500 pounds, up from the current 80,000-pound limit.

The bill by Republican Sen. Mike Parson, of Bolivar, is similar to provisions in a larger bill aimed at spurring agricultural growth.

Parson’s bill would apply to all Missouri highways except interstates. The legislation also would allow trucks to exceed weight limits by 10 percent for grain products during harvest seasons.

No senators spoke against the bill Thursday, but Democrats have raised concerns about putting more weight on roads without additional taxes to pay for potential damages.

Chiefs release LB to create salary cap space

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs released veteran linebacker Joe Mays on Thursday as they attempt to free up much-needed salary cap space before the start of free agency next week.

The Chiefs saved about $3 million by parting with Mays, who started last season on injured reserve and wound up making just 16 tackles in eight games. Mays was expected to start alongside Derrick Johnson, but never seemed to solidify his role.

ChiefsThe Chiefs have made modest savings by releasing Mays along with wide receivers Donnie Avery and A.J. Jenkins and tight end Anthony Fasano. Now, the big question is whether they will carve out more significant salary cap space by trading, releasing or restructuring the massive contracts of wide receiver Dwayne Bowe and linebacker Tamba Hali in the coming days.

Danforth aide says Missouri auditor shot himself after call

Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich
Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich

JEFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — An aide to former U.S. Sen. John Danforth says she was on the phone with Missouri Auditor Tom Schweich discussing his religion just moments before he killed himself.

Danforth assistant Martha Fitz said in a written statement Thursday that Schweich’s chief of staff expressed concerns about his emotional state on Feb. 26 and asked her to call Schweich’s wife, Kathy.

Fitz said she spoke over the phone with Tom Schweich around 9:40 a.m., and he expressed outrage over “rumors that were being spread about his religion.”

She says Schweich threatened to kill himself and handed the phone to his wife. Seconds later, Fitz says she heard his wife say, “He shot himself.”

Danforth mentored Schweich, who had launched a campaign for the Republican nomination for governor just a month before his death.

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