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McCaskill Applauds VA Announcement to Keep Mt. Vernon Clinic Open

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill today released the following statement after the VA’s announcement that it has reached an interim agreement to keep open the VA’s community-based outpatient clinic in Mt. Vernon, which was scheduled to close this month:

“This agreement to keep open the Mt. Vernon facility is a real victory for the many veterans who depend on it for quality, specialized care. The clinic is home to a variety of critical rehabilitative services, including treatment for traumatic brain injuries, and I’m pleased the VA has taken action to keep those services in Mt. Vernon. I’ll continue working with the VA and with area providers to ensure these services remain in southwest Missouri as long as they are needed, so our veterans can continue to receive the high quality care they deserve.”

The agreement extends the VA clinic’s contract with the Missouri Rehab Center until the end of the year, and the VA plans to extend that contract for the next three years, until the completion of a new clinic in Springfield.

In August, McCaskill, the daughter of a World War II veteran, visited John J. Pershing Medical Center in Poplar Bluff and the VA’s Community-Based Outpatient Clinic in West Plains to hear directly from area veterans and VA administrators, and announce the expansion of her veterans’ customer satisfaction survey to the southeast Missouri region.

McCaskill launched her Veterans’ Customer Satisfaction Program (VCSP), a confidential survey, to give Missouri veterans an opportunity to offer direct, confidential feedback on the quality of service they receive at their local VA facility. Nearly 1,000 Missouri veterans participated in this year’s surveys, and the program is in its fourth year. The survey is now active in four regions: St. Louis, Kansas City, Columbia, and Poplar Bluff.

Police: Officer fatally shoots man in St. Louis, protests follow

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Authorities say an off-duty police officer has fatally shot a man who fired on him in south St. Louis.

St. Louis Police Lt. Col. Alfred Adkins says the 32-year-old police officer was working a secondary security job late Wednesday when he stopped to talk to four people. The four fled and the officer chased one of them.

Adkins says that man fired a gun at the officer who returned fire, killing the man. Adkins says the officer wasn’t hurt.

Family members later told The St. Louis Post Dispatch that the man who died was not armed. Police say a gun was retrieved from the scene, near Missouri Botanical Gardens.

Adkins did not describe the conversation between the officer and the four pedestrians, and didn’t explain why he gave chase.

The shooting death saw more protests and demonstrations are scheduled to take place in nearby Ferguson, Missouri, over the shooting of Michael Brown two months ago.

Butler, Gordon relish Royals’ postseason success

Screen Shot 2014-10-06 at 10.09.39 AM

 

DAVE SKRETTA, AP Sports Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — They endured it together, Billy Butler and Alex Gordon. All those years with 90 losses, the managerial changes and youth movements and empty seats come late September.

Empty seats in July and August, too.

They were supposed to be the two players who led the Kansas City Royals back to the playoffs. Butler was the standout high school prospect who couldn’t run well and struggled with his glove, but my, how he could hit. And Gordon was the best player in college baseball when the Royals plucked him out of Nebraska, a sure-fire All-Star one day.

Well, that day has finally arrived. After seven years of building and rebuilding, Butler and Gordon are reveling in the Royals’ first postseason appearance since 1985.

“For the fans, 30 years without feels like a lifetime. It’s an eternity to me,” Butler said. “Kansas City deserves everything they’re getting and we want to give it to them.”

The Royals open the best-of-seven AL Championship Series on Friday night in Baltimore having already given thousands of fans plenty of postseason thrills.

There was the 12-inning walk-off win over Oakland in the wild-card game at Kauffman Stadium. There was the pair of 11-inning wins against the Angels in Los Angeles. And there was the clinching game back in Kansas City, an 8-3 romp that kicked off a citywide party.

Butler and Gordon have been gleefully in the midst of it all.

“This is personal for us,” Butler said. “It started all the way back when we got drafted. That’s what they envisioned when they drafted us. Going through some bad times, I’ve been with this team for 10 years, building toward this.”

It’s been a challenging road filled with pitfalls and potholes, and more than once it looked as though neither Butler nor Gordon would see the fruits of their labor.

Butler established himself as a solid hitter early in his career, but his limited ability on the base paths and in the field hampered his value. Butler finally made an All-Star game in 2012, when it was played in Kansas City, but the past couple of seasons have been a struggle.

He was hitting just .235 in late-May, a disaster by his lofty standards. And late in the season, Butler found himself sitting on the bench for critical games in a pennant chase.

Of course, he would rise to the occasion when the postseason rolled around.

Butler had a pair of hits in the victory over the A’s. And while he went 0 for 9 against the Angels, he managed three walks and even stole a base, his first in two years.

“We’ve believed in Billy all along,” Royals manager Ned Yost said.

The same could be said of Gordon, the second overall pick in the 2005 draft — one year after Butler went in the first round. He was rushed to the majors two years later as the heir to George Brett at third base and soon fizzled out, spending the next couple years vacillating between the majors and minors while trying out a variety of positions.

He finally stuck when he landed in left field, and in 2011 hit .303 and earned the first of three consecutive gold gloves. He made his first All-Star game last year, and his second this season, when he hit .266 with 19 homers and again played a masterful left field.

Gordon atoned for a 0-for-5 performance against Oakland by beating up the Angels, going 3 for 10 with a pair of doubles and scoring twice. It was his bases-loaded double in the first inning of Game 3 on Sunday night that spurred the Royals to the series clincher.

“Gordo, hands-down leader of this ballclub,” third baseman Mike Moustakas said. “For him to go out there in a huge situation like that, after we’re down one, drive in three runs, it just gave us so much confidence going into the rest of that game.”

Gordon has slowly evolved into the face of the franchise, yet he’s a reluctant star who speaks quietly but carries a big stick. He rarely gets too excitable, nor does he ever get too down. And when he is asked about his personal performance this postseason, he quickly defers the credit to general manager Dayton Moore for sticking with him all these years.

“Dayton has done a great job molding this team to where it is now,” Gordon said. “He really got the right pieces in through the draft and through the trade with James Shields and Wade Davis. Things are really starting to come together. Give a lot of credit to Dayton.”

Give a lot of credit to Butler and Gordon, too.

“We’re about now,” Gordon said. “It’s been a struggle, but we’re here now. It doesn’t matter who does it as long as someone does it and we get the win.”

Mo. woman hospitalized after rollover accident

CAINSVILLE- A Missouri woman was injured in an accident just after 9 p.m. on Wednesday in Mercer County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2000 Mercury Mountaineer driven by Brandy M. Sial, 28, Cainsville, was westbound on Highway N two miles west of Cainsville. The driver lost control of the vehicle; it went off the south side of the road and overturned.

A private vehicle transported Sial to the Harrison County Hospital

Missouri seeking federal grant for preschools

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri education officials say they are seeking more than $17 million annually of federal grant funding for early childhood education efforts.

The state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education says the grant could expand preschool programs for 4-year-olds in what it describes as “high-need communities.”

Missouri will find out in December whether it will get the grant, which could be renewed for up to four years.

The state agency says Missouri has been falling behind in early childhood education funding. It cites a study by the National Institute for Early Education Research which ranks Missouri’s funding 38th out of 41 states that have preschool programs.

Study: Voter ID laws cut turnout by blacks, young

VoteWASHINGTON (AP) — A nonpartisan congressional study has found that stiffer state voter ID laws have damped election turnout, disproportionately affecting blacks and younger people.

The Government Accountability Office found that election turnout in Kansas and Tennessee — which tightened voter ID requirements — dropped more steeply than it did in four states that didn’t change their identification requirements.

The report found that in those two states, voter turnout was more sharply reduced among young people than among the middle-aged and among blacks than whites and others.

Young people and blacks generally tend to support Democratic candidates.

Republicans have said such laws are designed to reduce fraud.

The report was released less than four weeks from Election Day.

Kansas plans traffic safety event at Statehouse

KDOT logoTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Transportation says teenagers will be coming to the Statehouse to participate in a quick-click buckling-up challenge as part of a traffic safety event.

Friday afternoon’s event on the south side of the Capitol is part of KDOT’s Put the Brakes on Fatalities Day.

The challenge involves teams of teenagers racing to unbuckle their seatbelts in cars, trade places and buckle up again.

Deputy KDOT Secretary Jerry Younger plans to serve as master of ceremonies.

The event emphasizes the importance of traffic safety.

 

In Kan. Senate debate, Orman defends independence

Roberts and Orman
Roberts and Orman

THOMAS BEAUMONT, Associated Press

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts is insisting that his stronger-than-expected independent opponent is a liberal Democrat in disguise.

But Greg Orman has donated to both Democrats, including Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Republicans, such as former Sen. Scott Brown.

Orman pitched domestic policy ideas during the debate that both parties have championed, and again refused to say which party he would usually vote with if elected.

However, Orman says he contributed to Brown’s 2010 Senate campaign to halt the advance of the health care law, which he says he opposed.

The race in typically GOP Kansas has become suddenly competitive in the past month as Democrat Chad Taylor has stepped aside and Orman, a wealthy businessman, has pulled ahead of Roberts in recent polls of Kansas voters.

2 arrested at KU on suspicion of rape

Arrest   jailLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Campus police at the University of Kansas say two men have been arrested on suspicion of raping two women in a residence hall during homecoming weekend.

6NewsLawrence reports the 21-year-old suspects are jailed in Douglas County without bond. They’re expected to have their first court appearances Thursday.

One suspect is from Lawrence and the other from Olathe. Police said one of the men is a KU student.

Public safety officials said the incidents were reported to have occurred between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. on Sept. 28 at Hashinger Hall. They were unrelated to allegations of sexual assault the same weekend at a fraternity.

 

Kan. organization pledges humanitarian aid for Liberian Ebola victims

By Elle Moxley – KCUR

Heart to Heart CEO Jim Mitchum says the Lenexa-based aid organization is committed to running an Ebola treatment unit in Africa for the next six months.- photo by Elle Moxley/KCUR
Heart to Heart CEO Jim Mitchum says the Lenexa-based aid organization is committed to running an Ebola treatment unit in Africa for the next six months.- photo by Elle Moxley/KCUR

LENEXA — An international aid organization based in Lenexa on Tuesday announced plans to operate a medical facility in Liberia to treat Ebola victims.

Heart to Heart International CEO Jim Mitchum said running the 70-bed Ebola treatment unit will be the largest and most challenging humanitarian effort the organization has undertaken. It will cost approximately $6 million to operate the facility, which should open in November, for six months.
Mitchum said Heart to Heart will recruit doctors and nurses for six-week deployments, when they’ll work with approximately 200 Liberians to staff the treatment center.

“They will spend the first week attending training to assure all the necessary protocols are well-understood and that they are able to keep themselves and their co-workers safe,” he said.

The announcement comes on the heels of the first reported case contracted outside the United States, by a nurse in Spain who cared for evacuated Ebola victims.

Lee Norman, chief medical officer at the University of Kansas Hospital, said, “We at KU Hospital have systems in place to assure you that should Heart to Heart volunteers and staff – and their worried families – need our care, we are here to help you.”

Ebola can only be contracted through contact with bodily fluids. Contrary to internet rumors, there have been no confirmed cases in Kansas City.

There have been just under 4,000 reported cases of Ebola in Liberia, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say those numbers could balloon to 1.4 million there and in neighboring Sierra Leone. The Ebola treatment unit Heart to Heart will operate is one of 27 the CDC says Liberia needs to contain the epidemic.

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