TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Caleb Stegall is scheduled to be sworn in as the Kansas Supreme Court’s newest justice on Dec. 5.
The Supreme Court announced the swearing in-ceremony Friday.
Stegall currently serves on the Kansas Court of Appeals. Gov. Sam Brownback appointed him to the state’s highest court last month.
It was Brownback’s first appointment to the seven-member Supreme Court. Stegall will replace former Justice Nancy Moritz, who was appointed to the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Stegall is 42 and was serving as Brownback’s chief counsel when the governor appointed him to the Court of Appeals last year. He served as Jefferson County’s elected prosecutor for two years before joining Brownback’s staff in January 2011.
Inside the Biocontainment unit at the University of Nebraska
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Officials at the Nebraska Medical Center where an American aid worker infected with Ebola is being treated say the patient is getting his appetite back.
Dr. Rick Sacra was flown to the Omaha, Nebraska, hospital on Sept. 5 for treatment in the hospital’s specialized 10-bed isolation unit.
Sacra’s doctors and his wife, Debbie, have said the 51-year-old doctor’s condition has steadily improved since he arrived.
On Friday, the hospital released a statement saying Sacra’s appetite is finally starting to come back. The hospital says Sacra sated a craving for ice cream with a pint of Ben & Jerry’s Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough.
Debbie Sacra says the ice cream helped her husband exceed doctors’ orders for him to start eating at least 1,000 calories a day.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal health experts say Novo Nordisk’s diabetes drug Victoza should be approved for a new use in treating obesity.
The panel of Food and Drug Administration advisers voted 14-1 that the injectable drug’s benefits outweigh its risks for patients who are obese or dangerously overweight.
The FDA first approved Victoza in 2010 as a daily injection to help control type 2 diabetes. The drug is part of a new class of medicines called GLP-1 agonists, which spur the pancreas to create extra insulin after meals. People with diabetes have trouble breaking down food into energy due to problems producing or using insulin.
Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk now wants the FDA to approve the drug as an obesity treatment based on company studies showing significant weight loss in most patients.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Fifty-two U.S. House members have signed a letter voicing concerns about a proposal to change the map that governs how donated livers are distributed around the country.
The letter, dated Friday, was written by Kansas Congressman Kevin Yoder, a Republican. It comes in advance of a meeting Tuesday in Chicago to discuss a proposal to redraw the nation’s transplant regions.
The issue is that some areas have fewer donated organs, and higher demand for them, than others. The United Network for Organ Sharing, which runs the nation’s transplant network, has proposed basing the map on the distribution and demand for donated organs.
The lawmakers who signed the letter are largely from the South and the Midwest. Those regions have higher organ donation rates and fear they would be negatively affected.
KANSAS CITY- A Kansas man was injured in an accident just after 1 p.m. on Friday in Wyandotte County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2002 Chevy Trailblazer driven by Fernanda B. Segura-Manon, Kansas City, was southbound on Interstate 635 just south of Metropolitan when a vehicle cut in front of the Trailblazer. The Trailblazer made an evasive maneuver, left the roadway and rolled down the hill.
Segura-Manon was transported to KU Medical Center. The KHP reported he was properly restrained at the time of the accident.
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Prominent Missouri political donor Rex Sinquefield has contributed $2.5 million to an organization that has pushed for lower income taxes.
Grow Missouri says it plans to use the money to finance its operations through the rest of the year. Treasurer Aaron Willard says that could include advertising, data collection and other support for candidates and ballot issues.
The group says it also plans to support a statewide listening tour by House Majority Leader John Diehl, who has dubbed his initiative “100 Great Ideas for Missouri.”
Grow Missouri supported Republican tax-cutting efforts that culminated earlier this year with the enactment of a law prescribing a gradual income tax cut.
Willard says the group wants to support additional “pro-growth” and smaller-government initiatives.
Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee.-Photo by Phil Cauthon
By Andy Marso
KHI News Service
TOPEKA — A newsletter for Johnson County seniors has become a source of consternation to some legislators who say an upcoming article critical of the health care compact passed this year will unfairly portray the legislation as a threat to Medicare.
Several people present Wednesday at a legislative breakfast hosted by the Johnson County Commission on Aging said the event was mostly cordial until Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook, R-Shawnee, questioned the commission’s intention to publish in a county newsletter an article critical of the compact.
“There was a lot of mutual respect in the room, but a pretty strong position was taken on this one particular issue, and for that part of the meeting things did get pretty tense,” said Dan Goodman, executive director of the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging.
The commission on aging is a board of volunteers appointed by Johnson County commissioners to advise the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging.
Pilcher-Cook said via email Thursday that she had not read the article in question but had concerns about the content as communicated to her.
“Someone told me about it and it was clear at the meeting there was some confusion about what the compact would allow, so I asked if they would hold it until they received more information,” said Pilcher-Cook, who as chairwoman of the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee pushed for passage of the bill authorizing the state’s membership in the controversial compact.
‘A lot of research’
Commission leaders say they are open to another meeting with legislators but aren’t confused about the compact and are comfortable with the draft of the article set to run in October, one month before general elections for all House seats and statewide offices. The article outlines the commission’s opposition to the compact based on concerns about Medicare.
“As far as the information in the article being incorrect, I would certainly disagree with that,” said Chuck Nigro, chairman of the commission’s legislative committee. “We assure you, there’s been a lot of research done.”
The compact would allow states to opt out of all federal laws regarding health care and take money currently used for federal health programs as block grants for state-run programs. Gov. Sam Brownback and governors of seven other states signed the compact bill, but it must be approved by Congress and, according to some constitutional scholars, by the president before it becomes effective.
The compact bill was meant as a repudiation of the Affordable Care Act, colloquially called Obamacare.
But Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger and the AARP spoke against the bill, saying it posed a threat to Medicare, the federally run health care program for American seniors.
Medicare concerns
At Wednesday’s event, Pilcher-Cook questioned the commission about its intent to submit the article to The Best Times, a monthly publication that is mailed to all Johnson County residents 60 and older.
Rep. Barbara Bollier, R-Mission, several commission members and Goodman all said that Pilcher-Cook assured commission members they had nothing to worry about regarding Medicare.
“She stated adamantly that there is absolutely no change to Medicare from this bill,” said Bollier, who opposed the compact.
Rep. Keith Esau, R-Olathe, another compact supporter who was at the breakfast, said he also had not read the proposed article but shared Pilcher-Cook’s concerns about it.
“It has some misinformation about the compact,” Esau said. “They’re saying that Medicare could be taken away from people, and that’s not true. The health care compact allows Kansas to manage it for ourselves instead of having the federal government manage it, but it doesn’t allow us to rob it or take it away.”
Esau said the compact, based on model legislation adopted by the American Legislative Exchange Council, is written so states can only use the federal block grant money for health care.
Bollier, a doctor, said she was unconvinced.
“If you put that money into the state general fund, it is possible it can be swept and used for other things,” Bollier said. “We all know any money can.”
In recent years money from the Kansas Department of Transportation’s highway construction fund has been re-appropriated for a number of purposes, and dollars from a legal settlement with tobacco companies earmarked for early childhood education programs have been diverted to pay for initiatives for older children.
The state is currently deficit spending and is projected to run out of reserves next year.
Rep. Stephanie Clayton, R-Overland Park, said she might have supported the compact if an amendment carving out Medicare had been approved. But after the amendment narrowly failed, Clayton decided to vote against the compact.
“It is my understanding that it would turn Medicare over to state control, and right now we’re in a precarious budget situation,” said Clayton, who was at Wednesday’s legislative breakfast.
Bollier said she could not support the bill because when she asked its carrier, Rep. Brett Hildabrand, R-Shawnee, what his plan was for state administration of Medicare, he had no answer.
Hildabrand did not respond to a message left Thursday, but when the bill passed he told the Wichita Eagle that Medicare would continue unchanged.
Pilcher-Cook said the purpose of the compact was to restore freedom to states “being coerced by the federal health care law, aka Obamacare.” Changes to Medicare are not contemplated, she said.
“It is clear the Kansas Legislature would have no interest in changing anything about Medicare unless it was being destroyed by the federal government,” Pilcher-Cook said.
Esau said that if the compact gains federal approval, the Legislature will probably continue to let the federal government administer Medicare.
“The likelihood is we would continue to let Medicare run the way it is currently unless there is a threat to Medicare, and then we might want to manage it so we get better health care out of it,” Esau said.
In signing the bill, Brownback said he “would strongly oppose any effort at the state level to reduce Medicare benefits or coverage for Kansas seniors” if the state takes over the program.
An informed vote
Nigro, Johnson County Commission on Aging chairwoman Patti Rule and vice chairman Eugene Lipscomb said they and other commission members examined the compact bill carefully before deciding to publicly raise concerns about it.
“There were questions about the state’s ability to actually operate Medicare and what the plan was, and we didn’t believe it was in the best interests of Kansas seniors,” Nigro said Thursday during a conference call that included Rule and Lipscomb.
The commission leaders said it was logical to write about the group’s stance on the issue and submit the article to The Best Times, which is designed to inform seniors.
Esau disagreed, saying a government publication is “probably not the place to have an opinion like that.”
“If they’re going to run it they should have it balanced, both sides,” Esau said. “It shouldn’t just be propaganda against the health care compact. It should have both sides displayed.”
The Johnson County Commission assumed publication duties of The Best Times last year. But the county’s public information officer, Gerald Hay, said editorial control still rests with the Johnson County Area on Aging and unless he hears differently from Goodman, he will run the story as is.
Goodman said he has no plans to change or pull it.
He said the commission that advises his agency is made up of competent professionals or retired professionals. He said Nigro is a former nursing facility administrator, Rule is a semi-retired public health nurse and Lipscomb is a housing administrator and attorney.
“We 100 percent support the advisory board,” Goodman said. “I followed their research on the compact bill, and I know they’ve done their due diligence. Their article is informative, but I don’t think it’s inflammatory in any way. It’s basically asking logical questions that anyone would ask if their benefits or income were being looked at.”
Nigro, Rule and Lipscomb said the commission had emailed Pilcher-Cook with an offer to set another meeting about the compact, but the article has been submitted and the commission fully intends for it to run.
“If it doesn’t get published, I’m sure you’ll hear from us,” Nigro said.
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican Sen. Pat Roberts’ re-election campaign has posted an online ad attacking independent candidate Greg Orman as a liberal pretending to be conservative.
But Orman’s campaign demanded Friday that Roberts’ team remove the ad because it edits audio from their recent debate at the Kansas State Fair.
The ad accuses Orman of pretending to be conservative like Roberts. It features a string of video clips from the debate in which Orman agrees with Roberts.
The last of those clips features audio edited from two parts of the debate. Orman spokesman Sam Edelen called the audio “fake” and said it had been manipulated while being represented as exactly what Orman said at the debate.
Roberts campaign manager Corry Bliss called the criticism laughable.
CAMERON (AP) – A southwest Missouri man convicted of killing his grandmother has died in prison.
The state Corrections Department says 31-year-old Troy Ford, of Springfield, was pronounced dead just before noon Friday at a northwest Missouri hospital. The agency says an autopsy will be performed.
Ford was serving a life sentence at Crossroads Correctional Center for second-degree murder and armed criminal action for the strangulation of 63-year-old Sharon Rheam in May 2006. Prosecutors alleged that Ford was stealing from Rheam, who was found dead in her Springfield mobile home.
Ford was initially charged with first-degree murder. His trial was already underway in late 2007 when he entered an Alford plea to the reduced charges. An Alford plea does not admit guilt but acknowledges that prosecutors have sufficient evidence for a conviction.
JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon has blocked expenditures for all 47 budget items on which lawmakers overrode his line-item vetoes.
Nixon said Friday he was restricting $54 million of spending items to ensure a balanced budget. That means that despite the veto overrides earlier this week, there will not be additional money flowing to such things as services for victims of child abuse and rape or for school safety grants.
But Nixon also said he was releasing $22 million of spending that he had previously frozen for state aid to county governments, job training and other programs.
The Missouri Constitution gives governors the power to withhold money that has been budgeted for programs in order to balance the budget.
After Friday’s actions, Nixon now is restricting $735 million of budgeted expenses.