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Topeka council to consider nudity ban

Screen Shot 2014-09-08 at 7.33.33 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Topeka City Council will consider making public nudity a misdemeanor offense.

The Topeka Capital-Journal the proposal to be considered Tuesday was prompted by people reporting that a man was walking nude in south central Topeka.

The ban would not apply to children under 10 years old or a woman breastfeeding her child.

State law and city ordinances do not ban public nudity, although state law prohibits it in the context of sexual arousal.

The proposed ordinance would impose penalties only when someone intentionally violates the ban.

Chick-fil-A founder S. Truett Cathy has died

Cathy
Cathy

ATLANTA (AP) — A spokesman says S. Truett Cathy, who started a postwar diner in Atlanta that grew into the Chick-fil-A restaurant chain, has died. He was 93.

Chick-fil-A spokesman Mark Baldwin tells The Associated Press Cathy died early Monday at home surrounded by family members.

For decades, Cathy’s fast food restaurants have offered a taste of the South, from chicken sandwiches to sweet tea and biscuits and gravy.

The chain also is known for its Bible Belt observance of Sunday — none of its more than 1,800 restaurants in 39 states and Washington, D.C. are open on that day to allow employees a day of rest.

Cathy’s $6 billion fortune as the founder of Chick-fil-A put him on the yearly Forbes magazine list of the wealthiest Americans in the country.

 

Did you miss Saturday’s Roberts-Orman Debate? Watch it here

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — Republican Sen. Pat Roberts and independent challenger Greg Orman agree that the U.S. needs to do a better job of securing its borders, but Orman also has a proposal to allow immigrants who are in the country illegally to stay.
The issue arose during their first debate Saturday at the Kansas State Fair in Hutchinson. Watch a replay of Saturday’s debate below.


The 78-year-old Roberts is seeking a fourth, six-year term. Orman is a 45-year-old Olathe businessman.

Video provided by WIBW radio

Murder convict takes case to Kansas Supreme Court

Killings
Killings

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court is preparing to hear an appeal from a Topeka man who is serving a “hard 50” prison sentence in another man’s shooting death.

Trevejon Maurice Killings insisted he wasn’t guilty when he was sentenced in 2011 to at least 50 years in prison with no chance of parole for the 2010 death of 24-year-old Antonio Jackson. Jackson was shot at a Topeka apartment while several other people, including a child, were present.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Killings is appealing his conviction for first-degree murder and his sentence. Issues raised in the appeal include claims that the judge erred when she didn’t instruct jurors about lesser included offenses to the murder count.

The case goes before the high court Tuesday.

 

Early results: Average 2015 marketplace premiums decline slightly

Health insuranceBy Jay Hancock
Kaiser Health News

WASHINGTON, D.C. — In preliminary but encouraging news for consumers and taxpayers, insurance filings show that average premiums will decline slightly next year in 16 major cities for a benchmark Obamacare plan.
Prices for a benchmark “silver” or mid-priced plan sold through the health law’s online marketplaces aren’t all moving in the same direction, however, a report from the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) shows. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.) In Nashville, the premium will rise 8.7 percent, the largest increase in the study, while in Denver it will fall 15.6 percent, the largest decrease.

But overall the results, based on available filings, don’t show the double-digit percentage increases that some anticipated for the second year of marketplace operation. On average, rates will drop 0.8 percent in the areas studied.

“If you’re the government, this is great news,” said Larry Levitt, KFF senior vice president. “Competition in the marketplaces is helping drive down the cost of the tax credit” that subsidizes coverage for lower-income consumers.

That’s because the credits are based on the cost of the second least-expensive silver plan, known as the benchmark plan. That’s the one KFF studied. The lower the benchmark-plan rates, the lower the cost to taxpayers.

For consumers, the picture is also promising — but more complicated.

The main message: shop around, says Levitt.

The fact that average premiums in selected cities are declining doesn’t mean your rates will fall. Premiums may vary significantly within states. Premiums for plans with different benefit levels — higher platinum and gold and lower bronze — may behave differently than prices for silver plans. And just because your policy was the least expensive in your area for 2014 doesn’t mean it will stay that way for 2015.

Bottom line: There is increased competition as more insurers enter the marketplaces and tune prices to attract customers. But you may need to switch plans to take advantage of that.

Millions spent on two Missouri ballot issues

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Nearly $6 million was spent trying to persuade Missouri residents to vote either for or against a pair of August ballot measures related to transportation and farming.

Final campaign finance reports showed that supporters of a proposed transportation sales tax were the biggest spenders, at $4.2 million. An opposition group spent barely $27,000. Yet voters defeated the measure by 59 percent.

The spending and vote totals were significantly closer on a proposal creating a constitutional right to farm. Supporters spent a little over $1 million while opponents spent $637,000.

The farming rights measure passed by a margin of less than one-half of a percentage point and is still undergoing a recount.

Ex-budget director to discuss deficit with farmers

Duane Goossen- photo KHI
Duane Goossen- photo KHI

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The former Kansas budget director will discuss the effect of the budget deficit at a series of presentations hosted by farm groups.

Kansas Farmers Union, a group of county Farmers Union chapters and the Kansas Beginning Farmers Coalition are hosting events this month featuring former budget director Duane Goossen.

Goosen served as the state’s budget director for 12 years under the administrations of Republican governor Bill Graves and Democratic governors Kathleen Sebelius and Mark Parkinson.

Farmers Union President Donn Teske says the goal is to educate residents on the impact of the state budget deficit on rural property taxes, services and the future of the state and its rural schools.

Presentations are scheduled Sept. 18 in McPherson, Sept. 22 in Lawrence, Sept. 24 in Seneca and Sept. 25 in Belleville.

 

Kansas State establishes Confucius Institute

Screen Shot 2014-09-08 at 5.25.05 AMMANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Kansas State University is adding a Chinese language and cultural center called a Confucius Institute.

The university announced last week that it has signed an agreement with China’s language-teaching agency, the Hanban. A Confucius Institute already is located at the University of Kansas.

Through the program, universities partner with a Chinese school. Kansas State’s partner school is Jilin University in northeast China.

The host school providing space and an administrator in exchange for textbooks and money from the Hanban. Teachers receive a monthly salary from the Chinese government.

A grand opening ceremony is planned for early spring 2015. A delegation of Chinese dignitaries will attend.

Topeka police: Officer dies after car stop shooting UPDATE

Preston Lane Ross
Preston Lane Ross

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say a Topeka police officer has been shot and killed while making a car stop.

Shawnee County Sheriff Herman Jones said at a news conference Sunday night that the officer had stopped a car in east Topeka, and in the middle of the stop the officer was shot. Authorities said the car then drove away.

The sheriff’s department said authorities got the call about 4:45 p.m. and responders found the critically wounded officer, who was taken to a hospital. Jones said the officer was pronounced dead there.

Jones identified the officer as Corporal Jason Harwood, a decorated 15-year veteran who leaves behind a wife and two children.

The sheriff’s office said a suspect Preston Lane Ross had been taken into custody.

 

———-

UPDATE   Shortly after the fatal Sunday shooting of a police officer,  Topeka Police issued an alert for 30-year-old Ross Preston Lane. The suspect wanted in connection to the shooting was arrested just after 8 p.m.

—–

TOPEKA- Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are searching for a suspect involved in police shooting.

The City of Topeka shared on their Twitter and Facebook page, “With heavy hearts, we report that an on-duty, fully uniformed Topeka Police officer was critically injured while conducting a car stop late this afternoon.”

Officials say the officer has died of gunshot wounds. His name has not been released.

The suspect wanted in connection with the shooting, Ross Preston Lane, 30, is described as a white male, 5’11”, 185 lbs, with hazel eyes and blonde hair. He was believed to driving a silver suburban or Honda truck.

Mo. man dies in Sunday tractor accident

MARSHALL (AP) – Authorities say a 74-year-old man has died in a tractor accident in Saline County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol identified the victim as Lawrence B. Holland of Marshall. He died Saturday afternoon when his tractor backed off a 15-foot embankment. The patrol says Holland was pinned within the tractor and was pronounced dead at the scene.

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