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NASCAR adds new rule on exiting cars after crashes

Harvick vs. Kyle 2011BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) — NASCAR has added a new rule telling drivers to not approach the track or moving vehicles after accidents. The rule comes less than a week after a driver was struck and killed during a dirt-track race at a small New York track.

NASCAR star Tony Stewart is skipping this weekend’s Sprint Cup race at Michigan International Speedway. Last Saturday, Stewart’s car hit and killed Kevin Ward Jr. at a sprint car event in Canandaigua, New York. After Stewart clipped Ward’s car, sending it spinning, Ward left the car during the caution period, walked down the track and was hit by Stewart.

NASCAR Vice President Robin Pemberton says the new rule merely formalizes reminders that take place during drivers’ meetings. NASCAR will address violations of the rule on a case-by-case basis.

More formal vetting process to be used in selecting new Medicaid inspector general

Phil Hermanson
Phil Hermanson

By Jim McLean
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — Whoever emerges as the top candidate from a crowded field of applicants for the state’s Medicaid inspector general post likely will be vetted more carefully than in the past.

Dr. Robert Moser, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said the Kansas Bureau of Investigation will conduct a background check of the candidate before he or she is appointed.

“It’s something that we’re going to require before extending the contract,” he said.

That’s a recent change in the hiring process. Before, he said, no formal vetting was done on people in key positions until after they were hired.

Citing rules about discussing personnel matters, Moser declined to say whether the change was triggered by a recent chain of events surrounding the appointment of former legislator Phil Hermanson to the inspector general’s post.

Hermanson resigned after only a few months on the job when questions were raised about his suitability for the oversight position given that his background includes a DUI conviction, campaign finance violations, a business bankruptcy and personal financial problems.

Those revelations and Hermanson’s lack of a college degree or relevant career experience prompted several Democratic legislators to question whether he should be in charge of overseeing the financial and operational integrity of the $3 billion Medicaid program, which in Kansas is known as KanCare.

One of those critics, Rep. Jim Ward of Wichita, said the Hermanson episode puts pressure on Moser and Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration to get it right this time.

“The goal is to get a good inspector general,” Ward said. “We want a good person in the job. We want quality work done, and we want detailed reports.”

The state has had some trouble retaining inspector generals. Robin Kempf, the first to hold the position in the now-defunct Kansas Health Policy Authority, resigned in late 2008, saying that the agency’s leadership and board didn’t allow her enough independence.

Kempf’s replacement, Nick Kramer, retired in 2011 as the policy authority was being merged into KDHE. It took officials in Brownback’s administration more than a year to hire Bill Gale to replace Kramer. Then, Gale left in January of this year to head the Department of Children and Families regional office in Wichita. Hermanson was appointed three months later.

The state also has sometimes had trouble attracting many qualified applicants for the $77,000-a-year-job. But, Moser said, that isn’t the case now.

“We’ve had a double-digit number of applicants this time around, and some very well-qualified individuals,” he said.

Interviews will be conducted over the next couple weeks. Once a selection is made, Moser said, it will take a minimum of two weeks to complete the background check.

“Our hope is to have an inspector general in place and under contract by October,” he said.

Whoever is hired will be prohibited by state law from exercising the full authority of the office until he or she is confirmed by the Senate, which won’t meet until the 2015 Legislature convenes in January. However, an interim committee could grant the appointee temporary authority.

The Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight is the panel most likely to take up the nomination. It is next scheduled to meet Nov. 18.

Check out the latest gas pump prices around St. Joseph

Need a tank of gas for the weekend? Here are the latest gas pump prices around St. Joseph
Area Average : $3.264
Last Week: $3.184 Last Month: $3.361 6 Months Ago: $3.130 Last Year: $3.350

Average Cost To Fuel A Vehicle With a 15 Gallon Tank: $48.95
Last Week: $47.77 Last Month: $50.42 6 Months Ago: $46.94 Last Year: $50.25

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Saint Joseph , MO
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Aug 14 09:01 AM
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Saint Joseph , MO
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320 EDMOND ST
Saint Joseph , MO
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Hy-Vee
201 N BELT HWY
Saint Joseph , MO
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IMPERIAL SUPER GAS
Unbranded
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Sinclair
1011 S BELT HWY
Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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BP
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Caseys
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Conoco
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Conoco
3804 MITCHELL AVE
Saint Joseph , MO
$3.299
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Saint Joseph , MO
$3.299
Aug 13 07:30 PM
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Sinclair
6101 N BELT HWY
Saint Joseph , MO
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Cenex
5430 FREDERICK AVE
Saint Joseph , MO
$3.299
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TREX MART
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Saint Joseph , MO
$3.299
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RIVERSIDE BP
BP
2119 S RIVERSIDE RD
Saint Joseph , MO
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Phillips 66
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Loves
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Caseys
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Shell
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Conoco
1702 SAINT JOSEPH AVE
Saint Joseph , MO
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4702 KING HILL AVE
Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO
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K HIGHWAY FOOD MART
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Saint Joseph , MO
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209 ROSEPORT RD
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Saint Joseph , MO
TREX MART #10
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Saint Joseph , MO
$3.499
Aug 14 06:01 PM
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Saint Joseph , MO
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Saint Joseph , MO

Budget cuts for Andrew County sheriff’s department services

SAVANNAH (AP) – Andrew County residents will see a reduction in services from their sheriff’s department after voters rejected a law enforcement tax earlier this month.

The St. Joseph News-Press reported Wednesday that Sheriff Bryan Atkins told county commissioners three deputies who recently resigned will not be replaced and road patrols and public services will be reduced.

The sheriff’s administrative office will be open only three days a week from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., and deputies will stop offering vacation household checks, unlocking assistance and other services. And Atkins says concealed-carry gun permits and sex offender registration will be offered only by appointment.

Services at the county jail and 911 communications will not be reduced.

On Aug. 5, voters rejected a proposed levy of 30 cents per $100 of assessed valuation.

Southwest Mo. searching for 6-time felon

Orrick- photo Greene County Sheriff
Orrick- photo Greene County Sheriff

SPRINGFIELD (AP) – Law enforcement authorities are searching for a man with at least six felony convictions after he fled from a sheriff’s deputy.

The Greene County Sheriff’s Department says the search started Thursday when 41-year-old Gary Orrick fled after a sheriff’s deputy approached him in southwest Springfield.

In July, federal authorities charged Orrick with being a felon in possession of a firearm after Springfield police found him with a .22-caliber revolver.

Orrick has at least six felony convictions, five in Missouri. The two most recent felony convictions were in 2007, one in Greene County for endangering the welfare of a child and a federal count for being a felon in possession of a firearm.

Orrick is white, 5-foot-9, and 160 pounds, with short hair. His legs and arms are covered with tattoos.

Data breach revealed by Supervalu stores in Mo.

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) — There’s been a data breach at a number of Supervalu grocery stores, as well as at some of its stand-alone liquor shops.

The company said Friday that hackers accessed a network that processes store transactions. Account numbers, expiration dates, cardholders’ names and other information may have been stolen.

Stores in Minnesota, Virginia, Illinois, Maryland and Missouri may have been affected.

The cards from which data may have been stolen were used at 180 Supervalu stores, 29 Cub Foods stores and some liquor stores between June 22 and July 17.

Supervalu Inc. says that it hasn’t determined if any such cardholder data was actually stolen and that there’s no evidence of the data being misused, but that it was announcing the data breach out of “an abundance of caution.”

WHO: Ebola toll may ‘vastly underestimate’ crisis

EbolaJONATHAN PAYE-LAYLEH, Associated Press

SARAH DiLORENZO, Associated Press

MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) — There is evidence the numbers of dead and sickened by Ebola in West Africa may “vastly underestimate the magnitude of the outbreak,” the World Health Organization said Thursday. The U.N. health agency said it was prepared for the crisis to continue for months.

With more than 1,060 deaths and 1,975 sickened, the Ebola outbreak is already the deadliest ever.

Liberian officials faced a difficult choice Thursday: deciding which handful of Ebola patients will receive an experimental drug that could prove life-saving, ineffective or even harmful.

ZMapp, the untested Ebola drug, arrived in the West African country late Wednesday. A day later, no one had yet received the treatment, which officials said would go to three people.

The outbreak, which was first identified in March in Guinea and since spread to Liberia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria, has overwhelmed the already strained health systems in West Africa and raised questions about whether authorities are doing enough to respond.

There is no licensed treatment for Ebola, a virus transmitted by contact with bodily fluids, so doctors have turned to the limited supply of untested drugs to treat some cases.

The Liberian government had previously said two doctors would receive ZMapp, but it was unclear who else would. Information Minister Lewis Brown said Thursday it would probably be another health care worker.

These are the last known doses of ZMapp left. The San Diego-based company that developed it has said it will take months to build up even a modest supply.

The outbreak has sparked an international debate over the ethics of giving such untested drugs to the sick and of deciding who should get the drugs. So far, only two Americans and one Spaniard have received ZMapp. The Americans are improving — but it is unclear what role the drug has played. The Spaniard died within days.

Now Liberian officials are facing those questions. In this outbreak, over 50 percent of those sickened with Ebola have died, according to the U.N. health agency.

“The criteria of selection is difficult, but it is going to be done,” said Dr. Moses Massaquoi, who helped Liberia obtain the drug from Mapp Biopharmaceutical. “We are going to look at how critical people are. We are definitely going to be focusing on medical staff.”

He added people past the “critical phase” who looked likely to survive would not be chosen.

Massaquoi said there was only enough of the drug to treat three people. Treatment will be staggered, so doctors can observe the effects in one patient before moving on to the next. Late Thursday, he said the treatment had not yet started.

Arthur Caplan, director of medical ethics at NYU Langone Medical Center, said the choice of who to treat would have to balance helping the largest number of people with learning the most from the treatments.

He said the question is not “whose life do we save?” but “who gets the chance to be experimented on?”

For that reason, recipients need to be good experimental subjects — people who have recently contracted the disease and are more likely to respond to treatment or perhaps younger patients, he said. In order to study the long-term effects, doctors will likely prefer people who can be observed for months, which might eliminate those living in remote places, he added.

Meanwhile, the U.S. State Department ordered families of embassy personnel to leave Sierra Leone on Thursday because of concerns that the crisis would make it difficult to get treatment for even routine health problems.

President Barack Obama spoke by phone Thursday about the Ebola outbreak with Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and in another call with President Ernest Bai Koroma of Sierra Leone. The White House said Obama expressed his condolences for the hundreds who have died in both countries and underscored the U.S.’s commitment to work with West African nations and U.N. agencies to contain the outbreak.

Also, Nigeria announced Thursday that another person had died from Ebola, bringing the country’s death toll to four. The Health Ministry said the person was a nurse who helped treat the country’s first Ebola case, Liberian-American Patrick Sawyer who flew in last month and died.

The ministry corrected its total number Ebola cases to 10 instead of 11 as it had reported earlier in the day.

Woman pleads guilty in Mo. cyberstalking case

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A former Kansas City university student has admitted to sending more than 100 emails to an instructor threatening mutilation, torture and murder.

The Kansas City Star reports  27-year-old Kenna Haight pleaded guilty to cyberstalking on Thursday. Haight was recently found competent to stand trial after telling the judge she has suffered from mental health issues.

 The former University of Missouri-Kansas City student was arrested in December at her home in Norfolk, Virginia. Authorities say she sent the emails from September 2012 until her arrest.

Authorities say she wrote that “homicidal fantasies” about the instructor were keeping her up at night in an October email.

A prosecutor says Haight faces up to five years in prison.

Officials warn of toxic algae levels area lakes

Veterans LakeWICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is cautioning the public about toxic levels of blue-green algae in several lakes.

The agency issued public health warnings Thursday for all of nine lakes and part of another, saying the water conditions are unsafe and direct contact should be avoided.

The warnings are posted for Cedar Park Lake, Deanna Rose Farmstead Pond and South Park Lake in Johnson County; Brown County State Fishing Lake; Hiawatha City Lake; Chisholm Creek Park Lake in Sedgwick County; Memorial Park Lake in Barton County; Jewell State Fishing Lake in Jewell County; Lake Warnock in Atchison County; and part of Milford Reservoir.

Health officials say people, pets and livestock should not drink the water and should avoid swimming or wading.

Ford recalls 83,250 cars and SUVs

Ford LogoDETROIT (AP) — Ford is recalling 83,250 vehicles because a faulty part could cause them to lose power or roll away if they’re parked.

The recall involves the 2012-2014 Ford Edge and Lincoln MKX; the 2013-2014 Ford Flex and Lincoln MKT; and the 2013-2014 Ford Taurus and Lincoln MKS.

The company says that due to the improper installation of a clip in the axle, the halfshaft can disengage from the linkshaft. If that happens, power won’t be transmitted to the wheels, increasing the risk of a crash. Also, the vehicles could roll out of the “park” position if the emergency brake isn’t engaged.

Ford says there have been no reports of injuries or accidents related to the defect.

Ford will notify owners and begin free repairs by the end of August.

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