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Subaru recalls 5 models for air bag problem

DETROIT (AP) — Subaru is recalling an undetermined number of vehicles because of air bag problems that have affected much of the global auto industry.

The recall covers the 2003-2005 Baja, Legacy and Outback and the 2004-2005 Impreza, as well as the 2005 Saab 9-2X made by Subaru.

It only affects vehicles in Florida, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands with air bag inflators made by Takata Corp.

The front passenger inflators can rupture, causing metal fragments to fly out when the air bags are deployed. That can injure passengers.

Faulty air bags have been blamed for recalls of millions of cars in recent years.

Subaru says it’s doing the recall as a precaution and to cooperate with a government investigation. Owners will be notified later.

Former Mo. teacher charged with molesting a student has died

INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) — A former band teacher in Independence who was charged with molesting a student died a day before a scheduled court hearing.
The Independence Examiner reports court records show 29-year-old James N. Owens of Lee’s Summit died July 30.

The cause of death was not listed.
Owens was a band teacher at William Chrisman High School when he was charged with child enticement and second-degree child molestation involving a 14-year-old female student.

Court records indicate a plea hearing was scheduled for July 31 but it had been rescheduled for Aug. 21.
Court documents allege that Owens exchanged more than 100 phone calls and more than 1,500 text messages with the girl.

GM says it’s making progress to fix recall website

General Motors GMDETROIT (AP) — General Motors says it has made progress in fixing its recall website so that it correctly lists all the cars that need recall repairs.

The company said Monday that it expects the site to be fully corrected this week.

The government said Friday that GM’s vehicle identification number look-up system has been incorrectly telling some owners that their cars aren’t being recalled. That happened when the cars’ parts weren’t available. But the government says all recalls should be listed.

GM has recalled 29 million vehicles this year. It disclosed in February that it took more than a decade to recall small cars with faulty ignition switches.

Starting Aug. 20, all automakers must have systems that allow owners to search recall information by vehicle number.

Sheriff’s deputy, Topeka police officer collide

Photo courtesy WIBW TV Facebook
Photo courtesy WIBW TV Facebook

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Shawnee County sheriff’s deputy and Topeka police officer were taken to a hospital early Tuesday after their cars collided on a bridge in Topeka.

Shawnee County Sheriff Herman Jones says the men’s injuries were not considered life-threatening.

Jones told WIBW that the deputy and officer were driving south on the bridge in response to another deputy’s request for assistance. When the call was canceled, the police car made a U-turn on the bridge and collided with the deputy’s car.

The Kansas Highway Patrol is investigating the accident.

 

Cameron man dies in Monday UTV accident

Fatal crashCAMERON- A Missouri man died in an accident on Monday evening in Clinton County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2006 Landpride Trecker UTV driven by Charles O. Cooper, 72, Cameron was southbound on U.S. 69 two miles south of Cameron.

A southbound 2005 Pontiac Grand Am driven by Jacqueline M. McQuinn, 52, Cameron struck the UTV in the front left side.
The vehicle spun 180 degrees and Cooper was ejected.

He was transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center where he died. The accident remains under investigation.

Two hospitalized after Monday rollover accident

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPST. JOSEPH- Two people were injured in an accident in Buchanan County on Monday evening.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 1998 Mercury driven by Anthony H. Schwarz, 29, Atchison, was southbound on U.S. 59 six miles south of St. Joseph.

The vehicle traveled off the right side of the road, became airborne and rolled twice.

Schwarz and a passenger in the vehicle Michelle A. Myers, 31, Lancaster, KS., were transported to Heartland Regional Medical Center.
The MSHP reported both were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Obamacare among issues fueling campaign to unseat House GOP moderates

The controversial Affordable Care Act is once again a factor in Kansas legislative races. Some conservative groups are using the federal health reform law to target several moderate House Republicans running for re-election against conservative challengers.- KHI photo
The controversial Affordable Care Act is once again a factor in Kansas legislative races. Some conservative groups are using the federal health reform law to target several moderate House Republicans running for re-election against conservative challengers.- KHI photo

By Jim McLean
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — The same groups that used the wedge issue of Obamacare to unseat moderate Republican senators two years ago are targeting several House members for defeat in Tuesday’s GOP primary.

But this time around, their efforts are being countered by groups that have organized to reverse the recent conservative tide in Kansas politics. The Kansas Values Institute and the Kansas Traditional Republican Majority are spending tens of thousands of dollars to defend moderate Republican Statehouse incumbents against charges that they failed to support conservative-led efforts to transfer control of federal health care programs to the state, block Medicaid expansion and repeal the state’s renewable energy standards.
argets of the ouster effort include Republican House members Barbara Bollier, Mission Hills, Stephanie Clayton, Overland Park, Blaine Finch, Ottawa, Russ Jennings, Lakin, Tom Sloan, Lawrence, and Kent Thompson, Iola.

The Kansas Chamber and the Koch Industries-backed group Americans for Prosperity are the main players in the effort, just as they were in 2012 when they succeeded in defeating Senate President Steve Morris and several other moderate GOP state senators. They are supporting Neil Melton, a Prairie Village banker, against Bollier; Jennifer Flood, a software consultant from Overland Park, against Clayton; Bob Fluke, chairman of the Franklin County Republican Party from Ottawa, against Finch; Stan Rice, a marketing director for a rural telephone and cable company who lives in Lakin, against Jennings; Jeremy Ryan Pierce, from Lawrence, against Sloan; and, Chad VanHouden, from Chanute, against Thompson.

“It’s not about advocating the election or defeat of certain candidates, it’s about getting our issues out,” said Jeff Glendening, director of AFP-Kansas. “That’s what we did back in 2012. We were able to get our issues out about why free markets work, why we need limited government in the state and why some of those people, like Senate President Steve Morris and others, weren’t supportive of limited government policies.”

The chamber’s political action committee has spent nearly $197,000 since January to support the legislative candidates it has endorsed, according to reports filed with the Kansas Governmental Ethics Commission. As a nonprofit educational organization, AFP isn’t required to file campaign finance reports, and Glendening declined to say how much the organization had spent in the primary.

Obamacare still a potent wedge issue

Many of the moderate Republicans being targeted voted against repeated attempts to repeal renewable energy standards. Repeal was a top priority of AFP and the state chamber. But their votes against two bills aimed at “stopping Obamacare” also are being singled out in the fliers.

One of the bills prohibited Gov. Sam Brownback from expanding Medicaid eligibility without legislative approval. It wasn’t necessary because Brownback, a strong opponent of the federal health reform law, had given no indication he was preparing to act on his own. Even so, the bill gave conservative lawmakers another opportunity to register their opposition to Obamacare.

An AFP flier mailed to voters in Bollier’s district characterized her vote against the measure as a vote to “expand Obamacare.” It went on to charge that Bollier had an expansion plan that “would cost the state an additional $1.1 billion.”
Calling the mailer “incredibly misleading,” Bollier acknowledged that she favors Medicaid expansion. But she said neither she nor anyone else had a plan because House leadership blocked discussion of the issue in committee and on the floor.

Rep. Barbara Bollier, R-Mission Hills.
Rep. Barbara Bollier, R-Mission Hills.

“I don’t understand why we can’t even talk about it,” she said. “That is not good government.”

The $1.1 billion figure, she said, was the Brownback administration’s estimate of the amount that expansion would cost the state over 10 years.

The AFP flier also criticized Bollier for voting against what it called “vital legislation to put health care choice and access back in the hands of Kansans.”

That was a reference to Bollier’s vote against a bill authorizing Kansas’ membership in a multi-state health care compact. If Congress approves the compact, member states could take over management of several federal health care programs, including Medicare.

Many saw the issue as another symbolic vote against Obamacare, but Bollier feared a state takeover of Medicare could jeopardize the benefits of the more than 450,000 Kansas seniors enrolled in the program.

“My No. 1 concern about it was that it took Medicare out of the hands of the federal government, placing it into a state-administered program,” she said. “That may work. But when I asked the carrier of the bill what had been done in the state of Kansas to prepare to administer this huge program that so many of our seniors rely on, the answer was nothing.”

Glendening said AFP believes that Kansas and the other compact states could do a better job of running Medicare.

“We need to have health care decisions made here in the state of Kansas,” he said. “Washington has not done a good job of managing our health care.”

A flier from the Kansas Values Institute praising Bollier for fighting to “protect Medicare for Kansas seniors” arrived in voters’ mailboxes about the same time as the AFP piece. It was no accident. The institute is spending thousands to support moderate Republicans targeted by conservative groups.

“It’s time to push back against that and provide an alternative voice in the mix,” said Ryan Wright, executive director of KVI and treasurer of the Kansas Traditional Republican Majority PAC.

While the KVI flier defended Bollier, one sent by the traditional Republican majority charged that Melton, her primary opponent, would be a “yes man” for special interest groups.

It said Melton was “recruited, bought and paid for” by those seeking to repeal the renewable standards, dismantle Medicare and drive up property taxes by continuing to cut state income taxes.

Confusing array of players and disclosure rules

Like AFP, the values institute is a nonprofit educational organization that isn’t required to report its expenditures, and Wright declined to disclose them. However, it’s known that KVI had at least $120,000 to spend in the primary cycle after receiving contributions in that amount from the Kansas National Education Association PAC between March and July of this year.

The teachers’ union also contributed $20,000 to the Kansas Jobs PAC, which in turn contributed $39,500 to the Kansas Traditional Republican Majority PAC, which has spent more than $40,000 since July 1 on fliers supporting moderate Republicans challenging or being challenged by conservatives endorsed by the chamber and AFP.

The activities of KVI are drawing fire from some GOP officials, who charge it has no business meddling in Republican primaries given that Dan Watkins, a prominent Lawrence Democrat, is the chairman of its board.

Late last week, Helen Van Etten, a national committeewoman for the state Republican Party and Brownback appointee to the Kansas Board of Regents, characterized KVI as a Democratic front group.

“As Republicans across the state head to the polls, I believe it is critical they know that members of Obama’s campaign team are spending scores of thousands of dollars to play in our Republican primaries,” Van Etten said.

Over the weekend, Michael Powell, chairman of the Leavenworth County Republican Party, forwarded Van Etten’s alert to his members and added his own warning.

“The Obama campaign machine is attempting to influence Kansas Republican primary campaigns by cleverly attempting to align more left-leaning moderate candidates with popular conservative candidates,” Powell said. “It is important to know the credentials of the organizations contacting you or sending you materials.”

Wright, a lifelong Republican who once worked for 2nd District Congresswoman Lynn Jenkins, said KVI is giving voters the information they need to weigh the differences among candidates on a host of critical issues.

“Whatever we’re mailing out, we are citing the legislative record,” Wright said. “Unlike these other shadowy groups that are operating within our state, we don’t just lob accusations willy-nilly.”

Use of animal gas chambers dwindling

Screen Shot 2014-08-05 at 5.16.37 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Stricter guidelines for using gas chambers to euthanize animals have the four Kansas communities that still operate them looking for affordable alternatives.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Kansas is one of only 11 states that still use that method.

The Kansas Department of Agriculture says it plans to adopt 2013 American Veterinary Medical Association guidelines that will make it almost impossible for the state’s aging chambers to keep operating.

Humboldt police Lt. Jeff Collins says it costs about $37.50 to have a veterinarian put down a single feral cat, while a bottle of carbon monoxide that can be used 200 times costs $13.

Opponents say the method isolates animals in a tight, dark box where they wait alone until gas that doesn’t immediately kill them is pumped in.

Kansas Senate race headlines 4-state primary day

Milton Wolf and Sen. Pat Roberts
Milton Wolf and Sen. Pat Roberts

PHILIP ELLIOTT, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Incumbent lawmakers in Kansas, Michigan and Missouri are trying to fend off primary challengers while voters in Washington state are considering a replacement for a two-decade veteran.

Voters on Tuesday pick candidates to appear on November’s ballots, and if recent contests are any guide, turnout will be low.

In Kansas, three-term Republican Sen. Pat Roberts faces Milton Wolf, a radiologist, tea party favorite and President Barack Obama’s second cousin.

In Michigan, two establishment-minded Republicans were drawing on their own deep pockets in hopes of upending incumbents who often side with the tea party.

In Missouri, five incumbent House members face underfunded primary challenges.

And in Washington state, voters are considering 12 candidates vying to replace Rep. Doc Hastings, a Republican who is retiring.

 

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