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Fire remains a vital management tool

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

Every spring, the ritual continues. Farmers, stockmen and landowners continue to use fire as a range management tool while maintaining the economic viability of the Flint Hills.

Viewed up close or at a distance, prairie fires are riveting. Across the vast, open grasslands we call the Flint Hills, fires can be seen for miles. The flames lick at the blue Kansas sky as the brown, dry grass crinkles, crackles and bursts into orange.

These fires aren’t recent phenomena and they aren’t strictly for the viewing pleasure of those traveling up and down our highways. Long before civilization invaded the prairie, fires were ignited by lightning storms and the charred prairie restored the health of the native grasses.

Native Americans were the first practitioners of prescribed fires. They used the fire to attract the buffalo for easier hunting.

The artificially ignited controlled burning of the tall-grass prairie in east-central Kansas is an annual event designed to mimic nature’s match. It has become a tradition, part of the culture of the communities and the people who inhabit this region of our state.

Fire is an essential element of the ecosystem. Burning these pastures is one of the best management tools for maintaining the native prairie.

This annual pasture burning only occurs for a few days each year. It is not a procedure that is drawn out and lasts for weeks. However, weather conditions dictate the length of the burning seasons most years.

Not every cattleman burns his pastures each and every year as is sometimes portrayed. Instead, individual ranchers and landowners survey and decide each spring, which pastures will benefit and produce a healthier, lush grass for livestock after burning occurs. Often neighbors plan and burn together, giving them more hands to ensure a safe, controlled burn.

Forage quality and ecosystem health are both dependent on fire. Without fire woodlands take over the Flint Hills and the livestock industry loses a fantastic resource.

Kansas State University recommends burning take place when wind speeds are between 5 and 15 miles per hour, relative humidity is from 40 to 70 percent and temperatures fall in the range of 55 to 80 degrees.

Landowners in all counties must notify local officials prior to planned, controlled burns. This notification is a key to preventing prescribed fires from turning into accidental wildfires and ensuring burning is allowed under the existing conditions.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) has a Kansas Flint Hills Smoke management plan to help alleviate air quality issues in urban areas generated by prescribed burning in the Flint Hills region. Coupled with the associated web tools, it should give producers better decision-making abilities when planning and implementing prescribed fires.

Producers can now assess how the smoke from their burns may impact urban areas downwind. Information like this can make a difference in keeping ozone within acceptable levels and keeping regulatory restrictions from impacting ranchers. This website is www.ksfire.org.

Actions to control smoke in the Flint Hills ranching community must remain voluntary. To ensure this continues, the farm and ranch community should tune into ever changing weather conditions and keep prescribed fire in the tall grass prairies confined to a minimum time period.

Prairie fires help rejuvenate the grasses that carpet the fertile Flint Hills. This is good for cattlemen, agriculture, rural communities and the Kansas economy.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas.

NWS: Winter Weather ADVISORY

wpid-nwslogo.gifURGENT – WINTER WEATHER MESSAGE
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE KANSAS CITY/PLEASANT HILL MO

ATCHISON KS-MIAMI-LINN KS-DONIPHAN-LEAVENWORTH-WYANDOTTE-
JOHNSON KS-ATCHISON MO-NODAWAY-WORTH-GENTRY-HARRISON-MERCER-
PUTNAM-SCHUYLER-HOLT-ANDREW-DE KALB-DAVIESS-GRUNDY-SULLIVAN-ADAIR-
BUCHANAN-CLINTON-CALDWELL-LIVINGSTON-LINN MO-MACON-PLATTE-CLAY-
RAY-CARROLL-CHARITON-RANDOLPH-JACKSON-LAFAYETTE-SALINE-HOWARD-
CASS-JOHNSON MO-PETTIS-COOPER-BATES-HENRY-
INCLUDING THE CITIES OF…ATCHISON…PAOLA…MOUND CITY…TROY…
LEAVENWORTH…OVERLAND PARK…OLATHE…TARKIO…MARYVILLE…
GRANT CITY…ALBANY…STANBERRY…BETHANY…PRINCETON…
UNIONVILLE…LANCASTER…DOWNING…OREGON…SAVANNAH…CAMERON…
GALLATIN…JAMESPORT…TRENTON…MILAN…GREEN CITY…
KIRKSVILLE…ST. JOSEPH…PLATTSBURG…HAMILTON…POLO…
CHILLICOTHE…BROOKFIELD…MACON…LA PLATA…PARKVILLE…
PLATTE CITY…WESTON…LIBERTY…EXCELSIOR SPRINGS…RICHMOND…
CARROLLTON…SALISBURY…KEYTESVILLE…MOBERLY…KANSAS CITY…
INDEPENDENCE…LEXINGTON…CONCORDIA…MARSHALL…FAYETTE…
NEW FRANKLIN…RAYMORE…HARRISONVILLE…PLEASANT HILL…
WARRENSBURG…SEDALIA…BOONVILLE…BUTLER…RICH HILL…CLINTON
835 PM CST FRI FEB 20 2015

…WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CST
SATURDAY…

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY FOR A WINTRY MIX OF SNOW…SLEET…AND
FREEZING RAIN REMAINS IN EFFECT UNTIL 10 AM CST SATURDAY.

* LOCATION…EASTERN KANSAS AND NORTHWESTERN MISSOURI.

* TIMING…A MIX OF SNOW…SLEET…AND FREEZING RAIN WILL CONTINUE TO
OVERSPREAD THE REGION THROUGH THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. PRECIPITATION
WILL GRADUALLY COME TO AN END FROM WEST TO EAST DURING THE LATE
MORNING HOURS ON SATURDAY.

* ICE ACCUMULATIONS…ICE ACCUMULATIONS GREATER THAN ONE TENTH
OF AN INCH WILL BE POSSIBLE ALONG AND SOUTH OF THE MISSOURI
RIVER…WITH AMOUNTS TAPERING OFF FARTHER NORTH THROUGH THE
HIGHWAY 36 CORRIDOR. HIGHEST ICE ACCUMULATIONS WILL BE TOWARDS
CENTRAL MISSOURI WHERE ONE TO TWO TENTHS OF INCH OF ICE IS
POSSIBLE. ICE ACCUMULATION WILL TAIL OFF FARTHER WEST…THOUGH
A FEW HUNDREDTHS OF AN INCH OF ICE IS POSSIBLE BACK TOWARDS
EASTERN KANSAS.

* SNOW ACCUMULATIONS…TOTAL SNOW ACCUMULATIONS OF UP TO 1 TO 2
INCHES WILL BE POSSIBLE ACROSS NORTH CENTRAL AND NORTH EAST
MISSOURI INTO PARTS OF THE CENTRAL MISSOURI INTERSTATE 70
CORRIDOR…WITH LOCALLY 3 INCHES POSSIBLE WHERE THE
PRECIPITATION CHANGES TO SNOW QUICKLY.

* IMPACTS…THE COMBINATION OF ICE AND SNOW ACCUMULATIONS WILL MAKE
TRAVEL HAZARDOUS TONIGHT INTO SATURDAY MORNING.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS…

A WINTER WEATHER ADVISORY MEANS THAT PERIODS OF SNOW…SLEET…OR
FREEZING RAIN WILL CAUSE TRAVEL DIFFICULTIES. BE PREPARED FOR
SLIPPERY ROADS AND LIMITED VISIBILITIES…AND USE CAUTION WHILE
DRIVING.

2nd professor quits amid ranking scandal at Missouri college

 

Norton
Norton

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A second professor has resigned from the University of Missouri-Kansas City after an audit found that its business school knowingly submitted false data when applying for rankings and awards from national organizations.

The university said Friday that John Norton’s exodus as associate director of its Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation will take effect March 15.

Norton’s supervisor, Michael Song, quit as the institute’s director last week.

Norton told auditors he felt pressured by Song to do improper things related to the ratings but didn’t speak up because he feared for his job and believed in Song’s vision for the institute.

In a statement released by the school, Norton says he remains passionate about teaching entrepreneurship but believes his “role in events of recent weeks may distract from that mission.”

Former Mo. school principal appears in court on suspicion of drug dealing

Drugs arrestHANNIBAL (AP) – Former A.D. Stowell Elementary School principal Joshua Foust appeared for his first court appearance Friday.

Foust is charged with drug possession with intent to deliver. Authorities allege he dealt a few thousand dollars-worth of heroin with his brother and another man.

The 33-year-old married father is a Hannibal High School graduate.

Parent Brent Riley said Foust “always seemed to have the kids’ best interest at heart,” but said he had no compassion for drug dealers.

Investigators said there’s no indication Foust dealt drugs on school grounds or to students or staff.

Missouri legislators seek ability to intervene in lawsuits

Sen. Dempsey
Sen. Dempsey

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri’s Republican Senate leader wants the ability to intervene in lawsuits regarding the constitutionality of state laws, if the attorney general declines to appeal or ask for a stay of a court ruling.

Senate President Pro Tem Tom Dempsey of St. Charles said in a statement Friday that he has filed a bill giving himself and the House speaker the authority to intervene in cases challenging state laws.

He says Attorney General Chris Koster has failed to fully defend Missouri’s constitutional ban on same-sex marriage in some recent cases.

Koster did not appeal a Missouri judge’s decision in October 2014 to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other states.

Dempsey says General Assembly leaders should be able to intervene in such cases to defend state laws.

Missouri police officer charged with assault after shooting

police shootingKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Missouri police officer has been indicted on assault charges after shooting and injuring a man police were trying to arrest last summer.

Kansas City officer Jacob Ramsey was arraigned Friday after being indicted by a Jackson County grand jury. He’s facing charges of first-degree assault and armed criminal action. A judge entered a not-guilty plea on his behalf.

Investigators say Ramsey shot 37-year-old Anthony Contreras after police went to Contreras’ home to serve an arrest warrant on June 24. Police say Contreras was shot while he tried to flee on foot.

Through his attorney, Ramsey waived his right to a jury trial and requested that a judge decide the case. A trial was scheduled for April 2.

The 31-year-old Ramsey is on unpaid administrative leave.

Mo. Man Pleads Guilty to Producing Child Porn After Being Caught on Nanny Cam

courtKANSAS CITY, Mo. –A Blue Springs, Mo., man who was caught sexually assaulting a toddler on a nannycam pleaded guilty in federal court Thursday to producing child pornography according to Tammy Dickinson, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

Jeffrey Laurence Treta, 47, of Blue Springs, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Beth Phillips to two counts of producing child pornography, two counts of producing child obscenity, one count of possessing child pornography and one count of obstructing justice.

Treta was living with his estranged wife and babysitting a 21-month-old child identified as Jane Doe #1 while his wife was away from the house on Jan. 29, 2013. Treta’s wife had installed a nannycam in the master bedroom, which was triggered whenever anyone entered the room. The nannycam recorded Treta bringing Jane Doe #1 into the bedroom, laying the toddler down on the bed, and using his cell phone to record himself sexually assaulting the child victim while he lay in bed with her.

Treta’s wife and son gave law enforcement investigators a SIM card they had innocently retrieved from Treta’s cell phone on a prior occasion. The SIM card contained a video and images of similar child pornography dated 10 days prior to Treta’s recorded assault of Jane Doe #1. Some of the images of this assault were transferred from Treta’s cell phone to his laptop computer.

Treta’s laptop also contained images of two more victims, about 10 years old, identified as Jane Doe #2 and Jane Doe #3. Those images were Photoshopped to make it appear as though the children were engaged in sexually explicit conduct.

Treta’s laptop contained hundreds of images from child modeling, nudist and other Web sites, many of which constituted child pornography. Many of the images were of prepubescent children (including toddlers) and a few depict sadistic activity. Other images on Treta’s laptop resembled the Photoshopped images of Jane Doe #2 and Jane Doe #3.

Treta destroyed evidence in anticipation of a police investigation of sexual abuse and child pornography. During the few minutes after police officers had been called, but before they arrived at his residence, Treta deleted a large number of items from his laptop, including images and videos.

Under federal statutes, Treta is subject to a mandatory sentence of 15 years in federal prison without parole. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Katharine Fincham. It was investigated by the Blue Springs, Mo., Police Department.

World Health Organization approves 1st quick test for Ebola

EbolaBERLIN (AP) — The World Health Organization has approved a quick test for Ebola that will dramatically cut the time it takes to determine with reasonable accuracy whether someone is infected with the deadly virus.
The Geneva-based U.N. agency says the ReEBOV Antigen Rapid Test Kit, made by the U.S. company Corgenix, meets sufficient quality, safety and performance requirements. WHO said Friday the new test can provide results within 15 minutes by detecting an Ebola protein. In trials it correctly identified 92 percent of the patients with Ebola and 85 percent of those not infected.
Until now, Ebola tests have been mainly conducted in laboratories. These gene-based tests are more accurate but can take between 12 and 24 hours.
Almost 9,400 people have died in the current Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Mo. man, son accused in axe handle beating of teen

PoliceCASSVILLE (AP) – A southwestern Missouri father and son are accused of using axe handles in the attack of a 17-year-old.

The 42-year-old father is charged in Barry County with first degree-assault, armed criminal action and first-degree property damage. His 16-year-old son also faces the assault and armed criminal action counts.

Sheriff Mick Epperly tells KYTV of Springfield  that while suspecting the alleged victim of stealing fuel from his farm, the father invited him over on Feb. 9 to help cut wood.

Authorities allege that after the 17-year-old arrived, the older man and his son pummeled the visitor with axe handles, breaking his legs and nose.

The alleged victim managed to drive 15 miles to the hospital.

Mo. lawmaker wants disclosure of unvaccinated children

File photo
File photo

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A Missouri Republican wants to require preschools and daycare centers to tell parents if there are other children attending who have not been vaccinated against measles or other illnesses.

The bill filed Tuesday by Rep. Diane Franklin of Camdenton would require public and private daycares, nursery schools and preschools to inform parents when they enroll their children that they can request information about immunization exemptions of other children enrolled.

If the parent requested that information, the provider would have to tell them whether there are children exempted from vaccination requirements.

Missouri law allows both a medical exemption and a broad personal exemption from recommended vaccinations for children enrolled at childcare centers.

Religious and medical exemptions are allowed for public school district students.

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