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5 in GOP run for Kansas insurance commissioner

Screen Shot 2014-08-03 at 3.42.09 PMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Five Republicans are running for Kansas insurance commissioner and seeking to replace retiring three-term GOP Commissioner Sandy Praeger.

The GOP field in Tuesday’s primary includes state Sen. Clark Shultz, of Lindsborg. He formerly served in the Kansas House as its Insurance Committee chairman

Former state Rep. John Toplikar, of Olathe, is now a Johnson County commissioner.

Beverly Gossage is a health insurance consultant from Eudora with a solid following among conservatives who oppose the federal health care law.

David Powell is president of an El Dorado insurance agency and has tea party support.

Ken Selzer, of Leawood, is an accountant and executive with a firm providing coverage to insurance companies against catastrophic claims.

The winner will face Democrat Dennis Anderson. He is an Overland Park businessman.

 

Three stranded boaters rescued

Missouri riverKANSAS CITY (AP) – The Kansas City Fire Department says it has rescued three boaters from the Missouri River.

Battalion Chief James Garrett tells the Kansas City Star that the department received an emergency call Sunday night. He says the boat was lodged on rocks just east of the Christopher S. Bond Bridge.

A helicopter was dispatched to locate the individuals. Boats rescued the stranded passengers.

Authorities haven’t released their names or what type of boat they were in. No injuries were reported.

More than Carnival Lights and Cotton Candy

Farm BureauBY REBECCA FRENCH SMITH

It always seems like summer is over too quickly. I spend much of the winter and spring longing for warmer days. Once summer is here though, it’s gone. But right now, we have one last hurrah before school starts, the days start turning cooler and harvest begins — the Missouri State Fair.

The State Fair is always an adventure. While the midway is fun, the State Fair is more than carnival lights, cotton candy and Tilt-A-Whirls. It’s more than ham and vegetable contests. Tractor pulls and bulls. Pumpkins and poultry. Hogs and corn dogs. Vendor deals and Ferris wheels. Beyond the contests and attractions, some people are there all fair-goers should meet: the farmers who raise and grow our food. If you visit the fair and miss meeting a farmer, your trip is most assuredly not all that it could have been.

There are a few spots at the fair that will guarantee a farmer spotting.

When you’re in the swine pavilion, stop and ask a young 4-Her how she did. Ask her how she came to be at the fair with her pigs.

When you’re in the cattle barns, ask the FFA students to tell you about their animals. You might even see a few of them washing their cattle to show. They not only take care of their animals at the fair but also at home on the farm.

When you’re in the Mathewson Exhibition Center watching the competitions, remember to cheer loudly. All of the competitors have worked hard to be there.

And when you tour the vegetable exhibits in the Agriculture Building, stop and take time to appreciate the true skill it takes to grow a blue ribbon pumpkin that weighs as much as fully grown men. Or the attention it takes to cultivate winning heirloom tomatoes. You might even discover a few vegetable varieties you had no idea existed.

Growing and raising food is a skill perfected over time, with much diligence and great passion. At the Missouri State Fair, we all have the opportunity to discover, appreciate and celebrate the agriculture tradition in the Show Me State. Won’t you come? There are some farmers to meet.

Rebecca French Smith, of Columbia, Mo., is a multimedia specialist for the Missouri Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization.

Missouri State president’s contract extended

FAIR GROVE, Mo. (AP) – The board of of governors of Missouri State University has extended the university president’s contract.

The 10-member board of governors awarded Clif Smart, president of Missouri State University, a four-year contract extension after meeting Thursday.

The Springfield News-Leader reports that Smart’s term will continue through June 20, 2022, and he’ll receive a 1.5 percent salary increase, the same as university faculty and staff.

The university has its main campus in Springfield and has nearly 24,000 students enrolled.

Audit outlines security issues at Johnson County Mental Health Center site

Screen Shot 2014-08-02 at 4.15.48 PMBy Mike Sherry
KHI News Service

OLATHE — The Johnson County Mental Health Center has not resolved long-standing security concerns to protect employees at its Shawnee location, according to an internal audit presented to the county’s board of commissioners Thursday.

The audit, conducted by Interim County Auditor Ken Kleffner, said that the mental health agency had rejected security recommendations made in 2007 “because management wanted the facility to be more accessible to clients served.”

Agency officials, the audit said, should install glass enclosures at the reception area at the Shawnee facility, as is the case at the offices in Olathe and Mission. The agency should also do more to restrict the access of patients to various areas around the building, at 6440 Nieman Road.

Kleffner said in the audit that, during the fieldwork, staff experienced two lockdowns “to control known threats within the Shawnee facility or near the facility’s entrance.”

The audit said agency management concurred with the recommendation and that the interim director is working with the facilities department to make the needed modifications.

Officials told the commissioners that part of the problem with the Shawnee building is that the services in the building have changed from its initial function. County management also said that the facilities department had only recently become more involved with the mental health center, because it had handled its own capital needs in the past.

“I just want to say good job,” Commission Chairman Ed Eilert told Kleffner at the meeting. “I know the objectives are currently being worked on” by county staff.

The commission ordered the audit in the wake of controversy surrounding the center last year, when the embattled executive director resigned amid revelations that the agency was in dire financial condition.

County officials said earlier this year that the agency was beginning to turn things around.

The auditors also said agency officials must:

• Ensure implementation of standard operating procedures, including clearing up confusion among front-desk staff at the various locations about how to handle patients who refuse to pay.

• Reduce employee turnover. In the previous two years, lower productivity due to turnover cost the agency more than $450,000 in lost billable hours.

• Increase employee productivity. Total client billed hours decreased by nearly 30 percent in the past four years, as did the number of service providers.

• Boost efforts to ensure that some of its uninsured clients apply for Medicaid coverage. About a quarter of the agency’s clients are uninsured.

• Improve intake procedures for new clients, including updating procedures for determining a client’s ability to pay.

The audit also found that staff members at the center are consulting with other community mental health centers across the state to improve operations of its new electronic medical record system.

The report also amplified and clarified some findings from an outside review of the center conducted in November.

A second phase of the audit is coming, but the commission did not discuss a timetable at its meeting Thursday.

In other health news, the commission rejected a recommendation to appoint Dr. Allen Greiner of the University of Kansas Medical Center to be the Johnson County health officer.

Right-to-life advocates had protested the choice based on past testimony Greiner had given to state regulators in a license revocation proceeding for another doctor.

According to a briefing sheet from the county health department, state law requires that the county board of health have a physician serving in an advisory capacity. The commissioners agreed to review a different candidate at their meeting next week.

Lotteries nationwide try to bring in younger players

KATELYN FERRAL, Associated Press

missouri lotteryRALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Lotteries around the world are trying to find a way to interest young adults in their games. Lottery officials say the 24- to 35-year-old age group buys tickets and plays the games less than any other age group. The industry is now focusing on bridging the interest gap with new digital ways to play and buy tickets.

U.S. lotteries lag behind their European and Canadian counterparts when it comes to technological innovation, though several state lotteries are trying to come up with digital ways to reach younger adults.

Officials in Illinois are focusing on lottery games that raise money for causes such as breast cancer research to draw in new players. Minnesota is looking for ways to make the games more social so young adults can play with their friends.

 

Mo. teen hospitalized after boating accident

Missouri Highway Patrol MHPSPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) – A Springfield teenager has been hospitalized after she was injured by a propeller in a boating accident on Pomme De Terre Lake.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol says the accident occurred Saturday afternoon when the canoe the teen was in collided with a pontoon boat. The patrol says Sharon E. Barret, 15, jumped out of the canoe to avoid the collision, but was run over by the pontoon and hit by the pontoon boat’s propeller.

The patrol says the teen was hospitalized in Springfield with serious injuries.

Wet weather blamed for two Sunday morning accidents

KHP  Kansas Highway PatrolKANSAS CITY- Wet weather is blamed for a pair of accidents on Sunday morning in northeast Kansas.

Just before 8:30 a.m., the Kansas Highway patrol reported a 2000 Dodge truck driven by Robert L. Nicholas, Jr., 36, Kansas City, was westbound on Interstate 70 just east of 18th Street in Wyandotte County.

The driver accelerated and lost control of the truck on the wet pavement. The truck spun to the right and struck the right concrete wall, then spun to the left and struck the left concrete wall.

Nicholas was transported to KU Medical Center.

Just before 10:30 a.m., the KHP reported a 2014 Chevy Cruz driven by Molly E. Cubbage, 20, Oskaloosa, was southbound on Interstate 35 in Merriam.

The vehicle hydroplaned and the driver lost control. The vehicle spun to the left and struck the barrier wall. The vehicle then spun to the right going off the roadway.

Cubbage was transported to Shawnee Mission Medical Center.

The KHP reported both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accidents.

Old issue still dogs Kansas tea party candidate

JOHN HANNA, AP Political Writer

 

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

HOLTON, Kan. (AP) — Tea party candidate Milton Wolf’s chances of knocking off three-term Sen. Pat Roberts in Kansas have been complicated by renewed attention to an episode in the challenger’s past.

A Kansas newspaper recently reported that a state medical board is investigating Wolf’s posting of graphic X-ray images of patients’ wounds on his Facebook page in 2010. Wolf, a suburban Kansas City radiologist, has apologized for the postings, which came to light months ago.

Roberts’ campaign is blanketing the airwaves with ads questioning Wolf’s judgment. Wolf is continuing to call attention to the revelation that Roberts’ official residence in Kansas is rented space in a friend’s house. Wolf says Roberts is an example of a Washington insider who has lost touch with his home state. The GOP primary will be held Tuesday.

 

Westar seeks $3.5 million for costs

westar-energyTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Westar Energy and Kansas City Power & Light want to charge customers for plant upgrades sooner than anticipated.

The two companies share ownership of the coal-fired plant at La Cygne and presented the Kansas Corporation Commission Thursday the reasons they should approve a different approach to recovery costs.

The companies normally couldn’t begin charging for the additional costs without filing a full rate case. But that process takes several months.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Westar’s request would total about $3.5 million, which would cost the average residential customer about 16 cents per month. KCP&L hadn’t specified a dollar amount in its filings with KCC as of Friday.

KCC chairwoman Shari Feist Albrecht said Thursday’s presentations were educational only and wouldn’t be entered into evidence for a final decision.

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