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GOP-led House approves lawsuit against Obama

House of Rep  CongressALAN FRAM, Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — A sharply divided House has approved a Republican plan to file an election-season federal lawsuit against President Barack Obama. The suit will contend that Obama has exceeded his constitutional powers in the way he has enforced the 2010 health care law. The vote was 225 to 201.

Democrats say the suit is a campaign-year stunt designed to draw conservative voters to the polls in congressional elections. They also say it may be a prelude to an effort to impeach Obama — a contention top Republicans say is groundless.

Republicans say Obama has gone too far in selectively enforcing parts of the health overhaul, such as by delaying the requirement that many employers provide health insurance for their workers. They say they are protecting the Constitution’s division of powers.

 

Foster parent charged with murder in hot car death

Jackson
Jackson

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Prosecutors have charged a Kansas foster parent with murder in the death of a 10-month-old girl who was left in a hot car.

Seth M. Jackson made his first court appearance Wednesday to hear the charges against him. A criminal complaint shows Sedgwick County District Attorney’s Office is charging the 29-year-old Wichita man with first-degree murder. An alternative count of second-degree murder charge has also been filed.

He is being held on a $250,000 bond. His defense attorney did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.

The girl died Thursday after being left for more than two hours inside a sweltering car. Police say Jackson had apparently forgotten about her until something on TV jogged his memory. Temperatures in Wichita at the time were around 90 degrees.

11,000 Kawasaki vehicles recalled for injury risk

NEW YORK (AP) — About 11,000 Kawasaki off-road vehicles are being recalled because debris can cut through the foot rest area and hurt riders’ legs.

The recall is for 2012 and 2013 Kawasaki Teryx4 750 vehicles with four-wheel drive. They were sold at Kawasaki dealers from October 2011 to July 2013 for about $13,400.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said Wednesday that there have been four reports of debris breaking through the floor boards of the vehicles. Two riders reported injuries to their toes and thighs.

Owners of the recalled vehicles should stop using it and contact a Kawasaki dealer, or call 866-802-9381, to get a free repair. Kawasaki said it will install floor board guards and replace damaged floor boards on the recalled vehicles.

Wolfe confronts Roberts at campaign stop

Screen Shot 2014-07-30 at 11.10.40 AMEMPORIA, Kan. (AP) — Tea Party challenger Milton Wolfe confronted U.S. Senator Pat Roberts as he campaigned in downtown Emporia.

Their brief meeting Wednesday took place at an intersection as Roberts walked from business to business to talk with merchants. The two are squaring off in Tuesday’s Republican primary.

Wolfe told Roberts he wanted the senator to keep his promise to debate him. Roberts says he has no plans to debate Wolfe.

At their meeting on the street, Roberts told Wolfe it was not the time for the discussion and walked away as a small group of journalists and Wolfe supporters watched.

A Wolfe supporter shouted at Roberts, “If you can’t face Milton Wolfe, how can you face Obama?”

Dentist pleads not guilty to gold theft

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A Lincoln dentist has pleaded not guilty to stealing nearly $17,000 worth of precious metals from the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Omaha.

Randall Toothaker appeared in federal court Wednesday and entered his plea.

Prosecutors say a lab technician reported seeing the 57-year-old dentist open a locked cabinet where precious metals used in dental procedures, including gold, were kept.

While VA officials investigated the missing metals, prosecutors say Toothaker tried to leave the property. Officers pulled him over and found the missing metals in a bag in his vehicle.

Toothaker told officers he didn’t know how the metals got into his bag.

Toothaker declined to comment to the Omaha World-Herald after Wednesday’s court hearing.

 

Kansas college, president part ways

Screen Shot 2014-07-30 at 2.58.23 PMFORT SCOTT, Kan. (AP) — A southeast Kansas college is looking for a new president after parting ways with the incumbent by what officials called mutual agreement.

The Fort Scott Tribune reports Clay Tatro had been the subject of a recent no-confidence vote by faculty of Fort Scott Community College.

Tatro was not present this week when the school’s board of trustees approved an agreement to end his presidency, which was scheduled to expire in June 2017. Tatro had served twice previously as the college’s president and was seven years into his latest term.

The college’s attorney said details of the termination agreement are confidential. The Tribune reports Tatro had a base salary of $104,000.

Trustee Dick Hedges gave up his seat on the board to serve as interim president.

 

Company seeking to buy KC area Catholic hospitals draws condemnation, admiration

By Dan Margolies
KCUR
Mike Sherry
KHI News Service

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Prime Healthcare Services, the for-profit California health care company that has agreed to acquire two nonprofit Kansas City area hospitals, is no stranger to controversy.

Among other things, it has faced fierce opposition from the nation’s largest health care labor organization – the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) – and has been accused of billing fraud.

“They don’t really bring any value to a community,” said Chris Salm, director of research for SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West in California, which represents some Prime workers. “They simply prey on vulnerable communities.”

Ascension, a Catholic health system based in St. Louis, announced Monday that its affiliate in Kansas City, Mo., Carondelet Health, has agreed to sell St. Joseph Medical Center in south Kansas City and St. Mary’s Medical Center in Blue Springs to Prime.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, and Prime spokesman Edward Barrera on Tuesday declined to comment on the transaction or on questions that have arisen about its operations.

Turnaround company

Prime is known for acquiring struggling hospitals and attempting to turn them around.

Salm urged Missouri officials to closely scrutinize the transaction. A media relations representatives for Attorney General Chris Koster did not respond to a request for information on the extent of the attorney general’s authority to oversee the transaction.

Salm noted that New Jersey authorities have recommended that several safeguards be included in the sale of a Catholic hospital in Passaic, N.J., to Prime.

Media reports have said those stipulations include a provision that could lead to the revocation of the sale within the next five years and a requirement that Prime file quarterly reports about an ongoing federal investigation into the company’s Medicare billing practices in California.

That investigation came shortly after California Watch, an investigative reporting website, raised questions about the high rates of kwashiorkor, a rare form of malnutrition, in Prime’s billings. The diagnosis pays at far higher rates than other forms of malnutrition.

Prime told California Watch that it was being targeted by the government because of false allegations made by the SEIU.

Whistleblower suit

In October 2011, a whistleblower suit against the company also alleged billing fraud.

Karin Berntsen, a registered nurse who was the director of performance improvement at Alvarado Medical Center, a San Diego hospital acquired by Prime Healthcare in late 2010, alleged that Prime had defrauded the federal government of at least $50 million.

Berntsen claimed the company had billed for unnecessary inpatient short stays that should have been classified as outpatient cases.

Calling the company’s behavior “particularly egregious,” she alleged that Prime had instructed physicians and hospital staff “to choose inpatient admissions over outpatient/observation status in almost every instance,” in violation of Medicare guidelines.

Prime, which insists its billings are proper, has signaled its intention to seek dismissal of the action.

The federal government, which can intervene in whistleblower suits, has indicated it does not intend to intervene for now, according to documents in the case.

Sisters of Charity lawsuit

Prime has shown a willingness to play hardball, if another lawsuit is any indication. In July 2013, the company was sued in federal court in Kansas City, Kan., by Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth Health System, which in January 2013 sold Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and Saint John Hospital in Leavenworth, Kan., to Prime.

The lawsuit alleged that Prime withheld payments that were supposedly due the Sisters of Charity as part of the transition of the hospitals’ operations to Prime.

According to the suit, Prime’s CEO, Prem Reddy, “threatened to shut down” the hospitals if the Sisters of Charity did not bow to the company’s demand for unspecified intellectual property belonging to the Sisters of Charity.

Prime has denied the allegations, and a federal judge recently remanded the case to state court in Leavenworth County.

In California, Salm said Prime has a history of cutting staff and eliminating money-losing operations such as behavioral health when it acquires a hospital.

Prime began operating Providence and Saint John in April of 2013, according to Kathleen Conwell, a spokewoman for the two hospitals.

Since that time, she said in an email, the number of employees at Providence has risen by almost 10 percent to 1,076. St. John’s employment is down by five to 244.

Conwell also said that Prime is on track to invest about $12 million in the two hospitals by the end of this year for building upgrades and new equipment.

‘A deep concern for people’

The news release announcing the deal for St. Joseph and St. Mary’s included a comment from Diane Steele, who was a member of the board of Providence and St. John when Prime acquired them.

“Prime Healthcare has a deep concern for people – for the physicians and staff who provide care, and for those they serve,” she said. “We’re very pleased that Prime has continued to honor our spiritual heritage demonstrated in care of patients, especially the poor, at both hospitals.”

Charlie Shields, the new president and CEO of Truman Medical Centers, a safety net hospital, said he was unwilling to assume that Prime’s problems in California and elsewhere would translate into similar problems locally.

But he did say he expects Truman to see an increase in the number of patients who can’t pay their bills if Prime succeeds in acquiring St. Joseph and St. Mary’s. He said it was in the nature of for-profit hospitals to maximize returns for investors.

He also said Truman would closely monitor the transfer of assets involved in selling nonprofit institutions to a for-profit company. In the past, such transactions have resulted in the creation of charitable foundations whose mission is to serve the uninsured and the underinsured.

Brownback’s GOP challenger has bankruptcy in past

Gov. Brownback and Jennifer Winn
Gov. Brownback and Jennifer Winn

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Wichita businesswoman who is challenging Gov. Sam Brownback in the Republican primary has filed for bankruptcy protection in the past, while her running mate has done so twice.

Jennifer Winn tells The Wichita Eagle  she was going through a divorce and not receiving child support when she filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2004, facing more than $79,000 in debts.

Winn, who owns a landscaping business, says she filed after losing her home and a truck.

Her running mate, Robin Lais, filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy in 1997 and again in 2002.

The single mother says the first bankruptcy was caused by medical bills for her daughter, who has epilepsy. The second came when clients of her advertising business went out of business and she was not paid.

 

Kansas treasurer far ahead in fundraising for race

Estes
Estes

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Republican incumbent Ron Estes has a big fundraising advantage over his Democratic challenger in the Kansas state treasurer’s race.

Estes’ re-election campaign filed a finance report this week showing that he raised more than $12,000 from January through July 24, on top of the nearly $43,000 he had at the start of the year.

Estes spent about $21,000 for his campaign, leaving him with nearly $34,000 heading into the fall.

Democrat Carmen Alldritt is a former Harper County treasurer and launched her campaign in early June.

She raised only $1,450 by July 24, and the Kansas Democratic Party covered her $1,360 filing fee.

Alldritt reported spending about $1,100, leaving her with $313 at the end of the period.

Estes is seeking his second four-year term.

 

Seating Available for Friday’s “Cronkite” Show

Kemper Recital HallSt. Joseph, Mo. —July 29, 2014—There are a limited number of seats available for an Aug. 1 showing of “Cronkite,” a live multi-media performance that complements the Walter Cronkite Memorial at Missouri Western State University. The show at 11:30 a.m. in the Kemper Recital Hall inside Spratt Hall is free, but because seats are limited reservations are requested. Please call the Western Institute at 816-271-4100.

“Cronkite” is a one-man show that incorporates audio, video and still photographs. It is based on an appearance by the legendary newsman on CNN’s “Larry King Live” in September 2002. As he reflected on the first anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he also recalled other major events he covered, including World War II, the Vietnam War and the assassination of John F. Kennedy. The show was written by Dr. Robert Vartabedian, Missouri Western’s president, and directed by Dr. Bob Willenbrink, founding dean of Missouri Western’s School of Fine Arts.

The part of Cronkite is played by Jim Korinke, a member of the Actors’ Equity Association. Korinke has been a professional actor for 42 years, having performed in more than 120 stage performances. He has also appeared in some two dozen feature films, including The House on Pine Street, due out this fall; and hundreds of commercials for such clients as the U.S. Army, Coca Cola, McDonalds, Hy-Vee and Honda. He was the voice of Walmart for four years.

“This project has been particularly rewarding,” Korinke said. “I can’t think of anyone I respected, admired or aspired to more than Mr. Cronkite. I am so honored and humbled to have been asked to bring his words and wisdom to life again.”

In addition to occasional public showings, “Cronkite” will be performed for visiting tour groups and class field trips by arrangement. Groups wanting to arrange a performance can call the Western Institute at 816-271-4100.

Walter Cronkite was born in St. Joseph on Nov. 4, 1916. The Walter Cronkite Memorial, in the atrium of Spratt Hall on the Missouri Western campus, was dedicated last year on what would have been his 97th birthday. The 5.000 square-foot display features images and videos of Cronkite’s life and the many historic events he covered as a journalist. The Walter Cronkite Memorial is open daily except Christmas, New Year’s Day and Easter, and admission is always free. For more information, visit www.waltercronkitememorial.org.

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