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St. Joseph man hospitalized after rear-end collision

Missouri Highway Patrol  MHPST. JOSEPH- A St. Joseph man was injured in an accident just before 6 p.m. on Sunday in Buchanan County.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol reported a 2007 Mitsubishi driven by Billy D. Wykert, 38, St. Joseph, was northbound on Interstate 29 just south of St. Joseph.

The vehicle was slowing for stalled traffic and was rear-ended by an unknown vehicle that left the scene.

The collision caused the Mitsubishi to travel off the east side of the road and hit a guardrail.

A passenger in the vehicle Patrick E. Owens, 47, St. Joseph, was transported to Mosaic Life Care. Wykert was not injured.

The MSHP reported they were not wearing seat belts.

Mo. woman dead, one injured after vehicle hits pole, tree

Fatal accidentKANSAS CITY (AP) – Kansas City police said one person is dead and another was injured after their vehicle went off the road, hitting a utility pole and then a tree.

Police say 22-year-old Kaitlyn Turner of Butler died at the scene of the early Sunday morning wreck. She was a passenger in the vehicle.

Authorities said the accident happened after the driver lost control of the vehicle, which went off the road in south Kansas City.

The driver, whose identity hasn’t been released, was taken to a hospital. Her condition wasn’t immediately clear.

Eye-opener: US teens getting less & less sleep, study shows

sleepwalkingLINDSEY TANNER, AP Medical Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — A 20-year study says U.S. teens are getting sleepier. The result show many lack even seven hours of shut-eye each night and the problem has worsened over two decades.

The research involved nearly 300,000 teens asked in surveys since 1991 if they regularly got at least seven hours of sleep nightly. They were also asked if they got enough sleep.

Experts generally recommend nine or 10 hours of sleep for teens; over half of the 15- to 19-year-olds surveyed in 2012 said they didn’t even get seven hours each night.

The results heighten concerns about the impact of sleep deprivation on teens’ health and academics.

Results were published in Monday’s Pediatrics.

Winter weather stops Mo. legislative work

Missouri CapitolJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Capitol will be quiet Monday because winter weather is in the forecast.

Missouri Senate Majority Leader Ron Richard says he’s calling off Monday’s session. Richard says the Senate won’t convene until 4 p.m. Tuesday. The Missouri House, meanwhile, is calling off all of Monday’s committee hearings.

The National Weather Service is predicting that a storm system will move into the state Sunday night. Snow accumulations of 3 to 6 inches are predicted across central Missouri, with 1 to 3 inches expected along the Missouri River.

The Legislature typically meets from Monday afternoon through Thursday afternoon.

MU adds gender-neutral housing, similar to option at Northwest

mizzou_campus2COLUMBIA (AP) – The University of Missouri’s flagship campus in Columbia is testing out a new gender-neutral housing option starting this fall.

The Columbia Daily Tribune reports that the 16-bed space in College Avenue Hall will be open to students of any gender. The goal is to create a safe, secure housing option for those students who are transgender or gender nonconforming.

MU Residential Life director Frankie Minor says students had asked for the housing. He says creating it was made easier after the Board of Curators added gender expression and gender identity to the University of Missouri System’s nondiscrimination policy last year.

Minor says about 150 universities nationwide have incorporated similar plans, including Northwest Missouri State University in Maryville.

Republicans take second look at Mo. tax code changes

State Senator Kraus
State Senator Kraus

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – Missouri Republican lawmakers are pushing ahead with sales tax exemptions and a requirement that businesses be notified when the application of the tax code changes.

Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon vetoed several tax-related bills last year and the Legislature did not override them.

This year, some lawmakers say they’re working with Nixon and the state’s revenue department to make sure the bills are successful.

Republican Sen. Will Kraus, of Lee’s Summit, says he’s added a “reasonable person” standard to his bill requiring businesses to be notified when the Department of Revenue changes the way it interprets the sales tax law. Kraus says the change was requested by the department.

Other bills moving forward this year include exemptions for utility companies, data storage centers and gym memberships.

Obama sets out privacy rules for government drones

CameraDroneWASHINGTON (AP) — As the U.S. prepares to see more drones aloft in coming years, President Barack Obama is taking steps to ensure that the government respects privacy and civil liberties when it uses the unmanned aircraft to collect information.

Obama issued a memorandum to federal agencies Sunday specifying measures to guard against abuse of data collected in drone flights.

Among other steps, the order requires agencies to review privacy and civil rights protections before deploying drone technology and to follow a range of controls.

Personally identifiable information collected in drone flights is to be kept no longer than 180 days, although there are exceptions.

It’s questionable whether such steps will satisfy civil liberties advocates, who’ve objected strongly to the government’s vigorous use of digital surveillance in the name of national security.

The HITs Keep Coming

MFB_Logo_social

BY GARRETT HAWKINS

Football season may be over, but the hits keep coming—not on the field but in the pocketbook. Last year, a little known tax called the Health Insurance Tax, or HIT, kicked in as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). The HIT, along with the individual mandate, are two of the largest tax increases in the healthcare law.

Labeled as a “premium fee,” the HIT is considered an excise tax by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and levied on the net premiums of health insurance companies. The tax, which totaled $8 billion in 2014, is divided among companies based on market share. The larger the insurance company’s market share, the higher their annual HIT.

The details are complicated (it is administered by the IRS after all), but it isn’t hard to figure out the end result—Americans with private insurance coverage feel the HIT.

Most farmers and ranchers, as well as other small business owners, don’t have a large enough pool of employees to be self-insured so they purchase health insurance in the fully insured market. Fully insured plans are the only plans that factor into the equation that determines how much tax an insurance company pays. The cost to companies, therefore, is passed on to farmers, ranchers and small business owners that purchase those plans.

A Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report confirmed that the HIT, as well as the fee on manufacturers and importers of medical devices embedded in the ACA, “would be largely passed through to consumers in the form of higher premiums for private coverage.”

Unsurprisingly, the tax doesn’t sunset or decrease. As posted on the IRS’ website, the tax will rise to $14.3 billion in 2018 and increase thereafter by the rate of insurance companies’ premium growth. For families, the impact may be as much as $500 a year based on a study conducted by former CBO Director Douglas Holtz-Eakin.

The U.S. House of Representatives recently voted to repeal the ACA and is expected to turn its attention to stand-alone bills dealing with parts of the law. H.R. 763, the Jobs and Premium Protection Act, and its Senate companion S. 603, would repeal the tax.

Farm Bureau has long believed one of the primary goals of health insurance reform should be to reduce costs, not make it more difficult to afford coverage. Congress needs to act; farmers, ranchers and small business owners shouldn’t have to take the HIT year after year.

Garrett Hawkins, of Jefferson City, Mo., is the Director of National Legislative Programs for the Missouri Farm Bureau, the state’s largest farm organization.
– See more at: http://www.mofb.org/NewsMedia/CuttotheChase.aspx#sthash.vwtxD9sc.dpuf

Interactive map shows county-by-county impact of agriculture

kansas-county-mapKansas Department of Agriculture

TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Agriculture has released an interactive map depicting the economic impact of agriculture in each of the 105 counties.

“Kansas agriculture contributes to 37 percent of our economy. Each county in our state plays a key role in making that economic percentage as significant as it is,” said Agriculture Secretary Jackie McClaskey. Breaking down statistics county-by-county provides a birds-eye view of our state’s most prominent industry.”

The map, located on the KDA website, can be used to find agricultural economic facts for each county in the state of Kansas. By interacting with the map and selecting a county, users can see detailed agricultural statistics including farm numbers, crop production and leading agricultural sectors. Data for these facts are pulled directly from the National Agriculture Statistics Service(NASS) Farm Facts. The economic impact data is sourced from IMPLAN.

To find the map, visit:  http://agriculture.ks.gov/countystatistics.

For those who are interested in sharing their county’s agriculture production via social media, infographics containing county facts can be found at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kansasagriculture/with/15468342964.

Each graphic gives statistics unique to the county selected.  KDA encourages sharing these facts to provide more agriculture knowledge across the state.

The Kansas Department of Agriculture is committed to providing an environment that enhances and encourages economic growth of the agriculture industry and the economy of Kansas.

For more information about Kansas agriculture, visit http://agriculture.ks.gov/about-ksda.

Robots replacing human factory workers at faster pace

jobsPAUL WISEMAN, AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — A new report says that cheaper, better robots will replace human workers in the world’s factories at a faster pace over the next decade, pushing labor costs down 16 percent.

The Boston Consulting Group predicts that investment in industrial robots will grow 10 percent a year in the world’s 25-biggest export nations through 2025. That’s up from 2 percent to 3 percent a year now. The investment will pay off in lower costs and increased efficiency.

Robots will cut labor costs by 33 percent in South Korea, 25 percent in Japan, 24 percent in Canada and 22 percent in the United States.

Only 10 percent of jobs that can be automated have already been taken by robots. By 2025, the machines will have more than 23 percent, Boston Consulting forecasts.

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