We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Governors Approve Budget and Master Planning, Energy Savings Contracts

MWSU Media Release

St. Joseph, Mo.—The Board of Governors at Missouri Western State University adopted operating and auxiliary budgets for the fiscal year that begins July 1, but it also looked further into the future by approving proposals to prepare a campus master plan and a comprehensive energy savings plan.

The operating budget for 2014-2015 totals approximately $51.7 million, up slightly from the current year’s budget of $51.1 million. The auxiliary budget totals approximately $12.1 million, down slightly from the current budget of $12.4 million.

The budget includes a 1.74 percent tuition increase for in-state undergraduate students, or $3.35 per credit hour. The Board had previously approved the tuition increase in the event that state appropriations didn’t rise. Gov. Jay Nixon announced this week that he would withhold a $43 million increase for colleges and universities approved by the General Assembly, including approximately $645,000 for Missouri Western.

“We’re always reluctant to raise tuition, and in fact have frozen tuition for in-state undergraduate students for four of the previous 10 years. However, given the current state appropriation circumstances, we had little choice,” said Dr. Robert Vartabedian, Missouri Western’s president. “Obviously, we hope the governor is able to release the additional funds after the legislature’s veto session in September.”

Even with the tuition increase, the cost of attending Missouri Western remains one of the lowest among the state’s public universities.

The budget includes a 2 percent salary increase for faculty and staff, and anticipates an increase of up to 15 percent in health insurance premiums.

Master Planning Services

The Board of Governors accepted a proposal from architectural firm Clark-Huesemann of Lawrence, Kan., to develop a campus master plan that will guide Missouri Western’s physical growth.

“A campus master plan will establish a framework for the physical growth and evolution that can be anticipated over the next 10 years,” said Jerry Pickman, vice president for university advancement and executive director of the Missouri Western State University Foundation. “This will be an essential tool to help guide the university’s decisions regarding new construction and renovation, traffic patterns, accessibility, environmental stewardship, parking, land development and space utilization.”

A selection committee invited five firms to campus to make presentations and answer questions. After that initial review, two firms were invited back to campus to make summary presentations to the committee, President Vartabedian and Leo Blakely, chair of the Board of Governors. Clark-Huesmann was unanimously chosen based on a combination of its presentations, scope of services offered, areas of expertise, experience with similar institutions, timeline, expected deliverables, and overall fit with the university.

A master plan is especially important as a long-term land lease bill that passed the General Assembly might present the campus with new opportunities, Pickman said. Current state law includes a sunset clause which prevents most universities from leasing their land beyond 2017. House Bill 1206, which removes that sunset clause, awaits the governor’s action.

“If the bill becomes law, there may be some opportunities to enter into long-term leases for some of our 723 acres, and a master plan will help ensure that any of these leases are compatible with our overall mission and possible future needs,” Pickman said.

The initial cost of the campus master plan is $188,600, with a contingency budget of $11,400.

Energy Savings

The Board of Governors accepted a proposal from Schneider Electric to provide an energy conservation program. Schneider will analyze campus energy usage and design, install, maintain, monitor and arrange the financing of a comprehensive energy conservation program.

“Missouri Western has dealt with rising utility and operational costs for years,” said Cale Fessler, vice president for financial planning and administration. “It is our hope that Schneider Electric will help us bring those costs down. One nice feature of the contract is that if we implement the company’s proposed changes and our energy savings fall short of its guaranteed benchmark, Schneider Electric will pay to cover the shortfall.”

Schneider was selected after a lengthy evaluation process by a five-member selection committee. The committee reviewed proposals from seven energy service companies, and then invited four firms to campus to make presentations.

Schneider Electric says its process typically does not require upfront capital, using guaranteed energy and operational savings to provide improvements. The leveraging of guaranteed energy savings will provide vast improvements to the university’s heating, air conditioning, lighting, water fixtures and other infrastructure needs.

Man accused of repeatedly exposing himself

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A Kansas City man is facing four counts of sexual misconduct after prosecutors say he exposed himself and committed lewd acts in public places around town.

The Kansas City Star  reports the 33-year-old suspect was arrested Wednesday in the parking lot of a coffee shop. Police say they were conducting surveillance on him because of previous incidents and saw him expose himself.

 Court documents indicate the man was in direct view of people inside the coffee shop and at a school across the street.

The man previously had been identified as a suspect in four other incidents reported by women in April and May. One of those was in the same place where he was arrested Wednesday.

The man made his initial court appearance Thursday.

Groups call again for tobacco ban at baseball parks

A letter from nine public health groups to the Major League Baseball commission and the players' association calling again for a complete ban on tobacco use in ballparks-Source: Tobacco Free Kids Click to enlarge.
A letter from nine public health groups to the Major League Baseball commission and the players’ association calling again for a complete ban on tobacco use in ballparks-Source: Tobacco Free Kids Click to enlarge.

By KHI News Service

The letter comes after the death of Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn, who attributed his cancer to use of chewing tobacco.

The letter said a ban would “honor the memory” of Gwynn, who died earlier this month. Gwynn was a longtime right fielder for the San Diego Padres. He was 54 when he died.

“Use of smokeless tobacco endangers the health of Major League ballplayers. It also sets a terrible example for the millions of young people who watch baseball at the ballpark or on TV and often see players and managers using tobacco,” the letter stated.

The groups began calling for a tobacco ban at ballparks in 2010.

MLB officials said they had no immediate plans to respond to the letter, which was signed by these organizations:

  • Tobacco Free Kids
  • The American Cancer Society
  • The American Lung Association
  • American Heart Association
  • American Medical Association
  • American Dental Association
  • Oral Health America
  • Legacy, an anti-tobacco group formed in 1999 as part of the Master Settlement Agreement that settled a lawsuit filed by dozens of states, including Kansas, against the major tobacco companies seeking to recover the costs of treating sick smokers.
  • and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

McCaskill Keeps Spotlight on Army National Guard Recruiting

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill, Chairman of the Subcommittee on Financial & Contracting Oversight, today pressed for updates from Army National Guard leadership on its investigations into wasteful, ineffective spending with sports marketing.

In a letter to Major General Judd Lyons, the Acting Director of the Army National Guard, McCaskill recapped promises made by Guard leadership during last month’s hearing regarding the Guard’s sponsorship and marketing contracts. 

“You stated that you were currently reviewing programs and making decisions for how to spend your marketing and recruiting funds,” wrote McCaskill. “You also stated that you had tasked your staff with performing an analysis of the current sports marketing program. You stated that you would be receiving that analysis and making a decision regarding next year’s contracts within the month following the hearing date.”

McCaskill continued, “As part of the Subcommittee’s ongoing oversight, I request that your office provide a copy of the analysis prepared by your staff. I also request that you provide a briefing for the Subcommittee staff to discuss your plans for professional sports sponsorships for 2015, including any alternatives the Army National Guard has identified.” 

Last month, McCaskill grilled Lyons on why the Guard continues these contracts when almost every other service branch has discontinued them, and on whether senior Guard officials had the opportunity to receive perks from NASCAR and Indycar from the sponsorship contracts. The target demographic for the National Guard is primarily young adults between the ages of 18 and 24. However, only 10 percent of NASCAR viewers are between 18 and 24. The typical age of an IndyCar fan is between 35 and 54 years old.

The Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the Coast Guard, all of which used to sponsor NASCAR, have decided to end these programs. The Regular Army ended its sponsorship with NASCAR in 2012 after concluding that the program had the highest cost per lead in the Army’s portfolio of sponsorships. The Marine Corps made the same decision in 2006, when it determined that the effectiveness of sponsoring a NASCAR team was almost impossible to measure. The Navy ended its own sponsorship of NASCAR in 2008 because the program was too expensive compared to the marketing benefit it received. And the Coast Guard ended its relationship with NASCAR in 2006 when the costly $9.6 million investment generated only 350 leads.

T1red of p@sswords? Y0u @re N*t @lone!

ComputerCHICAGO (AP) — Feel like you’ve got too many passwords? Have trouble remembering them? You’re far from alone.

Frustration over the growing list of letter-number-and-symbol codes we have to create to get into devices and online accounts is common.

Thomas Way, a computer science professor at Villanova University, calls it the “tyranny of the password.”

To get around it, some people use programs that generate and recall passwords to various accounts for them. We’re also starting to see more “biometric” solutions — such as the thumbprint needed to get into the new iPhones or face recognition technology that’s on the horizon.

In the meantime, some security experts say good passwords don’t have to be something you’ll easily forget. They suggest, for instance, typing in a sentence you can remember, including spaces and punctuation.

 

Plan to streamline health law re-enrollment

obamacareRICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — New health secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell says she wants to make it easy for the 8 million Americans signed up under the health care law to renew their insurance next year.

The Health and Human Services Department outlined a plan Thursday that allows people to automatically keep their current insurance, if it’s available.

And for most consumers, the government will re-estimate the amount of subsidies that reduce their premiums. That’s if they checked a box on their original application allowing HealthCare.gov to access their latest tax data.

Making it easier to re-enroll would cut the workload for the federal insurance website, making it less likely to crash again.

But premiums are also changing, and an independent market analysis firm says most consumers should shop around to get the best deals.

Lawsuits wants to change how Mo. legislation is summarized

JEFFERSON CITY (AP) – A Missouri judge is considering challenges to a pair of proposed constitutional amendments slated for the August ballot.

Cole County Circuit Judge Jon Beetem heard arguments Thursday on lawsuits challenging the ballot summaries for measures that would enhance the right to bear arms and impose a three-quarter-cent sales tax for transportation projects.

In both cases, the lawsuits contend the summaries prepared by the Republican-led Legislature are insufficient because they don’t mention some aspects of the measures. The lawsuit against the transportation tax also questions a projection that it will generate $534 million annually.

If Beetem were to order changes to the summaries, that could negate the votes on those measures for anyone who already has cast an absentee ballot in advance of the Aug. 5 election.

Graves Votes to Lower Gas Prices, Advance U.S. Energy Independence & Job Growth

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Representative Sam Graves (MO-06), House Small Business Committee Chairman, this week voted in support of several measures to lower gas prices, create good-paying jobs, and achieve long-term energy independence for the U.S.

“The U.S. is an energy rich nation that continues to act like an energy poor nation.  Right now, an overbearing government is making energy more expensive.  Whether it’s lowering gas prices or preventing bigger electric bills, common sense solutions are needed to ease the squeeze on middle class Missourians.  The Keystone XL pipeline, for example, is a project that will promote greater energy security and economic growth right here at home, yet the President and the Administration have sat on it for years,” said Congressman Graves.

H.R. 4899, Lowering Gasoline Prices to Fuel an America That Works Act of 2014, increases offshore oil production by requiring the Obama Administration to move forward with new offshore energy production in areas containing the most oil and natural gas resources. The bill increases onshore oil production by streamlining government roadblocks and bureaucratic red-tape that block and delay onshore American energy production.  The bill harnesses the oil and natural gas resources we have here in the U.S., and as a result will help ease the pain at the pump.  Graves voted yes.

H.R. 3301, North American Energy Infrastructure Act, requires that cross-border oil pipelines be approved within 120 days unless they are found to compromise national security interests.  The debacle that has delayed the Keystone project should never happen again.  Graves voted yes.

H.R. 6, Domestic Prosperity and Global Freedom Act, expedites exports of U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) to our allies by placing a 30 day deadline on the Department of Energy to issue a final decision on applications to export LNG.  Due to advancements in technology and innovation, natural gas output by the U.S. has rapidly increased over the last decade and is expected to continue rising. Increasing LNG exports will help boost the economy while increasing global energy security.  The U.S. has more than enough gas to supply our domestic needs and the export market.  Graves voted yes.

 

KC Mayor: We won’t follow St. Louis in Gay Marriage Challenge

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A spokeswoman for Kansas City’s mayor says he would take actions similar to that of his St. Louis counterpart on same-sex marriage – if the city’s charter allowed it.

Four same-sex couples were married Thursday in St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay’s office to challenge Missouri’s constitutional prohibition against gay marriage. A federal appeals court in Denver ruled on Wednesday that states cannot prevent gay couples from marrying.

Joni Wickham, spokeswoman for Kansas City Mayor Sly James, says the city’s council-manager form of government prevents James from making unilateral decisions on gay marriage. Slay heads a strong mayor form of government and has the authority to take actions like those Thursday.

Officials in Springfield and Columbia say they have seen no signs of similar decisions by their municipal leaders.

Medicare program reports decrease in Kan. hospital readmissions

Screen Shot 2014-06-26 at 9.02.55 AMBy KHI News Service

TOPEKA — The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reports that the number of Medicare beneficiaries readmitted to hospitals and the number of health care-related infections has gone down nationally and slightly more so in areas where so-called Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) have programs aimed at reducing the problems.

Officials with the Kansas Foundation for Medical Care, the state’s designated QIO, said hospital readmissions here among the Medicare population went down almost 15 percent between October 2010 and March 2013 and that hospital admissions also dropped by almost 10 percent. That translated into more than 6,000 fewer hospitalizations and 1,547 fewer readmissions.

The Foundation has been working statewide to reduce avoidable admissions and also with provider coalitions in Hays, Kansas City, Topeka and Wichita.

The group also has been working with other agencies to decrease the incidence of infections acquired in healthcare settings.

It is partnered with the Kansas Department of Health and Environment and various health care providers to address Clostridium difficile infections (C. diff).

Foundation officials said seven facilities have joined the Kansas Clostridium difficile Prevention Collaborative, which is working to reduce the infections through better awareness and training.

The officials said early results have shown a 16.5 percent “relative improvement rate in reducing the number of hospital onset C. diff infections.”

Representatives of the foundation and KDHE were selected to report on the collaborative at the national Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) annual conference.

The CMS data showed that hospital readmissions among Medicare beneficiaries nationally declined by 13.22 percent in QIO communities, compared to a national drop of 12.55 percent. Similarly, hospital admissions declined further in QIO communities—by 8.39 percent vs. 8.12 percent nationally.

Foundation officials said the reduced hospitalization had saved Medicare nearly $1 billion nationally.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File