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Market Facilitation Program Payments Stuck at OMB

Farmers thought they’d have more details on the second round of USDA trade-aid payments by now. However, Farm Journal says the payments are still under negotiations.

USDA is negotiating with the Office of Management and Budget for that second round of payments under the Market Facilitation Program. USDA had originally intended to release the information on Monday. The agency had wanted to assess the potential impact of the temporary U.S. and China trade truce.

The OMB is tasked with making sure the cost of what the government projects it will spend is kept in check as much as possible. Following the China news, Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue told farmers that payments would still be happening. “From my perspective, nothing has changed as far as the damages farmers have experienced,” Perdue says. How large those payments will be is unclear, but they will likely be a different amount than the first round of payments.

The Farm Journal report says the prospect of a more normalized trade flow with China going into 2019 might mean this round of aid payments will be a little less than they were before.

Watch Replay: President Trump in Kansas City to address national conference on crime

KANSAS CITY (AP) — President Donald Trump was in Kansas Friday to address a national conference on crime.

 

Trump delivered the closing address at the 2018 Project Safe Neighborhoods National Conference in Kansas City, Missouri. The meeting is sponsored by the Justice Department.

The White House says Project Safe Neighborhoods is the centerpiece of the department’s strategy for reducing violent crime. The program encourages federal, state and local law enforcement officials to work together on crime-reduction strategies.

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker addressed the conference and highlighted record violent crime prosecutions, including federal firearm charges and drug defendants.
Whitaker said that, while “the numbers speak for themselves,” the goal is not to fill up jails or the courts, but to reduce crime.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein also addressed the conference.

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Kansas City (AP) – President Donald Trump will visit Kansas City today for a conference on crime.

According to the White House, Trump will speak at the 2018 Project Safe Neighborhoods National Conference in Kansas City. He is scheduled to speak just at 11:50 a.m.

The event has drawn hundreds of law enforcement officials, prosecutors and others focused on cutting back on crime.

The George W. Bush-era Project Safe Neighborhoods faded during former President Barack Obama’s administration. Former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions revived it last year.

Through the initiative, federal prosecutors have worked with local law enforcement agencies to target offenders in cases involving guns, drugs and gangs.

Kansas suspends RB Pooka Williams after alleged assault

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Standout Kansas running back Pooka Williams has been suspended from the team after his arrest on suspicion of domestic battery.

Williams photo University of Kansas Athletics

Williams, whose name is Anthony Ray Williams, was arrested Thursday at the university’s public safety office. No further details were immediately available.

New coach Les Miles said the department was taking the allegations “very seriously.” He said Williams has been suspended from all team activities pending further investigation. Associate Athletics Director Jim Marchiony said the school would have no additional comment.

Williams was a four-star prospect from Boutte, Louisiana, who became the star of the team during the season. He was the first running back in the school history to have back-to-back 100-yard games to start their career and won several awards for his play.

U.S. Beef Gains Access to Morocco

U.S. Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer announced that Morocco will begin importing U.S. beef and beef products this year. 2018 will be the first year that U.S. beef and poultry exporters have had access to the Moroccan market under the U.S.-Morocco Free Trade Agreement. Morocco has already opened up its market to U.S. poultry back in August.

“New access to Morocco for beef and beef products is an important step in ensuring that our farmers and ranchers can continue to expand their exports of U.S. agricultural products,” says Lighthizer. “American beef is the best in the world,” Perdue says, “and as soon as the Moroccans get a taste of it, they’ll surely want more.”

As of last month, U.S. ag exports to Morocco were worth more than $512 million dollars. Initial estimates say that Morocco could be an $80 million export market for U.S. beef and beef products. In 2017, the U.S. was the third-largest beef exporter in the world, with global sales of beef and beef products worth $7.3 billion.

China Appears Ready to Purchase U.S. Ag Products

China appears to be getting ready to follow through on commitments it made with the White House in a short-term trade bargain with the U.S. Politico calls it a potentially encouraging sign for U.S. ag producers.

A Chinese government official said the two countries reached agreement in sectors like agriculture, autos, and energy. U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping reached a short-term trade truce during discussions in Buenos Aires. Politico quotes a Bloomberg report saying Beijing officials are preparing to resume importing products like soybeans and liquefied natural gas. That appears to confirm White House statements that said China will begin buying more American farm goods “immediately.”

It’s not known for sure if China will drop its retaliatory tariffs on soybeans and other commodities, or possibly compensate customers. It’s also unclear yet when the promised purchasing will begin. In another positive sign for the long-term discussions, China also announced new punishments for IP theft. That’s one of the central disputes the U.S. hopes to resolve through further negotiations over the next three months.

Kansas teen gifted with work boots he was caught shoplifting

ROELAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Officers in suburban Kansas City have made a gift of the work boots that a teen was attempting to steal.

Officer Suffield and Officer Snepp who responded to the shoplifting call -photo courtesy Roeland Park PD

On Thursday afternoon, police responded to a Walmart in Roeland Park, Kansas, where the teen was caught shoplifting.

Chief John Morris says the responding officers Suffield and Snepp learned the teen was a displaced juvenile and wanted the boots so he could get work. Instead of punishment, the officers headed to the cash register.

After some words of encouragement to find a job, finish school and stay out of trouble, the teen was gifted the same pair of boots he had attempted to steal.

Morris says the teen had tears in his eyes after he was given the boots. He says the story “almost made me cry, too.”

Missouri man says he was too drunk to remember burglaries

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) – A 28-year-old Missouri man has pleaded not guilty in a series of burglaries that he says he was too drunk to remember.

Reinke -photo Greene Co.

Authorities say Weston Reinke of Springfield is suspected of burglarizing several businesses in east Springfield, using either a tire iron or crowbar to gain entrance. Guns, crystals, computers and a $1,000 gold coin were among the items taken.

Reinke lives in the neighborhood near where the burglaries occurred. He has been charged with four counts of felony burglary but police suspect him of several other break-ins this year.

Court documents show Reinke told police he couldn’t remember the burglaries because he often would drink until he blacked out.

Reinke is being held on a $12,500 bond. Online court records do not list an attorney for Reinke.

16-year-old NE Kansas boy dies after crash with a semi

JACKSON COUNTY — One person died in an accident just after 3:30p.m. Thursday in Jackson County.

First responders on the crash scene Thursday- photo courtesy WIBW TV

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Toyota Corolla driven by Garrett N. Klahr, 16, Wetmore, was westbound on 286th Road and failed to stop at the stop sign at U.S. 75.

A southbound Kenworth semi driven by David J. Christianson, 54, Canby, MN., struck the Toyota in the passenger side. The vehicle spun around and traveled into the southwest ditch.

Klahr was transported to the hospital in Topeka where he died. Christianson was not injured. The KHP did not have details on seat belt usage of both drivers.

Kansas will boost foster care spending $35M

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas will boost its annual spending on foster care by $35 million under state Department for Families and Children grants that have been awarded to five contractors.

DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel during Thursday’s conference-photo courtesy Kansas DCF

DCF Secretary Gina Meier-Hummel had a news conference Thursday to introduce the contractors and discuss how she believes the grants will improve services for abused and neglected children. The department announced them Nov. 1 , six months after requesting proposals from interested parties.

The grants run four years, starting July 1. The state expects to spend $245 million on foster care during the fiscal year beginning on that date. That’s a 17 percent increase over the current fiscal year.

Departing Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer’s administration announced the grants five days before Democratic state Sen. Laura Kelly was elected governor. She takes office Jan. 14.

Former Mo. teacher charged with more child sex crimes in Kansas

OLATHE, Kan. (AP) — More sex crime charges have been filed in Kansas against a former charter school teacher.

Carter -photo Johnson County

42-year-old Randall Carter II, of Overland Park, Kansas, was free on bond when he was arrested again Friday.

He had been teaching at Lee A. Tolbert Academy in Kansas City, Missouri, when he was charged in May in Johnson County, Kansas, with multiple sex crimes involving two children. Charter officials said the children weren’t students at the school.

The new charges of rape, aggravated indecent liberties and sodomy involve a third child and date back to 2012.

Bond for Carter is set at $500,000. During a hearing Thursday, a judge denied his request to lower it.

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