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Kansas man hospitalized after vehicle slides into semi

KDOT view of the Icy roads near Salina on Monday
KDOT view of the Icy roads near Salina on Monday

SALINA – A Kansas man was injured in an accident just before 8 a.m. on Monday in Saline County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2013 Ford Escape driven by Timothy Tallman Baffa, 37, Salina, was exiting from eastbound Interstate 70 on to 9th Street and was unable to stop at the intersection due to icy conditions

The Ford rear-ended a semi driven by Ulises Bladimir Fuentes, 38, Grand Prairie, Texas.

Baffa was transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.

Fuentes and a teenage passenger in the Ford were not injured.

The KHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

Sheriff’s office investigating death as suspicious UPDATE

police body found

PARK CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in southern Kansas say they’re investigating after a body was found near Park City over the weekend.

Capt. David Mattingly of the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office says Monday the case is being investigated as a homicide. The body was found Sunday night.

A passer-found the body early Sunday evening.

No further details about the case were released early Monday.

———–

PARK CITY, Kan. (AP) — Authorities in southern Kansas say they’re investigating after a body was found near Park City over the weekend.

Capt. David Mattingly of the Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office says the case currently is being investigated as a suspicious death.

No further details about the body, which was found Sunday night, were released, including identity.

Mattingly told Wichita television station KAKE that officials were waiting on forensic investigators to arrive at the scene on Sunday night.

FHSU names new Provost

FHSU University Relations

Dr. Glynn
Dr. Glynn

HAYS, Kan. — The national search to fill a key position at Fort Hays State University has culminated in the selection of a provost whose wide experience has taken him from his native Ireland to England and to stops in New York, Nebraska, Pennsylvania and Michigan.

Dr. Graham Glynn, at present the vice provost and executive dean of college wide programs at Mercy College in New York City, will take over as provost at Fort Hays State on June 1.

FHSU is organized into four divisions: Academic Affairs; Administration and Finance; Information Technology; and Student Affairs. The provost, as chief academic officer, leads the Division of Academic Affairs. Dr. Larry Gould stepped down as provost in October 2013 to return to the classroom. Dr. Chris Crawford, who had served as assistant provost for 10 years, filled in as interim provost while the national search was underway.

In making the announcement today, Dr. Mirta M. Martin said the search committee sought a visionary academic leader who would enhance Fort Hays State’s stature as an innovative university that supports its current exceptional faculty and attracts new faculty of excellence. “As one of the four vice presidents, Dr. Glynn becomes a key player in developing the academic programs of distinction that make Fort Hays State a destination of choice,” President Martin said. “Graham brings a breadth and depth of experience that will be invaluable as we move through the process of re-engineering our university to create better efficiencies so that we can better serve our students. I am just thrilled to be able to welcome Graham and his family to the Tiger family. I know he will be a great fit.”

Glynn, who has a doctorate in neuroscience, has extensive experience in technology and the delivery of education at a distance, which is a widely recognized strength of Fort Hays State and its Virtual College. At Mercy College, he helped restructure the educational assessment process to improve student success and retention. He is an entrepreneur who started and ran his own software business that developed and sold a personal knowledge management application in 27 countries. At Creighton University, he initiated the online school of pharmacy, which nearly doubled enrollment and was the first online school of pharmacy in the world. With his family, Glynn has hosted international students from Africa, Europe, Korea, Japan, China and South America.

“I am very excited and honored to be joining the Tiger family and want to thank President Martin, the search committee and the campus community for their faith in me,” Glynn said. “Fort Hays State is a very special institution with a can-do attitude that embraces innovation. I had the opportunity to walk through many of the campus buildings the day after my official interview and was very impressed by the level of engagement and energy I saw between the faculty, staff and students. I look forward to working with and getting to know everyone.”

Dr. Mark Bannister, chair of the search committee and dean of FHSU’s College of Business and Entrepreneurship, said today: “The Provost Search Committee was very pleased by the depth of the candidate pool. FHSU attracted strong candidates from across the nation who had a variety of strengths and experiences. We were impressed by the candidates who visited campus and had confidence President Martin would have a quality pool to select from. I am excited about Dr. Glynn. He impressed the committee as a visionary.”

In addition to Bannister, the members of the search committee are Dr. Paul Faber, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; Deborah Ludwig, dean of Forsyth Library; Brenda Hoopingarner, chair of the Department of Allied Health; Dr. Michael Meade, associate professor of English; Dr. Eric Deyo, assistant professor of physics and president of the Faculty Senate; Linn Ann Huntington, professor of communication studies and president of the FHSU Chapter of the American Association of University Professors; Arin Powers, a Woodward, Okla., junior and president of the Student Government Association; Dr. Keegan Nichols, assistant vice president for student affairs; DeBra Prideaux, director of governmental relations and the FHSU Alumni Association; and Matt Means, assistant professor of music and theatre and director of the Honors College.

Prior to becoming vice provost at Mercy College, Glynn was assistant provost and executive director of teaching, learning and technology at Stony Brook University in the state of New York from 2006 to 2011; director of the Royer Center for Learning and Academic Technologies at Penn State University in State College from 2003 to 2006; director of the Office of Information Technology and Learning Resources at the Creighton University School of Pharmacy and Health Professions in Omaha from 1999 to 2003; a visiting professor at the Open University in Milton Keynes, England, from April through June of 1999; an associate professor and coordinator of distance learning systems at Creighton from 1997 to 1999; an assistant professor of pharmacology at Ferris State University College of Pharmacy in Big Rapids, Mich., from 1993 to 1997; and a post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Neuro-Pharmacology at Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research (now Pfizer) in Ann Arbor, Mich.

Glynn earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience in 1990 from the N.E. Ohio Universities College of Medicine/Kent State University in Rootstown and a Bachelor of Science Degree in pharmacology and biochemistry in 1985 from the University College Dublin in Ireland. He also earned a Certificate in Business Administration in 2003 from Creighton University, a Certificate in Foundations of Effective Management in 2001 from Creighton and a Certificate in Multimedia and Internet Technology in 1996 from the University of Texas at Austin. He has published and lectured widely.

Kan. Senate bill would change which radioactive waste could go to landfills

Screen Shot 2015-02-16 at 8.51.32 AMBy Kelsie Jennings
KU Statehouse Wire Service

TOPEKA – A Senate bill heard by the Kansas Natural Resources Committee would amend the definition of low-level radioactive materials, which would allow waste containing them to be buried in landfills.

Members of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment spoke before the committee in support of Senate Bill 125, saying that the current law’s definition was too broad and should not include naturally occurring radioactive materials, also known by the acronym “NORM.”

William Bider, director of waste management for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said that NORM is already in natural materials such as rocks. Bider said the current law, which was put in place in the 1980s, does not allow burial of low-level radioactive waste, and that the definition of NORM needs to be changed so these materials are not lumped into a group with materials that have high levels of radioactive waste.

Bider said even though burial of this material is prohibited by law, it’s already in landfills because of oil and gas drilling waste and construction demolition debris that has been going on for years.

He said nobody was aware that these materials had low-level NORM when the law was put in place, but it was discovered the last few years when they started doing sampling of drilling waste and comparing with other states. Now that they realize the disposal conflicts with the law so they need to alter the definition so it complies with the law.

“It’s safe levels, it’s low levels, and we want to make it legal,” Bider said.

Bider said the current law isn’t clear on what should be done with radioactive waste, it just says that it can’t be buried, so some waste companies have to take their radioactive waste to other states where they have proper disposal sites.

Bider said NORM levels range from low-level, mid-level, and high-level, which indicate how the waste should be disposed, with the low-level being unrestricted.

Bider and Tom Conley, chief of the radiation and asbestos control program at KDHE, said their tests show that drilling waste appears to be at a low level in Kansas but it varies state-to-state because of the types of rock.
Bider said drilling companies in Kansas are aware of environmental liability issues and want to be in compliance with the law.

“Some of the drillers would still want to make sure that the landfills that they send theirs to are legally able to take material with NORM in it,” Bider said.

Some waste management groups gave written support of the bill, but no opponents were present nor provided written testimony.

Kelsie Jennings is a University of Kansas senior from Olathe, Kan., studying journalism.

FEBRUARY 16, 2015

Bauer Computers
www.bauercomputers.com

Download Trading Post Classified Form CLICK HERE

Studio Line 9AM – 10AM:  620-792-2479

FOR SALE: TIRES 13,14, 15 MUDGRIPS, BAR STOOLS (4) ADJUSTABLE. 792-2916

WANTED: SOMEONE TO REPAIR JUKE BOXES. 793-0340

FOR SALE: 1994/2002 CHEVY PU BED. 793-9304

FOR SALE: GAS FURNACE FOR A LARGE HOME. 792-2388

FOR SALE: 2009 CHEVY EXT CARGO VAN, 2013 CHEVY CRUISE LXT. 797-5666

FREE: MULCH 791-7878

FOR SALE: WHIRLPOOL WASHER & DRYER (FRONT LOAD) SINGLE DOOR REFRIGERATOR. 785-650-4216

FOR SALE: 4 TIRES LT245/70/17 793-4850

FOR SALE: JIM BEAM DECANTERS, ELECTRIC GUITAR W/AMPS, ANTIQUE COUCH. 792-5310 OR 282-3957

FOR SALE: DESK, COMPUTER DESK, CHINA CABINET, RADIATOR, ALTERNATOR HEATER MOTOR FOR A 1995 OLDSMOBILE. 639-2038

FOR SALE: PROPANE GRILL, SKILLETS. WANTED: TWIN SIZE BED COMPLETE. 793-6379

FOR SALE: 8 DRAWER DESK & CHAIR, BOW SHAPED SHOWER CURTAIN ROD. 793-7706 AFTER 12PM

FOR SALE: MOLE KILLER. 793-8835

FOR SALE: TAURUS 357 REVOLVER (NEW IN THE BOX). 786-0929

FOR SALE: PINK PROM DRESS (3). WANTED: KING SIZE HEADBOARD & FRAME. 786-6996

FOR SALE: BABY CHANGER (WHITE), SNOW BOOTS (11), SIZE 3T GIRLS COAT. WANTED: STOOL RISER W/HANDLES. 617-3505

FOR SALE: FIREWOOD, ROOSTERS. 792-5636

FOR SALE: 2005 YAMAHA 350 4 WHEELER 2WD OR 4WD, TIRES FOR A DODGE PU. 275/60/20. 793-0979

FOR SALE: PROFESSIONAL DRAFTING TABLE, ADJUSTABLE DRAFTING CHAIR. 785-324-1533

FOR SALE: YOUNG LAYING HENS. 786-0702 OR 804-0060

FOR SALE: 3 JOY STICKS, PAPER SHREDDER, DAYBED WITH STORAGE/BOOKCASE SIDEBOARD. 786-5101

FOR SALE: 2008 CHEVY MALIBU (70,000), SMALL SQUARE ALFALFA BALES. 785-252-8041

FOR SALE: 2007 STINGER STACKER BALE WAGON, 185,000 BTU OIL BURNER W/STAND. 339-5734

FOR SALE: SNOW GOOSE DECOYS,GPS (NEW IN THE BOX). 491-1570

FOR SALE: 30′ COMBINE PU REEL, 4 WHEEL HEADER TRAILER. 653-4913

FOR SALE: 1998 GMC EXT CAB 4WD PU. 617-8147

FOR SALE: 4 TRUCK TIRES ON DODGE WHEELS 265/70/R17. 785-324-1248

FOR SALE: CAST ALUMINUM INTERNATIONAL PEDDLE TRACTOR. 786-1645

FOR SALE: DATSUN PU BED TRAILER. WANTED: 32″ STORM DOOR AND WINDOWS. 785-656-3067

TRADING POST CLASSIFIED’S

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HAVE A GOOD DAY!

Tuesday’s Barton County Commission Meeting Agenda

barton county courthouseBOARD OF BARTON COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Agenda Meeting – Tuesday, February 17, 2015

I. OPENING BUSINESS:

A. Call Meeting to Order.
B. Recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance.
B C. Consider Approval of the Agenda.
C D. Consider Minutes of the February 9, 2015, Regular Meeting.
D E. Any citizen wishing to make statements during the discussion of any item must first be recognized by the Commission Chair. After being recognized, that person should state their name and the name of any organization represented. Statements should be limited to five minutes.
E F. Cell phones and other electronic devices, other than those used by the media, should be shut off.

II. OLD BUSINESS – Items tabled, or scheduled, from previous Commission Meetings, will be heard at this time.

-There is no Old Business at this time.

III. NEW BUSINESS – All new business to be considered by the Commission will be heard at this time.

A. EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION: Service Awards:

-Barton County employees are recognized for continuous service for five, ten, fifteen and twenty years. The County Commission, with the assistance of Richard Boeckman, County Counselor / Administrator, and Bj Wooding, Employee Relations Committee President, will recognize employees for their years of service.

B. COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE: Request for Approval – Added / Abated / Escaped / Refunded Taxes for 2014:

-Donna Zimmerman, County Clerk, will present a listing of Added / Abated / Escaped / Refunded Taxes for 2014. Orders for these actions are kept on file in the County Clerk’s Office. These are used to correct assessments and are requested by the County Appraiser’s Office or the County Clerk’s Office.

C. MEMBERSHIP: Kansas County Commissioners Association:

-The Commission received an invoice for the 2015 dues for the Kansas County Commissioners Association. Tied closely to the Kansas Association of Counties, this organization is comprised of the Commissioners serving the 105 counties in Kansas. Education, training, partnering and seeking strategic alliances that benefit the interests of County government and its citizens are its core goals. The Commission will determine if they will retain membership in the Association.

D. COUNTY SERVICES: Informational Update:

-Mr. Boeckman will provide the informational report of work completed during the last period. The report, which will be made available to the media, will serve as a public reminder of the services provided by the County on a regular basis.

IV. ENDING BUSINESS – After new items are heard by the Commission, the following items, including announcements, will be heard.

A. ANNOUNCEMENTS:
B.
C. -Following the close of the Agenda Meeting, the Commission will consider the authorization of personnel changes for classified positions, sign any documentation approved during the agenda meeting or sign any other documentation required for regular County business. Similar action may take place throughout the day.

-County officials may attend the Great Bend Chamber Banquet on Saturday, February 21, 2015. The event, held at the Great Bend Convention Center, 3017 W 10th, Great Bend, Kansas, begins with a 6:00 p.m. social, followed by a dinner and program.

D. APPOINTMENTS:
E.
9:45 a.m. or following the close of the Agenda Meeting – Richard Boeckman, County Counselor / Administrator, will discuss regular business.

10:00 a.m. – Equipment Replacement – Phil Hathcock, Solid Waste Director

10:15 a.m. – 2014 Financial Review and Annual Transfers – Jessica Wilson, Financial Officer

10:45 a.m. – Commission Discussion

THE COUNTY EDITION, KVGB-AM – Thursdays at 11:05 a.m. Members of the Health Department are scheduled for February 19, 2015.

V. OTHER BUSINESS:

A. Discussion Items.
B. Citizens or organizations may present requests or proposals for initial consideration.
C. Announce the Commissioners are available to the Public on Mondays during regular business hours.
D. Announce that the Commissioners may, individually, schedule personal appointments related to County business at their discretion.
E. Announce next Regular Meeting at 9:00 a.m., Monday, February 23, 2015.

VI. ADJOURN.

Western Kansas man dies after train collision

train railroad trackCIMARRON- A Kansas man died in an accident just after 12:30 a.m. on Monday in Gray County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1994 Lexus passenger vehicle driven by Lanh T. Tranh, 45, Garden City, was westbound on U.S. 50 three miles east of Cimarron.

The driver lost control due to icy the roadway. The vehicle came to a stop on the railroad tracks where it was struck by the Amtrak train.

Tranh was pronounced dead at the scene and transported Western Plains Regional Hospital Morgue.

Nobody on the train was injured. The train continued after a 2-hour delay.

Kansas teen hospitalized after I-70 collision

Screen Shot 2013-05-26 at 9.27.46 AMELLSWORTH – A Kansas woman was injured in an accident just after 8:30 p.m. on Sunday in Ellsworth County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Ford F150 driven by Danielle R. Sherraden, 18, Plainville, was traveling on Interstate 70 just east of Kansas 156.

The truck was passing a Pontiac passenger vehicle driven by Mandy J. Rowh-Hovis, 36, Wichita, when the driver lost control. The truck struck the Pontiac.

Both vehicles came to rest in the south ditch.

Sherraden was transported to Ellsworth Medical Center.

Rowh-Hovis and a passenger in the Pontiac were not injured.

The KHP reported all were properly restrained at the time of the accident.

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.

Kansas Veterans Praise Passage Of Mental Health Bill

Pres. Obama during last week's signing ceremony
Pres. Obama during last week’s signing ceremony

By ANDY MARSO

Two Kansas soldiers treated for post-traumatic stress disorder after serving in the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan say a bill signed last week by President Barack Obama is a good start in preventing veterans’ suicides.

The Clay Hunt SAV Act, signed into law Thursday, is named for a Texas Marine Corps veteran who took his life after returning from Afghanistan with PTSD.

The bill requires annual independent audits of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs mental health system and creates peer support groups and a loan repayment program for psychiatry students who choose to work in the VA system.

Brandon Garrison, a U.S. Army veteran from Leavenworth treated for PTSD after serving multiple deployments in Afghanistan, says the bill provides much-needed oversight for a system in which the auditing has been done internally.

“It takes that responsibility and puts it into someone else’s hands so you don’t have this big cover-up within the VA,” he says.

Garrison says he got to know some of Hunt’s family while he worked with Team Rubicon, a disaster relief nonprofit founded by Marine veterans. He says the legislation is a fitting tribute.

“I think it’s going to save lives. I really do,” Garrison says.

But he laments how long it took for VA mental health reforms to be enacted when an average of more than 20 veterans a day commit suicide in the United States.

Will Stucker, an Army veteran from Kansas who was wounded in Iraq, echoes those sentiments.

“I am glad that the vets today are going to be getting better treatment, but what about those of us that are still being ignored?” asks Stucker, who had served 10 years when he was hurt in 2005. He was deemed too injured to return to the fight but not injured enough to receive military medical retirement, and has since unsuccessfully petitioned for it several times.

He says he saw parallels in the story of Hunt, who was granted only a minimal disability rating despite his PTSD and was shuffled from one medication to another.

“VA and DBH (Division of Behavioral Health) providers are loaded down with too many patients and red tape,” Stucker says. “The go-to ‘fix-all’ is pills. There is little to no therapy involved. Some of the providers care but (they) are pressured to see more patients, so the quality of care suffers greatly.”

Stucker is studying clinical psychiatry at Emporia State University in the hope of becoming a counselor who can fill a need in a VA system unprepared for the influx of veterans returning with behavioral health issues.

Garrison, who is living with debilitating muscle weakness that he fears was caused by exposure to airborne toxins from his military base burn pit, recently received a service dog courtesy of a North Carolina dog training company and a veterans nonprofit called the Food Industry Serving Heroes, or FISH.

Andy Marso is a reporter for Heartland Health Monitor, a news collaboration focusing on health issues and their impact in Missouri and Kansas.

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