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Bill would prevent Kan. schools from promoting some sexual materials

Senator Mary Pilcher-Cook
Senator Mary Pilcher-Cook

By Tomas Hoppough
KU Statehouse Wire Service

TOPEKA – The Senate Committee on Corrections and Juvenile Justice introduced a bill Wednesday that would prevent schools from promoting sexual materials some say can be harmful to minors.

Senate Bill 56 would remove affirmative defense for promoting “harmful material” to minors. Affirmative defense allows defendants to concede the committed alleged acts if there was no illegal intention.

The bill stems from a incident in 2014 when a poster on a Kansas middle school classroom door listed how people expressed their sexual feelings.

“The poster was a big mistake,” said Phillip Cosby of American Family Association of Kansas and Missouri. “We need to protect our kids.”

Sen. Mary Pilcher-Cook (R-Shawnee) said state laws should safeguard the rights of parents to protect their children from harmful material, especially in schools.

“Pornography and obscene materials are becoming more and more prevalent in our society,” Pilcher-Cook said. “It’s all too common to hear of cases where children are not being protected from the harm it inflicts.”

Last year, Pilcher-Cook pushed for a House bill that would require districts to collect signed consent forms from parents if they wanted their child to learn about sexual education. The same sexual feelings poster also instigated that bill.
In 2014, a 13-year-old girl at Hocker Grove Middle School in Shwanee saw the poster on the back of a science classroom door and was “disturbed by it.” The poster listed sexual acts ranging from kissing to vaginal intercourse.

Opponents of the bill introduced Wednesday were not present in the hearing but provided written testimonies. Elise Higgins of Planned Parenthood, in her written testimony said that teachers should not be criminalized for doing their jobs of educating students on sexual health.
Other opponents of SB 56 said the bill is a solution looking for a problem.

“The affirmative defense is not a free pass to break the law and provide harmful materials to minors,” said David Schauner, General Counsel for the Kansas National Education Association. “It is, however, a protection against baseless claims attacking legitimate education programs and curriculum.”

Pilcher-Cook said educators of K-12 children should exercise thoughtful judgment on materials that could be considered offensive. Cosby said that in Kansas, minors lose their protective potency to obscene material the moment a kindergartner enters the school building.

“Times are different now,” Cosby said in his testimony. “We need to have better protection for our kids. Adults have more protection (from obscene material) than kindergartners.”

In response, committee ranking minority member Sen. Pat Pettey (D-Kansas City) said she didn’t agree with Cosby’s statements, then asked how kindergartners have less protection to obscene material than adults. Cosby responded they aren’t doing enough to protect children but did not elaborate.

The committee will continue discussion on SB 56 in mid-February.

Tomas Hoppough is a senior at the University of Kansas from Fairbanks Alaska, and is majoring in journalism.

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Midwest Energy unveils redesigned website

mwe web siteMidwest Energy

Midwest Energy launched a redesigned website Feb. 3, offering visitors an improved experience with an easier-to-navigate layout, and a responsive format that optimizes the site’s appearance for the type of device they are using.

“On the old site, customers using a mobile phone or tablet device would have to zoom in a lot just to read the text,” said Tim Flax, Vice President of Information Technology at Midwest Energy. “Now, the site recognizes whether they’re using a desktop, tablet or mobile device, and serves the appropriate layout view based on screen size.”

Most visitors to the site come to pay their energy bill, search the careers section or research renewable energy information, such as small wind or community solar options. Those areas are all more readily identifiable on the new site, most requiring just one or two clicks to access.

“You’ll have the same functionality regardless of device type, but now you can read the site easily and find what you’re looking for more quickly,” Flax added.

Midwest Energy engaged Lifeboat Creative of Wichita for the site’s redesign, which had last been refreshed in 2008. The site’s address remains the same, www.mwenergy.com.

Kan., Mo. rank in bottom half of states for measles vaccination rates

Screen Shot 2015-02-05 at 6.30.09 AMBy Dan Margolies

With measles making a comeback in the United States after it was thought to have been eradicated 15 years ago, a new analysis finds that fewer than 90 percent of preschoolers nationwide have received the recommended vaccination against measles, mumps and rubella. Both Kansas and Missouri fell below the 90 percent threshold for preschooler vaccinations, the baseline goal set by Healthy People 2020, a federal interagency task force.

The analysis by Trust for America’s Health, a Washington, D.C.-based health policy organization, looked at MMR vaccination rates in all 50 states and found that Kansas and Missouri ranked in the bottom half: Kansas tied for 39th at 89.4 percent and Missouri tied for 35th at 89.8 percent. Health experts say that when vaccination rates drop below 90 percent, there’s a danger that “herd immunity” — the protection afforded a community when a certain percentage of the population is immune to a disease — may be lost.

Communities in which immunity falls beneath that threshold are vulnerable to measles outbreaks.  “We rely on the rest of the herd, the rest of the community to take the vaccines to protect those individuals who cannot take it,” says Lisa Hubbert, an epidemiology specialist with the Kansas City, Mo., Health Department. “And so if the anti-vaxxers choose not to take it — those parents (who) choose not to vaccinate their children — we are putting those who cannot at risk.”

Some individuals can’t take the vaccine because their immune systems are compromised, they’re allergic to ingredients in the vaccine or they’re infants whose immune systems are insufficiently developed.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently issued a health advisory about the measles outbreak, which has been traced to Disneyland in California and so far has afflicted more than 100 individuals in 14 states. Most of those who came down with the disease had not been vaccinated.

Recent measles outbreaks

So far, no measles cases have been reported in Kansas City this year, according to Kansas City, Mo., Health Department spokesman Jeff Hershberger. Last year, there were 22 reported measles cases in Kansas City, Mo. Several dozen people who were exposed were quarantined in their homes and weren’t allowed to leave unless they provided documentary proof that they were vaccinated. Ten of those people came down with measles, “so had we not quarantined them, they would have been working and exposed countless numbers of others,” Hubbert says.

Last summer, measles cases in Wichita were linked to the Kansas City outbreak.  Measles is highly contagious — 90 percent of those not immune to the virus will become infected if exposed to a carrier — and spreads rapidly: One infected person can infect 12 to 18 others. Worldwide, some 20 million people contract the measles and 146,000 die from it every year, according to the CDC.

The CDC recommends that all children get two doses of the MMR vaccine, one at 12 to 15 months of age and the other at 4 to 6 years of age. The vaccine is 95 percent to 97 percent effective and considered safe. Side effects are rare. Health experts attribute the recent outbreak in part to parents who refuse to vaccinate their children because they deem the vaccinations unsafe or because they have religious or philosophical objections.

Some anti-vaccine proponents have linked vaccinations to autism, a widely debunked notion that finds little support in the scientific literature. A 1998 research paper in the Lancet that first made that claim was later deemed fraudulent and withdrawn. The paper’s lead researcher was subsequently stripped of his ability to practice medicine in the United Kingdom. While visiting Kansas City last week,

Dr. Vivek Murthy, the U.S. Surgeon General, said that MMR vaccines were safe and effective. He said there was no evidence it was linked to autism or other developmental disorders. “I want to say that definitively there have been studies which have proven there is no link between the measles vaccine and autism,” Murthy said. “But not everyone has gotten this message, so that’s partly why I’m here out on the road, to talk about the importance of things like immunization.”

Kansas immunization efforts

Kansas has attempted to boost preschooler immunization rates through a program called “Immunize and Win A Prize,” which was begun in 2003.

Under the program, families who timely vaccinate their children up to age 2 receive small prizes and are entered into a drawing for a $300 payment applied to their utility bills. Aimee Rosenow, a spokesperson for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, says a 2010 survey done by the Kansas Foundation for Medical Care found that the program had boosted immunization rates by 78 percent.

KDHE also was a partner in the Immunize Kansas Kids project, which started in 2004 with financial support from the Kansas Health Foundation. (The Kansas Health Foundation is the primary funder of the Kansas Health Institute, which is the parent organization of the editorially independent KHI News Service.)

The project studied barriers to improving the state’s immunization rate and used findings to create a plan to overcome them. Though project funding ended as of 2015, the coalition continues to meet. In its analysis, Trust for America’s Health reported that New Hampshire has the highest MMR vaccination rate for preschoolers, 96.3 percent, while Colorado, Ohio and West Virginia have the lowest, 86 percent.

Nationwide, the organization said, 91.1 percent of preschoolers are vaccinated. It noted, however, that more than 2 million preschoolers don’t receive all recommended vaccinations on time. “It is so important that communities maintain high levels of MMR vaccination — because measles is so infectious — and especially when outbreaks are occurring around them,” Litjen (L.J) Tan, chief strategy officer of the Immunization Action Coalition, said in a news release. “To have pockets where community immunity is below 90 percent is worrisome as they will be the ones most vulnerable to a case of measles exploding into an outbreak.”

 

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

Kan. man charged with murder in girlfriend’s death

Hall
Hall- Wichita Police Dpt. photo

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 22-year-old man is facing criminal charges in the death of his girlfriend, whose body was found in a parked car.

Darnell D. Hall of Wichita made his first court appearance Wednesday afternoon in Sedgwick County District Court. He was charged with one count of second-degree murder and three counts of criminal possession of a weapon by a convicted felon.

Police sought Hall after neighbors reported seeing him carry 23-year-old Sabryna Guerrero-Newman’s body from a home last week. She was found shot to death several hours later inside a dark blue car.

A district judge set bond at $1 million for Hall, who will be represented by the public defender’s office. A message seeking comment was left with the office Thursday.

Former Ellis Co. man dies after I-70 pickup crash

Fatal crashLAWRENCE – A Kansas man died in an accident just before 2 p.m. on Wednesday in Douglas County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Dodge pickup driven by Timothy A. Lang, 50, Perry, was westbound on Interstate 70 just north of Lawrence. The driver lost control of the vehicle on an icy road. It traveled across all lanes and struck a bridge support.

Lang was pronounced dead at the scene.

It is unknown whether Lang was wearing a seat belt according to the KHP

Kan. teacher honored with Milken award, $25K prize

Amy Stanislowski- courtesy photo
Amy Stanislowski- courtesy photo

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A third-grade teacher in Wichita has won a prestigious teaching award that comes with a $25,000 prize.

Dodge Literacy Magnet Elementary School teacher Amy Stanislowski was named a recipient of the Milken Educator Award for Kansas. The Kansas State Department of Education said in a news release that Stanislowski was told about the award this week in a surprise ceremony at the school.

Stanislowski is one of about 40 educators around the country being recognized this year with the distinction.

Stanislowski has been teaching for more than six years. Colleague Melissa Mahan described Stanislowski as “one of the very best teachers in our profession.”

Hackers infiltrate insurer Anthem, access customer details

hackingThe Associated Press

Health insurer Anthem says hackers infiltrated its computer network and accessed a swathe of personal information about current and former customers including their incomes and street addresses.

The company says in a statement that the cyberattack was “very sophisticated.”

It says credit card information wasn’t compromised and so far it has not found evidence that medical information such as insurance claims and test results was targeted or obtained.

Anthem says the FBI is investigating and it has hired Internet security company Mandiant to improve its network defenses.

Information stolen included names, birth dates, social security numbers, street addresses, email addresses and employment details including income.

KU student newspaper to shift to ‘digital first’ circulation

Screen Shot 2015-02-05 at 5.08.31 AMTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The University Daily Kansan is going digital with fewer print editions and more content online.

The University of Kansas’ student newspaper announced Wednesday that it will move to just two printed issues per week, rather than four, starting this fall.

The Kansan has seen its web traffic increase over the past several years, while print circulation has slumped. The Kansan says in a news release that the shift of more content to its website will better serve students and faculty.

The Kansan’s staff decided the move was necessary because of research showing the newspaper’s audience is increasingly consuming news online. The shift also was made to help prepare the student journalists that run the newspaper for today’s media environment.

Williams leads Texas Tech past Kansas St., 64-47

Kansas State’s Brian Rohleder and Texas Tech’s Devaugntah Williams battle for a loose ball during an NCAA college basketball game in Lubbock, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015. (Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, Tori Eichberger/Associated Press)
Kansas State’s Brian Rohleder and Texas Tech’s Devaugntah Williams battle for a loose ball during an NCAA college basketball game in Lubbock, Texas, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015. (Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, Tori Eichberger/Associated Press)

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) – Devaugntah Williams scored 22 points to lead Texas Tech to a 64-47 win against Kansas State on Wednesday night.

Both offenses struggled exiting halftime, as the Kansas State (12-11, 5-5 Big 12) scored just two points over the first 5:20 and the Red Raiders needed 3:50 to make their first field goal of the half. The Wildcats, who trailed 34-26 at the break, heated up, however, trimming their deficit to one, 45-44, when Stephen Hurt hit a 3-pointer with 7:50 remaining.

The Red Raiders (12-11, 2-8 Big 12) responded with a 14-0 run over 2:46 to build a 59-44 lead with 2:28 left and ice the game.

Kansas State sophomore Marcus Foster was suspended for the game due to a violation of team rules. He entered as the team’s leading scorer, averaging 14 points per game.

Thomas Gipson scored 13 points to lead the Wildcats in Foster’s absence.

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