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No smoke detector: 2 escape Kansas house fire

Friday fire in Hutchinson-photo courtesy Hutchinson Fire Dept.

HUTCHINSON – Fire officials are investigating the cause of a Friday night house fire.

Just after 9:30 p.m., the Hutchinson Fire Department responded to 336 South Lorraine for a report of a house on fire, according to a media release.

Arriving units encountered heavy fire and smoke coming from the single-story home. Crews then proceeded with an aggressive interior attack.

Battalion Chief Rex Albright says that due to a quick response, crews were able to contain the fire to the front portion of the home.

Two people were home at the time of the incident and both were able to escape with no injuries. There wasn’t a working smoke detector in the home.

The home is deemed uninhabitable and the fire remains under investigation.

Audits Reveal Bumpy Road For Kansas Driver’s License IT Project

A decade after Kansas unveiled plans to migrate its driver’s license records from an aged mainframe to modern information technology infrastructure, the effort remains incomplete and, auditors say, troubled.

Now five-and-a-half years past the original completion deadline — a goal that has moved repeatedly — legislative auditors revealed in a report published July 31 that ongoing woes could cause the KanDrive project to miss yet another “go live” date, while also going above its original $40 million budget.

Read auditors’ most recent IT Project Monitoring Report.

Auditors fear, too, for the quality of the final IT product. They cited a February technical review that found gaps in code, limited functionality and existing features that “required workarounds to function.”

More than five years past its original deadline, an information technology project to migrate Kansas driver’s license records to a new system remains incomplete and troubled, auditors say.
SUSIE FAGAN / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

Officials at the Kansas Department of Revenue told auditors that “significant” progress has been made on fixing bugs and that they remain committed to lifting the curtain on the project at the start of 2018.

Lisa Kaspar, the department’s director of vehicles, told a panel of lawmakers receiving the audit results last month that development will be done in time to test the system this fall.

She described private contractor MorphoTrust, a company that specializes in ID services, as the project’s “main risk” and said her team is communicating with MorphoTrust weekly.

“We are holding them very accountable,” Kaspar said. “They did have some delays. We are now back on track with them. I mean, not to the original dates, but we are comfortable that we’ll still be able to go live with our system on Jan. 3.”

The issue of accountability is a sensitive one because past reviews found the department didn’t hold another contractor, 3M, to its commitments or obtain related financial penalties from that company.

Audits indicate MorphoTrust has missed at least two major deadlines. In the most recent case, it delivered equipment “that is not working properly.”

MorphoTrust did not respond to a request for comment.

The Department of Revenue declined to make officials available for an interview ahead of this story.

“We are building strategies for the impending rollout,” spokeswoman Rachel Whitten said. “We are not ready to discuss it publicly at this time.”

‘Critical’ infrastructure

At issue, according to auditors, is one of the Department of Revenue’s “most critical systems” — a platform tracking the driving records of 2 million people that must at all times be accessible to law enforcement agencies.

Plans to migrate the Kansas driver’s license system and other records solidified in 2007 as the DMV Modernization Project. In 2009, 3M landed a contract for the work, worth $25 million of the total $40 million Kansas planned to spend. To help pay for it, the state tacked a $4 fee onto prices Kansans paid at their local treasurer’s offices for vehicle registrations.

Snags in the project began early and persisted past its 2012 deadline. Flawed work by contractors bedeviled it, but independent reviewers also found evidence of problems with project management, office culture, staffing and leadership.

And in the midst of it all, a 2014 audit found that regularly scheduled third-party reviews of the project were discontinued in violation of state policy. Quarterly updates to lawmakers were misleading and incomplete, the audit said, preventing them from knowing the extent of the problems as the project fell year after year behind.

Sen. Laura Kelly, a Topeka Democrat, called for the 2014 audit.

“I wanted to know what had gone wrong,” she recalled.

Kelly remains concerned that a pattern of poor planning and project management, combined with under-resourcing, may be dogging the state’s IT efforts. Though IT can be complex and arcane, the process deserves public scrutiny, she said earlier this month.

“So much government service now is done through technology,” said Kelly, a lawmaker since 2005 who sits on the Legislature’s audit committee. “We have no choice but to keep our eyes on it.”

Issues with other IT projects

The project isn’t the only state IT effort that has sparked concern. Glitches and delays plagued the state’s rollout of a pricey Medicaid enrollment platform known as the Kansas Eligibility Enforcement System in recent years. That system is still causing headaches, the Wichita Eagle recently reported, as the state moves to integrate welfare processing next week — years behind schedule.

Separately, the state’s aborted 2013 attempt to wean four state agencies off an IBM mainframe with an in-house IT infrastructure project called GovCloud led to millions of dollars in equipment sitting unused in the basement of Docking State Office Building.

In December, auditors released results of a three-year check into IT security at 20 Kansas agencies that store sensitive information. They found substantive problems at most of them, including unsecure websites and unpatched vulnerabilities that could open the door to hackers.

Then, this spring, hackers took advantage of a coding weakness in a data system within the Kansas Department of Commerce to gain access to 5.5 million Social Security numbers from 10 states.

The cost to taxpayers of the data breach remains unclear. Kansas is on the hook to pay for free credit monitoring for the victims, but the state has redacted pricing information from documents provided to the Kansas News Service — and hasn’t answered questions about whether it has any insurance that will help cover the expense.

Representatives of the Kansas Office of Information Technology Services, under the Office of the Governor, declined to comment on whether there are any overarching problems, such as under-resourcing or poor project management, hurting the state’s IT functions. They deferred comment to the agencies involved in the troubled projects.

However, the office’s 2016-2017 strategic plan lays out a number of issues that need to be addressed, including that IT infrastructure and support are isolated by agency and that infrastructure is out of date. The plan describes the current situation as “fraught with risk” and points to “incidents demonstrating significant data security exposures.”

History of problems

Because of the history of problems with the modernization of the driver’s license database, the Legislature’s auditing staff members now review the project on an ongoing basis, updating lawmakers four times a year.

The 2014 audit came after phase one of the DMV Modernization Project — a revamped vehicle title and registration platform — went live in 2012. That launch, 10 months behind schedule, led to hours-long lines for Kansans trying to update their tags in some counties.

Swamped county treasurers brought in extra staff or even closed doors to catch up on backlogged applications.

Rep. Don Schroeder, another member of the Legislature’s audit committee, said he could accept the delays in the implementation of the driver’s license portion of the project if the state has been fixing the bugs to ensure a solid product. The Hesston Republican wants to avoid a repeat of phase one’s rocky launch.

“That’s my biggest concern,” said Schroeder, a lawmaker since 2007. “Just hoping it doesn’t become something like that.”

The 2014 audit estimated counties spent more than $2 million on overtime and other expenses triggered by the 2012 rollout — even though the state had initially predicted it would cost them nothing.

Auditors turned up other concerns, too. They said Kansas paid out 90 percent of the 3M contract before finally canceling it in May 2014. The company had not delivered on key elements of the contract when the work was canceled, according to auditors. (Officials with 3M declined to speak to auditors.)

At the time, Department of Revenue officials said the remaining work would be finished in-house by November 2015, and that it would cost about $2 million.

That didn’t happen. Instead, the project was closed and relaunched as KanDrive, with a $6 million projected price tag.

After Sam Williams was appointed revenue secretary in late 2016, he ordered an independent review that found multiple problems and concluded KanDrive was at risk of missing its deadline and running out of money. The agency moved to reduce the project’s scope and restructure its team.

The project will again go through the bureaucratic hoops to be closed and relaunched with a new name: KanLicense.

In a letter to lawmakers in response to the audit, Williams signaled commitment to the Jan. 3, 2018, deadline and said he has hired a chief information officer to help.

“Although the scope was changed,” he told lawmakers, “the KanDrive project will still have major benefits provided to the Division of Vehicles.”

Auditors expressed appreciation for the department’s efforts to address the KanDrive problems, but they see continued risks for the project’s quality and for further delays.

They were concerned, too, about the project’s overall cost.

Changes to project scope and structure “made it impossible for us to evaluate whether changes in the project’s cost estimates are appropriate,” the auditors wrote.

In 2014 auditors estimated that Kansas had spent $37 million of the original $40 million budgeted for the DMV Modernization Project, including the unanticipated costs to counties in 2012.

Estimates for finishing the project range from $8 million to $10 million in their latest report.

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ.

Kansas man hospitalized after Ellsworth Co. motorcycle accident

ELLSWORTH COUNTY — A Kansas man was injured in an accident just after 7p.m. Friday in Ellsworth County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2015 BMW Motorcycle driven by Jesse C. Goetz, 37, Ellsworth, was eastbound on Interstate 70 six miles east of Wilson in the right lane.

The motorcycle struck a 2015 Dodge Ram pickup pulling a trailer that was slowing with emergency hazards lights on.

Goetz was transported to the hospital in Salina. The driver of the pickup Vincente C. Conley, Cushing, OK., was not injured.
Goetz was wearing a helmet, according to the KHP.

2 Kansas men jailed after prostitution sting

Worthen-photo Lyon Co.

LYON COUNTY -Law enforcement authorities are investigating two suspect for alleged prostitution.

On Wednesday, detectives with the Lyon County Sheriff’s Department and the Emporia Police Department Narcotics Unit conducted a sting for prostitution. Through the course of the investigation they identified 2 suspects, according to a  media release.

Officers arrested Timothy Worthen, 48, Emporia, for the selling of sexual relations.

On Thursday, police arrested John Potter, 33,  Allen, KS, was arrested for the selling of sexual relations, possession of methamphetamine, possession of marijuana, possession of

Potter- photo Lyon Co.

paraphernalia, child endangerment, and use of telecommunications in drug transaction.

Kim Ringwald wins new 2017 Chevy Cruze

Kim Ringwald checks out her new ride with Rob Dove from Dove Chevrolet Buick Cadillac at Jack Kilby Square

Kim Ringwald says she really doesn’t plan her days. Instead, she leaves it to the man upstairs to determine what kind of day it will be. The big guy took really good care of her Friday night at Jack Kilby Square. Kim was the winner of a brand new Chevy Cruze Hatch from Dove Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac in the Chevy Cruze summer promtion from Eagle Radio and Hull Broadcasting. After she won the 2017 Chevy Cruze, Ringwald talked about what she was feeling when she was on the stage as part of the final 10 finalists.

Kim Ringwald Audio

After the night began with 100 finalists, it came down to just two, Ringwald who is from Great Bend and fellow bender Mandy Stansfield. Stansfield’s ping pong number 80 was the next ball taken from the machine leaving Ringwald’s lucky number 87 the last ball left which made her a winner of the new car, a vehicle that she says is much needed.

Kim Ringwald Audio

Josh Holoska ended up in third place.

The Chevy Cruze Craze was also made possible by Northview Nursery and Landscape and Farmers Bank and Trust.

Chevy Cruze Craze finalists check in.
Finalists hope their ball will be the last one out of the machine.
Chevy Cruze Craze Presenting Sponsors, Chad Lagerman with Northview Nursery, Craig Neeland with Farmers Bank & Trust and Rob Dove with Dove Chevrolet Buick Cadillac join Eagle Radios Phil Grossardt and Randy Goering on Stage
The Cruse Craze Giveaway

Kansas man jailed for threatening woman in her home

Joshua Capsey – Saline County Jail booking photo

SALINE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect after an alleged altercation with a woman in her home.

According to Salina Police Capt. Paul Forrester Joshua Gene Capsey, 40, Salina, went to the woman’s residence on the 2000 block of Oxford to gather some personal items. The woman has had problems with Capsey in the past and attempted to prevent him from entering the home.

An argument ensued after Capsey made it into the home and began taking a shower.

During the course of the argument, Capsey allegedly pushed the woman into the kitchen stove, choked her and threatened to kill her. While this was occurring, she urged her 11-year-old daughter to call the authorities, according to Forrester.

Capsey allegedly took the woman’s cellphone and fled before police arrived. Authorities issued an attempt to locate for Capsey’s white Chevy Silverado.

Just after 7p.m., Abilene police arrested Capsey and he was booked into the Saline County Jail for aggravated domestic battery, aggravated intimidation of a witness and theft.

Great Bend City Council special meeting cancelled with four no-shows

Aug. 18, 2017 special Great Bend City Council meeting.

Not a single Great Bend City Council member that voted to suspend Great Bend Police Chief Cliff Couch showed up at Friday’s special meeting, causing the meeting to be cancelled for insufficient numbers to conduct business.

Council member Dana Dawson sent a letter to Mayor Mike Allison Thursday to conduct a special session to discuss the city’s job vacancies that was approved by Allison for Friday night.

When 5:30 p.m. rolled around, only four members were present, one short of the needed quorum to conduct the meeting at the Great Bend Events Center. Dawson expressed his disappointment in the council members that did not show up, especially Joel Jackson, who said earlier that he would be there.

Dana Dawson Audio


The agenda included the election of a new council president, following council member Wayne Henneke’s resignation from the board Thursday. The special meeting was to also address vacancies in key administrative and executive positions and the possibility of a forensic audit on the City of Great Bend.

Along with Jackson; Vicki Berryman, Allene Owen, and Allison did not show up for the meeting. Dawson says he has not spoken to Owen or Berryman since problems with the Police Department publicly surfaced on June 5, 2017. As for Jackson, Dawson was frustrated that the council member failed to notify them of his absence. It was said that Jackson claimed he was with a work client and would not make the meeting.

Dana Dawson Audio


Dawson, Mike Boys, Cory Zimmerman, and Brock McPherson were at Friday’s meeting, all of which voted to have Couch reinstated at the August 7 meeting. Jackson, Owen, and Berryman all voted to keep the suspension. The next regularly scheduled council meeting is Monday, August 21, but it remains to be seen if any discussion of these matters will be allowed to be brought up since they are not on Monday’s agenda.

Couch was suspended with pay July 24 following multiple executive sessions discussing Couch’s claims of misconduct and unethical procedures from City Administrator Howard Partington and Allison. Hundreds of citizens showed up again Friday night only to quickly realize the meeting would not happen because of the no-shows.

Couch did not know how the Wednesday resignation of Partington affects his case, but stated he and his attorney are just working to get him reinstated and back to work at the moment. Couch mentioned there is no date confirmed for his hearing and chance of rebuttal to his suspension, but tentatively September 5 is the date.

Family mourns mother, daughter killed in Kansas shooting

Erin and Mazey -Photo courtesy Warren-McElwain

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — The family of a mother and daughter killed in a double murder-suicide near Lawrence is planning a celebration of life for the two.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports 36-year-old Erin Berg and her 3-year-old daughter Mazey Berg were found dead Sunday. Police say Mazey’s father, 41-year-old Peter Sander, fatally shot them and himself.

Berg’s family is planning a celebration of life for the mother and daughter Saturday in Lawrence. Their obituary says their deaths are the result of “a senseless act of domestic violence.”

Berg’s mother, Kim Thomason, says her daughter and Sander never married but shared custody of Mazey. Thomason says Sander had been mentally and emotionally abusive but that he had never physically abused Mazey or her mother beforehand.

She says Berg was empathetic and genuine.

Sen. Roberts: Protecting nation’s food supply needs to be priority

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Two U.S. senators from Kansas and Missouri say an emphasis on protecting the nation’s food supply has waned since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and it’s time to make the issue a priority again.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Democrat from Missouri, and Sen Pat Roberts, a Kansas Republican, met Friday with government, education and private officials involved in ensuring the nation is prepared to protect food, agriculture and livestock from terrorism and infectious diseases.

McCaskill and Roberts stressed that the nation’s food supply is still the safest in the world and they were not reacting to any imminent threat. But Roberts, who leads the Senate Agriculture Committee, says the nation and media’s focus often shifts to other problems and it’s important to “ramp up” agriculture protection efforts again.

Worker killed in accident at Kansas demolition site

First responders on the scene of Friday’s fatal accident-photo courtesy KAKE

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say one person has died in an industrial accident at a building demolition site in north Wichita.

The incident happened around 1:40 p.m. Friday when debris fell on the worker. Firefighters responding to the call say the dead worker was trapped under the debris. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

Further details were not immediately available.

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