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Police chief removed immediately; Great Bend appoints replacements for many vacancies

Jolene Biggs (center) appointed to serve the remainder of Wayne Henneke’s Ward 2 seat at the Sept. 18, 2017 meeting.

The City of Great Bend started plugging in replacements to fill vacancies on the city staff Monday night at City Hall. The Great Bend City Council approved motions to appoint a new fire chief, interim city administrator, and open city council seat.

The main position that was not replaced was police chief after Cliff Couch announced his resignation last week in a lengthy press release.

Mayor Dr. Mike Allison did make a motion to amend the agenda to remove Couch from work immediately.

Mike Allison Audio

Couch submitted his resignation last week to go into effect October 15. The motion to remove Couch immediately with continued pay until October 15 passed 7-0.

Couch was suspended with pay July 24, for among other reasons, not following an order from city administration according to the notice. The police chief was eventually reinstated September 5, but his press release stated a “target on his back” and the acceptance of another job made him decide to submit his resignation.

The city council also approved Captain Luke McCormick to take over as Fire Chief at the Great Bend Fire Department. Council member Allene Owen and Allison mentioned there were three worthy internal candidates that applied for the spot.

Allene Owen & Mike Allison Audio

 

Luke McCormick was appointed Great Bend Fire Chief at Monday’s Great Bend City Council meeting.

McCormick replaces Mike Napolitano after Napolitano’s retirement went into effect September 1. Napolitano spent 43 years with the Great Bend Fire Department.

With council member Wayne Henneke’s resignation on August 17, the city had 60 days to find a replacement to fill the remainder of his term. The city council approved the appointment of Jolene Biggs to take over the Ward 2 position until the end of the year. Biggs is also running for the council seat in the upcoming election along with Rachel Mawhirter and Matt Suchy.

The council also approved George Kolb as interim city administrator for no longer than six months. Kolb was the city manager in Wichita from 2004 to 2008. Kolb most recently spent a year as Interim City Administrator in Valley Center. He also has stints in Wentzville, MO; Surprise, AZ; Augusta, GA; Richmond, VA; Saginaw, MI; Albion, MI, and Jackson, MI in similar positions. Kolb will start October 9 with a salary of $2,100 per week or just over $50,000 for the six months. Great Bend City Attorney Bob Suelter says this will give the new governing body after the elections a chance to select their permanent city administrator before Kolb’s contract ends, a process that may take 2-3 months.

Kolb takes over for Howard Partington. Partington retired August 16, citing the harassment of a malicious minority during the Chief Couch saga as the reason after 36 years in the position.

Officials await autopsy result after Kan. man dies in grain elevator accident

ADM elevator in Haskell County-google image

HASKELL COUNTY —Officials are waiting for autopsy results after the death of a Kansas man in a grain elevator accident.

Just after 3:30p.m. Thursday, the Haskell County Sheriff’s Office received a 911 call that an employee was trapped in a grain elevator at the Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) facility, 1892 U.S. Highway 83 in Haskell County, according to a media release.

First responders determined that 2 ADM employees were in a grain silo trying to remove another employee who was entrapped in grain within the silo.  Efforts to remove the 25-year-old Javier Trejo, 25, Liberal, were unsuccessful.

Just after 6:00p.m. officials pronounced Trejo dead at the scene. An autopsy is going to be performed.

The Gray County Fire Department and Grant County Fire Departments assisted at the scene according to the sheriff’s department.

Civil Air Patrol officer reinstated after saying Kan. Rep. should ‘swing from a tree’

State Representative 19th District- Stephanie Clayton

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A lieutenant colonel in the Kansas’ Civil Air Patrol who resigned his command after posting on Facebook that a state lawmaker should “swing from a tree” has chosen not to resume participation in the volunteer organization after being cleared to do so.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that Col. Linette Lahan, commander of the Kansas Wing of the Civil Air Patrol, says Jonathan Holder is “not active.”

The Civil Air Patrol conducts emergency searches. Holder had led a squadron at the based at the Kansas National Guard Armory in Emporia.

The dispute stems from a Facebook post saying that Republican Rep. Stephanie Clayton of Overland Park ought to die for introducing what he considers an unconstitutional bill to block carrying of concealed handguns on college campuses.

Young, Low-Income Kansans More Likely To Be Uninsured

BY JIM MCLEAN 

Low-income Kansans are less likely to have health insurance than their counterparts in other states, according to an analysis of new data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

The uninsured rate among Kansans living below the federal poverty level has been worse than the national rate for many years. But the gap has widened in recent years, mainly because of the state’s rejection of Medicaid expansion, said Robert St. Peter, president and CEO of the nonpartisan Kansas Health Institute.

In Kansas, younger or low-income adults are less likely to have health insurance than their counterparts in other states, according to new data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
COURTESY KANSAS HEALTH INSTITUTE

“Since 2014 when many states expanded Medicaid, which of course is targeted to low-income families, the gap between Kansas and the rest of the country has actually increased,” St. Peter said.

In 2014 — the first year of the Affordable Care Act’s coverage expansion — the national uninsured rate for families living below the poverty line was 21.3 percent, compared to 24.6 percent in Kansas. In 2016, the national rate dropped to 16 percent. The Kansas rate also declined, but only to 22 percent.

The 2016 poverty threshold was annual income of $11,880 for individuals and $24,300 for a family of four.

Efforts to expand Medicaid coverage to low-income families earning up to about a third more than the poverty level — $16,040 for an individual and $32,718 for a family of four — gained traction in the 2017 session of the Kansas Legislature. Lawmakers passed an expansion plan but failed by a few votes to override Gov. Sam Brownback’s veto of the bill.

The recent failure by Republicans in the U.S. Congress to repeal the ACA has expansion supporters in Kansas gearing up for another attempt when the 2018 legislative session convenes in January.

The latest U.S. Census numbers show Kansans losing ground in other areas as well.

Prior to implementation of the ACA, young adults in Kansas were more likely to have health coverage than 19- to 25-year-olds across the country.

“Now, young adults in Kansas are slightly more likely to be uninsured than young adults in the rest of the country,” St. Peter said.

In 2009, the national uninsured rate for young adults stood at 31.7 percent, compared to 26.8 percent in Kansas. But Kansas lost its advantage in 2016 when the decline in its rate to 15.7 percent was exceed by a drop in the national rate to 14.1 percent.

“This isn’t unique to Kansas,” St. Peter said. “I think all of the states that haven’t expanded Medicaid are seeing similar trends.”

Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have expanded eligibility for their Medicaid programs. Kansas is among 19 states that haven’t.

Although rejection of Medicaid expansion is the main reason uninsured rates in Kansas and other non-expansion states are declining more slowly, there are other factors, St. Peter said, explaining that some states led by governors opposed to the ACA didn’t do as much as others to help people eligible for subsidies purchase insurance in the Obamacare marketplace.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Editor’s note: The Kansas Health Foundation, one of several regional health foundations that provide funding to the Kansas News Service, is also the primary funder of the Kansas Health Institute. 

Patient charged in fatal stabbing of Kansas psychiatrist

Dutt-photo Sedgwick Co.

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A patient of a psychiatrist stabbed to death in the alley behind his holistic practice in Kansas has been charged with first-degree murder.

Twenty-one-year-old Umar Dutt made his first court appearance Monday in the Sept. 13 death of Achutha Reddy at the Holistic Psychiatry Services clinic in Wichita. He is being held on a $1 million bond.

His attorney Kurt Kerns says the case is complex and sad.

An attorney for Dutt’s family released a statement offering their condolences to the doctor’s family for their loss. Raj and Azra Dutt say their family has also suffered and will continue to suffer “the terrible toll and consequences of mental illness.”

His next court appearance is set for Oct. 3.

Kansas mail carrier going to prison for theft of cash, gift cards

WICHITA —A former mail carrier in Sheridan County was sentenced Monday to six months in prison for stealing mail he was supposed to deliver, according to U.S. Attorney Tom Beall.

The defendant was ordered to pay $4,000 in restitution.

James N. Stephenson, 25, formerly of Hoxie, Kan., and now living in Basehor, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of mail theft. In his plea, he admitted the crime occurred while he was employed at the Post Office in Hoxie, Kan. He stole mail containing cash, gift cards and prepaid debit cards. He said he looked for birthday and anniversary cards that were likely to contain items of value.

After serving his sentence, Stephenson will spend two years on supervised release.

Police: 1-year-old Kansas boy hospitalized after left in bathtub

First responders on the scene of Sunday’s incident in Wichita-photo courtesy KWCH

SEDGWICK COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a drowning.

Just after 3pm. Sunday, first responders were dispatched to a drowning at an apartment in the 2400 Block of South Woodlawn, according to officer Charlie Davidson.

An investigation revealed a 24-year-old man was giving a bath to a 1-year-old and a 3-year-old in a tub in a second-floor bathroom.  The children were left alone in the tub while the man stepped into an adjacent shower. One of the children was able to turn the water back on and the tub overflowed.

The one-year-old was found face down in the water and transported to an area hospital in critical condition, according to Davidson.

There was also a 22-year-old woman, a 20-year-old man and two other small children in the home at the time of the incident.

How over-seeding can help your bare or thin cool season lawn

Homeowners who have thin spots in their cool-season lawns can thicken those up by over-seeding in the fall. To succeed with that however, one needs to closely follow certain guidelines and procedures. That’s according to K-State horticulturist Ward Upham who says there are three keys things to remember when over-seeding your lawn. The first is having the proper seeding rate.

Ward Upham Audio

Another key to a successful over-seeding project is to make sure the seed is making good contact with the soil.

Ward Upham Audio

Soil preparation is also very important. Upham says before you begin to seed, you should make sure soil moisture is 6-8 inches deep. Once the seed is down, that means keeping the soil moist but not water logged, watering at least twice per day and even more if it is a windy day.

When over-seeding, you may find it necessary to apply a starter fertilizer before or directly after seeding. This is especially true if a soil test says your soil phosphorus is low.

David Duane McCullum

PENDING FUNERAL NOTICE

David Duane McCullum, 43, passed away Sunday September 17, 2017 in Medford, Oklahoma, service will be held at a later date and will be announced by Bryant Funeral Home. Cremation has taken place.

Mildred E. Meitner

Dateline: Great Bend, Kansas 

Mildred E. Meitner, 105, just 14 days before her 106th birthday passed away September 16, 2017 at River Bend Assisted Living. She was born in Friend Nebraska September 30, 1911 the daughter of Louis G. and Christine (Steffensen) Andersen.

Graduating from Lincoln General School of Nursing in 1938, she worked 40 years as a nurse in Nebraska, Los Angeles, California and CKMC of Great Bend. While working in California she met and married Eugene F. Meitner January 25, 1942 in Yuma, Arizona. She moved with her husband to Kansas in 1950 to farm in rural Olmitz. He preceded her in death June 25, 1993.

Survivors include her son, Gary Meitner and his wife Penny of Great Bend, grandchildren, Troy Meitner (April) and Wes Meitner (Angela) of Great Bend, Paula Fritschen (Steve), Christina Andrews (Kerry) both of Dorrance, Kansas; thirteen great grandchildren and six great great- grandchildren. She was preceded by an infant daughter Kathleen in 1945 and sister Gertrude Bjerre in 1968.

Visitation will be 9:00 am until 9:00 pm Tuesday, September 19, 2017 with an Altar Society rosary at 4:00 pm and an vigil at 7:00 pm, all at Bryant Funeral Home. Mass of Christian burial will be 10:30 am Wednesday, September 20, 2017 at St Patrick Church with Father Ted Stoecklein officiating. Interment will be at St Ann Cemetery, Olmitz, KS.

Memorials have been established with the Barton Community College Nursing Program or The Golden Belt Humane Society, or Great Bend Community Theatre, in care of Bryant funeral Home.                                                                                                                          

Condolences may be sent and notice viewed at www.bryantfh.net

                        Arrangements by      Bryant Funeral Home            1425 Patton Road        Great Bend, Kansas     67530

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