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KSU to honor former Kan. congressman with honorary doctorate

MANHATTAN — Dan Glickman, the former U.S. secretary of agriculture and longtime congressman from Kansas, will receive an honorary doctorate from Kansas State University.

Dan Glickman during his Landon Lecture in 1995-image courtesy KSU

The awarding of the honorary doctorate was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents at its Sept. 20 meeting and is the highest honor Kansas State University can give. Glickman will be presented with the honor at the Graduate School’s fall commencement ceremony at 1 p.m. Friday, Dec. 7, in Bramlage Coliseum.

Glickman was nominated for the recognition by several current and former Kansas State University administrators and faculty members as well as several distinguished colleagues, including Sen. Pat Roberts of Kansas; Peter McPherson, president of the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities; and Dorothy Reddel Caldwell, retired deputy administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service.

“Few individuals can match Dan Glickman’s distinguished record of service to Kansas, the nation and the world, particularly on issues involving food and agriculture, and hunger prevention and food secure communities,” said Charles Taber, university provost and executive vice president. “Through this work, he has helped champion and advance K-State’s longstanding work with global food systems. We are truly pleased to honor him with the university’s highest honor.”

Dan Glickman -courtesy photo

Glickman represented the state’s 4th Congressional District from 1977-1995. During that time, he was a member of the House Agriculture Committee, including six years as chair of the subcommittee with jurisdiction over federal farm policy issues. He also was an active member of the House Judiciary Committee, chair of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and was a leading congressional expert on general aviation policy.

In 1995 Glickman was appointed secretary of agriculture by President Bill Clinton and served in the post until 2001. As secretary, he administered farm and conservation programs; modernized food safety regulations; and forged international trade agreements to expand U.S. markets.

Glickman earned a bachelor’s in history from the University of Michigan and a law degree from the George Washington University Law School. He served as a trial attorney for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission from 1969-1970, and then as a partner in the Wichita law firm Sargent, Klenda and Glickman from 1970-1977. He also was president of the Wichita School Board in 1976.

Since leaving his cabinet post, Glickman has remained active in several organizations involved with agriculture, public health and more. He is a senior fellow at the Council on American Politics, a part of the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University. He also is a senior fellow at the Bipartisan Policy Center, focusing on public health, national security and economic policy issues. He is executive director of the Aspen Institute Congressional Program and senior fellow at the Center on Communication Leadership and Policy at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism. In addition, he is member of the Council on Foreign Relations and Chicago Mercantile Exchange; chair of the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition at the Center for U.S. Global Engagement; and a member of the board of trustees of the National 4-H Council.

As a member of the Meridian Institute, Glickman co-chairs an initiative at the Institute of Medicine on accelerating progress on childhood obesity. He is co-chair of the global agricultural development initiative of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and is a director of Oxfam America Inc. He also served as chair and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of American from 2004-2010, and taught at Harvard University’s School of Government and Institute of Politics from 2002-2004.

Glickman has been a speaker twice for Kansas State University’s prestigious Landon Lecture Series: On Sept. 8, 1995, he presented the lecture “Securing Our Place in the Global Economy,” and on Oct. 21, 2013, he joined five other former secretaries of agriculture for a Landon Lecture panel, “A Conversation With the Secretaries.”

Kan. Board of Regents OKs funding increase for state universities

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Board of Regents has approved an $85 million funding increase for state universities during the next two years.

The request approved Thursday would restore funding cut by the Kansas Legislature in 2009. Lawmakers will have to approve the funding increase.

The request includes $50 million for fiscal year 2020, which begins in July, and an additional $35 million for the fiscal year 2021.

The board’s official budget document will be submitted to the governor and Legislature by Oct. 1.

The state’s current funding of state universities is about $588 million out of a total state general fund budget of $7 billion.t

Kan. man jailed for alleged rape after ramming police cars

HUTCHINSON — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect for alleged sex assault and aggravated burglary.

Starlin -photo KDOC

Just before 8a.m. Thursday, police were dispatched to the Yes Way convenience store located at 1000 West 30th in Hutchinson regarding a “trouble with subject” call, according to a media release.

Once Officers arrived, they discovered 34-year-old Zachary Starlin driving a tan colored Oldsmobile trying to leave the store.

According to police, Starlin intentionally rammed two patrol cars causing minor damage and wrecked into the Yes Way building before he headed eastbound on 30th Street.

Starlin was later located in the area of 4th and Grandview and subsequently taken into custody by two police detectives.

Starlin was arrested for potential charges of rape, aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer, aggravated burglary, felony stalking, felony flee and elude and theft. He was also served with a felony warrant.

According to authorities he allegedly broke into a residence that belonged to a woman with whom he had a prior relationship. He then drove her to the Yes Way store on west 30th.

Starlin has previous convictions for drugs and aggravated assault, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Questions linger about alleged rape of Kan. girl in state custody

The alleged rape of a 13-year-old girl while she was waiting for a foster care placement in May has many asking about consequences for the contractor, responsible that day for both the girl and the 18-year-old accused of assaulting her.

On a Facebook Live session Wednesday, Department for Children and Families secretary Gina Meier-Hummel fielded a question about why the contractor hasn’t been dropped.

A day before, lawmakers promised tough questioning of KVC Kansas officials at this month’s meeting of a task force investigating the Kansas child welfare system.

Kansas privatized its foster care system in the mid-1990s. KVC Kansas handles foster care for the Kansas City area and the eastern part of the state. St. Francis Community Services covers Wichita and western Kansas.

Since privatization, DCF has only penalized a contractor financially once, when Meier-Hummel worked in DCF’s Office of Prevention and Protection Services.

Meier-Hummel said financial repercussions were discussed after the incident at KVC Kansas’ Olathe office, and could still be on the table for a provider failing to meet expectations in child safety. But she said KVC Kansas hasn’t been financially sanctioned for the alleged assault.

That doesn’t mean the contractor couldn’t still stand to lose a lot more money.

The current child welfare contracts run out at the end of June. New four-year grants to manage foster care and family preservation will be awarded in December.

Meier-Hummel said past performance comes into play when the agency is weighing who can be trusted with the state’s kids.

She said that when kids get hurt because of “a lapse in judgment,” as KVC described the social worker leaving youth in the office unattended, that’s one factor that could swing a contract over to a different provider.

Because they’re carrying out the state’s responsibilities to foster kids, contractors are bound by no-eject, no-reject policies — meaning they have to serve every child DCF refers to them.

Taking every child has become complicated as larger numbers of kids have flooded into the foster care system over the past several years. More than 7,000 children are currently in state custody, up from 5,500 in 2013. That’s overloaded capacity and contributed to hundreds of kids sleeping in contractor offices over the past year.

May, the month of the alleged rape, was a peak month for KVC Kansas. It kept 49 kids overnight that month. The contractor then drove that number down to zero, not keeping any kids overnight again until the end of August, when three kids spent the night.

KVC Kansas spokeswoman Jenny Kutz said in an email that keeping children out of offices “is a daily challenge because of a lack of placements in communities.”

DCF and its providers have been working to add beds to the system that can help children with a range of ages and needs. Many of the children who stay in an office overnight are hard to place, often because they’re older, have acute mental health needs or have a history of violent or delinquent behavior.

Meier-Hummel said the agency is also working to divert kids away from the foster care system when it’s safely possible by working with families to connect them with resources and build parenting skills that will allow kids to remain with their parents.

The number of kids in care has been decreasing each month for the past five months, which could point to progress. However, the number of children coming into care will often slow in the summertime as teachers, who are legally required to report abuse, don’t have access to kids.

Madeline Fox is a reporter for the Kansas News Service. You can reach her on Twitter @maddycfox.

Hall of Fame Honors for Eagle Communication’s Phil Grossardt

Phil Grossardt

This year’s Kansas Association of Broadcasters Hall-of-Fame induction ceremony will have a Barton County flavor as the two inductees into this year’s class grew up in central Kansas.

Phil Grossardt and Lance Saylor will be inducted into the Kansas Broadcasting Hall of Fame during the annual convention in Wichita on October 14. Grossardt, a current employee with Eagle Communications in Great Bend, says he is humbled by his induction.

Phil Grossardt Audio

Grossardt is happy that he gets to enter the Hall of Fame will Saylor, who began working at KCKT TV in Great Bend in 1974.

Phil Grossardt Audio

Grossardt, who received the Sonny Slater Award for Service to Station and Community in 2007 from the KAB, currently is an account executive and afternoon drive host on KHOK.

KAB Bio’s

Phil Grossardt

Grossardt began his broadcasting career in 1973 at Barton County Community College and student-operated, KBJC-FM. While at Barton, he worked part-time at KCKT-TV (now KSNC-TV). Grossardt transferred to Kansas State University where he was public service and program director for KSDB-FM, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in Radio-TV in 1977. In 1978, he joined the staff of KSAL-AM in Salina as music director and mid-afternoon air personality. In 1979, Grossardt returned to Barton County for a short stint as program director and morning show host at KHOK-FM and was hired by Barton Community College as director of college communications. In 1984, he returned to KSNC-TV as a commercial production voice and in 1999, he left Barton and was hired by Eagle Communications in Great Bend. From 2001 through 2012, Grossardt was station manager of Hull Broadcasting’s KBGL-FM. He re-joined Eagle in 2013 and today is an account executive and afternoon drive host on KHOK. He received the Sonny Slater Award for Service to Station and Community in 2007.

Lance Sayler

After graduating from Kansas State University in 1974, Sayler went to work for KCKT TV in Great Bend, where he worked in sales, production and news. After a stint at Lisec Advertising in Kansas City, he returned to Great Bend in 1977 to sell advertising for KVGB Radio. In 1985, he put KZXL FM on the air in Great Bend. He owned and managed the station until he sold it in 1990. Lance moved to Pittsburg, Kan., becoming Managing Partner in 1991 of KKOW AM/FM and KBZI FM over the next 12 years.

In 2003, he formed a radio group and became Managing Partner of Southeast Kansas broadcasting which owned, KSNP FM Burlington, KKOY AM/FM, Chanute, KWXD/KHST FM Pittsburg, and KEKS FM, Emporia. Following his entrepreneurial spirit in 2007, Sayler started and managed two radio stations in La Crosse until 2011 when he founded Arrowhead Outdoor LLC where he serves as president. Sayler served as KAB Board Chairman in 1999 and in 2007 received the Mike Oatman Award for Sales Excellence

Distracted Driving forum hosted by Pawnee Valley Campus Foundation

Distracted driving is a national epidemic with nearly one in 10 drivers calling it a habit. Join The University of Kansas Health System Pawnee Valley Campus for their first Community Conversations Forum, Distracted Driving.

According to TeenSafe, distracted driving accounts for approximately 25 percent of all motor vehicle crash fatalities and driver distraction is reported to be responsible for more than 58 percent of teen crashes.

Community Conversations will include a current topic that the hospital’s Foundation hopes sparks a conversation in the community. Amy Schmitt will be one of the guest speakers. Schmitt’s daughter was killed in 2009 in an accident in which her daughter was texting and driving.

Amy Schmitt Audio

The forum is September 27 at the Larned Community Center Auditorium, 1500 Toles Avenue in Larned. The morning will include the guest speakers’ presentations to high school students in Pawnee County and activities that highlight the difficulties of distracted driving.

Jacque Tierce’s daughter was killed this past May after getting into a crash while texting and driving.

Jacque Tierce Audio

The presentation will also be available free to the public in the evening at 6:30 p.m.

Sharon K. Offutt

DEATH NOTICE   

September 17, 2018

Sharon K. Offutt, of Sugar Land, Texas, passed away Sunday, September 16, 2018.  Graveside service will be Friday, September 21, 2018, at 10:00 A.M. at the La Crosse City Cemetery, La Crosse, Kansas.

West Nile Virus Confirmed in Horses in Kansas

The Kansas Department of Agriculture Division of Animal Health has received notification of multiple confirmed cases of West Nile virus (WNV) in horses across the state over the past few weeks. Confirmed cases have been reported in Lyon, Seward, Neosho, Marion and Wichita counties, according to a media release.
In August, the KDHE reported most of Kansas now at high risk for West Nile Virus

WNV is a preventable disease, with annual vaccinations that have proven highly effective. All of the confirmed cases of WNV in Kansas were in unvaccinated horses or horses with an unknown vaccination history so were assumed to be unvaccinated. All horse owners should consult with their local veterinarians and make a vaccination plan for their horses.

WNV is a virus that can infect humans, horses, birds and other species. Horses infected with WNV can have symptoms that range from depression, loss of appetite and fever to severe neurologic signs such as incoordination, weakness, inability to rise, and hypersensitivity to touch or sound. WNV can be fatal in horses. If you see symptoms of WNV in your horse, contact your veterinarian immediately.

The virus is carried and transmitted by mosquitoes; it is not directly contagious from horse to horse or from horse to human. WNV is a reportable disease in Kansas, which means veterinarians are required by law to report any confirmed cases to the State Veterinarian.

For more information about West Nile virus or other animal disease issues in Kansas, go to the KDA Division of Animal Health website 

Labor Day flood caused $17.2M in damage in Manhattan

MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP) — Manhattan City Manager Ron Fehr says a flood over the Labor Day holiday weekend caused $17.2 million in structural damages in the city.

Flood victims rescued in Riley County -photo RCPD

Fehr told the Manhattan City Commission Tuesday that four commercial and eight residential properties suffered substantial damage — meaning more than 50 percent damage from the storm or 25 percent or more damage in successive storms.

Nearly 9 inches of rain fell, causing Wildcat Creek to overflow its banks and forcing more than 300 people to evacuate their homes.

The U.S. Small Business Administration opened a disaster loan outreach center on Tuesday. It will remain open until Sept. 27. Businesses, nonprofits, homeowners and renters can apply for money to help repair or replace their property.

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