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FAA officially approves grant to help replace Great Bend’s runway

Runway to be reconstructed at Great Bend Municipal Airport. The blue line marks the FAA approved portion and the yellow line marks the state requested portion for financial help.

When an estimated budget was constructed in November of 2017, the City of Great Bend believed repairing the runway at the Great Bend Municipal Airport was going to cost $1.1 million for the City’s share, and more than $11.1 million total. Airport Manager Martin Miller told the Great Bend City Council the city’s share will be well under that estimate, down to $837,133.

The Council approved the Federal Aviation Administration’s offer of funding 90 percent of 5,500 feet of the primary runway 17/35.

Miller says the replacement project will include asphalt, constructed by Venture Corporation.

Martin Miller Audio

The runway will include 5 inches of asphalt, on top of 10 inches of subgrades, on top of one foot of stabilized soil. Four major general contractors had plans for the job, with Venture being selected. Burns & McDonnell was chosen to handle the supervision of the project.

Miller expected the replacement to get started next spring with 310 days of contracted time to finish the job. The construction could hurt traffic coming in and out of Great Bend, but Miller says there will always be one runway option open during the process.

Martin Miller Audio

The total length of the runway is 7,851 feet, with the remaining 2,351 not covered by the FAA grant planned to come from Kansas Department of Transportation assistance. KDOT would cover 90 percent of the $550,102 of the northern portion, costing the City $55,010.

The effort to preserve the length of the runway will keep Great Bend’s runway one of the longest in the state.

In other Great Bend City Council news from Sept. 4…

– Hank Denning with the SRCA Dragstrip addressed the council regarding establishing a maintenance fund to replace the dragstrip. Denning expected to get two more years of use out of the current track that was placed in 2000. The Council and administration said they will look into the idea.

– Kid’s Ag Day on Wednesday has been moved to the Great Bend Expo Complex because of the rain.

– City Administrator Kendal Francis stated he will host “Kendal’s Coffee” sessions where he will be available to the public to talk with him about concerns or thoughts on the city. The first coffee session is scheduled for October 12 from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. at Perk’s Coffee Shop. Francis expected to host these gatherings quarterly throughout the year.

– The Council voted 4-3 to approve two additional paid holidays for employees (adding Christmas Eve and Presidents Day) and increased structure for vacation days.

Sentencing delayed for Kan. day care worker in baby’s death

EUDORA, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas home day care worker who was convicted in the death of a 9-month-old baby is seeking a new trial.

Buchhorn-photo Douglas County

44-year-old Carrody Buchhorn was scheduled to be sentenced Friday. She was convicted in July of unintentionally but recklessly causing the death of Oliver “Ollie” Ortiz, of Eudora, on Sept. 29, 2016, at the Sunshine Kids Group Daycare Home in Eudora.

Buchhorn has a new legal team that is trying to get her a new trial. Douglas County District Court Judge Sally Pokorny rescheduled Buchhorn’s sentencing for Oct. 18 to allow time for her new attorneys to file their motion for a new trial and the state to file its response.

Since her conviction, Buchhorn has been in jail without bond.

Lawsuit: Urgent care doctor in Kan. responsible for leg amputation

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas City area man has filed a lawsuit alleging that a trip to an urgent care clinic for a foot wound led to gangrene and a leg amputation.

Trenton Twidwell filed the lawsuit last month against Kristin Duncan, the doctor he saw at the CareNow urgent care clinic in Overland Park.

The lawsuit alleges that Duncan diagnosed Twidwell with a common infection called cellulitis in August 2017. The lawsuit alleges Duncan prescribed ineffective antibiotics, never cultured the wound and didn’t order any lab work.

The suit says Twidwell developed gangrene and sepsis just weeks later, leading to a below-knee amputation.

The newspaper was unable to reach Duncan for comment. A CareNow employee says she no longer works there.

Kansas man accused of DUI in fatal hit and run crash

SEDGWICK COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities are investigating a fatal, Labor Day hit and run crash and have a suspect in custody.

Carpenter -photo Sedgwick County

Investigators determined a 2005 Ford Freestar driven by 34-year-old Monte Carpenter of Wichita was southbound on McClain Street in Wichita just after 3p., according to officer Charley Davidson.

It is believed Carpenter ran the red light at 31st Street and stuck an eastbound 2003 Buick Century driven by Marsha Oglesby, 56, Wichita.

She was pinned in the vehicle and later transported to an area where she died, according to Davidson.

McClain fled the crash on foot. With the help of local citizens, police found and arrested him.  He was booked for involuntary manslaughter, hit and run, driving under the influence and driving with a suspended license, according to Davidson,

Carpenter has previous convictions for DUI and theft, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Wednesday Weather

Wednesday
Showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm before 1pm, then a chance of showers and thunderstorms between 1pm and 4pm, then a chance of showers after 4pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 80. Southwest wind 7 to 11 mph becoming northeast in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 70%.
Wednesday Night
A chance of showers, with thunderstorms also possible after 7pm. Cloudy, with a low around 63. Northeast wind 9 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 40%.
Thursday
A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 73. North northeast wind around 9 mph.
Thursday Night
A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a low around 62.
Friday
A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high near 76.
Friday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 61.
Saturday
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 78.
Saturday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Sunday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 82.
Sunday Night
A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 62.
Monday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 83.
Monday Night
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.
Tuesday
Sunny, with a high near 85.

Lady Cougars blow past Dodge

Barton’s Kaila Harris sets the attack

bartonsports.com – The Barton Community College volleyball team opened up Jayhawk Conference play Monday evening at the Barton Gym with a swift sweep over Dodge City Community College 25-13, 25-11, and 25-18.

The victory improves Barton to 1-4 on the early season as the Conquistadors are still searching for their first victory in falling to 0-6. The Cougars will next travel to No. 17 Hutchinson Community College (1-3) on Wednesday for a 6:30 p.m. first serve at the Sports Arena.

Behind the attacking and net play of freshmen Migle Mazurkeviciute and Rayanne de Oliveira, the Cougars broke open the first set with seven straight. Sophomore Laine Alveswas also instrumental in the dominance, carrying over to the second set helping lead a stretch of winning 8-of-9 points to seize a commanding 14-4 advantage in cruising to the win.

The second wave of Cougars took a while to get rolling, exchanging points with the Conquistadors through the first eleven points before stringing five straight points to open up an early 10-6 lead. Dodge City would cut the gap to two a trio of times but behind mostly a crew of freshman, the Cougars warmed up to a seven point mid-set score in clinching the match scoring three of the last four points.

Chiefs sign backup lineman Cam Erving to 2-year extension

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Chiefs have signed backup offensive lineman Cam Erving to a two-year contract extension, one year after acquiring the former first-round draft pick in a trade with Cleveland.

The financial terms of the deal Tuesday were not disclosed. The Chiefs had declined the fifth-year option on Erving’s rookie contract earlier this year.

Erving was the 19th overall pick of the Browns out of Florida State in 2015, but he struggled to solidify a starting spot on the offensive line. He bounced around to multiple positions, starting 17 of the 30 games he appeared in, before getting dealt to Kansas City for a fifth-round draft pick.

He wound up starting four games and appearing in 13 for the Chiefs last season, and was listed as the backup at right tackle and left tackle on this season’s initial depth chart.

No. 11 LSU, No. 12 Virginia Tech make big jumps in AP Top 25

No. 11 LSU and No. 12 Virginia Tech made the biggest jumps in the first Associated Press college football poll of the regular season while No. 4 Ohio State leapfrogged No. 5 Wisconsin after a week in which most off the top teams were unchallenged.

Alabama remained No. 1 with a blowout of Louisville, and No. 2 Clemson and No. 3 Georgia held their spots in the poll released Tuesday. The Crimson Tide received 48 first-place votes, Clemson had 12 and Wisconsin had one. The Buckeyes are just four points ahead of the Badgers and only nine points ahead of No. 6 Oklahoma.

LSU, which was ranked No. 25 in the preseason, moved up 14 spots after beating Miami 33-17 in one of four games that matched ranked teams. The Hurricanes dropped from No. 8 to No. 22. Virginia Tech won 24-3 at Florida State and moved up eight spots.

The Seminoles fell out of the rankings after being 19th. Texas, which was No. 23 in the preseason poll, didn’t receive any votes in the latest poll.

No. 4 Ohio State moved up a spot after scoring 77 points against Oregon State. Auburn jumped two spots to No. 7 after beating Washington.

The ninth-ranked Huskies dropped three places. No. 8 Notre Dame moved up four spots after beating Michigan, which fell from 14 to No. 21.

POLL POINTS

Alabama tied Ohio State for most appearances at No. 1 in the history of the AP college football poll, which started in 1936. Barring an historic upset, Alabama should break the record Sunday after playing Arkansas State on Saturday in Tuscaloosa.

Alabama — 105 weeks at No. 1
Ohio State — 105
Oklahoma — 101
Notre Dame — 98
Southern California — 91
Florida State — 72
Nebraska — 70

CONFERENCE CALL
Week one was good for the Southeastern Conference, which went 13-1 including two victories against ACC opponents, one versus the Pac-12 and one against the Big 12. The SEC has seven teams ranked this week, the most for the conference since Oct. 16, 2016, when eight were ranked.

No. 24 South Carolina and No. 25 Florida entered the rankings this week.

SEC — 7

Big Ten — 5

Pac-12 — 4

ACC — 3

Big 12 — 3

American — 1

Mountain West — 1

Independent — 1

RANKED VS. RANKED
No. 3 Georgia at No. 24 South Carolina this week. Big opportunity for the Gamecocks, who are ranked for the first time since Sept. 21, 2014.

No. 17 Southern California at No. 10 Stanford. The Cardinal have been in control of this rivalry for most of the past decade, but the Trojans swept Stanford last season — including a victory in the Pac-12 championship game.

Governor declares state of disaster emergency due to Kan. flooding

TOPEKA —Gov. Jeff Colyer MD has issued a state of disaster emergency declaration for five Kansas counties affected by flooding over the weekend. Named in the declaration are Jewell, Kingman, Marshall, Pratt, and Riley Counties. 

Flood victims rescued Monday in Riley County -photo RCPD

Damages in these counties included washed out roads, bridges, culverts and flooding to some businesses and residential properties. 

“Here in Kansas we make it a priority to take care of our neighbors,” said Colyer. “Those impacted by the recent flooding have our full support and we will continue to do whatever is needed to help during this time of emergency.”

The state declaration may be amended to include any additional counties that declare due to flooding as damage assessments are conducted. The declaration authorizes the use of state resources and personnel to assist with response and recovery operations in affected counties that meet certain criteria.

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RILEY COUNTY —According to officials Anneberg Park and all soft-surface trails will remain closed until surfaces dry, debris is removed, and repairs can be made. No ballfields at any of the parks will be open for practice or play because of the soggy turf. Anneberg is currently without power or restroom facilities.

Bridges will continue to be periodically inspected to ensure safety.

Crews are working to remove debris from the storm sewer. Street sweepers are clearing mud and debris. Please be courteous of these vehicles as they work to clear the roadway.

At this time the City of Manhattan will not be conducting a mass pick up of debris or household items. The City will pick up debris for flood affected areas only. The Riley County Transfer station is currently open for people to dispose of items.

The storm generated 6-9″ of rainfall. Floods in 2009 and 2011 resulted in 3-5″ of rainfall. Water levels for this storm went beyond map projections for a 100 year flood.

28 people stayed in the emergency shelters last night.. Poliska Lane is the only area that still has standing water, according to the Riley County Police Department. It will be closed until next week when repairs can be made after conditions have dried.

People who want to help, should contact the Red Cross in Manhattan.

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Juvenile Services moves forward with electric door locks purchase

Barton County Commissioners Monday approved the purchase of electric door locks and the access controlling software that goes with it for the Juvenile Services Department on Baker Street in Great Bend. According to Juvenile Services Director Marissa Woodmansee, the building currently uses mechanical keypad door locks. For security reasons, it is necessary to change the codes which she says has become very costly.

Marissa Woodmansee Audio

County Administrator Phil Hathcock told the board that it has been a collaborative effort between Juvenile Services and the County’s I.T. Department to research the new technology that could offer opportunities for use elsewhere.

Phil Hathcock Audio

The total cost of the new locks and software will be $5,004.

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