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High participation for Lincoln’s “Walking Club”

Lincoln School students take the first lap on their morning walk.

At summer school this year, the staff at Lincoln Elementary School in Great Bend was noticing many students coming to school either tired or full of energy, both extremes. Principal Misty Straub says the staff wanted to find something for the students to do besides sitting in the gym and talking with each other.

In an effort to get the children moving, Lincoln developed the Walking Club.

Misty Straub Audio

From 7:30 a.m. to 7:50 a.m. students that choose to, walk laps around the building with their peers. Straub says the students benefit from getting fresh air, movement, and additional oxygen moving through their bodies, helping them feel more awake and prepared for the school day.

Getting the staff to help supervise was easy.

Misty Straub Audio

The Walking Club started last Monday, and Straub says there was approximately 50 percent participation with the 3rd through 6th grade classes. Second grade was added later last week, and kindergarten and 1st grade were added to the mix this week.

Report: Kan. August revenue receipts exceed last year

TOPEKA—Fiscal year tax collections exceeded previous year’s totals by $79.49 million according to data from the latest revenue report released Tuesday from the Kansas Department of Revenue.

Fiscal year 2019 collections so far total $993.36 million.

August tax collections were up $33.99 million, or 7.38 percent over last year.

Individual income tax collections totaled $220.78 million which is $25.09 million or 12.82 percent above the same time last year. August sales tax collections exceeded last August’s collections by $537,427.

Great Bend lands new Network Administrator

The City of Great Bend has hired a new Network Administrator. The position that was created out of concern over internet and software security, has gone to James Cell.

Cell has lived in Great Bend for the last 15-years where he was an employee of Hays Med providing network support for St. Rose and Pawnee Valley Community Hospital.

Cell began working in his position last month and talked about one of his first projects that he wants to get done.

James Cell Audio

Cell will oversee software installation, backups, and maintenance of the City’s computers, networks, and Information Technology systems. He will also be part of finding a company that will handle the city’s overall network security needs.

James Cell Audio

The city council decided to create the position last spring after former Interim City Manager George Kolb raised the issue that the city’s sensitive information was at risk to computer hackers.

Gladys Mae Webster

PENDING FUNERAL NOTICE 

Dateline: , Great Bend

Name of Deceased: Gladys Mae Webster                       Age: 77

Date of Death: September 4, 2018

Place of Death: Cherry Village Nursing Home, Great Bend, Kansas

Services are pending with Bryant Funeral Home, 1425 Patton Road, Great Bend, Kansas.

 

Jack Estelle Durbin

Dateline: Great Bend, Kansas

Jack Estelle Durbin, 91, passed away September 1, 2018, at Clara Barton Hospital, Hoisington.  He was born October 2, 1926, at Kansas City, MO, to Zeno Estelle and Alma Ruth (Holsapple) Durbin.  Jack married Ramona May (Huseman) Kohls May 9, 1981, at Enid, OK.  Ramona passed away February 26, 2015.

He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and Korean Conflict, obtaining the rank of MM 3rd Class.

A Great Bend resident since 1981, coming from Wichita, Houston and Abilene, Tex., Jack had been a HVAC specialist for Fuller Brush Industries for 17 years, retiring in 1992.  He held previous employment with Boeing Airplane Co., and Kansas Refinery Helium Co.  He was a member of V.F.W. Post 3111, American Legion Argonne Post 180 and the Eagles, and Fellowship of Faith Bible Study, all of Great Bend.

Survivors include; step sons, Doug Kohls and wife Colleen of Great Bend, Phil Kohls and wife Kathy of Garden City, and Kent Kohls and wife Terri of Great Bend; step daughters, Lana Penney and husband Mike of Great Bend, Terry Bigheart and husband Mike of Enid, OK, Peggy Bartholomew and husband John of Oklahoma City, and Eva Neuforth of Great Bend; half-brother, Gerald Martin of Wichita; one half-sister, Alice James of Florida; 18 grandchildren and 24 great grandchildren, and his beloved dog Sissy.

Jack was preceded in death by; his parents; step father, Homer Martin; son-in-law, Gene Neuforth; grandson, Gavin Neuforth; and one half brother, James Martin.

Graveside services will be conducted 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 5, 2018, at Great Bend Cemetery, with Rev. Arlyn Thielenhaus.  Military Honors will be conducted by the United States Navy Honor Guard and The Legion Riders.  There will be no visitation, as cremation has taken place.  Donations may be made to the Golden Belt Humane Society, 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

 

Patrick “Pat” Depperschmidt

Patrick “Pat” Depperschmidt, also known as “”The Lawnmower Man” 87, La Crosse, Kansas, died Friday, August 31, 2018, at his home.

Mr. Depperschmidt was born November 1, 1930, in Liebenthal, Kansas, the son of John and Bernadine (Werth) Depperschmidt.  He was a lifelong resident of Rush County, Kansas, living in La Crosse for 55 years.  A 1949 graduate of Schoenchen High School, Schoenchen, Kansas, he was a machinist for Weitzel Manufacturing, La Crosse, Kansas, for many years, and later worked in the maintenance department of Rush County Memorial Hospital, La Crosse, Kansas.

He was a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas; Knights of Columbus Council 2970, Third Degree, Life Honorary Member, Liebenthal, Kansas; and American Legion Post 180, Great Bend, Kansas.

He was a United States Army veteran, serving from 1954 to 1956.

He loved to go to the lake, fish, boat, and camp.  Sales and auctions; repairing lawnmowers; Friday night cards at Earl’s; and an occasional scotch and water were also favorite activities.

On January 12, 1963, he married Rita Schuckman at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Liebenthal, Kansas.  She preceded him in death August 20, 2008.

Survivors include:  his son and daughter in law, Troy and Sharon Depperschmidt, Kansas City, Missouri; and one sister, Viola Enslinger, La Crosse, Kansas.

He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife; and eight siblings.

We would like to thank his dear friend, Larry Muth, for assisting Pat to remain independently living at home and the compassionate care of his friend and primary P.A., Dodie Martin.

Visitation will be Monday, September 3, 2018, from 4:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. at the Janousek Funeral Home, La Crosse, Kansas, with the family receiving friends from 6:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M.  A vigil service and rosary will be at 7:00 P.M.

Funeral service will be Tuesday, September 4, 2018, at 11:00 A.M. at St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas, with Father Eric Gyamfi officiating.  Interment will be in the La Crosse City Cemetery, La Crosse, Kansas.

Memorials are suggested to St. Michael’s Catholic Church, La Crosse, Kansas, or Hospice at Hays Medical Center, Hays, Kansas, or the donor’s choice.

Condolences or remembrances may be left for the family at www.charterfunerals.com/locations/janousek-lacrosse.php.

Arrangements were by Janousek Funeral Home, 719 Pine Street, P O Box 550, La Crosse, Kansas 67548, 785/222-2517.

Former Kansas Gov. Graves endorses nominee Kelly

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Former moderate Republican Gov. Bill Graves has endorsed Democrat Laura Kelly in the Kansas governor’s race.

Kelly’s campaign announced the endorsement Monday and posted a YouTube video of Graves praising Kelly, a veteran state senator from Topeka.


 

Graves says in the video that Kelly will bring Republicans and Democrats together to solve problems.

The former GOP governor’s endorsement came after the union representing firefighters in Kansas endorsed Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach last week. It previously has endorsed Democrats.

Kelly and independent candidate Greg Orman are wooing moderate Republicans alienated by Kobach’s conservative politics and advocacy of tough immigration policies.

Graves served two terms as governor from 1995 until 2003. He won re-election in 1998 with a record 73 percent of the vote but clashed frequently with GOP conservatives.

Poker run participants raise funds for new Sunflower Diversified project

Kent Yetschke, Great Bend, prepares to putt for a playing card at the
HandleBar & Grill, Great Bend, during the recent Sunflower Diversified Services Ride
for Independence. He won the grand prize for the best poker hand.

Participants in the second annual Ride for Independence Poker Run raised $1,785 for a special project at Sunflower Diversified Services. All proceeds are earmarked for a new art studio that will showcase the talents of Sunflower clients who want to share their creativity. Beautiful Minds Art Studio is in the planning stages.

Sunflower, which sponsored the poker run, serves infants, toddlers and adults with developmental disabilities and delays in Barton, Pawnee, Rice, Rush and Stafford counties.

Approximately 80 participants, including drivers, passengers and volunteers, made the event possible, said Tammie Caley, Sunflower’s chief financial officer.

“I want to thank all of the generous participants and sponsors who made our second poker run a success,” Caley said. “In addition, we could not have done this without the dozens of volunteers who shared their time and talent.”

The event began at Sunshine Garage in Larned. Stops along the way were: Squeak’s Club in St. John; Oasis Convenience Store, near Sylvia; Brew 56 Coffee & Tap in Lyons; the Wolf Hotel in Ellinwood; and HandleBar & Grill in Great Bend.

“It is so gratifying to have the support of businesses in our area,” Caley commented. “They can be assured their contributions mean a lot to the people we serve and our staff.”

During the Aug. 25 event, Kent Yetschke, Great Bend, won the grand prize of $250 for the best poker hand; Ryan Taylor, Great Bend, came in second and won $100.

Kan. Attorney General: Transgender right’s case Is about reducing cost

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt has defended the state’s decision to weigh in on a case that could limit transgender rights.

Asked by reporters about Kansas’ decision to join 15 other states in urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that it’s legal to fire people for being transgender, Schmidt noted that the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which includes Kansas, has taken that position.

Transgender Kansans were among those at a rally for LGBTQ equality at the State Capitol in March 2018.
photo by C.J. JANOVY -Kansas News Service

“Almost certainly at some point, some plaintiff or group of plaintiffs is going to file a lawsuit to test the continued validity of the 2007 decision that binds Kansas today,” Schmidt said. “Or we can say, ‘Let’s do our part to try to get this in front of the Supreme Court as quickly as possible.’ That adds certainty, it reduces litigation risk and cost.”

Schmidt was referring to the 10th Circuit’s decision that federal laws prohibiting sex discrimination do not protect transgender people.

That decision runs contrary to the majority of courts that have addressed the issue. And although Schmidt said the ruling was binding on Kansas, the state is free to adopt a broader interpretation of the law if it wishes, a legal expert said.

“They can always extend broader protections at the state than what the law requires,” said Kim Jones, an employment lawyer at Seyferth Blumenthal & Harris in Kansas City. “So even if the 10th Circuit took that position, as an employer, as an enforcement agency, they (Kansas) could take the position that, no, we are going to treat people better  than the law would require.”

Schmidt made his remarks after Kansas joined a friend-of-the-court brief asking the Supreme Court to overturn another federal appeals court’s decision that it was illegal for a Michigan funeral home to fire an employee who was transitioning from male to female.

The employee, Aimee Stephens, had told the funeral home’s owner that she was a transgender woman and planned to dress as a woman. The owner, a devout Baptist who believed that God created males and females in the traditional biological sense, said that was unacceptable and terminated her.

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued on Stephens’ behalf but the case was dismissed. On appeal, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, finding that gender identity discrimination is a form of sex discrimination prohibited under Title VII.

Kansas and the other states argue in their brief that the Sixth Circuit decision “erases all common, ordinary understandings of the term ‘sex’ in Title VII and expands it to include ‘gender identity’ and ‘transgender’ status.”

“In doing so,” says the brief, “the lower court rewrites Title VII in a way never intended or implemented by Congress” when it passed Title VII as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Jones said that while the 10th Circuit found that Title VII’s protection against sex discrimination does not extend to transgender individuals, many lawyers have managed to get around that by arguing that their transgender clients were discriminated against because they did not conform to gender stereotypes.

“And that is a form of sex discrimination that has been recognized by virtually all of the circuits, including the 10th. So nothing about that (2007) opinion would have necessitated Schmidt to do what he did,” Jones said.

“And, in fact, even in enforcing the laws for which his office is responsible, he could take the position that this is about sex stereotyping and that a transgender person should be protected because this is a form of sex discrimination.”

Schmidt told reporters that even if the Supreme Court finds that the firing of Stephens was illegal, “that still saves the state money because we don’t have, potentially, years of litigation sorting it out in the appeals courts.”

“Obviously, I’m going to advocate on the side of both federal and state as it’s applied in Kansas,” Schmidt said. “I’m not going to arbitrarily choose a different position, but I think as the state’s lawyer, the interest I’m trying to protect is in minimizing the state’s litigation risk, getting an answer, moving on with the least amount of hassle.”

“At the end of the day,” he added, “I’ve got to do my job.”

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor in conjunction with the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies

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