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Kansas National Guard wraps up aerial battle of wild fires

Spc. Orin Meyer, a UH-60 Black Hawk crew chief with 1st Battalion, 108th Aviation Regiment-courtesy Kan. Army National Guard

TOPEKA -As the wildfires across Kansas near full containment, the Kansas National Guard reported Sunday their aerial fire suppression mission is finished.

Fifty-five Kansas Army National Guard Soldiers were deployed and dropped an estimated 482 buckets totaling approximately 289,200 gallons of water from seven UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters, according to a social media report.

The Guard partnered with U.S. Army Reserve and civilian aviation assets along with ground crews to fight the fires that burned an 711,950 acres, according to estimates released on Friday.

Distracted driving blamed for increase in Kan. traffic deaths

October 2016 fatal crash in Chase County- photo courtesy Jeff Petrel

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas recorded a 22 percent increase in traffic fatalities in 2016 compared with the previous year, and one state trooper says distracted driving is the main reason.

The Kansas Department of Transportation says 432 people died in traffic accidents in 2016.

The National Safety Council says traffic fatalities increased 6 percent nationwide in 2016.

Kansas Highway Patrol trooper Chad Crittenden says distracted driving is the key reason for the increase. He says he recently watched 14 drivers while he was stopped at a busy Wichita intersection — and 11 of the drivers went through the intersection either talking or texting on their phones.

Others say lower gas prices also are a factor, because more drivers are on the roads.

Evidence from former Kan. man’s trial moves to bombing museum

Taylor spoke at the museum on Thursday

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Evidence from Oklahoma City bombing co-conspirator Terry Nichols’ state murder trial will not be housed at the museum and memorial that honor those killed in the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in the U.S.

Nichols was at home in Kansas at the time of the bombing.

The Oklahoman reports 32 filing cabinets and numerous computer towers, photos, maps and diagrams were moved last week to the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum’s climate-controlled archives. The collection eventually will be incorporated into exhibits.

Former Oklahoma Supreme Court Justice Steven W. Taylor oversaw the trial and said the files are sacred. Taylor said Nichols hated the government, but that same government gave him a fair trial.

Nichols is in a federal prison in Colorado serving life terms without the possibility of release.

Bomber Timothy McVeigh was executed in 2001. The 1995 attack killed 168 people.

Kansas man files motion against sentence in fatal stabbing

Alvarez-photo KDOC

RENO COUNTY– A Kansas man convicted of second-degree intentional murder and sentenced to over 15 in prison has filed a civil motion over the sentence in the case.

A Jury found Aaron Alvarez, 27, guilty in the November 2011 stabbing death of 23-year-old Allen Frank.

The two got into an altercation after Alvarez may have accidentally struck Frank’s girlfriend.

The two men then argued and Alvarez stabbed Frank in the stomach and slashed his neck.

A status hearing over the civil filing was scheduled for Friday.

House Bill Adds to Required Vaccinations for Kansas Students

By Matt Ostrowski

KU Statehouse Wire Service

TOPEKA – Andy Marso understands the pain and suffering that can result from meningitis.

“Within 24 hours I went from being a healthy college student to being in intensive care with essentially a 50/50 shot of survival,” Marso, who lost most of his fingers and the front halves of his feet from meningitis, said.

Marso came down with the illness in April of 2004 while attending the University of Kansas. He spent three weeks in a coma, the next four months in the hospital, and still had to go through about a year of therapy just to be able to do day-to-day tasks like walking again.

Now, Kansas legislature could be taking steps to prevent meningitis cases like Marso’s. HB 2205 passed through the Kansas House of Representatives on a 104-20 vote recently. This bill would require Kansas children to receive a meningitis vaccination before enrolling in any Kansas school, public or private. It has been referred to the Kansas Senate Committee on Public Health and Welfare, where they will hear the bill.

The bill specifically states that children must receive the vaccination no earlier than the age of 11, and also receive a booster shot at the age of 16, similar to what the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommends.

“If you look at the spikes for meningitis, there’s a spike in high school, and then there’s a spike in college,” said Leah Luckeroth, a physician at Watkins Health Services at the University of Kansas. “Those are the two spikes that people look at, and that’s why it’s recommended to get the vaccine both times.”

Meningitis is an inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. According to the National Meningitis Association, 21 percent of all meningitis cases occur in those aged 11-24. Meningitis can be deadly, with 10-15 percent of meningitis cases resulting in death, and among those that survive, 19 percent live with permanent disabilities.

“The thing that you have to remember is that it’s rare, but it’s deadly,” she said. “They get it, but they can be dead in 12 hours,” Luckeroth said.

Currently, Kansas law states that the following vaccinations are required: diphtheria, hepatitis B, measles, mumps, whooping cough, poliomyelitis, German measles, tetanus, and chickenpox. According to the CDC, in 2015 63.7 percent of 13 to 17-year-olds received a meningitis vaccine in Kansas. The national average was 81.3 percent.

There are multiple types of meningitis strains, which means there are multiple types of vaccines. HB2205 does not specify which vaccine is to be required.

The most common types of meningitis are strains A, B, C, W and Y, according to the CDC.

The CDC has recommended the use of a vaccine that is effective against strains A, C, W and Y since 2005, with the first shot being administered at age 11 or 12, and a booster shot at age 16. It wasn’t until 2015 that the CDC recommended a vaccine that is effective against strain B, which is what Marso had, for young adults aged 16 to 23.

Students who come to college are at high risk of meningitis, according to Luckeroth. University of Kansas has required all students living in university-owned housing to receive a meningitis vaccine since 2005.

Luckeroth said she recommends vaccinations, pointing out the quickness with which meningitis acts as one of the main reasons why.

“I guess the problem with meningitis is it’s so rare but it’s so deadly,” she said. “So you don’t have lots of options once somebody has it. Especially if you can die within 12 hours.”

As for Marso, he suggests vaccines for all types of diseases. However, he understands the low rate of vaccination, due to the lack of education about meningitis. So, utilizing his experience with the disease, he feels it is his duty to talk about it and educate people.

“I feel like that’s my responsibility,” he said. “I need to, you know, be somebody who talks about my experience, as difficult as that is sometimes, and raises awareness about it.”

Matt Ostrowski is a University of Kansas senior journalism major from Roselle, Illinois.

Jobs: Kan. needs more students with degrees or certificates

Kansas Education Commissioner Randy Watson-photo Kansas Dpt. of Education

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Education Commissioner Randy Watson says the state needs to double the percentage of students who earn college degrees or training certificates in order to compete in the changing economy.

Commissioner Randy Watson says a national report found that 72 percent of the jobs in Kansas by 2020 will require some level of post-secondary education.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports data from the National Student Clearinghouse found only about 65 percent of Kansas high school graduates in 2010 enrolled in college the following year. Six years after graduation, fewer than 40 percent had earned any kind of degree or training certificate.

Watson spoke this past week to a joint meeting of Kansas Senate and House education committees, which will help write a new school funding formula this year.

Kansas officer hospitalized after crash during police chase

LINN COUNTY – A Kansas deputy was injured in an accident after a crash during a police pursuit just after 12p.m. on Saturday in Linn County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2001 Mitsubishi Galant driven by Kevin S. Gedrose, 28, Garnet, was fleeing from police east bound on 2400th Road three miles northwest of Parker.

The driver ran the stop sign at Devlin Road and hit a 2014 Ford Explorer driven by Linn County Deputy Tanner Shane Ogden, 38, Pleasanton, that was northbound on Develin Road.

Ogden was transported to Overland Park Regional Medical Center.
Gedrose refused transport for treatment.

Both drivers were properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

Details on what prompted the chase and possible charges were not available.

Kansas man enters plea in crash that killed 80-year-old

Fatal crash in Hutchinson

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A Hutchinson man pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in a collision that killed an 80-year-old man.

Twenty-five-year-old Everette Hardy entered the plea Friday in the May 2016 death of John Johnson, also of Hutchinson.

Johnson died in a Wichita hospital 23 days after the accident.

A Kansas Highway Patrol trooper testified during a Jan. 23 preliminary hearing that Hardy accelerated seconds before reaching the intersection to try and beat oncoming traffic and slammed into Johnson’s pickup at about 45 mph.

Hardy will be sentenced April 21.

Police warn of skimmers at Kansas gas stations

Skimmers found on bank ATM in July 2015

RILEY COUNTY – Law enforcement authorities in Riley County are investigating a report of skimmers at multiple gas station in Manhattan.

The device is placed over credit and debit card readers to illegally obtain information.

Police reported on social media they were unsure if there are other, undiscovered skimmers. They urged residents to consider paying inside instead of at the pump this weekend.

They also reminded citizens to check your accounts regularly for fraudulent activity.

Police: Missing Kansas woman’s car found with body inside

Officials pulled Anderson’s car from the river on Friday-photo courtesy KCTV

PARKVILLE, Mo. (AP) — Kansas City police say a car pulled from the Missouri River belonged to a missing Wichita woman and a female body was inside the car.

Capt. Stacey Graves couldn’t confirm the body discovered Friday evening was that of 20-year-old Toni Anderson, who’s been missing since Jan. 15.

But Graves said the car found in the river near Parkville was Anderson’s. She said a medical examiner will positively identify the body and determine a cause of death.

Police say Anderson, a student at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, was last seen after she left her job early Jan. 15.

Anderson -courtesy photo

A police officer pulled her over for a traffic violation then watched Anderson drive to a nearby QuikTrip to get gas for her car. She was alone at the time.

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