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Gun rights groups want to strengthen Kan. campus carry law

Rep. John Barker is Chair of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Gun rights advocates in the Kansas Legislature are pushing back against efforts to repeal a law that will allow concealed carry on college campuses starting July 1.

A bill in a House committee would not only retain campus carry but also strip colleges of the right to make policies about how and where guns could be carried on campus.

The Federal and State Affairs Committee heard the bill Thursday. It’s not clear when the committee might vote on it.

Gun rights advocates argue that university policies, such as requiring gun owners to carry their weapons on their person at all times and to carry with the chamber empty and the safety on are too restrictive.

University officials argue they are in the best position to draft campus policy.

KDHE: More mumps reported across Kansas

Mumps virus-CDC image

TOPEKA, Kan. – Fifty-six mumps cases have been reported in Kansas across multiple counties as of March 4, according to a media release from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE).

The State affected local health departments are working closely together to identify cases and implement appropriate isolation and exclusions policies to prevent further spread of mumps. Mumps cases have been reported in Atchison, Barton, Crawford, Douglas, Ellis, Finney, Franklin, Johnson, Marshall, Riley, Rooks and Thomas counties.

“As we continue to see mumps cases throughout the state and region, I encourage Kansans to take precautions to prevent the spread of the disease,” said KDHE Secretary Susan Mosier, MD, MBA, FACS. “Please make sure that you and your family are up-to-date on vaccines, and stay home if you do get mumps.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than 4,000 mumps cases were reported in the U.S. in 2016, and mumps outbreaks are ongoing in the nearby states of Missouri, Oklahoma and Arkansas.

Mumps is a contagious disease caused by a virus. Mumps typically starts with a few days of fever, headache, muscle aches, tiredness and loss of appetite, followed by swollen salivary glands. Mumps can occasionally cause complications, including inflammation of the testicles or ovaries, meningitis or encephalitis. Most people with mumps recover completely in a few weeks.

Anybody with symptoms of mumps should isolate themselves and call their healthcare providers. Anybody who suspects they may have mumps should stay home from work, school and any social activities.

People with mumps can spread the disease before the salivary glands begin to swell and up to five days after the swelling begins. Mumps spreads through saliva or mucus from the mouth, nose or throat. An infected person can spread the virus through the following:

 

Coughing, sneezing or talking.

Sharing items, such as cups or eating utensils, with others.
Touching objects or surfaces with unwashed hands that are then touched by others.

to staying isolated when you have mumps, you can help prevent the virus from spreading by:

Covering your mouth and nose with a tissue when you cough or sneeze, and putting your used tissue in the trash can. If you don’t have a tissue, cough or sneeze into your upper sleeve or elbow, not your hands.
Washing your hands often with soap and water.
Avoiding sharing drinks or eating utensils.
Disinfecting frequently touched surfaces, such as toys, doorknobs, tables and counters.

After the introduction of the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine, mumps became less common in the United States. MMR vaccine prevents most, but not all, cases of mumps and complications caused by the disease. Some people who receive two doses of MMR can still get mumps, especially if they have prolonged, close contact with someone who has the disease. If a vaccinated person does get mumps, they will likely have less severe illness than an unvaccinated person. Therefore the best way to reduce your chance of getting the disease is by being vaccinated with the MMR vaccine.

For updated case counts and more information about mumps, please go here.

Cattle that died in Kan. accident donated to feed fire fighters

Thursday morning semi crash in McPherson Co. -photo KHP

MCPHERSON COUNTY – A driver avoided serious injuries in an accident just after 7 a.m. on Thursday in McPherson County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a semi hauling cattle and driven by Brandon Peterson, 25, of Nebraska rolled on Kansas 61 Highway at the Interstate 135 Junction.

Three animals on board died in the crash.

Two others animals were injured. They were transported to a McPherson County meat processor and euthanized according to Ben Gardner of the Kansas Highway Patrol.

The meat will be donated to a local food bank and to feed volunteers fighting the wildfires, according to Gardner.

UPDATE: Brownback make take new job before end of legislative session

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback isn’t committing to staying in that job through the end of the legislative session this spring.

Brownback wouldn’t comment Thursday on Kansas Public Radio reports that he will be named the U.S. ambassador for three food and agriculture organizations in Rome. He told reporters he’s focused on fixing the state’s budget problems and writing a new education funding formula. When asked whether he was committing to staying through the legislature’s session, he declined to comment.

Kansas is facing a budget crisis and Brownback is trying to stave off income tax increases supported by many fellow Republicans. The state Supreme Court also ruled that the state must spend more on schools.

If Brownback steps down, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer will become governor. Colyer also had no comment.

————-

 

By STEPHEN KORANDA & J. SCHAFER

Governor Sam Brownback speaking at an event in November.
STEPHEN KORANDA / KPR

At a time when Kansas is facing a serious budget deficit and a court order saying school funding is inadequate, Gov. Sam Brownback may be leaving the state for a job in Italy. A former high-ranking government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, tells Kansas Public Radio that Brownback will be named the next U.S. ambassador to the United Nations agencies for food and agriculture in Rome.

The governor’s office did not confirm or deny the appointment, but a source tells Kansas Public Radio that the appointment is “a done deal.” If Brownback leaves his post, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer would become governor.

“Gov. Brownback is focused on working with the Kansas Legislature to balance the budget and pass a modern school funding system,” said communications director Melika Willoughby when asked for comment.

If appointed and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Brownback would become the leader of the U.S. Mission to the U.N. Agencies in Rome. That organization is the link between the U.S. government and several international organizations based in Rome, including the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, the World Food Programme and the International Fund for Agricultural Development.

David Lane held the job as ambassador to the U.N. agencies in Rome from 2012 to 2016. In an interview with KPR, he confirms that around a week ago, he also heard Brownback may be selected for the position. Lane says the U.S. is a major funder for the international organizations and the ambassador leads the U.S. team working with those groups.

“Provides strategic direction to the boards of those agencies … holds them accountable for the U.S. contribution and looks for results,” said Lane.

Lane said he met then-Sen. Brownback while they were both working on efforts related to malaria. He says the governor’s agriculture background and humanitarian work make him a good fit for the ambassador job.

“His humanitarian work, his work on malaria and some of the other things he was associated with as a senator, would be as valuable or even more than his experience with agriculture,” Lane said.

Lane said high-profile global refugee crises add extra importance to the services offered by international food organizations.

“It is a hugely important role right now,” Lane said.

There has been widespread talk since the election that Brownback could take a job in the administration of President Donald Trump, but Brownback has deflected such questions.

“I’m just making no comments about anything regarding the Trump administration,” Brownback said in November.

Clay Barker, executive director of the Kansas Republican Party, said after the election that the Trump administration is open to hiring Brownback.

“Someone on the Trump team told me that there are positions – I have no idea which ones – that if Gov. Brownback wanted them, he could have them,” Barker said.

The question so far has been whether Brownback wants to stay and work on his Kansas policies or move to the national stage.

Brownback would be leaving the state when Kansas is struggling to fill a budget hole of hundreds of millions of dollars. At the same time, the Kansas Supreme Court has said the state isn’t adequately funding schools, potentially requiring hundreds of millions of dollars in additional spending.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter and J. Schafer is News Director for Kansas Public Radio, a partner with kcur.org in the Kansas News Service  

Discarded cigarette blamed for $75K Kansas house fire

GEARY COUNTY – A Thursday morning fire at a home in Junction City is being blamed on improperly disposed of smoking material.

Just before 2:30 a.m., the fire crews responded to report of a fire in a home at 2706 Oakwood Drive in Junction City, according to a social media report.

Firefighters were advised that the fire was at the rear of the residence with a propane bottle on the deck and all occupants were out of the house.

The fire spread to the attic area of the home from the outside deck. Firefighters opened the roof and interior crews opened the ceiling up in the involved area and extinguished fire extension in the attic.

Ventilation of the structure was completed to remove smoke.

The damage estimates were $75,000 to the contents and structure, according to JCFD Chief Terry Johnson.

Slower Kan. winds in forecast should aid crews battling wildfires

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Fire crews are expecting slower winds as they work to extinguish blazes that have scorched hundreds of square miles of land in four states and killed six people.

Most of the burned land is in Kansas, where more than 1,000 square miles has been consumed in a series of fires. One that spans two counties along Kansas’ southern border with Oklahoma is the largest in the state’s recorded history.

Emergency officials in the two counties said Thursday morning that the fire is largely contained, with crews working to monitor hot spots.

Comanche County Emergency Manager John Lehman says the ground is “extremely dry,” so it’s possible the fire could re-ignite.

In neighboring Clark County, emergency management spokeswoman Allison Kuhns says “frankly there not much left to burn.”

After 18-hour debate, GOP takes first step to dismantle Obamacare

WASHINGTON (AP) — Republicans have won the first round in their fight to dismantle “Obamacare.” After nearly 18 hours of debate, Republicans in the House Ways and Means Committee pushed through legislation to abolish the tax penalty the Affordable Health Care Act imposes on people who don’t purchase insurance.

 

  Former President Barack Obama’s so-called individual mandate is perhaps the part of the health care law that Republicans most detest.  

 

2 Kansas women dead after 3-vehicle semi crash

First responders on the scene of Thursday’s Saline Co. crash

SALINE COUNTY- Two Kansas women died in an accident just before 4p.m. on Wednesday in Saline County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2017 Freightliner semi driven by Kirk N. Simms, 41, Lakewod, NJ., was northbound on Interstate 135 just north of Magnolia Road.

The semi left the roadway and crossed the median where it struck a southbound 2013 Kia Soul driven by

Marilyn R. Mayo, 63, Salina, in the driver’s side, causing it to strike the guardrail which impaled the rear of the vehicle.

A KDOT truck driven by Michael K. McDaniel, 23, Salina, took evasive action and the vehicle was struck on the rear driver’s side.

Mayo and a passenger Emma L. Thomas, 96, Marquette, were transported to Salina Regional Medical Center where they died.

McDaniel was also transported to Salina Regional Medical Center.

Simms and a passenger in the semi were not injured.

Mayo was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Kansas unlikely to pass hate crimes bill after sports-bar shooting

Purinton-photo Henry Co.

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers are unlikely to advance a bill to toughen the punishment for hate crimes two weeks after a gunman killed a man and wounded two more in an Olathe shooting that may have been racially-motivated.

The Senate Judiciary Committee heard testimony Wednesday. The bill would double the sentences for hate crimes and require the state attorney general’s office to collect data on them.

The hearing comes two weeks after one man from India was killed and another injured in a shooting the FBI is investigating as a possible hate crime.

The hearing was scheduled before the shooting happened. A third man was also injured when he intervened. Adam Purinton is jailed on murder and attempted murder charges in the case.

The proposed hate crimes law isn’t new but sponsor Sen. David Haley says Kansas is being portrayed as intolerant since the shooting.

Kan. man sentenced for beating 2-year-old who refused to eat

Rodriguez-photo Brown Co. Sheriff

BROWN COUNTY -A Kansas man was sentenced this week for the serious beating of a two-year-old child.
Frank Lee Rodriguez, 25, Hiawatha, was found guilty after a bench trial in January.

On Monday a Brown County judge ordered Rodriguez to serve 52 months for aggravated battery, and an additional 34 months for felony abuse of a child, for a total sentence of more than seven years, according to the county attorney’s office.

Rodriguez originally denied hitting the child. He ultimately told Hiawatha police he got upset when the girl was not eating. He said he slammed her onto the floor and punched her in the head.

The child sustained severe head injuries in the beating on August 26, 2016.

She was released from the hospital in December.

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