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President Trump issues new temporary travel ban

WASHINGTON (AP) — White House says President Trump has signed revised executive order on temporary travel ban.

The new travel ban order will temporarily halt entries to the United States for people from six Muslim-majority countries who are seeking new visas.

That’s according to a fact sheet distributed to lawmakers and obtained by The Associated Press.

The new directive aims to address legal issues that arose from the original order, which was blocked by the courts.

According to the fact sheet, people from Sudan, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia and Yemen who do not currently have valid visas will be blocked from coming to the U.S. for 90 days.

Iraq was originally included on the list of banned countries. But according to the fact sheet, Iraq was removed from the order after agreeing to increase cooperation with the U.S. government on vetting of its citizens applying for a travel visa.

UPDATE : Police identify teen killed in Kan. shooting; 4 hospitalized

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Authorities say an 18-year-old woman has been killed and four others have been wounded in a Topeka shooting.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the woman who was killed was identified Sunday morning as 18-year-old Kianna Hodge.

Police Lt. Andrew Beightel says the shooting happened late Saturday. He says a short time later, three men suffering from non-life threatening gunshot wounds arrived in the parking lot of a hospital emergency department. Officers found Hodge and another woman in a different vehicle around the same time.

Hodge was pronounced dead at the scene, while the other woman suffered injuries not believed to be life-threatening.

No arrests were immediately made. Authorities are urging anyone with information to come forward.

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SHAWNEE COUNTY- Law enforcement authorities in Shawnee County are investigating a fatal shooting.

Just after 11:30 p.m.Saturday, officers responded to the area of S.E. 23 and Bellview in Topeka after reports of gun shots, according to a media release.

At the same time, officers responded to Stormont Vail where three adult men had arrived after suffering gunshot wounds.

At approximately the same time, officers responded to SE 6th and SE Deer Creek in Topeka after report of another shooting and two women with gunshot wounds. One of the women was pronounced dead at the scene, according to police. The other woman was transported to the hospital with non-life threatening wounds.

Authorities ask that anyone with information should contact police.

‘It’s A Tall Order’: Budget Challenges Loom For Kan. Legislature

By JIM MCLEAN

In the next three months, the Kansas Legislature must find ways to erase hundreds of millions of dollars in red ink to avoid deficit spending and devise a new school finance formula.
FILE PHOTO / KANSAS NEWS SERVICE

It is not hyperbole to say the challenges that members of the 2017 Kansas Legislature face are among the most daunting in state history.

In the next three months, they must find ways to erase hundreds of millions of dollars in red ink to avoid deficit spending, which the Kansas Constitution prohibits. They also must devise a new school finance formula and come up with the estimated $800 million it could take to satisfy the Kansas Supreme Court, which on Thursday declared the current funding formula inadequate and therefore unconstitutional.

Individually they are huge tasks, but lawmakers must tackle them in tandem amid a charged political environment with the clock ticking toward a hard deadline: the end of the state’s fiscal year on June 30.

“It’s a tall order,” says Senate Minority Leader Anthony Hensley, a Topeka Democrat.

Hensley recalls that a rewrite of the school finance formula he worked on as a member of the House in the early 1990s took two full sessions to complete.

“We don’t have that kind of time now that the Supreme Court has set a deadline of June 30,” he says.

In anticipation of the school finance decision, Hensley urged legislative leaders to establish a special committee to work on a new formula over the summer and fall, but the Republicans in control at the time rejected the idea. Consequently, Hensley says, lawmakers now have a lot of ground to cover in a short amount of time.

“We’re halfway through the legislative session, and there’s no doubt in my mind that this is going to cause us to go beyond what we normally would have as a 90-day session,” he says.

Lacking Clear Consensus

In addition to the time crunch, the politics surrounding the school finance and tax issues are difficult. There is no clear consensus among lawmakers on how much to rely on tax increases versus spending cuts to balance the budget. Likewise, there is no agreement on what to prioritize in the new school funding formula or how much to spend.

Those divisions were evident last month when Senate Republican leaders abruptly canceled a planned vote on a budget-balancing measure that would have cut more than $120 million from public schools after concluding they didn’t have the votes to pass it.

To a lesser extent, they also were evident when senators attempting to override Gov. Sam Brownback’s veto of a bill that would have raised personal income taxes and repealed a controversial business tax exemption fell three votes short.

Sen. Carolyn McGinn, a Sedgwick Republican and chairwoman of the Senate’s budget-writing committee, says it is not clear if the Kansas Supreme Court’s order and the need to raise money to comply with it will break the stalemate.

“That’s what I certainly want to find out next week, because I heard from some of my leadership that some people still want a cuts plan,” McGinn says. “We’ll just have to wait and see.”

No Time To ‘Play Politics’

Workflow issues also are complicating matters. As a first order of business, lawmakers must close a projected $280 million gap in this year’s budget before they can address next year’s estimated $500 million shortfall and move on to deciding how to generate whatever additional revenue may be necessary to fund the new school finance formula.

How lawmakers decide to meet those challenges will largely depend on how much the recent election shifted the balance of power in the Legislature. A coalition of moderate Republicans and Democrats in the House recently overpowered conservatives on key votes to expand Medicaid and override Brownback’s tax bill veto.

No such coalition yet exists in the Senate. But one of those moderate Republican newcomers, Sen. Dinah Sykes of Lenexa, is hoping to see a majority coalesce around the budget and school finance issues.

“We really don’t have the time to play politics,” Sykes says. “We’ve got to work together and find solutions. That’s what we ran on.”

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of kcur.org, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks

Kansas teen dies after Colorado ski accident

photo courtesy gofundme

SEDGWICK COUNTY – A Kansas teen died on Sunday in a Colorado hospital after an accident while on a ski trip.

According to the family’s gofund me page, Tess Smith, 15, Wichita, was unresponsive since the accident and there was nothing more doctors at Children’s Hospital in Aurora could do.

The family chose for her to be an organ donor to assist the lives of up to 8 others.

A gofundme page has been established to help with medical expenses, transportation and burial.

Report: Okla., Kan. remain at high earthquake risk in 2017

Earthquake damage from the 2016 Cushing, Oklahoma earthquake courtesy photo

WASHINGTON – Federal scientists forecast that Oklahoma will continue to have the nation’s biggest man-made earthquake problem but 2017 probably won’t be as shaky as recent years.

In February, the USGS reported six earthquakes in Kansas.

The strongest measured 3.3 on February 22, and was centered four miles northeast of Anthony in Harper County. Another 3.3 quake hit just north of the Oklahoma State line in Sumner County on February 13. A 2.6 quake shook Sumner County on Sunday morning.

In its annual national earthquake outlook, the U.S. Geological Survey reported this week that a large portion of Oklahoma and parts of central California have the highest risk for a damaging quake this year: between 5 and 12 percent.

Seismologists say Oklahoma’s problem is triggered by high volume ground injections of wastewater from oil and gas drilling.

USGS seismic hazard chief Mark Petersen says Oklahoma’s recent regulation wastewater injection is starting to work, so scientists slightly reduced Oklahoma’s risk this year.

– The AP contributed to this report.

Small Kansas town recovers from deadly 2012 tornado

HARVEYVILLE, Kan. (AP) — Five years after a tornado killed one person, injured about a dozen more and destroyed up to 40 percent of the small eastern Kansas town of Harveyville, officials are proud of the rebuilding progress but acknowledge more needs to be done.

The EF-2 tornado hit Harveyville, in Wabaunsee County just after 9 p.m. on Feb. 28, 2012. Residents, people from surrounding communities and many organizations quickly came together to get the town back on its feet, current Mayor Dustin Kuntz told The Emporia Gazette,

Damage from the 2012 photo courtesy Image courtesy Kansas Adjutant General’s Office

“We were so blessed by the love and support from other people, communities and agencies,” Kuntz said. “It was almost more than we could accept at one time. If you think about water going into a funnel, there’s only so much it will let through, and we had a funnel going on here. There was so much help. It was just so incredible it became a challenge to administrate it efficiently.”

Kuntz also credited the Harveyville Area Rebuilding Team, which consolidated community organizations and resources to help get residents back on their feet.

The mayor said a family occasionally moves into an empty lot and several residents have rebuilt.

Amy Terrapin, emergency management coordinator for Wabaunsee County, said residents stepped up.

“The community of Harveyville didn’t sit around and pity themselves,” Terrapin said. “They didn’t sit around and wait for the federal, state or local government to come pick things up. They got out their dump trucks and tractors and got to work.”

Today, the city has a new park and playground and a storm shelter. A group of mothers who were tired of taking their children to other communities to play in a nice park put on a bake sale and other events and received some memorial donations. They gave the town between $16,000 and $17,000 to use as matching funds to obtain grants.

When the twister hit, residents weren’t warned because the tornado siren had to be activated manually and it wasn’t. Now, the city has a new siren that can be remotely activated by the Wabaunsee County Sheriff’s Office.

A new United Methodist Church sits in the same location where the former church was destroyed. Some of the church’s original stained glass was created into an art piece by Breanna Strohm, the niece of Richard Slade, who died from injuries he suffered in the tornado. The piece sits in the church’s sanctuary.

“To see what we have today compared to what we had before and what got destroyed, it blows you away,” said longtime resident Larry Montgomery.

But Kuntz said the town still lives with some long-term repercussions from the storm.

“It would be nice if every empty lot had families that attended your churches and your schools, but we still have empty lots — we haven’t fully recovered yet,” he said.

Kan. man seeks appeal of sentence; police found 90-pounds of pot

90 pounds of marijuana -photo Hutchinson Police

RENO COUNTY — The Kansas man sentenced to just over 12 years in prison in a marijuana distribution case is seeking an appeal of that sentence.

Gerardo Saucedo, 34, Hutchinson, entered pleas in the case as charged and was sentenced to prison by Judge Tim Chambers.

He filed an appeal of that sentence, but the state is now asking that the appeal be dismissed, noting that the defendant has failed to have the appeal docketed in a timely manner.

It was filed in March of last year, but as of Jan. 30, had not been docketed.

The issue was scheduled for hearing Friday in front of Judge Tim Chambers.

The Kansas Court of Appeals reported they did receive the motion to have it placed on their docket and they accepted, so the case is pending a hearing in Topeka.

On Friday, Reno County Deputy District Attorney Tom Stanton says he isn’t even sure of what Saucedo is appealing.

Saucedo

He was not sentenced under the sentencing guidelines because Judge Chambers granted a departure or Saucedo would have been spending more time in prison.

In April of 2014, Saucedo was arrested after a search warrant was served on his home.

Police found around 90 pounds of marijuana in brick form believed to be from Mexico. They also found numerous containers of high-grade marijuana scattered throughout the home, as well as new packaging materials, a digital scale and some weapons.

He was convicted of possession of marijuana with intent to sell, possession of drug paraphernalia with intent to

Sunday morning earthquake reported in Kansas

Location of Sunday morning quake -image USGS

SUMNER COUNTY – An earthquake shook portions of Kansas early Sunday.

The quake, just after 6 a.m., measured 2.6 and was centered approximately 17-miles northeast of Caldwell in Sumner County, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

In February, the agency recorded six Kansas earthquakes. They measured from 2.5-3.3. The February 13 quake was also in Sumner County.

It measured 3.3 and was centered in rural area just north of the Kansas-Oklahoma State line, according to the USGS.

There have no reports of damage or injury from Sunday’s quake.

In A First, All 3 KanCare Insurance Companies Turn A Profit

By MEG WINGERTER

All three of the private insurance companies that manage the Kansas Medicaid program made a profit on it in 2016 — the first year that has occurred.

UnitedHealthcare was by far the most financially successful of the three, with $30.2 million in profits. Sunflower State Health Plan, a subsidiary of Centene, had a $5.5 million profit and Amerigroup made about $3.4 million.

The three companies lost millions in 2013 and 2014, the first two years of KanCare.

State officials announced the 2016 results at last week’s meeting of the Robert G. (Bob) Bethell Joint Committee on Home and Community Based Services and KanCare Oversight.

Mike Randol, director of the Division of Health Care Finance at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, told the committee members that financial losses are typical in the first years of a managed care program.

For Sunflower, 2016 was the first year it made a profit on KanCare operations. It lost about $12 million in 2015.

The company declined to offer specific information about why its fortunes had improved, but Chris Coffey, Sunflower’s president and CEO, said he was pleased with the results, which he said would allow more investments in community health initiatives.

Amerigroup’s profits were down substantially in 2016 from $24.2 million the previous year, a drop of about $21 million. A spokeswoman declined to comment on the results.

UnitedHealthcare showed little change, with profits increasing from $29.4 million in 2015 to $30.2 million in 2016.

Medicaid is a state-federal partnership in which the federal government pays about 60 percent of the costs. The $3 billion KanCare program provides health care coverage for about 425,000 people — most of them low-income children, pregnant women and people with disabilities.

Rep. Jim Ward, a Democrat from Wichita and a longtime KanCare critic, questioned whether the profits resulted from denials of coverage or services. Some members of the public who spoke at the committee meeting said they were denied services or inexplicably lost coverage, though others praised employees of the insurance companies who helped them navigate the health care system.

The government provides KanCare coverage for people with disabilities because insurance companies couldn’t do so and still make a profit, Ward said.

“Medicaid wouldn’t exist if you could provide these services through the private sector,” he said.

Some legislators not ideologically opposed to privatization also wanted more information, however. Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita, asked KDHE officials to provide more data about the companies’ profit margins but didn’t indicate what he thought was an appropriate amount.

“I would certainly think the MCOs making a profit is healthy,” he said.

The state’s waiver for KanCare ends in December. Federal officials denied a request to extend the program as it is, so Kansas will have to come up with a renewal plan in the next few months. Federal regulators pointed to problems with KanCare, but state officials attributed them to political games by the outgoing administration of former President Barack Obama.

Meg Wingerter is a reporter for kcur.org‘s Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio and KMUW covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach her on Twitter @MegWingerter

Reno Co. fire: Residents allowed to return to their homes

Reno Co. fire on Saturday-photo courtesy of Andrea Leiker

RENO COUNTY –Two task forces monitored the fire in the Highlands area near Hutchinson overnight.

Just after 9 p.m., residents in the area were allowed to return to their homes, according to the Reno County Sheriff’s Department.

Residents were advised to use a garden hose to put out any embers that come into yards and not call 911 every time a glow is spotted. If there is an open active flame currently threatening a structure, then call 911.

It is estimated 1200 acres have been burned in the other Reno County fire in Jupiter Hills Fire. It is 80 percent contained.

All roads, except 69th Avenue from Old K-61 to Mayfield and 56th Avenue from Old K-61 to the dead end have been opened.

The county has declared a state of emergency which will help bring in state resources to help.
Critical fire weather conditions will continue the next few days.

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HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A grass fire is forcing some evacuations north of Hutchinson after burning more than 1,000 acres.

Officials say at least two house fires were reported Sunday in the Highlands area near Hutchinson. No injuries have been reported but residents in the area have been asked to evacuate.

The fire had burned more than 1,200 acres. Officials say the fire was about 80 percent contained Sunday afternoon.

Interim Hutchinson Fire Department Chief Doug Hanen says fire crews are working to control numerous hot spots in the fire.

Twenty firefighting units responded to the blaze.

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HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A grass fire north of Hutchinson is mostly under control after burning more than 1,000 acres.

The fire was about 80 percent contained as of Sunday afternoon.

Kathleen Fabrizuis with the Kansas State Incident Management Team says the fire was reported earlier on Sunday. Twenty firefighting units responded to the blaze.

The fire burned at least 1,200 acres but no injuries or evacuations were required. Two sheds were damaged by the fire.

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RENO COUNTY – Fire crews were busy fighting grass fires in several areas of Kansas on Saturday as a result of the dry, windy conditions

Fire crews battled a large grass fire on Kansas 18 highway in the area of T Road in Rooks County late Saturday afternoon. Officials temporarily closed Kansas 18 from Damar to Palco.

Just before 2:30 p.m. in Reno County fire crews were called to a fire along 43rd east of old Kansas 61. By the time crews arrived the fire had spread as far north as 69th, according to Deputy Fire Chief Doug Hanen.

Over 40 units and 100 firefighters were helping fight the blaze. They had it 75 percent contained late Saturday. Two sheds were damaged, according to Hanen. There were no injuries reported. Reno County Commissioners signed a disaster declaration in order to seek assistance from the state.

Cause of the fires is still under investigation.

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