Kansas Lawmakers Override Governor's Veto of Medicaid Bill
TOPEKA, Kan. (KPR) - Kansas lawmakers have wrapped up their 2022 session. They spent part of their final day overriding a veto from the Democratic governor. Republicans overrode Governor Laura Kelly’s veto of a bill that blocks her administration from negotiating new multi-billion-dollar contracts with companies that run KanCare, the state’s Medicaid program. They say that should be left to the next governor, who they’re hoping will be Derek Schmidt, the state’s Republican attorney general. Opponents - mainly Democrats - argue the bill could give the current KanCare companies what amount to no-bid contract extensions. To ensure they had the votes, Republicans combined the contracts bill with one that prohibits the governor from closing down religious services during disease outbreaks. Representative Brenda Landwehr. “That occurred right here in the state of Kansas. This bill assures us that that cannot happen again," she said. With the override vote, the combined bills are now state law.
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Republicans in Kansas Senate Block Efforts to Legalize Fentanyl Test Strips
TOPEKA, Kan. (KPR) - Republicans in the Kansas Senate have blocked efforts to legalize possession of fentanyl test strips. Fentanyl is a prescription opioid 100 times stronger than morphine. Because dealers often blend it with illegal drugs, it’s contributing to a sharp increase in Kansas overdose deaths. Democratic Representative Jason Probst says legalizing test strips would allow outreach programs that would save lives. “To make sure that students, active drug users (and) people working towards recovery are aware of fentanyl, the danger of it and how to protect themselves," he said. The House supports legalization of testing strips, but the Senate does not. Republican Senator Kelli Warren, a candidate for attorney general, says the proposed change would suggest that Kansas condones illegal drug use.
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Kansas Plans to Provide Pandemic Relief to Businesses
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Kansas plans to provide $50 million in relief to businesses forced by state or local officials to shut down or restrict their operations during the first weeks of the coronavirus pandemic. On Monday, the Republican-controlled Legislature approved a bill setting up the new program and sent it to Democratic Governor Laura Kelly. The measure is aimed at small businesses and would allow them to receive up to $5,000 for 2020 and 2021 if state and local officials imposed COVID-19 restrictions.
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Bank Analysts: Nationwide Gas Prices Could Hit $6 a Gallon by August
UNDATED (CBS) - Analysts at a top U.S. bank are warning that nationwide gas prices could skyrocket from their current $4.59 average per gallon to more than $6 per gallon by the end of summer. According to CBS News, Natasha Kaneva, head of global oil and commodities research at JPMorgan, wrote in a research document that the U.S. was in for a “cruel summer,” as gas prices were expected to continue smashing records. Kaneva wrote that U.S. retail prices could surge to a $6.20 per gallon by August. The news comes as some places have already started to experience gas prices of more than $6 per gallon, including Los Angeles County and Orange County. Regular unleaded gasoline in Kansas is now averaging $4.04 per gallon.
Kaneva's forecast is just one view of where the market is going, and it is dependent on the typical summer trend of Americans getting behind the wheel for vacations and road trips. Motorists aggrieved by skyrocketing fuel prices could cut back on driving, putting the brakes on fuel demand. Other analysts, such as GasBuddy's petroleum analyst Patrick De Haan, said they don't see gas prices hitting $6 nationally.
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California Couple Gives McPherson College $25 Million Gift
MCPHERSON, Kan. (AP) - A California couple known for their philanthropy is donating $25 million to McPherson College in central Kansas. Melanie Lundquist announced the gift from her and her husband, Richard, during her commencement address Sunday at the small liberal arts college. The Lundquists did not attend or graduate from McPherson but have been supporters since 2012. The gift is the largest donation in McPherson's 135-year history. Richard Lundquist owns Continental Development Corporation, a property development firm based in California.
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Kansas Unemployment Rate Unchanged; Still Lower than the National Average
TOPEKA, Kan. (KNS) - The Kansas unemployment rate remains unchanged from last month but is under 3%, which is still lower than the national average. Early in the pandemic, Kansas unemployment spiked to more than 12%. Within a year, the jobless rate had dropped back to levels similar to before COVID-19 - between 3 and 4%. And it continued to decline. Now, two years after that unprecedented unemployment spike in 2020, the jobless rate is 2.4 percent for two months in a row. Kansas added more than 23,000 private-sector jobs in the past year and lost 500 government jobs.
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Researchers Hope Kansans Will Sign Up to Catch and Release Bumblebees
TOPEKA, Kan. (KNS) - Scientists are looking for Kansans across the state to help count bumblebees. That will require people to take training on how to catch bumblebees, take photos of the insects and let them go. Volunteers in Missouri and Nebraska have already recorded thousands of sightings. Katie Lamke is a biologist with the Xerces Society, a conservation group that focuses on insects. Insect populations are dropping in the Midwest, but bees are critical for many plants to reproduce. “They are by far the most effective pollinator," she said. "They’re constantly gathering pollen and nectar because that’s their only source of food.” Next month, the Xerces Society will offer training in Kansas City, Wichita and Strong City.
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Starbucks Employees in Wichita Hope to Form Union
WICHITA, Kan. (KMUW) - Workers at a Starbucks in Wichita hope their store will become the first in the city with a union. Employees at the Starbucks at 21st and Amidon (AM-ih-dun) filed for a union vote with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) last week. It’s the second store to file in Kansas, joining a store in Overland Park. Maia Cuellar Serafini is a barista at the Wichita location and a lead organizer in the union drive. She says about 70% of her coworkers support the union. “Why are we getting the bare minimum when we are the backbone of this company? If we all left, this company couldn’t function," she said. About 56 Starbucks locations have formed unions since the first store unionized in December. The NLRB has filed a number of complaints against Starbucks for anti-union activity in the past year, including a complaint that three pro-union workers in Overland Park were illegally fired.
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Central Missouri Library System Workers Vote to Unionize
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Workers at a regional library system in central Missouri have voted to unionize. Officials said Monday that 65% of Daniel Boone Regional Library employees who voted to form a union, which will be the only active public library union in the state. The system has branches in Columbia, Fulton, Ashland and Holts Summit. The library employees covered by the union will be represented by the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees, or AFSCME. The next step is contract negotiations, although no date has been set to begin that process.
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Courts Stymie Abortion Bans in Iowa, Other GOP-Led States
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa Supreme Court decision is holding back the state's solidly Republican Legislature and governor from banning abortion if the U.S. Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade. Iowa is among GOP-controlled states that would be expected to ban abortion, except for state high court decisions recognizing the right under the state constitutions. The issue is most immediate in Iowa, where a court now dominated by Republican appointees is expected to decide in the coming weeks whether to uphold the ruling, decided just four years ago. The Iowa case highlights the inevitable confrontation between new abortion bans being prepared in anticipation of Roe's reversal and state constitutions.
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Abilene to Display World’s Largest Belt Buckle
ABILENE, Kan. (KNS/KCLY) - The world’s largest belt buckle could be on its way to Abilene, Kansas, thanks to a $22,000 grant. The size of the buckle has not been revealed yet, but it’s intended to beat one in Texas that’s 10 feet by 14 feet. The idea started when Julie Roller-Weeks, director at the Abilene Convention and Visitors Bureau, was trying to find a way to add tourism to the city. “I started looking at belt buckles, and found that there was one in Missouri that was the world’s largest and then some folks down in Texas were working on the World’s Largest and they announced the size of it and I thought you know what… I think we can do better.” With the help of Fluters Creek Metal Works in Abilene and a Kansas Tourism Attraction Development grant, the project has started to take shape. The design on the buckle will showcase Abilene Icons like Dwight D. Eisenhower and Wild Bill Hickok. The hope is to showcase the belt buckle during the Central Kansas Free Fair and Wild Bill Hickok Rodeo in August.
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Police-Related Shooting Injures Man in Junction City
JUNCTION CITY, Kan. (KWCH) - The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) is looking into an officer-involved shooting that left one man injured in Junction City Saturday evening. KWCH TV reports that around 5:30 pm, a woman called 911 to report that a man was outside her home, waving a handgun and threatening her (near the 700 block of West 11th Street). Junction City Police responded and spotted the man fleeing the area and proceeded to chase the man on foot. During the chase, the man aimed his gun at officers. One officer then fired at the man, striking him multiple times. EMS responded and took over life-saving measures. The man has now been identified as 36-year-old Carlton Solton. No others involved in the incident were injured; however, Solton underwent surgery and is receiving treatment in the intensive care unit at an area hospital.
(AP version...)
Kansas Authorities Investigating After Man Shot by Junction City Police
JUNCTION CITY, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Bureau of Investigation is probing the police shooting of a Junction City man over the weekend. The agency says the shooting happened late Saturday afternoon. That's when officers were called to a Junction City home by a woman who reported that a man was outside her house waving a gun and threatening her and another woman. Arriving officers chased a man running from the scene. The officers said they heard gunshots and saw the man later identified as 36-year-old Carlton Solton Jr. pointing a gun at them. An officer fired several shots, hitting Solton multiple times. Solton was taken to a Topeka trauma center for surgery and remained in the intensive care unit Sunday.
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Report: Rural Kansas Airports at Risk of Closing
HAYS, Kan. (KNS/HPPR) - A nationwide pilot shortage has put some rural Kansas airports in danger of losing their only commercial airline carrier. The Kansas News Service reports that the uncertainty is already affecting local economies. For Kansans living in Liberal, Dodge City and Hays, there’s only one airline that flies to and from the local airport: SkyWest. So when that airline filed paperwork this spring to terminate services, it sent shock waves through these communities. Liberal area economic development director Eli Svaty says small towns like his still need air service — and not just for the convenience of travelers, but to draw the new businesses and workers that grow the local economy. “Not to say that you lose the airport, you lose the town. But it is critical that… we find something that can assure people that it's okay to live out here in rural Kansas because we still have great air service," he said. For now, the federal government is forcing SkyWest to continue some service to these towns while the airports try to find a replacement airline. ( Read more.)
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Adoptions Another Facet of Life Halted by War in Ukraine
LEEDS, Maine (AP) — The ripple effects of Russia's invasion of Ukraine have been devastating for families of all kinds, including those who have seen their prospective adoptions put on hold. Ukraine has stopped all international adoptions as the country copes with the turmoil unleashed on its courts by the war. Children, including orphans, have also fled or been displaced. The National Council For Adoption says there are more than 300 children previously hosted by American families that were seeking to adopt them at the time the war started. U.S. families meanwhile are trying to keep the bonds with the children in Europe strong.
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Kansas Ordered to Pay $63 Million to Former Pizza Magnate
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court has ordered the state to pay more than $63 million to settle a 16-year tax dispute with former pizza magnate Gene Bicknell. The court ruled Friday that Bicknell was a Florida resident in 2005 and 2006, when he sold NPC International, which at the time was the largest owner of Pizza Huts in the world. State officials argued that Bicknell, a longtime resident of Pittsburg, was a Kansas resident when he sold the company, which would have meant millions in sales tax revenue for the state. In 2020, Bicknell said Kansas owed him $63 million — his original tax bill plus interest.
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Global Shortage of Medical Dye Prompting KC Hospitals to Ration Supplies
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (KNS) - A global shortage of medical dyes used for procedures like CAT scans has prompted Kansas City area hospitals to start rationing the supplies. Contrast fluids contain iodine that helps doctors look for abnormalities on X-rays and CAT scans. But there’s a shortage – yet another example in a long string of supply problems since the pandemic hit in 2020. The KU Health System says COVID lockdowns affecting Chinese manufacturing plants triggered this latest shortage. KU Health System is using its contrast dyes on critical patients. It delays scans for non-urgent patients or uses alternatives, like MRIs, whenever possible.
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Invasive Jumping Worms Spreading Across Kansas, Missouri, other Midwestern States
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (WDAF) — A species of wiggling worms can jump a foot in the air, and they’ve spread to more than a dozen states in the Midwest, including Kansas and Missouri. WDAF TV reports that the jumping worm, also known as Alabama jumpers, snake worms and other names, are invasive earthworms, originally native to east Asia. They thrash wildly when disturbed, have snakelike movements and sometimes shed their tail in defense, according to the Missouri Department of Conservation. These worms have experts increasingly worried as they spread across the country. The U.S. Forest Service says Asian jumping worms eat a lot. “They are never satiated,” the agency writes. And in the end, after feeding their unending appetites, the Missouri Department of Conservation says established populations of jumping worms can make the soil look like coffee grounds. That soil won’t be able to retain moisture, and Smithsonian Magazine reports the topsoil will be depleted of nutrients, making it difficult for plants to grow. To make matters worse, jumping worms grow twice as fast and reproduce more quickly than other earthworms, a Cornell University study says. The worm’s tiny eggs can even survive a Midwest winter. ( Read more.)
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These area headlines are curated by KPR news staffers, including J. Schafer, Laura Lorson, Kaye McIntyre, and Tom Parkinson. Our headlines are generally posted by 10 am weekdays, 11 am weekends. This news summary is made possible by KPR listener-members. Become one today.