Kobach urges Congress to ratify controversial health compact

Kansas secretary of state says interstate compact a way to ‘end Obamacare’ in Kansas and other member states

by Jim McLean, KHI News Service

Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach is urging members of Congress to ratify a controversial health compact that would give Kansas and eight other states control over Medicare and other federal health care programs within their borders.

Kobach, a Republican whose positions on voter fraud and immigration have made him a controversial figure both in Kansas and nationally, said in a letter to Republican members of Congress that the compact is “the only legal path that we have left to end Obamacare,” referring to the federal Affordable Care Act that was spearheaded by President Barack Obama.

Kobach sent the letter July 9 to GOP members who represent the nine states that have adopted legislation authorizing the compact. His office included a copy of the letter in a media release Monday.

“I feel that it is my personal duty to do everything possible to stop Obamacare in the wake of the Supreme Court’s two erroneous decisions sustaining it,” Kobach, a former constitutional law professor, wrote, referring to two U.S. Supreme Court decisions that upheld the ACA.

The most recent of those decisions, released June 25, preserved federal tax subsidies used by nearly 70,000 Kansans to purchase health insurance through the online marketplace at www.healthcare.gov.

Kobach says the rulings left those “who cherish the sovereign authority of states” wondering whether there was any way left to “avoid the overreaching federal mandates and regulations of Obamacare.”

The compact would give member states regulatory and administrative control of federal health care programs, except those that cover members of the U.S. military.

Gov. Sam Brownback, who like Kobach is a conservative Republican, signed the bill authorizing the state’s membership in the compact in April 2014, despite concerns that it could threaten the Medicare benefits of nearly 450,000 Kansans.

“Some members of the Legislature seem determined to express their disdain for the ACA,” Maren Turner, director of AARP Kansas, said at the time. “Placing the health care of Kansans in jeopardy is not the way to do it.”

A bill to ratify the compact was recently referred to the U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary, Kobach said in his letter.

“I urge you to do everything in your power to speed its adoption,” he wrote, adding that if Congress approves the compact it does not “require the president’s signature.”

That has been a matter of debate among legal scholars.

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Police search for Edwardsville burglary suspect this morning

A search was underway for a burglary suspect this morning in Edwardsville.

An employee of a business near 96th and Woodend interrupted a burglary to his work truck this morning, said Lt. Clifton Oblinger of the Edwardsville Police Department.

The employee got into a physical altercation with the suspect, he said. The employee felt threatened, got a pistol out of his truck, and fired a single shot to the ground, Lt. Oblinger said.

The suspect, described as a male in his 20s, got away, according to police. He is not believed to have any injuries.

Officers from Bonner Springs and Kansas City, Kan., police departments assisted, setting a perimeter and bringing K-9s for the search, he said.

Police kept getting reports about sightings of the suspect; however, he has not been found yet, he said. Officers are still keeping a presence in the area, he added.

Victim of fatal accident in Bonner Springs identified

A pedestrian who was killed in a traffic accident at 12:51 a.m. Sunday, July 12, has been identified, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.

Janet K. Dull, 61, Kansas City, Kan., was killed as she was crossing the intersection of K-7 and 130th in Bonner Springs, according to the trooper’s report.

The trooper’s report stated that a Toyota car was northbound on K-7 when it struck the pedestrian. Driving the Toyota was a 71-year-old Leavenworth woman, according to the report. There was a 79-year-old passenger in the car.