Three vehicles involved in crash on I-35 ramp to 18th Street

A crash involved three vehicles at 4:15 p.m. Aug. 12 on the I-35 ramp to 18th Street in Kansas City, Kan.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s report, two vehicles were stopped in traffic when a Kia Sportage was braking but could not stop in time.

The Kia hit the back of a Lexus, pushing it into a Dodge utility vehicle, the trooper’s report stated.

The driver of the Kia, a 68-year-old Kansas City, Kan., resident, was not injured, according to the report.

The driver of the Lexus, a 26-year-old woman from Kansas City, Mo., also was not injured, the report stated.

The driver of the Dodge utility vehicle, a 26-year-old woman from Kansas City, Mo., was taken to a Kansas City, Kan., hospital with a possible injury, according to the report.

A 1-year-old passenger in the Dodge utility vehicle, a girl from Kansas City, Mo., also was taken to the hospital with a possible injury, the report stated. The infant was properly restrained in a child safety seat, the report said.

Disabled Kansans urged to weigh in on waiver changes

Advocates say proposed changes could be big, encourage attendance at coming forums

by Dave Ranney, KHI News Service

Advocates for Kansans with disabilities are encouraging those who receive services through Medicaid waivers to attend upcoming forums at which state officials will discuss proposed changes to the waiver system.

State health officials on Monday announced plans to host 13 public forums on how the changes might affect Kansans who access services that help them live in community-based settings rather than institutions.

The 90-minute forums are scheduled:

• 10:30 a.m., 2 p.m., and 5:30 p.m., Aug. 25, at Capital Plaza Hotel, 1717 SW Topeka Blvd., Topeka.
• 10 a.m., 2 p.m., 5:30 p.m., Aug. 26, at Hilton Garden Inn, 520 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kan.
• 10 a.m., 2 p.m., 5:30 p.m., Aug. 26, at Wichita Marriott, 9100 Corporate Hills Dr., Wichita.
• 10 a.m., 2 p.m., Sleep Inn & Suites, 202 W. 11th, Coffeyville.
• 10 a.m., 2 p.m. Clarion Inn, 1911 E. Kansas Ave, Garden City.

Attendees are asked to fill out an RSVP form on the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services website.

The proposed changes, according to KDADS Secretary Kari Bruffett, are meant to give the state the ability “to provide the right services to individuals regardless of their disability definition.”

Details of the proposed changes are not yet public, Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokesperson, said in an email. But she said additional information would be made available prior to the forums.

Currently, the state’s Medicaid program includes separate waivers that set eligibility criteria for home and community based services for people with physical disabilities, developmental disabilities, traumatic brain injuries and autism. There are also waiver programs for children with serious emotional disabilities and frail elders.

KDADS and the Kansas Department of Health and Environment have proposed combining the often-complex waivers into a single, ‘global wavier’ that would be easier, and perhaps less costly, to administer.

The public hearings are meant to give consumers an opportunity to comment on how they might be affected by the proposed changes.

Rocky Nichols, executive director of the Disability Rights Center of Kansas, said he’s actively encouraging people with disabilities to participate in the forums.

“We need to find out more about what they’re proposing, but, potentially, this could be the largest single change in the way waiver services are provided,” in Kansas, Nichols said. “Bigger than KanCare.”

KanCare refers to the state’s Medicaid program, which, since 2013, has been administered by three for-profit managed care companies.

KDADS and KDHE are charged with making sure the new system’s services comply with the standards spelled out in the waivers.

“KanCare changed the way the way the waivers were managed, but it didn’t change the waivers,” Nichols said. “What the state is proposing would change the way the waivers are structured. That’s a pretty big change.”

Nichols said he is concerned that combining the programs in a global waiver could result in some people’s needs being put ahead of others.

De Rocha said such concerns are misplaced.

“The idea is that, under the current siloed waiver system with the individual lists of available services for each waiver, consumers sometimes don’t always get the services that would be most useful and helpful to them,” she said.

In the current system, she said, waiver designations dictate the services that are provided. Under the proposed changes, the state would have flexibility to match services to persons needs regardless of their specific disability.

“We want to move away from labeling and defining people by their disabilities,” de Rocha said.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Sporting KC advances to U.S. Open Cup finals

Benny Feilhaber
Benny Feilhaber

Krisztian Nemeth
Krisztian Nemeth

Sporting Kansas City advanced to the 2015 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup Final with a 3-1 come-from-behind victory over Real Salt Lake on Wednesday.

Olmes Garcia and Soni Mustivar traded first-half goals at Sporting Park, setting up a dramatic final 10 minutes in which Benny Feilhaber and Krisztian Nemeth provided the goals to send Sporting Kansas City into the Sept. 30 championship against the Philadelphia Union at PPL Park.

The Union, 1-0 winners over the Chicago Fire on Wednesday, will be the host of the championship match for the second straight year after falling 3-1 in extra time to the Seattle Sounders FC in 2014.

Meeting for the fourth time this season, Sporting Kansas City and Real Salt Lake renewed the burgeoning rivalry with a high-stakes showdown reminiscent of their match in MLS Cup 2013. In front of more than 16,000 fans – a record crowd for the U.S. Open Cup’s modern era – Sporting Kansas City rallied after falling behind in the 24th minute.

Tim Melia, who began his MLS career with Real Salt Lake in 2010, had made a superb foot save to deny designated player Sebastian Jaime minutes earlier but found himself one-on-one with Garcia after a ball played behind the Sporting KC defense by Tony Beltran.

Garcia made no mistake with a first-time finish to cap off a 14-pass scoring sequence for his second goal against Sporting KC in 2015, following his 93rd minute game-winner in June.

Sporting Kansas City responded just over 10 minutes later on a free kick won by Nemeth near the left corner. Feilhaber served a driven delivery inside the six-yard box, where Mustivar beat Nick Rimando to the cross with a darting run and leveled the score at 1-1 with his header into the back of the net.

Feilhaber now has 17 assists across all competition in 2015, one shy of the club’s single-season record, and has contributed a goal or assist in six straight games across all competition. His five assists in this year’s U.S. Open Cup are most by any player in the tournament and most by a KC player all-time in the competition.

The match would remain deadlocked until the 80th minute thanks in large part to Rimando’s seven saves. The U.S. Men’s National goalkeeper turned away a shot from Amadou Dia – one of two rookies to start on Sporting Kansas City’s backline – in the 41st minute and was called into action again to deny Dom Dwyer in the 48th minute.

Moments later, however, Sporting Kansas City was inches from pulling ahead when Nemeth latched on to Feilhaber’s through ball and pushed a shot past Rimando only to see Beltran clear the goal-bound effort off the line with a crucial recovery. On the opposite end, Melia did his part to hold Real Salt Lake at bay with his save on Devon Sandoval in the 53rd minute.

The game’s final 30 minutes would belong to a home side seeking a third U.S. Open Cup title (2004, 2012) and the ultimate reward of a berth in the 2016/17 CONCACAF Champions League. Feilhaber’s free kick was on frame in the 60th minute but smothered by Rimando with a low dive to his left, the same direction in which he was required to react toward minutes later to thwart Dwyer.

Nemeth took his turn to threaten with a scoring chance in the 71st minute. He looked poised to bury the breakthrough goal until the shot’s deflection off Elias Vasquez directed it wide of the post.

The decisive goal would finally come to fruition in the 80th minute with Dwyer doing the lion’s share of the work.

Dwyer initially brought down a clearance from Mustivar, spun past Vasquez and eluded the challenge of Aaron Maund before sending his shot off the post with a left-footed strike. Feilhaber was first to the rebound and hammered home a shot from 10 yards out for his 10th goal of the season in all competitions.

Feilhaber again proved pivotal on the game’s final goal, sending a 65-yard ball forward that Maund errantly headed into the path of Nemeth.

The 26-year-old newcomer danced around Rimando and calmly placed his shot into the empty net for his 12th goal in all competitions, sealing Sporting Kansas City’s fourth straight win in the U.S. Open Cup.

Sporting KC will now resume the MLS regular season against Western Conference leaders Vancouver Whitecaps FC at 8 p.m. on Saturday at Sporting Park in Kansas City, Kan. A limited number of tickets may be available via Ticketmaster.com or by calling 888-4KC-GOAL.

Ticket information for Sporting Kansas City supporters interested in attending the 2015 U.S. Open Cup Final will be available by Friday on SKCAwayTickets.com.
– Story from Sporting KC