Car hits construction vehicle on I-70

A 1996 Honda Civic Del Sol hit a construction vehicle this morning on eastbound I-70 just east of the Indian Springs exit in Kansas City, Kan.

According to a Kansas Turnpike Authority trooper’s report, a 2012 Freightliner tractor was parked on the right shoulder waiting to deliver construction material to the construction site about 6:15 a.m. Oct. 2 when the Del Sol ran into the back of it.

The driver of the Del Sol, a 66-year-old man from Kansas City, Kan., was injured and taken to a hospital, according to the trooper’s report.

The driver of the construction vehicle, a 50-year-old man from Owosso, Mich., was not injured, according to the report.

Disability community abuzz about waiver integration

Advocates say change could be bigger than switch to KanCare for people with disabilities

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

Advocates for elderly and disabled Kansans are anxiously awaiting the publication of the state’s plan to combine seven Medicaid waivers into one.

The waivers currently provide home and community-based services for people within a range of support categories, including developmental disability, physical disability, traumatic brain injury or frail-elderly.

Janet Williams, who runs an Overland Park company that provides services for brain injury survivors, said the waiver integration plan is a hot topic for people in her line of work.

“It’s all anybody’s talking about,” Williams said.

Officials with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services initially said they planned to post details of the proposal on Sept. 30.

But Angela de Rocha, a spokeswoman for the agency, said via email Tuesday that was not a hard deadline and the plan may not be published until late this week or early next week.

State officials say combining the seven waivers will reduce bureaucracy and allow enrollees to receive services that better fit their individual needs, rather than being constrained by a disability label.

But advocates for Kansans with disabilities have expressed anxiety about the overhaul.

Williams said she hopes the result will protect the rights of Kansans with the most severe disabilities to remain in their homes rather than live in institutions.

“Combining waivers to me is watering down what’s available to people with the most significant disabilities,” she said. “You can’t design a waiver that’s going to meet every need. That’s why you’ve got individual waivers.”

The waiver integration plan was also on the agenda when a new advocacy group for case managers met Sept. 17 at an Overland Park church.

Minutes from that meeting show that while some of the case managers saw the potential for positives to come from the change, they believed it had to be done carefully to avoid losing services.

Others said problems with the eligibility process for the individual waivers should be addressed before they’re combined. KDADS will provide a public comment period on the proposal after it is posted.

Williams, whose company has lately seen people with brain injuries struggle with the amount of documentation required to qualify for the waiver, echoed that sentiment.

Matt Fletcher, associate executive director of Topeka-based developmental disability provider network Interhab, said the waiver integration plan is “potentially the most profound change to service delivery in the last 20 years or so.”

He said that includes KanCare, the state’s recent move to place nearly all Medicaid services in managed care administered by three private insurance companies.

Fletcher said much of the discussion in the disability community about waiver integration has focused on the state’s “very aggressive timeline” for completing the change.

State officials expect to submit their plan to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services by the start of 2016. If CMS signs on, the state plans to implement the changes by July 2016.

“It might behoove the state to have perhaps a slower timeline that allows for greater amounts of collaboration so we make sure we can do this in best possible way,” Fletcher said.

In that sense, he said it might be a good sign if the waiver integration plan is not released Sept. 30 as originally expected.

“If they don’t feel like it’s ready, then move the timeline back,” Fletcher said. “That’s responsible.”

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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Powerball to change after Oct. 3 drawing

Lottery players will have a better chance of winning a prize in Powerball with changes in the game that begin after the Saturday, Oct. 3, drawing.

Sales for the new version of the Powerball game start Sunday, Oct. 4, with the first drawing in the new Powerball game on Wednesday, Oct. 7. Among the changes players will see:

• Overall odds in the game will improve to 1:25 instead of the current 1:32. Players will choose their first five numbers from a set of 69 (currently 59) and their Powerball from a pool of 26 (currently 35).

• The third prize level for matching four of the first five numbers and the Powerball increases from $10,000 to $50,000.

• A 10X multiplier will be added whenever the advertised annuitized jackpot is $150 million or less. Currently, players can multiply prizes (except for the jackpot and Match 5 level) by up to 5X by adding the Power Play option for an extra $1 per play. Power Play numbers will be: 2X, 3X, 4X, 5X and 10X.

Jackpots will continue to start at $40 million. Odds of winning the Powerball jackpot will change to 1:292 million from the current 1:175 million.

Players who use a play slip to purchase their Powerball tickets will need to get a new play slip from a Kansas Lottery retailer to purchase tickets for drawings held after Oct. 3.

Powerball is currently played in 44 states, Washington D.C., Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Powerball jackpot for Oct. 3 is an estimated $40 million with a cash option of $24.5 million. One ticket, sold in Michigan matched all numbers in the Sept. 30 drawing to win a jackpot estimated at $310.5 million.

Information from Kansas Lottery