Library workshop to guide writers in finding own ‘inner trickster’

Denise Low, former Kansas Poet Laureate and retired humanities professor at Haskell Indian Nations University, will read from her book of stories, “Jackalope,” and conduct a short workshop, guiding writers in finding their “inner tricksters,” on Dec. 14.

The program and workshop will be at 6 p.m. Monday, Dec. 14, at the Bonner Springs City Library, 201 N. Nettleton Ave., Bonner Springs.

The program is free and open to the public. Registration is not required.

Low will conduct a fun writing exercise to help writers find their own “inner tricksters.” In the tradition of the Jackalope, Coyote, Brer Rabbit and Bugs Bunny, the tricksters, according to Low, are one’s own mischievous subconscious, causing change.

Low has won two Pushcart Prize nominations for her fiction. Her most recent book is “Jackalope,” published by Red Mountain Press. She blogs, reviews and co-publishes Mammoth Publications. Her workshops have national reach, and she teaches at Baker University.

Amid financial troubles, company closes two Kansas ethanol plants

Abengoa Bioenergy halts operations at year-old facility near Hugoton

by Bryan Thompson, KHI News Service

Financial problems at one of the world’s leading biofuels companies are causing ripples in the Kansas economy.

The Spanish company, Abengoa Bioenergy, opened a state-of-the-art ethanol plant in October 2014 near Hugoton, Kan. Gov. Sam Brownback greeted the grand opening as a shot in the arm for the Kansas economy.

“It does create jobs,” Brownback said at the time. “It creates opportunities, and right now we are seeing a rural renaissance in Kansas.”

But Abengoa’s role in that renaissance has not lived up to expectations. The company projected an annual payroll of more than $5 million at the southwest Kansas plant and estimated it would spend $17 million a year buying crop residue from area farmers for use as the raw material to produce ethanol fuels.

But a little more than a month ago, Abengoa officials said they were going to close the plant and reopen it in the spring, according to Neal Gillespie, Stevens County economic development director.

“They had produced ethanol, but no, it had never come up to full production,” he said. “I think they found some problems in the process and they were going to address those over the wintertime.”

Then, in late November, news broke that the parent company was considering bankruptcy protection.

All but half a dozen of the 50 employees in Hugoton have been laid off. Gillespie said some of them already may have moved away.

The $500 million ethanol plant was financed, in part, with a $132.4 million loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy. A spokesperson for the energy department said the company repaid its loan in full in March.

In addition to the next-generation cellulosic ethanol plant in Hugoton, Abengoa shut down an older, traditional ethanol plant in Colwich.

Biomass Magazine recently quoted a former Abengoa employee as saying an executive told staffers the company didn’t have enough money to continue paying wages.

“We were told layoffs were worldwide and only about 30 people remain at the corporate office in St. Louis,” the employee said.

Abengoa did not respond to repeated requests, by phone and email, for comment.

That doesn’t surprise Gillespie, who thinks the company is trying to figure out what its next move should be. But he is optimistic that production will eventually resume at the Hugoton plant, whether by Abengoa or another company.

“I do think there’s a lot of value in that plant out there,” Gillespie 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.

– See more at http://www.khi.org/news/article/amid-financial-troubles-company-closes-two-kansas-ethanol-plants#sthash.Gf7pv0n9.dpuf

Holiday train

More than 350 people from the Argentine and Turner areas of Kansas City, Kan., rode the BNSF holiday train from Turner to Topeka on Tuesday night. It was the first time the BNSF holiday train has been in Kansas City, Kan. Children on the train ride visited with Santa Claus. BNSF made a $5,000 check presentation to Camellia White, executive director of the Turner Recreation Center, on Tuesday. (Photo from Bill Rogers of ANDA)
More than 350 people from the Argentine and Turner areas of Kansas City, Kan., rode the BNSF holiday train from Turner to Topeka on Tuesday night. It was the first time the BNSF holiday train has been in Kansas City, Kan. Children on the train ride visited with Santa Claus. BNSF made a $5,000 check presentation to Camellia White, executive director of the Turner Recreation Center, on Tuesday. (Photo from Bill Rogers of ANDA)