BPU scheduled to meet tonight

The Board of Public Utilities will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 6, at the BPU offices, 540 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kan.

The work session will start at 5 p.m. with a board update and general manager update; and a solar project report.

The regular meeting begins at 6 p.m. Jan. 6. The agenda includes a visitors’ time; legislative update; resolution for a pilot community solar project; November financial report; board comments and general manager comments.

Sporting KC names new director of player personnel

Brian Bliss has joined Sporting Kansas City’s technical staff as director of player personnel, according to a news release.

A World Cup and Olympic veteran on the U.S. Men’s National Team, Bliss will oversee Sporting KC player personnel matters while assisting in domestic and international scouting. He will also share a player assessment role for the Swope Park Rangers and the Sporting KC Academy, reporting to Manager and Technical Director Peter Vermes.

Bliss ended his MLS playing career in 1998 with the Kansas City Wizards and served as an assistant coach for the team from 2000 to 2006.

“I’m excited to come back to Kansas City and work for a great organization,” Bliss said. “Sporting KC has made tremendous strides over the last several years, and we have a great opportunity to continue that growth into the future. I look forward to helping Peter and the staff reach their goals and keep the club headed in a positive direction.”

Bliss comes to Sporting KC from the Chicago Fire, where he had been the club’s technical director since December 2013. He assumed the role of interim head coach for Chicago’s last five matches of the 2015 season.

Bliss began his coaching career in 1999 with the A-League’s Connecticut Wolves before joining the Wizards a year later. In seven seasons as an assistant coach, he helped lead Kansas City to the 2000 Supporters’ Shield, 2000 MLS Cup and 2004 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup titles. He was appointed Kansas City’s interim head coach for the second half of the 2006 campaign, finishing with a 4-4-6 record.

Following his time with the Wizards, Bliss spent 2007 as the state director of coaching for Kansas Youth Soccer. In 2008, he began a six-year spell as technical director for Columbus Crew SC, winning two Supporters’ Shields (2008, 2009) and the 2008 MLS Cup. Bliss became the club’s interim head xoach in September 2013 and went 4-4-0 to close out the season. At the youth level, he coached the Crew Juniors to U.S. Youth Soccer U-19 McGuire Cup national championships in 2010 and 2012.

Bliss has served as an assistant coach for the United States Under-20 Men’s National Team since 2012, including a trip to the 2013 FIFA World Cup in Turkey.

As a player, Bliss earned 33 caps for the U.S. Men’s National Team between 1984-1995. The defender played with Vermes at the 1988 Olympics and the 1990 FIFA World Cup while also competing at the 1995 Copa America.

A native of Rochester, N.Y., Bliss began his 12-year club career with the Cleveland Force (1987-88), Albany Capitals (1989) and the Boston Bolts (1990). Following the 1990 World Cup, Bliss moved overseas where he played for Energie Cottbus (1990-91), Chemnitzer FC (1991) and FC Carl Zeiss Jena (1992-96) of the German Second Division. In 1996, Bliss returned to the United States and was allocated to Columbus for the inaugural season of Major League Soccer. He moved to the New York/New Jersey MetroStars in 1997 and finished his MLS playing career with Kansas

– Story from Sporting KC

Forum explores conservative path to Medicaid expansion

Some Kansas legislators hope to debate issue during upcoming session

by Mike Sherry, Heartland Health Monitor

If policymakers in deep-red Indiana can do it, so can their equally conservative counterparts in Kansas.

That was the dominant – though not unanimously held – message at a forum Tuesday at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, where the topic was expanding the Kansas Medicaid program to cover as many as 150,000 additional Kansans.

Doug Leonard, president of the Indiana Hospital Association, told an audience of more than 300 people at the forum that Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, who is a conservative like Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback, was satisfied that Medicaid expansion in Indiana was fiscally sound in the short- and long-term.

“He was not going to throw the state under the bus,” Leonard said.

The expanded Indiana program, which took effect nearly a year ago, has added more than 220,000 residents to the Medicaid rolls. Nearly 1,000 new health care providers have joined the program.

Kansas, by contrast, is one of 20 states that have not expanded Medicaid, which in Kansas is a privatized program that goes by the name KanCare.

A February analysis by the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation called the Indiana plan the most complex waiver of the four the federal government had approved up until that time. The analysis cited the state’s four Medicaid packages and varied treatment of beneficiaries based on variables such as income, medical frailty and maintenance of premium payments.

The government has allowed states to experiment with new approaches to Medicaid through expansion. One general idea in these waivers is to have recipients pay premiums and co-pays.

That’s the case in Indiana. Leonard said that Medicaid beneficiaries in Indiana are required to have some “skin in the game” and must make modest contributions to health savings accounts to qualify for enhanced benefits. Enrollees who fail to pay their share of monthly premiums face added co-pays and other fees.

Another key component of the Indiana plan, Leonard said, is that it pays health care providers at Medicare rates, which are higher than Medicaid reimbursement rates.

Under the Affordable Care Act, the federal government pays 100 percent of the costs of Medicaid expansion through 2016 in states that raise eligibility to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, or $16,242 annually for an individual.

The federal share gradually phases down to 90 percent in 2020 and remains at that level afterward.

The forum included three state senators – Jeff King, a Republican from Independence, Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park, and Laura Kelly, a Democrat from Topeka – and two state representatives – Jerry Henry, a Democrat from Atchison, and Mark Hutton, a Republican from Wichita. A similar forum occurred in November in Wichita.

It was unclear after the three-hour session if the Kansas Legislature will schedule committee hearings on Medicaid expansion in the session that begins next week, let alone find enough common ground to pass a measure this year.

Denning, for one, expressed serious misgivings about expanding KanCare, insisting Indiana would be unable to control the costs of its expanded program, especially given the higher reimbursements it’s paying to providers.

“They have no idea what is fixing to happen to them,” he said.

He cited a recent analysis of the Indiana plan posted on the website of Forbes magazine. Leonard, however, derided the analysis, saying it consisted of “wild claims” posted on a blog that had been thoroughly debunked by Indiana state officials.

“Sen. Denning must have access to some books in Indiana that we don’t have access to,” he said. “The governor’s office, the Senate and the House all looked at this, and it’s the state that came to us with the idea of the plan and the funding mechanism, so they have a lot more confidence in it than Sen. Denning has.”

Funding for Indiana’s expanded program comes from the state cigarette tax and an assessment on providers.

Dave Kerr, a former Republican state senator from Hutchinson who served as president of the Kansas Senate, told the forum audience that Kansas needed “to get serious and design a plan for Kansas with Kansas principles.”

He said that any Kansas solution should require beneficiaries to pay something for their care and contain an employment component.

King, whose hometown hospital, Mercy Hospital, closed last year, said the closure might have happened even if KanCare had been expanded and provided it with additional Medicaid reimbursements. But expansion, he said, might have provided other options.

“Saying no to everything is not the answer,” King said.

Even if expansion does come up for debate, King said he doesn’t expect it to pass this session. He predicted it could take as long as two years for that to happen.

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/kancare-forum-explores-conservative-path-to-medicaid-expansion#sthash.GRH3KUsc.dpuf