State seeks feedback on KanCare

Contracts to administer Kansas Medicaid back up for bid in 2018

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

State officials have scheduled five meetings to gather public comment on KanCare in advance of renewing contracts to administer the state’s privatized Medicaid program.

The contracts currently held by UnitedHealthcare, Amerigroup and Sunflower State Health Plan (a subsidiary of Centene) expire in 2018. Those private insurance companies serve as managed care organizations that operate KanCare.

Susan Mosier, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, said her agency wants to hear from the public on what to include in the next contracts.

“As we move toward renewal of KanCare in 2018, it is important for us to continue to meet with the people directly impacted,” Mosier said in a statement released Tuesday. “We want to listen to what they have to say and the ideas that they have to move KanCare forward. These public sessions are part of our efforts to make KanCare even better and more effective for beneficiaries and their families.”

Public meetings with officials from KDHE and the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services are set for 1 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. on:

• May 24 at the Ramada Hotel and Convention Center in downtown Topeka.
• May 25 at the Marriott Wichita and the Jack Reardon Civic Center and Hilton Garden Inn in Kansas City, Kan.
• May 26 at the Rose Garden in Hays and Pittsburg State University.

According to a news release, the administration will incorporate the public comments into an application for the renewal of KanCare that will be submitted in October to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Medicaid is administered by the states but partially funded with federal dollars and is subject to federal oversight.

State officials intend to vet applications to administer the new KanCare contracts — worth about $1 billion each — from November 2016 to May 2017 and launch the renewed version of KanCare in January 2018.

Gov. Sam Brownback moved to privatize all of Kansas Medicaid under KanCare after he took office in 2011, saying that managed care would improve health outcomes and save the state $1 billion over five years.

The administration and the managed care organizations have pointed to metrics like decreased emergency room visits and better management of chronic conditions like diabetes as evidence the program has been a success.

Some of the money saved has, in past years, allowed the administration to provide home and community-based support services for Kansans with disabilities who were on waiting lists.

Critics have pointed to persistent problems with hospital billing, heavy financial losses for the managed care organizations early on that are now beginning to level off and anecdotes about service reductions for Kansans with disabilities as evidence the system is flawed.

Case managers for Kansans with disabilities also have expressed frustration with the thousands of dollars the managed care organizations have spent lobbying legislators and contributing to their re-election campaigns.

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KCKCC’s Killam all-region; Harris, Oroke second team picks

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

What a difference a year made for three Kansas City Kansas Community College softball sophomores.

Designated hitter Tiffany Killam was named to the All-Region VI first team for Division E and second team All-Jayhawk while first baseman Geena Harris and outfielder Morgan Oroke were both All-Region second team and honorable mention All-Jayhawk selections.

A .317 hitter with five home runs and 42 runs-batted-in as a freshman, Killam belted a record 16 home runs this team while hitting .455 with team highs in RBI with 49 and slugging with an .881 average.

“Tiffany really worked hard all summer and fall on her swing,” said head coach Kacy Tillery. A mortuary science major from Waupun, Wis., Killam will serve as team manager next year while completing work on her degree.

A Tonganoxie graduate, Oroke hit .306 in 40 games last season before adding 127 points to her batting average this spring, hitting.427 with 25 RBI. “Morgan improved tremendously as a player and was without an error in conference play,” said Tillery

A Bonner Springs graduate, Harris played in only 15 games and hit .250 her freshman year at Neosho County before transferring to KCKCC where this spring she hit a blistering .436 and was second on the team in home runs with six and RBI with 44. Her home runs included a walk-off round tripper in a 3-2 win over Johnson County and the winning home run in a 4-3 win over league champion Highland.

“She came here and really worked hard,” Tillery said.

Capital murder charge filed against shooting suspect; bond set at $10 million

Today Wyandotte County District Attorney Jerome Gorman filed multiple charges against Curtis R. Ayers, 28, Tonganoxie, Kan., in connection with the May 9 shooting death of Kansas City, Kan., Police Detective Bradley Lancaster.

The charges include capital murder; two counts of aggravated robbery; two counts of aggravated burglary; aggravated battery; two counts of kidnapping; and criminal possession of a firearm.

Curtis R. Ayers
Curtis R. Ayers

Gorman said bond was set at $10 million. He also said his office has not yet made a final decision on whether to seek the death penalty, and that decision will come after the investigation is complete and after discussions with the officer’s family. It will be the sole decision of the district attorney’s office, he added.

Ayers remains in the hospital currently in Missouri, Gorman said, and his condition has improved somewhat. Ayers was shot by a Kansas City, Mo., police officer who witnessed Ayers shooting a woman driving on U.S. 71. He was charged on Tuesday by the Jackson County, Mo., prosecutor in connection with that carjacking and shooting of a woman driver on U.S. 71, an incident that occurred after the shooting in Kansas City, Kan.

Detective Lancaster died from his injuries in the shooting near the Hollywood Casino on Monday. The suspect allegedly carjacked his vehicle and drove west.

The charges from the shooting incident near the Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway included capital murder, aggravated robbery and aggravated burglary, Gorman said.

Another incident, a carjacking at 118th and State Avenue, resulted in charges of aggravated robbery, aggravated battery, aggravated burglary and two counts of kidnapping. Two children were in the Toyota Camry that was allegedly carjacked at that location. A woman who was in the Camry was injured.

The final charge was felon in possession of a firearm. Gorman said the suspect had two firearms, including a long gun. He had been previously convicted of eluding a law enforcement officer, and the law does not allow those who have been previously convicted to have firearms.

Gorman said Wyandotte County will begin an extradition process immediately. The defendant is currently in the custody of Jackson County, Mo. Gorman plans to discuss the extradition with Jackson County officials.

“Our hope is that they will allow our charges to take precedent,” he added.

Gorman said the investigation is continuing, and he declined to discuss the facts of the case because the investigation was not yet complete. Many law enforcement agencies were involved in this case, including officers from the Wyandotte County agencies, Kansas City, Kan., Leavenworth County, Jackson County, Kansas City, Mo., Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Basehor, Kan., and the Kansas Highway Patrol.

However, in answer to a question, Gorman said that Hollywood Casino personnel had called for law enforcement assistance the day of the shooting. A bondsman had been at the casino on an earlier day looking for Ayers, he said, on a previous incident that happened in Leavenworth County.

Ayers was dropped off at the casino on Monday, and Gorman believes Ayers was inside the casino for a short period of time then.

Gorman said investigators believe Ayers had two separate weapons with him on the day of the shooting, including a long gun. However, at this time investigators do not believe he had a long gun with him when he was at the casino.

Gorman said there is a period of time that is not yet accounted for between the shooting at the casino and the shooting on Highway 71 in Missouri, in which the defendant may have obtained the long gun, and that if any citizens have any information on where the suspect was during that time, they should call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.

Gorman added it is also possible that Leavenworth County prosecutors at some time may want to file charges against the defendant, involving another carjacking in Basehor after the defendant headed west.