Youth baseball field ribbon-cutting planned Thursday

A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Kansas RBI baseball field at 5325 Parallel Parkway is planned at 3 p.m. Thursday, May 5.

The new field will be named the George and Doris Haley Field at the Barton-Ross complex.

RBI is an acronym for Reviving Baseball in the Inner City, a program sponsored by Major League Baseball. Kansas RBI has restored the old 3&2 field in Kansas City, Kan., that had fallen into disuse.

The public is invited to the ribbon-cutting at the field, said Cle Ross, executive director of Kansas RBI.

In conjunction with the ribbon-cutting, a fundraising banquet will be held later in the day at the Vox Theatre, 1405 Southwest Blvd., in Kansas City, Kan. Reservations and tickets are necessary to attend the banquet.

The keynote speaker at the event will include Dayton Moore, general manager of the Kansas City Royals.

Honorees will include Tim Barton, founder of Freightquote; Rep. Valdenia Winn, D-34th Dist.; Ryan LeFebvre of the Kansas City Royals; and David Segui, former Major League Baseball player.

Special guests at the event will include Mayor Mark Holland, the Doris Haley family and Cal Ripken Jr.

Brownback administration suspends Medicaid waiver integration

by Andy Marso, KHI News Service

Gov. Sam Brownback’s administration will not fight a legislative directive to postpone the integration of Medicaid waiver services for Kansans with disabilities, according to an email sent by an administration official.

The Legislature passed a budget early Monday that included a provision prohibiting spending in the next fiscal year on any waiver integration plan to be implemented before July 2018.

Brownback could have vetoed that part of the budget bill. But an email sent Wednesday by Becky Ross, director of Medicaid initiatives for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, suggests the governor will let it stand.

“Due to a legislative directive, KDHE and KDADS (the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services) are suspending work on the waiver integration project,” Ross wrote in the email. “The agencies’ leadership expects to reassess the project at a future date to determine when to resume work and when it will be implemented.”

The administration’s decision appears to end a months-long saga during which advocates for Kansans with disabilities repeatedly voiced concerns that the integration plan was moving ahead too quickly, with too few details about how it would be operated.

The waivers provide Medicaid coverage for support services that allow Kansans with disabilities to remain in home and community-based settings rather than institutions. The services are split into seven groups based on type of disability: developmental, physical, frail elderly, autism, traumatic brain injury, technology assisted and serious emotional disturbance.

The Brownback administration’s plan would compress the services into two groups: one for children and one for adults. Administration officials say that would allow all Kansans to receive a broader array of services more efficiently, rather than being constrained by labels.

But disability advocates worried it could lead to service reductions.

The administration already agreed to delay it once, prior to this week’s suspension.

Sean Gatewood, a former Democratic legislator, is a spokesman for the KanCare Advocates Network, a coalition of groups that work with people on Medicaid, which in Kansas is a privatized program called KanCare.

“We’re just excited the administration and the Legislature took a stance to delay (integration) and get meaningful input from legislators and stakeholders,” Gatewood said.

Rep. Dan Hawkins, a Republican from Wichita who chairs the House Health and Human Services Committee, appointed a subcommittee to evaluate the administration’s integration plan and the advocates’ concerns.

After that subcommittee in March returned a report that also concluded the plan was short on details and should be postponed, Hawkins procured a letter from Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer assuring him the administration would not move forward until after the 2017 session.

According to Ross’ email, the project is now on hold indefinitely.

Hal Schultz, a Lawrence resident who leads a self-advocacy group for Kansans with intellectual and developmental disabilities, said that was good news.

“I actually like that idea, because I think that if we put all the waivers into one that it would make things really confused for the state and for self-advocates and also that services would not be done the correct way,” he said.

Schultz, who spoke about waiver integration during a March rally at the Statehouse, said he felt like he was being heard by his representatives in government.

Schultz said he and other advocates remain willing to provide input on any future waiver integration plan. But Wednesday’s announcement also suspended the activities of several workgroups the administration had formed to discuss the plan.

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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KCKCC at full strength for home playoff opener Saturday

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College will be at full strength this weekend when the Blue Devils are the host of the opening round of the NJCAA Region VI playoffs.

The No. 3 seeded Blue Devils, who closed out non-conference play with a 15-11 win over Maple Woods Tuesday, will put their 38-18 record on the line against No. 6 Barton County (29-25) Saturday with the first of two games starting at 1 p.m. If a third game is needed, it will be played Sunday at 1 p.m. All games will be nine innings unless a team leads by 10 or more runs after seven innings.

The Blue Devil lineup will be buoyed by the return of centerfielder Eli Lovell, who has been sidelined by a foot injury. A sophomore from Lincoln, Neb., Lovell leads the Blue Devils in hitting (.477), home runs (17) and runs-batted-in (79).

Boasting a team batting average of .354, the Blue Devils will go with a starting infield of first baseman Conor Behrens (.389), second baseman Easton Fortuna (.331), shortstop Albert Woodard (.331) and third baseman Travis Stroup (.465) with Drew Holtgrieve (.344) behind the plate. Lovell will be flanked in the outfield by Ryan Fisher (.356) and Chase Redick (.339) with Ty Bradshaw (.520) as the designated hitter.

Sophomore Brandon Reid (5-2) will draw the opening pitching assignment. In his last start, Reid had a no-hitter through five innings and finished with a 2-hitter in an 11-1 win over No. 1 ranked Neosho County. Freshman Jake Purl (8-2) will get the start in the second game with Dustin Eby (4-2) the likely choice if a third game is necessary.

Five Blue Devils had two hits each as the Blue Devils rallied for the 15-11 win over Maple Woods. Fisher and Redick each drove in four runs, Fisher with his fifth home run and a triple and Redick with a triple and double. Fortuna drove in three runs with a pair of singles; Behrens tripled and singled; and Ty Bradshaw increased his season’s batting average to .520 with a double and single.

Redick opened the scoring with a 2-run triple in the first following a walk and Fortuna single and the Blue Devils made it 3-1 in the fourth on Bradshaw’s double. KCKCC built its lead to 8-3 with a 5-run fifth. Fisher’s home run following a Behrens’ triple and a walk scored the first three and Fortuna singled in two more after a Holtgrieve single and a walk.

The lead, however, did not hold up as Maple Woods scored five runs in the sixth and three in the seventh off three KCKCC hurlers. Taking advantage of two hit batsmen, two walks and an error, the Blue Devils scored six times in the seventh capped by a 2-run double by Redick and a triple by Fisher and then added an insurance run in the eighth on singles by Woodard and Bradshaw. The last of seven KCKCC pitchers, Avery Fliger, closed out the win with two innings of two-hit relief.