Piper results

Piper High School at Shawnee Mission Northwest
– 5th place in sweeps
– Public Forum Debate: Cara Bruce and Michael Gentry 1st, Scout Molder and Pierce Green 2nd, Taran Kerst and Dylan Hendrix 5th
– Program of Interp: Emmett Lockridge 2nd
– Prose Interp: Alena Riley 2nd
– Oration: Corey Mann 4th
– Humorous Interp: Maggie Wolf 4th
– Poetry Interp: Alena Riley
– Informative Speaking (7 min): Corey Mann 7th
– Informative Speaking (10 min): Abby Neal 7th

– Information from Doug Key, Piper High School activities director

New attention to struggles of Kansas hospitals fuels Medicaid expansion effort

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Renewed attention to the financial struggles of several Kansas hospitals is giving supporters of Medicaid expansion a potentially powerful argument as they work to build a veto-proof majority for a new bill.

“The conversation became much more real with the renewed talk about hospital closures,” said David Jordan, director of the Alliance for a Healthy Kansas, a pro-expansion coalition. “I think legislators are seeing how motivated their constituents are and maybe rethinking their votes.”

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback’s rejection of expansion was a factor in the 2015 closure of Mercy Hospital in Independence. Now, numerous sources say St. Francis Health in Topeka could be on the brink of shutting its doors after more than 100 years of operation.

Officials from the hospital’s parent organization, Denver-based SCL Health, were in Topeka on Monday to meet with the hospital’s board of directors, according to Topeka Mayor Larry Wolgast.

“Therefore one could assume an announcement of some type will be forthcoming,” Wolgast said. “But we don’t have anything specific about a definite date or time.”

The announcement could come as soon as Tuesday, according to reports in the Topeka Capital-Journal.

Hospitals in Wellington and Fort Scott are also in dire financial straits.

Expansion opponents argue there are many reasons for the increasing financial pressure on Kansas hospitals. Expanding KanCare, the state’s privatized Medicaid program, would not generate enough additional federal revenue to save many of them, opponents say.

However, House Minority Leader Jim Ward, a Wichita Democrat, said information provided by the Kansas Hospital Association has convinced him that expansion would be a “lifeline” to many of the state’s struggling hospitals.

“Knowing that help was on the way would allow many of them to hang on until that money got to them,” Ward said. “More hospitals will close if we don’t take action.”

Chance to flip votes?

The rejection of expansion has cost Kansas health care providers more than $1.8 billion in additional federal funding, according to the hospital association.

Brownback recently vetoed an expansion bill that the House and Senate passed by wide margins. An override attempt in the House fell three votes short of the two-thirds majority needed.

Expansion supporters are now using the threat of additional hospital closings to build a veto-proof majority by convincing a handful of lawmakers to switch their votes. They hope to force another vote soon after they return May 1 for the wrap-up portion of the 2017 session.

“I do think there’s a good chance of us flipping those votes,” Ward said, adding that conversations with some lawmakers who opposed the override attempt lead him to believe “there is some buyer’s remorse.”

Because of the failure of the override vote, expansion supporters would have to pass a new bill. That makes the process more difficult, but it also allows supporters to gain votes by modifying the bill.

“We are open to making changes to the bill,” Jordan said.

Possible changes include prohibiting payments to abortion providers and requiring non-disabled adults covered by expansion to work or participate in job training.

New study on costs

Cost is one of the issues that expansion opponents cite most often. They point to the fact that enrollment has greatly exceeded projections in many of the 31 expansion states and District of Columbia.

“Their budgets have ballooned,” said Dan Hawkins, a Wichita Republican and chairman of the House Health and Human Services Committee. “Their budgets are just enormous on this. And with what we’re doing here in the state, and the budget constraints that we have, I think it’s truly irresponsible for us to expand.”

But a study in the May edition of Health Affairs finds that federal funds have so far more than covered the cost of expansion, even in those states where enrollment has been higher than expected.

“There were no significant increases in spending from state funds as a result of the expansion, nor any significant reductions in spending on education and other programs,” the study said.

The federal government covered 100 percent of expansion costs for the period covered by the study. If the Affordable Care Act remains in place, the federal obligation will gradually decline until it reaches a floor of 90 percent in 2020, at which time state costs will increase.

Expansion would qualify all Kansans earning up to 138 percent of the poverty level, annually about $16,642 for individuals and $33,465 for a family of four, for Medicaid coverage.
An estimated 300,000 Kansans would qualify for coverage under expansion, though only about 180,000 would initially enroll, according to estimates.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration covering health, education and politics in Kansas. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/new-attention-struggles-kansas-hospitals-fuels-medicaid-expansion-effort.

Blue Devils face toughest closing slate after Ft. Scott split

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

With just eight games to go, the race for home playoff berths in the Jayhawk Conference is going down to the wire and no one faces a tougher finishing slate than Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Dropped into third place by a home split with Fort Scott Saturday, the Blue Devils finish out the season against the two hottest teams in the conference.

The Blue Devils (19-10) open a four-game series Thursday at fourth place Neosho County (18-10), which has won nine of its last 10 games; and then finish the season against league-leading Johnson County (22-6), which has won 10 in a row.

The Blue Devils, who are 31-14 overall and have won eight of their last 10, will play at Longview Tuesday before resuming conference play at Neosho Thursday.

Fort Scott, which is in fifth (17-11) two games back of KCKCC, took advantage of wildness and miscues to rally in the seventh inning for a 5-4 win in Saturday’s opener before the Blue Devils came from behind late on a 2-run home run by Brandon Green for a 10-8 nightcap win.

KCKCC took a 5-0 lead in the first inning of the second game only to have Fort Scott go ahead 8-6 and lead 8-7 entering the bottom of the seventh when the Blue Devils struck swiftly and decisively. Alex Phillips doubled with one out and with two down, Green blasted his fifth home run of the season to left-center for a 9-8 lead and the Blue Devils tacked on an insurance run in the eighth on a single by Drew Holtgrieve, Josh Schumacher’s double and an Albert Woodard sacrifice fly.

Julian Rivera got the win, allowing only one hit over the final three innings although he had to pitch out of bases-loaded jam in the eighth. He struck out four, walked three.

Green also had the big hit in the Blue Devils’ 5-run first inning, a 2-run double following two walks and Chase Redick single. Easton Fortuna and Drew Holtgrieve closed out the big uprising with RBI singles. However, Fort Smith rallied behind the long ball. After three hits and an error, Will Baker belted a grand slam home run for a 5-5 tie in the third and the Greyhounds went ahead 8-6 in the sixth, scoring two runs on a Quin Waterbury home run and the third on a wild pitch.

A Rorey Combs’ triple and a ground ball closed the KCKCC gap to 8-7 in the sixth after back-to-back singles by Schumacher, Woodard and Pittman had put the Blue Devils in front in the fourth 6-5. Five Blue Devils finished with two hits, Redick, Green, Fortuna, Holtgrieve and Schumacher. Corey Cowan, who gave up seven hits, was charged with all eight runs but only four were earned.

Miscues and wildness proved fatal in the opener as the Greyhounds rallied for three runs in the seventh on just one hit. After a four-pitch walk to start the inning, Fort Scott’s No. 9 hitter, Mitch McCallister, doubled over third to put runners on second and third. An error scored one run, a Shea Stephens wild pitch tied it and a line drive that couldn’t be handled scored the game-winner. Fort Scott’s first two runs came in the fourth on two singles, ground ball and wild pitch.

KCKCC took a 1-0 lead in the first on a single by Woodard and double by Pittman and made it 2-0 in the third on a triple by Pittman and a Phillips’ single. Fort Scott got even in the fourth but KCKCC went back ahead in the bottom of the inning on a double by Fortuna, a triple by Combs and a Holtgrieve sacrifice fly. Combs finished with three hits while Woodard and Pittman each had a pair. Stephens suffered only his second loss in seven starts, allowing seven hits, striking out six and walking four.