Bench powers KCKCC women; pivotal home finale Saturday

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College’s Lady Blue Devils survived a battle with the flu and a blackout on the road Wednesday to set up the season’s biggest game against a non-ranked foe.

Down to just eight players because of the flu, the Blue Devils’ bench stepped front and center in a 75-66 win at Hesston to take undisputed possession of fourth place in the Jayhawk Conference.

The win put the Blue Devils (3-4) in position to wrap up a first round home playoff berth Saturday when they play host to fifth place Fort Scott (2-5) at 2 p.m. in KCKCC’s final regular season contest at home.

It’s also Sophomore Day with the team’s lone sophomore, Alix Wilson, and two-year team manager Elizabeth Briggs honored in post-game ceremonies.

With rebound leader Lillie Moore and Piper guard Miya Ford unable to make the trip, the Blue Devils needed big performances from the bench and got more than could be expected. All three non-starters, Camryn Swanson, Gena Ojeda and Lizzie Stark, scored in double figures and in fact, outscored the five starters 39-36.

A 5-9 guard from Blue Springs, Swanson returned from injury just in time to drain 5-of-10 3-point attempts for 15 points. Ojeda, the Jayhawk leader in 3-point accuracy from Shawnee Mission Northwest, was 4-for-11 from distance and finished with 13 points; and Stark, a 5-11 forward from Liberty North, had her first double-double with 11 points and a game-high 10 rebounds.

Kisi Young led the scoring with 16 points and seven rebounds; Wilson and Nija Collier had eight points each; and Wilson and Caitlyn Stewart had seven rebounds apiece. Stewart and Ashley Daniels led in assists with four each.

“This was one of the strangest games I’ve ever been a part of,” KCKCC coach Joe McKinstry said. “At one point in the first half, the lights in the gym went out right in the middle of a play. I’ve never seen that before!”

KCKCC never trailed after the opening moments, building a 16-11 first quarter lead and stretching it to 45-32 at halftime.

Young led the way with 12 points; Swanson made 3-of-5 3-pointers; and Wilson had all of her eight points in the second period. Hesston never got closer than eight points in a second half that saw non-starters Stark, Ojeda and Swanson score all but one KCKCC point in the fourth quarter.

Statistically, the Blue Devils won the rebounding battle 44-34 and had a slight edge in shooting (.373-.344) but turnovers were a problem for both teams, KCKCC committing 21 and the Larks 22.

The big difference came in 3-pointers where the Blue Devils had an 11-4 edge.

“This was an ugly game but even in the ugly ones, someone has to win,” McKinstry said. “We had a lot of adversity in this game with only eight players suiting up. Ugly or not, I’m glad our group came out on top.”

In other Jayhawk action Wednesday, Highland (7-0) all but wrapped up the league championship with a 86-66 win at second place Johnson County (5-2) while Labette was defeating Fort Scott 76-59.

Backers of Kansas Medicaid expansion pack hearing, but can they change policy?

Supporters of Medicaid expansion packed a Kansas Senate hearing room on Wednesday. (Photo by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service)

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

When it comes to packing Statehouse hearings, few groups fill a room more reliably than those pushing for Medicaid expansion.

What they’re less good at, at least so far, is convincing lawmakers and a governor to expand Medicaid eligibility to another 150,000 low-income Kansans.

They came close last year. Lawmakers passed an expansion bill, but came a few votes short of overriding then-Gov. Sam Brownback’s veto.

Again this year, they face opposition from conservatives — notably Gov. Jeff Colyer — who still object to the Obama-era Affordable Care Act. Those forces worry about bloated government services and asking taxpayers to foot health care costs for a larger group of people.

Expansion supporters launched their 2018 effort Wednesday, flooding the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee with testimony from 140 individuals and organizations.

It came from doctors, hospital administrators, business leaders and every-day Kansans like Amy Houston, who thought it appropriate the hearing was on Valentine’s Day.

“I have the compassion, hope and love that I’m going to give you this message and you’re going to accept it and not turn me away,” Houston said.

A small business owner from Mulvane, Houston talked about struggling to maintain health insurance during her nine-year battle with cancer.

Randy Peterson, CEO of Stormont Vail Health in Topeka, warned of hospital closings without the additional federal money that expansion would bring.

“These dollars could be the very margin for these hospitals to remain open,” Peterson said.

Sheldon Weisgrau, the director of a pro-expansion coalition funded by several Kansas health philanthropies, touted studies that document the economic benefits of expansion.

“In Colorado, the gross domestic product has increased by more than 1 percent as a result of expansion,” Weisgrau said. “That doesn’t sound like a lot, but an equivalent increase in Kansas could be $2 billion of additional economic growth.”

Though outnumbered, expansion opponents — most representing conservative groups with ties to the Koch brothers — pushed back. They argued that expansion was little more than an expensive new entitlement for people who may not deserve taxpayer-funded health coverage.

“These adults don’t have disabilities,” said Gregg Phister, government affairs director for the Florida-based Foundation for Government Accountability. “Most of them are without children and don’t work a full-time, year-round job.”

Phister said expansion has “been a disaster” in many of the 32 states that have adopted it due to enrollment that has swamped projections and driven up costs.

Asked by Sen. Ed Berger, a Hutchinson Republican, whether any expansion state had reversed course, Phister said none had but some were discussing it.

Jeff Andersen, acting secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, the state’s lead Medicaid agency, detailed the Colyer administration’s opposition to expansion.

Among other things, Andersen said continued efforts by the Trump administration and Republican leaders in Congress to repeal Obamacare should give Kansas lawmakers pause.

Most immediately concerning, he said, are questions about whether the federal government will continue to pay 90 percent of expansion costs.

“Yet this month, our governor has meetings scheduled with leaders in Washington … to get a better handle and guidance on where the feds are going,” Andersen said.

Weisgrau said GOP efforts to repeal Obamacare will continue to be thwarted by Republican governors in expansion states “lobbying to keep it.”

“Don’t listen to those people who continually say ‘no’ and offer no alternatives,” he told members of the committee, who are expected to vote on the bill Monday.

Currently, KanCare eligibility is limited to children, pregnant women, people with disabilities and seniors in need of long-term care who have exhausted their financial resources. Parents are eligible only if they earn less than a third of the federal poverty level, less than $10,000 for a four-person family.

Single adults without children currently are not eligible no matter their income. Expansion would extend eligibility to all Kansans who earn up to 138 percent of the poverty level, or about $17,000 annually for an individual and approximately $34,000 for a family of four.

Jim McLean is managing director of the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. 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 the original post.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/backers-kansas-medicaid-expansion-pack-hearing-can-they-change-policy.

Two candidates to speak at Third Saturday Democratic breakfast

Two Democratic candidates are scheduled to speak at the Wyandotte County Third Saturday Democratic Breakfast on Saturday, Feb. 17, at Las Islas Marinas, 7516 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.

Laura Kelly, the Kansas Senate assistant minority leader, from Topeka, who is running for Kansas governor, and Mike McCamon, a candidate for the U.S. House, 3rd District, from Overland Park, are the scheduled speakers.

State Rep. Stan Frownfelter, D-37th Dist., Democratic assistant leader of the Kansas House, will give an update on the Legislature.

The breakfast buffet begins at 8:15 a.m., with the program starting at 9 a.m. The event is open to Democrats. The cost of the breakfast buffet is $10, or $6 for students and those on limited incomes. Those attending do not have to purchase a breakfast. Reservations should be made to scottmackey08@yahoo.com by Friday, Feb. 16. Reservations are not necessary, but they are appreciated.