Car overturns in accident on I-635 ramp

A Chevrolet Impala that was southbound on 38th Street on the ramp to southbound I-635 overturned in an accident at 1:56 p.m. Thursday, March 1.

According to the Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s report, the Impala sideswiped a semi traveling southbound on I-635. The semi was pulling a trailer.

The Impala then ran off the roadway to the left, struck the inside barrier wall, then hit the outside barrier wall, went off the roadway to the right and struck a guardrail before overturning, the trooper’s report stated.

The driver of the Impala, a 39-year-old woman from Kansas City, Kansas, was taken to a hospital, the report stated.

The driver of the semi, a 30-year-old man from Franklinton, Louisiana, was not injured, according to the trooper’s report.

Young Blue Devils score 31 runs in sweep of Missouri Valley

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Unfortunately runs can’t be stored in a bank and then withdrawn when needed because Kansas City Kansas Community College’s young softball teams scored a bunch of them Wednesday – 31 in all in a sweep of Missouri Valley College.

The Blue Devils rode Shannon Greene’s one-hit pitching performance to a 9-0 win in the opener and then got a three-hitter from Katelyn Kittrell in a 22-0 nightcap win. Both games were stopped after five innings.

The wins boosted KCKCC’s record to 5-1 heading into Jayhawk Conference play next Tuesday when the Blue Devils play host to No. 5 nationally ranked Johnson County in a doubleheader starting at 1 p.m.

A sophomore from McLouth, Greene (2-1) allowed only two baserunners, a third inning single and a fourth inning walk, while the Blue Devils backed her with errorless defense.

Kittrell, a freshman from Lansing, gave up three hits and struck out four in recording her third win of the season in the second game.

KCKCC took a 2-0 lead in the second inning of the first game without a hit and then broke it open with a 6-run third inning.

Lindgren’s triple following a Kali Jacobson single scored the first run and after a single by Jenny Mullins, Shannon Brown delivered a two-run single. A single by Brittney Beck and a two-run single by Aspen Salinas made it 8-0

Ignited by an inside-the-park leadoff home run by sophomore second baseman Natalie Cowan of Basehor-Linwood, the first eight Blue Devils to come to bat reached base in the 22-0 nightcap.

Jacobson was hit by a pitch, Lindgren singled and both scored on a single by Kaylee Arnzen. After a walk, Brown, Paris Forshey and Beck delivered singles for a 9-0 first inning start.

Arnzen, a freshman from Pampa, Texas, paced a 23-hit attack with two singles, a double and a 3-run home run that capped an 8-run third inning.

Brown and Beck each added three singles, Forshey singled and tripled in two runs in a 5-run second inning; Cowan added a single to her home run; and Logan Tucker and Salinas each singled twice to lead the hit parade as 12 Blue Devils hit safely.

Kansas aging agency spills personal information of 11,000 people

by Stephen Koranda, Kansas News Service

Officials with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services said Thursday that a staff member improperly disclosed personal information for 11,000 people in an email sent to multiple addresses.

Angela de Rocha, a KDADS spokeswoman, said the disclosure includes Social Security numbers, birth dates and other personal details of Medicaid recipients and potential recipients of the health care program.

Such personal details, particularly the combination of a Social Security number with a date of birth, can be all a criminal might need for identity theft.

The agency said it had no indication that the information has been misused or spread further. KDADS learned of the disclosure last month.

Gov. Jeff Colyer said that his administration is investigating the breach and that the worker was fired.

“I’m upset about it. I think that employee needed to be terminated. They were,” Colyer said. “We are going to be watching this. I want to make sure this does not happen again.”

The information was improperly emailed to local contractors with the state’s 11 area agencies on aging.

“KDADS emailed all of the individuals on the recipient list, advised them of the situation and asked them to delete or destroy the email,” de Rocha said. “In addition, they were asked to shred any printed copies.”

The state is contacting affected individuals to inform them about the data breach.

De Rocha said it would not have been a violation to send the personal information about a specific individual to the local organization assisting that person. The problem in this case, she said, was sharing the personal information of thousands of individuals with multiple organizations.

In a statement, the agency said “KDADS apologizes sincerely to the consumers affected for any distress or inconvenience this may cause. KDADS is undertaking an immediate review of policies and procedures relevant to preventing a similar situation from occurring.”

Democratic Rep. Jeff Pittman referenced the data breach during debate on the House floor Thursday. He said state agencies vary widely in security and that some aren’t doing enough to protect the personal data of Kansans.

“When that data gets out, their identity gets stolen,” Pittman said. “We are not doing a good job in terms of keeping our data secure.”

KDADS said people concerned about the breach can put a freeze or fraud alert on their credit report from the three major reporting bureaus, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion.

Stephen Koranda is Statehouse reporter for Kansas Public Radio, a partner in the Kansas News Service. Follow him on Twitter @kprkoranda. 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/kansas-aging-agency-spills-personal-information-11000-people.