Salisbury steak recalled

Conagra Brands Inc. of Russellville, Arkansas, has recalled about 135,159 pounds of Salisbury steak products (poultry, pork and beef) that may be contaminated with bone, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service.

The Salisbury steak and brown gravy products were produced March 10, 2018.

It is in a 27-ounce carton containing plastic shrink-wrapped packages of six pieces of “Banquet Family Size 6 Salisbury Steaks and Brown Gravy made with Chicken, Pork and Beef – Grill Marks Added” with lot code 5006 8069 10 05 and a “best by” date of Sept. 1, 2019, printed on the package.

The recalled products bear a USDA mark of inspection with establishment number “P-115” on the side panel of the package. The items were shipped to retail locations nationwide.

The product was discovered after the firm received several consumer complaints and three reports of minor oral injury associated with consumption of the product.

Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider.

FSIS is concerned that some product may be frozen and in consumers’ freezers. Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers. When available, the retail distribution list(s) will be posted on the FSIS website at www.fsis.usda.gov/recalls.

Consumers with questions about the recall can contact Conagra Brands Consumer Affairs at 800-289-6014.

Consumers with food safety questions can “Ask Karen,” the FSIS virtual representative available 24 hours a day at AskKaren.gov or via smartphone at m.askkaren.gov. The toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline 1-888-MPHotline, 1-888-674-6854, is available in English and Spanish and can be reached from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Eastern time) Monday through Friday.

Tyler to sing national anthem at Kansas Speedway May 12

Michael Tyler

For Mother’s Day weekend races at the Kansas Speedway, country music artist Michael Tyler, whose hits include “Hey Mama,” will sing the national anthem on Saturday night, May 12.

The singer and songwriter from Thayer, Missouri, is one of the best new artists in country music, with a debut album, “317,” on Reviver Records featuring songs such as “They Can’t See” about small-town memories and lifelong love.

The 24-year-old Tyler connected with Michael Knox, Jason Aldean’s producer, when Tyler was 13. Tyler co-wrote the hit, “Somewhere On a Beach,” with Dierks Bentley. He and Jason Aldean co-wrote four songs, including two on his new album.

Touring with Canaan Smith and LoCash, Tyler also has opened for Darius Rucker and Billy Currington.

Tickets for the May 12 Kansas Speedway race are available by calling 866-460-7223, by visiting www.kansasspeedway.com or from the Kansas Speedway ticket office between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.

Colyer to lawmakers on school spending bill: Fix it

by Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Kansas Republican Gov. Jeff Colyer wants lawmakers to fix a costly mistake in the school finance bill passed after midnight on the last day of the regular session.

“It needs to be taken care of,” Colyer said Wednesday. “We’ll work with the Legislature on doing that.”

The error — a byproduct of confusion and deal-making in the session’s final hours early Sunday morning —makes re-engineering the state’s school finance formula more difficult than usual.

Facing a hard April 30 deadline for getting a new plan to the Kansas Supreme Court, legislative leaders left the heavy lifting on the issue to the final days of the regular session. That allowed little time to negotiate substantial differences between a House bill that called for an additional $534 million in funding and a Senate bill that proposed about half that amount.

With the clock ticking toward an adjournment, legislative leaders decided to go with the House bill. That forced a final-day showdown between lawmakers insisting it was more than the state could afford and those contending it was the least the state could spend and hope to satisfy the court.

In the end, the bill got just enough votes to pass both chambers. But frantic last-minute deal making led to a drafting error that reduced its funding by $80 million.

The mistake came in language added to the measure by Rep. Clay Aurand, a Belleville Republican, to allow local property taxes in the calculation of state aid.

Rep. Melissa Rooker, a Fairway Republican who helped write the House bill, said she didn’t spot the error until just before the House vote. By then, she said, it was too late to do anything without endangering the fragile coalition pushing for passage.

“I was told to relax,” Rooker said. “It would get fixed later.”

Apparently, later means when lawmakers return April 26 for a wrap-up session scheduled to last only eight days.

The short time and the politics dividing lawmakers on the issue could make “fixing” the funding bill difficult, Rooker said.

“The logistics of getting to a vote on the floor for that will be tricky,” she said. “The timing is rough in terms of the April 30 deadline. But I don’t think there’s any question that we need to do it.”

Still, lawmakers opposed to the size of the funding increase see the mistake as an opportunity to continue to press their case.

“Gives us another chance to kill the bill,” Rep. John Whitmer, a Wichita Republican, said in a tweet.

Meantime, lobbyists and lawyers representing school boards and teacher groups contend the bill, even in its original form, didn’t increase funding enough to satisfy the court.

“This probably isn’t enough,” said Mark Tallman, associate director of the Kansas Association of School Boards.

The increase is at the low end of what several studies — including a new one commissioned by Republican legislative leaders — indicated would be necessary to meet the court’s constitutional test, Tallman said. On top of that, he said, the plan distributes the money too slowly.

“The biggest weakness in the state’s case may be that because it’s phased in over five years,” he said. “Inflation is going to erode some of that.”

That argument is “hard to dispute,” Rooker said, suggesting that the same amount of money phased in over three years might come closer to hitting the mark.

The problem with that, said House Majority Leader Don Hineman, is that an accelerated timetable would require lawmakers who have “absolutely no appetite for raising taxes” to do just that.

Alan Rupe, the lead attorney for the school districts that sued the state over funding, said the court has made it clear previous rulings that the Legislature’s reluctance to raise taxes isn’t a valid defense.

“If you always do what you’ve always done, you’re going to get what you’ve always got,” Rupe told the Associated Press.

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/colyer-lawmakers-school-spending-bill-fix-it.