T-Bones add new talent, bring back key players for 2019 season

The Kansas City T-Bones have signed several more players for the 2019 season, including existing players and new talent.

Shawn O’Malley

Announced today was the signing of infielder Shawn O’Malley, who played in 2018 for the Albuquerque Isotopes, a Colorado Rockies AAA club in the Pacific Coast League. O’Malley was recovering from a broken hand in spring training during part of the year.

O’Malley hit .279 with one home run and 16 RBIs last season, in 55 games. He also played with AAA Tacoma, AA Arkansas and rookie level Arizona.

In 2016, O’Malley was called up to the Seattle Mariners in May, and played 89 games with a .229 batting average. O’Malley spent the first eight years of his career with the Tampa Bay Rays organization.

O’Malley, who grew up in the Tri Cities of Washington state, now resides in Overland Park, Kansas.

Dustin Hurlbutt

The T-Bones also recently signed pitcher Dustin Hurlbutt. A native of Coffeyville, Kansas, Hurlbutt spent parts of four seasons with the Oakland Athletics organization after being selected in the 15th round 2015 draft. He attended Tabor College, Hillsboro, Kansas.

Hurlbutt played in the Venezuelan Winter League this winter, starting twice. Last season he had a 3-4 record with a 3.86 earned run average in nine starts with Stockton in the California League. In 2017, he played at three levels of the Athletics’ organization.

At Tabor, he was named NAIA All-American and was a member of the Blue Jays club that reached the NAIA World Series.

Marcus Crescentini

Marcus Crescentini, who pitched for the T-Bones during the 2018 championship season, returns for this season.

Crescentini had a 1.32 earned run average in 25 appearances from the T-Bones bullpen. He struck out 36 and went 5-0 with one save for the T-Bones.

The right-handed pitcher was the winner of the fourth championship game Sept. 15 when the T-Bones clinched the American Association title with a 5-3 win over St. Paul.

Crescentini, a Florida native who joined the T-Bones on July 4, 2018, previously played with Jupiter in the Florida State League, and also with AA Jacksonville in the Southern League.

He began his career with the Los Angeles Dodgers organization in 2015, and played in the Pioneer Rookie League, with Great Lake in the Midwest League, with Batavia in the New York-Penn League, and Greensboro of the South Atlantic League.

Christian Correa

Catcher Christian Correa will be returning to the T-Bones for the 2019 season. It is the third time he has played for the T-Bones.

Correa spent spring training in 2018 w ith the T-Bones, but was traded on May 15 to the Sussex County Miners in the Can-Am League. His rights were reacquired in a trade from Sussex County on Oct. 8, 2018. At Sussex County, he played in 50 games, hitting .292 with two home runs and 26 RBIs.

He was with the Houston Astros organization in 2017 before joining the T-Bones on May 17 and starting behind the plate on opening night. He played previously for Buies Creek in the Carolina League. For the T-Bones, he hit .215 in eight games, hitting a home run and five RBIs. He hit an inside-the-park home run May 30 against Gary SouthShore.

In June of 2017, the Colorado Rockies signed Correa and sent him to Boise in the Northwest League, where he went 1 for 12 with one RBI. He is a native of Coconut Creek, Florida, and went to Nicholl State University in Louisiana. In his college career, he was on some all-conference and all-state teams and also was named to the dean’s list.

As a catcher for the T-Bones in 2016, Correa caught 46 percent of the base runners, and also caught three in 15 attempts in Kansas City in 2017.

Mason Davis

A key member of the T-Bones championship team, infielder Mason Davis, has signed for the 2019 season.

Davis played in 63 games for the T-Bones in 2018 after joining the team June 22, and was second in home runs, with nine, and led the club in stolen bases, with 26. He had 31 RBIs, finishing with a .313 batting average.

He led off for the T-Bones, and had seven sacrifice bunts during the season.

At third base, he had an excellent .954 fielding percentage with only five errors on the season.

A clutch hitter, Davis was where he was needed during the wild card playoff competition. He scored three runs in a T-Bones 14-13 win over Sioux City at home on Aug. 28. He scored three runs in a 12-6 T-Bones win over Wichita in the playoff race.

On Sept. 2, when the T-Bones and Gary RailCats were tied 2-2 in extra innings, Davis hit a solo home run down the right field line in the 16th inning for a T-Bones lead of 3-2.

During the American Association Championship Series, Davis drove in two and scored another in an 11-4 win for the T-Bones in the opener. In the third game, he scored a run and added a stolen base in a 7-3 comeback win.

A native of Georgia, Davis has previously played for Jacksonville in the Southern League, for Jupiter in the Florida State League, and for Greensboro in the South Atlantic League. He also played for the Marlins organization at Batavia in the New York-Pennsylvania League.

The T-Bones’ opening day will be Friday, May 17, against the Fargo-Moorhead Redhawks at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas.

Full and half-season ticket packages and mini plans are on sale online at www.tbonesbaseball.com or by calling 913-328-5618 or visiting T-Bones Stadium offices.

Wyandotte County residents will be able to purchase individual game tickets beginning at 10 a.m. Tuesday, March 19, and the public may purchase individual tickets on Thursday, March 21.

  • Information from T-Bones

Former mayor to speak at Women’s Chamber meeting

Former Mayor Joe Reardon is scheduled to be the guest speaker at 11:30 a.m. April 3 of the Kansas City, Kansas, Women’s Chamber of Commerce.

Reardon, who is the CEO of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, plans to speak about the importance of pre-kindergarten education and how it is a long-term workforce issue.

The luncheon meeting, from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., will be held at Kansas City Kansas Community College, upper Jewell Center, 7250 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. The cost of the luncheon will be $20 for members and $25 for nonmembers.

Reservations may be made to https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07eg49k31pa05cf5b9&oseq=&c=&ch=. For more information, visit http://kckwomenschamber.org/events/ or email [email protected].

Kansas prison health contractor piling up penalties for poor performance

by Nomin Ujiyediin, Kansas News Service

The company hired to provide health care in Kansas prisons is getting paid millions less than its contracted amount after failing to meet the agreement’s terms.

State officials reduced payments to Corizon Health because the company failed to hire enough nurses and other health workers. Corizon lost additional money after audits found it fell short of performance standards for a range of medical services.

Now, the Kansas Department of Corrections says the contractor has one more year to look after the health of 10,000 people in its prisons.

The department’s executive finance director, Keith Bradshaw, told lawmakers this month that for now, his agency intends to renew its contract with Corizon for only a year — rather than the two-year option included in the original contract.

“If things continue to improve, we’ll go ahead and pick up that second year,” Bradshaw said. “If we continue to have issues, then we’ll look at doing a rebid.”

The state currently has a $68.8 million contract with Corizon. Kansas penalized the company $534,880 for not meeting performance standards in 2018.

The state also cut $2.82 million from its payments to Corizon because the company didn’t deliver an agreed-upon number of employees and work hours last year.

Documents provided by the Kansas Department of Corrections show thousands of hours of missing work each month, due to unfilled jobs for nurses, behavioral health professionals and other medical staff.

Corizon currently faces 22 federal lawsuits regarding the care it provides to people in Kansas prisons. Complaints include inmates being refused medication and care for conditions such as hepatitis C. The state first awarded a contract to the company in January 2014.

The University of Kansas Medical Center audits Corizon’s performance for the state corrections department. KU Med tracks medical services such as intake health assessments, sick calls and group therapy and passes the information to the department. The state can deduct money from its payments to Corizon if the company does not meet performance standards.

According to an agreement provided by the Department of Corrections, the state penalizes Corizon $100 per incident when the company falls below 90 percent compliance with any of its 12 performance standards.

That penalty increases if the company doesn’t fix the problem within six months. It goes up again if the company doesn’t meet compliance standards in subsequent months.

Specialty services — X-rays, dermatology, chemotherapy, and obstetric and gynecological services — are penalized at a higher rate.

If the company doesn’t meet 90 percent compliance for those services, the state imposes a penalty of $300 per instance, with higher penalties the longer the problems persist.

In 2018, KU Med audited nine out of 12 performance standards. Out of those nine standards, Corizon was found to be 100 percent compliant on only one: specialty services. The company’s compliance rates for the other standards were well below the threshold of 90 percent.

Mental health groups, defined as group therapy and workshops on topics such as anger and addiction, were found to be nearly 70 percent compliant. But other services that were audited, including sick calls, intake health assessments and chronic care for conditions like diabetes and HIV, were compliant at rates of less than 10 percent.

Information from Kansas Department of Corrections

At a presentation at the Kansas Capitol this month, state officials said the audits reviewed a small sample of the total number of medical services and do not accurately represent the overall quality of inmate health care.

Bradshaw told lawmakers there were too few workers to conduct extensive evaluations for all 12 performance standards.

Much like its shortage of corrections officers, the state’s prisons also face a shortage of health care workers. It relies heavily on overtime and asking administrators to cover shifts.

Bradshaw said the state was having trouble hiring, despite offering signing bonuses of up to $7,000 for registered nurses and $10,000 for psychologists.

“Corizon is also facing the impact of low unemployment rates throughout the state,” he said, “as well as competition in the highly competitive health care industry.”

Documents provided by the Department of Corrections show that wages for nurses, psychologists and other health professionals working in Kansas prisons are similar to average and entry-level wages for those jobs throughout the state.

Registered nurses working for Corizon in Kansas make $25 an hour. On average, registered nurses in Kansas make an hourly wage of $28. Corizon pays dental assistants $15 an hour, while statewide average pay for the same job is $16.86 an hour. Behavioral health professionals working for Kansas prisons make $24 an hour, while average hourly wages for various mental health and counseling jobs in Kansas range between $16 and $24 an hour.

Registered nurses and behavioral health professionals comprise half of all health-related job openings, Bradshaw said.

Information from Kansas Department of Corrections

Inmates’ health needs can also be time-consuming for corrections officers, who must accompany inmates to expensive off-site medical appointments in pairs. Bradshaw said those appointments often add to officers’ overtime shifts and to vehicle costs.

“With the small staff that we have and the size of this contract and the services being provided,” Bradshaw said, “it’s not realistic to expect every facility and every outcome to be looked at every month.”

Bradshaw said the state didn’t penalize Corizon for noncompliance from June 2017 to December 2017 because the state was moving inmates between facilities and didn’t want to blame the company for any performance issues during that period.

In an interview, he said a better measure of health care quality was the number of medical grievances filed by inmates.

“We’re actually seeing that trend going down, while at the same time the population’s going up,” he said. “I think we have to look at it more holistically.”

People incarcerated in Kansas prisons can file a written grievance with their prison’s warden if medical issues aren’t addressed within 10 days. If the issue is still not resolved, the next step is an appeal to the secretary of corrections, Roger Werholtz.

Chart by Nomin Ujiyediin, Kansas News Service

David Tatarsky, director of health services at the Department of Corrections, said KU Med frequently fielded calls from inmates, their family members and prison staff. He said those complaints and concerns informed where and when KU Med conducts audits of Corizon’s work.

Tatarsky told lawmakers that staff needed to be selective.

“We look for trends. We try to get the most bang for our buck,” he said. “We try and focus where we think the need is greatest.”

In an emailed statement, Corizon spokeswoman Eve Hutcherson said the company was evaluating information from the state.

“We take all requirements very seriously in our mission to provide exceptional care to the patients we serve as the DOC’s partner,” she said. “Corizon remains committed as a strong partner with Kansas Department of Corrections and the patients we serve.”

Nomin Ujiyediin is a reporter for 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 her on Twitter @NominUJ.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

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