Fundraiser planned June 8 at Grinter Place

The Grinter Place Friends are planning the annual Tacos N’ More fundraiser dinner from 3 to 6 p.m. June 8 at the Grinter Barn, 1400 S. 78th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

The proceeds will support the Grinter Place Museum, a state museum that is the oldest house still standing in Wyandotte County. It is at South 78th and K-32.

There will be dinners, single tacos and side dishes available for purchase. Also, there will be a free kids craft of slime-making, coordinated by the KCKCC Art Gallery.

Donald Wade Davis

Donald Wade Davis will appear from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, June 8, at the Grinter House. Davis will portray an old-time trader and tell about the goods they traded.

Tours of the Grinter House, 1420 S. 78th St., will be available. Grinter Place was a trading post and also operated a ferry across the Kansas River in the mid-1800s.

For more information, visit Facebook under Grinter Place Friends.

Memory of slain child a special motivation for playground renovations at Clem Park

Volunteers installed new playground equipment Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

by Mary Rupert

For Cherri West, today’s playground building event at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue was important.

“It means a lot to me to be able to carry on Pammy’s memory and give the children a new, fresh place to play,” said West, the mother of Pamela Butler, a 10-year-old who was abducted from the Armourdale area and killed almost 20 years ago.

Pamela Butler was abducted in 1999 while roller-skating near her home in the Armourdale area of Kansas City, Kansas. She later was found murdered in the Grain Valley, Missouri, area.

In 2000, a portion of Bill Clem Park, Pammy’s Playground, was dedicated to a children’s playground in memory of Pamela Butler.

West was at the playground building event today, working with cement, the tether ball area and with mulch. In fact, the playground upgrade was her idea.

Cherri West, mother of Pamela Butler, was working at the playground renovation project Wednesday for Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

“Almost 20 years, it kind of got a little old and deteriorated, so I wanted to see if we could freshen it up, since it will be 20 years in October for her, and I thought this would be a great anniversary,” West said.

West is an employee of CarMax, whose foundation is sponsoring upgrades of playgrounds all over the country. She requested the CarMax Foundation to get involved with the playground upgrade here. The park upgrade is receiving a grant from the CarMax Foundation.

Besides about 100 volunteers from CarMax, there also were volunteers at the rebuild from the police and fire departments, as well as from parks department in Kansas City, Kansas.

About 150 volunteers today built state-of-the-art new playground structures at the park, according to Chasity Miller, community engagement manager of CarMax.

The new structures being built at the park included swings, slides, a climbing frame, tether ball, soccer goals, a shade structure, sidewalk decorations and flower boxes. The improvements are expected to be safer than former structures at the park.

Pammy’s Playground improvements were based on designs by the children who attend the nearby John Fiske Elementary School, according to Miller.

Miller said this playground project is part of a national CarMax Foundation $4.4 million national program partnering with KaBOOM! to improve children’s health. This program will build 68 playgrounds across the country.

A ballpark figure for the cost of today’s park improvements is about $100,000, according to Miller.

A small community contribution of about $8,500 with donations of time, equipment and materials were from the Unified Government, said Angel Obert, recreational division manager for the UG parks and recreation.

Obert said the playground improvement project was initiated last year and took off in April when CarMax approved the grant.

A Unified Government parks official stated that the UG was honored to be a partner with KaBOOM! and the CarMax Foundation to restore this playground, and it would provide a safe environment, strengthening the community, while giving children and families an opportunity for recreation.

There were many community partners with this playground renovation, including the Armourdale Renewal Association and several businesses.

The Clem Park playground project is one of three that has been done in the area by CarMax Foundation and KaBOOM!, Miller said. Another of their playground projects was in October 2013 at the Providence-Ball Family Center YMCA at 8601 Parallel Parkway in Kansas City, Kansas.

Volunteers installed new playground equipment Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers were working on the playground upgrade Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers installed new playground equipment Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers were working on the playground upgrade Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers were working on the playground upgrade Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers were working on the playground upgrade Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers were working on sidewalk decorations Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
A soccer game started Wednesday shortly after soccer goals were installed at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Volunteers installed new playground equipment Wednesday at Pammy’s Playground at Bill Clem Park at 10th and Kansas Avenue in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Bill Clem Park is named after an athlete from Kansas City, Kansas.

Report names Kansas and Missouri nursing homes with ‘persistent record of poor care’

by Dan Margolies, Kansas News Service

Nine nursing homes in Kansas and 14 in Missouri are among nearly 400 nationwide with a “persistent record of poor care” whose names had been withheld from the public, according to a U.S. Senate report released Monday.

The facilities are not included on a shorter list of homes that get increased federal scrutiny because of health, safety or sanitary problems.

The names of the previously undisclosed facilities were released by Pennsylvania Sens. Bob Casey, a Democrat, and Pat Toomey, a Republican, as part of their investigation of federal oversight of nursing homes.

The nearly 400 homes qualify for the federal Special Focus Facility (SFF) program but aren’t selected to participate because of limited resources at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), according to the Senate report.

“Despite being indistinguishable from participants in terms of their qualifications for enhanced oversight, candidates are not publicly disclosed,” the report states. “As a result, individuals and families making decisions about nursing home care for themselves or for a loved one are unlikely to be aware of these candidates.”

Here are the Kansas and Missouri homes that are candidates for the SFF program, according to the Senate report, along with the number of their certified beds. (The bed numbers come from Nursing Home Compare, an online reference maintained by CMS that rates nursing homes based on health inspection reports, quality of care measures and overall staffing.)

Kansas

• Enterprise Estates Nursing Center, Enterprise, 41 beds
• Great Bend Health & Rehab Center, Great Bend, 65 beds
• Woodlawn Care and Rehab, DBA Orchard G, Wichita, 93 beds
• Indian Creek Healthcare Center, Overland Park, 120 beds
• Fort Scott Manor, Fort Scott, 45 beds (This facility closed last year.)
• Pinnacle Ridge Nursing & Rehab Center, Olathe, 94 beds
• Westy Community Care Home, Westmoreland, 43 beds
• Via Christi Village Pittsburg Inc., Pittsburg, 96 beds
• Mount Hope Nursing Center, Mount Hope, 45 beds

Missouri

• Kansas City Center for Rehabilitation and Healthcare, Kansas City, Missouri, 180 beds
• Crestview Home, Bethany, 92 beds
• Normandy Nursing Center, St. Louis, 116 beds
• Garden Valley Healthcare Center, Kansas City, Missouri, 156 beds
• Life Care Center of Bridgeton, Bridgeton, 91 beds
• Hillside Manor Healthcare and Rehab Center, St. Louis, 208 beds
• Parklane Care and Rehabilitation Center, Wentzville, 240 beds
• Crystal Creek Health and Rehabilitation Center, Florissant, 158 beds
• Maple Wood Healthcare Center, Kansas City, Missouri, 150 beds
• Edgewood Manor Center for Rehab and Healthcare, Raytown, 66 beds
• Christian Care Home, Ferguson, 150 beds (This facility is no longer participating in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.)
• Lewis & Clark Gardens, St. Charles, 142 beds
• Redwood of Raymore, Raymore, 142 beds
• Rancho Manor Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center, Florissant, 120 beds

Two Kansas nursing homes and three Missouri nursing homes are in the SFF program:

Kansas

• Serenity Care and Rehab, Overland Park, 145 beds
• Garden Valley Retirement Village, Garden City, 78 beds

Missouri

• Hidden Lake Care Center, Raytown, 112 beds
• St Johns Place, St. Louis, 94 beds
• Green Park Senior Living Community, St Louis, 188 beds

As the Senate report notes, the SFF program “targets those facilities that ‘substantially fail’ to meet the required care standards and resident protections afforded by the Medicare and Medicaid programs.” The program aims to stimulate improvements in their quality of care.

Linda MowBray, vice president of the Kansas Health Care Association, a trade association representing 260-plus Kansas nursing homes, said that SFF program participants are chosen from the poorest performing facilities in the bottom 20 percent of state inspection surveys.

“The state survey agency identifies two to three facilities from the lowest 20 percent that have demonstrated a special need for more oversight due to history of deficiencies, staffing levels and/or quality outcomes,” she said.

“They may very well need to be a special focus home,” MowBray said. “But it may be that they are in that bottom quintile because of one particular incident, not necessarily a longstanding history that’s care-related. But some facilities do have a record of having more widespread problems.”

She added: “It’s public information and people need to know it, but I really believe that in Kansas we’re getting our act back together.”

Only 88 nursing homes out of more than 15,700 nationwide are currently participating in the SFF program, according to the Senate report.

The program dates to 1987, when Congress enacted the Nursing Home Reform Act requiring nursing homes to maintain “the highest possible mental and physical functional status of residents.” The act also established oversight procedures, including regular surveys and inspections.

Unlike SFF participants, which are required to notify the public of their participation in the program, SFF candidates are not. Adding further confusion to the picture, 27 percent of the SFF candidate facilities had two stars out of a maximum of five on Nursing Home Compare.

In Kansas, some of the ratings may be dated. The Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services (KDADS), the agency that conducts nursing home surveys, had fallen behind the federal schedule that calls for nursing homes to be inspected at least once a year.

“It’s taken KDADS quite some time to get caught back up with surveys,” MowBray said. “So we’ve had facilities that have gone as long as 24 months between surveys, and we don’t like that, the homes don’t like that.

“Some of the rankings have been hanging around their neck for a long time and they’ve made quite a few improvements since that bad point. But that bad survey’s still hanging out there.”

Dan Margolies is a senior reporter and editor at KCUR. You can reach him on Twitter @DanMargolies. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.
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