Kansas National Guard deploys helicopters to wildfires burning in Kansas

High winds, low humidity and kindling in the form of dry grasses made the state susceptible to fires

by Allison Kite, Kansas Reflector

Kansas City, Missouri — The Kansas National Guard will deploy helicopters in an effort to put out wildfires in several counties in central and western Kansas, several state departments said in a news release Thursday.

Gov. Laura Kelly declared a state of disaster emergency last week because of the risk of fire.

According to the news release, the Kansas Army National Guard will deploy Black Hawk helicopters to assist local responders in areas that are difficult for ground crews to reach. The Kansas Forest Service will also have air tankers on standby.

“Prepositioning firefighting personnel and equipment in western Kansas along with those assets responding will allow our aviation assets to quickly respond and keep Kansans safe,” Kelly said in the news release. “Local responders work heroically to respond when wildland fires threaten their communities and the state stands ready to back them up, if needed.”

Low humidity and abundant dry grass made the state susceptible to wildfires. Wednesday’s extraordinary storm system, which brought winds of more than 100 mph in some parts of Kansas, only added to that risk.

Scott Blair, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Kansas City, Missouri, said in some cases, power lines blown over in the high winds started grass fires.

Though the extraordinary weather system also brought thunderstorms, high winds started long before and continued after the rain. Those winds made putting out fires more difficult.

The winds also brought smoke from the fires east across the state, affecting the air quality in Topeka and Kansas City, Missouri, on Wednesday night.

While the winds have died down, risk of wildfires across central and western Kansas remained Thursday, according to the news release. Most of Kansas is in an enhanced, significant or critical fire danger outlook.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/12/16/kansas-national-guard-deploys-helicopters-to-wildfires-burning-in-kansas/

Russell, Kansas, bids farewell to its most favorite son, Bob Dole

by David Condos and Jim McLean, Kansas News Service

Russell, Kansas — Bob Dole’s hometown said a proud farewell to the former senator one last time on Saturday.

The town of just over 4,000 in central Kansas packed a memorial service at St. Mary Queen of Angels Catholic Church. The ceremony happened near the house where Russell’s most famous resident grew up and returned to after suffering wounds in World War II that would challenge him until his death this month.

Some of the people who came knew Dole back when he was the boy who lived on Maple Street and was the soda jerk at Dawson’s drugstore. And even after Dole left town for a high-profile life in Washington, they said he continued to look out for his hometown.

“He never forgot Russell, he was always ready to come back home and do what he could,” Janet Funk said. “And Russell always welcomed him with open arms.”

Funk lives on a farm just outside of Russell. Her family has been friendly with the Doles her entire life, ever since her father and Dole were classmates at Russell High School.

She said people in town take pride in what Dole became — U.S. Senate majority leader and Republican presidential nominee — but just as proud of what he never lost sight of: his Russell roots.

“When he came home, he was a hometown boy,” Funk said. “He was a part of us.”

Elsie Keller, now 97, remembers growing up as good friends with Dole and his sister, Gloria, in Russell. In more recent years, she’d often bake a cake for Dole during his periodic visits back to see family.

And she said she’s thankful for this final chance to say goodbye, right here in the town that meant so much to them.

“It’s quite touching,” Keller said. “It was an honor to have known him.”

The senator from Russell also brought people to the town on Saturday.

“It’s hard to imagine a Kansas without Bob Dole,” Gov. Laura Kelly said. “And I’m not sure I want to.”

Kelly, U.S. Sens. Jerry Moran and Roger Marshall and former Sen. Pat Roberts each spoke at the service.

“While his achievements put him at the pinnacles of power in a public life,” Kelly said during her speech, “it was his unmatched character, his integrity, his wit, his optimism and his work ethic — forged right here in Russell — that won him the hearts of Kansans.”

Dole’s widow, former U.S. senator and one-time cabinet member Elizabeth, and other family members watched from the front row. Former Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky sat in a pew directly behind Kelly.

The speakers highlighted some well-known memories of Dole’s connection with Russell — growing up poor during the Dust Bowl, his early jobs as a paperboy and a soda jerk and how the town came together to collect money in a cigar box to help pay for Dole’s medical care after he suffered injuries in Italy during World War II.

There were lesser-known stories, too. Roberts told of how Dole once saved the Kansas wheat harvest after the Environmental Protection Agency threatened to cancel it.

But the consistent theme that ran through the memorial was the deep connection between the man who rose to the highest levels of American leadership and the small town in rural Kansas that raised him.

“To the people of Russell, to the people of Kansas, thank you for the manner in which you have shaped, treated, respected a man now so worthy of our admiration,” Moran said. “This town should be so proud.”

Later Saturday in Topeka, many of the same politicians spoke about Dole’s life at a service in the state Capitol.

Dole’s flag-draped coffin sat in front of the rostrum as Kelly, Marshall, Moran, and former Sen. Nancy Kassebaum Baker and former U.S. Rep. Jim Slattery paid tribute, while former Attorney General Bob Stephan and former Gov. Sam Brownback looked on.

“We’ve lost the ability — as Senator Dole did so often — to reach across the aisle to get things done,” Kassebaum Baker said in an interview after the service.

Slattery, a Democrat, said Dole was a tough politician but “a skillful legislator who had a heart for the underdog.” Dole’s advocacy for the disabled and and the food stamp program demonstrated that, Slattery said.

“And on the difficult issue of civil rights, Bob Dole was on the right side of history,” Slattery said. Dole voted for the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act the following year and supported a national holiday to honor slain Martin Luther King Jr.

Dole’s casket will now travel back to Washington, D.C., and be buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

David Condos covers western Kansas for High Plains Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @davidcondos.
Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks or email jim (at) kcur (dot) org.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2021-12-11/russell-kansas-bids-farewell-to-its-most-favorite-son-bob-dole.

State Finance Council approves $14.9 million in additional funds for Kansas COVID-19 testing

by Noah Taborda, Kansas News Service

Topeka — Kansas legislative leaders and the governor Thursday approved $14.9 million to extend state testing programs through the end of the year.

With COVID-19 cases rising in Kansas and the omicron variant looming, the Strengthening People and Revitalizing Kansas Executive Committee requested the funds last month to maintain testing capacity across the state. The surge of cases from the delta variant sapped the budget, said Lt. Gov. David Toland, chairman of the SPARK executive committee.

Toland reaffirmed to the State Finance Council the importance of maintaining testing during a time when case numbers are climbing.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s “employer and community testing programs, which were set up early in the pandemic response, are really critical to ensuring our management of the pandemic,” Toland said. “It’s especially important to continue this testing and make sure that it’s available across our state, both for those who are experiencing symptoms or those that have potential exposures to COVID-19 in their communities.”

The finance council — made up of Senate and House leadership, as well as Gov. Laura Kelly — moved unanimously to approve the additional funds. The money would come from recouped COVID-19 relief funds and maintain testing through Dec. 31.

Senate Minority Leader Dinah Sykes, a Lenexa Democrat, raised concerns she had heard from some Kansans about accessing affordable testing.

“I know we had different places where residents could go, and some of those are charging like $120 for testing,” Sykes said. “Will that offset that cost, so people are not having to pay that much?”

Myron Gunsalus, director of KDHE labs, said some sites that previously were using funds from KDHE labs to provide free testing may have added fees. While the newly allocated funds will not provide expanded testing capacity, it would ensure free community testing continues.

Businesses previously participating in the testing program would also be eligible for testing.

“This does extend free testing across Kansas, either through antigen testing with our community partners or through our community site testing sites,” Gunsalus said. “That includes about eight to 10 mass testing sites, basically like a drive up or a walk-up site that (KDHE) will actually man as one of the ways to save some money and yet maintain a public-facing free testing option.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/12/09/state-finance-council-approves-14-9-million-in-additional-funds-for-kansas-covid-19-testing/.