New law to lower prescription drug costs will help Kansas residents

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., said allowing Medicare to negotiate for lower drug costs will help put money back in residents’ pockets.

Rep. Davids recently held a roundtable discussion on new provisions to lower the cost of prescription drugs in Kansas. Davids also joined Glenda DuBoise, state director of AARP Kansas for a virtual town hall to speak directly to Kansas seniors about these new cost-saving measures.

Americans pay two to three times what citizens of other countries pay for prescription drugs. Thanks to a new federal law, beginning next year several policies will go into effect to help Kansans afford their medications, including a cap on insulin prices for Medicare beneficiaries, rebates if pharmaceutical companies raise prices faster than inflation, and the first-ever out-of-pocket cap on seniors’ medication costs.

“There’s no reason Kansans should pay so much more for medicines than people in other countries, and we’re finally starting to change that,” Rep. Davids said. “Allowing Medicare to negotiate for lower drug costs has been a priority of mine since coming to Congress, and I am so glad we were finally able to get it done. These new provisions will put money back in Kansans’ pockets and reduce the stress of having to choose between life-saving medications and other necessary expenses.”

New, key provisions that will save Kansans’ money on prescription drugs include:

• Capping insulin copays at $35 per month for Medicare beneficiaries. An estimated 28,000 Kansas Medicare beneficiaries used insulin in 2020. Starting next year, their costs will be capped at $35 a month for life-saving insulin.


• Capping seniors’ out-of-pocket costs at $2,000. Starting in 2024, Medicare prescription drug plans must offer improved financial protections and in 2025, a $2,000 out-of-pocket cap will take effect. Each year, that will benefit about 18,000 Kansas Medicare beneficiaries who would otherwise have out-of-pocket costs above the cap—and, for the first time, all 401,000 Kansans with Medicare Part D will have the peace of mind of knowing their pharmacy costs are capped.


• Allowing Medicare to negotiate prices for high-cost drugs. Approximately 5 to 7 million Americans on Medicare will likely see reduced costs on their most expensive medications thanks to Medicare negotiation. Additionally, billions of taxpayer dollars will be saved and put towards reducing the national debt.


• Addressing skyrocketing prescription drug prices. Starting next year, companies will be required to pay Medicare a rebate if they increase prices faster than inflation.

While these savings were included in the Davids-supported Inflation Reduction Act, comprehensive legislation to lower health care and energy costs and reduce the national debt by more than $300 billion, Rep. Davids has been working to lower health care costs since before her election. She led her colleagues on similar actions to lower the price of prescription drugs and co-sponsored legislation to do so. She also released a report on the high price of insulin in the Kansas Third and held a roundtable with local parents to discuss how the rising cost of insulin impacts their family after voting to cap insulin co-pays at $35 a month for all Americans.

  • Story from Rep. Davids’ office

From entertainment to art, ‘The Art of Gaming’ highlights video games

Gaming Flyer/Poster

Video games make the transition from entertainment to art in the latest exhibit at the Kansas City Kansas Community College Art Gallery.

“The Art of Gaming” is on display through Sept. 23 at the art gallery, in the lower Jewell building at the main KCKCC campus, 7250 State Ave., Kansas City, Kansas.

Shai Perry, who curated the exhibit, said it was inspired by her stepkids, who were playing games online during the pandemic. Gaming was a way the kids communicated with each other, she said. Moms may not want their kids to have as much screen time, but it’s how kids are socializing today, she said, and the art show expresses these changes.

“I as curator have a series called ‘Art Is,’ where I take something you might not think is artistic and show people that it is,” said Perry, also the coordinator of the KCKCC Art Gallery. Creativity is part of everyday life, she added.

“We are creative every day in the way we decide what shirt and shoes to put on,” she said. Everyone creates, and the art show, “The Art of Gaming,” just expresses the creativity found around gaming.

The art exhibit has sparked the interest of students at the college, where there are members of a gamers’ club who have traveled to competitions and won awards. Some students have painted miniature characters to make them more realistic. Some college classes have scheduled tours of the art gallery.

Topics that have inspired art include tabletop games, old school games such as Sega and Mario, the NFL, and arcade games such as Pong, Duck Hunt and Tetris.

Some of the works are three-dimensional animation, while others are acrylic on wood platforms, some are drawings, others are acrylic on canvas and acrylic on paper.

Anthony Oropeza, a community artist who is an alumnus of KCKCC, has works in the exhibit. Another community artist with works on display is Darryl Woods, who works with kids’ art summer camps and whose works are loved by kids, she said. Oropeza is known for sports art, and Woods has done many superhero art pieces.

Other students and community artists who have works on display in the exhibit include Bekon Flory, Ben Lee, Christopher Guthrie, Damont Jordan, Emma Conforti, Ian Young, Joseph Sanchez, Julianna Johnson, Micki W. Hill, Oscar Alvarez-Alonso and Raven Harmon.

The art show opened Aug. 15, at the beginning of the school year, and runs through Sept. 23. There will be a closing reception from 4 to 7 p.m. Sept. 23. The art gallery is free and open to the public. Perry suggested that visitors make an appointment at 913-288-7408 to make sure that the gallery is staffed and it is open at the time they want to visit.

Ribbon-cutting

Superintendent Anna Stubblefield spoke at a ribbon-cutting ceremony Wednesday morning for the Alfred Fairfax Academy, 2226 N. 85th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Formerly the Fairfax Learning Center, the school was renamed after Alfred Fairfax, the first Black state legislator in Kansas. A restorative high school, Fairfax Academy is designed to offer an alternative high school educational experience for KCKPS students who are not reaching their full potential. (Photo from Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools)
A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held Wednesday morning for the Alfred Fairfax Academy, 2226 N. 85th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Formerly the Fairfax Learning Center, the school was renamed after Alfred Fairfax, the first Black state legislator in Kansas. A restorative high school, Fairfax Academy is designed to offer an alternative high school educational experience for KCKPS students who are not reaching their full potential. (Photo from Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools)