"I will tell the people what's going on at the statehouse. I'm going to treat the capitol as a borderline crime scene. ... If businesses don't have to pay taxes, the burden should not be on those trying to feed themselves." - The Valley Falls Vindicator & Oskaloosa Independent, March 3, 2016.

Across Kansas the top 1% are looting and on-the-loose, pitting us against each other. Communities in Jefferson County need to democratically prepare themselves for food and energy autonomy.

- MICHAEL CADDELL, Publisher, Producer Radio Free Kansas

Monday, January 18, 2021

KANSAS INSIDER, eNewsletter, Jan. 15, 2021

 

Black and white photo of residents of Protection, Kansas, gathered in the high school gym in April 1957 to receive the polio vaccine. The small southwest Kansas town was the first in the nation to be fully inoculated against the disease.

A dose of history

Protection, Kansas — chosen during the Eisenhower years because of what its name might symbolize in a public health campaign — was championed for how virtually everyone in town bore their arms for shots of the polio vaccine in 1957.

Today, amid a killer pandemic, the southwest Kansas town of about 500 people represents a different attitude. The county has ditched the governor’s mask orders. And, at times, the area has been a hotspot of COVID-19 infections and deaths. Some people there see conspiracies in vaccines. Jim McLean of the Kansas News Service explored the history and the present.

"I'm pretty savvy and I was like, 'Jesus, this is hard.'"


— Niall Brennan, CEO of the Health Care Cost Institute, on making sense of newly published hospital prices.
A photo of an empty hospital bed surrounded by health care equipment.

Blinded with transparency

The Trump administration has forced hospitals to publish what they charge for different services. It reveals how the cost of childbirth or a skin biopsy or thousands of things can vary wildly. You might save money paying cash, or get charged three times more on one insurance plan versus another. The price lists are complicated, beyond the ability of most people to use for comparison shopping. But big employers and others will now be able to analyze the prices and bargain for better rates. Celia Llopis-Jepsen of the Kansas News Service explains.
A photo from behind the television camera, showing Gov. Kelly seated at her desk before giving her State of the State speech in January 2021.

Gov. Hopeful

The State of the State speech from Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly this week mourned the loss of 3,000-plus Kansans to COVID-19 and pined for cooperation from the conservative Republicans who run the Legislature. But she’s unlikely to get through Medicaid expansion or maybe even her proposal to tax more online sales — a move she says could help Kansas retailers. Stephen Koranda of the Kansas News Service breaks down the annual address.

Trump Country

The 45th president of the United States got impeached this week. For the second time. One member of the Kansas delegation to the U.S. House, a Democrat, cast a vote to put Donald Trump on trial in the Senate. All the Republicans voted against impeachment. Aviva Okeson-Haberman of KCUR has the story.

COVID Crush

Hospitals are so overwhelmed in parts of Kansas that ambulances are getting turned away. Kaiser Health News shares some unsettling stories.

Truth and killing

Coyote hunters like to compete for prize money by challenging each other to weekend contests. The team that bags the most kills wins. But some hunters have been known to cheat by saving up carcasses ahead of contests. So last weekend in Kismet, Kansas, a competition lined up lie detector tests to keep things honest. David Condos of the Kansas News Service explains more about the world of competitive coyote hunting.
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