The Piper Craft Show will take place from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 2, at Piper High School, 4400 N. 107th St., Kansas City, Kansas.
The event is sponsored by the Piper High School robotics team, and money raised goes toward the team’s expenses. Admission is free, and food and drinks will be available for purchase at the craft show.
It will be the 20th year for the event. The robotics team goes to national competitions almost every year.
Crafters Mary Kobe Peterson of Designs by Me said she is planning to be at the craft show and she expected many vendors to be at the event. She designs specialty T-shirts, glitter and gemstones, including T-shirt designs for women and men.
The Kansas City T-Bones have released catcher Leo Rojas. The move will allow Rojas to retire from professional baseball.
Leo Rojas was signed by the Kansas City T-Bones on March 23, 2017. The native of Punto Fijo, Venezuela, played in 48 games for the T-Bones in 2017 and hit .251 with five home runs and 24 RBI.
In his lone season in Kansas City, Rojas set career highs in games played (48), runs (23), hits (43), doubles (11), home runs and RBIs.
Rojas was originally drafted by the San Francisco Giants in the 2012 MLB draft from Miami-Dade College, Kendall Campus in Miami, Florida.
The catcher spent parts of four seasons in the Giants organization before his release in June of 2016. Rojas retires as a career .250 hitter in 142 minor league games with 10 home runs and 72 RBI.
Full and half-season ticket packages for 2018, as well as flex plans, are on sale now online at www.tbonesbaseball.com or by calling 913-328-5618 or visiting in person the Providence Medical Center Box Office. Group ticket sales for renewing accounts are also on sale, while group ticket sales will open to the public on Dec. 12.
by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service
Kansas’ top health official is stepping down in January, the governor’s office announced Thursday.
Susan Mosier, a former state lawmaker, had led the Kansas Department of Health and Environment since late 2014 and previously served as the state’s Medicaid director.
Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer will select Mosier’s successor, according to a statement from the governor’s office. Colyer has begun taking the reins on some state matters in anticipation of Gov. Sam Brownback’s departure for a position at the U.S. State Department.
The governor’s office statement cited Mosier’s oversight of improved health outcomes and lower costs for Kansans in Medicaid, among other accomplishments.
“Dr. Mosier has dedicated her time tirelessly to serve the people of Kansas over the past six years,” Gov. Sam Brownback said. “Dr. Mosier has worked effectively for Kansas’ most vulnerable citizens.”
Mosier was Medicaid director when the program that provides health insurance to more than 400,000 Kansans was privatized as KanCare.
The Brownback administration has touted KanCare as a victory for coordinated care and responsible state finances, but critics including health advocacy groups say paperwork backlogs, weak oversight and other problems have plagued the program and reduced access to health care.
Early this year the Obama administration denied Kansas’ request to extend KanCare another year under a special waiver from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, citing multiple concerns about the program. The Trump administration approved a corrective plan and extension later in the year.
Kansas is now seeking to renew KanCare.
Sean Gatewood, co-administrator of the KanCare Advocates Network, said the timing of the leadership change is problematic.
“Getting a new secretary on the heels of getting a new Medicaid director adds to the confusion and builds our case further for delaying the implementation of KanCare 2.0,” he said, referring to the state’s plans to revamp and extend the program, this time with work requirements and lifetime caps on services for some beneficiaries.
The state’s most recent Medicaid director, Mike Randol, left this fall. Jon Hamdorf is serving as interim director.
In the announcement about her departure, Mosier expressed gratitude for her experiences at the agency.
“It has been my great privilege to serve the people of Kansas,” she said.
Celia Llopis-Jepsen 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 @Celia_LJ. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.
See more at http://kcur.org/post/kdhe-leader-leave-start-2018-colyer-appoint-successor.