February 11, 2012

Senator says new revelations show need for DNR review

A state senator heading a review of why the Department of Natural Resources withheld a report on contamination at the Lake of the Ozarks says the most recent revelations confirm the need for a Senate review.

A review of DNR action by the Senate Committee on Commerce, Consumer Protection and the Environment began in late July. Chairman Brad Lager (R-Savannah) refuses to call it an investigation, insisting the committee simply wants to know what broke down, where it broke down and should public policy change to keep it from breaking down in the future.

DNR withheld information about elevated E. coli levels at the Lake of the Ozarks for four weeks. It came to light late last week that a former top DNR official informed a top aide of Governor Nixon about the problem on May 29th. The interview former DNR Communications Director Susanne Medley gave to Senate committee staff members contradicts the insistence of the governor’s office that it didn’t know until June 23rd that DNR withheld the report. Medley told Senate staffers that she spoke with Jeff Mazur, a member of the governor’s communications office on the 29th, the day after she found out about the report.

Revelations that Governor Nixon’s office knew early on confirm Lager’s belief that the probe is needed.

“And the reason that that is so important is because this is not about pointing a finger at somebody and saying, ‘It’s this person’s fault.’ This is about understanding where the public trust was violated and then making sure that never happens again,” says Lager.

Lager doesn’t want to rush the review, which he says has been slowed because DNR hasn’t cooperated.

“What is very clear to me is DNR has made a conscious decision to not be candid, to not be open and to not be honest,” Lager says.

Lager adds that after DNR drug its feet, it then dumped nearly half a million e-mails on the committee, yet still might be keeping e-mail correspondence vital to the review from committee staff members. Staff members with the committee have been interviewing DNR personnel and reading e-mails.

 

Gov. Nixon held a news conference last week to announce an initiative to improve water quality at the Lake of the Ozarks. The four-part plan begins with the inspection of about 400 area facilities that hold wastewater permits close to the Lake of the Ozarks of major tributaries. Lager says he’s not sure the plan adequately addresses public safety concerns at the lake. He advocates a state government policy that works with communities at the Lake of the Ozark to police contamination.

Download/listen Brent Martin reports (:60 MP3)

Rams 0-3 after home opener loss to Packers

The St. Louis Rams’ woes continue as the bad luck they experienced in their first two games, on the road, follows them to the Edward Jones Dome as they lose their home opener 36-17 to the Green Bay Packers in front of 60,234 fans – many wearing the colors of the Packers plastic cheeseheads, and cheering loudly for the visitors.

Green Bay linebacker Nick Barnett stops St. Louis running back Steven Jackson (UPI/Bill Greenblatt) The Rams had a chance early as they got the ball on the opening kickoff and put themselves into field goal range. But a 48 yard field goal attempt by Josh Brown was blocked by Green Bay’s Johnny Jolly and the Packers took over.

The Pack took advantage of the opportunity to move the ball into field goal range and struck on a 48 yard attempt by Mason Crosby to put Green Bay on top 3-0 with 6:03 to go in the 1st quarter.

Green Bay scored a second field goal, taking advantage of a Marc Bulger fumble at the St. Louis 15 yard line. Mason Crosby drilled through a 38 yard field goal to put the Pack in the lead 6-0.

Bulger injured his right shoulder on the play and tried to continue but could not and was replaced with backup quarterback Kyle Boller, who completed 16 of 31 pass attempts for 164 yards and a pair of touchdowns. Boller also rushed for 31 yards. The extent of Bulger’s injury won’t be known until an MRI can be taken.

Crosby wasn’t done with place kicking duties as he drilled a third field goal in the 1st quarter, a 25 yarder, on the final play of the period to put the Packers up 9-0. The Packers got the ball on the St. Louis 12, courtesy of a Steven Jackson fumble.

In the 2nd quarter John Kuhn scored the Packers’ first touchdown of the afternoon as he ran it in from a yard out to cap a 6 play, 80 yard drive. Crosby’s extra point made it Green Bat 16, St. Louis 0.

The Rams came back on their next series of downs to put up their first points of the day. Kyle Boller tossed a 16 yard pass to Daniel Fells in the end zone to put the final touches on a 10 play, 78 yard drive. Josh Brown’s extra point was good and the Rams has narrowed the lead to 16-7.

Green Bay wasted little time striking back as Aaron Rodgers completed a 21 yard TD pass to Donald Driver to finish a 5 play, 89 yard drive. The Crosby extra point made it Packers 23, Rams 7.

The Rams weren’t done for the half as Fells caught his second touchdown pass of the game, a 19 yard pass from Boller to cap a 9 play, 84 yard drive with under 2 minutes to play in the half. Packers 23, Rams 14.

The Rams cut the lead to 23-17 as Josh Brown launched a 53 yard field goal through the uprights with just under 8 and a half minutes to go in the 3rd quarter. The 3rd quarter ended with the Pack leading 23-10.

With a little more than 12 minutes to go in the 4th quarter the Packers picked up some insurance as quarterback Aaron Rodgers ran from 4 yards out for the TD. The extra point was no good and Green Bay had a 29-17 lead.

LA Rams great David "Deacon" Jones honored before the game (UPI/Bill Greenblatt) Green Bay put more points on the board with just under 5 minutes to play as John Kuhn caught a 10 yard touchdown pass from Rodgers. The Crosby extra point was good and the Pack led 36-17.

The Rams head to the West Coast, next weekend, to play the 49ers in San Francisco.

This was a special day for the Rams franchise. Prior to the game the Rams honored the man known as the Secretary of Defense as they retired uniform number 75 worn by David "Deacon" Jones during his career from 1961-1971 with the Los Angeles Rams.  

Download?listen: Rams Coach Steve Spagnuolo’s post-game comments (5:00 MP3)

KC ground game anemic as Eagles soar over Chiefs

The Kansas City Chiefs fall to 0-3 on the season as they bow to the Eagles 34-14 Sunday afternoon in Philadelphia.

The Eagles got on the board first as LeSean McCoy scored on a 5-yard run for a touchdown. David Akers PAT made it Philadelphia 7, Kansas City 0.

Philadelphia scored another TD before the end of the 1st quarter as quarterback Kevin Kolb ran it in from a yard out for the major. Akers’ extra point made it Philadelphia 14, Kansas City 0.

Kansas City cut the lead in the half in the 2nd quarter as Matt Cassel tossed a 13 yard touchdown pass to Mark Bradley for 6. Ryan Succop’s extra point made it Philadelphia 14, Kansas City 7.

Philadelphia regained its two touchdown lead as LeSean McCoy scored his second TD of the game on a 64 yard pass from Kevin Kolb. Akers’s conversion made it Philadelphia 21, Kansas City 7.

Akers picked up 3 more points for the Eagles as he sliced the uprights with a 29 yard field goal to make the score Philadelphia 24, Kansas City 7. That was the score as the teams went to their locker rooms for the half.

Akers struck for 3 more points early in the 3rd quarter as he drilled a field goal from 38 yards to make it Philadelphia 27, Kansas City 7. The 3rd quarter ended with the Eagles enjoying that 20 point lead.

Philadelphia didn’t need any more points, but the Eagles put points on the board, nonetheless, as Brent Celek snagged a 35 yard TD pass from Kolb. The Akers’ extra point was good and the Eagles led 34-7.

The Chiefs picked up a last TD as Bobby Wade caught a 9 yard TD pass from Matt Cassel. Succop’s extra point was good and the Eagles led 34-14. That’s how the game stayed.

Quarterback Matt Cassel completed 14 of 18 passes for 90 yards and 2 touchdowns. On the ground, Larry Johnson led the way for the Chiefs, with only 38 yards in 19 rushes. The team had only 99 net yards rushing the day.

The Chiefs return to Arrowhead Stadium, next Sunday, to host the New York Giants. 

KC hospital chief wants more imput from public hospitals in health care debate

Capitol Hill lawmakers who are crafting a health care reform package are being urged to consider the effects of reform on public hospitals. Among those issuing the call is John Bluford, President and CEO of Kansas City-based Truman Medical Centers , which includes Truman Medical Center Hospital Hill and Truman Medical Center Lakewood in Kansas City.

Public hospitals, some of which Bluford calls safety net hospitals, provide services to many Medicaid patients and individuals who are uninsured and underinsured.

“First and foremost, we need to get these 46- or 47-million people in our country who are not insured – we need to have coverage for those people,” said Bluford in an interview with the Missourinet. “That relates very directly to the viability of these safety net hospitals – public hospitals and so forth.”

Bluford says many of these hospitals are level one trauma centers delivering emergency care to the uninsured or underinsured.

“Many of those things (trauma cases, high-risk pregnancies, etc.) currently, because of the uninsured dilemma, are not being reimbursed for,” said Bluford. “They, (the hospitals) in effect, are vulnerable, themselves, as institutions.”

Bluford says many of these public hospitals are not receiving reimbursement rates at levels that can sustain continued delivery of services.

“There must be a protection for disproportionate share payments,” said Bluford. “That’s an industry term but, in effect, it is a subsidy for these safety net institutions that cover a disproportionate share of uncompensated care individuals and Medicaid individuals.”

Bluford says Truman Medical Center hospitals are usually at capacity and need to expand, but he says it is difficult to do so because the low reimbursement rates and other factors stand in the way of generating the revenues needed for expansion.

Download/Listen: Steve Walsh report (:60 MP3)