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Give Your House A Fresh Start: Get The Ductwork Cleaned

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(NAPS)—While professionally cleaned ductwork can be like a breath of fresh air to many houses, there are a few facts you should know when it’s time to have your home’s air ducts cleaned.

  1. In a typical six-room home, up to 40 pounds of dust are created annually through everyday living. Your heating and cooling system is the lungs of your home. The dander, dust, chemicals and other contaminants are pulled into the HVAC system, where they can build up and possibly contribute to health problems, especially for people with respiratory conditions, autoimmune disorders or allergies.
  2. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, 25 to 40 percent of the energy used for heating or cooling a home is wasted. Contaminants in the heating and cooling system cause it to work harder and shorten the life of your system. A clean HVAC system doesn’t have to work as hard so it uses less energy.
  3. When you do hire a professional cleaner, ask if it belongs to NADCA, a trade association of the HVAC inspection, maintenance and restoration industry. Its members have signed a Code of Ethics and invested time and resources into industry-related training and education. They also have general liability insurance.

4. You should be aware that some non-NADCA companies use scare tactics and “bait and switch” methods to squeeze money out of their clients or don’t clean the HVAC system at all, let alone to the industry’s standards.

How To Tell You’re Getting A Professional Cleaner

  • Is the company able to show proof of NADCA membership and certification?
  • Is the contractor willing to conduct a thorough inspection of the HVAC system prior to per- forming any work and disclose any problems discovered?
  • Will the contractor clean the supply and return air ductwork, the airstream side of the heat exchanger and the secondary heat exchanger?
  • After cleaning, are access panels properly sealed; blower blades and compartment clean and free of oil, dust and debris? Point a flashlight into the cooling coil. Does light shine through? It should if the coil is clean. Check to make sure the coil fins are straight and evenly spaced and the coil drain pan is clean and that it is draining properly. Do the filters fit properly and are they the proper efficiency recommended by the manufacturer?

Learn More

You can get free brochures about HVAC inspection, maintenance and restoration as well as a complete checklist and more information online at http://nadca.com.

 

 

If your ducts look dirty, they probably are and should be inspected by a reputable, certified HVAC professional

Spring turkey permits go on sale January 12

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Hunters have through Feb. 13 to apply online for Unit 4 Spring Turkey Permits

PRATT –  Have you been dreaming of longbeards? Do you find yourself spending extended periods of time listening for gobbles in the distance? Are you driving your family nuts practicing clucks and purrs on your turkey call? If your answer is yes to any of these questions, you may be experiencing spring turkey hunting withdrawals. But don’t worry, help is on the way!

All 2015 Spring turkey permits will be available over-the-counter and online beginning Jan. 12, except for Unit 4 permits, available only to Kansas residents and are disbursed through a lottery drawing. Applications for the 500 permits allocated in Unit 4 will be accepted from Jan. 10-Feb. 14. Applications can be made by visiting ksoutdoors.com. Hunters may apply for a Unit 4 Spring Turkey Permit or a Unit 4 Spring Turkey Permit/Game Tag Combo; however the game tag will only be valid in Units 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6.

Kansas youth (15 and under) may purchase a spring turkey permit valid statewide over the counter or online and will not need to enter the Unit 4 draw. Unit 4 spring turkey permits are also valid in adjacent Units 1, 2, and 5.

UNIT 4 SPRING TURKEY APPLICATION FEES:

General Application: $27.50

Landowner/Tenant Application: $17.50

General Combo Permit/Game Tag Application: $32.50

Landowner/Tenant Combo Permit/Game Tag Application: $22.50

Preference Point only: $6.50

There is a $6.50 nonrefundable application fee. Unsuccessful applicants will receive a refund check and be issued a preference point. If you do not want to apply for a permit and want to purchase a preference point only, you may do so online by selecting Spring Turkey Preference Point Application. Only one point may be obtained per year.

Any individual who has purchased a Spring Turkey Permit is eligible for one Second Turkey Game Tag. Game tags are valid in Units 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 ONLY. Individuals who possess a Spring Turkey Permit and Turkey Game Tag may harvest both turkeys the same day to obtain their bag limit.

The spring turkey season will open April 1-14 for youth and hunters with disabilities, and April 6-14 for archery hunters. The regular spring season is April 15-May 31, 2015.

For more information, including pricing on all other turkey permits and game tags, visit ksoutdoors.com, or call (620) 672-5911.

Roger’s view from the hills

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CAKE AND EATING IT

“IN POLITICS STUPIDITY IS NOT A HADICAP”.    Napoleon Bonaparte
     Well since it is so cold, (damn that global warming), I am not getting out and visiting parts of Kansas as much as I like to.  So even with Fox News gone fighting with Dish, politics is taking a big part of my observations.  We are about to witness the worst in human behavior.  Not just terrorists, but those who are in charge of doing our business.  The most dangerous time of year is when Congress and the Legislature are in session.
     If any of you are waiting for solutions to come out of Washington you might as well find a place to get comfortable and wait.  When the chance to replace the leader of the House was stopped we all know that things have not changed.  The first duty of the day is to punish those members who had the gall to oppose the leadership.  New ideas are not the subject of the day.
      The original way that the states selected their Senators was not by direct vote of the people.  The people elected their state legislatures and the House of Representatives for their districts.  It was up to the state to nominate and elect the senator.  This changed because it made the position too beholding to the people back home.  It is a six year term for Senator so even doing some blatant things lets the office holder pretty well count on the short term memory of the voter.
     Without an added amendment to the Constitution there is no way to rein in the out of control workings of the Federal Government.  I am afraid that the next two years will be so disappointing that the gains made in the Congress will be lost for a generation.  We are at that point where dependence on the government, deteriorating education, and expanding self centeredness are over growing the well informed voter.
      Is there anything I feel good about?  Yes.  There is a new generation of sincere, educated, and products of grassroots America starting to show up.  One that I am most hopeful for is the newly elected 113th House Rep. J. Basil Dannebohm from Ellinwood.  Whatever the circumstances, he ran unopposed in the primary and general elections and was able to concentrate on getting a foot up in Topeka and ready to hit the ground running.
      It would take too long to go through his resume but suffice it to say that he is an extraordinary person for the job and I think larger jobs down the line.  Yes I mean national office.  I want to be the first on his bandwagon.  This considering that I am not a fan of the run of the mill politician or the wannabe politician.
     As they say “all politics are local” I hope that Basil’s run at representing you and me inspires others that still possess some character and common sense to follow his lead.
      The old saying “you can’t have your cake and eat it to” never made any sense to me.  And it doesn’t take a smart elec kid on a TV commercial to say if you have cake we might as well eat it.  Lets find some more of these smart kids growing up and get them in their pushing out the dead weight.

Steve harper Memorial scholarship available

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Wet and Wild Lands
Wet and Wild Lands

Kansas college students in wildlife-based or outdoor journalism curriculums eligible

PRATT – Kansas high school seniors enrolled in a Kansas college and current Kansas college students pursuing wildlife/nature-based or outdoor journalism degrees are eligible to apply for the Steve Harper Memorial Scholarship. The $1,000 grant is available in memory of Harper who was a well-known Kansan with a colorful career in photojournalism.

Harper was a photojournalism instructor at Wichita State University before becoming the photo editor at the Wichita Eagle Newspaper. His final post was as the Eagle’s outdoor writer and photographer. Harper’s series of articles on Kansas day trips led to the publication of his popular book,83,000 Square Miles, No Line, No Waiting. His outdoor page was selected as best in the nation several times.

Harper died of cancer in 2000 at the age of 55 in the Newton home where he had grown up and raised three daughters. At the suggestion of Governor Bill Graves, the memorial scholarship was first established by the Outdoor Writers of Kansas (OWK), of which Harper was a member. Harper was an excellent judge of character and put as much stock in a person’s initiative and accomplishments as academic successes. A scholarship selection committee will give equal consideration to all three qualifications.

The $1,000 scholarship ($500 per semester) is funded by OWK and the Kansas Wildscape Foundation and will be awarded without regard to race, color, religion or sex. The chosen recipient will be required to show proof of full-time enrollment (at least 12 credit hours) in a Kansas college.

A letter of recommendation from a teacher, counselor, coach or employer must accompany the completed application. Applicants studying outdoor journalism should also include examples of their work. Applications can be downloaded from the Kansas Wildscape website, www.kansaswildscape.org and must be received on or before April 15, 2015. Mail applications to Kansas Wildscape Foundation, Attn: Steve Harper Scholarship, 2500 W. 6th St., Suite G, Lawrence, KS 66049.

For more information on the Steve Harper Memorial Scholarship, contact Wildscape’s Debbie Brandt, [email protected], (785) 843-9453 or Wichita Eagle outdoors writer Michael Pearce, [email protected].

For more information about OWK, go to www.outdoorwritersofkansas.com.

Kansas falling behind in feeding its own, study says

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kfu

Feeding Kansas report offers solutions to hunger and food access issues

By Tom Parker, guest writer

 

MANHATTAN, KS Jan. 7, 2015 – The good news is, Kansas consumers spend $7.2 billion on food each year. The bad news is, $6.5 billion of it comes from beyond the state’s borders, obesity is on the rise, 56 percent of Kansas farmers require secondary income and only eight percent of Kansans have healthy diets, according to a 2010 survey by the Kansas Health Institute.

 

The statistics are sobering considering that Kansas prides itself as as an agricultural state. And yet a new study sponsored by the Kansas Rural Center shows that though the state prides itself on “feeding the world,” residents increasingly struggle to feed and nourish themselves.

 

Feeding Kansas, funded through a grant from the Kansas Health Foundation’s Statewide Partnership for a Healthier Kansas Initiative and partnerships with the American Heart Association, the Healthy Kansas Hospitals, KC Healthy Kids, Kansas Action for Children, Kansas Alliance for Wellness and the Kansas Rural Center, was presented at the annual Kansas Farmers Union convention held Dec. 4 through 6 in Manhattan.

 

Cole Cottin, primary analyst for the KRC and author of the study, recently spent over one year traveling the state discussing the issue with Kansans, and what she found was both troubling and promising.

 

“It was one of the most critical conversations of our lifetime-how will we feed ourselves now and into the future,” she said.

 

While each partnership had their own focus in the results of the study, the Kansas Rural Center’s focus was with the family farm. “We’re looking at a common sense solution to this challenge that starts with our farms-the source of our foods-as being critical to increasing the availability, accessibility and the use of healthy foods in Kansas,” Cottin said. “We need to make sure that healthy food is routinely available for all Kansans.”

 

Four key barriers currently limit the capacity of Kansas farmers to provide a diverse selection of healthy foods, the report found: inadequate coordination, planning and resource allocation on both local and state levels, lack of regulatory clarity in state-level policies that impact the farm-to-fork food system, lack of a centralized location for finding farm-to-fork-related policies and program information, and limited information, resources and protections for the production, handling and sale of fruit and vegetable crops in Kansas.

 

“People say we need to produce more, but the truth is we can feed ten billion people,” Cottin said. “And yet people are chronically hungry. The issue is much bigger than production.”

 

Food waste-including the disposal of fruits and vegetables with minor blemishes-constitutes 40 percent of all food produced, the study found.

 

“It’s an issue we’re all familiar with,” she said. “But to address these things, we have to look at poverty. The economic story is critical to the story of our health.”

 

The economic health of family farms is at stake. A study concluded that farm income in 2012 was $2.9 billion less that in 1969 when comparing cash receipts against production expenses. Farm income is significantly lower than other types of employment, and the average farm family isn’t keeping up with the cost of living. The state is losing farms at a rapid rate, and most Kansas farms are located in rural areas that are considered food deserts, with little access to fresh vegetables and healthful foods.

 

And because crops require water, managing depleting water resources is paramount to success, especially in drought-stricken areas, the study said.

 

“We raise a lot of water-intensive things, but an 80 percent reduction in water use is needed right now,” Cottin said. “Water is an important part of food. Changing diets and reducing food waste would reduce water consumption. As a speaker said at one of our meetings, ‘We can get along without a lot of things, but we can’t get along without food or water.”

 

Strengthening the family farm and the state’s economy are necessary, she said, and on that front there are a few promising signs. The number of food cooperatives has risen dramatically as well as a flourishing specialty crop industry. Farmers markets continue to expand and often remain open long after traditional closing dates due to the prevalence of greenhouses and high tunnels that extend the growing season for vegetables and fruits. Another promising sign is the number of schools that actively seek and purchase locally-grown vegetables-35 percent of all Kansas schools as of late 2014.

 

According to the study, if Kansas residents spent $5 on food directly from the farmer, it would raise $750 million in new revenue. Getting them to do so would require both a complete shift in how people view healthful food, increased support from public and legislative entities and a concerted focus on long-term solutions involving increased production and accessibility to fruits and vegetables.

 

For the time being, there are no easy answers, Cottin said. However, during her travels around the state she saw enough innovation, creativity and passion to hold out hope for the future. When she discussed the issue with the mayor of Greensburg, he said that if there’s one thing residents of the town learned after almost being demolished by the EF5 tornado that struck on May 4, 2007, it was that “disaster is a tremendous opportunity.”

 

“This,” Cottin said, “is an opportunity.”

 

Feeding Kansas can be found by visiting http://kansasruralcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/0-Feeding-Kansas-KRC-2014.pdf.

 

The event was sponsored by the Kansas Farmers Union, the state’s oldest active general farm organization working to protect and enhance the economic interests and quality of life for family farmers and ranchers and rural communities. For more information, visit their Web site at www.kansasfarmersunion.com or call 620-241-6630.