legislation filed to crack down on pill...

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A6 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2012 LOCAL THE ADVOCATE-MESSENGER WWW.AMNEWS.COM FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 859-238-4181 DANVILLE CINEMA 8 DANVILLE CINEMA 8 1001 BEN ALI DRIVE DANVILLE, KY 40422 TICKETS FOR EVENING SHOWS (6 PM & AFTER) Adults $7.00 Seniors & children under 12 - $5 3D FEATURES - $2.50 PREMIUM + TICKET PRICE MATINEE TICKETS (BEFORE 6 PM) Adults $5.00 Seniors & children under 12 - $4.00 **AS ALWAYS-CHILDREN 2 & UNDER FREE!** SHOWING FEBRUARY 3RD - FEBRUARY 9TH WOMAN IN BLACK (PG-13) 106 min. (Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd) 1:35, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 RED TAILS (PG-13) 135 min. Open Caption February 7th @ 4:10 show 4:10 BIG MIRACLE (PG) 117 min. Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd 1:00, 4:00, 7:05, 9:35 CHRONICLE (PG-13) 94 min. (Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd) 1:10, 4:15, 7:35, 9:55 UNDERWORLD AWAKENING (2D) (R) 99 min. 9:55 ONE FOR THE MONEY (PG-13) 101 min. 1:40, 4:35, 7:40, 10:00 THE DESCENDANTS (R) 125 min. Open Caption Feb. 7th @ 4:05 & 7:05 shows 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 9:50 MAN ON A LEDGE (PG-13) 113 min. 1:30, 4:25, 7:30, 10:05 JOYFUL NOISE (PG-13) 128 min. Open Caption Feb. 7th @ 1:25 & 7:00 shows 1:25, 7:00 THE GREY (R) 127 min. 1:15, 4:20, 7:20, 10:00 By ROGER ALFORD Associated Press FRANKFORT Oxy- contin and other powerful painkillers would be lim- ited to 30-day allotments under a Kentucky proposal aimed at cracking down on prescription drug abuse in Kentucky where more peo- ple are dying from over- doses than car crashes. House Speaker Greg Stumbo filed a bill Thurs- day that would initiate a se- ries of changes, including stepped-up monitoring of the prescription practices of Kentucky doctors. “This epidemic truly knows no bounds, and it’s poised to get much worse if we do nothing,” Stumbo said. “My approach will help us end the deadly flow of these drugs both now and however the bat- tlefield may change in the future.” Stumbo’s proposal also calls for the state’s pre- scription monitoring pro- gram, known as KASPER, to be placed under the ju- risdiction of the attorney general, the state’s top law enforcement officer. The monitoring program is currently administered by the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Serv- ices, a social services agency. The change would give law enforcement and prosecutors quick access to key information that could identify unscrupu- lous physicians. Doctors charged with overprescribing painkillers would be barred from writ- ing prescription unless they’re cleared of wrong- doing. Physicians found guilty would immediately be stripped of their li- censes. Not allowing doctors to provide more than a 30- day supply is intended to limit the availability of the most widely abused painkillers. Attorney General Jack Conway, who helped to draft Stumbo’s legislation, has been traveling the state warning people about the dangers lurking in their families’ medicine cabinets. “This is a matter of life and death,” Conway told students in Henry and Oldham counties on Thursday. “I want Ken- tucky kids to know that it is never OK to take a pill that is not prescribed to them. These are some of the most dangerous and ad- dictive substances on the planet. They will take your appetite, your mind and eventually your life.” The Office of National Drug Control Policy con- siders abuse of prescrip- tion pills the fastest growing drug problem in the United States. By some counts, prescription drug overdoses are claiming an average of 82 lives a month. All of Kentucky’s politi- cal leaders have been pressing for ways to curb the state’s prescription drug problem. White House Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske visited the state last year at the invita- tion of U.S. Sen. Mitch Mc- Connell to see firsthand the toll prescription drugs is having here. Kerlikowske called what he found “heartbreaking.” Kentucky’s prescription pill woes skyrocketed in 2000 when addicts discov- ered OxyContin. Police blamed the drug for hun- dreds of deaths. Gov. Steve Beshear, a proponent of Stumbo’s bill as well as some other pro- posals pending in the state legislature, said he expects lawmakers to pass some sweeping legislation this year to deal with the state’s prescription woes. “We’ll pull everything together,” Beshear said. “We’ll get the best out of everybody’s ideas. I can just tell you that I am con- fident that we’re going to end up with a very aggres- sive, strong measure that will make a dent in pre- scription drug abuse in Kentucky.” mit was sponsored by the two U.S. attorneys for Ken- tucky, hosted by the Uni- versity of Kentucky, and brought together law en- forcement, physicians and the pharmaceutical com- munity to learn more about the problem and co- operate in fighting it. “We’re galvanizing our forces, all of our forces, in this fight,” Gov. Steve Beshear told the packed crowd. “is is a corrosive evil, and we have to stop it.” He noted that drug over- doses kill more Kentuck- ians than traffic accidents, and other speakers said the overdose numbers are under-reported. “I think a lot of our peo- ple have had enough,” said Kerry Harvey, the chief federal prosecutor for East- ern Kentucky. at’s where the problem is worst, but speakers made clear it is statewide. e state has electroni- cally tracked prescriptions since 2000, but Attorney General Jack Conway said only about 25 percent of doctors use the Kentucky All-Schedule Prescription Electronic Reporting sys- tem, and KASPER’s data are “just sitting there, and law enforcement are not able to access it” to proac- tively search for people getting an unusual amount of drugs. Beshear recently ap- pointed a panel of health- care providers to establish guidelines to identify over- prescribers through KASPER, and his budget proposal would put more money into the system and set up the state’s first sub- stance-abuse treatment program for Medicaid re- cipients. e day after the sum- mit, House Speaker Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, filed a bill to require drug prescribers to use KASPER and require pain clinics to be owned by doctors, among other things. While Kentucky has many suspicious pain clin- ics, many of the pills have come from out of state, pri- marily Florida. Wifredo Ferrer, U.S at- torney for Southern Florida, said the state is cracking down on pill mills, in which doctors were seeing as many as 500 patients and making be- tween $2,000 and $6,000 in cash each day. e speeches from offi- cials were leavened with personal stories of drug abuse, death and near- death. Marine Lance Cpl. Daniel Gross, 26, said he was 21 when his addiction started. He was introduced to pain pills shortly after a roadside bomb exploded beside his Humvee in Iraq in 2006. With his right foot shattered, his other one broken and his brain in- jured from the blast, he was prescribed Percocet and oxycodone. With pre- scriptions “overflowing” at Camp Lejeune, N.C., tak- ing pills became common- place. “If I ran out, I got them from someone else,” Gross said. Quickly he became an addict, a burden he carried with him after he was dis- charged two years later. “I pawned, stole, lied, cheated,” he said. “Nothing else seemed to matter.” After two stints in rehab, Gross was able to over- come his addiction. Now clean for 14 months, he won a standing ovation from the crowd. Police and local prose- cutors expressed their frus- tration over the problem, with state police Major An- thony Terry likening the situation to “a dog chasing its tail.” Floyd County Common- wealth’s Attorney Brent Turner said, “We are not treading water . ... We are drowning in a sea of pills, and if something is not done, the whole region is going to be destroyed.” UK President Eli Capi- louto told the crowd the land-grant university needs to be a partner in solving such problems, and the extent of it had be- come clearer to him the day before, when he met with local extension agents: “is issue came to the forefront.” “is has to be a group effort” among public ser- vants and health-care providers, said Dr. Lon Hays, chairman of the UK Psychiatry Department. Too often, he said, providers use “the big gun” of a strong painkiller. “We need to exhaust other methods of pain control before we go to that method of pain control.” Kentucky Health News is a service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Is- sues, based in the School of Journalism and Telecommunica- tions at the University of Ken- tucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Ken- tucky. its $47,500 budget for salt and only $3,764 of its $15,350 allocation for overtime. e milder winter has an added benefit for workers who have to clear snowy or icy roads. “It is big for morale purposes,” Morgan said. “It is hard work and it is tough when you are doing your regular job, then you are getting called out in the middle of the night under those conditions several times a week for several weeks in a row.” Other area governments have a similar sunny outlook on the potential for thou- sands in savings. Garrard County Deputy Judge-Executive James Bushnell said the county hasn’t dipped into its road salt budget at all after spend- ing about $34,000 on the product last year in the first quarter alone. “It’s an unexpected plus for the budget and makes a tremendous difference,” Bushnell said. “It’s one of those things in the budget, kind of like the jail budget, where it is very difficult to predict. It’s kind of its own beast.” Lincoln County Treasurer Teresa Padgett said the county has spent about $4,000 of its $25,000 budget for salt so far and only a few hundred dollars on overtime. Mercer County Treasurer Gayle Horn said she has made a salt order once this fiscal year, and at the current rate, the county will be able to stockpile its supply for next winter. “We are fortunate that we have a place we can keep all of our salt, and some places don’t have that,” Horn said. “If this continues, it will be great for us.” nity members, Becker noted. No audition is re- quired. e group meets weekly during the summer and ends the summer sea- son with a public concert. e Danville Children’s Choir was a long-standing tradition in Danville. “e choir disbanded several years ago. Barbara was de- termined to resurrect the choir and devoted countless hours to re-establishing the program and making sure it is on a sound footing for years to come,” Becker said. “e choir has been invited to participate in an Interna- tional Festival in Cincinnati next year. Only two Ken- tucky choirs were so hon- ored.” Hall also served as presi- dent of the Arts Commis- sion. “Her work on the board contributed greatly to its development of a strong scholarship program and its ongoing support of art and artists in the Danville com- munity,” Becker said. Clay Jackson/[email protected] Danville Public Works hasn’t had to use much of its salt stockpile this winter. WINTER, from A1 HALL, from A1 PILLS, from A1 Legislation filed to crack down on pill mills mayor’s person, Gipson called Boyle County dispatch to request assistance from the sheriff’s office to avoid a po- tential conflict of interest. Deputies Derek Robbins and Chris Stratton responded but passed on investigating the matter, instead calling Kentucky State Police. Trooper Michael Keeton ar- rived and administered a Breathalyzer test to Douglas, which revealed the mayor had a blood-alcohol content of .04 percent, court records show. Under Kentucky law, a person is considered drunk if their blood-alcohol rate is .08 percent or greater, so Douglas was not cited. After the other officers left, Douglas fired Gipson on the spot. Court records show Dou- glas initially told Gipson he was being fired because the mayor did not like him. e official termination letter stated Gipson, who also served as fire chief, was dis- missed for insubordination for failing to address the mayor’s concerns about leav- ing the doors to the fire sta- tion open, allowing unauthorized personnel to ride in city police cars and ex- cessive fuel use by the police department. Filings in the case show the mayor also offered another reason for Gipson’s dismissal. Douglas said that Gipson told him in October 2010 that he was retiring at the end of year. Gipson was running for Boyle County sheriff at the time and had heard that Douglas planned to replace him with Merl Baldwin, a former deputy who is now Junction City’s police chief. When Gipson told the mayor in November that he needed to work through Sep- tember 2011 to collect his full retirement benefits, Douglas balked. “What are we going to do. We’ve already made other plans,” Douglas told Gipson, according to court records. In the lawsuit, Gipson claimed his firing violated the state’s Whistleblower’s Act and Policeman’s Bill of Rights, but Boyle Circuit Judge Darren Peckler dis- missed those counts, saying those statutes didn’t apply to Gipson’s termination. Peck- ler, however, allowed Gipson to proceed on his wrongful termination claim, stating that Gipson was “performing acts pursuant to Kentucky statutes” when he called in other officers to investigate his suspicions that the mayor was drunk. In the lawsuit, Gipson asked for reinstatement to his job, back pay and punitive damages for sullying his rep- utation. None of those mat- ters will be addressed during mediation, however; Irwin said the settlement talks will center on Gipson receiving payment for the money from his retirement fund that he has had to spend since his fir- ing. “He’s been out of work ever since,” Erwin said. “He’s had to cash in his retirement to pay his bills.” Court records show Gip- son, who worked for Junction City for 10 years, has with- drawn all $20,248 available in his retirement account. Had he continued in his job through September 2011, he would have been eligible for $22,083, records show. DISPUTE, from A1 HOLLIS, Maine (AP) — A 9-year-old Maine girl is home from a Boston hospital healthy, active and with high hopes — and a new stomach, liver, spleen, small intestine, pancreas, and part of an esophagus to replace the ones that were being choked by a huge tumor. It’s believed to be the first- ever transplant of an esopha- gus and the largest number of organs transplanted at one time in New England. Spunky and bright-eyed as she scampered around her family’s farmhouse outside Portland, Alannah Shevenell said Thursday that she’s glad to be feeling well again and able to go sledding, make a snowman, work on her scrapbooks and give her grandmother a little good- humored sass. The best part, though? “Being home,” she said. “Just being home.” It was 2008 when Alannah, then 5, began running a fever and losing weight while her belly swelled. Doctors dis- covered the tumor that year and twice attempted to re- move it, as it made its way like octopus legs from organ to organ. But it was difficult to access what turned out to be a rare form of sarcoma, said Debi Skolas, Alannah’s grand- mother, and chemotherapy didn’t do the trick, either. All the time, the growth — known as an inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor continued to grow in her ab- domen, causing pain, mak- ing it hard to eat and swelling her up with fluid. Surgery was the last resort to save her life, and Alannah spent more than a year on a waiting list for the organs, said Dr. Heung Bae Kim, the lead surgeon on the procedure at Children’s Hospital Boston. The family was told there was a 50 percent chance Alannah wouldn’t survive the procedure. But without it, she had no chance whatsoever. Things were more tense than celebratory in October when doctors prepared to re- move the growth and the or- gans in one fell swoop and replace them with organs transplanted in one tangled piece from another child of similar size. The hardest part was tak- ing out her organs and the tumor, Kim said, calling it a difficult operation with lots of blood loss. “It’s probably one of the most extensive tumor re- movals ever done,” the sur- geon said. Dr. Allan Kirk, professor of surgery at Emory University in Atlanta and the editor-in- chief of The American Jour- nal of Transplantation, said no other esophageal trans- plant has been reported in medical literature. After the surgery, Alannah spent three more months at the hospital, with her grand- mother sleeping every night in a lounge chair by her bed. She battled infections and complications from the sur- gery before finally being given the OK to leave. She arrived back home Wednesday in the 192-year- old house on a country road where she lives with her grandmother and grandfa- ther, Jamie Skolas, in Hollis, a town of 4,500 residents. small ads BIG DEALS Classifieds 1-800-428-0409 Maine girl bouncing back after 6-organ transplant

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Page 1: Legislation filed to crack down on pill millsnyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7k6d5p978q/data/06_70102_A6Fri0203.pdf · WOMAN IN BLACK (PG-13) 106 min. ... House Speaker Greg Stumbo filed a bill

A6 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2012

LOCAL THE ADVOCATE-MESSENGER

WWW.AMNEWS.COM

�������������� �����FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 859-238-4181

DANVILLE CINEMA 8DANVILLE CINEMA 8

������ ����� �

1001 BEN ALI DRIVE DANVILLE, KY 40422TICKETS FOR EVENING SHOWS (6 PM & AFTER)

Adults $7.00 Seniors & children under 12 - $5

3D FEATURES - $2.50 PREMIUM + TICKET PRICE

MATINEE TICKETS (BEFORE 6 PM)Adults $5.00 Seniors & children under 12 - $4.00

**AS ALWAYS-CHILDREN 2 & UNDER FREE!**

���������������������� ��������������!�

SHOWING FEBRUARY 3RD - FEBRUARY 9TH

WOMAN IN BLACK (PG-13) 106 min.(Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd) 1:35, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45

RED TAILS (PG-13) 135 min.Open Caption February 7th @ 4:10 show4:10

BIG MIRACLE(PG) 117 min. Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd1:00, 4:00, 7:05, 9:35

CHRONICLE(PG-13) 94 min.(Starts Fri. Feb. 3rd) 1:10, 4:15, 7:35, 9:55

UNDERWORLD AWAKENING (2D)(R) 99 min.9:55

ONE FOR THE MONEY(PG-13) 101 min.1:40, 4:35, 7:40, 10:00

THE DESCENDANTS(R) 125 min.Open Caption Feb. 7th@ 4:05 & 7:05 shows1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 9:50

MAN ON A LEDGE(PG-13) 113 min.1:30, 4:25, 7:30, 10:05

JOYFUL NOISE(PG-13) 128 min.Open Caption Feb. 7th @ 1:25 & 7:00 shows1:25, 7:00

THE GREY(R) 127 min.1:15, 4:20, 7:20, 10:00

By ROGER ALFORD

Associated Press

FRANKFORT — Oxy-contin and other powerfulpainkillers would be lim-ited to 30-day allotmentsunder a Kentucky proposalaimed at cracking down onprescription drug abuse inKentucky where more peo-ple are dying from over-doses than car crashes.

House Speaker GregStumbo filed a bill Thurs-day that would initiate a se-ries of changes, includingstepped-up monitoring ofthe prescription practicesof Kentucky doctors.

“This epidemic trulyknows no bounds, and it’spoised to get much worseif we do nothing,” Stumbosaid. “My approach willhelp us end the deadlyflow of these drugs bothnow and however the bat-tlefield may change in thefuture.”

Stumbo’s proposal alsocalls for the state’s pre-scription monitoring pro-gram, known as KASPER,

to be placed under the ju-risdiction of the attorneygeneral, the state’s top lawenforcement officer. Themonitoring program iscurrently administered bythe Kentucky Cabinet forHealth and Family Serv-ices, a social servicesagency. The change wouldgive law enforcement andprosecutors quick accessto key information thatcould identify unscrupu-lous physicians.

Doctors charged withoverprescribing painkillerswould be barred from writ-ing prescription unlessthey’re cleared of wrong-doing. Physicians foundguilty would immediatelybe stripped of their li-censes.

Not allowing doctors toprovide more than a 30-day supply is intended tolimit the availability of themost widely abusedpainkillers.

Attorney General JackConway, who helped todraft Stumbo’s legislation,has been traveling the

state warning peopleabout the dangers lurkingin their families’ medicinecabinets.

“This is a matter of lifeand death,” Conway toldstudents in Henry andOldham counties onThursday. “I want Ken-tucky kids to know that it isnever OK to take a pill thatis not prescribed to them.These are some of themost dangerous and ad-dictive substances on theplanet. They will take yourappetite, your mind andeventually your life.”

The Office of NationalDrug Control Policy con-siders abuse of prescrip-tion pills the fastestgrowing drug problem inthe United States. By somecounts, prescription drugoverdoses are claiming anaverage of 82 lives amonth.

All of Kentucky’s politi-cal leaders have beenpressing for ways to curbthe state’s prescriptiondrug problem.

White House Drug Czar

Gil Kerlikowske visited thestate last year at the invita-tion of U.S. Sen. Mitch Mc-Connell to see firsthandthe toll prescription drugsis having here. Kerlikowskecalled what he found“heartbreaking.”

Kentucky’s prescriptionpill woes skyrocketed in2000 when addicts discov-ered OxyContin. Policeblamed the drug for hun-dreds of deaths.

Gov. Steve Beshear, aproponent of Stumbo’s billas well as some other pro-posals pending in the statelegislature, said he expectslawmakers to pass somesweeping legislation thisyear to deal with the state’sprescription woes.

“We’ll pull everythingtogether,” Beshear said.“We’ll get the best out ofeverybody’s ideas. I canjust tell you that I am con-fident that we’re going toend up with a very aggres-sive, strong measure thatwill make a dent in pre-scription drug abuse inKentucky.”

mit was sponsored by thetwo U.S. attorneys for Ken-tucky, hosted by the Uni-versity of Kentucky, andbrought together law en-forcement, physicians andthe pharmaceutical com-munity to learn moreabout the problem and co-operate in fighting it.

“We’re galvanizing ourforces, all of our forces, inthis fight,” Gov. SteveBeshear told the packedcrowd. “is is a corrosiveevil, and we have to stop it.”

He noted that drug over-doses kill more Kentuck-ians than traffic accidents,and other speakers said theoverdose numbers areunder-reported.

“I think a lot of our peo-ple have had enough,” saidKerry Harvey, the chieffederal prosecutor for East-ern Kentucky. at’s wherethe problem is worst, butspeakers made clear it isstatewide.

e state has electroni-cally tracked prescriptionssince 2000, but AttorneyGeneral Jack Conway saidonly about 25 percent ofdoctors use the KentuckyAll-Schedule PrescriptionElectronic Reporting sys-tem, and KASPER’s dataare “just sitting there, and

law enforcement are notable to access it” to proac-tively search for peoplegetting an unusual amountof drugs.

Beshear recently ap-pointed a panel of health-care providers to establishguidelines to identify over-prescribers throughKASPER, and his budgetproposal would put moremoney into the system andset up the state’s first sub-stance-abuse treatmentprogram for Medicaid re-cipients.

e day after the sum-mit, House Speaker GregStumbo, D-Prestonsburg,filed a bill to require drugprescribers to use KASPERand require pain clinics tobe owned by doctors,among other things.

While Kentucky hasmany suspicious pain clin-ics, many of the pills havecome from out of state, pri-marily Florida.

Wifredo Ferrer, U.S at-torney for SouthernFlorida, said the state iscracking down on pillmills, in which doctorswere seeing as many as 500patients and making be-tween $2,000 and $6,000 incash each day.

e speeches from offi-cials were leavened withpersonal stories of drug

abuse, death and near-death.

Marine Lance Cpl.Daniel Gross, 26, said hewas 21 when his addictionstarted. He was introducedto pain pills shortly after aroadside bomb explodedbeside his Humvee in Iraqin 2006. With his right footshattered, his other onebroken and his brain in-jured from the blast, hewas prescribed Percocetand oxycodone. With pre-scriptions “overflowing” atCamp Lejeune, N.C., tak-ing pills became common-place.

“If I ran out, I got themfrom someone else,” Grosssaid.

Quickly he became anaddict, a burden he carriedwith him after he was dis-charged two years later. “Ipawned, stole, lied,cheated,” he said. “Nothingelse seemed to matter.”

After two stints in rehab,Gross was able to over-come his addiction. Nowclean for 14 months, hewon a standing ovationfrom the crowd.

Police and local prose-cutors expressed their frus-tration over the problem,with state police Major An-thony Terry likening thesituation to “a dog chasingits tail.”

Floyd County Common-wealth’s Attorney BrentTurner said, “We are nottreading water. ... We aredrowning in a sea of pills,and if something is notdone, the whole region isgoing to be destroyed.”

UK President Eli Capi-louto told the crowd theland-grant universityneeds to be a partner insolving such problems,and the extent of it had be-come clearer to him theday before, when he metwith local extensionagents: “is issue came tothe forefront.”

“is has to be a groupeffort” among public ser-vants and health-careproviders, said Dr. LonHays, chairman of the UKPsychiatry Department.Too often, he said,providers use “the big gun”of a strong painkiller. “Weneed to exhaust othermethods of pain controlbefore we go to thatmethod of pain control.”

Kentucky Health News is aservice of the Institute for RuralJournalism and Community Is-sues, based in the School ofJournalism and Telecommunica-tions at the University of Ken-tucky, with support from theFoundation for a Healthy Ken-tucky.

its $47,500 budget for saltand only $3,764 of its $15,350allocation for overtime. 

e milder winter has anadded benefit for workerswho have to clear snowy oricy roads. “It is big formorale purposes,” Morgansaid. “It is hard work and it istough when you are doingyour regular job, then youare getting called out in themiddle of the night underthose conditions severaltimes a week for severalweeks in a row.”

Other area governmentshave a similar sunny outlookon the potential for thou-sands in savings.

Garrard County DeputyJudge-Executive JamesBushnell said the countyhasn’t dipped into its roadsalt budget at all after spend-ing about $34,000 on theproduct last year in the first

quarter alone.“It’s an unexpected plus

for the budget and makes atremendous difference,”Bushnell said. “It’s one ofthose things in the budget,kind of like the jail budget,where it is very difficult topredict. It’s kind of its ownbeast.”

Lincoln County TreasurerTeresa Padgett said thecounty has spent about$4,000 of its $25,000 budgetfor salt so far and only a fewhundred dollars on overtime.

Mercer County TreasurerGayle Horn said she hasmade a salt order once thisfiscal year, and at the currentrate, the county will be ableto stockpile its supply fornext winter.

“We are fortunate that wehave a place we can keep allof our salt, and some placesdon’t have that,” Horn said.“If this continues, it will begreat for us.”

nity members, Beckernoted. No audition is re-quired. e group meetsweekly during the summerand ends the summer sea-son with a public concert.

e Danville Children’sChoir was a long-standingtradition in Danville. “echoir disbanded severalyears ago. Barbara was de-termined to resurrect thechoir and devoted countlesshours to re-establishing theprogram and making sure itis on a sound footing foryears to come,” Becker said.“e choir has been invitedto participate in an Interna-tional Festival in Cincinnatinext year. Only two Ken-tucky choirs were so hon-ored.”

Hall also served as presi-dent of the Arts Commis-sion. “Her work on theboard contributed greatly toits development of a strongscholarship program and itsongoing support of art andartists in the Danville com-munity,” Becker said.

Clay Jackson/[email protected]

Danville Public Works hasn’t had to use much of its salt stockpile thiswinter.

WINTER, from A1

HALL, from A1

PILLS, from A1

Legislation filed to crack down on pill mills

mayor’s person, Gipsoncalled Boyle County dispatchto request assistance from thesheriff’s office to avoid a po-tential conflict of interest.

Deputies Derek Robbinsand Chris Stratton respondedbut passed on investigatingthe matter, instead callingKentucky State Police.Trooper Michael Keeton ar-rived and administered aBreathalyzer test to Douglas,which revealed the mayorhad a blood-alcohol contentof .04 percent, court recordsshow. Under Kentucky law, aperson is considered drunk iftheir blood-alcohol rate is .08percent or greater, so Douglaswas not cited. After the otherofficers left, Douglas firedGipson on the spot.

Court records show Dou-glas initially told Gipson hewas being fired because themayor did not like him. eofficial termination letterstated Gipson, who alsoserved as fire chief, was dis-missed for insubordinationfor failing to address themayor’s concerns about leav-ing the doors to the fire sta-tion open, allowingunauthorized personnel toride in city police cars and ex-cessive fuel use by the policedepartment.

Filings in the case show themayor also offered anotherreason for Gipson’s dismissal.Douglas said that Gipson toldhim in October 2010 that hewas retiring at the end of year.Gipson was running for BoyleCounty sheriff at the time andhad heard that Douglasplanned to replace him withMerl Baldwin, a formerdeputy who is now JunctionCity’s police chief.

When Gipson told themayor in November that heneeded to work through Sep-tember 2011 to collect his fullretirement benefits, Douglasbalked. “What are we goingto do. We’ve already madeother plans,” Douglas toldGipson, according to courtrecords.

In the lawsuit, Gipsonclaimed his firing violated thestate’s Whistleblower’s Actand Policeman’s Bill ofRights, but Boyle CircuitJudge Darren Peckler dis-missed those counts, sayingthose statutes didn’t apply toGipson’s termination. Peck-ler, however, allowed Gipsonto proceed on his wrongfultermination claim, statingthat Gipson was “performingacts pursuant to Kentuckystatutes” when he called inother officers to investigatehis suspicions that the mayorwas drunk.

In the lawsuit, Gipsonasked for reinstatement to hisjob, back pay and punitivedamages for sullying his rep-utation. None of those mat-ters will be addressed duringmediation, however; Irwinsaid the settlement talks willcenter on Gipson receivingpayment for the money fromhis retirement fund that hehas had to spend since his fir-ing.

“He’s been out of workever since,” Erwin said. “He’shad to cash in his retirementto pay his bills.”

Court records show Gip-son, who worked for JunctionCity for 10 years, has with-drawn all $20,248 available inhis retirement account. Hadhe continued in his jobthrough September 2011, hewould have been eligible for$22,083, records show.

DISPUTE, from A1

HOLLIS, Maine (AP) — A9-year-old Maine girl is homefrom a Boston hospitalhealthy, active and with highhopes — and a new stomach,liver, spleen, small intestine,pancreas, and part of anesophagus to replace theones that were being chokedby a huge tumor.

It’s believed to be the first-ever transplant of an esopha-gus and the largest number oforgans transplanted at onetime in New England.

Spunky and bright-eyed asshe scampered around herfamily’s farmhouse outsidePortland, Alannah Shevenellsaid Thursday that she’s gladto be feeling well again andable to go sledding, make asnowman, work on herscrapbooks and give hergrandmother a little good-humored sass.

The best part, though?“Being home,” she said. “Justbeing home.”

It was 2008 when Alannah,then 5, began running a feverand losing weight while herbelly swelled. Doctors dis-covered the tumor that yearand twice attempted to re-

move it, as it made its way likeoctopus legs from organ toorgan.

But it was difficult to accesswhat turned out to be a rareform of sarcoma, said DebiSkolas, Alannah’s grand-mother, and chemotherapydidn’t do the trick, either.

All the time, the growth —known as an inflammatorymyofibroblastic tumor —continued to grow in her ab-domen, causing pain, mak-ing it hard to eat and swellingher up with fluid. Surgery wasthe last resort to save her life,and Alannah spent morethan a year on a waiting listfor the organs, said Dr. HeungBae Kim, the lead surgeon onthe procedure at Children’sHospital Boston.

The family was told therewas a 50 percent chanceAlannah wouldn’t survive theprocedure. But without it, shehad no chance whatsoever.

Things were more tensethan celebratory in Octoberwhen doctors prepared to re-move the growth and the or-gans in one fell swoop andreplace them with organstransplanted in one tangled

piece from another child ofsimilar size.

The hardest part was tak-ing out her organs and thetumor, Kim said, calling it adifficult operation with lots ofblood loss.

“It’s probably one of themost extensive tumor re-movals ever done,” the sur-geon said.

Dr. Allan Kirk, professor ofsurgery at Emory Universityin Atlanta and the editor-in-chief of The American Jour-nal of Transplantation, saidno other esophageal trans-plant has been reported inmedical literature.

After the surgery, Alannahspent three more months atthe hospital, with her grand-mother sleeping every nightin a lounge chair by her bed.She battled infections andcomplications from the sur-gery before finally beinggiven the OK to leave.

She arrived back homeWednesday in the 192-year-old house on a country roadwhere she lives with hergrandmother and grandfa-ther, Jamie Skolas, in Hollis,a town of 4,500 residents. s

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Maine girl bouncing backafter 6-organ transplant