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Governor Kelly Announces Heartland Flyer Passenger Rail Expansion Moves Forward in Kansas

2023-12-11T10:24:21-06:00December 11th, 2023|

Governor Laura Kelly today announced the proposed extension of the Heartland Flyer passenger rail corridor is among the projects selected by the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) for inclusion in the Corridor Identification and Development (ID) Program. The Corridor ID Program will provide funding for the development of a Service Development Plan (SDP), which is expected to be completed in spring 2024. In this first cycle of Corridor ID Program awards, $500,000 will go to the development of the Heartland Flyer Corridor SDP. The proposed Corridor would connect Amtrak’s existing Heartland Flyer intercity passenger rail service between Fort Worth and Oklahoma City, [...]

Local photographer retires, becomes new utility clerk

2023-12-08T11:02:42-06:00December 8th, 2023|

Longtime Hiawatha resident Deb Christian started her first full day as the new utility clerk for the City of Hiawatha on Dec. 3. Christian’s official start day was on Dec. 1, which is the same day she retired from photography and operating Deb’s Images. “I’m still finishing out some accounts in my photography business,” Christian said. “But I’m not taking any new clients.” Christian learned about the utility clerk position in the newspaper and saw it on Facebook a few times. “It was a couple of months ago,” Christian recalled. “And I thought ‘I wonder if I am qualified to do [...]

Pool code update goes to Derby’s trades board

2023-12-08T11:10:44-06:00December 8th, 2023|

Following lengthy discussion and input, the Derby City Council took action at its Nov. 28 meeting for staff to take pool code language changes to the Building Trades Advisory board for review. The change would be to the international residential code (IRC) portion of the municipal code. After council feedback, staff brought an amended pool code policy forward for consideration. The updated policy would leave all pool safety requirements currently in the municipal code (needing security fencing, to follow nuisance abatement requirements, etc.) for in-ground and above-ground pools over 24” in height. However, any soft-sided above-ground pools (defined as movable prefabricated [...]

The state, county and Ideatek undertake Internet project for eastern Harvey County

2023-12-08T10:57:13-06:00December 8th, 2023|

The Kansas Office of Broadband Development awarded $3.9 million to Ideatek to fund building 150 miles of fiber-optic lines to serve 450 residents and businesses in eastern Harvey County. Harvey County, in turn, will pay up $250,000 for the project. In a release, Ideatek stated the total cost of the project to be $5 million. “This grant really helps us hit that business case that we need to bring fiber optic out to these rural areas,” James Krstolich, community and public relations manager for Ideatek, said. “The whole point of these grants is they help us get to these residents that wouldn’t be served any [...]

A Hidden Risk in the Municipal Bond Market: Hackers

2023-12-08T11:13:16-06:00December 8th, 2023|

Local governments are spending big to mop up after hacks and prevent new ones. That means peril—and opportunity—for the investors who buy their bonds. Hacks are on the rise across all industries, but the public sector’s weak protections make it an increasingly attractive target for cybercriminals. Cybercrime has left schools, hospitals and utilities from Baltimore to Los Angeles struggling to pay ransom, restore services and boost security. Finances have suffered, threatening credit ratings. The number of K-12 public schools suffering ransomware attacks almost doubled between 2021 and 2022 to almost 2,000 a year, according to a report by Emsisoft, a cybersecurity company. The [...]

Wichita library adds locks to some bathroom doors for public safety

2023-12-08T10:53:22-06:00December 8th, 2023|

As you walk to the family restrooms at the Advanced Learning Library in Downtown Wichita, you'll run into a problem. A small silver lock. The only thing that can open it is a tiny gold coin that you get from the service desk. The library added the locks a couple of months ago because it says there were multiple incidents of people locking the doors and spreading human waste around the bathroom as well as other things. "We have had some instances to be quite honest of drug use, and some other things going on," said Sean Jones, the library's communications [...]

Overland Park moves to allow e-bikes, e-scooters on city trails

2023-12-08T10:51:49-06:00December 8th, 2023|

Overland Park plans to permanently allow e-mobility devices, like e-bikes and electric scooters, on its city trails. On Monday, the Overland Park City Council Community Development Committee voted 4-0 to recommend approval of the new ordinance and the repeal of an existing one prohibiting motorized devices and vehicles on trails. “To me, this kind of seems like something that’s coming to us whether we like it or not,” Councilmember Logan Heley, who chairs the committee, said. “They’re probably going to use the trails whether we say it’s OK or not.” Former Councilmembers Scott Hamblin and Fred Spears previously sat on this committee, but their terms [...]

Double Trouble: Investors Fight Fed on Two Fronts

2023-12-08T11:15:02-06:00December 8th, 2023|

Investors are betting against the Fed—twice over. The first bet is the sudden turn from expecting the Federal Reserve to keep rates higher for longer to instead expecting rapid and deep cuts next year. The second bet is almost the exact opposite, that the Fed will have to keep rates much higher in the long run than it says it will. Treasury yields have come down, but at around 4.1% the 10-year yield remains more than 1.5 percentage points above the Fed’s forecast of long-run interest rates. Both bets go against the popular market dictum: Never fight the Fed. Yet, there are good reasons [...]

Emporia discusses rental registrations, vacant property ordinance

2023-12-08T11:15:32-06:00December 8th, 2023|

City commissioners were undecided on how to proceed with possible rental registrations and updates to the vacant property ordinance on Wednesday afternoon. According to the Director of Building and Neighborhood Development, Kory Krause, the city last discussed rental registration “364 days ago,” but it has come up several times over the last few years. Krause said a rental registration program would help ensure safer rental properties and improve accountability of rental units within the City of Emporia. “We’re still having problems,” Krause said. “We do have issues with rental properties. We’ve had some bad landlords here in town.” He mentioned that about [...]

Power back on for most of Emporia after ‘equipment failure’

2023-12-08T10:44:38-06:00December 8th, 2023|

The lights are back on for nearly 3,000 Evergy customers in Emporia after an "equipment failure" took power offline for more than two hours Thursday afternoon. The outage, caused by a downed power line, knocked power out for 2,739 customers in Emporia according to the Evergy Outage Map. The outage was first reported just before 3:30 p.m. The outage stretched along U.S. Highway 50 from just west of Prairie Street and east to Sylvan Street, along parts of 12th Avenue, down Commercial Street, and south on Highway 99 past the David Traylor Zoo. As of 5:40 p.m., about 56 customers were still reported to [...]

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