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U.S. cities have been introducing tougher measures to address the growing problem of homelessness, prompting a number of court challenges that could set guideposts.

2023-01-18T07:56:03-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Cities across the U.S. have been introducing tougher measures to address the growing problem of homelessness, prompting a number of court challenges that could set guideposts on how far municipalities can go. Local governments have been experimenting with a range of homeless policies, such as involuntarily removing people from the streets when they appear to be mentally ill, confiscating belongings or evicting the homeless from public property. City officials say the measures are necessary to address situations that are threatening public safety and leaving homeless people themselves living in conditions that are unsafe and unsanitary. Source: Wall Street Journal

Trees in Overland Park are in danger due to this pest. Here’s how the city is coping

2023-01-18T07:47:41-06:00January 18th, 2023|

It would seem the emerald ash borer is enjoying Johnson County, and the city of Overland Park is taking action to eradicate it in a new way. Later this year, the city will begin an ash tree clear-cutting program in some neighborhoods. Currently, the city estimates between 8,000 and 11,000 ash trees still stand in Overland Park. Until now, the procedure has been to remove trees as they become too damaged to safely stand, which means about 500 per year are taken out. That plan isn’t cutting it anymore, according to city forester Bailey Patterson. “(We’re) just physically incapable of keeping [...]

Bill Fiander came to Topeka with a 2-year plan; 26 years later, here’s what makes him proud

2023-01-18T07:42:03-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Bill Fiander went above and beyond the call of duty by attending the 2002 funeral for Emogene Shepard, president of the Tennessee Town Neighborhood Improvement Association, said her grandson, Michael Bell. As an employee of the city of Topeka's planning department, Fiander had worked with Shepard and shared her commitment to making a better place out of the violence-plagued central Topeka neighborhood where she lived.... Tennessee Town benefited from Fiander's considerable skills and education, as well as his willingness to connect with residents on a personal level while realizing he was "helping living, breathing people," Bell said. Fiander's last day with [...]

New K-State initiative to bring ‘supercharged’ business support in all 105 Kansas counties

2023-01-18T07:37:39-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Business owners around the state will now have better access to advanced business support, research and expertise, thanks to a Kansas State University initiative to create more than 3,000 jobs and generate $3 billion in investment by 2030. Officials from the university and Network Kansas —a statewide network of nonprofit, business-building organizations and resources — on Tuesday morning announced a partnership between the two entities that will bring university-level resources, research and professionals to businesses in communities around the state. Source: CJonline

Construction materials company wants planning commissions to reconsider their opposition to Eudora quarry project

2023-01-18T07:27:14-06:00January 18th, 2023|

A Topeka-based construction materials company is hoping to establish a new quarry in Eudora, and it wants the Eudora and Lawrence-Douglas County planning commissions to reconsider after they voted nearly unanimously to recommend against the project. At its meeting Wednesday, the Douglas County Commission will consider the request from Mid-States Materials to return the original conditional use permit application to the Lawrence-Douglas County and Eudora planning commissions for further discussion and an updated recommendation. The Douglas County Commission has to give its approval to revisit the application because back in November, the entire seven-member Eudora Planning Commission and all but two [...]

Lawrence leaders take another step toward protections for tenants who use housing vouchers, other government assistance

2023-01-18T07:25:53-06:00January 18th, 2023|

City commissioners Tuesday took another step to make Lawrence the first city in the state to prohibit landlords from refusing to rent to tenants who receive government assistance, such as Section 8 housing vouchers. After about two hours of divided public comment, city commissioners expressed support for an ordinance that would prohibit landlords from discriminating against potential tenants on the basis of their “source of income.” However, commissioners ultimately agreed to delay passage of the ordinance for a month to give the city’s legal staff more time to refine the ordinance, especially in understanding how the new regulation may impact not [...]

Wichita water plant contractor fined by OSHA for ‘serious violation’ in worker’s death

2023-01-18T07:06:35-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Federal workplace safety regulators have fined a Wichita Water Partners subcontractor for a serious violation of workplace safety law in the death of a construction worker at the city’s new water treatment plant. Manuel Esparza, a 55-year-old project manager for Utility Contractors Inc., was killed last March while trying to move a large iron pipe at the Northwest Water Treatment Facility. Source: Wichita Eagle

High aspirations: Former Kansas mayor’s tourism vision includes silos, dwarf goats

2023-01-18T07:07:40-06:00January 18th, 2023|

The Kyner grain elevator that towers over the main street in Wilson, Kansas, hasn’t been in service for well over half a century. Most passers by look at the silos and see a relic of the past. David Criswell sees mountains. Criswell, 60, is a former mayor of Wilson, a purveyor of raw Kansas honey and a passionate goat apologist — they’re “largely misunderstood” creatures, he says — and he has a vision for the defunct silos no less quirky than one might expect from a town of 836 whose claim to fame is the world’s largest painted Czech egg. Criswell [...]

Leavenworth County farm winery blending litigation, politics in bitter property tax dispute

2023-01-18T07:08:44-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Farm winery owners Bryan Zesiger and Gina Montalbano stirred up a hornet’s nest of property tax controversy by challenging Leavenworth County’s decision to classify a wine tasting room and 1.1 acres at the vineyard as commercial rather than agricultural property. The issue surfaced when owners of Z&M Twisted Vines learned the Leavenworth County appraiser had decided 85.2 acres of the winery would be classified agricultural in 2022. An 1,860-square-foot implement building with space for wine processing and storage, a tasting room for wine and hard cider sales and an event space would be classified as commercial by the county for tax [...]

Kansas legislators renew efforts to save Ogallala Aquifer

2023-01-18T00:39:16-06:00January 18th, 2023|

Saving the Ogallala Aquifer could mean economic trade-offs in the short-term, the chairman of the Kansas House Water Committee said Tuesday. But the state can make progress and still maintain the farming economy of western Kansas, said Rep. Jim Minnix, R-Scott City. “If I were a banker … looking at the value of agriculture in western Kansas, it makes all kinds of sense to me to try to preserve the aquifer to maintain the economy up there for as many years as possible,” Minnix said. Minnix, a farmer and livestock producer, is the newly minted chairman of the House Water Committee, [...]

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