Kansas Municipal News
Wichita city officials drop ‘friends’ from ethics proposal, back away from fines
After drafting a new ethics code for more than a year, the Wichita City Council on Tuesday moved to weaken the wording of the existing policy, scrubbing all mention of the word “friends.” The existing ethics code, which has been in place for 63 years, prohibits City Council members from making decisions involving friends, business associates, customers, clients and competitors. But the council is left to police itself and has not enforced the policy, saying friends was not well defined. The proposed policy would strengthen other parts of the ethics code. It would limit gifts to $150 a year, create an advisory board to handle complaints against City Council members and city board appointees, establish whistleblower protections, and allow penalties to be handed out for violations.
Source: Local News | Wichita Eagle
Derby’s Rock River Rapids to open at 60 percent capacity
The Derby Recreation Commission shared details from its plan to reopen Rock River Rapids at the April 20 DRC board of directors meeting. The DRC plans to allow a capacity of 1,500 people, which is 60% of its normal peak occupancy of 2,500 people. Tickets will be sold on location only this year, and the DRC is taking a number of precautions to limit the spread of the coronavirus. Concessions will also make a return.
Source: Derby Informer | News
2020 Census: Kansas population grows at slowest rate since Great Depression; state keeps 4 U.S. House seats
Kansas will get to keep all of its current seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, federal Census data confirmed on Monday, but the state still had its worst population showing since the Great Depression. The data showed Kansas’ population grew at one of the slowest rates in the state’s history. Over the last decade Kansas added only 84,762 people. Its 2020 population stood at 2,937,880 people. The numbers were the first the Census Bureau has released from the 2020 Census, and they are some of the most important because the figures are used to determine how the 435 seats in Congress are apportioned among the states. Population totals for individual cities or counties haven’t yet been released.
Source: LJWorld.com.
Municipal Bond Trends for April 26, 2021

The interest rate table above illustrates recent changes in a sample of MBIS “investment grade” yields. Every issuer’s credit is different. For rates that may be applicable to your municipality, contact our Municipal Bond Advisors, Larry Kleeman and Beth Warren.
Wichita seeks to change freeway design and protect abandoned rail bridge for bikeway
The city of Wichita plans to work with state and federal officials to redesign part of the planned interchange at the Kellogg and I-235 freeways to preserve a bridge that the city wants to use for a bike and pedestrian path linking downtown Wichita to Garden Plain. The city is hoping to save an abandoned railroad bridge across the Big Ditch south of Kellogg and east of Hoover, now the eastern end point of the Prairie Sunset Trail, said Gary Janzen, city engineer. But the bridge, at the perfect spot to extend the bike trail, also happens to be at the same spot where the state Department of Transportation planned to sink a pier for a ramp in the next phase of construction on the freeway interchange.
Source: Wichita Eagle.
100% green energy and 6 other changes Sedgwick County Zoo has for its 50th birthday
The Sedgwick County Zoo will ring in its 50th birthday on May 27 with an unveiling of its new entry building and zoo store, both of which will run on 100% renewable energy. The zoo also plans to announce six additional environmental initiatives to reduce the zoo’s carbon footprint. “I think the role of the modern zoo and aquarium is more important today than it’s ever been,” said Dr. Jeff Ettling, the zoo’s executive director. “We all need to take action now because we’re seeing the dramatic impact that climate change is having here at home. We really need to walk the talk. It’s one thing to talk about conservation, it’s another to actually put it into action.” These changes are part of a broader campaign the zoo started on Earth Day 2018, which included eliminating single-use plastic lids and straws and a comprehensive recycling program.
Source: Wichita Eagle.
The Fed will stay put in 2021 despite growing concerns about overheating economy, CNBC survey says
The Federal Reserve will remain on hold for the rest of this year despite an increasing belief on Wall Street that policymakers should throttle back the stimulus they’re providing to the U.S. economy, according to the latest CNBC Fed Survey. Respondents to the survey forecast the Fed won’t reduce its $120 billion of asset purchases until January, three months later than predicted in CNBC’s March survey. And the first rate hike won’t come until December 2022, survey respondents said.
Source: CNBC.
Johnson County woman sues city over COVID mask requirement. Judge rules against her
A Johnson County judge sided with the city of Shawnee on Monday after a resident sued when she was denied entry into a city meeting without wearing a mask. It’s among the latest in a string of challenges to mask mandates under Kansas Senate Bill 40, which opened up a new system for fighting city, county and school district COVID-19 restrictions. In Johnson County alone, several residents have challenged mask mandates in three school districts — Blue Valley, Olathe and De Soto — and all were upheld.
Source: KC Star.
Monday marks 30 years since deadly Andover tornado
The storm that hit on April 26, 1991, is most known for devastating the community of Andover. But the F5 twister also hit parts of Wichita, Haysville, McConnell Air Force Base, and other parts of south-central Kansas…. Of the more than 50 tornadoes reported that day, 30 were rated an F2 or greater. But the most devastating tornado was the one that hit Andover and south-central Kansas. In south-central Kansas, 19 people died and 298 people were injured in the storms that day. In Andover, 13 people died at the Golden Spur Mobile Home Park, four died in the Greenwich Heights subdivision of southeast Wichita, one died in Cowley County, and another in Elk County. Two people died in tornadoes in Oklahoma.
Source: KSN.
City of Edgerton Partners With Watershed Coalition On Native Plants
The City of Edgerton and the Hillsdale Watershed Coalition are pleased to announce a new partnership for Spring 2021. All Edgerton residents who help support watershed health by planting native trees and plants, or by constructing rain barrels or rain gardens on their properties will be eligible for free technical assistance from the Miami County Conservation District’s Urban Conservationist. Those who choose to plant native trees are encouraged to apply for a 50 percent reimbursement of up to $75 per tree for up to two trees per household, and all approved native plant gardens, rain barrels, bioswales, and buffer strips are eligible for the same 50 percent reimbursement up to $1000 per project.
Source: Gardner News.
Municipal Bond Trends for April 23, 2021

The interest rate table above illustrates recent changes in a sample of MBIS “investment grade” yields. Every issuer’s credit is different. For rates that may be applicable to your municipality, contact our Municipal Bond Advisors, Larry Kleeman and Beth Warren.
The Fed is unlikely to hint at policy changes next week, even with a stronger economy
Federal Reserve officials next week are likely to paint a robust picture on the economy while simultaneously not even hinting at policy changes ahead. Investors increasingly have come to trust central bankers when they say that even with the economy running at its hottest pace in nearly 40 years, they won’t start taking away policy accommodation until it’s clear the recovery is on solid ground. … The Fed has kept short-term borrowing rates near zero since early in the Covid-19 pandemic … Financial markets, though, have been leery that with economic data getting stronger by the day and inflationary pressures starting to build that the Fed could find itself pressured to start easing off the accelerator.
Source: CNBC – Bonds
Twenty years later, PWWSD 18 plant still keeping water clean
Twenty years ago, construction work began on a new water treatment plant that, under the auspices of Public Wholesale Water Supply District 18, was designed to treat water from Banner Creek Reservoir west of Holton for use by water customers in both the city and Jackson County Rural Water District 3. Since its completion about a year later, the water plant has seen only a few operational changes, the most significant being a switch from its original membrane filtration system to a more traditional sand filtration system, according to Holton Water and Sewer Superintendent Dennis Ashcraft, who also oversees daily operations at the PWWSD 18 plant southwest of Holton. And even though changing state and federal rules and regulations regarding water treatment plants continue to force changes in the way things are done, Ashcraft said PWWSD 18 continues to keep up with those changes and provide the best water to the more than 3,500 served by the district in both Holton and RWD 3.
Source: Holton Recorder
Cities face lifeguard shortage as summer looms
The Jones Aquatic Center kept its gates closed last summer and its full return in 2021 is still precarious due to a shortage of lifeguards and swim instructors. The problem isn’t limited to Emporia. On April 12, Overland Park reported that only three of its six out door aquatic centers would be open this summer and similar news stories have popped up all over the country. “We’re not alone with this,” said Emporia Recreation Center director Tom McEvoy. “We had our in-person state conference here last Wednesday down at [White] Auditorium and I talked to a number of director friends of mine from around the state. They’re finding from large cities to cities our size and smaller they’re having a problem finding lifeguards.”
Source: Emporia Gazette
Newton changing its signage
Out with the clouds; in with the “train and grain.” The newly formed Community Development Commission moved forward on changing up city gateway/wayfinding signage. “The end game is to have those in place by the sesquicentennial,” Director of Community Development Zach McHatton said. “We’re branding behind the flag.” For at least 15 years, Newton’s wayfinding signs–the ones that direct people to city attractions–displayed a blue sky and cloud design. You may have noticed them, or you may not have.
Source: Harvey County Now
Johnson County town makes way for industrial park expansion despite neighbors’ pleas
Hundreds of residents, many of whom live outside of Edgerton’s city limits in unincorporated Johnson and Miami counties, have been fighting the expansion. They are frustrated that Edgerton leaders continue to annex more farmland, making way for the development of more warehouses at the ever-encroaching Logsitics Park Kansas City. They say their quiet, rural way of life is threatened as the industrial park continues to expand south of Interstate 35. That has led about 300 residents to petition to form their own city in Miami County. They hope that incorporating into their own town will help protect their borders, so that surrounding farmland is preserved.
Source: Joco 913 News
Crawford County working to combat vaccine hesitancy
While covid-19 vaccinations have become more available – vaccination rates have stalled. They’re seeing this firsthand in Crawford County. They’re trying to help take away this vaccine hesitancy so many people are having. The good news – they already have a plan, and it comes down to sharing stories of trusted people throughout the community. Tyler Wilson, Pittsburg Resident, said, “A lot of people are hesitant to get the vaccine just out of fear I feel like.” Across the country, covid-19 vaccines are becoming more available. However, places like Crawford County are starting to see less people showing up.
Source: KSNF/KODE
Sparks steps up as Chief of Moundridge Police Department
Michael Sparks has been a familiar face on the Moundridge Police Department since 1995. This month, he was promoted to chief of police. Despite nearly three decades of policing, Sparks said, as a child, he wanted to be a pilot. In high school, police work caught his attention and became a career. “It’s a mix of things, helping people and being part of the community. It’s cliche, but it’s really what it’s about,” he said. As a small-town resident, Sparks grew up in Halstead and made his home and raised his six children in Moundridge with his wife, Frances.
Source: McPherson Weekly News » Feed
Water park short on job candidates
McPherson Water Park needs about 15 employees if the facility is going to resume a normal operating schedule this summer. Aquatics Director Kyle Roberts said he’d worked hard over the years to recruit lifeguards and support staff with his motto of “professional fun.” Even so, finding adequate staffing has become more difficult in recent years as perhaps teenagers are looking for more lucrative employment. He said the trend of having a smaller pool of available employees was affecting water parks across the state. “You really have to love aquatics, but there is a higher expectation now that is falling on these kids,” he said.
Source: McPherson Weekly News » Feed
Diversity task force says it wants Manhattan city government to consider health in all policy decisions
Members of the city government’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Task Force want Manhattan city commissioners to consider health in every policy decision they make. During the task force’s fourth meeting, which took place in person at the K-State Student Union, members broke into subcommittee groups: public safety, livability, economic opportunity, health and wellness, and individual and family support. Each group Thursday identified issues it wants to focus on. About 20 members attended the first in-person meeting of the task force. Jurdene Coleman, who represents Pawnee Mental Health on the task force, spoke on behalf of the health and wellness subcommittee with recommendations. Each group presented to the committee as a whole after brainstorming for an hour.
Source: themercury.com