Municipal News & Jobs

Municipal News & Jobs2018-08-05T16:28:50-05:00

Kansas Municipal News

Barton County to get new election equipment

The current electronic poll pads used at voting precincts and in the Barton County Clerk’s Office have reached the end of their life span, County Clerk Donna Zimmerman told the County Commission Monday morning. So, the County Commission approved the purchase of new pads, as well as other related election equipment, totalling $95,915. Omaha, Neb.-based Election Systems and Software has a poll pad product that integrates with the ES&S electronic voting equipment and ES&S ELection Voter Information System (ELVIS) voter registration database. Fifteen additional ExpressVote ballot marking devices are also quoted. “The additional equipment should help to expedite lines of voters on election day,” Zimmerman said. The cost for all equipment includes installation, training and a one-year warranty.
Source: Great Bend Tribune

Dodge City ‘Well 21’ May Have High Levels of Nitrate

City of Dodge City Public Works department was notified that a water quality sample collected from Well 21 on April 6, 2021, showed a nitrate level at the maximum level allowed for community public water supplies at 10 mg/L. This notice is a cautionary measure while confirmation samples are being collected to determine if there is a nitrate problem with the water quality. Water Well 21 has been turned off from water production and will remain off until confirmed safe. At this time, it is advised that consumers refrain from using the water for infants less than 6 months old, if they are nursing, or if they are pregnant.
Source: Western Kansas News

Kansans seeking unemployment now must prove job search efforts

If you’re unemployed, Kansas is now making it tougher for you to get benefits. The state is once again requiring something it hasn’t since before COVID-19. Anybody applying for unemployment now has to prove that they are actively looking for jobs. This has been a mandate within the Kansas Department of Labor for years and was put on pause the last year because of the pandemic. But many companies are now returning back to hiring. People filing for unemployment will have to apply for at least three jobs a week and keep a log of the search.
Source: KAKE – News

As City of Lawrence celebrates 75 years of parks and recreation, community looks back at how it began

Perhaps it is fitting that what led to the creation of a city department whose business includes organizing games, hanging holiday lights and planting flowers was actually the community’s hardship. In the late 1930s, Lawrence, like the rest of the country, was still in the midst of the Great Depression, and while the adults worked longer hours and dealt with the struggles of the time, the activities that once entertained the children had become scarce. “All of these organized activities that would have occupied young people, scouting trips, outings and hikes, they weren’t happening as much,” said Watkins Museum of History Curator and Collections manager Brittany Keegan. “So what the city started noticing was groups of kids around without an activity.” The city was planned with central and neighborhood parks from its beginning, but Keegan said it was in the context of the depression that a volunteer council started the recreational component of what would eventually become the Parks and Recreation Department we know today.
Source: LJWorld.com.

How the rural Kansas town of Paxico is looking to address its nitrate-ridden water and floodplain issues

When it rains in the small, rural town of Paxico — which sits about 30 miles west of Topeka, just off Interstate 70 — pools of water remain long after each storm has passed. “We have terrible stormwater runoff,” said resident Deanna Pierson. “We’re in a flood zone.” Pierson, with help from an international organization that works with communities to address climate-related issues, published a survey late last year in The Wabaunsee County Signal-Enterprise to collect responses from area residents about local problems they thought needed to be addressed…. But until recently, efforts to reduce such risk were stagnant — that is until Pierson connected with Thriving Earth Exchange, a program that aims to help communities of all sizes tackle local issues related to natural hazards and resources. And Paxico just so happens to be the smallest community with which the earth exchange has ever worked. The Thriving Earth Exchange partnership is one of two different projects Paxico is undertaking to address water-related issues in the northeast Kansas town of about 280 people. The other is an effort to connect the town to a rural water district in order to rid it of well water contaminated with nitrates, which recently led local officials to issue a drinking-water advisory for infants, pregnant women and nursing mothers.
Source: CJonline.com.

City hears issues with abandoned homes

Angela Johnson first spoke to the commission about homes around her parents’ house at 2519 Gabriel. Johnson said her parents have a panoramic view around their property of run-down houses.
“It’s horrific,” she said. Kenneth and Diane Johnson have kept their home in good shape and have made updates over the years, Angela Johnson said, and they have bought other nearby properties and demolished the homes there in an effort to keep their surroundings pleasant and their home value up. Their efforts, however, have been to no avail as more homes become abandoned. Now, many of those houses have become a haven for pests such as skunks and opossums, Johnson said, as well as vagrants. There is a foul odor coming from one home, and Johnson’s father said some of the homes have black mold.
Source: Parsons Sun

SEK library reopens after suffering flood damage

Two years ago, a devastating flood resulted in the doors being closed at the Johnston Public Library in Baxter Springs. The long road to recovery was made even longer thanks to the pandemic. Now – a sense of normalcy has returned and the doors have re-opened. Mary Hixon, Board of Directors President, said, “It just felt like just one thing after another, just making decisions constantly.” On October 23rd 2019, the Johnston Public Library woke up to one of their worst nightmares. Andrea Bresee, Johnston Public Library Director, said, “We had a pipe burst in the attic, and it went from the second floor, flooded half of that floor and went on down to the first floor and literally rained into the first floor.”
Source: KSNF/KODE

Johnson County considers next steps to address countywide housing inequities

Without the willingness of Johnson County’s elected leadership to work toward equitable, attainable housing solutions and achieve buy-in from residents, the challenges for people trying to afford to live here will probably only grow worse over time. That’s according to a report earlier this month to the Johnson County Board of County Commissioners, when county leaders received an overview of the results of a housing study and considered next steps for the county to take. “To me, this is a shared responsibility,” said Julie Brewer, executive director of United Community Services of Johnson County, who led the discussion on April 8. Brewer said cities in Johnson County should also be intentional about housing solutions, and employers should also recognize what is necessary for a ready and able workforce. Cities and the county can incentivize developments to build affordable housing, and incentivize businesses to pay a living wage so that middle- and lower-income individuals and families can afford to live in Johnson County.
Source: Shawnee Mission Post

The power of wastewater: $2M grant will help KSU researcher explore ways to clean, use it

A $2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy will help Kansas State University researchers create new resources from sewage. The Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy announced awards totaling $27.5 million for water infrastructure projects in 13 states, including Kansas. All the projects awarded by the Department of Energy focus on developing treatment techniques to produce renewable power, extract any chemicals and fertilizers from wastewater, and reuse water locally, while minimizing energy consumption and waste. The project at K-State receiving federal funding involves using what’s called an Integrated Anaerobic Membrane Bioreactor (AnMBR). Associate professor of civil engineering Prathap Parameswaran said this technology enables carbon material in wastewater to be converted into something useful.
Source: themercury.com

Kansas opts for bonding to help consumers with energy price shocks, transition from coal

Gov. Laura Kelly signed bipartisan legislation stretching over time consumers’ payment of exorbitant natural gas costs incurred during the February freeze and to offer financial incentive for utility companies weighing transition from old coal plants to newer solar or wind sources of electricity. The law’s most immediate result would be issuance by public utilities such as Kansas Gas Service of ratepayer-backed bonds so customers had years instead of months to pay extraordinary utility bills. The long-term consequence was that investor-owned utilities, including Evergy, would be permitted to issue bonds covered by ratepayers that softened the risk of taking a step away from coal. Bonding, also referred to as securitization, has been relied upon in a couple dozen states to help utility companies deal with undepreciated investments in aging coal plants. In Kansas, much of that investment was in emissions control equipment installed to tame some of the country’s biggest coal-plant polluters.
Source: Kansas Reflector

A ‘Golden’ opportunity

Nearly 300 residents in northern Miami County are taking matters into their own hands when it comes to protecting their rural property from future industrial growth and development. The group filed a petition Friday, April 9, in the Miami County Clerk’s Office to incorporate a new third class city named “Golden.” The city would encompass about nine square miles north of Hillsdale Lake, and the population would be 776, according to the petition’s documents. Jennifer Williams, who lives along Moonlight Road within the proposed city boundaries, filed the petition Friday after working with others during the past few weeks collecting more than 275 signatures from residents within the proposed boundary lines who support the plan.Source: Local News | republic-online.com

Real Estate market increasingly competitive amid pandemic

So with those important middle income houses harder to come by, it’s made things difficult to grow a city’s population. But this hasn’t stopped Fort Scott City Manager Jeremy Frazier. He sees potential in some of the city’s other properties. Jeremy Frazier, Fort Scott City Manager, said, “What we discovered is that we have a lot of homes that are low to moderate income homes, and we have a few homes that are on the higher end of that scale.” So Fort Scott officials want to take advantage of these properties. “We’re trying to market those lots for in field development to developers who are interested in that middle, moderate income housing style home, and we have quite a bit of that available that is mainly not city owned property, but we’re trying to connect those developers with those owners.” To help build needed momentum the city can use for its future.
Source: KSNF/KODE

A day in the life of Kansas’ newest career: a wheat and wind farmer

When Chance Jacobson graduated high school, he faced a conundrum likely familiar to many young people who grew up in the rural plains. He’d spent the past 18 years on his family farm about 40 miles east of Salina learning the trade from his father and grandfather. “I wanted to farm with my dad, and there just wasn’t enough money,” Jacobson said. “Between my dad and grandpa farming together, and for me to come in and be the third person in the operation, there just wasn’t really room for me.” He’d be the sixth generation farmer on this land if he stayed, and with their family operation growing crops and raising cattle, they could use the help. But in the rural area where he grew up, the nearest town unincorporated long ago, there were limited options for supplemental income.
Source: Wichita News

Atchison area leaders discuss tax rebate program and future of sales tax

The Atchison County and Atchison City Commission met jointly for the first time in three years to discuss a pair of hot button topics and the state of the city and county as a whole last Thursday at the Atchison Event Center. The two talking points of the meeting was the renewal of the Neighborhood Revitalization Program before the end of October and the future of the 1% Sales Tax. The tax rebate program is a five-year deal that is set to expire Oct. 31, 2021 after going into action October, 15 2016.
Source: City Government | atchisonglobenow.com

New Nickerson-South Hutchinson superintendent has a passion for education, music

For the newly named superintendent of Nickerson-South Hutchinson Schools, life is what you make of it. Along with his suit-andtie job of running a high school in Bennington, Curtis Nightingale is a musician. While attending Newton High School, he played the cornet in band and participated in musical theater, but it was in college where he realized his passion for the bass guitar and his love for several types of contemporary music – from 1950s and ’60s classics to blues to heavy metal. “It was the guitar that struck me,” Nightingale said.
Source: Hutch News.

Where Kansas’ public universities saw enrollment declines, private colleges found stability

Matt Lindsey, KICA president, said he believes the phenomenon of better-than-expected enrollment at the private colleges is likely because of a few particular reasons. First, Kansas’ independent colleges weren’t immune to the same downward trend in Kansas high school students’ college-going rate, which was exacerbated by the effect the pandemic had on first-year freshman enrollment rates all around the country. But any trends down in enrollment were buoyed by a significant increase in the number of out-of-state students, who Lindsey said might have seen the more rural Kansas as an “oasis” during spring and summer 2020, when students either finalized or switched plans for their 2020-2021 college years.
Source: CJonline.com.

Johnson County development invades their land. Their solution? Create their own town

But Williams and other neighbors in unincorporated Miami County say their slice of paradise is increasingly threatened by the ever-encroaching industrial development up the road in Johnson County. Huge warehouses and distribution centers continue to proliferate, bringing thousands of employees and constant truck traffic to rural roads. The battle has been brewing for years along the county line. But now with a significant expansion proposed at the nearby industrial park in Edgerton, residents say they’ve been left with only one option to preserve some of the last remaining farmland: Form their own city. This month, Williams filed a petition, with about 300 neighbors’ signatures, to create an entirely new city in Miami County. Currently, the neighbors feel helpless against the industrial park’s growth. City leaders in Edgerton make decisions about zoning and annexations. And people like Williams, with no city council or mayor of their own, have little to no influence.
Source: Joco 913 News

“Constantly short”: Chase County EMS seeking recruits as staffing shortage continues

With just six people certified to respond to any 911 dispatched EMS responses within Chase County, EMS Service Director Scott Harris says he is facing a critical staffing shortage that can only be addressed by hiring more staff. “Right now we’re down to myself — the full-time person who not only works the dayshift but covers any nightshift we need covered — and our five part-timers or ‘volunteers.’” While part-time EMS staff are considered volunteers, in this case the title is a bit misleading; part-time EMS volunteers are paid positions. Each of those five part-time staffers, Harris said, also works a full-time job.
Source: Emporia Gazette

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