Municipal News & Jobs

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

Kansas Municipal News

New health order drops curfew in Sedgwick County, bar owners react

Right in time for the weekend, Sedgwick County released a new health order Friday. The biggest change is that it dropped the midnight curfew that has been placed on bars and clubs for many months now. “I was like wow, that’s exactly what we been waiting to hear really for the whole year,” said Mike Mansour, Manager of Heroes Sports Bar and Grill. Mansour said the return of normal hours and staying open until 2 a.m. is when they find their most success, “Those two couple extra hours are gonna make a big difference in our sales.” After nearly a year of restrictions, co-owner of The Stop, Alan Brinkman says this is a needed relief. “It’s huge, our numbers last year were down tremendously — almost 50 percent,” Brinkman said. “Luckily we prepared and had a little cushion, and we’re able to survive — I feel very bad for those that weren’t able to make it.”
Source: KSN-TV

Galena student’s artwork to hang in the United Nations building in New York City

Its always an accomplishment for an artist to be recognized for their work. But when the recognition involves both national and international recognition – well, then you know you’ve got something special. Dakota Bennett, Galena Middle School Student, said, “Like I still wake up and I’m like, ‘I’m thinking this is a dream,’ because this is just crazy.” Dakota Bennett is your typical middle school student, but she’s accomplished something huge. With competition from 600,000 young artists worldwide, she’s one of 23 Merit Winners in the Lions Club International Peace Poster Contest. Now her art is heading to a very special spot in New York City.
Source: KSNF/KODE

Shawnee County health officials shorten quarantine guidelines

Shawnee County Health Officer Dr. Erin Locke updated the county’s quarantine guidance on Friday. The health department said based on recommendations from the state’s health department and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people end their quarantine after seven days with a negative COVID-19 test or 10 days without a test. Tests must be completed on or after day 6 and people have to stay in quarantine until results are received, the health department said.
Source: KSNT News

Osage City historical downtown property shares in statewide preservation grants

An Osage City property will receive a historic preservation project grant as part of 2021 round of Heritage Trust Fund grant program. The Star Block, a portion of the downtown in Osage City on Market Street, will receive $90,000 of the total of $1,168,492 awarded for 15 historic preservation projects across the state. HTF grants reimburse expenses for projects that preserve or restore qualifying historic properties. The funded projects represent a diverse collection of properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places or the Register of Historic Kansas Places. All awards are contingent upon available funding.
Source: Osage County Online

Labette County extends disaster declaration

Labette County commissioners on Friday extended for 14 days a disaster declaration based on the frigid temperatures the area experienced last week. Charlie Morse, Emergency Operations director, introduced the declaration, the second one approved by the commission. The first declaration will expire on Monday. Without keeping such a declaration in place, communities such as Altamont and Chetopa, which are facing the prospect of steep increases in utility bills tied to the frigid temperatures, could not benefit from a federal disaster declaration if one comes. Morse said some Kansas counties have approved declarations as has the state. So far the federal government only made a disaster declaration for Texas. Morse didn’t think Kansas would see such a declaration anytime soon.
Source: Parsons Sun

Rose Hill chamber launching new promotion in March

Expanding past the Small Business Saturday trend, the Rose Hill Chamber of Commerce is launching a new promotion in March to encourage area residents to shop local. Through the “Shop Local, Win Big” raffle event, customers will have the opportunity to win prizes by shopping in Rose Hill stores – with local businesses getting some exposure as well. “It’s just to stimulate and support our local businesses,” said Rose Hill chamber board member Sharynne Mattingly. “We hope as a chamber that our businesses will get more business.”
Source: Derby Informer | News

Goddard City Council approves plan to reshape itself

The Goddard city council approved a charter ordinance at its Feb. 16 meeting that changes the composition of the governing body. The ordinance eliminates the position of mayor as an elected, non-voting member of the council. Instead, the city will be governed by a five-member city council, all elected at large and all having a vote.
Source: Times-Sentinel Newspapers

Haven students drive to school in farm style to celebrate FFA Week

Each year, Haven High School students drive their tractors — or other farm vehicles — to school to celebrate FFA week. Because these students live on nearby farms, driving these vehicles is second nature to them. The machines come in different colors – dependent on the make. They were also from different decades – from state-of-the-art vehicles to 1990s to a 1947 fixer-upper tractor. “This shows people who don’t live on a farm what we do,” said Grace Sawatzky, 17, of Yoder. Like most of the other students, her family raises wheat, corn, soy, alfalfa and milo.
Source: Hutch News.

Child care shortage seen in Garden City, nation

Alack of child care slots and locations exists in Garden City and the wider Finney County area. Lona DuVall, president/CEO of the Finney County Economic Development Corporation, said the lack of child care in the area was noticed by the FCEDC as early as 2012. The problem has since gotten worse, DuVall said. In 2012 there was a shortage of about 485 child care slots, by 2018 shortage had more than doubled to about 1,850 slots. DuVall said they knew there was a shortage, but nobody did anything, FCEDC didn’t even get involved until the lack of child care started affecting employers, who were having a hard time recruiting and retaining staff because of the lack of reliable and accessible child care. A perfect storm caused the shortage, DuVall said. It started with population growth, economic growth and an increase in demand for qualified workforce but the biggest factor was a change in state regulations.
Source: GC Telegram.

Denison could lose city status if no assistance with gas bill arrives

Denison is a town of about 180 people that now owes about $241,400 in gas bills, which is double the $125,000 it paid for gas in all of 2020. Vickie Wold, Denison city council president, said the Kansas Attorney General’s Office is opening an investigation into price gouging during a disaster, but that might not help Denison in time. “That’ll take time, we know that. We are going to have a bill coming that we can’t pay,” she said. “We could lose our city status.” Wold said the Kansas Municipal Gas Association could get a loan big enough for all 49 municipalities it represents to help them pay off the bills, which would ease the burden on residents.
Source: CJonline.com.

Urban renewal did away with downtown Topeka’s aging ‘Bottoms’ neighborhood in 1960s

The downtown Topeka area known as “the Bottoms” was admittedly old, rundown and blighted when Topeka’s city government did away with it in the 1960s, says Tom Rodriguez. Still, those who lived there tend to look back fondly on that time, said Rodriguez, the author of a book published in 2012 titled “The Bottoms: A Place We Once Called Home.” “In recorded interviews with former residents, almost all of them expressed a longing for the days when they used to sit out on their front porches and say ‘Hello’ or talk to everyone who passed by,” he wrote. “They remember the time when they knew every one of their neighbors, and when neighbors helped each other out when times were tough.”
Source: CJonline.com.

From lifeguard to city manager: Jane Foltz is retiring from the city of Abilene after 20 years

Officially, Jane Foltz is retiring from the city of Abilene after 20 years, starting with the Abilene Parks and Recreation Department in 2000 and ending as the Abilene city manager. But Foltz’ service with the city of Abilene goes back a bit further. She started as a lifeguard at the Abilene Municipal Pool when she was still a junior attending Abilene High School. Foltz said that summer she was babysitting a couple kids and taking them to the pool. One day she was told one of the lifeguards had broken her arm and was asked to be the replacement. “They knew I had my senior lifeguarding certification. That is what started me in parks and rec,” she said.
Source: Abilene Reflector-Chronicle.

USDA Invites Comments on Final Rule to Expand Broadband Access in Rural America Under the ReConnect Program

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) today announced that USDA is seeking comments on a final rule to expand broadband service in rural areas by simplifying program requirements to make more companies eligible to participate in USDA’s ReConnect Program. The rule will eliminate paperwork requirements and will shorten the application process. It also enables an applicant to submit a letter of credit as proof of its financial ability to complete a project. These changes are expected to enable more companies to participate in the ReConnect program, resulting in more broadband coverage in rural areas. The changes take effect April 27, 2021, at the end of a 60-day comment period. The ReConnect Program offers loans, grants and loan/grant combinations to facilitate broadband deployment in rural areas that do not currently have sufficient access to it. Comments must be submitted through https://www.regulations.gov by April 27, 2021. For additional information, see page 11603 of the February 26, 2021, Federal Register.

3 Kansas City metro counties end curfew for restaurants and bars as COVID rates drop

As the number of new COVID-19 cases continues to drop, Johnson, Wyandotte and Jackson counties will join the rest of the Kansas City metro and lift their curfews on bars and restaurants. In a joint announcement on Thursday, health officials said the three counties will allow bars and restaurants to resume normal hours. But other restrictions remain in place. At the same time, Jackson County Executive Frank White warned people to remain vigilant as a new, more easily transmissible strain of the coronavirus has been detected in wastewater systems in eastern Jackson County, Kansas City and in wastewater originating in Johnson County.
Source: Joco 913 News

Governor Laura Kelly signs SB 15, part of economic recovery

Kansas Governor Laura Kelly signed a new bill to help with economic recovery in Kansas Thursday morning. The bill, Senate Bill 15, allows banks to offer low-interest loans to people struggling to recover from the pandemic. During a press conference, the governor said the loans will mainly be going to rural and agricultural communities across the state. “It’s going to spur business growth, it’s going to create jobs, and it’s going to provide financial relief for our farmers and ranchers.” The bill also provides incentives for developers to build homes in rural communities.
Source: KSNT News

Johnson County will stop getting Moderna vaccine

Johnson County will no longer be receiving shipments of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, county health officials say. … Kansas has started saving the Moderna vaccine for other counties that don’t have ultra-cold freezers needed to keep the Pfizer vaccine, which must be stored at temperatures significantly lower than the Moderna vaccine. (Here’s a NPR explainer on why the Pfizer vaccine requires colder storage than the Moderna vaccine.) Since Johnson County has the ability to store Pfizer vaccines, and smaller, more rural counties may not, Kansas will begin diverting Moderna doses to those other counties and send Pfizer doses to Johnson County.
Source: Prairie Village Post

Abandoned factory outside Overland Park attracts teens, worries parents — will it finally be torn down?

Little alarm bells went off for Jay Rutler about three years ago, when his son — who was in middle school at the time — started talking about a mysterious “warehouse” in the neighborhood that kids liked to visit. So at his son’s urging, Rutler walked out to the long-abandoned Kuhlman Diecasting plant about three-quarters of a mile from their family’s home. “When I was out, there were a couple of high school kids making out in one corner and a bunch of kids that were young – middle school, maybe elementary school – that were climbing on the roof of that place,” Rutler said. “You’ve got rusted holes through it, and big openings that were windows or vent holes. It was obviously very concerning.”
Source: Prairie Village Post

City of Ark City launches new survey tool

Arkansas City residents are being invited to weigh in on local issues through a survey program deigned for quick input on various topics. The first FlashVote citizen surveying system was schedule to go live Tuesday morning, according to a press release from the city. The surveys will also be used to help develop the city’s new comprehensive plan.
Source: The Arkansas City Traveler

Osawatomie approves chickens inside city limits

A request that first surfaced last fall has come home to roost. The Osawatomie City Council adopted an ordinance at its Thursday, Feb. 12, meeting that allows hens to be kept on residential property inside the city limits, subject to certain limitations. The issue came up at the city’s Nov. 12 meeting when a resident asked the council to consider lifting a ban on chickens. “A Northland resident came to a meeting and asked us to look into chickens,” Mayor Mark Govea said. “City Council directed staff to look at it and come back with a ordinance.”
Source: The Miami County Republic

Wichita introduces new facade improvement program aimed at small businesses in low-income areas

City Hall would like to make its facade improvement program more accessible to Wichita’s small-business owners located in lower-income neighborhoods. Sally Stang, director of the city’s housing and community services department, shared details during a Thursday media briefing about a new program that provides a deferred, 0% interest loan to owners or tenants with matching funds to help renovate building facades. “We’re very excited to roll this out, we think this is a great opportunity for small businesses and our low-income neighborhoods,” Stang said.
Source: Wichita Business Journal

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