Municipal News & Jobs

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

Kansas Municipal News

Hopes of ‘a bubble’ gone, COVID-19 expands its footprint in unprepared rural Kansas

Until two weeks ago, Meade District Hospital had never admitted a COVID-19 patient. Then, it admitted three in one weekend. For the southwest Kansas town of roughly 1,700, three hospitalizations is the equivalent of several thousand in metropolitan Kansas City, said Gary Morsch, founder of an organization that helps staff rural critical access hospitals. Morsch was working in the Meade hospital’s emergency room that weekend. He said the hospital had two beds set aside for coronavirus patients, and needed to stretch only to accommodate the third. However, he said, it’s a sign of what’s to come in small towns and rural areas that, until recently, were able to avoid the biggest impacts of the deadly virus.
Source: Local News | Wichita Eagle

COVID-19 dims recession-inspired draw of Kansas community colleges as retraining crucibles

Neosho Community College president Brian Inbody relied on precedent to make assumptions about how the pandemic of COVID-19 could influence enrollment at the southeastern Kansas college during a period of massive unemployment and business realignment. In wake of the brutal U.S. recession from 2007 to 2009, he said, enrollment at Neosho Community College increased 21% per year over a three-year period. Early in the pandemic of 2020, higher education institutions were thrown into an online instructional format as COVID-19 spread into the heartland. Unemployment in Kansas surged from 3.1% in February to 11.9% in April. The stage appeared set for community colleges to answer the bell of another recession.
Source: Kansas Reflector

Amazon confirms massive warehouse for Park City

Amazon, the online retail giant, now confirms what The Wichita Eagle reported this summer: It is building a one-million-square-foot fulfillment center at 7130 N. Broadway in Park City. The company confirmed that and a similar center at 9700 Leavenworth Road in Kansas City, Kan., during a virtual news conference with city and state leaders Friday. “It’s an exciting day for us at Amazon as we strive to offer faster delivery to customers across the state,” said Mark Marzano, Amazon director of operations.
Source: Wichita Breaking News, Sports & Crime |

Downtown stewards of Winfield expand history program

Historical plaques were recently installed on five buildings on Main Street in Winfield. The plaques are done by members of the Winfield Main Street Committee of the Winfield Area Chamber of Commerce. The project is a collaboration between the Main Street committee, the Cowley County Historical Society and downtown building owners. Putting historical plaques on Main Street buildings has been ongoing since about 1997, according to Dorothy Fisher, who has been part of the process since the beginning.
Source: Cowley CourierTraveler

Topeka’s haunted trails aim at providing safe outdoor activity for community

Halloween will look a lot different in 2020 than in any previous year as many of the venues that provide an enjoyable amount of terror to patrons will be closed due to the lingering pandemic. But two outdoor venues are terrifying guests without putting them in jeopardy of real danger from COVID-19. Fear Zone, located at 3909 S.W. Burlingame Road, is open for its second year, having made some virus-protocol modifications. Owners Scott and Kelly Heston said they have had an increase in customers thus far in 2020 over a successful first year.
Source: Local News | Topeka Capital-Journal

Sedgwick County official extends bar and club curfew despite COVID-19 cases rising

Despite a growing number of COVID-19 cases, the Sedgwick County health officer approved an order on Friday that extends the time bars and clubs can stay open from midnight to 1 a.m. “Locally, our case numbers have started increasing but testing has not increased,” Dr. Garold Minns said in a news release. “I appreciate our community’s diligence in following the recommended healthy behaviors but we need to really stick to them during cold and flu season.” In a phone interview, Minns said he doesn’t have strong evidence that the case increase is attributable to businesses serving alcohol.
Source: Local News | Wichita Eagle

Officer-involved shooting in Lyons leads to large police response

A Lyons man is in custody on Friday after a few-hour standoff following the shooting of an officer and a man, officials said. It started at around 3:40 p.m. when a man mowing a lawn was threatened by a man with a gun at a neighboring home in southeast Lyons. The threatened man called 911. A responding officer was shot by 40-year-old Adam Hrabik, according to Kansas Bureau of Investigation spokesperson Melissa Underwood. The officer was shot multiple times and also shot back, according to KBI special agent in charge Cory Latham.
Source: Local News | Wichita Eagle

Renwick receives grant for ‘telerobots’

High schools in the Renwick School District will receive more than $450,000 in grants to support STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) education.Garden Plain High School and Andale High School, plus 18 other Kansas high schools, will receive funds through a telemedicine grant targeted to rural and underserved communities. The funding – $451,480 – will be used for 10 telepresence robots, five for each of the district’s two high schools.
Source: Times-Sentinel Newspapers » Feed

Maple Leaf Festival At Baldwin City Goes Virtual This Year

Like many events this year, the Maple Leaf Festival will be in an entirely different format. Officially, the traditional 63rd annual Maple Leaf Festival in historic downtown Baldwin City is cancelled. “Decision to cancel the 2020 Maple Leaf Festival is necessary,” said Mike Curran, committee president. “It is the right step for public health safety during the coronavirus pandemic.” The annual festival typically draws 30,000 people to Baldwin City fueled by 300 booths from across the country. “It supports the local nonprofit community through food booth proceeds,” Curran added.
Source: WIBW News Now

As 60% of Johnson County schools report COVID cases, guidance for returning is eased

The Johnson County health department has issued more lenient guidance on whether school districts should allow older students back into classrooms when there is high community spread of COVID-19. Unlike under the previous criteria, districts could now allow middle and high schoolers to return to in-person learning in a hybrid model — going to class part time and taking online classes for the rest of the week — as long as safety precautions are implemented. The guidance for elementary students has remained the same, as officials continue to recommend they can return to classrooms full time.
Source: Joco 913 News

Last of major Johnson County districts says older students can return to classrooms

Following the Johnson County health department relaxing coronavirus guidance for schools, the Olathe district announced it will allow older students to return to classrooms part time later this month. Superintendent John Allison said in an email that middle and high school students will start in-person learning on Oct. 19, in a hybrid model. Middle schoolers will go to school buildings for part of the week, then learn online the rest. High school students will attend school for half days, five days a week.
Source: Joco 913 News

LaHarpe starts talk on stop signs

LaHarpe City Council members will chew over a request by city employees to add as many as 26 stop signs around town. Code Enforcement Officer Penny Miller and City Superintendent Mike Hedmon have driven every block in town in search of potential trouble spots for motorists due to obstructed views at intersections or where unfettered traffic pose safety hazards. Miller provided the Council members with a color-coded map identifying intersections she thinks would be better served if motorists had to stop.
Source: The Iola Register

Pittsburg hospital limits procedures as virus cases climb

Pittsburg’s hospital is putting the brakes on some procedures as coronavirus cases continue to climb steadily statewide and the positivity rate tops 17%.<

Randy Cason, President of Ascension Via Christi Hospital in Pittsburg, said this week that the plan to pause elective and non-emergent procedures allows leaders to reallocate staff to help care for an influx of patients.
Source: The Iola Register

COVID-19 a challenge for Kansas schools

COVID-19 is threatening the way Kansas schools do their work.  Randy Watson, state education commissioner, told members of the Kansas Association of School Boards recently that the way schools deliver education currently is “not sustainable.” Although 1A to small 4A schools are returning to traditional five-day-a-week on-site classes because they can keep class sizes to fewer than 15 and require masks and social distancing, most larger schools are obliged to operate differently.  They are using all online, remote or hybrid models where students alternate attending on-site for part of the week and study remotely the remainder of the week.
Source: The Iola Register

Beef continues to rule economically in Kansas

Once again, beef leads the pack in sales and jobs for Kansas’ agricultural businesses.Contributing more than $8.7 billion to the Kansas economy, the beef cattle ranching and farming sector, which includes feedlots, is the state agricultural leader in jobs as well, with just shy of 39,000 employed in this market, according to the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s latest reports. Economic contributions of agriculture in Kansas totals more than $70 billion…
Source: Local – The Hutchinson News

Train noise on your nerves? Old Lenexa residents soon to catch a break

By the summer of 2021, people who live and work near Old Town Lenexa should be hearing less noise from passing trains. That’s when — thanks to an extra infusion of city money — wayside horns will be installed at two BNSF Railway crossings: Pflumm Road and Noland Road. “Noise from passing trains has long been an issue for the 1,200 residents and businesses who live within a half-mile of these crossings,” the city said in a news release.
Source: Joco 913 News

Topeka modernizes parking payments with launch of new app

The City of Topeka, Kansas will be introducing a new way to pay for parking with the Passport Parking mobile app. The app, which will be the first mobile pay solution for parking in the City, will offer drivers a contactless option for paying for and managing parking and can be used at over 1,200 metered spaces. With the Passport Parking app, users can pay to park quickly and remotely from their smartphones. Additionally, users can receive alerts when their parking sessions are ending, get email receipts and view their parking history from one place.
Source: Derby Informer | News

Parsons adds Pocket Park to Main Street

It’s a tiny park between pre-existing buildings — a new way towns and cities around the country are adding life to their communities. This started off as inspiration from a group of friends. Rod Landrum, SEK Point of Pride, said they would go out and they would travel, they would bring ideas back and implement them in our town. Then, that inspiration hit Rod Landrum and his wife as they were traveling to the East coast. “We thought, here’s an idea.” Once they returned to Parsons, they introduced the idea to Southeast Kansas Point of Pride. The city of Parsons is getting — what they call a Pocket Park — on Main Street. It all started with just one donation.
Source: KSNF/KODE

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