Landlord Incentive Pilot Program concludes after two rounds of federal funding

15 Tuesday, October 15

Landlord Incentive Pilot Program concludes after two rounds of federal funding

2024-10-15T13:05:30-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Johnson County’s Landlord Incentive Pilot Program, which was approved by the Board of County Commissioners on June 8, 2023 and launched on July 1, 2023, has successfully concluded. The pilot program provided landlords with financial incentives to rent their units to tenants using federally funded housing subsidy vouchers. The Board approved two rounds of federal grant funding, totaling $400,000, from July 2023 to Oct. 1, 2024. Both rounds of funding were successfully spent. The program was developed through a collaborative effort between local landlords and Johnson County Government. The county conducted surveys, listening sessions and a focus group to build partnerships [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Overland Park joins effort helping cities around the globe tackle hate

2024-10-15T13:03:53-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Overland Park will participate in a pilot program with the Strong Cities Network designed to help communities prevent and combat hate, extremism, polarization and terrorism. Money to support the city’s participation in the pilot comes from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The city has been putting the pieces together on the pilot program for the past year. City officials plan to soon release a survey seeking to gather information about residents’ experiences with hate, extremism and polarization that have threatened their safety. “We are working to connect with anyone who has experienced hate or extremism to learn how to best [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Lenexa explores building new fire HQ on old city hall property

2024-10-15T13:02:39-05:00October 15th, 2024|

The city of Lenexa is looking at renovating its old city hall property into a new headquarters for the Lenexa Fire Department. Currently home to a one-truck fire station, the city would like to demolish the old city hall building on the site near 87th Street Parkway and Monrovia Street and build a structure that would serve as the new headquarters for the department. “It cuts our response time to the 79th (Street) and Quivira corridor in half,” Lenexa Fire Chief Travis Vaughn said. “We’re in a time-based business where people get sicker or become more hurt and or the fire [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Shawnee Mission parents circulate petition calling for ‘phone free’ schools

2024-10-15T13:01:27-05:00October 15th, 2024|

A group of Shawnee Mission School District parents has followed up their request for cell phone free schools with a petition to the school board. The petition, circulated since last week via Google forms, asks the board to create a clear policy on phones and electronic devices. As of last Thursday, it had 300 signatures, said Allison Brimblecom, one of three signers. The petition springs from an “action meeting” of Shawnee Mission district parents and teachers last Tuesday that was attended by 40 or 50, Brimblecom said. Although it doesn’t give specifics of how the policy should look, “our hope is [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Speed bumps, humps and tables — How Johnson County cities try to slow drivers down

2024-10-15T13:00:18-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Cities like Leawood and Prairie Village have recently addressed speeding in neighborhoods through traffic calming measures. But which measures work the best to slow down traffic? Speed humps or roundabouts are just two examples of traffic calming measures used in specific areas to slow down vehicle speeds. In several Johnson County cities, these measures are installed on a case-by-case basis due to specific needs on specific roads, city staff members told the Post. “Traffic calming devices are so site specific that it is difficult to say one type outperforms other types,” Lenexa City Engineer Tim Green told the Post. Most Johnson [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Prairie Village says final price tag for new community center could top $90M

2024-10-15T12:59:02-05:00October 15th, 2024|

After narrowly surviving a vote to scuttle the entire project, the Prairie Village City Council is moving forward with a years-long idea to build a city-owned community center. The final projected price tag is now clearer, too, with the city council voting 8-4 to move forward with plans to repay construction costs over 30 years through an estimated five-eighths or three-quarter cent sales tax increase. The cost of building a new city-owned community center to replace the current aging Paul Henson YMCA is estimated to be $55 million, but when interest is added on to repaying bonds over a 30-year term, [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

New UG development director talks growth, long-term strategy

2024-10-15T12:57:36-05:00October 15th, 2024|

The Unified Government of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kansas, filled a two-year vacancy in its economic development office. Chelsee Chism will be the county’s next economic development director, rebuilding the department to support small businesses, entice new economic development opportunities and assist with the UG land bank program. “I love the diversity that Wyandotte County offers. There is also this ability to exercise multidimensional approach to economic development that’s not necessarily offered in Johnson County. I feel like my efforts here and my team’s efforts could just be really impactful for the community,” Chism said. She comes to the job from her [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Audit of Kansas TIF districts reveals delays in returns, increased crime rates

2024-10-15T12:55:50-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Some of Kansas’ largest cities are struggling to gain full returns on tax increment financing districts meant to help bolster development activity and property values, a recent state audit found. TIF districts, as they are called, are intended to fund real estate projects that otherwise wouldn’t exist. The idea is that the development will increase property values in the designated district, resulting in higher property tax collections that are used to pay off the bonds that financed the project. State auditors surveyed six TIF districts from Kansas’ largest cities and found that half did not recover their costs in a timely [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

‘First People of Kansas’ documentary showcases Native American history for St. John community 

2024-10-15T12:53:31-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Former journalist Beccy Tanner had always had a knack for history. As soon as she noticed there was not any written history of Native Americans in her small central-Kansas town of St. John, she knew she could join her talent with other journalists to educate her community about their history. Tanner, joined by photographer Bo Rader, videographer Auriel Hathaway and local historians, created the “First People of Kansas” documentary series, highlighting the history of Native Americans in the St. John and Wichita area. “We didn’t really have stories of diversity,” she said. “We had a lot of stories, and we still [...]

15 Tuesday, October 15

Volunteer firefighters worry new OSHA safety standards could shut down some rural departments

2024-10-15T12:51:46-05:00October 15th, 2024|

Fighting fires has evolved, but federal safety regulations haven’t changed for nearly half a century. Now the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has proposed new safety standards. It's great news for professional firefighters, but volunteer departments say the new rules could bog them down with expensive and irrelevant regulations. Hundreds of US firefighters die every year, and job-related cancer is far and away the biggest killer, according to Sean DeCrane with the International Association of Fire Fighters union. He places some of the blame on outdated federal safety rules that protect firefighters, enacted in 1980. “It’s long past due that the [...]

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