Commissioner contends new Emporia policy prohibiting ‘unlawful camping’ on public property is aimed directly at local homeless population

17 Thursday, November 17

Commissioner contends new Emporia policy prohibiting ‘unlawful camping’ on public property is aimed directly at local homeless population

2022-11-17T12:07:00-06:00November 17th, 2022|

Emporia City Commissioners have enacted a new policy that will make “unlawful camping” in a public space a misdemeanor crime. The ordinance will establish a new city code prohibiting camping on public property without a permit. According to City Attorney Christina Montgomery, the city, in cooperation with the Emporia Police Department, will now begin developing the permit application process. Commissioners approved the ordinance 4-1 with commissioner Susan Brinkman serving as the lone no vote. During the meeting, Brinkman stated the ordinance was full of “sanitized language” and believes the ordinance directly targets the city’s homeless population. Source: KVOE Emporia Radio

17 Thursday, November 17

Planners to consider container facility

2022-11-17T00:27:03-06:00November 17th, 2022|

A Rose Hill man’s application to create a facility to modify shipping containers a mile south of Hillsboro will be reviewed Dec. 1 by the county planning and zoning board. Quentin Heidt wants to build a staging and operating location to modify new and recycled containers to customers’ specifications. Heidt listed one of his reasons as providing assets for community members. Source: PEABODY Gazette-Bulletin

17 Thursday, November 17

Bodycam video shows Leawood Police pull woman from burning SUV

2022-11-17T12:08:31-06:00November 17th, 2022|

Bodycam video released by Leawood Police show officers pulling a woman from a burning vehicle. A 51-year-old woman suffered severe burns Monday afternoon after her SUV crashed and caught fire near the Tomahawk Creek trailhead, just east of Tomahawk Creek Parkway and Town Center Drive. First responders got to the scene just before 2:10 p.m. and found the SUV flipped on its side, its front engulfed in flames. The video clip released by Leawood Police is just under minute long and shows the perspective of one arriving officer, who approaches the SUV as other officers and Leawood firefighters are attempting to extricate the [...]

17 Thursday, November 17

Task force seeks retail ban on single-use bags, Dillons working on phased elimination

2022-11-17T12:10:06-06:00November 17th, 2022|

Lori Lawrence, of Bag Free Wichita, and Sheila Regehr, of Dillons Food Stores based in Hutchinson, outlined on the Kansas Reflector podcast strategies aimed at taking a bite out of demand and supply of plastic bags. Lawrence is part of the Wichita City Council’s task force studying potential of an ordinance prohibiting use of plastic bags by businesses starting in 2023. Regehr is on Wichita’s task force but said Dillons, which is part of Kroger Co., has a plan to eliminate use of these bags in its stores by 2025. “I’ve been an environmentalist for some time and plastic bags are [...]

17 Thursday, November 17

Future of Kansas town’s library uncertain after outpouring of support at commission meeting

2022-11-17T00:14:51-06:00November 17th, 2022|

Following public outcry about censorship, the St. Marys City Commission decided to table a vote on renewing the Pottawatomie Wabaunsee Regional Library’s lease. The lease is under threat because the library refused to comply with the commission’s request to remove all LGBTQ, sexual, racial or otherwise “socially divisive” content from its shelves. But with the lease ending in December, the library is still in a precarious situation. Every chair in the commission meeting room was filled for Tuesday night’s discussion about the library, with residents lined up against the walls to listen to debate. The majority of residents who spoke said [...]

17 Thursday, November 17

Lawrence City Commission wants to consider a moratorium for rule on downtown liquor sales

2022-11-17T00:10:37-06:00November 17th, 2022|

Lawrence city commissioners on Tuesday deferred an amendment to city code that would have allowed John Brown’s Underground to keep operating — but they want to look at ways to expand the opportunity to other businesses, too. A long-standing city rule requires establishments with liquor licenses to derive no more than 45% of their sales from liquor. Passed in 1994, the rule allowed exemptions for 29 existing locations. The code still exempts new bars that open in the same buildings as any of those original 29. JBUG had maintained compliance with the rule in recent years by factoring in food sales [...]

16 Wednesday, November 16

Fed’s Daly sees rates rising at least another percentage point as ‘pausing is off the table’

2022-11-16T10:53:06-06:00November 16th, 2022|

San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said Wednesday she expects the central bank to raise interest rates at least another percentage point, and possibly more, before it can pause to evaluate how the inflation fight is going. Daly told CNBC in a live interview that her most recent estimate in the Fed's summary of economic projections puts the benchmark overnight lending rate around 5%. She added that the right range is probably from 4.75% to 5.25% from its current targeted range of 3.75%-4%. "I still think of that as a reasonable landing place for us before we hold, and the [...]

16 Wednesday, November 16

Lenexa taking Republic to court over trash pickup problems

2022-11-16T09:12:54-06:00November 16th, 2022|

Complaints about missed trash collections and slow response to customers by Republic Services are on the rise in Lenexa — so much so that the city has issued a citation. Complaints have been increasing the past few months about failures of the Phoenix, Ariz.-based company to pick up trash and recycling in a timely manner, said Scott McCullough, Lenexa community development director. To that end, the city has charged Republic with a code violation based on one of those complaints. The citation carries a possible $2,500 fine and is on the municipal court’s docket for Thursday, Nov. 17. Source: Prairie Village [...]

16 Wednesday, November 16

Bicyclist injured in crash on wet Olathe trail sues, says city didn’t maintain path

2022-11-16T10:43:36-06:00November 16th, 2022|

A bicyclist is suing the City of Olathe for $75,000 after crashing on a city trail, according to documents filed in Johnson County District Court earlier this month. According to court documents, Joyce Coker-Dreier was riding her bike along Meadow Lane Trail in September 2021. While riding, Coker-Dreier said she encountered a stretch of wet payment. Even after slowing down, she said her bike fell immediately because “the City allowed algae, mud, and/or other substances to accumulate” on the concrete, making it “extremely slick,” the documents allege. ... Coker-Dreier is suing Olathe on four counts of liability and negligence-related claims. She [...]

16 Wednesday, November 16

Hesston Grocery Store plans unveiled

2022-11-16T10:47:35-06:00November 16th, 2022|

Hesston’s downtown will be reshaped by an 18,000-square-foot grocery store and long-promised TEFFI dollars. That’s according to the plan members of the Beneficient Company and its Beneficient Heartland Foundation presented at the Hesston City Council meeting Monday night. “The great thing about a store that size is it has the potential to drive 2,500 unique customers through the doors each week,” said Denise Goevert, Beneficient Heartland board member. “This will benefit all of our Main Street businesses in having the foot traffic generated through the store.” Source: Harvey County Now

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