PIE announces scholarships
Partners in Education Foundation, Inc. (PIE), announced May 12 the 2022 scholarship awards for El Dorado High School graduates.
Partners in Education Foundation, Inc. (PIE), announced May 12 the 2022 scholarship awards for El Dorado High School graduates.
In a stark turn from its more austere budgetary past, the state of Kansas will likely close out the fiscal year in June with a larger-than-expected $2.7 billion surplus, thanks to federal relief funds.
Remember when small town Kansas had filling stations instead of convenience stores? Today we will meet an old time filling station, but this one is not about filling your gas tank. Instead, it’s about filling your stomach.
The USD 375's school board made a big approval during their monthly board meeting.
A new report released by Kansas Appleseed Center for Law and Justice highlights strategies to address hunger in South-Central Kansas suggests there are hundreds - if not thousands - of Butler County residents who go hungry every day.
Three lucky students can look forward to a Mars experience this summer at the Cosmosphere camp in Hutchinson after winning a scholarship from Citizens Bank of Kansas – including one student from Augusta.
LEAGUE FOR INNOVATION ANNOUNCES NATIONAL AWARD WINNERS El Dorado, Kan. - Butler Community College is a 2021-2022 Innovation of the Year award recipient recently announced by The League for Innovation in the Community College.
MANHATTAN – No one will argue that food is one of human’s most basic needs. And yet, across rural America, many grocery stores routinely are scratching and clawing their way to survival.
TOPEKA — In the waning hours of the veto session, the Kansas Legislature approved a rewrite of the state’s public health laws, disregarding bipartisan concerns the bill was too restrictive. After weeks of conversation and modifications to proposed legislation, Senate Bill 34 came together shortly before the House and Senate debated the bill.
TOPEKA — The chairman of the Kansas Corporation Commission issued a rare dissent when a majority on the regulatory commission imposed limits on a business coalition’s ability to argue against construction of a new transmission line carrying power from the Wolf Creek nuclear plant in Kansas to customers in Missouri.