Hillsboro Free Press - logo

Navigation


Business/Farm

Goessel city hall to be tested as center for commodities

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Written by Cynthia Goerzen Tuesday, 28 February 2012 16:22

The Goessel City Council discussed at its Feb. 23 meeting using city hall as a distribution center for government commodities in the community.

The council met Thursday because its usual meeting day on Monday was a federal holiday.

Gayla Ratzlaff, coordinator for the Marion County Department on Aging, attended the meeting to discuss commodity distribution with the council. She said income and family size determine eligibility for commodities, which are available four or five times a year...

Read more: Goessel city hall to be tested as center for commodities

 

Marion City Council raises fee for some permits

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Written by Patty Decker Tuesday, 28 February 2012 16:21

After reviewing what other cities charge for conditional-use, variances and rezoning permits, the Marion City Council Feb. 20 approved raising its fees from $16 to $75 for each kind of permit.

“The fee of $16 is too little, but $75 is regionally responsible,” said City Administrator Doug Kjellin, who provided council members with a breakdown of permit charges in use by nine cities similar in size to Marion.

Fredonia, Westmoreland, Hiawatha, Cherryvale, Kechi, Solomon, Blue Valley, Neodesha and Bennington were included in the comparison.

The research showed that Neodesha has no fee for the three permits in question.

Blue Valley charges $25 for all three. At the high end was Kechi, which charges $300 for conditional-use, $175 for a...

Read more: Marion City Council raises fee for some permits

 

Awarded for service

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Written by Hillsboro Free Press Tuesday, 21 February 2012 16:49

ConservationAwardSudermans4712

Dawn and Joel Suderman hold the plaque Joel received at the annual meeting for his one term on the Marion County Conservation District board and his work as treasurer. Steve Bartel received a service award for his nine years of board membership, including several as chairman.

   

Meterologist says Marion County near the end of its drought status

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Written by Patty Decker Tuesday, 21 February 2012 16:48

ConservationDinnerSpeaker4722 Meterologist Chance Hayes told his audience that the average temperature in 2011 was actually close to the 30-year average. Chance Hayes, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Wichita, was the guest speaker at Saturday’s 66th annual Marion County Conservation District dinner.

For those attending the dinner who might have thought this year’s warmer temperatures are not normal, Hayes offered statistics to show that this year is close to 30-year average from 1982 through 2012.

“In 1991, the average temperature was 56.5 degrees, which is 13 degrees higher than it is now,” he said.

Hayes also compared temperatures from last year to this year.

“Last year’s average low was 30.8 degrees compared to this year’s low of 43.1, making it 8.6 degrees lower last year,” he said.

He also talked about some of the highest temperatures...

Read more: Meterologist says Marion County near the end of its drought status

 

Kirkpatrick foresees farming in his future

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintEmail

Written by Jerry Engler Tuesday, 21 February 2012 16:47

SoilConMatthewKirkpatrick Matthew Kirkpatrick’s plan is to work in agri-business for three years before coming home to farm. This year’s Young Conser­va­tion Farmer Award winner for the Marion County Natural Resources and Conservation Services District seems to be able to stand the world on its head.

Matthew Kirkpatrick is beginning his farming career from a different perspective than many of his predecessors.

He is 23, and is months away from finishing his degree in production agronomy at Kansas State University.

Yet, he is still working for Monsanto in Manhattan during the school year, planning to work for Pioneer Seeds at Garden City during the summer before returning home to Marion County to farm with his father, Duane, permanently—if he carries through on plans to work in agri-business for only three years.

Add to this the fact that he has...

Read more: Kirkpatrick foresees farming in his future

   

Page 19 of 113