
Hazard Mitigation Plan updated
Other entities in Kansas Region E will also be required to adopt similar resolutions.
Kansas Region E includes Barton, Pawnee and Stafford counties, along with Barber, Comanche, Edwards, Kiowa and Pratt counties.
Mark Dean, Barton's vice president of administration, provided a copy of the plan — a document with 290 pages plus appendixes, and a resolution adopting it.
"We didn't write this, but we were involved in it," Dean said. "All cities, counties and colleges are required to approve the resolution. That allows us to be eligible for FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) dollars."
Other entities in Kansas Region E will also be required to adopt similar resolutions.
Other adopting jurisdictions in Barton County are the City of Albert, City of Claflin, City of Ellinwood, City of Hoisington, City of Pawnee Rock, City of Susank, USD 112 Claflin, USD 355 Ellinwood, USD 428 Great Bend, USD 431 Hoisington, Ark Valley Rural Electric Cooperative (REC), Midwest Energy, Rolling Hills REC, Sunflower Electric, Western Electric, Wheatland Electric, Post Rock Rural Water District and Rural Water District #3.
The introduction to the plan explains its purpose:
Hazard mitigation is commonly defined as sustained action taken to reduce or eliminate long-term risk to people and their property from hazards and their effects. Hazard mitigation planning provides communities with a roadmap to aid in the creation and revision of policies and procedures, and the use of available resources, to provide long-term, tangible benefits to the community. A well-designed hazard mitigation plan provides communities with realistic actions that can be taken to reduce potential vulnerability and exposure to identified hazards.
This multi-jurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan (HMP) was prepared to provide sustained actions to eliminate or reduce risk to people and property from the effects of natural and man-made hazards. This plan documents the Kansas Region E and its participating jurisdictions planning process and identifies applicable hazards, vulnerabilities, and hazard mitigation strategies. This plan will serve to direct available community and regional resources towards creating policies and actions that provide long-term benefits to the community. Local and regional officials can refer to the plan when making decisions regarding regulations and ordinances, granting permits, and in funding capital improvements and other community initiatives.
According to FEMA, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and five territories including American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands have approved mitigation plans. A total of over 21,227 local governments and 196 tribal governments have approved or approvable-pending-adoption mitigation plans.
The nation's population who live in communities with current mitigation plans is nearly 80.9%. States, tribes, territories, and local governments benefit from all hazard planning because it helps them understand natural hazards and develop mitigation strategies. It also provides eligibility for certain non-emergency FEMA grants.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Quincy's Scott Campbell faces crowded field in bid to retain at-large council seat
QUINCY ‒ Incumbent Councilor-at-large Scott Campbell's bid for a second term pits him against seven competitors for three seats. A Tuesday, Sept. 2, preliminary election will whittle the crowded field to six candidates who will appear on the ballot for the November general election. During an interview at the city council's offices in City Hall, Campbell said he's running on making housing affordable and continuing the council's support for Mayor Thomas Koch's transformation of the city. Campbell described himself as a lifelong Quincy resident and the youngest of eight in a family committed to community service, primarily through sports. Campbell said he continues that legacy to this day by coaching and organizing an annual golf tournament for alumni of Quincy and North Quincy High's football program. "I stayed involved my entire life," Campbell said. "Not because it's something good to do. It's a responsibility." Campbell began his professional life working in sales and customer relations for the telecommunications sector, including such firms as Granite Telecom and AT&T. But when he turned 30, he determined it was more of job than a vocation. In 2001, Campbell joined former Quincy city councilor, state treasurer and gubernatorial candidate Tim Cahill as a special aide, later rising to the position of chief of staff. Campbell described Cahill as a role model in politics. "The stances he took may not always have been popular," Campbell said. "It was the right thing. It wasn't always the easy thing." Campbell began a new job in January with the Massachusetts Sheriffs Association as director of government affairs. He was elected to city council in 2023 in an uncontested race. Quincy City Council candidate Scott Campbell: On affordability Asked what he hopes to accomplish if reelected, Campbell said he's focused on making the city affordable to live in for three generations of families. He said there are existing options, such as property tax abatements for veterans and seniors, which everyone may not know how to access. Campbell also named the Affordable Housing Trust Fund as part of a strategy to bring down housing costs. Private developers building market rate housing in the city can pay into the fund in lieu of building affordable units as part of their own projects. "Can we find a way to utilize that money," Campbell said. Quincy City Council candidate Scott Campbell: On the raises In the spring of 2024, Campbell and the rest of the council approved a 79% raise that Koch proposed for himself, increasing the mayor's salary from about $159,000 to $285,000. At the same time, Koch proposed a roughly 50% raise for the councilors, which increased their pay from $29,500 to $44,500. The council approved that raise as well. After the State Ethics Commission launched a conflict-of-interest inquiry, Koch and the councilors deferred the raises until after the next elections. The raises take effect in 2026 for the councilors and 2028 for the mayor. Or perhaps not for the mayor. A group of Quincy residents are working to put a citizen petition on November's ballot that would set the mayor's salary at $184,000 and take away elected officials' ability to increase their own salaries. Campbell defended his support for the mayor's raise by highlighting what he sees as the city's progress over the 17 years of Koch's tenure. "This is a national story here with the transformation of Quincy," he said. "By and large, it has been extremely successful." Asked why he didn't recognize that the mayor's and council's actions may have violated state conflict-of-interest law, which bars public officials from participating in matters in which they have a direct financial interest, Campbell said that others led the "process" which he only followed. "We were relying on a process," he said. "That process was presented to us." Asked who presented him with the process, Campbell named City Solicitor Jim Timmins and Council President Ian Cain. Performing arts, presidential center: Quincy reveals big new plans. With no price tag. Or address Courts: Quincy health commissioner will fight drunken driving charge at trial, lawyer says Quincy City Council candidate Scott Campbell: On the statues Speaking on the two, 10-foot-tall bronze statues of St. Michael and St. Florian planned for the façade of the new public safety building, Campbell said his initial response was concern over their pricetag, but ultimately he supports them. "My biggest issue was the cost," Campbell said. "At the end of the day, they fell within their budget." The statues cost $850,000, according to city officials. Commissioned as early as 2023, they were not disclosed to the city council, which approved the project's budget, or the residents until The Patriot Ledger reported on them in February. "By and large, (the public safety building) was managed in a really great way," Campbell said of the $175 million project. "We're talking about a landmark building, a 100-year building. To over simplify it, you don't buy a new suit and wear old shoes." Campbell said he doesn't think the statues violate the constitutional separation of church and state. Rather than Catholic figures, he said St. Michael and St. Florian are "accepted symbols of spirituality" for police and firefighters and "less about religion and more about protection." Three civil liberties organizations sued the city on behalf of 15 residents, claiming that Koch violated Article 3 of the state constitution, which bars government from elevating one religion over others. The plaintiffs are seeking a court order prohibiting installation of the statues, which are scheduled to go up in early October. Peter Blandino covers Quincy for The Patriot Ledger. Contact him at pblandino@ Thanks to our subscribers, who help make this coverage possible. If you are not a subscriber, please consider supporting quality local journalism with a Patriot Ledger subscription. Here is our latest offer. This article originally appeared on The Patriot Ledger: Incumbent at-large councilor Scott Campbell runs for re-election Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
DC Council rips Trump's ‘manufactured intrusion on local authority'
The D.C. City Council condemned President Trump's federalization of the city's police force and plans to deploy the National Guard to fight crime in the city. 'This is a manufactured intrusion on local authority. Violent crime in the District is at the lowest rates we've seen in 30 years. Federalizing the Metropolitan Police Department is unwarranted because there is no Federal emergency,' the council said in a statement. 'Further, the National Guard has no public safety training or knowledge of local laws. The Guard's role does not include investigating or solving crimes in the District. Calling out the National Guard is an unnecessary deployment with no real mission.' Under the Home Rule Act, Trump can temporarily take control of the District's police department if he determines 'special conditions of an emergency nature exist.' The president announced Monday he was declaring a public safety emergency in the District. 'It's becoming a situation of complete and total lawlessness,' Trump said at a Monday morning press conference. But that claim does not align with crime rates in the city. According to the council, violent crime in the city has decreased by almost 50 percent over the last two years, a dynamic they credit to staying 'laser focused on driving down crime' to some of the lowest figures in decades. 'The President was unable to cite any evidence that our MPD is not able to do the job. Let's stay focused,' the council wrote. 'Taking over our police department and deploying hundreds of National Guard members is not the hard work of public safety — it is a show of force without impact.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Solve the daily Crossword

Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Councilman resigns days after WP council selects mayor pro tem
WILLOW PARK — City council members selected a mayor pro tem on Tuesday and hired landscapers for a beautification project on Interstate 20 during a largely drama-free meeting. The drama came later in the week, when Willow Park Councilman Greg Runnebaum resigned his seat — for the second time in as many months. 'Essentially, what he told me he was not going to put up with it anymore,' city spokeswoman Rose Hoffman said Friday. Runnebaum previously stepped off the five-member council in July, but changed his mind within the eight days needed for it to take effect. Councilwoman Lea Young had resigned within days of Runnebaum, and with two vacancies the city would have had to hold a special election. Runnebaum changing his mind eliminated that special ballot, leaving him and the rest of the council free to appoint a replacement for Young. Tuesday's meeting was new Councilman Scott Smith's first. Runnebaum was not immediately available for comment Friday. Hoffman said Friday she has not yet received direction from the council on proceeding. With an Aug. 26 council meeting canceled by Mayor Teresa Palmer, the next scheduled session is Sept. 9. The council also trimmed its Christmas lighting project to decorate only city hall, in a cost-cutting move. But one of some 35 residents attending the meeting in the Trinity Christian Academy gym announced his business would decorate parks and other areas cut from the holiday lighting plan. 'Thank you so much,' Palmer told Rod Foreman, who stood up after the council agreed to spend $34,100 on city hall lighting. 'That's wonderful.' The price tag was trimmed from an initial $46,955 in a proposal that included the public safety building and King's Gate, Cross Timbers and Memorial parks. 'If we're shy (of funds), we'll do the rest of it,' Foreman had said, after motioning to the mayor he wished to speak. Tuesday's session was markedly less volatile than some recent meetings, during which residents in a packed gallery consistently spoke up when they disagreed with something said on the council dais — or with what someone was saying during the public comments section of the agenda. 'I hope for better things out of all of you,' resident Clifford Voorhies said during the comments section, after congratulating Smith for his appointment to succeed Young, who resigned in July. 'It's OK to disagree on how the city should move forward, but at the end of the day you accept the direction the council has chosen.' Clifford was one of five who spoke during the comments section, all to applause. Young also had been the city's mayor pro tem. and Councilman Nathan Crummel was appointed Tuesday to that second-in-charge position after debate over whether to also name an alternate mayor pro tem to lead meetings when both the mayor and pro tem are absent. Crummel and Smith, the latter of whom ascended from the city's planning and zoning commission, had asked for some mechanism for when the pair are unavailable. Palmer suggested the most senior council member lead meetings in her and the pro tem's absence, and Runnebaum included that in his motion naming Crummel as pro tem. The council on Tuesday also met Andy Messer, a municipal attorney invited by Councilman Chawn Gilliland, who had been assigned to find a replacement for William Chesser. The city attorney also resigned in July. Messer, co-principal in statewide municipal law firm Messer & Fort, sort of saved the meeting when council members hesitated to hire the firm without researching an engagement letter they were just then seeing. 'A lot of these things (on the agenda) are tied to having an attorney,' Palmer said, with the city attorney item third among 23 agenda items. The lawyer, whose firm also represents Mineral Wells, suggested the council appoint him as its interim city attorney to get them through the session, which they did and moved on. Just before that item, the council had approved City Manager Bryan Grimes' recommendation that the city attorney position be moved from under the city manager's oversight to report directly to the council. Grimes' position with the city has been uncertain, chiefly owing to a contentious relationship between him and the mayor. The council emerged from a closed session later Tuesday to authorize a continued negotiation toward a separation agreement between Grimes and the city. Also Tuesday, the council agreed to spend $80,000 of a $400,000 beautification grant from the Texas Department of Transportation on a section off Interstate 20 at Mikus Road. Under TxDOT's Green Ribbon grant program, the city pays the landscaper and is reimbursed by the state. Other council actions Tuesday included the following: — Renewal of an interlocal agreement in which the Parker County Sheriff's Office handles dispatching for the Willow Park Police Department. The cost is $107,908, Chief Ray Lacy said. 'I cannot put in a dispatch center for that amount of money,' said Lacy, who was hired in March. The chief also said he would bring a renewal of an agreement to use the Parker County Jail to the next council meeting. — Authorized city staff to work with developer Skorburg Co. to write an agreement to build a 244-lot high-end housing development on 82 acres overlapping Willow Park's northwest city limit. Skorburg Development Partner Bryan Holland told the council lots are slightly less than one-quarter acre. He also said design for The Clearion and The Heights of Clearion additions ' ...was based on our conversations with the council and neighbors.' Meeting backup material shows plans for homes of 5,000- to 19,800-square feet ranging from $460,000 to $1 million. Resident Mark Wagner had signed up to speak on the development when the agenda item arose. He said the council should better maintain existing infrastructure before adding more development. 'The roads are junk, the water is failing,' he said. 'And now we're planning on doubling down with the addition of these houses.' — Appointed 14 residents to a commission that will be tasked with writing a charter for Willow Park to become a home rule city. Such a classification would give Willow Park more autonomy from the state than it has now as a type A general law city. The mayor selected the members from 28 applicants she attracted on her mayoral Facebook page. She said their work will ' ...allow the citizens to define the framework for the city's future.' Palmer is targeting a May 2026 public referendum on the document the commission writes. Its meetings will be open to the public. Commission members are Tandy Blackstock, Darrell Boughner, Carol Bracken, Michael Chandler, Mary Diedrich, Gwendolyn Galle, Charles Gilchrist, Charles Hodges, Roy Kurban, David Laurenzo, Gene Martin, Dixie Smith, Jonathan Stickland and Brian VonHatten. Solve the daily Crossword