However, Kansas also had its own concrete road, which was built around the same time. At a minimum, it was the first concrete road west of the Mississippi. However, it may be even
Kansas is experiencing record-high tuberculosis cases in two counties. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment and a TB expert weigh in on the public risk.
TOPEKA — Apolina Bahati’s decades-long journey to United States citizenship came to a close Monday at a naturalization ceremony in the marble-enveloped rotunda of the Kansas Capitol.
Ahead of Sunday’s AFC Championship Game between the Chiefs and Bills, most of the country is rooting for Buffalo. BetOnline.ag studied geotagged X posts and found fans in just six states are rooting for the Chiefs now: Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, Rhode Island and New Hampshire.
The outbreak poses “very low risk to the general public, including the surrounding counties,” the Kansas Department of Health and Environment said.
About 340 communities throughout the United States have red light cameras ... and pedestrian injuries. Read on to see how Kansas compares to others in traffic camera laws, and check out the national analysis here. Red light and speed cameras are typically ...
Several communities, including in Kansas City, shared their perspectives on the immigrant ... including immigrants and second-generation Americans whose parents immigrated to the United States. The conversations reveal a timeline of the immigrant ...
The largest tuberculosis outbreak in the U.S. occurred from 2015 through 2017 at a homeless shelter in Georgia, which was responsible for more than 170 active cases and more than 400 latent cases, according to the CDC, which began tracking TB cases in the 1950s.
Two deaths and 67 active cases mark Kansas City's worst tuberculosis outbreak in years. Here's what health officials want you to know about this growing crisis.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - On Tuesday, a federal judge temporarily blocked a plan to freeze federal funding for trillions of dollars. It caused panic for many legislators, nonprofits, and families, while some feel this is a step in the right direction.
The outbreak is real, but Jill Bronaugh, the communications director at the Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE), told Snopes via email that it posed a "very low risk" to the general public.