Skip Navigation
 

Notices

Applications Open for Second Cohort of Kansas Commerce Rural Champions Lieutenant Governor and Commerce Secretary David Toland today announced that the Office of Rural Prosperity has opened applications for the second cohort of Rural by Choice Champions. Governor Kelly Announces Kansas Moving Forward with $451.7M High-Speed Internet Deployment Plan Governor Laura Kelly today announced federal approval of the state’s Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Initial Proposal Volume 2, providing an investment of more than $450 million to expand Kansas’ high-speed internet infrastructure. Funding will be granted to areas that have been identified as underserved through a competitive application process that will begin in July. Kansas Tourism Announces Participating Attractions for the Sunflower Summer Program for Kansas Families Kansas Tourism is pleased to announce the lineup of attractions participating in the 2024 Sunflower Summer program. Designed as a benefit for Kansas families with school-age children, Sunflower Summer offers a way to explore and fall in love with Kansas by providing complimentary access to tourism attractions across the state. Kansas-Based IST Offers One-Stop Service for Food Processing Sector Industrial Service Technologies (IST) specializes in turn-key design, manufacturing and installation services for food production clients and other manufacturing operations nationwide, with company headquarters and its metal fabrication division based in Tonganoxie. View All

Menu

Business Regions Made in Kansas Our Department Publications Initiatives & Incentives Transparency Database About Us Notices Contact
Back
Back

Lt. gov. visits area and holds summit on rural prosperity

Jul 10, 2019

Share this post:

About 70 area residents gathered at the Winfield Community Center at Baden Square in Winfield Monday night to define prosperity, what is being done right to encourage prosperity and what is standing in the way of that prosperity in their communities.

Among those present, there was a confluence of opinion in each of those categories. The crowd was answering the call of Lt. Gov. Lynn Rogers, who is conducting a 12-city listening tour of rural Kansas communities to find out what residents think the state government can do to help the rural areas of the state thrive.

Rogers, with Sarah Werner, CEO of the Winfield Area Chamber of Commerce, and Kerri Falletti, director of Cowley First, had spent the day touring Cowley County cities and visiting with people in different businesses and industries.

The people attending the meeting came from communities as least as far west as Wellington and as far east as Independence. Several legislators, both current and former, were on hand.

Rogers introduced the exercise that took up most of the meeting, then people were divided into groups according to colored dots on their name tags.

Each group was led by someone from among the tour organizers.

The groups were asked to list their responses to the three questions on prosperity, what’s good about area and what stands in the way. They were also asked to choose the most important elements in each category.

Rogers said his Office of Rural Prosperity will collect the answers and determine what can be done to facilitate changes needed to improve rural living.

One woman, Tabatha Rosproy, lead teacher at Cumbernauld Little Vikings, said for her prosperity meant that every single person has to prosper.

Several of the elements that contribute to the area’s prosperity include: a community united in its willingness to volunteer; good public schools; good infrastructure (roads that get you where you want to go quickly); enlightened forefathers in Winfield who developed city-owned utilities; two colleges that contribute to the area’s culture as well as education; access to quality health care, especially in Winfield; vibrant downtown areas; a strong industrial base.

What could be done better include: Medicaid expansion so more people have access to healthcare; better responses from politicians to the people’s needs and requests; better and more affordable housing; dealing with the drug problem; affordable daycare; getting rid of sales tax on food; early childhood education for everyone; better pay, a real living wage; cleaning up blighted city neighborhoods; better access to broadband internet.

The attendees were asked to rate what they thought was the most important thing that needed to be addressed and they agreed on better responses from Topeka and the political parties to their needs.

The lieutenant governor’s office will send out reports of what they found on the tours when they are completed.

Content retrieved from: http://www.ctnewsonline.com/news/article_d74f07de-a2ab-11e9-a657-d32c1f601dd9.html.


en_USEnglish