Kansas daily brief

Kansas news for busy people - Mar 27, 2026 edition

Kansas daily brief

🌾 Kansas

  • Kansas lawmakers have sent a nearly $28 billion state budget to Gov. Laura Kelly with a 1% across-the-board salary increase for roughly 35,000 executive branch and public university workers, well below Kelly's recommended 2.5% raise.

  • Generation Z homebuyers are increasingly choosing Kansas and other Midwest markets, with Wichita's homeownership rate for residents under 35 at 18.4% — nearly 40% above the national average.

  • Manufacturing activity across the central United States expanded at its fastest pace in nearly four years in March, with the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's composite manufacturing index climbing to 11 from 5 in February.

  • Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed Senate Bill 368, which would have limited state regulators' authority to take action against certain health facilities, and announced Kansas will join the federal "A Home for Every Child" foster care initiative.

  • The Kansas Senate voted 39-0 to send Gov. Kelly legislation protecting parents who allow age-appropriate independent activities like outdoor play or walking to school from child welfare intervention based solely on unsupervised activity, commonly called 'free range parenting'.


🇺🇸 US

  • Trump extended a pause on U.S. military strikes against Iranian energy sites by 10 days, though peace talk mediators contradicted his account that Iran requested the extension.

  • Ukraine and Saudi Arabia signed a defense-cooperation agreement as Gulf nations seek Ukrainian expertise in repelling large-scale drone attacks.

  • The Senate voted early Friday to fund most of the Department of Homeland Security but excluded Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Border Patrol.

  • Every metro area in the United States experienced lower immigration rates during the year leading up to July 2025 compared with the previous year, according to new Census Bureau estimates.

  • The number of Americans worth tens of millions and hundreds of millions of dollars has surged in recent decades, with roughly 430,000 U.S. households now worth $30 million or more.


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March 27 1984: Hot Pockets trademarked


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