McPherson daily brief

McPherson, Kansas and US news for busy people - May 20, 2026 edition

McPherson daily brief
Meet Turkey Creek's temporary grounds crew: 200 goats, contracted by the city to clear brush near Avenue A over the next 4–5 days. Steer clear of the electric fence.

McPherson

  • The McPherson High School boys baseball team won the Class 4A regional championship in McPherson, advancing to the state tournament.
  • The McPherson High School girls softball team won the Class 4A regional championship on May 19 to advance to the state tournament.
  • The McPherson High School boys varsity golf team placed third at the Class 4A regional tournament in Cheney to advance to state.
  • The City of McPherson contracted with Restoration Grazing to deploy 200 goats to clear brush at Turkey Creek Golf Course.
  • The McPherson Public Lands and Facilities Department will host a ribbon-cutting for a new shade structure at the Downtown Plaza on Wednesday.
  • The McPherson City Commission approved a special use permit for a new church to lease space on West Fourth Street near the hospital.
  • The McPherson City Commission approved Ordinance 3461, raising the minimum age from 18 to 21 to enter smoking lounges.
  • The McPherson City Commission set a July 21, 2026, public hearing for a proposed annexation of commercial land south of Love's.
  • The McPherson City Commission approved a rezoning request to allow the construction of new duplexes on three residential parcels.
  • Expect a mostly cloudy Tuesday in McPherson with a high of 63°F and breezy north winds gusting up to 28 mph.
Calendar McPherson CJ

🌾 Kansas

  • Vice President JD Vance rallied in Kansas City Tuesday, praising Missouri's Republican-drawn redistricting map targeting Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver's seat and promoting the Trump administration's manufacturing agenda.

  • The Kansas Secretary of State's Office has launched Esper software statewide to replace a decades-old paper-based rulemaking system, completing the first-ever overhaul of the state's regulatory process.

  • No Labels Kansas notified Secretary of State Scott Schwab's office Friday that it is terminating its status as a recognized political party, with affected voter registrations to be moved to unaffiliated.

  • A U.S. Air Force Beechcraft T-6A Texan II trainer landed gear-up at McConnell Air Force Base on Tuesday after failed landing attempts at Hutchinson Regional Airport, with both pilots uninjured.

  • Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Rashee Rice was ordered Tuesday to serve 30 days in jail after testing positive for marijuana in violation of probation terms stemming from a 2024 Dallas highway crash.


🇺🇸 US

  • Trump-backed challenger Ed Gallrein defeated seven-term Rep. Thomas Massie in Kentucky's Republican primary, 55% to 45%, after Trump targeted Massie for repeatedly defecting from his agenda.

  • Trump endorsed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton over incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in the May 26 Republican Senate runoff, raising GOP concerns that a Paxton nomination could jeopardize the party's 53-47 Senate majority.

  • The Senate voted 50-47 to advance a war powers resolution limiting Trump's ability to strike Iran without congressional approval, with Sen. Bill Cassidy casting the decisive vote days after losing his Louisiana primary.

  • The CFTC is investigating more than $800 million in oil futures trades executed minutes before Trump announced a pause on Iran strikes March 23, with at least five firms posting gains of $5 million or more on the moves.

  • The U.S. and Israel planned to install former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as Iran's new leader, but the scheme collapsed on the first day of the conflict when an Israeli strike intended to free him from house arrest instead injured him.


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MAY 20, 1862: PRESIDENT LINCOLN SIGNS HOMESTEAD ACT OPENING THE GREAT PLAINS TO SETTLERS

The Homestead Act granted 160 acres of federal land to eligible settlers who agreed to live on and improve the property, accelerating migration into the Great Plains. In what is now Kansas, it spurred a wave of small farms and townsites, reshaping the state’s economy, politics and landscape. By 1900, homesteaders and speculators together had claimed tens of millions of acres, anchoring Kansas’s long-term identity as an agricultural state.


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