McPherson daily brief
McPherson, Kansas and US news for busy people - Jun 3, 2026 edition
McPherson
- The McPherson Industrial Development Company reported $71 million in capital investments and 50 new jobs in its pipeline. →
- The McPherson Industrial Development Company is using a state grant to offer incentives to attract out-of-state manufacturing workers. →
- McPherson USD 418 delayed the implementation of a new manufacturing education program at McPherson High School until 2027. →
- The McPherson Board of Public Utilities urged commercial customers to shift electricity loads to avoid peak charges during summer months. →
- The McPherson City Commission announced that surveying is complete for the West Kansas Avenue reconstruction project. →
- The McPherson City Commission announced phase three of the Avenue A trail project is advancing, with construction planned for spring 2027. →
- The McPherson Fire Department returned from a deployment assisting with a 130,000-acre wildfire in Clark and Meade counties. →
- We're looking at a mostly cloudy Wednesday in McPherson with a 30% chance of showers and thunderstorms and a high near 81°F, along with some breezy south-southeast winds.
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🌾 Kansas
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Kansas's four U.S. House incumbents and Republican Sen. Roger Marshall will face a combined 25 challengers in the Aug. 4 primary following the June 1 filing deadline. →
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The U.S. Senate confirmed Jeffrey M. Kuhlman of Great Bend as U.S. District Judge for the District of Kansas on June 2 by a party-line vote of 52-46. →
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The Finney County Board of Commissioners voted 4-0 to approve special-use permits for Sherlock Solar LLC, a 400-megawatt facility spanning roughly 6,150 acres south of Holcomb, with construction slated to begin in spring 2027. →
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Kansas State University agronomist Romulo Lollato warned this week that Kansas wheat producers are seeing yield reductions of up to 20% due to spring drought, late freezes and disease pressure. →
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The Kansas Board of Regents plans to vote in mid-June on a proposal allowing state universities to offer bachelor's degrees requiring as few as 90 credit hours instead of the traditional 120. →
🇺🇸 US
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Tech companies have committed record capital to data center construction, but a JPMorgan analysis found more than 60% of capacity planned for 2027 completion is not yet under construction, with supply-chain backlogs, permitting disputes and power shortages driving delays. →
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President Trump signed an executive order June 2 asking AI companies including Anthropic, OpenAI and Google to voluntarily share frontier models with the federal government up to 30 days before public release for national-security review, while explicitly barring mandatory licensing or pre-clearance requirements. →
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Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass secured her spot in a November runoff but faces Republican reality TV personality Spencer Pratt as her likely opponent, making her the first incumbent LA mayor to face a runoff since 2005, while a Trump-endorsed Republican held a narrow early lead in the California governor's race. →
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A Harvard-led study of more than 5,300 adults published in the American Journal of Public Health found that those who ate the most ultraprocessed foods had a 58% higher risk of developing dementia than those who ate the least. →
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U.S. and Iranian forces exchanged strikes in the Persian Gulf after the U.S. disabled an Iranian oil tanker breaching its blockade, prompting drone attacks, ballistic missile launches at Kuwait and Bahrain, and a deadly drone strike on Kuwait's international airport, even as Central Command said the April ceasefire remained technically in effect. →
Weather

JUNE 3 1889: FIRST LONG-DISTANCE ELECTRIC POWER LINE OPENS IN OREGON
The new line carried hydroelectric power 14 miles from Willamette Falls to Portland, Oregon, proving that electricity could be transmitted efficiently over distance. This breakthrough came before most homes were wired, laying crucial groundwork for America’s future electric grid.
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