McPherson daily brief
McPherson, Kansas and US news for busy people - Jun 10, 2026 edition
McPherson
- Kimberly Horn, a McPherson daycare owner accused of child abuse and endangerment, will stand trial following a court ruling. →
- The McPherson County Commission approved a $9,500 payment to Rice County to house overflow jail inmates due to local space limits. →
- The McPherson County Commission approved temporary closures of the clerk, treasurer, and motor vehicle offices for relocation in June. →
- McPherson County will receive its first half-cent Emergency Medical Services sales tax disbursement of about $334,000 in late June. →
- The McPherson County Commission approved a $5,765 change order for security cameras and a card reader in new ballot storage rooms. →
- McPherson County was denied three state bridge grants, prompting public works crews to shift focus to summer road overlay projects. →
- The McPherson ReUse It Center distributed its May funds to the Omega Project, McPherson Area Habitat for Humanity, and FYR Mac-Town. →
- Get ready for a hot and windy Wednesday, McPherson, with plenty of sunshine and a high near 95°F, though those southwest gusts could reach up to 32 mph.
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🌾 Kansas
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Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, Senate President Ty Masterson and allied groups are backing a constitutional amendment to replace the merit-based nominating process for Kansas Supreme Court justices with partisan elections, with voters deciding the question on the Aug. 4 primary ballot. →
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A 115 mph windstorm struck Salina on June 8, snapping roughly 200 power poles, knocking out power to 105,000 customers across multiple cities and leaving an estimated 40,000 customers facing a multi-day wait for restoration. →
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Five Republican incumbents are leaving the Kansas State Board of Education, opening half the 10-member board's seats ahead of contested Aug. 4 primary races in three districts. →
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Kansas wheat harvest opened June 9 in Sumner and Kiowa counties, with early test weights of 59–60 pounds per bushel recorded in Sumner County, even as USDA rated 57% of the statewide crop poor or very poor. →
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The Wichita City Council voted unanimously June 9 to approve up to $450 million in industrial revenue bonds for Boeing's Wichita campus, enabling a 10-year property tax abatement valued at roughly $100 million as part of Boeing's previously announced $1 billion investment in the city. →
🇺🇸 US
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Marine veteran Graham Platner won Maine's Democratic U.S. Senate primary with 72% of the vote, setting up a high-stakes fall challenge to incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins in a race Democrats see as critical to flipping chamber control. →
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The House passed a $70 billion immigration enforcement bill 214-212 on a party-line vote, as border czar Tom Homan announced a coming surge of ICE agents into New York City in response to a state law barring local police cooperation with federal immigration enforcement. →
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The House passed a Democratic bill 230-193 to fast-track contract negotiations for newly formed unions, with 20 Republicans breaking from party leaders to force the measure to the floor. →
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U.S. forces struck Iranian air defenses, radar sites and ground control stations near the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for Iran's downing of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter off Oman, with Iran responding by launching drone and missile attacks against U.S. military facilities in Bahrain and Kuwait. →
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Chinese President Xi Jinping concluded a two-day state visit to Pyongyang, pledging with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to deepen "strategic coordination" as the two countries reaffirmed their alliance amid North Korea's growing ties with Russia. →
Weather


JUNE 10, 1692: FIRST SALEM WITCH HANGING
Bridget Bishop, the first colonist tried in the Salem witch trials, was executed by hanging in Salem Village after being found guilty of practicing witchcraft. Her death marked the beginning of a wave of hysteria that would lead to more than 150 accusations and 19 executions before the trials were halted.
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