Topeka daily brief

Topeka, Kansas and US news for busy people - Apr 24, 2026 edition

Topeka daily brief

Topeka

  • The city has scrapped plans to widen 45th Street between Gage Boulevard and Cambridge Avenue, opting instead for a $750,000 sidewalk project that will require acquiring right-of-way properties.
  • Ongoing underground water damage on 37th Street will require the replacement of a water line before crews can repave the surface to eliminate hazardous driving conditions.
  • A June 2 hearing will discuss a $9.8 million project adding 40 market-rate rental housing units, though city council members raised concerns about the projected $1,500-$1,750 monthly rents.
  • School district officials reported a surge in library checkouts as part of a targeted focus on literacy and student mental health.
  • The school board recognized retiring leader Susan Mills for expanding the district's mental health resources from 14 to 42 social workers during her tenure.
  • Shelly Prescott, owner of Prescott Performance Lab in McPherson, explains the importance of including mobility work in fitness routines.
  • It’s going to be a gorgeous, sunny day in Topeka with a high near 75 and just a light breeze from the north.

🌾 Kansas

  • Gov. Laura Kelly vetoed House Bill 2412, rejecting a Republican-led measure that would have required Kansas high school students to pass an American civics test before graduation, citing the state constitution's grant of curriculum authority to the State Board of Education.

  • Kansas voters will decide in the August 2026 primary whether to replace the state's merit-based Supreme Court selection system with direct elections, an amendment placed on the ballot by Republican lawmakers as the Supreme Court Nominating Commission begins filling the vacancy left by retiring Chief Justice Marla Luckert.

  • The Kansas State High School Activities Association Board of Directors voted 61-1 to sanction girls flag football as an official sport, with competition set to begin in the 2026-27 school year, making Kansas the 18th state to adopt the sport.

  • The Kansas Department of Labor began mailing notices to 8,526 individuals who collectively received $67.4 million in pandemic-era unemployment overpayments, warning that those who fail to respond may face liens, wage garnishment, or property seizure.

  • Six months after youth football coach Travon Stewart, 32, was fatally shot at a Wichita park during a youth football game, police have made no arrests, with Crime Stoppers offering a $10,000 reward for tips leading to an arrest.


🇺🇸 US

  • The U.S. has fired more than 1,000 Tomahawk missiles and up to 2,000 air-defense interceptors since the Iran war began Feb. 28, with officials warning depleted stockpiles could limit America's ability to defend Taiwan from a Chinese invasion in the near term.

  • Wall Street banks including JPMorgan Chase are struggling to offload billions in data center loans tied to Oracle, straining financing capacity for the AI buildout as internal lending caps force some developers to seek alternative tenants.

  • Disapproval of President Trump has risen to 58 percent — the highest of his second term — according to a New York Times polling average, amid rising gas prices linked to the Iran war and broader economic concerns.

  • Meta Platforms will lay off roughly 8,000 employees, about 10 percent of its workforce, in May to reduce costs and fund up to $135 billion in AI infrastructure spending this year.

  • U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer is pushing allies to pay a "national security premium" for critical minerals sourced outside China, with proposals for a trading bloc that would set minimum prices and impose steep tariffs on outside producers.


Weather

Weather


APRIL 24 1980: IRAN HOSTAGE RESCUE MISSION ENDS IN DISASTER

An attempted U.S. special-operations raid to free 52 American hostages in Tehran collapsed when multiple helicopters failed and one collided with a transport plane at a desert staging site. Eight U.S. servicemen were killed, no hostages were rescued, and President Jimmy Carter publicly took responsibility for the failed mission, which further damaged his presidency.


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