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- Kansas Sees Drop in Rural Mainstreet Economy, Farmland Price, and New Hiring; Sees Growth in Agriculture Goods and Livestock
- Papa Murphy’s Wichita Dishes Out More Than $30,000 to Student Employees in ‘Pay for A’s’ Program
- Kansas Parents Show Growing Support for Apprenticeships, Technical Schools
- Mid-America sees drop in Business Conditions; Kansas Sees Rise in Manufacturing Sector
- KU Announces Startup Help with FORGE Grant
- KC Fed: Regional manufacturing decline slows
- Elanco Animal Health expanding Elwood manufacturing facility
- First-Ever Kansas Local Food Summit Draws Overwhelming Interest
Author: Biz News Staff
Kansas businesses can hire community and technical college students for project based “Micro-Internship” projects for free through the Kansas Board of Regents. Interns will work on professional projects designed by employers, receive pay, and “resume-able” experience, at no additional cost to employers, thanks to grant funding. “This is a unique program for Kansas students to connect with far more Kansas employers today, tomorrow, and in the future, in a way that will hopefully provide immediate on-demand help for Kansas employers, seeking students to complete specific projects. said Tim Peterson, Kansas Board of Regents Senior Project Director. “This will hopefully also connect students…
TOPEKA, Kan. —Factory activity in the region including Kansas saw a further decline in March, according to the latest manufacturing survey from the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank.However, expectations for future activity are fixed said Chad Wilkerson, senior vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. “Regional factory activity fell further in March, and expectations for future activity were again steady,” Wilkerson said. “Employment levels expanded modestly even as production and new orders contracted, and over half of firms have given mid-year wage increases recently but fewer plan to this year.” The month-over-month composite index was -7 in…
TOPEKA, Kan.- Kansas business conditions dropped to 45.6 in March, down from 50.7 in February according to the monthly Business Conditions Index compiled by Creighton University. The index is the average of individual scores measuring new orders, production or sales, delivery lead time, employment, and inventories. Employment in Kansas measured at 31.9. According to the latest month’s U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data, there were two job openings for every unemployed worker in the state. This is the same ratio recorded 12 months earlier. Hiring in the nine-state MidAmerica Region survey came in at 40.9, said Ernie Goss, professor of…
Retail trade is the largest major industry in Kansas, supporting 24% of all jobs in the state, according to a new report from the National Retail Federation. Direct economic impact totals $18.3 billion per year, with 41 billion in total impact on state Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The retail industry is defined as selling directly to the consumer, including food services and drinking places. “From your favorite local coffee shop, to the place you pick up a new soccer ball for your kid, or grab supplies for your weekend gardening project, retail businesses support our way of life and it’s no surprise…
Kansas had 2,474 active apprentices in 2023, ranking 38th nationwide, according to a new report from the Kansas Department of Commerce. This marks an increase of 571 active apprentices compared to the previous year. In 2022, Governor Laura Kelly established the Kansas Office of Registered Apprenticeship under the Kansas Department of Commerce to “give workers the experience and skills to compete in the modern economy and knockdown employment barriers.” “This is not your grandfather’s apprenticeship program. I say this with full respect for skilled trades and past training methods. Our program is not a ‘less than’ training opportunity. It is…
TOPEKA, Kan.- Conditions in the Kansas rural economy sank this month, according to the latest economic report from Creighton University. The Kansas Rural Mainstreet Index for March fell to 30.2 from February’s 37.9. A score of 50 is considered growth neutral, while anything below 50 is considered contraction. “Higher interest rates, weaker agriculture commodity prices and higher grain storage costs pushed the overall reading to its lowest level since the early months of the pandemic,” said economics professor Ernie Goss of March’s report. Individual Indicators The state’s farmland price index fell to 52.1 in March, down from 54.1 in February. The new…
A new bill that would cut taxes for Kansas taxpayers and businesses is now under consideration by the Kansas House of Representatives Committee on Taxation after a hearing Wednesday. House Bill 2844 includes mechanisms to reduce Kansas individual income tax, property taxes, and business tax. Proponents of the bill included the Kansas Farm Bureau and Kansas Livestock Association, who say the reduction of the statewide property tax levied for schools from 20 to 18 mills will reduce tax liabilities for the farmers and ranchers they represent. “We support the broad-based property tax relief included in this bill,” John Donley, who…
Stan Ahlerich and Frank Henderson have worked in education and business for decades and noticed a significant gap between the job market’s needs and the skill sets of students graduating high school. Now they are changing that by giving students the opportunity to gain experience and certifications that match employer hiring needs before they graduate high school.
TOPEKA, Kan. – Kansas business conditions were a hair above growth neutral last month and declined from January according to the according to February’s Kansas Business Conditions Index The monthly survey of purchasing managers put Kansas at 50.7 in the second month of 2024. Economic optimism from all six states surveyed remained gloomy, but rose to 33.4, up from 31.9 in January. “Approximately 48% of supply managers expect worsening business conditions over the next six months,” said Ernie Goss, director of Creighton University’s Economic Forecasting Group. Individual Indicators a Mixed Bag In the Production or Sales index, Kansas scored 40.6 in…
WICHITA, Kan. – Delta Dental of Kansas on Friday announced Kristen Hoffman will now be Chief Operating and Experience Officer, overseeing operations and customer experience for employers and consumers managed by Delta Dental and its subsidiaries in 34 states. Hoffman has been with DDKS in various leadership roles for nearly 14 years, most recently as Vice President of Client Service. In that role, Kristen and her team achieved a 99.8% client retention and 98% broker and customer satisfaction rating. Under Kristen’s leadership, the customer service call center ranked top 10% in the United States by Benchmark Portal based on call…