Kansas
Registration open to attend free KC conference on navigating your financial future

TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) – The Kansas State Treasurer’s office says the registration is now open for women across the region to expand their financial expertise at the Kansas City Women & Money conference. State Treasurer Steven Johnson’s office says the event is free.
The purpose behind the Women & Money event is an educational opportunity for women to grow their knowledge of finances and give them the tools they need to navigate their finances, whether they want to save money, resolve debt, talk to children about money, or start their own business.
The conference schedule consists of hearing success stories from national and local financial leaders, networking opportunities, and breakfast and lunch will be provided.
The Master of Ceremony will be FOX 4 KC anchor Loren Halifax who will guide the attendees and conduct drawings for some door prizes included.
“Financial health is one of the most important elements in our overall well-being,” said Kansas State Treasurer Steven Johnson. “Wherever you are in your financial journey, the State Treasurer’s Office and our Women and Money partners want to help you identify [the] next steps to build and protect your financial health. Thanks to our partners, this event is being offered at no cost to attendees.”
The conference will be held at Children’s Mercy Park, home of Sporting KC, on Oct. 15, 2024.
More information about this event can be found HERE or by calling 785-296-3171. Space is limited and all spots are on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Copyright 2024 WIBW. All rights reserved.

Kansas
Panasonic’s vision for massive Kansas battery plant becomes reality with grand opening
Kansas
Patrick Mahomes in a dome? The Kansas City Chiefs’ terrifyingly good idea

Former Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes has been an unstoppable force since joining the Kansas City Chiefs. The young gunslinger has already won three Super Bowls (2020, 2023, 2024) and added two NFL MVPs to his resume (2018, 2022). Mahomes and the Chiefs have been perennial Super Bowl contenders since he took over the starting role. Based on his stats and accolades, it doesn’t appear that Mahomes needs any other advantages to continue his dominance of the NFL and his onslaught of the NFL record books. The Kansas City Chiefs organization disagrees.
Mahomes put up video game-like numbers while quarterbacking the Texas Tech Red Raiders. One advantage he had in Lubbock was playing on turf. Turf play speeds the game up and allows receivers to make more crisp and concise cuts, increasing the chances of separation from hapless defensive backs and linebackers. Mahomes used this to his advantage, utilizing his incredible accuracy to put the ball where his receivers would be, and not allowing defenders a chance to interfere with the passing game plan. The Chiefs want to give that advantage back to their star quarterback.
Kansas is dangling the idea of a domed stadium to the Chiefs, hoping to turn the state into a “professional sports powerhouse.”
The Chiefs are delaying their stadium decision as they weigh their future either in Missouri or Kansas.
— Front Office Sports (@FOS) July 13, 2025
Putting Mahomes in a dome does two things: it removes the weather aspect and puts his speedy wideouts back on turf. Thinking about Kansas City speedster Xavier Worthy on turf with Mahomes throwing to him harkens me back to the St Louis Rams days of old. The Rams were known as “the fastest show on turf.” They destroyed NFL offensive records on their way to a Super Bowl win in 2000 over the Tennessee Titans. If the Chiefs can pull off this dome dream, Mahomes could elevate his game even further than it already is. The Chiefs and Mahomes would revitalize their franchise, giving them a marked advantage over visiting teams.
– Enjoy more Texas Tech coverage on Texas Tech On SI –
Kansas
Explore Kansas Outdoors: Insect removal technicians

By STEVE GILLILAND
Explore Kansas Outdoors
As we walked up the sidewalk and across the patio at my grandson’s house the other night we had to watch our footing as the ground practically moved beneath our feet.
Dozens of tiny toads the size of quarters hopped in every direction with each step. An adult toad the size of a peach, probably dad or grandpa, perched at the top of the porch. We usually have multitudes of toads at the Gilliland ranch every summer, tumbling from beneath the tomato plants or leaping from under the lilacs. This year though, oddly enough our place seems to be “toad deficient.” I miss the little blighters as they are nature’s ground crew for insect control.
Toad… the name itself conjures up visions of witches adding eyes of newts and wings of bats to a bubbling caldron of potion, or a derogatory remark about a person’s physical appearance. They’re fat and pudgy, their blotchy skin is covered with lumps and warts, their spring mating call sounds like a poor lost calf calling for its mother and they pee on anyone attempting to pick them up. You gotta’ love ’em!
Their saving grace comes in the form of a voracious appetite for insects.
A few years back during a particularly wet spell like that of late, I spoke with Wildlife Diversity Coordinator for the state of Kansas, Ken Brunson, about the myriad of tiny toads that were literally everywhere that year.
Just when I thought life was as simple as a toad, was a toad, was a toad, Ken informed me that toads have names, too. Ken said that 95% of the toads seen in Kansas are either Woodhouse’s Toads, or Great Plains Toads. Eastern Kansas also has some American toads and Spadefoot toads.
Ken linked that year’s abundance of tiny toads to the abundance of standing water in places where there hadn’t been water for ages, and the flood waters forced many from their homes near the streams and swamps where they hatched, and sent them scrambling for higher ground.
Whatever their clan, all toads begin their life as jelly-covered strands of eggs laid in the shallows of swamps, streams and ponds. In about one week the eggs hatch into tadpoles. Next, hind legs begin to grow, then front legs, then lungs replace the gills, the tail is absorbed into the body, and finally, two to three weeks after hatching, the youngsters hop out onto dry land. Woodhouse and Great Plains toads both grow to be three to five inches long when fully mature.
Although not particularly athletic, toads are efficient predators and do have a ravenous appetite for insects. Research suggests that a toad is capable of eating two-thirds its body weight in insects daily.
Worms of all kinds seem to be favorites as they’re probably easier to catch (and I’m sure more filling!) A study done on Great Plains toads in Oklahoma found that because of their fondness for dining on over-wintering cutworms, these toads were estimated to be worth twenty-five dollars apiece per year to the agriculture industry there.
Their taste for bugs can easily be seen in their droppings. The black cigar shaped droppings found in driveways and on sidewalks this time of year are in fact, toad poo. When they have acres of yards, gardens and fields to potty in, I’ll never understand why they feel the need to go on the sidewalk or in the driveway (the least they could do is cart it away when they leave.) Next time you see some, take a stick and poke it apart; you’ll see it’s comprised entirely of undigested bug parts like legs and wings.
Contrary to the old-wives tale, handling a toad does not cause warts. The warts on their skin and the glands behind their eyes do, however, produce a toxin capable of making you sick if accidentally ingested. You’ve witnessed this toxin at work if you have ever seen your dog frothing and foaming at the mouth after playing with a toad in the yard.
With that in mind, I guess my advice to you concerning toads would be three-fold.
1) If you suddenly find your dog foaming and frothing at the mouth, don’t shoot it, it probably just licked a toad.
2) Don’t lick a toad yourself.
3) ALWAYS hold a toad way out in front of you with both hands or you’re liable to get your shoes wet.
So whenever a fat pudgy toad surprises you in the garden or flower bed, tip your hat to them and thank them for the insect removal service they provide.
Continue to Explore Kansas Outdoors!
Steve can be contacted by email at [email protected].
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