- Marshall will move to restart the XL pipeline
- Sedgwick County Election Commissioner will not be re-appointed
- Sedgwick County enters COVID-19 vaccine Phase 2
- Accomplice in the 1990 death of a Wichita girl, released from prison
- Kansas expects small uptick in vaccine supply
- Kansas coach who survived lung transplant dies of virus
- COVID positivity rate sees a 10-day drop in Sedgwick County
- Sedgwick County announces winner of 2021 safety slogan contest
- Kansas Sen. Marshall criticizes trial for Trump as divisive
- Board awards assistance to Kansas crime victims
- Marshall will move to restart the XL pipeline
- Senate confirms Biden 1st Cabinet pick
- Biden confirms Trump left a 'very generous' letter behind for him, but he's mum on its contents
- Biden to sign executive orders nixing Trump policies [VIDEO]
- Doctors locked out of hospital, forced to treat patients in parking lot
- Kwame Kilpatrick to go free after Donald Trump commutes sentence of former Detroit mayor
- Teen jailed for breaching quarantine in Cayman Islands: 'I deserved it'
- McConnell criticized over reported consideration of impeachment [VIDEO]
- POMPEO: The Chinese Communist Party poses an ‘Existential Threat’ to the United States
- RUSH: The MAGA agenda will succeed, after Democrats fail [VIDEO]
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Steve & TedSen. Marshall to oppose President's Keystone XL pipeline permit revocation- January 21, 2021
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January is National Soup Month, which is your favorite?
COVID-19 spurs Kansas Legislature to plan $3M tech upgrade
KNSS News
November 22, 2020 - 5:21 pm

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The Kansas Legislature plans to spend about $3 million on technology upgrades. Its leaders are hoping that people will be able to watch committee hearings and other functions even if they can’t leave their homes because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The Topeka Capital-Journal reports that the upgrades are designed to ensure that legislative committee rooms and even conference spaces are outfitted with audiovisual equipment to broadcast events to the public. The move comes as top lawmakers are starting to consider exactly how the Legislature will conduct business after it convenes its next annual session in January.
The upgrades will include better support for meetings conducted with video conferencing.
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