By Roger McKinney
rmckinney@joplinglobe.com
COLUMBUS, Kan. — A grant through the federal stimulus program will allow the Cherokee County Commission to buy three foreclosed houses from a county bank.
Nancy Lamb, deputy emergency management director for the county, provided information Monday about that grant and other grants on which she has been working.
Lamb said the $180,000 grant is through the Neighborhood Stabilization Program, offered through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. She said the program was established by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. According to the program’s Web site, it was established to stabilize communities that have suffered from foreclosures and abandonment.
The grant will allow the county to buy three foreclosed houses, one in Columbus and two in Galena, thereby helping a county bank. The houses are owned by American Bank, based in Baxter Springs.
Lamb said the county commissioners thought it was important that a local bank benefit from the grant.
“They wanted it to benefit our county first,” she said in a conversation after her meeting with the commissioners.
Lamb said the grant includes money to repair and refurbish the houses. After that, the commission may decide to sell the houses or donate them to a nonprofit group.
Lamb said the engineering phase of a grant-funded project to stabilize the viaduct on old Route 66 at Galena has been completed. The next step will be to apply for the second phase of the grant, which would allow for rehabilitation to start.
The National Park Service Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program awarded the grant in 2008. It includes $30,000 from the National Park Service and a $50,000 local match.
The 216-foot-long structure was built in 1922 and 1923 to serve the mining industry, and it was incorporated into Route 66 in 1926. The viaduct was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.
Grants through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development agency are paying for two new storm warning sirens in Mineral Township and one in Treece.
The cost of the two sirens in Mineral Township, paid by the grant, is $34,000. Lamb said the sirens will be placed in the Stipville community and at the Scammon Express Lane convenience store. She said the Scammon siren can be heard in Roseland.
The cost of the Treece siren is around $18,000. Lamb said that though the residents of the town are seeking a federal buyout, the siren can be heard at nearby housing developments. That siren was installed Monday.
Lamb and Jason Allison, emergency management director, have made writing grant applications part of their duties with the county.
“It’s job security,” Lamb said.
Commissioner Pat Collins, speaking outside the meeting, said the grant awards that Lamb and Allison have brought to the county have been a big help, especially in the slow economy. He said both earn their pay.
More grants
Nancy Lamb, deputy Cherokee County emergency management director, said she hopes to pursue other grants for storm warning sirens in Riverton, Hallowell and Carona.
Columns
Federal stimulus money allows Cherokee County to buy foreclosed houses
- Columns
-
-
Irrigation system upgrade begins at Eagle Creek
Will Clark will be putting in a lot of hours over the next month or so while keeping an eye over a major upgrade of the irrigation system at Eagle Creek Golf Course.
-
Grizzled veterans may be best at telling tall tales
I saw Jim Barr and Larry Eggers this weekend at another swap meet.
Barr will be at our swap meet on March 17 at the Brighton Assembly of God gymnasium at Brighton Mo. Jim Barr and I have similar backgrounds. We both grew up on the Big Piney River, both of us spent most of our boyhood years fishing from wooden johnboats, and we both were doing some guiding on the river when we were just kids. -
Federal stimulus money allows Cherokee County to buy foreclosed houses
COLUMBUS, Kan. — A grant through the federal stimulus program will allow the Cherokee County Commission to buy three foreclosed houses from a county bank.
Nancy Lamb, deputy emergency management director for the county, provided information Monday about that grant and other grants on which she has been working. - Guest column, Allen Shirley: Copy a winning example Last October, I published a column in The Joplin Globe documenting three failed attempts involving the states of Maine, Massachusetts and Tennessee and their efforts to implement “Obamacare” in their states.
-
Anson burlingame, guest columnist: Living within our means
“Mainly, we are going to have to live within our means and be very careful.”
That is the most resounding sound bite I have heard from a politician in a long time. If only that sentiment can grow and resonate, politically, to turn the tide of incessant and extraordinarily dangerous growth beyond our means in government. - Jim Stone, guest columnist: Paranoia shouldn’t impede freedom The afternoon of Dec. 30 brought news that eight American CIA agents and four Canadian soldiers at Forward Operating Base Chapman in Afghanistan had been killed by a suicide bomber.
- Dan Ray, guest columnist: Bills can still be terminated We still have an opportunity to terminate the health care bills that have been passed in the Senate and the House.
-
Dave Woods: Global warming fires up debate
on Adams doesn’t believe in global warming.
I have to say, when it’s 3 degrees below zero outside in Joplin and we’re headed for our third week without a thaw, global warming theory is a tough concept to wrap my head around. -
Jack Kaminsky, guest columnist: Remembering a ‘classic’
Last week Editor Carol Stark asked me to write something about my dad and the Kaminsky Classic, the annual Joplin High School basketball tournament which ended on Saturday.
Even as I started writing, I began crying, and have had tears in my eyes all day. - Carol Stark: We all need someone’s hand to hold I was always a nervous little kid and while others my age went through life without a care, I held back, imagining that the worst was about to happen.
- More Columns Headlines
-
Irrigation system upgrade begins at Eagle Creek



