Ford County awarded funds for Emergency Food, Shelter Program dodgeglobe.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dodgeglobe.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Finney County has been chosen to receive $4,645 in Phase 38 Set Aside Funds to supplement emergency food and shelter programs in the county.
A local board made up of Catholic Charities of Southwest Kansas, The Salvation Army, Emmaus House Emergency Shelter, Live Well Finney County, Genesis Family Health, Red Cross, Ministerial Alliance, United Way of Finney County and The City of Garden City will determine how the funds awarded to Finney County are to be distributed among the emergency food and shelter programs run by local service agencies in the area. The local board is responsible for recommending agencies to receive these funds and any additional funds made available under this phase of the program.
Finney County receives emergency food, shelter funds gctelegram.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gctelegram.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Ford County to receive $6,911 for emergency food, shelter programs
Dodge City Daily Globe
To supplement emergency food and shelter programs in Ford County, Federal funding has been made available in the amount of $6,911 through the Department of Homeland Security/Federal Emergency Management Agency under the Emergency Food and Shelter National Board program.
Distribution of the funds will be made by a local board that will look for entities that expand the capacity of food and shelter programs.
For Ford County, the local board consisted of Catholic Charities of Southwest Kansas, The Salvation Army, Genesis Family Health, Friendship Feast, The Manna House, The Crisis Center of Dodge City, Compass Behavioral Health and United Way of Dodge City.
Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector
Topeka Thirty-one percent of people in Kansas who were arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement between 2015 and 2018 had no criminal conviction or just a minor traffic offense, according to records compiled into a new statewide data tool made available by the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas.
Information sourced from the Syracuse TRAC system details the number of ICE arrests and removals in Kansas and the highest level of crime committed, if any. In 2019, 359 people in Kansas were removed by ICE, down from 621 in 2018. On top of that, 576 Kansans were arrested by ICE in 2018; there is no data available in this category for 2019.