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Crime trends, park funding, neighborhood upkeep, refuse rates, safer streets, and summer fireworks all show up in one fast City Council recap with Mayor Mark Kairis. If you want to understand what Hanford City Council decisions actually mean for your day-to-day life, this update connects the dots clearly, without the jargon.
We start with the Hanford Police Department’s 2025 annual report and the most important signal in the data: crime is down across nearly every major category, including assault, burglary, robbery, and rape. From there, we shift to Heroes Park and the complicated reality of funding big community projects. We explain why staff recommends declining a $1.9 million federal Land and Water Conservation Fund grant, how Proposition 68 funding changes the plan, and what the current timeline looks like for groundbreaking and opening.
Next, we cover community recognitions like Financial Literacy Month and Arbor Day, plus a public invitation to the tree planting at Hidden Valley Park. Then we dig into the public hearings that hit home for many residents: landscape assessment district ballots that reject assessment increases and the resulting reduction in maintenance, as well as the refuse rate increase that begins May 1 and continues over five years to maintain service levels. We wrap with major transportation planning for the East Lacey Corridor Improvement Project, including Complete Streets design and a grant application for a “cool corridor” to protect pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit riders from extreme heat, plus the green light for a July 4 fireworks show at the Hanford Softball Complex.
Subscribe for more Hanford government updates, share this recap with a neighbor, and leave a review. What council topic do you want us to explain next?
You can find the Hanford Insider at www.hanfordinsider.com and on social media at @hanfordinsider
Thank you for supporting the show!
By Rob Bentley4.5
22 ratings
Send me a text and give me feedback on this episode!
Crime trends, park funding, neighborhood upkeep, refuse rates, safer streets, and summer fireworks all show up in one fast City Council recap with Mayor Mark Kairis. If you want to understand what Hanford City Council decisions actually mean for your day-to-day life, this update connects the dots clearly, without the jargon.
We start with the Hanford Police Department’s 2025 annual report and the most important signal in the data: crime is down across nearly every major category, including assault, burglary, robbery, and rape. From there, we shift to Heroes Park and the complicated reality of funding big community projects. We explain why staff recommends declining a $1.9 million federal Land and Water Conservation Fund grant, how Proposition 68 funding changes the plan, and what the current timeline looks like for groundbreaking and opening.
Next, we cover community recognitions like Financial Literacy Month and Arbor Day, plus a public invitation to the tree planting at Hidden Valley Park. Then we dig into the public hearings that hit home for many residents: landscape assessment district ballots that reject assessment increases and the resulting reduction in maintenance, as well as the refuse rate increase that begins May 1 and continues over five years to maintain service levels. We wrap with major transportation planning for the East Lacey Corridor Improvement Project, including Complete Streets design and a grant application for a “cool corridor” to protect pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit riders from extreme heat, plus the green light for a July 4 fireworks show at the Hanford Softball Complex.
Subscribe for more Hanford government updates, share this recap with a neighbor, and leave a review. What council topic do you want us to explain next?
You can find the Hanford Insider at www.hanfordinsider.com and on social media at @hanfordinsider
Thank you for supporting the show!