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2022 article above is very interesting article and makes you really question many thing's that AREN'T BEING SAID in our Water Department. This article speaks of using monochloramine and sounds horrifying. We apparently use it as well according to article's below.
I've attached a few more in relation to "lead pipes". Yes, the City of Topeka uses monochloramine (often referred to simply as chloramine) as a disinfectant for its drinking water.
Key details regarding Topeka's water treatment:
***Treatment Process: The water treatment process includes adding pure chlorine initially, followed by ammonia to create chloramine, which serves as a residual disinfectant to keep water safe as it travels through pipes.
***Safety Levels: Recent water quality reports (2024–2025) indicate that chloramine levels are monitored and kept within regulatory limits.
***Usage: It is used as a standard, long-lasting disinfectant alternative to free chlorine.
For specific health concerns or for individuals who use kidney dialysis machines or own fish tanks, the city advises that, like chlorine, monochloramine must be removed from the water.
Here's how water from the Kansas River travels through the treatment system and to Topeka faucets
An overview of water treatment in Topeka following a March violation in water turbidity.
A hotel feasibility study (often called a market feasibility study or market study) is a core document that Wyndham's franchise sales and real estate teams review as part of evaluating potential new-build or conversion franchise opportunities. These studies help them determine if a proposed hotel site or property makes sense for one of their brands (e.g., Days Inn, Super 8, Ramada, La Quinta, Microtel, Wingate, etc.), whether it will perform well enough to support franchise fees, and if it qualifies for any development incentives.
Wyndham (the world's largest hotel franchisor by number of properties) doesn't publicly list a rigid "must-have" feasibility study requirement on its development site, but industry practice, FDDs, and their own processes show it's a standard expectation or strong factor in approvals. The real estate guys you spoke with in franchise sales are typically the ones who evaluate these studies during site approval, franchise applications, or incentive reviews. They use them to assess risk, brand fit, market viability, and long-term revenue potential for Wyndham Rewards and system-wide performance.
Studies are usually prepared by reputable independent firms (e.g., HVS, PKF, or similar hospitality consultants) using nationally recognized methodologies. Wyndham may review or even recommend firms.
A typical hotel feasibility study for Wyndham follows a standard industry methodology (e.g., as outlined by firms like Hotel & Leisure Advisors). It's not just a "yes/no" report—it's data-driven with projections over 5–10+ years. The team scrutinizes it for realism, brand alignment, and red flags like oversupply or weak demand generators.
Here's a breakdown of the main sections and what Wyndham's team specifically evaluates:
Bottom line: The real estate team wants proof the project is viable, low-risk, and a good fit for Wyndham's system—not just today, but for the 15–20-year franchise term. A strong, independent study from a credible firm goes a long way toward getting a "yes," especially if it shows solid demand and financials that support their royalties.
If you're preparing one or have a specific site/brand in mind, I recommend reaching out to Wyndham's development team directly (via their site) for guidance—they often help with market insights. Let me know if you want help finding sample studies, recommended firms, or digging into a specific brand's FDD!
Thank you so much for sharing these insights! It's incredible to see a 1.44% share rate—it proves that your content is truly high-quality and resonates with the audience. That March 21st spike is a clear sign of growth potential.
Based on the breakdown you shared, I am ready to take this to the next level. Here is how I will proceed immediately:
Shorts Strategy: I will start cutting the best moments from your podcasts to create high-impact YouTube Shorts and Reels to drive more traffic.
SEO Optimization: I'll refine the titles and descriptions using the 2026 trending keywords to make your videos more searchable.
Engagement Boost: I'll help manage the comments to ensure we are engaging with the community within the first 48 hours.
Let's turn this 'nano-influencer' stage into a major success. I'm excited to dive in.I'm a sick right now, so I'm late for work.On Sat, Mar 21, 2026 at 5:03 PM Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com> wrote:**This is a respectable start for a small YouTube podcast channel—solid foundation with real growth potential, especially thanks to those shares.** It's not "excellent" or viral-level yet (that usually means 10K+ subs and millions of views), but it's way better than the average new channel struggling with low engagement. You're in the "nano-influencer" tier (under 10K subs), and the numbers show your content is resonating beyond just your current audience.
### Quick Breakdown of Your Analytics- **331 subscribers**: Early-stage normal. Many podcasts hover here for months before momentum kicks in. The key is you're building a loyal base.- **236K lifetime views**: Impressive for only 331 subs. This means your videos are getting discovered organically (search, recommendations, external shares) rather than just from subs watching. Average views-per-sub is strong here.- **4.4K likes (~1.86% of views)** and **1K comments (~0.42%)**: Decent-to-good engagement. Comments show people are invested (podcasts thrive on discussion).- **Overall engagement rate**: Roughly 3.73% if you calculate (likes + comments + shares) / views. For a small channel, this is healthy—nano channels often see 5%+ in some benchmarks, while platform averages sit around 2-3.5%. You're beating typical small-channel performance.- **Recent views (370 in last 7 days)**: A bit quiet overall, but that big blue spike on Mar 21 (today in the screenshot) is promising—probably a fresh episode or timely topic hitting. Watch time and that spike are what the algorithm loves.
### The 3.4K Shares Stand Out—Yes, That's a Lot!You're spot on to highlight this. **A 1.44% share rate (3.4K shares on 236K views) is excellent and the strongest signal here.** Shares are rarer than likes or comments (most channels see way lower rates, often under 0.5%). People only share content they love, find useful, or think their friends will enjoy—especially for podcasts (debates, insights, funny moments). This tells YouTube your stuff is *high-quality and share-worthy*, which boosts recommendations and can snowball growth. It's a bigger win than raw views or subs right now.
**Bottom line on ranking**:- **Good/Respectable**: Yes—strong engagement and discovery for a podcast just getting started.- **Excellent**: Not yet, but the shares + organic views put you ahead of most small channels. With consistency, this could scale fast.
### How I'd Grow This Channel (Practical 2026 Podcast-on-YouTube Plan)YouTube is now the #1 platform for video podcasts (over 1 billion monthly viewers), and video versions get higher CPMs than pure audio. Focus here for max leverage.
1. **Optimize for the Algorithm (Quick Wins)**- Turn episodes into a clear playlist labeled "Podcast Night" so YouTube treats it like a series.- Nail titles/descriptions: Use searchable keywords (e.g., "Joe Rogan Style Debate: [Topic] 2026" or whatever your niche is). First 1-2 lines of description matter most.- Thumbnails: Bold text + your mic logo + guest face—test what drove that Mar 21 spike.- Aim for consistent uploads (1-2 episodes/week) to build momentum.
2. **Repurpose Ruthlessly for Discovery**- Cut 30-60 second clips (best moments, hot takes) into YouTube Shorts. Shorts drive massive engagement and funnel people to full episodes.- Post the same clips to TikTok, Instagram Reels, and X—your share rate proves people will spread them.
3. **Boost Shares & Engagement (Your Superpower)**- End episodes with "Share if this changed your mind!" or debate prompts.- Reply to every comment in the first 24-48 hours—YouTube rewards active channels.- Cross-promote where shares are happening (Reddit communities, X threads, Facebook groups in your niche).
4. **Collaborations & External Promotion**- Guest on similar small podcasts (or vice versa)—this is gold for subs.- Network: Reach out to creators in your space for shoutouts. Paid promo (cheap YouTube ads targeting your video viewers) can accelerate once you hit monetization.
5. **Hit Monetization Thresholds Fast**You're close: Need 1,000 subs + 4,000 watch hours (check your Analytics > Audience tab). The shares/views suggest you'll get there soon. Once monetized, podcast CPMs on YouTube are often $5-15+ per 1K views (higher than regular videos).
6. **Track & Iterate**In YouTube Studio, dive into "Reach" and "Audience" tabs—see which videos have the highest share % or watch time, then make more like them. The recent spike is your clue.
**My honest take**: This isn't a fluke—3.4K shares on a small channel screams "quality content with word-of-mouth potential." Most new podcasts die with low engagement; yours has the ingredients to grow into the thousands of subs quickly. Stay consistent, lean into what people are sharing, and treat YouTube as your main growth engine (not just an audio dump). If you keep posting and optimizing, that recent spike could turn into a trend.
You've got this—drop your channel name or a specific episode if you want more tailored tips! Keep grinding. 🚀888
--
MD SHAWON HOWLADER
I am a social media maneger,All social media manage and marketing. Facebook,IG,Twitter,YouTube marketing,Gmail: mdshawonhowlader37@gmail.com
WhatsApp: +8801850215464www.aktechnologybd.com/
MD SHAWON HOWLADER ![]() | Gmail: mdshawonhowlader37@gmail.com WhatsApp: +8801850215464 | ||||||
| www.aktechnologybd.com/ | |||||||
Thanks for reaching out. I appreciate you thinking of me for this. I agree there's a lot of room for improvement with CAC's approach to housing and economic development.
A few initial thoughts:
- We need clearer, outcome-based metrics for all housing programs.
- The DREAMS project scoring rubric should be more transparent and better aligned with actual neighborhood needs.
- At-large positions should be filled with people who have practical, on-the-ground experience.
Happy to discuss ideas further or get more involved - just let me know what next steps you'd like from me.
Henry McClureTime kills deals785-383-9994
www.henrymcclure.live
On Thu, Nov 13, 2025 at 12:35 PM Valley Park wrote:
Hi Henry,
Please consider using your talents to assist the CAC membership when it comes to addressing housing and economic development. There is value in having an experienced person, like yourself, providing neighborhood leaders with suggestions on how to move forward with promoting their neighborhoods, addressing affordable housing, and improving economic development. CAC membership votes on programs that use Community Development Block Grants. The membership needs people who can work toward changing the current outcomes of such programs. There needs to be improved measures for each housing program as well as the scoring rubric of the DREAMS projects. What are your thoughts to help change the status quo?
Mayor Padilla never filled all three at-large positions to be appointed by the mayor despite requests to do so. See Topeka Municipal Code 2.25.040 for more details. One at-large member must come from a low to moderate income (LMI) area not represented by a certified Neighborhood Improvement Association. Two at-large members must come from disciplines such as construction trades, architecture, appraising, real estate sales, public finance, mortgage lending, legal, real estate development, residential property management, commercial banking, construction material suppliers, fundraising, neighborhood planning, zoning, engineering, health or education.
There is a NIA representative position on the Land Bank Board of Trustees and the current person, ShaMecha King Simms, is stepping down at the end of 2025. Today, I sent out a soliciting email to the CAC membership and NIA President and Vice Presidents in an attempt to fill the position prior to 2026.
Sandra Batts is the representative on the Topeka Housing Authority Review Committee.
Susan W. McClacherty2024-2025 Citizen Advisory Council Chair