Hollywood Casino hits three high months in a row

Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway reported gaming revenues of just over $12 million for November, marking the third month in a row of high gaming revenues, according to Kansas Lottery officials.

Hollywood Casino has had reports of high gaming revenues for each of the past three months, their best-ever reports for those particular months, according to Keith Kocher, director of program assurance and integrity for the Kansas Lottery. The November revenues this year, for example, were compared with November revenues of previous years. Kocher made his report to the Kansas Lottery Commission today.

In October, Hollywood Casino reported gaming revenues of $11.9 million, according to Kansas Lottery records. The September gaming revenues there were about $12 million.

Revenues for all four Kansas state-owned casinos were up in November as compared to October, according to lottery statistics. November gaming revenues were about $3.2 million at Boot Hill Casino, Dodge City, Kansas; $14.6 million at Kansas Star Casino, Mulvane, Kansas; and $2.4 million at Kansas Crossing Casino, Pittsburg, Kansas.

In other discussion, lottery officials said the Millionaire Holiday Raffle has started slowly this year, but they hope to sell all 200,000 tickets by Jan. 2. It was reported earlier this week that more than 141,000 raffle tickets have been sold at $20 each.

The game was changed slightly this year, and did not offer early $25,000 prizes as did last year’s contest, and no instant win tickets, according to lottery officials. Several drawings for $10,000 prizes have been held, with two more scheduled Dec. 10 and 17. The grand prize is $1 million, drawn on Jan. 3.

Piper results

Piper High School – girls basketball at Paola Tournament, semifinal

– Piper varsity defeated Harrisonville, 57-22

Friday: Piper vs. Wellsville, 6:30 p.m. at Paola.

Piper High School – boys basketball at Huhtamaki Hardwood Classic (DeSoto)

– Piper varsity lost to Gardner-Edgerton, 62-67 (OT)

Thursday: Piper vs. Excelsior Springs, 3:30 p.m. at DeSoto.

Pipr High School – boys swimming at Hayden

– Piper: 12th place

– 200 Medley Relay A placed 14th (Jonny Moon, Jack Roland, Conner Berry, Kyle Chambers)

– 200 Medley Relay B placed 17th (Chase Bundy, Carson Gardner, Abraham Marquez, Hunter Calovich)

– 200 Free: Jonny Moon (23rd)

– 200 IM: Jack Roland (16th)

– 50 free: Ari Butler (32nd), Chase Lee (33rd), Abraham Marquez (37th)

– 100 free: Jonny Moon (25th), Conner Berry (31st), Obinna Okoye (37th)

– 200 Free Relay A placed 19th (Ari Butler, Dalton White, Abraham Marquez, Zane Howell)

– 200 free relay B placed 21st (Chase Lee, Jakob Hein, Nikolaj Konradsen, Ben Rehm)

– 100 Back: Chase Bundy (19th)

– 100 breast: Jack Roland (15th), Carson Gardner (27th)

– 400 free relay A placed 12th (Jack Roland, Jonny Moon, Hunter Calovich, Kyle Chambers)

– From Doug Key, Piper High School activities director

KCK program tries to rid neighborhoods of blight

The Unified Government’s anti-blight SOAR initiative is starting to have an effect on Kansas City, Kansas, neighborhoods.

The program, which stands for Stabilization, Occupation and Revitalization, has increased communication among UG departments dealing with blight, and is starting to cut the waiting time for something to be done about neighborhood decline.

At a UG meeting on Nov. 16, UG administrators and staff described their efforts in better communication among departments handling procedures related to blight, and some challenges they face in moving the program forward. One of the goals of the program is to stabilize neighborhoods that are on the edge of decline.

Changes at the Land Bank are part of the effort. According to Commissioner Brian McKiernan, at the UG Neighborhood and Community Development Committee meeting on Monday, Dec. 4, houses now come in from the tax sale to the Land Bank, are put under the UG’s control to rehab them, and if they are too far gone, will be placed on the demolition list.

The advantage to the UG is when a property comes into the Land Bank, the UG can control the property, secure it and keep the grounds up, McKiernan said.

Chris Slaughter, UG Land Bank manager, at the Dec. 4 NCD meeting, told commissioners that the changes were starting to have an effect.

Slaughter said once houses come to the Land Bank, they are inspected and an assessment made whether they should be rehabilitated or demolished.

UG staff previously referred to a “purgatory” that a home was in after it did not sell at a tax sale. Slaughter said that long waiting period has been done away with.

More than 160 delinquent tax properties that did not sell at the August property tax sale were turned over to the Land Bank recently. Most were vacant lots; there were 17 homes that did not sell at the tax sale, and 19 homes that sold that were not redeemed, according to Slaughter.

“If a property makes it to a tax sale, it’s either going to be bid on and paid for by someone in the public, or it’s going to come to the Land Bank for us to take care of,” Slaughter said.

The next delinquent tax sale is scheduled for 10 a.m. Dec. 14 at Memorial Hall, 600 N. 7th St. The tax sale property list is at http://maps.wycokck.org/gisdata/TaxSale/TaxSale339Details.html. A map at the website showed that most of the homes on the list were located in the northeast area of Kansas City, Kansas.

Slaughter said there are currently 38 contractors in the pool, with 85 homes affected, 65 houses are in the rehab program and 20 houses need demolition. The contractors, after making the repairs to homes, can make a profit upon selling them.

Four houses have been completed and the fifth was scheduled to be deeded this week, Slaughter said.

Rehab has started on 15 homes, with eight waiting for title reports and other items to close on, he said.

There are 14 houses that have been through an open house and people have viewed them, and they are waiting for offers, he said.

There are 24 houses from the tax sale in August that are being completed for final inspection and boarding, and they hope to have open houses on them by the end of the year, Slaughter said.

He cited a home on South Ferree Street that has been rehabbed through this program. It took a little under four months for the rehab of the home, he said.

When UG staff visited the home last week, they saw that a home across the street was now undergoing a total rehab, including painting and a new porch, he said. Another home on the block also was being fixed up.

He said he hopes this is the benefit that the UG sees from this program.

“Not only are we taking care of the individual house, but this is starting to ripple through the existing neighborhoods,” Slaughter said. “As this continues to grow, this ripple keeps getting bigger and bigger.”