Grocery store for northeast area would take priority over community center in new UG recommendation

UG meeting preview

A recommendation from Unified Government Administrator Doug Bach would place priority on a grocery store in the northeast area over a proposed community recreation facility there.

The grocery store and a YMCA community center were part of the Healthy Campus project that has been worked on for several years by the previous UG mayor.

At the 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 8, UG Commission meeting, according to the agenda, Bach is recommending to go forward with the grocery store separately.

An agenda statement says the UG staff has been working to advance the Healthy Campus for the past two months.

“As of this time, staff has not been able to secure a management agreement for the operation of the proposed grocery store, therefore we are recommending that we pause our current efforts to design the proposed site for the combined project,” the UG agenda stated. “Focus for this project will be directed toward securing a grocery store developer and operator for the downtown – northeast areas. It should also be noted that the federal government renewed the New Market Tax Credit Program for 2019, thus this tool will still be available to us in the coming year should we elect to make it part of the project.”

Also on Thursday’s 7 p.m. agenda is a public hearing to consider a joint ordinance and resolution designating Neighborhood Revitalization Areas and adopting the 2018-2020 Neighborhood Revitalization Plan.

Special project areas under this plan include the State Avenue corridor east and the Leavenworth Road corridor.

Other items on the 7 p.m. agenda include:

– Sale of general obligation bonds, ordinance and resolution, city and county.
– Sale of municipal temporary notes.
– Report on the 2018 Commission and Mayor’s travel and community event expenditures.
– Emergency Operations Plan update, proposed resolution.
– Wyandotte County Debris Management Plan, proposed resolution.
– Fairfax Drainage District agreement, proposed resolution to provide sewer services for industrial growth in the Fairfax district, and reimbursing the district $197,700 for sewer services already provided.
– Approval of a report to help property owners reduce their risk of flooding by providing an understanding of flood risk, flooding sources and resources of mitigation.
– Resolution to approve the Memorandum of Understanding with the Sheriff’s Department and Teamsters Local No. 955 labor contract.
– Nathan Reasons has been nominated to the Planning and Zoning Commission, submitted by Commissioner Jane Philbrook.
– Carla Baker has been nominated to the Self-Supported Municipal Improvement District (Downtown Improvement District) Advisory Board, submitted by Commissioner Gayle Townsend.

Also, these Land Bank items are on the agenda:

Applications
2312 N. 34th St. – Nancy Chavez-Cordona, yard extension
2923 Lafayette Ave. – Lorenza Jaranillo, yard extension
2313 N. 12th St. – Hazel Byers, yard extension
900 Lafayette Ave. – Preston Brown, yard extension
2756 N. 22nd St. – Henson Memorial Church, property acquisition
455 Bluegrass Dr. – Ryan Casey, single family construction

Transfer to Land Bank
2700 N. 18th St. – Unified Government of Wyandotte County/KCK
(Property was transferred to the UG with over $6,500 in back taxes. After abatement, the property will be transferred back to the UG.)

Transfer from Land Bank
2700 N. 18th St. – Unified Government of Wyandotte County/KCK
(Property was transferred to the UG with over $6,500 in back taxes. After abatement, the property will be transferred back to the UG.)

Donations to Land Bank
1329 Webster Ave. – Jontell Jones
6007 Kansas Ave. – Lowkap, LLC
954 Ivandale St. – Linda (Ronchetto) Johnson

Tax Sale #339 (12/14/17) Transfers
(There are 126 properties on the tax sale list. They include properties that received a bid but were not redeemed by a winning bidder by the deadline of the tax sale. The list begins on page 452 of the agenda.)

A 5 p.m. Feb. 8 special session will be held about security, and then at 6 p.m. a special session will be about labor. Those meetings are executive sessions, closed to the public, according to the agenda.

More information about the Feb. 8 meeting can be found on the agenda, which is online at www.wycokck.org, under Agendas.

Colyer calls for Kansas school funding hike, plus Medicaid and foster fixes

by Celia Llopis-Jepsen, Kansas News Service

Newly installed Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer described his state Wednesday as vibrant but with trouble spots, telling lawmakers he plans to charge ahead at its problems.

Colyer promised to reform the state’s struggling foster care system, improve its privatized Medicaid program, open government activities into clearer public view and help more Kansans find jobs.

The speech was effectively a State of the State speech by a former two-term lieutenant governor now one week into higher office and trying to distinguish himself from his unpopular running mate, former Gov. Sam Brownback. Brownback delivered a formal State of the State address last month.

Yet Colyer gave few specifics on the looming issue vexing legislators: how to find hundreds of millions of dollars potentially needed to bring the state in compliance with a court order to shore up its funding for local school districts.

“We must keep our schools open,” he said. Like Brownback, he called for doing so without a tax hike.

But Colyer didn’t repeat the proposed $600 million funding increase that featured in the former governor’s speech — and that drew a swift backlash from lawmakers who felt it was unattainable. Instead, he called for gradual increase.

Senate Majority Leader Jim Denning saw that as a signal Colyer is backing off of that number and letting lawmakers figure out what’s possible.

“That gives us all the assurance in the world that he trusts our work,” Denning said.

Colyer also said he wants lawmakers this year to bring him “a definitive solution that ends the school finance lawsuits for good.”

Some Republicans want to amend the state constitution to prevent courts from weighing in anymore on school funding. Colyer didn’t clarify whether that’s what he wanted.

Democratic Rep. Valdenia Winn, D-34th Dist., Kansas City, Kansas, said Colyer’s comments concerned her because the judiciary is part of Kansas’ system of checks and balances.

“He has a positive tone,” she said. “But tone is one thing — and equal opportunity before the law is another.”

Colyer has repeatedly promised to “change the tone in Topeka.” That theme featured in Wednesday’s speech, where he noted that in his first week in office, he met with Democratic leaders, signed an executive order requiring thousands of state workers to undergo annual training on preventing sexual harassment, and promised to push for government transparency.

He thanked lawmakers for proposing a slew of transparency measures in recent weeks.

“It’s time for the executive branch to do its part,” he said.

Colyer said he would cut costs for people who seek open records, improve online access to schedules and materials for public meetings, and push officials to use government instead of private email accounts.

On the state’s foster care system, which is struggling to offer refuge for children from troubled families, he pledged to hire more child welfare workers and investigators and add emergency placement options.

“So there are no more kids sleeping in offices,” he said.

He promised to fight sexual harassment and investigate and handle allegations promptly and appropriately.

“Harassment in any form, at any time, in any place,” he said, “will not be tolerated in my administration.”

A recent Kansas Human Rights Commission investigation found a state contractor likely fired a woman as retaliation for her reporting a high-ranking Brownback administration official’s habitual sexual harassment.

He vowed to continue Brownback’s efforts to curtail abortion and questioned court decisions that protect a women’s right to end a pregnancy.

Any argument that state and federal constitutions include a right to abortion “is violence against basic facts,” he said. “We are a pro-life state.”

Colyer cited the state’s low jobless rate, less than 4 percent, but said too many jobs go unfilled.
He promised to launch a “My (Re) Employment” program to help job hunters polish their resumes and find high-demand fields, and to continue investing in career and technical education.

Colyer inherited a tough budget situation.

One Kansas administration after the next has underfunded the state’s pension system and diverted funds from highway infrastructure. And state revenue woes in recent years — widely blamed on Brownback’s signature 2012 tax cuts — cut into higher education and other government functions.

Colyer called for ending the practice of borrowing from the state’s highway fund to pay for other state government services.

On the day of his speech, the Kansas Department of Commerce announced a deal that would bring the headquarters of hospital chain HCA Midwest Health to Overland Park from Kansas City, Mo. The state said it wasn’t making the government incentives in the deal public because the contract hadn’t been finalized.

Colyer, who works for an HCA hospital as a physician, said he was not involved in putting together the package.

“I was unaware of it,” he said. “I became aware of it when I became governor.”

Celia Llopis-Jepsen is a reporter for the Kansas News Service, a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio covering health, education and politics. You can reach her on Twitter @Celia_LJ. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to the original post.

See more at http://kcur.org/post/colyer-calls-kansas-school-funding-hike-plus-medicaid-and-foster-fixes/

Wyandotte County Young Democrats to present black history program Feb. 10

Rashane Hamby

The Wyandotte County Young Democrats will present a program on “Blacks in Politics” from 2 to 4 p.m. Feb. 10 at the West Wyandotte Library, 1737 N. 82nd St., Kansas City, Kansas.

The Black History Month program will be given by Rashane Hamby, co-host of the “Hip Hop Environmental Report + All things Kansas City.” The program is presented by the Wyandotte County Young Democrats.

A panel discussion is planned. Panelists who are scheduled to participate include Kerry Gooch, former executive director of the Kansas Democrat Party; Khrystal, a local rapper, actor and activist; Alvin Sykes, a civil rights activist; Rachel Jefferson, executive director at Historic Northeast – Midtown Association and co-host of “hip Hop Environmental Report + All things Kansas City”; and Darnell Hunt, activist and candidate for the Kansas House, 49th District.

Josh Svaty, a gubernatorial candidate for Kansas, will be at the event, as well as Ethan Corson, executive director of the Kansas Democratic Party.

Members of the Wyandotte County Young Democrats must live in Wyandotte County, be a registered Democrat, and from age 18 to 35.

The meeting is open to everyone.