Public meetings planned Wednesday on zoning code rewrite

Two public meetings are planned on Wednesday, April 10, on the zoning code rewrite in Kansas City, Kansas.

The public may make comments at the two open houses. The first will be from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, at the Rainbow Mennonite Church, 1444 Southwest Blvd., Kansas City, Kansas. The second meeting will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, at the Miracle Temple Church of God in Christ, 2106 Quindaro Blvd., Kansas City, Kansas.

At the meetings, there will be exhibits that will provide information about the new Unified Development Code that is being written.

The new code will combine the zoning, subdivision and historic preservation regulations, according to UG officials.

UG staff and a consultant team will answer questions and discuss improvements.

This will be a drop-in format, with residents welcome to stop by anytime during the two hours. There will not be formal presentations.

For more information, visit https://www.wycokck.org/News-and-Events/News/You-re-Invited.aspx.

Stingy pitching, home runs help Blue Devils sweep Fort Scott

KCKCC sophomore first baseman Kaylee Arnzen got two big home plate welcomes after belting two-run home runs in the first and second innings of an 11-3 win over Fort Scott Monday. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College used a pair of 5-run innings to sweep Fort Scott 7-1 and 11-3 Monday,

The wins kept the Blue Devils (8-4) solidly entrenched in fourth place in the Jayhawk Conference heading into KCKCC’s next-to-last home league doubleheader against Coffeyville Thursday at 2 and 4 p.m. Johnson County, the Blue Devils’ opponent Saturday in Overland Park, leads the conference with an 11-1 record followed by Highland (8-2), Labette (9-3) and KCKCC.

Freshmen Shay Grosstephan and Mackenzie Pinkerton turned in complete game performances in the sweep of Fort Scott. Grosstephan (10-4) scattered four hits, struck out seven and walked two in the opening 7-1 win while Pinkerton (10-7) allowed six hits and no runs over the final five innings in the 6-inning 11-3 nightcap. She also struck out seven and walked two.

The first game was scoreless until KCKCC (25-13) put five runs on the board in the fourth inning.

Grosstephan had the big hit in the inning, a 2-run double. Alaina Howe also doubled in a run and Jennica Messer singled in another. Hannah Redick and Kaylee Arnzen each had two hits in KCKCC’s 8-hit attack.

Arnzen launched two home runs and Howe one in the nightcap as the Blue Devils pounded out 12 hits, six for extra bases. Howe, Devin Purcell and Britney Smith each added doubles while five Blue Devils finished with two hits each – Purcell, Grosstephan, Arnzen, Smith and Howe.

Fort Scott took a 3-0 lead in the first inning but Arnzen got two of those runs back in home run to left and then put the Blue Devils ahead with another two-run line drive shot to left-center in a 5-run second inning. In addition to Arnzen’s four RBIs, Smith, Purcell and Grosstephan each drove in two runs.

Freshman Shay Grosstephan not only got her 10th pitching win in a 4-hit, 7-1 win over Fort Scott Monday but she drove in two runs in both games of KCKCC’S doubleheader sweep. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

Drop in sales tax revenues reported in KCK

Kansas City, Kansas, has experienced a drop in sales tax revenues recently, according to Unified Government officials.

Sales tax revenues came in at 91.9 percent of the amount budgeted for the fourth quarter of 2018, according to Kathleen VonAchen, the UG’s chief financial officer. She included the information in her April 1 quarterly budget report at the Economic Development and Finance Committee meeting.

Sales tax revenues for the fourth quarter were $42.6 million, as compared to the amended budget estimate of $46.4 million, a difference of about $3.74 million, according to UG figures.

For the fourth quarter, the UG revenues for sales tax were about double that of property tax, as the county and city now derive more of their income from sales taxes than in years before The Legends Outlets was built. The property tax for the fourth quarter came in about 1.2 percent over the estimates.

UG Commissioner Ann Brandau Murguia asked for more information about the reasons for the sales tax revenue difference.

“My sales tax estimate included a 6 percent increase, and that was probably overly optimistic,” VonAchen said at the meeting. “It’s a combination of my sales tax estimate being overly optimistic and the economy declining quicker than I anticipated.”

Some of that effect on sales taxes at The Legends Outlets may have been because there were renovations going on at some of the Legends locations, she said. Some of the properties were not open and not collecting sales taxes during that transition, she added.

When actual fourth quarter sales taxes in 2018 were compared to actual fourth quarter sales taxes collected in 2017, there was a decrease of $2.78 million, according to UG figures.

Commissioner Tom Burroughs said he believed that renovations and transitions at The Legends Outlets may have caused the reduction in sales tax. He said he also would like to see more information about it. The shopping center has more than 100 stores and restaurants.

New stores added within the last year to the Legends Outlets have included Torrid, Michael Kors, Rack Room Shoes, the Dapper Doughnut, El Toro Loco Mexican Bar and Grill, Journeys and HomeGoods.

In a more recent sales tax figure, March 2019 sales tax distributions in Wyandotte County were 14.4 percent less than March 2018 figures, according to a Kansas Department of Revenue sales tax distribution report. According to that report, $1.968 million was collected in March 2018 in Wyandotte County as compared to $1.685 million in March 2019.

Nearby Johnson County experienced an 8.5 percent drop in its sales tax during the month of March 2019, Shawnee County was down 6.8 percent, Douglas County was down 7.7 percent, Sedgwick County was down 4.6 percent, and Leavenworth County was down 6.7 percent.

March was characterized by some extreme weather in snow and rain, with some school closing days during the month.

Possibly affecting retail totals in areas other than The Legends, a Kmart store at 78th and State Avenue closed in late January 2019.

The three-month period of January through March saw only a .4 percent drop in Wyandotte County sales tax distributions from 2019 to 2018, according to figures on the KDOR website.