Two injured in shooting on Parallel

Two persons were injured in a shooting on Tuesday night, according to a police spokesman.

The location of the victims was in the 1900 block of North 15th, according to police.

Officers went to the scene around 9:57 p.m. Aug. 13.

They found one juvenile and one adult male who had been shot while riding in the back seat of their vehicle while traveling eastbound on Parallel between 38th and 18th streets, according to the police spokesman.

Police stated the juvenile had life-threatening injuries and was in critical condition. The adult victim sustained serious injuries and was listed in stable condition.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department’s Criminal Investigations Unit is investigating. Anyone with information is asked to call the TIPS hotline at 816-474-TIPS.

T-Bones win seventh in a row, 9-7

Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)

by William Crum

Chris Colabello launched a blast in the first inning – a home run scoring two – as the T-Bones again looked like the American Association champions they are in Tuesday night’s game at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium, Kansas City, Kansas.

The T-Bones won their seventh straight game and displayed their comeback ability in the seventh inning Tuesday night against the Cleburne Railroaders.

At the top of the third inning, the Railroaders got two runs, and added two more at the top of the fourth, for a Cleburne lead of 4-2.

In the bottom of the seventh inning, Shawn O’Malley, Tyler Marincov and Roy Morales scored. Morales hit a single, Marincov hit a double, while O’Malley was hit by a pitch to get on base. Ramsey Romano’s double allowed O’Malley and Marincov to score, and the T-Bones led, 5-4.

In the eighth inning, the T-Bones added four more runs to make the score 9-4. Colabello singled and Casey Gillaspie hit a home run to start the rally. O’Malley singled and stole a base, then scored on a Marincov single. Also getting hits in the inning were Romano, Dylan Tice and Daniel Nava.

Cleburne came back in the ninth, but it was not enough, and the T-Bones won 9-7.

The winning pitcher was Christian Binford, while D.J. Sharabi took the loss. Carlos Diaz got the save. Attendance was listed as 1,899.

The T-Bones are now 42-37 on the season and Cleburne is 47-34.

Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)
Scenes from the T-Bones’ 9-7 win over Cleburne on Tuesday night at JustBats Field at T-Bones Stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. (Photo by William Crum)

Kansas, Missouri agree to end economic ‘border war’

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, left, and Missouri Gov. Mike Parson shared a light moment after signing an agreement that will end the economic “border war” in the Kansas City area. They were at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas, on Tuesday morning. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

by Mary Rupert

From now on, Missouri and Kansas will work together on economic development instead of trying to lure businesses across the state line.

The governors of Kansas and Missouri announced today at a summit held at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas, that they would end the economic “border war” in the Kansas City region and quit offering incentives and tax breaks to companies that move across the state line.

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly made ending the border war one of her campaign issues. It also was a goal of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, led by Joe Reardon, the GKC chamber’s president.

“Boundaries will no longer define the potential for progress,” Gov. Laura Kelly said Tuesday morning at Kansas City, Kansas, Memorial Hall. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

“The executive order I recently signed, and the bill that Governor Parson signed, ends this senseless battle,” Gov. Kelly said.

“Kansans elected me in part because they were tired of far-reaching fiscal irresponsibility in the past several years, which included inaction on the border war, one that saw hundreds of millions of dollars spent in incentives by both states in the past decade to move businesses a matter of blocks, with no economic gain to the region as a whole,” Gov. Kelly said.

The goal of the agreement will be more new jobs in the area, she said.

Gov. Kelly said they will continue to compete for businesses that want to start up or relocate, and they will use strategies that are sensible, cost effective and productive for people in both states.

“The best outcome will be substantial growth in this region. Growth where all businesses can prosper and where both states benefit from their presence. Boundaries will no longer define the potential for progress,” Gov. Kelly said.

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said it’s also important to retain the businesses they currently have. He was at Kansas City, Kansas, Memorial Hall on Tuesday morning. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

“Sometimes common sense does prevail,” Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said.

“We talk about bringing new businesses in, it’s also just as important to retain the businesses we have,” Gov. Parson said.

Gov. Parson said the governments could use the money they save from incentives for companies that move across the state line for improvements such as repairing the Buck O’Neil Bridge.

He also said officials in Washington, D.C., might learn something from this agreement signed by the governor of Kansas, a Democrat, and the governor of Missouri, a Republican.

According to the agreement, the states can still give incentives for projects that add net new jobs. The “net new jobs” could receive incentives from the states, and the agreement says states will share information with each other about the number of base jobs of the company that is relocating.

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor David Alvey, left, talked with Don Hall, executive chairman of Hallmark Cards, center, and Joe Reardon, president of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, right, after a news conference on Tuesday morning at Memorial Hall in Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor David Alvey said he’s on board with the idea to end the border war.

Kansas City, Kansas, will work together with Kansas City, Missouri, and other cities not to use incentives for firms moving from one side of the state line to the other, he said.

The fundamental question for the city is how do they improve services, provide more services and reduce the tax burden, Alvey said.

“The only way to do that is by growing the economy,” Alvey said.

Sales tax revenue bonds (S.T.A.R. bonds), have been very productive for Wyandotte County, he said. Property tax revenues and sales tax revenues have increased in the areas with S.T.A.R. bonds, he said.

Most companies look at the work force and the communities’ amenities when they are thinking of relocating, and taxes are way down the line in the criteria they are looking at, he said.

The summit also included presentations by Amy Liu, Brookings Institute; David Toland, Kansas secretary of commerce; Rob Dixon, director of the Missouri Department of Economic Development; and Don Hall, executive chairman of Hallmark Cards.

Officials held a news conference at Memorial Hall Tuesday morning on the economic “border war.” (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Many officials who attended the “border war” summit on Tuesday morning at Memorial Hall posed for a photo afterward. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, left, and Missouri Gov. Mike Parson talked a little before a news conference Tuesday morning at Memorial Hall. Kansas City, Missouri, Mayor Quinton Lucas was on the left. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)
Joe Reardon, president and CEO of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce, addressed the summit on Tuesday morning at Memorial Hall. A longtime goal of the GKC Chamber has been to end the “border war.” Reardon is a former mayor of Kansas City, Kansas. (Staff photo by Mary Rupert)