Changes to Foodie Park deadline and Hilton Garden bond amount receive preliminary approval

Changes to two development projects received unanimous preliminary approval at Monday night’s Unified Government Economic Development and Finance Committee meeting.

The Foodie Park, a mixed-use development including food warehouse, office and retail facilities at the former Indian Springs Shopping Center at 47th and State Avenue, received a preliminary extension that will allow the developer three more months. A distribution, food service center, office and commercial space are planned for the 49.2-acre former Indian Springs Shopping Center site. The retail or public portion of the project is an area along State Avenue where there could be three to five restaurant and retail pad sites.

Scavuzzo’s Food Service Co. is the developer for the project, and Richard Scavuzzo, CEO of Scavuzzo’s, said that the closing date for the first phase area is requested to be postponed from Dec. 31 to March 31. The plat for the project already has been approved by the UG, said Katherine Carttar, UG economic development director.

A general contractor and automation firm have been added, and a kickoff meeting for the project was held about five weeks ago, Scavuzzo said.

“They are going as fast as humanly possible,” he said.

A brokerage firm and owner’s representative have been hired, he added. They have done a lot of work on the second through fourth phases toward finding additional tenants, with a possible additional office building in the fourth phase, he said.

The need for the extension coincides with the delay during UG consideration of the development agreement, he added, and they’re asking for that time to be extended.

The project plans to bring more jobs to Wyandotte County, Scavuzzo said. There are about nine students from Wyandotte High School in an after-school program now with Scavuzzo’s, he said.

“We want to engage even more with the Wyandotte community,” he said.

The company will do its own training and fully intends to hire from the community, he added. Scavuzzo’s also is making an effort to work with the transit system so employees will have the opportunity to ride the bus to work.

Also at the Monday night meeting, the Hilton Garden Inn interior renovation received preliminary unanimous approval for more funding.

About a year ago, the project received about $4 million in industrial revenue bonds, but that was not enough for the project.

Additional work was added to the project, and project costs increased to $5.5 million, an increase in $1.5 million, according to Carttar.

Carttar said the IRBs will have a sales tax exemption, not a property tax exemption. Also, the UG will not be responsible for the payment of the bonds, she said.

The IRBs were issued for sales tax exemption for construction materials and furniture, fixtures and equipment for renovations, according to UG information.

Hilton Garden Inn officials said the renovations got bigger, and now it’s a complete renovation, with walls being taken out, and rooms and bathrooms completely redone. Walls that had mold were completely removed, according to officials. There are 147 rooms being completely redone. Both the scope of the project and the price of materials increased, according to officials.

The bond approval now is expected to go to the full UG Commission on Dec. 12.

The committee also unanimously approved a resolution offering for sale municipal temporary notes and general obligation bonds and requesting the Public Building Commission to issue leasehold revenue bonds. Two pages of projects to be funded are listed in the committee agenda.

The most expensive projects on the list were $30 million for the Wolcott expansion – Conner Creek facility; $10.2 million for the Kansas Levee Betterment project; $10 million for the Kaw River Bank Stabilization at Turkey Creek; $9.3 million for Kaw Point Biosolids Digestion; $9 million for the Leavenworth road project from 78th to 63rd streets; $4.45 million for courthouse improvements; and $4 million for the Hutton Road fire station.

According to UG officials, some projects are currently in discussions, and are not considered ready to move forward yet. One is the biosolids project that is progressing and in negotiations with Kansas City, Missouri, officials said, although they don’t expect it to be ready to go during 2020.

Several other items were discussed at Monday night’s meeting, which is online at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0iHTpE0j6E.

After a split at Mineral Area, Blue Devils at St. Mary’s Tuesday

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

While not a home game, it’s the closest Kansas City Kansas Community College’s well-traveled men’s basketball team has been to home in the last 17 days as the Blue Devils play Saint Mary’s junior varsity at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Leavenworth.

It’s the fifth straight game on the road and ninth in 11 games for the Blue Devils, who are coming off a two-game split in the Mineral Area Classic in Park Hills, Missouri, Friday and Saturday.

After a down-to-the wire, come-from-behind 86-84 win over North Arkansas Friday, the Blue Devils ran into an NJCAA Division I powerhouse Saturday as unbeaten Mineral Area lived up to its ranking as the nation’s No. 9 team with a 90-67 win on its home court. It was the 12th straight win for the Cardinals, who are averaging 90 points a game.

Mineral Area scored the first nine points before a Jermaine Yarbough dunk got the Blue Devils on the board 6½ minutes into the game. The Cardinals widened their lead 20-6 in the first nine minutes and held a 40-18 halftime lead before the Blue Devils played the hosts almost even (50-49) in the second half.

Five players scored in double figures for the Cardinals, who converted 29-of-31 free throws for a sizzling 93.5 percent to 7-of-10 for KCKCC. Mineral Area was 28-of-61 for 45.9 percent from the field but only 5-of-25 from 3 point (.200).

“Give Mineral Area credit,” KCKCC coach Brandon Burgette said. “They took us out of everything from beginning to finish. That’s a very good basketball team with a lot of size, experience and very good guards.”

DeAngelo Bell, a 5-9 freshman guard from Harmon, led KCKCC with 13 points and four assists while Yarbough added 11 points, Jaemaal Newson 10, Tim Barbieri 7 and Calvin Slaughter 6. Robert Rhodes had six rebounds for KCKCC, which was out-rebounded 38-23.The Blue Devils shot 40 percent from the field (26-of-65) and .364 from 3-point (8-of-22).

The loss came 24 hours after KCKCC’s best 3-point shooting performance of the season in the 86-84 win over North Ark.

The Blue Devils were 14-of-28 from the perimeter in outscoring North Ark 21 points from 3-point. Jalen Davis and Derin McDaniel were each 4-for-8 and Ezekiel Lopes 3-for-4. Davis finished with a career high 31 points, netting 9-of-15 from the field and 9-of-10 free throws along with seven rebounds.

Robert Rhodes had a double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds while McDaniel finished with 14 points, Jones 10, Slaughter 6 and Yarbough and Cody Dortch 5 each.

The Blue Devils were 28-of-59 for 47.5 percent from the field while limiting North Ark to 29-of-73 for 39.7 percent.

The Blue Devils (2-8) finally get home Friday when they play host to Washburn junior varsity at 7 p.m. They are also home to Division I State Fair Tuesday, Dec. 10, and Southwestern (Iowa) Saturday, Dec. 14, before breaking for the holidays.

KCK police search empty lot in 20-year-old case

The Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department conducted an evidence search today in the 1700 block of South 49th Street, according to a spokesman.

The empty lot formerly was a residence where Star Boomer stayed off and on with a boyfriend, police stated. Boomer was last seen in February 1999 at a bar near 49th and Metropolitan, according to police.

Detectives reopened the cold case in 2017, and while there were not many new leads, they decided to revisit previous locations from the case, according to a news release from the police spokesman.

With the help of the University of Kansas, police used a ground-penetrating radar that showed where the house used to be. Although the images did not tell police what was under the soil, the spokesman stated that police will use resources to bring an end to the cold case and closure to the family.

Police stated that 49th Street will be closed from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day, between Barber and Douglas, to through traffic while officers conduct the search.