KC NWSL to build new training facility in Riverside

KC NWSL has announced plans for a new $15 million training facility in Riverside, Missouri. (Submitted drawing)

Kansas City NWSL unveiled plans today for the team’s new $15 million training facility in Riverside, Missouri.

The women’s soccer team plays its games at Legends Field in Kansas City, Kansas.

The training facility, exclusively privately funded by team owners, will be located just off I-635 and Horizons Parkway and is part of the team’s aspiration to set the standard for the future of professional sports, according to the announcement.

The complex will include two grass pitches and more than 17,000 square feet. Meticulously designed, the layout includes comprehensive team training features such as a locker room, weight and cardio rooms, and multiple outdoor and gathering spaces. The complex will house the team’s front office activities and includes spacious areas focused on nutrition and wellness.

With ground broken only nine months after Kansas City was awarded the club, the team’s new facility will also create iconic outward-facing moments and visuals.

“The training facility gives a tangible sign of the three driving forces for our club: our players, our community and our passion to create the future of women’s sports,” said co-founder and co-owner Angie Long, “Our team will spend more time together here than anywhere so it’s thrilling for us to bring it to life so quickly.”

In choosing the location for the facility, co-founder and co-owner Chris Long noted that it was important to connect to the history, attitudes and attributes that have shaped the metro.

“This location is a perfect representation of both the history of the area and our bright future. Riverside sits on the very river that formed and shaped Kansas City with incredible views of downtown. We are grateful to Mayor Kathy Rose, the Board of Aldermen, and the entire city staff; from moment one, they have shared our vision for an even brighter tomorrow, and an appreciation for the way our team can connect the broader KC community.”

“As our community began to envision how Horizons could look, the idea of an active, inviting, and engaging development serving people from around the region became our goal. We’ve had many successes over the past ten years, but this is certainly a crowning achievement,” said Rose. “These owners, this team, and this project will be a wonderful addition to Riverside. I am so excited to work with Angie, Brittany, and Chris to help their team be a great success and model for young women everywhere.”

KC NWSL has Generator Studio and Monarch Build as its primary design and construction partners for the project, which is expected to be completed in 2022.

The team is in its first season of play, led by owners Angie and Chris Long and Brittany Matthews, and will be in action next on Sept. 26 at the Washington Spirit before returning home to take on the Houston Dash on Oct. 2 at Legends Field. Tickets are available at KCWoSo.com.

Judge won’t block new Kansas voting law

by Noah Taborda, Kansas News Service

Topeka — A Shawnee County judge Thursday allowed Kansas to continue enforcing a controversial election law, rejecting arguments it will inhibit voter registration and education efforts.

District Judge Teresa Watson denied a request by four voting advocacy groups to temporarily block the law while a lawsuit filed before the statute took effect July 1 plays out. The groups — the League of Women Voters of Kansas, Loud Light, Kansas Appleseed and Topeka Independent Living Resource Center — objected to a provision in the law that criminalizes knowingly impersonating an election official, arguing it has forced them to cease routine activities that could be interpreted to as a violation of the statute.

Watson rejected this argument, emphasizing that the law requires the individual to “knowingly” misrepresent themselves as an election officer to violate the law.

“Plaintiffs downplay the word ‘knowingly’ … almost to the point of ignoring it,” Watson said, adding that, “The scenarios described by Plaintiffs in their affidavits do not help them. A representative of each organizational Plaintiff stated that its members always identify themselves as members of their respective organizations and not as election officials.”

The action comes just two days after the parties battled in court over the merits of the new law, which threatens felony prosecution for violators.

The lawsuit also addresses several other provisions in the legislation, including a limit on the number of advance ballots an individual can deliver on behalf of others. The groups say these laws will make it harder for senior citizens, members of minority groups, young voters and rural residents to cast their ballots.

A separate federal lawsuit is challenging another state law, which bars out-of-state actors from mailing advance ballots to voters in Kansas.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2021/09/16/kansas-judge-wont-block-new-kansas-voting-law/

State program helping with housing and utility expenses to expand to homeowners

The KERA housing and utility assistance program is expected to add funds for homeowners as well as renters by the end of the year, according to Board of Public Utilities’ officials.

Currently the state’s housing and utility assistance program is for renters only, but that will change, officials said at the Sept. 15 Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities meeting.

David Mehlhaff, chief communications officer for BPU, said at the Sept. 15 meeting that the KERA (Kansas Emergency Rental Assistance) program has been working on a draft plan that was submitted to the Department of Treasury on Wednesday.

While the plan is still in a draft form and the final version has not yet been completed, Mehlhaff said there are plans to create a Kansas Homeowners Assistance Fund through the Kansas Housing Resource Corp., which is also handling the KERA program.

While it doesn’t have a start date yet, they anticipate it starting at the end of 2021 or beginning of 2022, he said. They anticipate an initial allocation of $56 million for the statewide program, he added.

The new program would have the same type of eligibility requirements as KERA, such as documenting the effects of COVID and financial hardships, and could apply to mortgages, electricity, gas, water, wastewater and other utility payments such as internet service.

Mehlhaff said the Unified Government Commission last month approved $11.7 million for immediate community needs from the federal American Rescue Plan Act funding it received. The commission added $1.85 million in housing assistance in Kansas City, Kansas, from its ARPA funding, he said. The fund also could include utility assistance. The commission is expected to hold workshops this fall on how to spend the remaining ARPA funds, he said, and the BPU will advocate for funding for utility assistance.

The $1.85 million is to be distributed by United Way to 10 to 12 local nonprofit organizations to assist the homeless and others with housing and utility needs. The UG was hoping to complete an agreement with the United Way by Friday, Sept. 17, he added. For utility assistance, payments would go directly to BPU from organizations such as Avenue of Life, Cross-Lines, El Centro and Catholic Charities, he added.

Mehhaff said the BPU also is working with the American Public Power Association to lobby for Department of Treasury guidance that utility assistance funding will not be considered income for the purposes of the income tax.

Jeff Bryant, a BPU board member, said he was floored by the idea that they would consider making the funding taxable for people who receive donations. He added that the federal stimulus payments were nontaxable.

The BPU has a moratorium on disconnecting electric service until Oct. 6, to give customers time to sign up with the KERA program or other assistance programs.

BPU serves 11 utility assistance inquiries in first week of program

The BPU started helping residents fill out their KERA utility applications and answering questions on Sept. 8 under a new customer assistance program. In the first week, the BPU had 11 customer inquiries.

Patrice Townsend, BPU director of utility services, said at the Sept. 15 BPU meeting that they had 10 KERA inquiries on the BPU’s hotline and one from the BPU’s website. Townsend is leading the effort for the BPU to help customers complete their KERA applications.

Of the inquiries from the hotline, three calls were unrelated, another did not want to move forward because of a confidentiality concern, two calls were resolved and four calls from customers were pending, waiting to gather documentation to go through the process, Townsend said.

Of the four pending phone calls, three of the customers did not have a computer, she said.

For the one inquiry that came in through the website, the BPU is waiting on that individual to provide documentation to move forward in the process, she said.

She said some issues that were identified from the callers included getting the landlord to register; customers did not have access to a computer; and homeowners were calling in to apply for KERA. Only renters are eligible for the program currently.

One of the issues that has been resolved involves landlords, Townsend said. If a resident is applying for utility assistance only, and that payment is not included in their rent payment, then documentation is not needed from the landlord, she said. Some customers have stated they couldn’t get their landlords to fill out the paperwork for the application.

KERA has been open since the spring, and individuals stated at past BPU meetings that it was difficult to apply for the assistance. Payments were approved slowly, and some customers in the early days had their utilities cut off while they were waiting for assistance. The BPU then changed to keep the electricity on for customers with completed applications who were waiting for KERA to make a determination on assistance.

About 1,018 Wyandotte County residents so far have applied for KERA utility assistance, with 407 of the accounts receiving KERA payments, according to Johnetta Hinson, BPU executive director of customer service.


Hinson said at the Sept. 15 meeting that 611 BPU customer accounts had KERA alerts on them at the end of August, meaning they had filed their applications and were waiting to hear if they would be approved for assistance. The BPU does not disconnect them while they are waiting to hear from KERA.

As of Aug. 31, the BPU had received $406,309.20 in KERA payments for utility assistance, she said. The payments ranged from less than $100 to over $1,000 on the delinquent accounts, according to Hinson. The payments cover all the items listed on the BPU bills, which include electricity, water, trash fees, wastewater fees, PILOT fees and other charges, according to Hinson.

With the homeowner and landlord issues being addressed, they are now working on addressing customers’ access to a computer, she said. The KERA program application is online from the Kansas Housing Resources Corp. website.

Townsend said the BPU is now considering a plan to have a staff member assist customers in person, if it can be done safely and within COVID guidelines, to resolve the issue of customers who do not have computers. No final plan was announced yet for this, and it could take the form of customer appointments.

Along those lines, Townsend said she has reached out, and is seeing if they might be able to use the Main Kansas City, Kansas, Public Library, which has computers open to the public. They might try to have dedicated time slots, if possible, where customers could come to the library and Townsend could be there to assist them, if that plan works out. Also, Donnelly College has offered its computer lab and Townsend said she may be seeing if they could arrange to be there to help customers.

Rose Mulvany Henry, a BPU board member, said she would reach out to Kansas City Kansas Community College to see if a computer could be available at the college’s TEC Center.

Townsend said Mehlhaff and Tiffany Johnson of the BPU communications staff have completed new fliers about KERA, which are available for distribution. The BPU’s website and social media sites have been updated with KERA information, also, she said. Mehlhaff will be making a presentation to Livable Neighborhoods about the program, also, she said.

Besides Mulvany Henry, board member Tom Groneman volunteered to assist in any way possible on this program.

BPU residential customers who have questions about KERA or utility assistance may call 913-573-9123 or email [email protected] and a BPU KERA advocate will assist them in the application process.

Residents also may visit the KHRC website at https://kshousingcorp.org/emergency-rental-assistance/ or call 785-217-2001.

To reach the United Way, call 211.

To see some past stories about utility assistance, visit
https://wyandotteonline.com/bpu-to-start-kera-assistance-line/


https://wyandotteonline.com/bpu-extends-moratorium-on-utility-shutoffs-to-oct-6/

https://wyandotteonline.com/1-85-million-in-housing-assistance-approved-by-ug/