Rep. Davids announces five federal grants for Wyandotte County

U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-3rd Dist., today announced five federal grants for Wyandotte County projects.

They were among 14 grants totaling $31.2 million in the 3rd District.

Each of the Davids-requested projects were submitted in tandem with local officials and selected for their potential to improve health and safety in the community, tackle climate change, and bring economic opportunity to the 3rd District, according to Rep. Davids’ office. Appropriations requests are subject to strict transparency and accountability rules.

• The University of Kansas Medical Center will receive $2,594,226 for the purchase of a new MRI scanner allowing community members to participate in the latest research studies for many years to come, and $2,956,507 for a CT scanner allowing researchers to obtain 3-D reconstructions of internal organs, a technology the KU Medical Center currently lacks.

“On behalf of the University of Kansas Medical Center, I would like to express our sincere thanks to Representative Davids for securing this funding,” said Dr. Robert D. Simari, executive vice chancellor for KU Medical Center. “These funds will be used to strengthen KU’s research capabilities, including access to cutting-edge medical equipment for researchers throughout Kansas. These types of medical innovations ensure that all Kansans can benefit from the latest research discoveries, clinical trials and treatment.”

• The Wyandotte County Public Health Department will receive $750,000 to increase access to mental and behavioral health services by integrating mental health services and funding new staff, helping reach more residents with better care.

• The Kansas City, Kansas, Board of Public Utilities will receive $3,707,250 for the purchase of an emergency electric back-up generator at the Nearman Water Treatment Plant, the primary water treatment facility in the event of electrical service disruptions.

• The Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, will receive $2 million for a Kaw Point Wastewater Treatment Plant project aimed at reducing both long-term operation costs and rates paid by the public.

“We are extremely grateful to Representative Davids for the continued support and funding,” said Interim County Administrator Cheryl Harrison-Lee. “This is an important investment in infrastructure that not only supports our community today but creates great potential for our economic development growth in the future.”

• The Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, will receive $1 million to address the aging infrastructure of parks in KCK. Specific upgrades include restoring rock work, improvements to shelters and play equipment, and rectifying issues with lighting for safety.


“We are excited and grateful to Representative Davids for the continued support of our parks,” expressed Unified Government Parks and Recreation director, Angel Ferrara. “Parks are a clear reflection of a community’s quality of life. They provide a sense of identity for residents and are an important factor in a community’s livability. Being able to repair and restore aspects of our parks to ensure every member of the community has equitable access to amenities, infrastructure and programming creates a better and safer community for our residents.”

Some of the grants in other parts of the 3rd District include: Olathe will receive $300,000 to upgrade technology in the Olathe Police Department, the city Police Command Post; the city of Shawnee will receive $126,750 to install solar panels at two Shawnee Fire Department locations; the city of Overland Park will receive $5. million for infrastructure upgrades to the College Boulevard Bridge in Overland Park, Kansas, and $4 million for the reconstruction of 167th Street from Switzer Road to Antioch Road; the city of Gardner will receive $3 million for their Gardner wastewater infrastructure project; the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority (KCATA) will receive $4 million to help further incorporate battery electric buses into the already established RideKC network, which covers the urban and suburban regions of the bi-state Kansas City area; the city of Olathe will receive $750,000 to design a new dam and spillway approximately 900 feet downstream of the current Cedar Lake Dam.

  • Information from Rep. Davids’ office

Sporting regular season to start Feb. 25

Sporting Kansas City will play a full 34-match schedule for the 2023 MLS regular season.

The season will kick off in Portland with the earliest regular season match in club history on Saturday, Feb. 25, during opening weekend and will end 34 weeks later at home on Saturday, Oct. 21, at Children’s Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kansas.

Sporting Kansas City’s regular season home schedule in 2023 begins with the club’s home opener at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 11, against five-time MLS Cup champions LA Galaxy and features a total of 17 matches, highlighted by 13 Saturday dates – including visits from reigning MLS Cup champions Los Angeles FC on June 17 and MLS newcomers St. Louis City SC on Sept. 2.

The league’s 29th club, St. Louis joins the Western Conference and will twice welcome Sporting KC for matches at City Park: first on Saturday, May 20, in the inaugural meeting between the regional rivals with a national television audience on FS1 and again on Saturday, Sept. 30, in a late-season showdown. Sporting’s 2023 road schedule also includes a first-ever match against Inter Miami CF on Saturday, Sept. 9.

Season tickets are available by calling 888-4KC-GOAL or visiting SportingKC.com. Sporting also offers a variety of ticket packages and promotions including the Home Opener Pack and Captain’s Flex Pack, as well as the My Five ticket contest .

In addition, single-match tickets for Sporting Kansas City’s first eight regular season home matches at Children’s Mercy Park in 2023 are now on sale via SeatGeek. Single-match tickets for the remaining regular season home matches will be released at a later date.

The season will see the debut of MLS Season Pass, the new subscription service from Apple and Major League Soccer that will have every match of the MLS regular season, Audi 2023 MLS Cup Playoffs and Leagues Cup with no blackouts. With MLS Season Pass, fans can enjoy every MLS match – as well as a weekly five-hour live whip-around show from 6:30-11:30 p.m. – through the Apple TV app on Apple devices, smart TVs, streaming devices, set-top boxes, game consoles and the web at tv.apple.com. The launch of MLS Season Pass on Feb. 1, 2023, marks the official kickoff of the 10-year partnership and all matches during the MLS is Back opening weekend will be available to watch for free on the Apple TV app.

Led by Manager Peter Vermes and captain Johnny Russell, Sporting will face 11 clubs in the Western Conference twice – once home and once away – while having the opportunity to play the team’s two closest geographic rivals, Minnesota United FC and St. Louis City SC, three times each in 2023. The remaining fixtures come against six of the Eastern Conference’s 15 teams with match-ups against Philadelphia, New England, Montreal, Chicago, Miami and Nashville – who re-join the East after a year in the West.

Beyond the MLS regular season, MLS will be host to the 2023 MLS All-Star Game presented by Target on July 19 at Audi Field in Washington, D.C., and Sporting KC will compete for trophies – as well as a berth in the Concacaf Champions League – during the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup and the reimagined Leagues Cup. Sporting’s participation in the U.S. Open Cup will begin in the Third Round (April 18-19) with the single-elimination competition to continue with the Round of 32 (May 9-10), Round of 16 (May 23-24), Quarterfinals (June 6), Semifinals (Aug. 23) and Final (Sept. 27) as the winner secures entry into the Concacaf Champions League.

In a new chapter for North American soccer, all 47 MLS and LIGA MX clubs will compete in Leagues Cup 2023 and the MLS regular season will pause following matches on July 15 for the annual World Cup-style tournament from July 21 to Aug. 19. The Leagues Cup champion, as well as the second and third place finishers, will qualify for the Concacaf Champions League.

In preparation for the upcoming campaign, Sporting will begin the club’s 2023 preseason presented by Children’s Mercy on Jan. 6 when players report to Kansas City for entrance physicals, testing and meetings. The team will travel to Arizona from Jan. 9 to Feb. 8 and from Feb. 15 to Feb. 24 with Sporting’s schedule of preseason matches set to be announced in early January.

The schedule:

  • Story from Sporting KC

Kansans Marshall, Moran split votes in U.S. Senate on pending $1.7 trillion federal spending bill

U.S. House prepaing to act on mammoth budget legislation ahead of deadline

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall voted against the $1.7 trillion spending bill awaiting action by the U.S. House because it expanded the federal deficit and fueled inflation with wasteful spending.

Marshall said the measure unwisely delivered $370 billion in handouts to clean energy, $47 billion in military, economic and humanitarian aid for Ukraine, $3.2 billion for processing illegal immigrants and $1.7 billion to enforce regulations eroding 2nd Amendment rights.

The Kansas Republican also objected to $212 million for the U.S. Department of Justice to advance prosecution of defendants and investigate cases tied to the assault on the U.S. Capitol in January 2021. The package would overhaul the 135-year-old law former President Donald Trump and his allies sought to exploit in an effort to stop the certification of the 2020 election.

Marshall’s criticism extended to congressional earmarks filling more than 4,000 pages of the bill, including spending for LGBTQ organizations. Overall, the legislation funded 7,200 earmarks valued at $15 billion.

“We are going to borrow another trillion dollars from our grandchildren,” Marshall said. “America is going to continue to print this money, the feds can keep raising interest rates, but they are just a tiger chasing its tail.”

Marshall split on the bill Thursday with Republican U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, also of Kansas. The U.S. Senate voted 68-29 to forward the bipartisan legislation to the U.S. House.

Moran backed the bill likely to be adopted by the U.S. House before the Friday deadline and quickly signed by President Joe Biden, but denounced the process of bundling what ought to be a dozen separate appropriations bill.

“I certainly decry the method by which the committee, the Senate, the Congress work in regard to appropriations bills. There is no reason — none — that we could not do as we are supposed to do,” Moran said. “We’d all be better off if we broke this down into 12 separate parts that are now combined into this one large bill. We’d know much more about it.”

U.S. Rep. Tracey Mann, who serves the 1st District covering much of western Kansas, said it was wrong for Democrats to push through an omnibus spending bill during the lame-duck period between the November election and the January transition to GOP leadership in the House.

“This is bad legislation passed in a dishonest, untimely way,” Mann said. “While Washington Democrats had control of the House, it was their responsibility to pass normal spending bills. They never got their act together, so now we are stuck with this omnibus — a 4,155-page spending bill put together behind closed doors and with no input or oversight from House Republicans.”

He said manner in which this budget legislation was handled demonstrated why Republicans were able to take back control of the U.S. House.

The package funding the federal government through September included $850 billion in defense spending, which would equate to a 10% increase over the previous fiscal year, and $770 billion in nondefense spending for an 8% boost.

The appropriations package offered more than $15 million for the construction of new U.S. Army barracks at Fort Riley, which serves the 1st Infantry Division.

“Already home to nearly 15,000 active duty service members and the headquarters for the 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley will soon have the opportunity to expand its capabilities,” Moran said. “By building new barracks, the base will have greater capacity for additional soldiers to be housed at Fort Riley and will be in a better position to compete for future opportunities.”

He applauded inclusion in the bill improvements in funding of health care and mental health services for U.S. veterans named in part for former U.S. Sen. Robert Dole, a Kansan seriously wounded during World War II in Italy.

“By closing the gaps in health care for rural veterans, protecting veterans’ right to seek care where they choose, investing in the treatment of prostate cancer, expanding homeless outreach programs and more, this legislation touches the lives of veterans in all different walks of life, from every corner of the country,” Moran said.

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See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/12/23/kansans-marshall-moran-split-votes-in-u-s-senate-on-pending-1-7-trillion-federal-spending-bill/