Santa Claus visits senior citizens

Gifts were wrapped and delivered to senior citizens on Monday by the Wyandotte Angels. (Photo from Wyandotte Angels)
Local law enforcement officers and public safety officers helped with delivery to senior citizens on Monday. (Photo from Wyandotte Angels)

Santa Claus visited several senior citizens on Monday in Wyandotte County, courtesy of the Wyandotte Angels.

“The best gift we give them is a gif of a visit, the gift of time,” said Jalynda Cervantes of the Wyandotte Angels. Since seniors don’t always get visitors, a knock on the door and a visit often is the best gift for seniors, she added.

Working with the Shepherd’s Center, the Wyandotte Angels helped 36 senior citizens on Monday, bringing with them Christmas blessing bags, she said. In the bags were crafts from preschoolers, handmade cards, decorations, snacks and treats, shawls, lipstick, jewelry and nostalgia items to uplift the spirits, she added.

The Wyandotte Angels are a grassroots volunteer group that helps the community. This is its third annual event helping seniors.

“I had lost both parents and wanted to serve that elderly community that is often forgotten,” Cervantes said.

They got police, sheriff and other law enforcement personnel involved in helping deliver the presents to the elderly.

“We wanted to build positive bridges between them and the seniors, trying to build unity in the community,” she said.

The Wyandotte Angels started about 2.5 years ago as a grassroots group during the COVID era.

“My husband and I were helping with food trucks,” Cervantes recalls. They noticed there was a need for more food, clothing, hygiene and other items. Originally they thought they would get 20 friends together, clean out their pantries and help two families, she said.

That then grew to thousands of Wyandotte Angels nationwide who have helped thousands of Wyandotte Countians. It was all done on a volunteer basis, without income coming in, she added.

Anyone who wants to be part of Wyandotte Angels may go to the Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/298361168037631.

Rock Island bridge project deadline extended

The Rock Island bridge project deadline was extended at Thursday night’s Unified Government Commission meeting.

The UG Commission heard that the project date would be extended to July 2023 by 16 months, to finish in March 2024. If not extended, the project deadline would have been Dec. 31. The motion that passed would allow the UG to recover the cost of a bridge raise through TIF and CID proceeds.

The bridge will be an entertainment and trail connection, with places such as restaurants and bars locating on it. It would be the first such bridge project in the nation, according to developers. Lately, a zip line from the Bonner Springs area would be added near the bridge for more entertainment options.

The cost of the project would be $5.7 million, including a bridge raise recommended by UG engineers. The financing was not approved Thursday night.

The four-foot bridge raise would be necessary because of levee work going on by the Army Corps of Engineers on the Kansas River, according to UG staff. The bridge would need to be protected against a 400-year-flood. The bridge could overtop and surge at a 400-year-flood.

Flying Truss, which is the company developing the bridge, is ready to start construction in January, according to UG staff.

The bridge raise would cost $850,000, according to UG staff.

The Corps of Engineers has classified the bridge as a closed bridge and is not putting any funding toward it, according to UG staff.

Commissioner Brian McKiernan said he has been a proponent of the bridge project from the beginning, as it has a catalytic potential for developing the riverfront.

However, he was disappointed that the Army Corps of Engineers is raising a levee and the Corps has told them it’s the UG’s responsibility for funding the bridge raise.

McKiernan also said he was disappointed that they already voted on the funding, plans, development agreements and suddenly there are more costs that they haven’t considered. He is disappointed that it happened at this stage.

Commissioner Tom Burroughs also was stunned that there is an additional cost to the project. He asked if they had actually purchased the bridge from Kansas City, Missouri, yet.

Patrick Waters, UG attorney, said they have the deed in hand but not closed and recorded it yet.

Financing options were to be presented in January.

UG engineers said the project costs have gone up almost 25 percent since they started. Some redesign was necessary.

Mayor Tyrone Garner said the community deserves to have down to the dollar information and they need to see where every penny is going. They simply do not have the money for increased expenses.

He said there was a communications lapse, a breakdown where something has gone critically wrong somewhere in the UG with communications and it was unacceptable.

The motion to extend the deadline passed 9-1 with Commissioner Gayle Townsend voting no because she was not clear about the nature of the moton. Later she said she supports the bridge project.

Mayor Garner said they had to hold UG staff accountable so this sort of thing doesn’t happen again.

Management style came up later in the night’s discussion about the change to the rules and procedures governing the mayor and commission in setting the agenda. Commissioner Mike Kane brought up the bridge accountability discussion and said it wasn’t nice for the mayor to talk to a staff member like that in public, until she started crying.

“If you don’t like what I’m doing, pull me in room and talk to me. Don’t beat me up in public,” Kane said.

Free turkeys today at Mercy and Truth Medical Mission

Free turkeys will be given away Tuesday, Dec. 20, at the Mercy and Truth Medical Mission, 721 N. 31st St., Kansas City, Kansas.

Ninety free boxes of food, 60 free turkeys and Santa Claus will hand out candy canes to children beginning at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Dec. 20.

“Mercy and Truth Medical Missions is excited to have Santa coming to help us help our community,” said Geofrey Kigneyi, the executive director. “We expect large crowds to come and are encouraging everyone to come early.”