Leavenworth Road Association works on community improvement project

by Lou Braswell

The Leavenworth Road Association has a major community project in July.

There is a team with 70 youth and adult leaders coming to town.

There are 13 residential projects on a list for them to help with, including painting eight houses, trimming fence lines, hanging doors, enclosing car ports, hanging blinds, trimming low branches and weeding a couple of gardens.

Two trucks picked up paint and other supplies, and delivered them. One of the trucks belonged to the Kansas City, Kan., Police Department community policing unit, with Officers Tony Lee and Tom Grote. The other truck was Deniese Davis with her grandson, Nick Davis.

All the paint was delivered, appreciate residents were met and the group is ready to go full force.

Some community policing officers will be dressed in civilian clothes to help paint, cut some brush and hammer a few nails.

Lou Braswell is the executive director of the Leavenworth Road Association.

A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)
A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)

A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)
A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)

A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)
A community improvement project with the Leavenworth Road Association and volunteers has begun in Kansas City, Kan. (Photo from Lou Braswell)

Turner industrial site finally finds development

Views
by Murrel Bland

It was a blessing in disguise.

About three years ago, Macy’s department store came looking for a major distribution center. Representatives considered the 130-acre site just south of the Turner Diagonal at Riverview Avenue. The agricultural property had long been considered a development site for various projects, including moderate-cost housing.

Macy’s rejected the site. Fast-forward to today. The site, now identified as RELP Turner LLC, will become a major distribution center for Amazon. It would employ about 1,500 persons and is considered very significant by folks who watch development. A building would cover 856,000 square feet.

The Unified Government confirmed on Monday afternoon that the new tenant would be Amazon.

The Unified Government Commission approved $310.5 million in industrial revenue bonds Thursday, June 9, to help finance the project. The owner of the site will be USAA Real Estate of San Antonio, Texas. That company has its roots in an insurance company, which caters to military personnel. The developer who would handle construction will be Seefried Properties, which has offices in Atlanta, Ga., and Dallas, Texas.

But there is much more. Public and private leaders envision this 130-acre site as a keystone to an industrial area that would cover some 670 additional acres and stretch from State Avenue to about 65th Street.

The Kansas Department of Transportation will award a $7 million grant to build a signalized intersection to help traffic in and out of this initial location. However, the Unified Government hopes to attract a federal grant from the U.S. Transportation Department for $13.48 million for roadwork that would enhance nearby sites. Business West sent a letter of support, urging U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx to approve the grant.

Wyandotte County suffers from a lack of industrial sites. This effort would address this deficiency, according to Greg Kindle, the president of the Wyandotte Economic Development Council.

A promotional brochure citing the needed roadway improvements states that thousands of jobs could be added to the community by “unlocking developable land currently hamstrung by overbuilt entrance and exit ramps.” “Interested developers with significant financial assets are ready to go to work building facilities…” Kindle is optimistic about receiving the federal grant that would be part of the TIGER program—Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery. Kindle said Wyandotte County has the right demographics for such an award.

Distribution center jobs do not pay particularly high wages—usually about $15 an hour. Kindle said that he would hope that future sites along the Turner Diagonal would attract manufacturing jobs that would pay higher wages.

The attraction of the Amazon fulfillment center shows the changing trend in retail sales. Walmart is the largest retail business in the world doing $482 billion in sales in 2015 compared to Amazon doing only $107 billion for the same period. However, Amazon doesn’t have any stores; Walmart wants to go after that e-commerce market. In 2014, according to an article in e.marketer.com, some 63 percent of U.S. households ordered something online.

Retail experts point out that many consumer products are manufactured in Asia and shipped by sea from the Pacific Rim to the West Coast to ports such as Long Beach, Calif. Merchandise is then shipped by rail northeastward. The goal is to have enough warehouse space at various locations to meet the demand of a two-day, or less, delivery time.

An article in the July 8 issue of the Kansas City Business Journal speculated that Walmart may be shopping for a distribution center in the Kansas City area. It has similar shipping centers in Texas, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Georgia and California. Amazon also has a distribution center in the intermodal industrial park in Edgerton.

Kindle said he expects NorthPoint Development to play a significant role as other areas along the Turner Diagonal are developed. Brent Miles, a former president of the Wyandotte Economic Development Council, is now a NorthPoint vice president. He played a very significant role in first obtaining the initial site on the Turner Diagonal and then selling it to USAA Real Estate. Miles and NorthPoint are active in redevelopment efforts in the Fairfax Industrial Area.

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press. He is the executive director of Business West.

Opinion column: Time to ban fireworks in KCK

Window on the West
Opinion column

by Mary Rupert

I realize there are a lot more important issues happening in Wyandotte County and the world right now, but I am going to weigh in on the topic of fireworks.

By far, the most reader comments we have received this past week had to do with fireworks in Kansas City, Kan. We didn’t even publish all of the comments, because some of them were anonymous or using an assumed name, and I want commenters to use their real first and last names.

Year after year, there are numerous injuries in Wyandotte County because of fireworks accidents. This year, KU Hospital recorded 15 injuries, including five amputations, and Providence Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., saw 12 injuries from fireworks.

Our commenters told us that there were people shooting off fireworks as early as July 1 and earlier, when it was legal to shoot them off only July 2, 3 and 4. I myself heard what probably sounded like fireworks being discharged on July 1.

When I watched fireworks being discharged on July 4, a thick cloud of haze hung over the neighborhood. It certainly can’t be good for the atmosphere and it’s not good for people who have asthma or respiratory illnesses.

From the number of people sending us comments about it, it seems like it is important to many persons. I can’t figure out what people were celebrating on July 1 – it couldn’t have been a Happy New Fiscal Year, could it?

Anyway, the reports we received about fireworks, and sometimes guns, being illegally discharged leads me to think that some residents here do not want to comply with the laws. Some may say they don’t know the laws about fireworks, but that information is easily available on the UG website, in area publications and news reports, at the fireworks stands and at the fire stations.

It’s really time to pull the plug on fireworks in Wyandotte County. There are too many needless injuries from them. There are a lot of complaints about people shooting fireworks in the days before they are legal and late at night, when they are not allowed.

There’s no reason to think that people will ever change their habits, unless a complete change is made to outlaw fireworks here.

If the UG does make a change, then there probably needs to be more entertainment offered as an alternative on the Fourth of July. The community fireworks display at Turner’s Pierson Park is a good idea, and possibly a couple other community entertainment events could be added, with an effort made to find outside sponsors.

There is really only one group that I feel for, if there are no fireworks allowed, and that is the family businesses that sell fireworks. Any action should be taken early, giving them time to adjust to new laws.

An effort was made not so long ago to ban fireworks, but it did not succeed at the Unified Government. And it would be unlikely to succeed in the next year, also, because of an election coming up in 2017.

Shooting off fireworks certainly isn’t worth a trip to the emergency room and it’s not worth polluting the atmosphere. We should all seek alternative ways to celebrate the Fourth of July.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected]. Send your comments for publication to that email address or to [email protected] and be sure to include your name.