‘Sign, sign, everywhere a sign’

Marching along 45th and Oak streets, several hundred people participated in the “March 4th For A Free Press” rally organized by group “The People Vs. The President of the United States” on Saturday at Theis Park. “Woman With Pink Sign” (Inking copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)
by Rebecca Tombaugh
reporting artist

Ron Meyer says he is a teacher. He, in fact, is with a group of school teachers. He adds, with emphasis, they are, “PUBLIC school teachers.”

Meyer’s grandfather was from Rosedale. Now, Meyer, standing on the corner of 45th and Oak streets in Kansas City, Missouri, at Theis Park, which is the south lawn of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, is holding one corner of a big vinyl sign that reads “unity in diversity” with a rainbow of colors as the background.

“We should go,” he told his friends earlier, after hearing about the “March 4th for a Free Press” on Saturday.

This is their first protest together as a group, he says. Meyer says teachers are busy, but they intend to participate in more.

“Anytime we are free,” he says.

The teachers spent some money on this sign and another that reads “Love Trumps Hate” with stars in rainbow colors. Meyer says teachers reuse things all the time and will take these to future protests.

Being teachers, he continues, they are liberal-minded, and he and his husband are gay, and they were concerned about the Betsy DeVos confirmation, and were shocked by the barring of the press from the White House.

“I don’t care if it’s a Democrat or Republican, that’s frightening,” says Meyer. The press, he says, keeps everyone informed and the White House transparent.

“It’s very important,” he says. “We can’t have the press bullied by this administration. They need to be free and safe to report.”

Meyer says protests are important.

“We need to let people know we are going to work to make sure we are not going to be complacent and let things happen,” he says, from the Muslim ban to transgender issues. “We cannot put our heads in the sand.”

Meyer says a lot of cars driving by honk in support. A few people make what he calls “unkind gestures.”

Meyer challenges everyone in the metro area to not be afraid to exercise what he calls their “civic duties.”

“I challenge everyone to let their voices be heard no matter what side of the fence we’re on,” he says.

A small group of passersby ask if they can take a photo of the banner. Of course, says Meyer. At the same time, two men walk up and asked if they can kiss each other in front of the banner. Everyone says “yes” in unison and take more photos as the couple embraces.

Holding the other corner of the sign is Meyer’s husband, Jeff Curran. The couple has been together for 22 years. Curran says he has been watching the news and social medial related to the current administration.

“They are stripping rights from people!” he said.

This angered him. The Muslim ban was barring people from America–the melting pot, he said.

“I can’t believe they would stop people from coming in!” he said.

Curran, a banker, says when he heard about the march in support of the press, he said, “We’re going!”

“We’re going,” Jeff Curran, third from left, told his husband Ron Meyer, fourth from left, and friends about the protest having watched the news about the current administration. (Photo copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)

This is his first protest, but he plans on participating in more. He won’t sit back, he says. And, Curran, a banker, says he is not hesitant and not afraid to be seen. He is out as a gay man, and he says the protests are no different.

“It’s time for us to come together, we have the same feelings, the same concerns,” says Curran. “I’m proud to be here. This is who I am. Passionate. It’s time for people to stand up. It’s time.”

Marge Steinhouse with her sign “Women’s Rights Are Human Rights.” (“Marge” inking copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)

A little ways down the sidewalk, Marge Steinhouse, of Blue Springs, Missouri, holds a sign that reads “Women’s Rights are Human Rights.”

“Freedom of the press,” she said, is the reason she showed up.

Steinhouse went to the Women’s Sister March on Washington in Kansas City, Missouri. And, she attended the President’s Day Protest at the J.C. Nichols Memorial Fountain recently.

She brought her grandchildren with her to some of them.

“So they know they have to participate in democracy,” she says.

Jean Cummings left her sign at the Trump hotel in Washington, D.C., after the Women’s March in January. (“Sign On My Phone” inking copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)

Her sister, Jean Cummings, of Leawood, Kansas, stands nearby with the same sign as her sister. She is wearing buttons that read “No Ban No Wall” and “Nasty Women Get S— Done” and her shirt reads “Nasty Woman.” The sisters recall their parents took them with them when working the election polls in the 1980s.

Left to right, sisters Jean Cummings and Marge Steinhouse recalled their parents took them along when they worked the polls in the 1980s. (Photo copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)

Cummings is married to a Muslim. She says he is nice and not a terrorist.

“I’ve vetted him,” she laughs.

They had a restaurant, and it burned down, she explains. So now, they have a business making hummus that was called “Mohammad’s Hummus,” but they changed the name to “Mo’s Hummus.” She was for changing the name, while her kids thought she was “insane.”

Said Cummings, “I know what hate looks like.”

This is not the first protest for Cummings. She traveled by bus to Washington, D.C., for the Women’s March in January.

Jean Cummings shows a photo on her phone from her trip to Washington, D.C., to the march in January. (Photo copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh)

She says her sign, “I’m With Her,” was left behind.

“I left it outside the Trump hotel,” says Cummings.

Rebecca Tombaugh is a reporting artist in the Greater Kansas City area.
Story, art and photos copyright 2017 by Rebecca Tombaugh

Letter to the editor

Dear editor:

Bienvenidos amigos, aquí respetamos a los inmigrantes.

Fuimos inmigrantes o descendientes de inmigrantes.

Jesús el Cristo enseñada y predicada, “Ama a tu vecino”.

Nos esforzamos para obedecer, amar y vivir como Jesús el Cristo.

Bienvenido al nuevo Wisconsinites, nuestros nuevos amigos!

Welcome friends, here we respect immigrants.

We were immigrants or descendants of immigrants.

Jesus the Christ taught and preached, “Love your neighbor.”

We strive to obey, love and live like Jesus the Christ.

Welcome to new Wisconsinites, our new friends!

Ron Renkoski

(The writer was born in KCK and Wyandotte County before their merger and lives now in Wisconsin.)

Racing industry scrambles for new opportunities

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Opinion column


by Murrel Bland

When the Kansas Speedway opened in 2001, it was the cornerstone for development in an area that was to become Village West. The International Speedway Corp. had decided to come to western Wyandotte in 1997 and build a $240 million tri-oval superspeedway that would attract the major leagues of auto racing.

Race fans scrambled to get seats and shelled out license fees to assure that future seats would be available. Top stock and Indy car drivers came to the Kansas Speedway. Sweltering summer heat over the Fourth of July weekend didn’t deter fans.

Fast-forward to 2017. Indy cars no longer race at the Kansas Speedway; however, a second race with top stock car drivers was added. The sport was hurt by the Great Recession as many of the fans were working-class blue-collar folks.

A front page story in the Feb. 21 issue of The Wall Street Journal told of the problems that NASCAR has had and still faces. Television viewership is down some 45 percent when compared to a peak in 2005 according to The Journal. The Kansas Speedway no longer sells out.

Part of the problem is that many of the typical NASCAR fans are getting older. And the millennial of today (19 to 34 years old) may be a race fan, but could be content to watch the race on a mobile device.

Stock car racing has its roots in the Southern United States where tales of good ol’ boy racecar drivers learned their craft hauling moonshine and outrunning revenue agents. It was Bill France Sr., who operated a gas station on Daytona Beach, Fla., who was the godfather of NASCAR. He was the one who established to original racing rules. But today, NASCAR is a very sophisticated business—and that may be what has turned off some fans. The France grandchildren manage ISC and NASCAR.

The Kansas Speedway was part of a national expansion of stock car racing which included tracks in the Los Angeles, Chicago and Dallas-Ft. Worth markets.

One of the major reasons that ISC came to Kansas City, Kansas, was the good deal it received from state and local officials. The track received a 30-year abatement on property—the only such benefit ever granted in Kansas. That was worth about $70 million. In addition, the track received the use of Sales Tax Revenue (STAR) bonds to pay for infrastructure. That was worth about another $10 million. However, the Speedway accounts for $243 million annually to the area’s economy according to an interview with Pat Warren, the Speedway president, in May of 2016.

Another major factor in choosing the Wyandotte County site was the intersection of I-435 and I-70 that provides relatively easy access for motorists with a minimum of stacking compared to older tracks such as Talladega in Alabama.

The Kansas Speedway has been the linchpin for development in Village West including Legends Outlet and the Plaza at the Speedway. The area now is responsible for about $25 million annually in property and sales tax. But talk to the typical business in Legends Outlet and they will tell you that their businesses suffer during race weekends. People stay away from the area because they don’t want to get tangled up in race-fan traffic. The truth is that it is one of the best times to shop at the Legends.

Although television viewers and ticket sales to NASCAR events may be down, a new race format and point system for 2017 may make a difference, according to an article in espn.com. The race is broken down into three phases in which drivers can earn points.

The NASCAR season started this last weekend at Daytona. The Kansas Speedway will hold NASCAR races May 12-13.

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