UG Commission to hold budget workshop Thursday

A budget workshop is scheduled for the Unified Government Commission at 5 p.m. Thursday June 16, in the fifth floor conference room of City Hall, 701 N. 7th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

After the budget workshop, there will be a closed, executive session on labor, litigation and personnel, according to the special session notice.

The public will be able to observe or listen to the special meeting on the budget on YouTube or UGTV or through Zoom.

The public also may view the special session-budget workshop from the fifth floor conference room, Suite 515, at City Hall. The executive session portion of the meeting will be closed.

The Zoom meeting is online at https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85481461624?pwd=ckJ6VktLSWNqdGphYUsvcjdLOStnUT09#success.

The passcode is 051636.

The webinar ID is 854 8146 1624.

Toll-free phone numbers for the meeting are 877-853-5257 or 888-475-4499.

For more information about the special session, visit https://www.wycokck.org/Engage-With-Us/Calendar-of-Events/Full-Commission-Special-Session.

UG amends ordinance allowing community ID cards

The Unified Government Commission voted to amend its Safe and Welcoming ordinance at the Thursday, June 9, meeting.

According to the UG’s legal staff, changes were made to the ordinance to bring it into compliance with a new state law by July 1. The former provision in the UG ordinance, stating they wouldn’t turn over information about undocumented persons to federal authorities, was not allowed by the state law.

Other minor revisions were worked out after going through a UG committee.

After discussion about how long the community identification card would be in effect, the commission decided on three years as a compromise.

The first motion, for a two-year community identification card, failed on a 4-3 vote. Six votes were needed to pass it.

A second motion, for a three-year ID card, passed 6-1. The name of the ordinance also was changed to the KCK Community ID Act.

Judy Ancel, of the Cross Border Network, who worked with the Safe and Welcoming Coalition for a number of years, earlier in the meeting had requested that the name of the ordinance be changed to “Wyandotte County Community ID Act.” She said with the state law changes, “safe and welcoming” was no longer appropriate as it might no longer be safe for the undocumented.

Also, she thought a two-year community ID card was too short and proposed five years for the card.

In other action, Mayor Tyrone Garner outlined some details about the search for a permanent county administrator. He said he hoped to have a search firm in place by mid-July. It will be an open process, with the UG issuing requests for proposals, he said. A committee will be appointed for the county administrator search.

The UG Commission also heard presentations from the International Association of Firefighters, Local 64, and from KCK Fire Department officials about how they would reopen the Fairfax fire station that had been closed under a previous administration.

Several ideas were presented by each, along with cost information, and the commissioners and Mayor Garner directed them to sit down together, come up with a proposal they could agree on and present it to the commission at a later date.

A meeting at 5 p.m. on June 9 about developing the area east of I-635 had been canceled. Mayor Garner apologized to residents and individuals who had signed up in advance to speak at that meeting. According to UG officials, there was a difficulty in getting a quorum for the meeting. The meeting will be rescheduled, according to officials.

New organization wants action from Unified Government

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Opinion column

by Murrel Bland

It was part religious revival and another part political rally.

At the end of nearly an hour and one-half of a very well-rehearsed meeting, more than 1,000 members of 17 Wyandotte County churches got what they came for — a commitment from Mayor Tyrone Garner and two Unified Government commissioners.

The group met at Mt. Carmel Church of God in Christ in the Northeast community of Kansas City, Kansas, Tuesday, June 7.

Members of the parishes have formed an organization called Churches United for Justice (CUFJ). The faiths include United Methodist, Baptist, Philadelphia Bible, Peace and Fellowship, Church of Christ and Episcopal. The group’s focus will be on the need for affordable housing and curbing violence.

The Rev. Andy Frazier, pastor of The United Methodist Church, Bonner Springs, made an extensive presentation telling the dark history of “redlining,” a practice eliminating persons in certain neighborhoods from receiving government-backed home loans. This was practiced here and in several other communities in the United States. Frazier said this practice had a far-reaching negative effect on communities including its schools.

Because of this injustice, CUFJ is proposing the creation of the Affordable Housing and Equity Trust Fund. It would be funded by a $25 million fund from the Unified Government of Wyandotte County in Kansas City, Kansas; the source of the federal funds would be stimulus money awarded to local governments because of the COVID pandemic.

The violence issue is very apparent as Wyandotte County has the highest homicide rate in the state of Kansas. CUFJ calls for law enforcement to work with CUFJ in securing a $425,000 grant from the Unified Government to hire a representative of the National Network for Safe Communities. This organization uses programs such as Group Violence Intervention (GVI). When used effectively, such as in Oakland, California, it has reduced the homicide rate by 43 percent.

Mayor Garner and two Unified Government commissioners, Gayle Townsend and Andrew Davis, said they supported the housing and anti-violence programs. But the political reality is that there must be at least three other votes before any proposal is passed.

Certainly CUFJ has done a lot of research. But there are some very practical questions that still linger with any such housing proposal. The first is the issue of skilled labor; right now those who build houses have difficulty in obtaining good help.

Often affordable housing has not been welcome in certain neighborhoods. There is also a Greater Kansas City public policy matter. Are other communities, such as Johnson County, doing what they should to support affordable housing?

CUFJ will meet again on Thursday, Sept. 22, to see if the mayor and Unified Government commissioners have accepted their proposals.

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press.