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KC Roundup: Vision Zero, Royals Deal, Police Hiring, and Labor Talks

KC Roundup: Vision Zero, Royals Deal, Police Hiring, and Labor Talks

Published 2 months, 2 weeks ago
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Good morning, this is Kansas City Local Pulse for Thursday, February 12. We start with breaking developments from City Hall, where Mayor Quinton Lucas delivered his seventh State of the City address yesterday. He spotlighted safer roads with over four million dollars for Vision Zero improvements on high-crash corridors like Ninth and Van Brunt, boosting pedestrian safety near local parks. He also pushed for a fair Royals deal in 2026, eyeing Washington Square Park to secure jobs and liven up downtown, tying into Riverfront Plaza redevelopment. On public safety, homicides dropped five percent last year, non-fatal shootings fell thirty-one percent, and the Kansas City Police Department hired its biggest class since 2007.

In other city updates, our Port Authority unanimously cut ties with Platform Ventures over their plan to sell a south Kansas City warehouse, on the old Air Force base site, to ICE for an immigrant detention center. KCUR reports this clashes with plans for logistics jobs and manufacturing there, after the city council already banned such facilities. Public protests downtown and at the developer's office show our community's strong pushback.

Shifting to sports, the Kansas City Current just acquired Croix Bethune, last year's NWSL Midfielder and Rookie of the Year, strengthening our team ahead of the season.

Weather today brings a mix of sun and clouds, with highs around sixty degrees and lows near thirty-three, per KSHB forecasts. No major impacts on events, but bundle up for the cooler evening, and expect partly cloudy skies tomorrow with sixty-four degrees.

Job talks heated up as over a hundred building trades union members rallied outside City Hall and Port KC yesterday, pushing for better wages and apprenticeships on tax-break projects. Negotiations stall, but Port CEO John Stevens says they're advancing labor-friendly rules.

Real estate sees momentum with Mayor Lucas emphasizing more affordable housing. Median home prices hover around three hundred thousand dollars, up five percent lately, while job postings rose ten percent in logistics near the riverfront.

Quick community note: New soccer fields and playgrounds opened at Ninth and Van Brunt amid five-degree chill, delighting kids and families.

No major crimes reported in the past day, keeping our streets steady.

Looking ahead, World Cup base camp buzz grows, with Netherlands and Algeria eyeing Kansas City and Lawrence. Check the American Jazz Museum for weekend programming.

Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for daily updates. This has been Kansas City Local Pulse. We'll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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