Monday, January 28, 2008

Congratulations To Lee's Summit's Chief Piccinini

Congratulations are in order to Lee's Summit's newest police chief, Joe Piccinini.

Long time neighborhood residents might remember Chief Piccinini as Officer Piccinini as the policeman who convened our first neighborhood meeting, months after our houses were built for the purpose of creating our neighborhood watch group. Others from the neighborhood might remember the work he did with our kids at Underwood Elementary as their DARE officer a few years back.

But I remember him for the support he gave to my boys Boy Scout Troop 42 where he was an involved parent.

Chief Piccinini is a fine officer and will make a fine police chief.

For more on our new police chief check out, NBC Action News KSHB-TV 41 - Lee's Summit has new police chief or Lee's Summit Journal - Lee's Summit, Missouri:

“It is my honor to accept the position of police chief and to continue serving the citizens of the city I’ve made my life-long home," Piccinini said in accepting the appointment. "In my permanent position as chief, I remain dedicated to strengthening the police department from within, and reinforcing positive interaction between LSPD personnel and the community.”

Piccinini began his law enforcement career as a patrol officer in 1983. He has served in various positions in the department including detective, public information officer, sergeant to the investigation units, captain/watch commander of patrol and the major for the operations division.

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Legoland Lee's Summit - It's not dead yet

Looks like the celebrative dancing by the Anti-Legoland Grinch's might be just a bit premature, Seann McAnnally from the Lee's Summit Tribune contacted Dave Claflin, vice president of marketing for RED Development. and Rep. Jeff Grisamore on their efforts to bring Legoland to Lee's Summit and both said plans are moving forward for another application to both local and state officials this year.

For more check out Seann's article in Lee's Summit Tribune - Legoland - It's not dead yet:


"We are diligently working to bring Legoland to Lee's Summit," said Dave Claflin, vice president of marketing for RED Development.

State officials are anticipating another Legoland application.

"We've been told we'll see another application in 2008," said Rep. Jeff Grisamore, of Lee's Summit. "We don't know many details at this point."

RED's original proposal was for a 200-acre development, including a Legoland theme park, Sea Life aquarium, a 250-room Lego-themed hotel, and more than 700,000 square feet of retail shops. The project was originally planned for the area east of the Summit Technology Campus along Chipman Road.

According to city documents, the total cost of the development would have been some $723.8 million. RED requested some $114.3 million in tax increment financing, $20.8 million in "super TIF" and about $46.8 million in state supplemental TIF.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Congratulations to the Lee’s Summit City Council Candidates

Congratulations are in order for all of the potential candidates that have heard the call and have filed in the last few weeks for the upcoming city council election.

There has been a good supply of candidates registering for the April election of city council candidates. Truthfully, I was a little concerned that after instituting city council term limits in the November election and the announced retirements of both councilmen Williams and Freeman that there would be enough interest generated to field an adequate number of candidates for the election, but no such problem.

What does concern me however is that so many of the candidates are handicapping themselves by taking anti-TIF and anti-Tax increase pledges prior to the election.

I don't like tax increases anymore than the next guy, and I agree that TIF's state wide haven't been used as they were initially envisioned, but without in-depth knowledge of the city's financial status, I don't see how anyone can make such promises, prior to ever serving in the position.

The next city council will face some daunting challenges over the next few years, among them the effects of the construction slow down on our local economy, construction delays affecting the opening of Summit Fair, less than expected sales tax revenue from Summit Woods, the lack of commercially developable land within the city limits. These plus additional unforeseen issues will have real but unplanned consequences to the city's bottom line.

In addition to these prospective revenue problems the city still has not adequately addressed the massive leakage of sales tax revenue to the TIF supported shopping districts located just to the north of Lee's Summit, in Independence. If anything with additional TIF supported shopping districts proposed or under construction in Independence, Blue Springs and Kansas City, the leakage of sales tax revenue may actually get worse.

The city is already operating under some stringent budget restrictions and given the additional possible problems, I don't see a way to address them other than increasingly stringent budget restrictions if the majority of the new council has taken anti-TIF and anti-Tax pledges.

Will the city council resort to reduced city services, less snow removal, fewer police patrols, maybe even a cut in city employment in order to keep their pledges to anti-TIF and anti-Tax increase groups with the city? I hope not, City Council members need to be entrusted by the citizens of this city to make decisions for what is best for the city free from restrictions placed on them by any group with biases counter to the benefit of the entire city. The City Council needs to be able to consider any and all means legally available to them to address the needs of the city.

I will be very interested in seeing the outcome of the upcoming city council election, how the new council handles the considerable issues facing them, and how promises made to the various groups involved affect the council's actions.

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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Katy Trail Extended To Downtown?

Most everyone in the area has heard of or even used the Katy Trail, to do some cross country biking or hiking but did you know that there is a real effort to extend the Katy Trail all the way to downtown Kansas City. The existing trail was originally a operating rail line that travel through the central part of the state, and was converted to a hiking and biking trail via a federal rails-to-trails program.

Recently a Reynolds County Circuit judge approved a $180 million settlement in response to the collapse of AmerenUE’s Taum Sauk reservoir in 2005. While much of that settlement involves damage repairs near the utility’s reservoir site in eastern Missouri, some of the money will allow the Missouri Department of Natural Resources to extend the Katy Trail from Windsor, Mo., to Pleasant Hill.

Now Trail backers are working on a solution to bring the trail all the way to downtown. The Kansas City Star is reporting in www.kansascity.com - Plans are under way to extend Katy Trail to KC area:

Trail backers have long coveted a segment of the same unused rail line that runs from Pleasant Hill to an area near the Truman Sports Complex. From there, the trail could use the Blue River Valley and streets to reach existing downtown trails.

But that segment is controlled by the Union Pacific railroad. Although unused, it has never been abandoned, said Union Pacific spokesman Mark Davis. The railroad has received several inquiries about the right of way, but no definitive discussions have ensued, Davis said.

Officials also are looking at other options in case that line is not available, Jaax said.

One idea would be to develop a trail route through Lee’s Summit to Longview Lake, and then head west, said Steve Rhodes, a Mid-America Regional Council trail planner.

The Missouri Department of Transportation is building a pedestrian bridge over U.S. 71 in the Grandview Triangle area, Rhodes said. A highway crossing there could lead the trail west to the Blue River Valley, where Jackson County and Kansas City control much of the right of way and already have trails built or planned.

Also, a trail built upstream in the Blue River corridor could provide a link to trail systems in Johnson County. Downstream links could be made to Independence. Links also are planned to the Northland.

But trail planners are not planning on bicycles pedaling on the Katy Trail from downtown to Longview Lake anytime soon.

“It will be several years at the current pace to bring it in,” Rhodes said. “But we hope with the announcement of the Katy coming to Pleasant Hill, we’ll see some renewed energy for it.”

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Local Boy Bullied To Death,

KCTV - Mother: Son Was Bullied To Death:

A grieving mother is suing the Blue Springs School District, claiming her 12-year-old son was bullied to death.Kim Myers said she blames school teachers and administrators for her son's death.She said her son, Brandon, was constantly picked on by classmates, teased for a speech impediment.Last February, her boyfriend found Brandon unconscious.

Myers said, "When he found Brandon, he was still standing upright. He had his one foot flat on the floor and another up on a bucket, with a cord around his neck. And John thought he was playing because he wasn't hanging, per se. And he nudged him and found that he was unconscious at that point."Myers said Brandon would have never committed suicide if the faculty at Voy Spears Jr. Elementary School in Lee's Summit would have done something to stop the constant bullying." Because there was bullying in the school that the teachers and the assistant principal and the principal knew about and the counselor. Nothing was done," said Myers. Myers said she knows a lawsuit won't heal the pain, but hopes Brandon's story will be a wake-up call for everyone about how serious bullying can be."I don't want any parents to go through what I've been through in the last year with my son. There were warning signs that I should have been told about - red flags that they didn't tell me about," Myers said.The district issued a statement saying it's had an anti-bullying policy since 2004.The policy was expanded in 2006 to add that threats in writing, including e-mails and text messages, could be considered acts of bullying. Officials said they adhered to the policy in Brandon's case.
My heart goes out Brandon's parents and relatives, as a boy I underwent more than my share of abuse at the hands of my classmates so I can identify with the helplessness that Brandon felt.

In scouts I worked with boys Brandon's age from Voy Spears Jr. and as part of scouting, we hope to teach boys that this type of teasing should never be condoned, but regretfully bullying still occurs.

If you are or know of a child who is unfairly treated by their classmates, please take the time and let a teacher, parent or scout leader know of the situation. Help is available, but unfortunately sometimes those who need it don't get it.

Update - Columbia Tribune has a story on Brandon called Bullying reverberates in suicide’s aftermath:
The bedroom bears the telltale signs of a typical boy on the cusp of his teen years: discarded food wrappers, video game consoles, clothes scattered on the floor.

The disarray hides tragedy inside the suburban Kansas City home. The room is a memorial to Brandon Myers, who killed himself in February 2007. He was 12.

For Kim Myers, her youngest son’s death is the result of what she calls incessant bullying that his teachers and other administrators at Voy Spears Elementary School failed to stop.

"He was teased in class on the day he died for acting depressed," said Myers, a single parent. "He was screaming for help. If he had got the help he needed, he would still be alive."

The details of how Brandon was harassed - and the school’s response - are incomplete. Myers has hired an attorney and said she plans to sue the Blue Springs School District for her son’s wrongful death. She and her ex-husband, Brandon’s father, don’t want to jeopardize the pending lawsuit by discussing it publicly.

A school district lawyer said officials would discuss only Brandon’s "educational experience" with The Associated Press, and then only with his parents’ permission.

The case is not without precedent. In 2005, a small-town teenager from Tonganoxie, Kan., who was bullied for years by classmates because they believed he was gay was awarded $440,000 in a settlement against a school district. The student, who said he was not gay, was harassed with homophobic slurs from seventh grade until he quit school before graduating.

For Brandon, life was never easy. Born with a cleft palate, he endured several corrective surgeries that improved his smile but didn’t get rid of a pronounced speech impediment.

His parents divorced when he was 5. Diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the third grade, and later depression, he took a daily chemical cocktail to combat those impulses and regularly saw a counselor outside school.

In the days and weeks leading up to his suicide, Brandon dropped several hints to classmates and teachers that his troubles might have grown life-threatening, Kim Myers said. She didn’t learn of those warning signs until it was too late.

Suicide long has been considered one of the greatest risks faced by vulnerable adolescents. But an increasing number of mental health experts warn that younger children such as Brandon also are susceptible.

Nationally, more than 1,600 children ages 10 to 14 committed suicide from 1999 through 2004, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Missouri, 34 children in that age group took their own lives from 2001 through 2005, state records show.

The direct effect of bullying on those suicides is impossible to determine.

But as in the case of Megan Meier - the 13-year-old suburban St. Louis girl who committed suicide after receiving cruel messages on a MySpace page - the social pressures that drive some children to suicide are immense, bullying expert Hilda Quiroz said.

"Schools are social settings," said Quiroz, a former teacher who now works for the California-based National School Safety Center. "And in social settings, there are kids who wield power."

A nationwide survey of more than 15,000 students in grades six to 10 showed that 30 percent reported experience with bullying - 11 percent as targets, 13 percent as bullies themselves and an additional 6 percent who said they had been both aggressor and victim. Bullying victims direct their anger in two directions, Quiroz said: at themselves or toward others, including their tormentors.

The Blue Springs School District has had a bullying policy since April 2004. The policy was expanded in 2006 to add that threats in writing, including e-mails and text messages, could be considered acts of bullying In the weeks after Brandon’s death - including a contentious school board meeting where angry parents brought up the case - officials said they adhered to the policy.

The day after Christmas 2007 would have been Brandon’s 13th birthday. His absence made the holiday a painful one for the Myers family.

"This is the first year he’s not been around," said his father, Randy Myers. "We’re struggling."

Down the block from Brandon’s house, a solitary plaque marks his shortened life, a tribute to the passion that drove him to awaken in the pre-dawn darkness each morning so he could fish at the neighborhood lake before school.

"Forever Fishing," the plaque reads. "Brandon Myers."

Fishing was an escape for Brandon, a respite from the daily taunts at Voy Spears. He would fish at the pond with his buddy Trystyn, or with his mother’s boyfriend at nearby Lake Lotawana. Summer meant bullfrog hunting trips with his grandfather in southwest Missouri.

Inside Trystyn Wagner’s home, toy frogs of all shapes and sizes surround a hallway display of baseball cards, fishing photos and other reminders of his late best friend.

A few days before Brandon’s death, the two friends argued about a girl. They quickly patched up the dispute, but guilt from that encounter and its proximity to Brandon’s suicide hangs over Trystyn, his mother said.

"He said he wanted to be next to Brandon," said Amy Wagner, who has since moved Trystyn and his younger sister to a private school as a result of what she says was bullying toward her son.

"It’s just been a nightmare," she said.

During a Lee’s Summit police investigation of Brandon’s death, Trystyn told officers that Brandon drew a picture of himself hanging from a rope. The drawing was found by another student and turned in to a teacher, according to a police report.

Another classmate later shared a note from Brandon that further hinted at his risks of suicide.

I "have had enuf of this crap(p)y life," the note reads. "I will hang myself tonight so if you have anything to say to me I suggest you tell me before 4:35 p.m. tonight."

In the note, a copy of which was provided to the AP by Kim Myers, Brandon asked the unknown student to notify others in their class and listed the phone numbers for two classmates he wished to alert.

Kim Myers said she first learned of the warning note in May 2007, nearly three months after Brandon’s death, from Lee’s Summit police. The note was given to school officials on March 2 by a student’s parent.

The unidentified student’s mother told police and school officials that she found the note folded on a table in her home two days after Brandon’s death and brought it to school later that week.

Another, earlier comment made by Brandon for a December 2006 school assignment shows his struggles for acceptance by his classmates.

"I’m sorry for all the things I’ve done," he wrote. "I regret standing outside the circle."

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Wednesday, January 09, 2008

Lees Summit Open House Jan 15 Planned For Proposed Blackwell and Todd George Area

I know there a lot of interest in what is going on in Lees Summit with the proposed interchanges at Blackwell Road, Todd George Road and US 50.

Here is a PDF file illustrating the area in question.

The city has announced plans for an Open House Public Meeting - Proposed US 50 Interchanges at Blackwell and Todd George:

The City of Lee's Summit will be holding an open house public meeting on the US 50 interchanges at Blackwell Road, Todd George and associated outer road improvements. The meeting will be held at the Lee's Summit City Hall in the Howard Conference Room, 220 SE Green Street, Lee's Summit, MO on Tuesday, January 15, 2008, from 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm.

The purpose of this meeting is to gather public input on the proposed improvements and their economic, social, environmental and community benefits and impacts. An open-house format will be used to maximize the public input and comments.




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Lee's Summit City Council Considers Future Developments

If your interested in how Lee's Summit will be look over the next few years, it looks like the City Council meeting, tomorrow, Thursday, Jan 10 at 6:15 pm at the City Hall, should not be missed. The council plans to hear from City Staff on the development plans of remaining 4.8% of the city that hasn't already been developed or isn't being kept from development by religious groups.

If you can't make the meeting, don't forget it is rebroadcast on your cable Government Access Channel. Rebroadcasts are scheduled for 1:00 and 7:00 p.m. on the Saturday, Monday, and Wednesday following the Council meeting.

Or if you've missed those you can check out a streaming video of City Meetings by clicking here. Now you have no excuse, get involved!

For more of what is planned for this important meeting, check out Lee's Summit Journal - Council looks at plans for future development, improvements:

The city of Lee's Summit and the Lee's Summit Economic Development Council are scheduled to request that the City Council develop Economic Development Master Plans for seven key strategic locations within the city during the regular session of the City Council at 6:15 p.m. on Thursday.

According to city information, the staff is presenting a Request for Qualification process that would allow the council to determine which, if any, of the targeted areas merit the investment of a long-term plan.

The seven areas outlined in city documents include the U.S. 50 corridor, the Lowenstein property, north of Interstate 470 near Lakewood, the Pfizer/Adessa property between Hamblen and M-291, Quarry Hills west of U.S. 350 and north of I-470, the Strother Corridor and land near Unity Village.
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According to city documents, the amount of remaining commercial and industrial land available for development is estimated to be 4.8 percent.

City staff and the LSEDC said that the development of a plan to use these properties in the best possible manner is important to the long-term financial sustainibility of Lee's Summit.

The goal of the RFQ process is to gain knowledge that would help the city in future development decisions.
Staff and the LSEDC want to encourage development that creates revenue growth that allows the city to support quality municipal services for Lee's Summit.

In addition to the RFQ, council is scheduled to approve the Thoroughfare Master Plan priorities that were recommended by the Thoroughfare Master Plan Steering Committee.

These priority projects include:
? Bailey Road: Two to three lane extension from M-291 to Hamblen

? Ward Road: Widening to five lanes from M-150 south to the southern city limits at County Line Road

? Jefferson Street: Two lane reconstruction from Persels to Stuart
? Chipman Road: Two to three lane realignment and upgrade from View High east to Bent Tree with a right of way for five lanes

? Lee's Summit Road: Widening to four to five lanes from Colbern to the north City limits

? Hook Road: Two to three lane reconstruction from Ward Road to M-291 with right of way for five lanes.
According to city information, the approval of the plan's priorities will determine the order in which each project funded by the 10-year half-cent sales tax receives resources.

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Monday, January 07, 2008

Missouri Promise Offers Four Year Tuition To A+ Students Under Proposed Bill

The Star is reporting on a proposed Missouri House bill that has potential to effect the lives of many Lee's Summit area students. Under the bill, the popular A+ program would be extended beyond providing two years tuition free at an area community college, to providing an additional two years tuition at a state sponsored four-year school, in exchange for maintaining a 3.0 grade point average and performing some additional community service.

The Lee's Summit school district all currently offers the A+ program to all its students. Under the program, high school students who keep a 2.5 grade point average, attend class 95% of the time and perform 50 hours of community service are entitled to two full years tuition at an area community college as long as they keep a 2.5 grade point average.

Under the new program dubbed "Missouri Promise" those A+ students attending a community college would have the opportunity to earn an additional two years tuition-free at a Missouri four year school, by keeping a 3.0 grade point average and performing additional community service hours.

Both of my two oldest children have taken advantage of the A+ program, and it has really helps out on tuition costs. If you think about the A+ program instills responsibility in its participants, by requiring them to do what they already should be doing, going to class, keeping their grades up and helping out the community.

For more on the proposed Missouri Promise program, read Primebuzz - Missouri House Dems tout plan offering free college tuition:

JEFFERSON CITY | Missouri House Democrats announced a plan Monday to allow students who have completed community college to continue tuition-free at a four-year school.

The scholarship program, called Missouri Promise, would be an extension of the A+ Program, which offers free tuition to students attending community colleges. Under the bill, students who earned their associate’s degree through A+ would receive state scholarships to go on to a four-year school.

“In simple terms, the bill fulfills the promise of what A+ was started for in the beginning,” said Rep. Clint Zweifel, a Florissant Democrat and the bill’s sponsor.

To be eligible, a student would have to attend community college on an A+ scholarship, maintain a 3.0 grade point average and perform several hours of community service.

Democrats estimate that the program would cost $15 million a year and could serve at least 3,000 students a year. It would be funded from the estimated $300 million budget surplus, said Rep. Paul LeVota, an Independence Democrat.

House Speaker Pro Tem Bryan Pratt, a Blue Springs Republican, said he expected both parties to emphasize access to higher education this year, although he said financing such improvements would be an issue.

“We always need to do more to promote higher education and provide access to it,” Pratt said. “But it all comes down to finding the money.”

A preliminary version of the bill is expected to be filed this week, Zweifel said. The legislative session begins Wednesday.

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