This is alt Text

Hopes for new life, and new traffic, at KC barge terminal

The view from Kansas City’s old river barge terminal in the West Bottoms offers a panoramic sweep of the downtown skyline, and a glimpse of just about every mode of transportation. Planes fly in and out of Wheeler Downtown Airport just across the Missouri River, and trains and trucks haul freight over the Broadway and…

Hospital Leader Challenges Brownback On Innovation, Medicaid Comments

The head of the Kansas Hospital Association is taking issue with comments made by Gov. Sam Brownback at a recent news conference. Asked about his continuing opposition to Medicaid expansion, Brownback downplayed the importance of the issue, telling reporters that innovation is more important to hospital finances than the billions of additional federal dollars that expansion would…

Missouri has the lowest cigarette taxes in the nation, at 17 cents a pack. Kansas has the 15th lowest, at 79 cents a pack.

Missouri Convenience Stores Do U-Turn On Tobacco Tax

After opposing efforts to hike the state’s cigarette tax for more than a decade, Missouri convenience stores are now pushing two tobacco-increase plans, either of which they said would add $800 million to state coffers within a decade of their enactment.

The Kansas City Care Clinic at 3515 Broadway Blvd. recently received a federal designation that will bring in additional funding. (Photo: Todd Feeback | The Hale Center for Journalism)

Kansas City CARE Clinic Receives Federal Designation

A nonprofit health care opened  in the 1970s by a group of concerned Kansas Citians has received federal recognition. The Kansas City CARE Clinic was designated as a Federally Qualified Health Center, or FQHC, on Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The clinic will receive federal funding of $650,000 annually, and KC CARE…

My Farm Roots: Farm Kid Without a Farm

In the Midwest, agriculture can be such a strong lure that there are some farm kids without farms. Ally Babcock lives with her family in a modern subdivision in Ames, Iowa. Tucked under the home’s back deck is a tiny barn space, enough room for her sheep and rabbits. “It’s a little difficult [not living…

Who says no one gets a free lunch? USDA program brings exactly that to KC kids.

On a recent scorching July afternoon in front of the De Soto Aquatic Center, a young boy is shouting out his lunch choice, as his parents look on in amusement. “I want the jammy sammy!” Of course he is choosing the PB&J over the more sophisticated fruit and cheese plates also on offer at this…

Helen's on Wheels and Plantain District were among the food trucks parked at the Macken Park Food Truck Pod this Thursday.

Dude, where’s my food truck?

A jogger circling Macken Park in North Kansas City stops to catch his breath and does a double take as he glances at the parking lot on his left. An impromptu dining room has sprung up with five white highboy tables a few feet from contractor’s trucks and minivans. A dozen people are eating lunch…

A close-up of an irrigation sprinkler.

A roundup of water issues facing Kansans — now and in the future

Editor’s note: Throughout this week, Flatland has published a series of stories from our partner, the Kansas Health Initiative, exploring how people access water, the economics of water and the challenges of drinking it. To find these stories, freelance journalist Sarah Green interviewed more than 50 Kansans in person, over the phone and by email over the course of seven months. For additional reporting and images in…

four cups of tea

Kansas City’s cup of tea

There are four cups sitting in front of Tyler Beckett, in a small warehouse just north of the river in Kansas City. Beckett uses a spoon to sip the first sample. “It’s got that nice beautiful smokiness to it.” he says about his first taste. He takes a sip of the second sample. It’s more…

An irrigated field in Kansas. Irrigation accounts for about 85 percent of the state’s water use, according to the Kansas Department of Agriculture’s Division of Water Resources.

Plentiful access to water fuels prosperity in rural Republic County community

In mid-fall, trucks full of corn and soybeans rumble through the north-central Kansas town of Courtland on their way to the grain elevator at the south end of Main Street. While neighboring counties struggle to survive, the western half of Republic County, including Courtland, population 273, isn’t doing too bad. Technology and insurance companies support the…

Allan Markley at stadium

Superintendent carousel turns as students return to class

The start of school typically brings with it a crop of new students and staffers.

Yet classes are resuming this year in the Kansas City area amidst a remarkable run of new superintendents in Missouri-side school districts, according to the Cooperating School Districts of Greater Kansas City, a consortium that stretches across several counties and represents more than 185,000 students.

Mike Nichols, city administrator in Hiawatha, says the city is working to secure funding, including federal grant money, to build a new water treatment plant with the capacity to serve surrounding water systems.

Turning from the tap

Natalie Horton doesn’t drink the tap water in Hiawatha. Neither does her 2-year-old son Silas. She already thought the water smelled and tasted funny. About a year ago, she read a Facebook post from a friend that said the water in Hiawatha wasn’t safe to drink. “I heard we had nitrates in our water, so now I buy…

A man in Kansas takes a drink from a water container. While about 96 percent of Kansans receive water from public water supplies that meet or exceed all state and federal regulations for clean water, some public water systems have one of more sources that exceed safe levels of contaminants.

Most water in Kansas safe to drink

The good news about the public water supply in Kansas is that almost all of it is safe to drink. About 96 percent of Kansans receive water from public water supplies that meet or exceed all state and federal regulations for clean water, said Mike Tate, director of the Bureau of Water for the Kansas Department of Health and Environment. “The vast, vast majority of…

Obesity And Diabetes In KC Area Continue To Rise

While health trends in metropolitan Kansas City are generally headed in a positive direction, two exceptions are obesity and diabetes. Every county from 2004 to 2011 saw growth in the rates of those conditions. There’s a glimmer of good news, however. Measured across shorter time frames, 2004-2007 and 2008-2011, the rates for those conditions have…

Deaf Kansans Request Medicaid Changes

It’s common knowledge that a child’s first years are critical for language development. But what if that child is deaf and has parents who don’t know sign language? Chriz Dally, a board member of the Kansas Association of the Deaf, posed that scenario last month at a meeting of state officials and members of the…