In all, more than 200 families attended the summit, the district reported. They circulated among 75 vendors, enjoyed free lunch, let their children work on craft projects, watched student performances — and many families went home with raffle prizes provided by LINC.
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“The Science and Language of HOPE: Healthy Outcomes from Positive Experiences” promotes asset-informed care — acknowledging hardship and barriers but framing education around strengths — to help children rise out of hard life circumstances.
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There's a disease going around...and it's killing more people than cancer and HIV combined. Diabetes not only kills at a staggering rate, it’s one of the leading causes of leg and foot amputations, as well as blindness.
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The public is invited to a tenants’ rights seminar that will help renters become better informed about a wide range of key points in Missouri state laws and city ordinances that cover landlords and tenants.
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The Annie E. Casey Foundation names five reasons why the U.S. census matters more than you think, and why you should encourage everyone you know in the nation to participate before the survey closes on July 31, 2020.
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A celebratory crowd cheered Kansas City’s new website that puts a growing wealth of local black history at our interactive finger tips on our phones. But their eye was on the greater audience they hope to reach: young people, their teachers, those who are unaware.
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More than a dozen LINC site coordinators plied the hallways and the offices of lawmakers in Jefferson City on Feb. 20, lifting the achievements — and the struggles — of providing free before- and after-school programming serving more than 7,600 children in and around Kansas City.
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In the depths of winter, LINC focused an eye on summer. There is trouble ahead: For too many Kansas City families, the view from July 4 to the start of the next school year far away in August is a bleak one, devoid of affordable child programs.
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The public is invited to join in celebrating the launch of Kansas City’s African American Heritage Trail. The event will bring together historians and filmmakers to highlight the online virtual trail that will serve as a dynamic and evolving guided tour the Kansas City’s historic cultural sites.
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Turn the Page KC and LINC celebrated with Kansas City civic leaders who predicted that young lives touched by the books will soar higher on the same literary fuel that propelled them to where they are today.
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A new documentary film and other events are part of the community’s celebration of the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Negro National League in Kansas City.
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Every year the special ed class at J.C. Harmon High School has picked out one of the great men and women featured in the latest set of local black history figures, sparking an educational adventure. LINC, the Kansas City Public Library and the Black Archives of Mid-America have been producing the materials for a decade.
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Hickman Mills Superintendent Yolanda Cargile isn’t going far at all to take on her next superintendent challenge. Five days after she told her Hickman Mills families that she was leaving the southeast Kansas City district, neighboring Center School District announced it had found its next leader: Dr. Cargile.
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New case managers in the Hickman Mills and Grandview school districts will help distressed families persist toward long-term health and stability, keeping their children in school and thriving.
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Most taxpayers who earned $60,000 or less last year qualify for the service, as well as many people with disabilities or limited English language skills. And numerous sites throughout the metro area have volunteers ready to help.
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The Girls Only LINC Chess Tournament will be Sat., March 7 at Blue Hills Elementary, 1911 N. Blue Mills Rd., Independence.
This is the second year the Girls Only Tournament has been held at the Fort Osage School District elementary school.
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With Blueprint 2030, the Kansas City Public Schools aims to reimagine the city’s educational system — including the charter schools that share the city’s and state’s resources. And they want your help.
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The Rev. Wallace Hartsfield is recalled as the “grandfather of ministers” in The Kansas City Star by Robert Lee Hill, a community consultant and minister emeritus of Community Christian Church.
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Deplorable conditions in the Nob Hill Apartments in southeast Kansas City are forcing more than 80 families into crisis, and the Community Assistance Council has put out a call for help get the families resettled in livable conditions — and support a healthier Kansas City community.
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