The Fort Osage school board and its constituents had a pretty big wish list for its community and its construction partners when it put two ballot issues before voters last April. Thursday morning, the first ceremonial shovels of dirt got turned for the big-ticket item — a new building for transportation, maintenance and administration.
Read More ...
The increase — approved by the federal government earlier in August — is the largest single boost in the program’s history. Learn more and see how you can apply.
Read More ...
The promise of a new year, new friends, new games and educational adventures unfolded across some 40 LINC Caring Communities before- and after-school programs Monday in the Kansas City, Hickman Mills, Center, North Kansas City and Grandview school districts.
Read More ...
A massive federal relief effort is trying to catch up with the vast need of renters and landlords who are struggling with rents, utilities and mortgages because of the pandemic. More funds are coming and renters with past-due bills should apply, say the United Way of Greater Kansas City and local landlords.
Read More ...
Once the red ribbon was cut and the first tours were under way, students Jaiden and Janae Taylor joined the wide-eyed procession inside Center School District’s new Indian Creek Elementary School Thursday as some of the most precious guests. See what they like the most.
Read More ...
As parents, guardians and students excitedly and anxiously cross off the days until the first day of school, the Kansas City Health Department is helping families make it a smooth start. Appointments required, so call today.
Read More ...
We’ve learned a lot in the past year and a half. And everything we know about hardship, strength, resilience and unity has primed us for what looms as the most critical school year probably in a lifetime. Everyone has a role. Here’s ours.
Read More ...
The pursuit of the unvaccinated is dogged now — “drilled-down” — as Truman Medical Centers has returned with its mobile clinic to Morning Star’s community center at 27th and Prospect Avenue for moments just like this . . .
Read More ...
We’ve learned a lot in the past year and a half. And everything we know about hardship, strength, resilience and unity has primed us for what looms as the most critical school year probably in a lifetime. But it’s going to take all of us, and here’s why.
Read More ...
Just get all the teachers to put together a list. Then GEHA representatives Karen Rutherford and Niki Nelson said they’d take it from there. See what it means to Cler-Mont Elementary School in the Fort Osage School District.
Read More ...
It was a roll call of pain, fear — even death. Kansas City area medical directors shared their grim accounting with the city in a public call for help Friday, beseeching a community “teetering on a precipice” to get vaccinated and to mask-up against Covid-19’s Delta variant. The Morning Star vaccination clinic is stepping up.
Read More ...
July’s sun was mounting the sky toward a 100-plus-degree heat index. But Hartman Caring Communities Coordinator Martin Jackson mopped his head with a towel and put his thoughts on Thanksgiving. By then, he said, these beds of soil LINC staff were building with the Kansas City Community Gardens will have been planted, watered and nurtured by LINC’s after-school kids.
Read More ...
We know you’re coming. We’re ready.
The before- and after-school programming you rely on is gearing up for a critical 2021-2022 school year — free and safe — in the Kansas City Public Schools, the Hickman Mills, Grandview and Center school districts, plus Topping Elementary in North Kansas City Schools and Lee A. Tolbert Community Academy charter school.
Pre-enroll today at kclinc.org/preenroll, and make plans to meet your LINC Caring Communities site coordinator.
LINC is following the safety guidelines of its school district partners and constantly monitoring local developments and advice from the CDC.
Learn more about our before- and after-school programs at kclinc.org/schoolcare.
We will also continue to provide broad community support in our LINC neighborhoods surrounding both our after-school sites and also our Caring Communities programs in the Fort Osage School District and Genesis School in Kansas City.
Find resources on our help page — kclinc.org/help — and our website, kclinc.org.
Also follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/kclinc, and find your individual school site’s LINC Facebook page at kclinc.org/social.
Read More ...
It was quite a day: Teenagers working with artists and entrepreneurs, stretching their imaginations in a mural design as broad as the community they love — and as close as the fear and joy in their hearts. Lee A. Tolbert Academy students poured their heart and soul into the Startland MECA Challenge, and now they wait.
Read More ...
Junius G. Groves, a figure well known to the annual Kansas City Black History Project for his rise from slavery to wealthy landowner and businessman, will be enshrined in the Kansas Business Hall of Fame. Groves became known as “The Potato King of the World” and one of the wealthiest African-Americans of the early 20th Century.
Read More ...
It’s been seven years since Genesis School and neighbors came together to build the playground provided by Kaboom! Now, the playground is in need of a makeover, and this time around Genesis is planning a community fair and rally Aug. 7 to get everyone primed and ready for the coming school year.
Read More ...
Morning Star Youth and Family Life Center and LINC received a donation of cereal featuring Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes.
About 100,000 boxes of Hy Vee Mahomes Magic Crunch were donated to various groups including Morning Star and LINC.
The donations were arranged through a partnership with the Church of the Resurrection which worked with LINC on several food distributions.
Read More ...
The fight against the Covid-19 Delta variant is on in Kansas City, and LINC’s vaccination clinic with Morning Star Missionary Baptist Church and Heart to Heart International is opening for walk-ins on selected Tuesday mornings beginning July 27 at 10 a.m.
Read More ...
For most low-wage workers, decent rental housing is unaffordable — nationwide and in Missouri. In no state, metropolitan area, or county in the U.S. can a worker earning the prevailing minimum wage afford a modest two-bedroom rental home in a standard 40-hour work week.
Read More ...
“The possibilities are endless,” said Fort Osage Superintendent Jason Snodgrass. The beloved JBZ's Rockin' B & Mercantile, closed during the pandemic, will become a student-run coffee shop and community event space across five acres of land.
Read More ...