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Amaryllis
One
of our neighbors, Amanda (aka "The Plant Lady"), gave the plant shown in the
photo to Mecee and me just after New Year.
It is called an Amaryllis.
Native to Africa, the genus Amaryllis comes from the Greek word amarysso, which means "to sparkle."
Bulbs were brought to Europe in the 1700s and have been known to bloom for up to 75 years.
The plant was less than half this size when Amanda gave it to us on January 2nd. It is now over 2' tall!
Amanda is a gifted gardener. She is slowly turning her yard into pathways of trees, shrubberies and flowers that are delight to walk through.
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BY GREG WALTERS |
Massive
Project Planned
SANITARY SEWER LINES
TO BE UPGRADED
The project will cost $1,541,502.00 (million dollars) and is expected to take nine months to complete.
The photo shows the properties that will be affected by the work. The work will consist of installing 18,200 feet of "cured in place pipe liner" (CIPP), 390 feet of total sewer line removal & replacement, manhole repairs, and repairing 11 private sewer service line connections to the City main.
The new sewer lines will add an additional life of 50 years to the sanitary sewers in the targeted area.
Walters told the Raytown Report, “The project is a continuing effort to upgrade or replace sanitary sewer lines that are nearing the end of their serviceable life. The tax dollars that pay for the project come from a reserve fund paid for by home and business owners when sanitary sewer tax bills are paid. Part of that tax is set aside in a reserve fund to upgrade sanitary sewer lines when needed.”
Homes
and business affected by the project include those located on the following
streets. Sanitary lines do not always run parallel to established streets. The
areas affected by the improvements are approximate.
FROM EAST TO EAST TO WEST :
69th Terrace from Raytown Road to Blue Ridge Boulevard
69th
Street from Raytown Road to Blue Ridge Boulevard
69th
Terrace from Arlington to Blue Ridge Boulevard
70th
Terrace from Evanston to Blue Ridge Boulevard
Gregory
Boulevard from Raytown Road to Hunter
Hunter from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Kentucky from Gregory Boulevard to 350 Highway
Lane from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Laurel from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Elm Street from 68th Terrace to Gregory Boulevard
FROM NORTH TO SOUTH:
Raytown
Road from 68th Terrace to Gregory Boulevard
Hawthorne
from 69th Street to Raytown Road
Brooklane
from 69th Street to to Hawthorne
Evanston
from 70th Terrace to Gregory Boulevard
Rice
from Hawthorne to 70th Terrace
Arlington
from Gregory Boulevard to 70th Terrace
Hunter
from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Kentucky
from Gregory Boulevard to 350 Highway
Lane
from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Laurel
from 68th Terrace to 350 Highway
Elm
Street from 68th Terrace to Gregory Boulevard
59th Street
Raytown Road
Intersection
to be rebuilt
The intersection of Raytown Road and 59th Street will be rebuilt to accommodate new storm sewer lines to abate flooding of the intersection during heavy rains.
Water lines will be replaced by the Raytown Water Company during the project as well. The Raytown Water Company portion of the project is not funded by tax dollars.
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A GEYSER IN RAYTOWN! |
The increased water pressure undermines the substructure that supports the street. The manhole cover pictured is located at 59th and Raytown Trafficway next to the Chamber of Commerce headquarters.
The four way intersection has commercial curbs on both 59th Street and Raytown Trafficway. The streets collect the water so efficiently that if overwhelms the storm drainage system under the street.
The plan is to re-direct the flow of water under the street to another storm sewer at a lower elevation to release the excess water before it can flood the intersection.
If not corrected, this constant flow of water from heavy rains will undermine the substructure under the intersection, eventually leading to large voids under the intersection subject to collapse from the weight of traffic on the street surface.
The project is funded by a Grant through the Missouri Department of Natural Resources of the State of Missouri. Part of the money funding the grant originally came from unspent funds originally set aside to combat the Covid 19 Virus Pandemic.
The project is expected to begin later this summer. A timeline for the construction period of this project has not yet been released by the City.
Paul's Rant! BY PAUL LIVIUS
The two projects reported above reminded me of something a former newspaper owner in Raytown once opined in an editorial.
The City had just gone through a bruising campaign on some tax increases. The tax proposals had failed by a landslide vote.
This caused some on the "yes" side of the question to run around manically complaining how all was over . . . those who opposed the tax question had doomed the City of Raytown to a future of failure.
Lee Gray was owner of the Raytown Post. He did something somewhat out of character. Rather than simply writing an editorial in his paper, he went before the City Council and spoke to them.
The theme of his short but very effective speech was that despite the failure of the tax increase, he assured everyone that the sun would still rise the next day.
He suggested the two sides set their differences aside and reach out to work together to find common ground to move Raytown forward.
It looks like Greg's two articles are on that path. I wish him well and hope that others running for public office will step up and join him in working together for the common good.
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3 comments:
To be fair about it we should wait and see what the plans are for fixing the flooding problem. I am not sure the entire intersection will be re-built. Really depends on where the water lines and the storm drainage lines are located. Though it is hard to ignore the Old Raytown Geyser is pretty close to remake of the surface for the bike trail. Not sure how much was spent on that. I think Jackson County Parks and Recreation picked up the tab on the changes.
Quid pro co, or something even more sinister! The facts are clear if you have a link an elected official the city looks the other way. There is at least one church that has been allowed to park trailer on the Southeast corner of the property for some time. There is at least one non-profit that has been allowed for years to get away with a large storage container on the Southeast corner of the property and more recent additional dumpsters that are not within an approved dumpster bin area. Is it helpful that currently two members of the BOA are on the board of the non-profit. Prior to them the mayor himself was on the board!
It doesn't end with them being the only ones the city has decided to look the other way when it comes to approved dumpster bin areas. They are not alone when we look at the candidates who have filed.
Some might same this is no big deal, but repeatedly on several Facebook pages as well as coffee gatherings around town people are asking why it is so hard for several business to open in Raytown. It is a very good question when everyone is not on the same playing field and even better question when we find ourselves at election time.
I know I cannot support any candidate that is obtaining special treatment for their friends, family, boards or personal business. We elected these individuals to lead Raytown in the right path and bring to light behavior that allows for quid pro co.
"...repeatedly on several Facebook pages as well as coffee gatherings around town people are asking why it is so hard for several business to open in Raytown...even better question when we find ourselves at election time."
Really? Which businesses?
Everyone really should review the video-archived January 3rd Raytown BOA meeting. Especially the discussion involving the used car dealer that wants to bring his business back to a property that he owns in Raytown.
We find precious little to defend this City against of late, IOO.
We will however make one major exception this time around.
We have no doubt whatsoever that all prospective Raytown businesses are being vetted equally.
It's an intensive and invasive process. As well it should be.
There is no disparate treatment. Period.
Clue in, Sister Sledge.
You sound like a broken record. Needlessly belching out so much draining, negative energy.
Stop wasting everyone's time with false claims and useless, DIVISIVE remarks.
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