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I was happy and a bit surprised to read in a Pete Grathoff column in The Star a couple of weeks ago that some concession prices were being lowered at Kauffman Stadium.

The column said the stadium was following the lead of several other stadiums around the country in reducing the public gouging that’s been going on for decades. Here’s what Pete wrote:

“A 16-ounce Pepsi will cost $3, hot dogs will sell for $4 and cans of Miller Lite will be $5. Also, popcorn and pretzels will be available for $3 each.”

Great, I thought, those prices are reasonable.

Today, I made my first trip this season to the stadium and, while waiting to meet family members, I went to the concession stand adjacent to Section 120 on the lower level, not far from the main entrance to the stadium.

In my hand, I held what remained of a 24-ounce bag of salted peanuts — a bag I had bought for about $5 at my Price Chopper a few days ago. (You can take snacks and unopened plastic bottles of water into the stadium.)

Big pretzels are about the only thing I ever buy at stadiums, and even though I had the peanuts, I thought that if I could get a pretzel for three bucks, I just might buy one.

But as I surveyed the concession stand menu and prices, I became disillusioned.

Here were the prices I jotted down for several items:

:: Peanuts (about a 12-ounce bag) — $5.75

:: Draft beer, $10.50 for domestic, $11.75 for premium

:: Small Pepsi, $6

:: Large hot dog, $8.75; small hot dog, $6.25

:: Pretzel, $6.75

…I thought maybe I hadn’t read Grathoff’s story carefully enough (I didn’t have it with me) and that the lower prices were only good at some remote concession stands.

But, no, after I got home, I re-read the story, which said:

“Concession stands will have signs indicating the cheaper prices and they will be located at sections 120, 135, 213, 242, 308, 417 and 422.” Like I said, I was at the section 120 concession stand.

I did not get in line and check with a concessionaire to see if perhaps the new prices were not reflected on the sign board. But I’m pretty sure that wasn’t the case. If the Royals had lowered the prices, I’m sure they’d have changed those signs right away.

**

After the other members of my group arrived, we sat down in some seats in section 120. We had gotten tickets, free of charge, from a friend, but those seats were way up in section 412. The crowd was small, though, and it was chilly, and the stadium attendants were basically letting people sit wherever they wanted.

So, that part of the afternoon was unequivocally a good deal — even though the Royals managed to pull defeat from the jaws of victory and lost their 10th straight game.

But back to those concession prices: Until somebody proves to me otherwise, I’m going to consider it a case of bait and switch.

Show me, then, Kansas City Royals: Just where can I get one of those $3 pretzels?

Remember all that talk from spring training about the Royals going back to speed and defense?

I guess management sold us another Trojan Horse…Somebody forgot to tell us the team has no hitting or pitching.

This is a team that only Rex Hudler could love. Last night, for example, on the pre-game show, Rex looked into his never-foggy crystal ball and predicted the Royals were going to beat the league-leading, heavy-hitting Seattle Mariners. Over the winter, the Mariners disdained a move to speed and defense and instead opted for power hitters.

The pitching match-up was journeyman Homer Bailey for the Royals (Homer is a career 67-game winner) and Felix Hernandez, a 169-game winner, for the Mariners.

Fortunately for the Royals, Hernandez was ill and came out after one inning. Bailey was going along alright, but the turning point came with two out in the top of the fifth inning, with the Royals leading 4-2 and the Mariners having runners on second and third.

At that critical juncture, as Bailey was pitching to Domingo Santana, Hudler announced, “I think we’ve got ourselves  a good starting pitcher.”

A pitch or two later, Santana mashed a base hit to left field, and the runners on second and third came home to tie the game.

I thought to myself, “Couldn’t Hud have just waited a few more pitches before making the judgment call on Bailey?”

Homer

Manager Ned Yost sent Bailey back out to the mound to start the sixth inning. The first batter hit a home run; the second walked; and the third singled. Yost then pulled Bailey, but the party was on for the Mariners, who sent another nine batters to the plate and scored an additional seven runs.

By the time a pitcher named Scott Barlow recorded the third out for the Royals, the Mariners led 12-3.

I stopped watching after Homer gave up the game-tying hit to Santana. The final score was 13-5.

Last year, the Royals went 58 and 104, and now — at 2 and 7 — they’re on pace to lose about 120.

I know this is crazy, but I think a loss record approaching 120 might test even Rex’s unbridled enthusiasm.

**

I was sorry to read in The Star that the Tivoli Cinemas are closing. I’ve been there many times over the years, but when Patty, Brooks and I were talking about the closing last night, it occurred to the three of us we had not been to the Tivoli very much in recent years. And that’s the main reason the place is closing: Not enough people have been going.

I think the last movie I saw there was “Puzzle,” a 2018 movie about an unfulfilled housewife whose life changes dramatically after she discovers she has a facility for working jigsaw puzzles. You’re just not going to see movies like that at the mainstream theaters.

The long staircase at the Tivoli

With the demise of the Tivoli, we still have Brian Mossman’s Fine Arts theaters in Overland Park. He has the Rio at 80th and Metcalf and the Glenwood Arts theaters at the Ranch Mart Shopping Center.

But as Mossman told The Star’s Joyce Smith, the Tivoli’s closing is “just a sad day for Kansas City, for the arts.”

**

Let’s end on a happier note. The Star recently ran a wonderful guest commentary by Mindy Corporan, whose father, William Corporan, and son, Reat Underwood, were killed April 13, 2014, by a wacko outside the Jewish Community Center.

Accompanying the commentary is a video of a meeting between Mindy Corporan and Sunayana Dumala, whose husband Srinivas Kuchibhotla was killed by another wacko on Feb. 22, 2017, at a bar in Olathe.

I urge you to check out the video. The two women touchingly talk about the friendship that developed between them after Mindy reached out to Sunayana.

Sunayana and Srinivas

Sunyana says in the video that Mindy related how waves of grief would suddenly overcome her and that it was part of a natural grieving process.

“It was a comforting feeling,” Sunayana says, “that there was this one person who I can share my pain (with) and who can relate to me and who can be on my side and guide me through that process…She has become more of a special friend and mentor.”

Mindy

As Sunyana speaks, Mindy looks at Sunayana, smiling gently and nodding.

It’s a video of two strong and beautiful women — one Hindu, one Christian — coming together almost out of necessity and under incredible duress. The deeds that brought them together are among the worst that have ever occurred in our area, but it is inspiring and uplifting to see something so good come out of those deeds.

P.S. The only thing I was sorry to see in Mindy’s commentary was that she and her husband and their surviving son Lukas apparently have moved to Florida in order to help Lukas get a new start in life.

Juggling three election jurisdictions on my pocket calculator last night with the results pouring in, I thought I was on top of the numbers.

In the light of day and with more time to compute, however, I found I was off by a couple of thousand votes. (My father was the accountant; I was an English major.)

Last night I had Jolie Justus beating Quinton Lucas by about 400 votes. I recomputed this morning and came up with Justus with 12,630 votes and Lucas 10,287.

The third through seventh positions looked like this:

Alissia Canady — 7,514

Steve Miller — 6,800

Scott Wagner — 5,044

Scott Taylor — 4,875

Phil Glynn — 4,358

**

As expected, turnout was low. In Kansas City, 19 percent of registered voters cast ballots. In Platte County, it was 16 percent, and Clay County brought up the rear at slightly more than 13 percent.

The turnout will be significantly higher for the June 18 general election, and it’s hard to say if that will be of greater benefit to Justus or Lucas. It could help Justus because she is better known and has a deeper track record as an elected officeholder. On the other hand, Lucas has a more appealing personal story, having been raised by a single mother and having pulled himself to success through grit and intellect.

Justus will have near-unanimous support in the LGBTQ community, and Lucas will get the vast majority of African-American votes. He should pick up many of Canady’s votes, as well as those of Jermaine Reed, another African-American candidate, who finished eighth in the field of 11.

Another wild card is the DUI charge hanging over Lucas’ head out of Lawrence, KS, where he is a lecturer at the KU School of Law. He got a bum deal on that incident when an officer ticketed him after finding him asleep behind the wheel while parked and with the motor of his car running. He had been to a party, had some drinks, and when he got to his car, he started it but thought the better of driving and took a nap. Cop could have let him go but hauled him to jail.

Lucas is fighting the charge hard, and I would bet it will be dismissed. In any event, it didn’t seem to hurt him yesterday.

**

By not endorsing Justus in the primary (it went for Canady and Glynn), The Kansas City Star has already boosted Lucas’ prospects. As my friend Clinton Adams told me the other day, that March 27 editorial “took some steam out of Justus and Miller.”  The editorial gave Lucas a positive mention when it said:  “We’re also impressed by councilman and KU law professor Quinton Lucas, who pushed through the city’s first incentive reform, capping abatements at 75 percent.”

As I said in last night’s post, I now expect Lucas to get The Star’s endorsement in the general election, and that could be a huge factor, mainly because, even with its influence on the wane, The Star holds sway with many elderly people. That’s the paper’s core constituency, and they vote.

The scene yesterday outside St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Meyer Boulevard and Wornall Road

**

Let’s look at the results in the three most-contested, at-large City Council races.

In the 3rd District at large (the seat being vacated by Lucas), state Rep. Brandon Ellington defeated Wallace Hartsfield II, a minister, by a count of 25,261 to 18,770. Ellington turned to the council race because he is term-limited in his state office, now serving the last of his allowable four two-year terms. Both candidates will go on to the June 18 general election. Ellington has the advantage of name identity and previous public service, while Hartsfield has the support of Freedom Inc…Ellington will be difficult to beat.

In the 5th District at large, incumbent Lee Barnes Jr. easily defeated Dwayne Williams and Erik Dickinson. Barnes had 20,541 votes to 12,172 for Williams and 11,766 for Dickinson. Williams, president of the Twelfth Street Development Corporation, will advance to the general election, along with Barnes. Barnes ran with Freedom’s support in 2015, but Freedom grew disenchanted with him and threw its support to Williams this time around…Looks like Freedom is going to have to stomach Barnes for another four years.

In the 6th District at large (the seat Scott Taylor is vacating), Andrea Bough, a lawyer, outpaced Stacey Johnson-Cosby, a realtor, by a vote count of 25,879 to 18,580. Bough got the lion’s share of organizational endorsements. Johnson-Cosby’s prospects appear dim.

**

In the 4th District at large, incumbent Katheryn Shields swamped two opponents in the primary and will be re-elected June 18 to a second four-year term. (This is Shields’ second go-round on the council, having also served from 1987 to 1994.)

In the 1st District at large, political newcomer Kevin O’Neill, owner and editor of the Labor Beacon newspaper, is unopposed.

In the 2nd District at large, incumbent Teresa Loar is unopposed.

It’s official: Jolie Justus has won the mayoral primary, with Quinton Lucas close on her heels.

With all Platte County, Clay County and Kansas City precincts reporting, here’s how the top seven mayoral candidates finished:

Jolie Justus — 13,702

Quinton Lucas — 13,334

Alissia Canady — 8,950

Steve Miller — 5,461

Scott Wagner — 4,982

Phil Glynn — 4,442

Scott Taylor — 4,079

So, Justus and Lucas — both lawyers who are finishing their first four-year-terms on the City Council — will advance to the June 18 general election.

…The biggest surprise to me is Lucas’ extremely strong showing. Although, like Justus, he had very good organizational support — including the black political organization Freedom Inc. and Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters — I thought Justus would beat him handily.

Clinton Adams, an East Side activist who is aligned with Freedom Inc., said he believed Lucas’ campaign message of the need to rein in tax incentives to developers registered with voters and helped him significantly. He also said he believed a Kansas City Star editorial that was critical of Justus for not doing enough to separate herself from Mayor Sly James cut into her vote.

Adams also said he believed voters gave Lucas relatively large margins on Kansas City’s East Side, where Freedom Inc. is most influential.

…Tonight’s outcome should make for a very exciting and hard-fought general election. Justus had, and should continue to have, a fund-raising advantage, but with Lucas now fighting her on even terms, he will become more competitive on campaign finances. In addition, he will now get equal time under the media’s arc lights, meaning the name identity of both candidates will skyrocket and their positions on key issues will be widely reported.

He could benefit in another important way, too: He probably will get The Star’s endorsement.

A bit of a surprise was the third-place finish of Canady, another first-term City Council member. She benefitted partly from getting The Kansas City Star’s endorsement (along with Glynn), but she also ran a campaign that gained momentum along the way. This election should bode well for her political future.

Another surprise was the relatively weak showing of Miller, a former chairman of the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission. He was the second-biggest spender, trailing only Justus, but he lost many votes in the Ward Parkway corridor to Glynn. Both are members of Visitation Catholic Church, 51st Terrace and Main, and they tapped some of the same contributors.

Taylor started out with the most funds but faded throughout the campaign.

Wagner, a Northland native, did particularly well in Clay County, but it wasn’t nearly sufficient to make him competitive with Justus and Lucas in the voter-rich area south of the Missouri River.

Congratulations to Jolie and Quinton on outstanding campaigns. We’ve got an entertaining 11 weeks in front of us.

P.S. I take no pleasure in banging on The Star, but for the life of me I don’t understand why the paper’s online story about the mayor’s race does not include any vote counts. All it cites is the percentages of votes that Justus and Lucas got. That is lazy, no-account and shameful reporting. Do the editors expect that readers seeking the statistical results are going to pore over the KC, Platte and Clay election-board websites and compute the vote counts? That’s the job of reporters. (THAT’S WHAT I DID FOR THIS POST!) But The Star has abdicated its responsibility on that important front.

Well, no one can accuse The Star of making “safe” endorsements in the Kansas City mayor’s race.

I was fairly astounded to go to The Star’s website today and see the paper was endorsing Phil Glynn and Alissia Canady in Monday’s primary election.

Neither of those candidates would be on just about anyone’s betting list of which two mayoral candidates will emerge from the primary and go on to the June 18 general election.

The endorsements are puzzling partly because Canady and Glynn both appear to be regional — and by regional I mean almost limited to a few neighborhoods — rather than city-wide candidates.

Glynn’s base is Visitation Catholic Church and, to a somewhat larger extent, the Ward Parkway corridor, although he’s got plenty of competition there from Steve Miller and Jolie Justus.

As for Canady, the 5th District City Council representative the last four years, her name does not resonate with many voters beyond the East Side.

Canady and Glynn both appear to be fine people, and I think both of them can have successful political futures. I just don’t think either is ready for the responsibilities that go along with being mayor of a city with nearly half a million people.

The Star’s rationale for selecting Canady and Glynn is that it would like to see a “change agent” in the mayor’s office. This strikes me as something of a slap at Mayor Sly James, who has had a very successful eight years in office, and also at Justus, the 4th District councilwoman, who is my even-money favorite to be Kansas City’s next mayor and is running with James’ support.

The editorial endorsing Canady and Glynn took a fairly strong swipe at Justus, pegging her as something of a go-along-get-along type of politician. The editorial said in part that “in her endorsement meeting with us, she repeatedly used the term ‘half a loaf’ as if that were the goal instead of the fallback position.”

That’s thin reasoning, if you ask me, and I’d like to know more about the context of those “half-a-loaf” comments…If I were Jolie, I’d be mighty pissed off.

**

The endorsements of Canady and Glynn represent a big risk by The Star. At a time when circulation is at all-time low (except for when the paper was getting started) and people’s confidence in The Star as a community weather vane has dimmed considerably, the editorial board is asking readers to make a great leap of faith in entrusting the reins of government to either of two relatively unknown and unproven candidates.

While I don’t think The Star should necessarily go with candidates who have the most money or are waging the most prominent and aggressive campaigns, I do believe it would be in the paper’s best interest to back a winner.

I can tell you this: I want a winner!

I’ve backed two losers in the mayor’s races that have been held since I retired — Jim Glover in 2007 and Mike Burke in 2011 — and being on the losing side is lousy. That’s one reason I’ve contributed to five mayoral candidates: Councilman Scott Taylor, Councilman Scott Wagner, Councilman Quinton Lucas and Justus and Glynn.

As I’ve written before, however, I think there are only two really “live” candidates in the race: Justus and Lucas.

Who knows. Maybe The Star will pull off the biggest surprise in modern mayoral politics and get one of its “change agents” into the general election. But I seriously doubt it. Like a lot of metropolitan dailies, The Star has been charting a different, downward course the last decade or so, and people just aren’t reading the paper or following its guidance like they used to.

In addition, of course, a lot of young people don’t even remember when The Star was a community beacon. That’s the real change that’s been going on.

It’s starting to look like the mayor’s race might be a runaway.

Councilwoman Jolie Justus has raised and spent more money than her closest rivals, and she has more endorsements.

The primary election is now just a week away, and yesterday marked the last day for submitting campaign finance disclosure reports before the primary. (The reporting period began on Feb. 17 and went through last Thursday.)

Each of the top four candidates — Justus, lawyer Steve Miller, Councilman Quinton Lucas and Councilman Scott Taylor — filed reports yesterday with the Missouri Ethics Commission. Let’s take a closer look at the reports, and the campaigns, of those four.

Jolie Justus

Justus raised nearly $150,000 during the most recent reporting period, and she spent about $333,000 — more than twice as much as Miller, Lucas or Taylor.

For the entire primary election campaign, she has raised about $676,000 and has spent nearly $633,000.

Justus is relying almost exclusively on mailers in the primary, sending at least half a dozen to frequent voters. Her campaign consulting company is The Dover Group, which has offices in Philadelphia and Chicago. It’s the same company that strategized Mayor Sly James’ 2011 and 2015 campaigns.

Not coincidentally, James has endorsed Justus. Justus’ other endorsements include the Greater Kansas City Political Caucus; LPAC, an LGBTQ advocacy group; and Emily’s List, a political action committee that strives to elect pro-choice Democratic women.

Endorsements like those serve urban, Democratic, female candidates very well, and Justus fills the bill. Were she running county wide, it would be a different story.

The maximum amount that any person, company or political organization can give to a mayoral candidate in the primary (or general) election is $3,325. Those who have given Justus the maximum include Rosana Privitera Biondo, president of Mark One Electric; Taxpayers Unlimited, a political organization affiliated with Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters; Cliff Illig, co-founder and retired vice-chairman of Cerner Corp.; David Westbrook, a Children’s Mercy Hospital executive; and Hailee Bland Walsh, owner of City Gyms.

Other noteworthy contributors to Justus in the most recent reporting period include members of the Bowen family, which runs Superior Bowen Construction Co.; Cynthia Siebert, founder of the Friends of Chamber Music; former city councilman and now-convention hotel developer Mike Burke; and Nick Benjamin, vice president of the Cordish Companies, which developed the Power & Light District.

Steve Miller

Miller with Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, a former classmate at Rockhurst High

Miller, a former chairman of the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission, raised about $112,000 in the most recent reporting period and spent about $148,000.

For the entire primary campaign, he has raised $557,421 and spent $486,865.

The breadth, effectiveness and aggressiveness of Miller’s campaign has surprised me, but I still wonder if he’s going to be able to draw a significant number of votes outside the Ward Parkway corridor, where he lives and where most of his yard signs are located.

He has an endorsement from a Northland group, Forward Kansas City, and he could do well in the Northland partly because of his Transportation Commission experience, but I haven’t been up there and have no way of gauging the depth of his name identity or support there.

Miller has received several maximum-amount contributions. One of those came from Anthony Biondo, who, I believe, is Rosana Privitera Biondo’s husband. Rosana, you will recall from above, gave $3,325 to Justus.

That could be nothing more than the Biondos wanting to “cover their bases.” In races with large fields, that happens a lot, and you will see other examples of it as we go along here.

Other maximum or near-maximum contributors to Miller include two former DST executives, Tom McCullough and Tom McDonnell; McDonnell’s wife, Jean McDonnell; Michael Atha Merriman, a financier who was involved Burns & McDonnell’s unsuccessful bid to build the new airport; and Ellen Merriman, Michael’s wife.

Quinton Lucas

Lucas raised about $34,500 during the reporting period, and spent about $159,000. His $3,325 contributors include Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters; Taxpayers Unlimited; and real estate developer Kenneth Block.

Other significant contributions came from members of the Bowen family, of Superior Bowen Construction.

…I still think Quinton Lucas has the best chance of being the second candidate to survive the primary and move on to the June 18 general election. I base that partly on his support from the black political organization Freedom Inc., which delivers more votes than any other organization, and also from the fact that he appears to be the favorite of Local 42 of the International Association of Fire Fighters, which can deliver several thousand votes.

What gives me pause is the fact that Miller’s campaign seems to be making more “noise” than Lucas’ campaign at this point.

Scott Taylor

Taylor with his wife Cathy Jolly and their son Drake

Taylor has significant support in his home area of south Kansas City, but his campaign has been on the wane. During the most recent reporting period, he raised only $24,760, while spending $147,626.

Taylor’s biggest contributors during the most recent period include $3,325 each from IBEW Local 124 and Taxpayers Unlimited.

Other noteworthy contributors to Taylor include lawyer David Fenley ($2,750), formerly of the Husch Blackwell firm; development lawyer Roxsen Koch ($2,250) of the Polsinelli firm; and former City Councilman John Sharp ($600).

**

From the reports filed yesterday, it appears that of the three candidates I’m writing about today, only Taylor had bought TV or radio ads during the most recent reporting period.

It is possible other candidates made media buys after the period closed last Thursday.

The world is moving fast, and a lot of interesting stories are playing out internationally, nationally and locally.

It is fitting to pause, however, and take note of three tragedies in our area the last nine days that have taken the lives of two women and a toddler.

Let’s take them as they happened…

Kathleen Kennaley Tripp

Kathleen K. Tripp

The 65-year-old Ms. Tripp was crossing Troost about 6:15 p.m. Wednesday, March 13, when she was hit by a Fed Ex truck. She was critically injured and died two days later.

I don’t know where Ms. Tripp lived or where she was going that evening.

Here’s the dry language of the report the KCPD sent me:

Investigation determined that a delivery truck had been westbound on 55th, entered the intersection under a green traffic signal, and initiated a left turn to continue southbound on Troost. A pedestrian was crossing Troost and was struck when the truck turned. The driver stopped immediately and remained at the scene throughout the investigation. The pedestrian, identified as a 65 year old Kansas City woman, was most recently listed as critical at an area hospital.

Of course, if the truck had a green light, that meant Ms. Tripp also had a green light. I don’t know if she had a “walk” or “don’t walk” sign — or if the signal was even equipped with that. Doesn’t really make a lot of difference; she was in the intersection, walking with a green light.

It also should be noted it was light at that time of day.

You seldom hear about delivery vehicles striking pedestrians, and I believe the main reason is the major carriers — Fed Ex and UPS — put an extremely high priority on driver safety. I’m sure this driver is beside himself or herself. Nevertheless, the driver will probably face traffic charges, perhaps careless driving and failure to yield.

Ms. Tripp is survived by two daughters and several nieces and grand nieces. Her obit, on the Muehlebach Funeral Home website, says this, among other things:

Kathy graduated from St. Therese High School in 1971. (I presume it’s St. Teresa’s Academy.) She then attended Loyola University New Orleans, Louisiana. Kathy was a woman of many humanitarian hats. She worked as an orthopedic lab technician at St. Luke’s on the Plaza in her youth then continued her career as an awarded hostess and bartender. She worked as a paralegal in several law firms around Kansas City. Never one to sit idle in her later years Kathy continued to show her compassion for others as a peer counselor with Truman Medical Center helping the homeless and actively volunteering at the World War I Memorial.

Celena Duncan

Ms. Duncan, who, I believe, was a minister at the Metropolitan Community Church in Topeka, was killed in a three-car crash about 10 a.m. Tuesday in the eastbound lanes of Shawnee Mission Parkway, a block or so east of Antioch.

This was much more egregious than the Fed Ex incident because the driver of the vehicle that caused the chain-reaction crash — 57-year-old Vicky Walter of Shawnee — was driving under the influence and her license had been suspended.

Walter, who is being held in the Johnson County jail on $500,000 bond, is facing a felony charge of involuntary manslaughter, in addition to charges of DUI and driving while suspended. A Fox4 News report said that after appearing in court Thursday, “Walter burst into tears as she heard the orders and walked back to her jail cell.”

I certainly hope she was crying because of the life she had taken and the other damage she had wrought, and not because she was losing her freedom.

The other damage I referred to? Ms. Duncan’s husband Jack Boren, who was driving the car they were in, was hospitalized with “crushed knees, damaged arms, broken clavicle, spinal fractures and a badly injured face.”

I have not been able to find out a lot about Ms. Duncan (her obituary had not appeared by this morning) but I believe she also lived in Shawnee and was in her 70s.

…Ten o’clock on a Tuesday morning on Shawnee Mission Parkway. Holy shit.

Jayden Courtney

Three years old. Father holding the boy’s hand. 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, 11th and Grand. Boy breaks free and runs into street. Spire Gas truck that is trying to make the light hits boy as he enters 11th between two parked vehicles.

This from Fox4…

From the window of the Jimmy John’s sandwich shop, John Garcellano saw Jayden and his dad walking down the street moments before the crash.

“He was right there. The father was on the sidewalk and had a hold of his kid, and he just — the kid just broke free and ran right in the middle of the street.”

Garcellano also saw the Spire Gas utility truck coming over a hill: “The truck actually was going pretty fast, pretty fast for downtown. He was trying to catch the light before it turned red.”

Garcellano told the station his “heart sank” when he say the little boy lying lifeless in the street.

**

I think I speak for all of us when I say all of our hearts sink for all three of the people who were killed and for the husband who has a long recovery in front of him — and no wife to go home to.

It appears to me that the McClatchy Co., owner of The Star and 28 other daily newspapers, is not long for this world.

One hedge fund, Chatham Asset Management, has been digging its claws into McClatchy for a few years — becoming its largest creditor and buying up at least 20 percent of the company’s stock — and on Wednesday another big stockholder filed notice demanding that McClatchy sell all its “non core assets,” including real estate.

That company, Bluestone Financial LTD, based in the British Virgin Islands, has increased its ownership stake in McClatchy from 5.16 percent a year ago to 8.82 percent as of Wednesday.

In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Bluestone said it believed McClatchy stock shares “represent an attractive investment opportunity.”

The filing went on to say…

“The McClatchy company should improve its balance sheet by selling all non core assets including real estate and its 49.5% stake in The Seattle Times Company. While right sizing its workforce The McClatchy Company should consider right sizing The Board and its compensation until the business stabilizes and starts growing again.”

I don’t know much about technical financial statements, but it seems to me there’s a lot of meat in that paragraph.

For starters, non core assets are commonly defined as the parts of a company’s business that are not essential for the generation of revenue, cash flow or profits. So, I take that to mean that Bluestone wants McClatchy to sell off just about everything it owns that is not generating significant revenue, which would include its headquarters buildings and perhaps its printing plants.

(The Star’s longtime headquarters at 1729 Grand has already been sold, of course, and recently McClatchy once again put the print pavilion at 16th and McGee up for sale. The asking price for the pavilion, built at a cost of $199 million in the early 2000s, is $31 million. The Star proposes to lease the building back and continue publishing The Star and other publications.)

The second piece of that paragraph that needs deciphering is the bit about the 49.5 percent stake in The Seattle Times. It’s my understanding McClatchy owns 29 papers outright and has the 49.5 percent stake in the Seattle paper. So, Bluestone apparently sees the Seattle investment as non critical or “non core.”

The third part of the paragraph that catches the eye is the strong suggestion that McClatchy right size “The Board and its compensation until the business stabilizes and starts growing again.”

I don’t know if that means Bluestone wants compensation lowered throughout the company or just in terms of board members’ compensation. I wouldn’t think that “right sizing” board members’ compensation would save enough money to make much difference in the long term, so I’m assuming Bluestone is referring to compensation company wide, including corporate officers like CEO Craig Forman, V.P. of Operations Mark Zieman and CFO Elaine Lintecum.

(I don’t know how it could “right size” salaries in the newsrooms, however, because it’s already laid off and bought out thousands of higher-earning employees and replaced some of them with younger people at much lower salaries.)

…The ultimate goal of companies like Chatham and Bluestone is to move in and get control of media companies’ still-significant cash flow. The strategy is called “harvesting market position,” a euphemism for peeling away the cash and reinvesting it elsewhere — anywhere but back in the company.

Which brings me to the last phrase in that pithy paragraph about “right sizing” until the business stabilizes and starts growing again.

There, I believe, Bluestone hangs out an empty hope that it knows is an empty hope.

Bluestone, Chatham and other such companies closing in on newspaper companies are betting that business is never going to stabilize and never going to grow again; they believe it’s going to wither away, and they want to be the ones grabbing the cash before the elevator hits sub-basement.

Oh, and here’s one final piece of information I don’t think I’ve reported before: Chatham, the hedge fund that is McClatchy’s biggest creditor and stockholder, owns the National Enquirer.

So, papers like The Star, the Miami Herald, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram and the Charlotte Observer, are, to some extent, sister papers to the National Enquirer, the paper that believes in paying big bucks for potentially embarrassing stories and then killing those stories to protect the reputations of people its owners favor, like President Donald Trump.

How do you like that for fine company?

In the hubbub of knee-replacement surgery, the Kansas City mayor’s race and Frank White’s self-immolation as Jackson County executive, I’ve been derelict in writing about Public Enemy No. 1…none other than pop-’em-up-shoot-’em down David Jungerman.

Today I went to the courthouse and checked out the latest filings in the criminal and civil cases pending against Jungerman in the October 2017 killing of Kansas City attorney Thomas Pickert.

From all indications, Jungerman is very pleased with himself because, from his jail cell, he’s doing what he loves doing best — making everyone in his sphere miserable.

That includes not just Pickert’s family members but also his own attorneys and even his own daughter, who spent nine days in jail after the judge in the civil, wrongful-death case held his daughter in contempt of court for failing to heed his orders.

The daughter, Angelia Buesing, was jailed from Feb. 26 to March 7 by Judge Kevin Harrell for refusing to turn over financial records the judge had ordered her to surrender. Apparently, Buesing didn’t care for confinement because on the 7th, Harrell ordered her released after determining she “has begun to cure her discovery deficiencies.”

(Got to love the legalese, don’t you? He could have said she “started getting the message through her thick skull,” but he chose to exhibit judicial temperament.)

The civil case — filed by Pickert’s widow, Dr. Emily Riegel and his parents — is a veritable legal slog that will turn on the financial records. Jungerman is believed to be worth more than $30 million, but sorting out his assets, which include thousands of acres of farmland in southwest Missouri, is proving to be extremely challenging. Not to mention that Jungerman and his family members are throwing up every possible road block.

The finances also play a significant role in the first-degree murder case, but a convincing case conceivably could be made without a mountain of financial evidence because the state has a mountain of circumstantial evidence. That evidence includes video that shows Pickert’s distinctive, white van traveling to and from his home in Raytown to Pickert’s home in Brookside the morning Pickert was shot outside his house.

In the one interview he gave police, Jungerman said the van did not move from his property that day.

Here are the major developments in the murder case:

:: The start of trial, originally set for last month, has been pushed forward to early September.

:: As I reported in December, Jungerman filed a motion, which the state did not object to, for a mental competency evaluation. The result of that evaluation was filed on March 12, but unlike almost all other filings, it is not open to the public. I have to assume, however, that psychiatrists determined Jungerman was competent to stand trial because the criminal case appears to be moving forward without alteration.

Dan Ross

:: For a period of less than 24 hours, Jungerman wanted to fire his criminal attorney, Daniel Ross. On Jan. 23, he filed a hand-written “motion to discharge attorney.” In the motion, he said, among other things, he had paid Ross $137,500 even though Ross had failed to produce “any major trial preparation.”

“Defendant doubts Mr. Ross will be willing to refund those funds,” Jungerman astutely noted.

He and Ross must have kissed and made up, however, because the next morning Ross filed a formal motion, obviously with Jungerman’s approval, to withdraw the motion to discharge.

:: The goofiest part of the discharge motion was Jungerman’s contention that he had pushed Ross to get the prosecutor’s office to file second-degree murder charges against one of the police detectives who investigated the Pickert case, Bonita Cannon.

Jungerman’s beef with Cannon is that she “included fake information on the probable cause statement” — the court filing that lays out the gist of the state’s case. Jungerman doesn’t say exactly why Cannon should be charged with murder — or whose murder — but the reader is left to presume that Jungerman is contending that she killed Pickert and then attempted to frame Jungerman.

…Yeah, you gotta watch these damn detectives. Sometimes they kill witnesses and plant guns on them, and sometimes they just kill lawyers and try to pin the blame on a guy sitting at home in Raytown watching TV.

What do you make of this mayor’s race?

The Kansas City mayor’s race…the one that doesn’t seem to be firing anyone up.

I think the lack of excitement attending the race is partly the result of what I’ve been writing about recently in regard to the twin fiascos of Frank White and the Jackson County jail:

With The Star a slip of its former self, people simply are not paying as much attention as they did in the past. A big reason they’re not paying attention is there’s not much coverage. Candidate forums involving the 11 candidates in the April 2 primary (the top two will go on to the June 18 general election) are taking place all the time. But The Star has only covered a few of them, and it’s almost impossible with that large a field to write an interesting story.

The reporter’s unappealing task is to try to be fair by including some snippet from every candidate — which has the effect of killing narrative. What you get is more or less a roll-call story.

This will change after the primary, when the field is down to two candidates, but it sure makes for a lousy primary.

…Enough bitching for now, though; let’s get down to the horse race.

At the track — where I spent a lot of time, mostly before I was married — you’ve got to keep a close eye on the tote board and weigh how the odds change as people bet. Since no betting is taking place in the mayor’s race, I can’t give you changing odds, but what I’m going to do is give you what the track calls the “morning line” odds, which are listed in the programs sold to people arriving at the track.

It’s the track handicapper’s best guess as to which horses are most likely to win and what their odds could be at post time.

As a brief primer, even odds — 1 to 1 — mean if you bet $5, you win $5, so your total return on the wager is $10.

If a horse is “odds on,” say 3 to 5, that means you get $3 back on your $5 wager, or a total of $8 when you collect at the pari-mutuel window.

(There’s an old racetrack saying, which I love, about the hazards of betting odds-on horses: If you’ve got the five, you don’t need the three.)

If a horse goes off at 10 to 1, you get $10 back for every dollar you bet, or $11 at the collection window.

The highest odds listed on the tote board are 99 to 1. What that means is you’ll get back at least $99 dollars for every dollar you bet. The actual odds could be 150 or 200 to 1, though, and the bettors don’t know exactly how much a 99-1 horse goes off at unless it wins and the tote board flashes the exact payoff.

So, let’s roll! Here are the JimmyCsays odds on each candidate seeking to be the next mayor.

Jolie Justus

Odds: 1 to 1

Although she has only very few yard signs so far, Justus, a lawyer, has three huge factors working in her favor. First, she has the most elective experience of any candidate, including eight years in the Missouri Senate (2007 to 2015) and the last eight on the City Council. Second, she has the most name identity of any council member (other than Mayor Sly James, of course) by dint of being Aviation Committee chairwoman and being widely credited, along with James, with the push for a new single-terminal airport. (James endorsed her today in a video announcement.)

Third, and perhaps most important, she has a winning personality and an extremely welcoming presence. She puts people at ease and focuses on them when she’s engaged in conversation or listening to them testify before her committee. The first time I met her, in 2007 I believe, the person who introduced us told me she was running for state Senate. After about five minutes of conversation, I pulled out my checkbook and gave her a contribution.

In this primary campaign, Justus has been flooding registered voters’ mailboxes with flyers. They are well done, and she has adopted as her logo the image of the Christopher S. Bond bridge, with its steel cables and triangular-shaped pylon. That was a stroke of genius, implying that her campaign is soaring.

On the down side, some of her 4th District constituents say she has become somewhat unresponsive to them as her city-wide profile has risen. For example, she sided with Quik Trip in its successful push to double the size of its store and gas pumps west of Southwest Trafficway on Westport Road. That left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of area residents.

 

Quinton Lucas

Odds: 5-1

Lucas is probably going to join Justus in the general-election campaign, primarily on the basis of his looks, smarts and organized support. He’s a lawyer and teaches law classes at the University of Kansas. He’s razor sharp and excellent at spontaneous debate. At a City Council meeting a few weeks ago, he blew away Mayor Pro Tem Scott Wagner, another mayoral candidate, with a blistering fusillade  in a debate over renaming The Paseo after Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Most important to his chances, Lucas has the backing of the black political organization, Freedom Inc., which is the biggest single, deliverable block of votes in Jackson County. Freedom will produce several thousand votes for Lucas, enough to insure he makes it out of the primary.

Nevertheless, I have been surprised that his campaign has not been more visible and energetic. I’m ambivalent about his yard signs — featuring a large “Q” — and I’m just not hearing much buzz about him.

He also has a shadow hanging over his campaign: A DUI charge he picked up several months ago in Lawrence, when he was sitting at the wheel of his car, motor running, after having had too many drinks at a party. He is fighting the charge, and I have the feeling — can’t give you a good reason why — it’s going to be dropped, at least before the general election.

Steve Miller

Odds: 9-1

Miller, also an attorney, is making a lot of noise and generating some publicity. For a person who has never run for elective office, he is making an impressive run. He knows his way around politics, having served several years on the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission, including two years as chairman. He also hails from a well-known south Plaza family. His late father Dick Miller was a well-known contractors’ lawyer, and his mother Bernadette Miller is a beloved figure at Visitation Parish, a resident of Bishop Spencer Place and a fixture at the Kansas City Symphony.

Miller has raised a lot of money (up there with Justus and Lucas), thanks mainly to his fellow lawyers, and he recently sent out a catchy email under the headline, “Why has Kansas City been swallowed by potholes.” In an accompanying photo, Miller was wearing a hard hat and reflective work shirt, holding a shovel and standing next to an asphalt-laying machine. Good stuff!

Still, name identity outside the Plaza and Ward Parkway corridor is going to be a problem for Miller. Moreover, he’s a Republican. City elections are nonpartisan, but if he should beat out Lucas for second place in the primary, Jolie Justus will make sure everyone knows Steve Miller is a Republican. Justus is already emphasizing the fact that she’s a Democrat in her flyers.

Scott Taylor

Odds: 15-1

At one time, Taylor led the way in fund-raising, but he has tailed off not only there but in overall visibility. From all indications, he’s been a good, honest councilman the last eight years; he just doesn’t seem to be mayoral timber. As chairman of the council’s Planning, Zoning and Economic Development Committee, Taylor raised a lot of money initially from developers and development attorneys. The problem is he’s seen as never having seen a development project he didn’t like.

Taylor will do very well in his home area, south Kansas City, but I can’t see him doing particularly well elsewhere.

**

The rest of the field — the seven other candidates — I’m lumping in the 99-1 category.

:: Scott Wagner. A councilman for eight years, Wagner hopes to do well in the Northland, from which he hails, but, like former Councilman Jim Glover eight years ago, he just doesn’t seem capable of making the jump to the big time.

:: Phil Glynn. A Ward Parkway resident and member of Visitation Parish, he will pull some votes from Miller but not enough to get anywhere. He should have exhibited patience and run for City Council.

:: Alissia Canaday. She is another council member who hasn’t been able to project a strong image or message.

:: Jermaine Reed…Ditto.

:: Vincent Lee. He calls himself “General Lee” and lives on a battlefield of his own making. I met him a couple of months ago at the Price Chopper in Brookside. He introduced himself as “General Lee” and bent my ear for 20 minutes but never once mentioned he was running for mayor.

:: Henry Klein. He ran eight years ago without making any impression on voters and is, for some reason, back again. He has several goofy yard signs, including one that says, “Fighting for Lost Causes.” It should have said, “Fighting a Lost Cause.”

:: Clay Chastain. I take it back on the 99 to 1. The odds on Chastain becoming mayor are 10,000 to 1. What a turd.