The Kansas City Municipal Court will be closed on Monday and KCMO.gov remains unavailable after the city’s computer system was reportedly compromised over the weekend.
The Kansas Business Hall of Fame is set to induct the first female CPA in Kansas following her passing, along with a Wichita couple, for their business endeavors.
A senator from Missouri has helped to introduce a new bill that would order the creation of a resource database for those with disabilities in a bipartisan effort.
Over 30 years ago, Kevin Costner helped deliver the line, “if you build it, they will come.” The Kansas City Royals have taken that advice, helping rebuild dozens of ball fields across the metro.
The Missouri Attorney General is set to defend three state senators in a defamation suit after they called an Olathe man an illegal immigrant in the aftermath of the mass shooting at Union Station.
The University of Kansas confirmed on Friday, May 3, that they will go through with the graduation ceremony set to take place on David Booth Memorial Football Field on Sunday, May 12 at 10:30 a.m.
Kansas City has launched an accelerated housing development with a plan to redevelop 46 lots in the city’s Washington-Wheatley neighborhood into single-family homes.
Dominic Miller, the alleged third shooter in the Chiefs rally shooting, has finally been released from the hospital and booked into the Jackson County jail.
Overland Park plans to open its damaged Bluejacket swimming pool for the summer after learning it would be cheaper to refill the aging pool than repair it.