Kansas City, Missouri, Question 3, Transfer Van Brunt Boulevard Land for School District Use (November 2019)

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Local ballot measure elections in 2019
Question 3: Kansas City Transfer Van Brunt Boulevard Land for School District Use
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The basics
Election date:
November 5, 2019
Status:
Approveda Approved
Topic:
Local property
Related articles
Local property on the ballot
November 5, 2019 ballot measures in Missouri
Jackson County, Missouri ballot measures
Other counties
See also
Kansas City, Missouri

A measure to transfer certain park property in the Van Brunt Boulevard right of way for school district use was on the ballot for Kansas City voters in Jackson, Clay, Platte, and Cass counties in Missouri on November 5, 2019. It was approved.

A yes vote was a vote in favor of transferring 1.6742 acres of Van Brunt Boulevard for use as a public school.
A no vote was a vote against transferring 1.6742 acres of Van Brunt Boulevard for use as a public school, thereby keeping it within the park system.

Election results

Kansas City Question 3

Result Votes Percentage

Approved Yes

32,294 72.61%
No 12,182 27.39%
Results are officially certified.
Source


Text of measure

Ballot question

The ballot question was as follows:[1]

Should the City of Kansas City remove from the park system property generally consisting of approximately 1.6742 acres of Van Brunt Boulevard right of way within an area between Brighton and Hardesty and authorize the City to convey said property for use as a public school for such terms and consideration as the City may determine?[2]

Support

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Opposition

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Background

Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department

As of 2019, the Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department (also referred to as KC Parks) oversaw 221 parks, over 12,000 acres of parkland, 158 miles of trails and bicycle pathways, 29 lakes, hundreds of athletic fields and tennis courts, 106 playgrounds, and five public golf courses. The department manages the city's parks and boulevards. The department's mission statement as of 2019 was "to improve the quality of life, health, and wellness of our community by providing socially equitable, community-driven programming and environmentally sound natural resource management."[3] The department manages the city's parks and boulevards.[4]

The Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department is governed by a board of five volunteers, known as the Board of Parks and Recreation Commissioners, who are appointed by the mayor.[3]

Section 1004(b) of the Kansas City charter states, "If any property is determined by the Board of Parks and Recreation Commissioners to be no longer necessary or appropriate for park, parkway, or boulevard use, such property may be removed from the park system by a vote of the people." The board recommended that the property in question be removed from the park system.[5]

Path to the ballot

See also: Laws governing local ballot measures in Missouri

This measure, Ordinance No. 190378, was approved by the City Council of Kansas City on June 6, 2019.[5]

See also

External links

Footnotes