Kansas City Local Pulse

Kansas City Local Pulse: Heat Advisory, Deadly Crash, New Jobs, and Community Events


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Good morning, this is Kansas City Local Pulse for Friday, August fifteenth. We start today with breaking news on the overnight crash in Northeast Kansas City, where police say a pursuit of a reported stolen Hyundai Tucson near Independence Avenue and Brooklyn ended in tragedy. The vehicle sped away and crashed into a Jeep Grand Cherokee at Lexington and Wabash, just after midnight. One person inside the Jeep, a right rear seat passenger, was ejected and later died in the hospital. The rest of the passengers, including several juveniles, were taken to local hospitals with critical injuries. The driver and rear seat passenger of the Hyundai are hospitalized but stable, while police continue their investigation.

Weather headlines are front and center as the National Weather Service has us under a heat advisory from one this afternoon through seven tonight, with heat indices likely to reach between one hundred and one hundred five degrees. The same is expected again tomorrow. Please drink plenty of water, limit outdoor activity, and check on neighbors who may be vulnerable. If you are headed outside, especially for events like the City Market or summer leagues at Berkley Riverfront, keep extra water handy. Temperatures should stay in the mid to upper nineties through Sunday, and only a slight chance of showers appears on the extended forecast.

Looking to City Hall, the big topic this week is how Kansas City will handle the ongoing challenges that come with relentless heat, including making more cooling centers available. Mayor Lucas is also urging support for new funding that would improve pedestrian safety, after an uptick in local concerns over speeding and poor driver behavior, especially near schools and parks.

On the jobs front, the Kansas City metro added roughly three thousand new positions in July according to regional economic reports, with hiring especially strong in health care and hospitality. Several new restaurants on the Plaza and in Brookside are looking for staff, so job seekers have fresh opportunities as the school year begins.

Speaking of growth, in real estate, the median home price in Kansas City has climbed to around three hundred seventy thousand dollars. A slight increase over last month, but local agents say inventory is starting to pick up in neighborhoods like Waldo and Armour Hills, offering a little relief for buyers.

Travelers will notice Southwest Airlines is expanding flights from KCI with new direct routes to the Caribbean starting next week. That is big news for anyone planning a fall getaway.

Over to community events, Jazz in the Park returns tonight at Loose Park, with live sets starting at six. The Plaza Art Fair is only a week away and preparations are underway, bringing artists and vendors to the Country Club Plaza for one of the city’s signature celebrations. If you are in the Crossroads, First Fridays is sticking with extra cooling tents.

In education news, Central High School’s robotics team has just returned from the national summer camp in St. Louis with top honors, a proud achievement for our local students.

And in feel-good news, local volunteers from Harvesters spent the week handing out over a thousand meals to families in need at the Linwood YMCA, a true testament to the Kansas City spirit.

Thank you for tuning in to Local Pulse. Subscribe so you never miss a story that matters to you, and stay cool today, Kansas City. This has been Kansas City Local Pulse. We’ll see you tomorrow with more local updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.

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Kansas City Local PulseBy Inception Point Ai