Kansas
As Living Costs Soar, Kansas City Pinches Pennies to Afford Rent and Mortgages – Northeast News
RobyLane Kelley
Editorial Assistant
Behind the Epidemic
Supply and demand is not a foreign concept; High demand for a product with low supply means the product seller can mark up its prices. The need to buy out of necessity continues, which includes housing. Many recent studies have shown Kansas City Metro lacks the number of dwellings – rentals, and otherwise – to adequately house its citizens within city boundaries.
The Mid-America Regional Council (MARC) stated in its June 25 review, that Kansas City has yet to recover, since the 2008 recession. MARC suggests that Kansas City has “underbuilt” since this recession — resulting in a shortage of anywhere from 12,000 to 24,000 dwellings.
This study says while the metro does continue to build roughly 6,700 units annually, this will not be sufficient to close the gap. Without factoring in population growth, MARC says the city would need to build at least 10,000 units per year for a decade to meet current needs.
Crunching the Numbers
Homeowners continue to struggle as well — comparing house-hunting for first-time homebuyers to searching for an oasis in the middle of a housing desert. According to Redfin, in May 2019, the average cost of a home in Kansas City, Mo., was $208,000, with 869 homes sold. This same data states that May 2024 saw homes sold for an average of $280,000, with 760 homes sold.
comparatively, in Kansas City, Kan., May 2019 data shows 177 houses sold for an average of $145,750. May 2024 shows 127 homes sold in said area for an average of $225,000.
With supply low and demand high, rent and home prices are skyrocketing. However, minimum wage has also risen during this time. In 2019, the minimum wage in Missouri was $8.60, and as of January 2024, it now sits at $12.30. Although, data from the MIT Living Wage Calculator suggests this increase is not livable. This data is broken down by living expenses including rent, food and medical, among others.
The livable wage provided with its data – last updated in February 2024 – based on the number of adults and children, which occupy a household. The foundation of this data states that one working adult with no children works at a poverty wage of $7.24, a minimum wage of $12.30 and a livable wage of $21.70. Nearing the Kansas border, some Missouri citizens may be working for Kansas’s Federal minimum wage at $7.25 – only a penny above the previously stated poverty wage.
Working Toward Solutions
Kansas City has generated programs — including grants — to help citizens find affordable housing. Many of these grants are for property owners, so they can build or revitalize their area. These grants include: Rebuild KC, Choice Neighborhood – one of the grants, which helped fund Samuel Rodgers Place and the Housing Trust Fund.
A housing application is available for Kansas City, Mo., residents called the Public Housing Program through the Housing Authority of Kansas City (HAKC). According to its website, eligibility will be based on “annual gross income, U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status, local federal preference and criminal record.”
This local federal preference is separated into three groups.
1: Working, Work Training Program, Elderly and Disabled
2: Homeless, Job Training Program, Housing Factor and Rent Burden
3: Non-Preference
After “initial” eligibility is met, HAKC will request additional documentation to ensure tenants will meet qualifications for the environment they are working to cultivate. Space is limited through the program as the number of units it operates through is over 1,900.
Federal grants for housing, eligibility information and applications can be found at https://www.usgrants.org/missouri/90511-kansas-city-missouri-housing-grants.
Kansas
Kansas State adds linebacker Colton McComb
It is safe to say Kansas State has it rolling a bit on the recruiting trail in the 2027 recruiting class. K-State has landed Edmond, Oklahoma linebacker Colton McComb.
The announcement from McComb comes while on an unofficial visit to Kansas State. It was the first time the linebacker had visited Manhattan and he was blown away by the Wildcats on his visit leading to his commitment.
McComb was a newer target of Kansas State when Collin Klein was announced as the new head coach. His recruitment was much more of the sprint variety. The Oklahoma native was offered by K-State January 16 by area recruiter Brian Lepak.
Shortly after his offer from the Wildcats, McComb was visited by Kansas State defensive coordinator Jordan Peterson who conducted an in-home visit with the junior. After the in-home visit, he scheduled a visit to Manhattan for this weekend where he pulled the trigger. The K-State defensive coordinator deserves a lot of credit for getting this commitment done for the Wildcats.
The junior held offers from Baylor, Boston College, Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Purdue, Memphis and Tulane along with the offer from the Wildcats. McComb had official visits scheduled to Baylor and Kansas for the summer, but will no longer take those. Both Sooner State schools also wanted the junior linebacker, so he was a very wanted prospect on the recruiting trail. He is also the older brother of David McComb who began his college career at Kansas.
Overall, McComb is commitment No. 5 for Kansas State. At this point last year, K-State still had not received its first commitment yet. He joins the Wildcat class of defensive lineman Dawayne Jones, safety Julian Elzey, cornerback Nazir Pitchford and offensive lineman Canaan Smith. McComb is also the second Oklahoma native to join the class joining Jones.
Kansas
Where to watch Milwaukee Brewers vs Kansas City Royals: TV channel, start time, streaming for Apr. 4
What to know about MLB’s ABS robot umpire strike zone system
MLB launches ABS challenge system as players test robot umpire calls in a groundbreaking season.
Baseball is back and finding what channel your favorite team is playing on has become a little bit more confusing since MLB announced plans to produce and distribute broadcasts for nearly a third of the league.
We’re here to help. Here’s everything you need to know Saturday as the Milwaukee Brewers visit the Kansas City Royals.
See USA TODAY’s sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Milwaukee Brewers vs Kansas City Royals?
First pitch between the Kansas City Royals and Milwaukee Brewers is scheduled for 4:10 p.m. (ET) on Saturday, Apr. 4.
How to watch Milwaukee Brewers vs Kansas City Royals on Saturday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Friday, April 3, 2026, at 11:26 a.m.
- Matchup: MIL at KC
- Date: Saturday, Apr. 4
- Time: 4:10 p.m. (ET)
- Venue: Ewing M. Kauffman Stadium
- Location: Kansas City, Missouri
- TV: FOX Sports 1, Royals.TV and Brewers.TV
- Streaming: MLB.TV on Fubo
Watch MLB all season long with Fubo
MLB regional blackout restrictions apply
MLB scores, results
MLB scores for Apr. 4 games are available on usatoday.com . Here’s how to access today’s results:
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
Kansas
KU Hospital to close pediatric intensive care unit in Kansas City, Kansas, cites ‘chronically low’ use
KSHB 41 reporter Isabella Ledonne reports on stories in Overland Park, Johnson County and topics about government accountability. Share your story idea with Isabella.
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The University of Kansas Health System in Kansas City, Kansas, is shutting down its pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) services.
The major hospital in Kansas City confirmed to KSHB 41 News on Friday that PICU services will be ending, though a date is not confirmed yet.
Pediatric services that are not considered “intensive care” are not affected.
According to a spokesperson with the hospital, “chronically low census” in the PICU led The University of Kansas Health System to make the decision.
The health system only has six PICU beds out of the 1,621 beds in the entire hospital. Out of the 542,429 patients who used services at the health system last year, only 150 patients were in the PICU.
“That is well below one quarter of one half a percent,” a spokesperson wrote. “The majority of the time, the PICU is used for overflow from the NICU or neonatal patient care. The health system needs space to meet higher demands for care,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
Pediatric patients needing services will still receive emergency, hospital and triage care at The University of Kansas Health System. If more intensive care is needed, the hospital will work with other KC metro health systems to provide that care.
“We will still offer pediatric inpatient services for peds who need hospitalization, but not pediatric intensive care,” a spokesperson wrote. “We also have a large outpatient footprint, as most pediatric issues are treated in outpatient settings.”
Staff currently working in the PICU will continue working with The University of Kansas Health System in either the pediatric or infant units.
“It is common for adult academic teaching hospitals to not provide ongoing pediatric intensive care services when there is a children’s hospital in the same city,” a spokesperson wrote. “This is not an unusual business model. In our case, there’s a children’s hospital less than 3 miles away.”
A date for the PICU closure is not confirmed yet, though a spokesperson said multiple dates are being looked at that coincide with the health system’s fiscal year budget.
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