- published: 02 Feb 2016
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The Kansas City metropolitan area is a 14-county metropolitan area anchored by Kansas City, Missouri that straddles the border between the U.S. states of Missouri and Kansas. With a population of 2,393,623, it ranks as the second largest metropolitan area with its core in Missouri (after Greater St. Louis) and has a population in Kansas larger than the Wichita metropolitan area. Alongside Kansas City, the area includes a number of other cities and suburbs, the largest being Overland Park, Kansas; Kansas City, Kansas; and Independence, Missouri; all over 100,000 in population.The Mid-America Regional Council (MARC) serves as the Council of Governments and the Metropolitan Planning Organization for the area.
The larger Kansas City Metropolitan Area as seen on a map can be visualized roughly as four quadrants:
The northeast quadrant of the map is locally referred to as "north of the river" or "the Northland". It includes parts of Clay County, Missouri including North Kansas City, Missouri. North Kansas City is bounded by a bend in the Missouri River that defines a border between Wyandotte County, Kansas and Clay County, Missouri running approximately North-South and a border between North Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Missouri running approximately East-West. The sharpest part of the river bend forms a peninsula containing the Kansas City Downtown Airport.
KCPT, virtual channel 19 (UHF digital channel 18), is a PBS member television station serving Kansas City, Missouri and Kansas City, Kansas, United States. The station is owned by Public Television 19, Inc.. KCPT maintains studio facilities (which are shared with sister adult album alternative radio station KTBG (90.9 FM)) located on East 31st Street in Kansas City, Missouri's Union Hill section (adjacent to the transmitter tower of CBS affiliate KCTV (channel 19)), and its transmitter is located near 23rd Street and Stark Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri's Blue Valley section.
On cable, the station is available on Time Warner Cable and SureWest channel 11, Comcast channel 4 and AT&T U-verse channel 19.
The station first signed on the air on March 29, 1961 as KCSD. It was founded by the Kansas City School District, and originally operated as a member station of National Educational Television; it later became a charter member of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) when it launched on October 6, 1970. The school district put the station's license up for sale in 1971. A group of civic leaders formed a nonprofit broadcasting entity called Public Television 19, Inc., and bought the license. The station changed its callsign to KCPT in January 1972. That fall, it began broadcasting PBS programs in color for the first time. In 1973, the station held its first televised auction.
A city is a large and permanent human settlement. Although there is no agreement on how a city is distinguished from a town in general English language meanings, many cities have a particular administrative, legal, or historical status based on local law.
Cities generally have complex systems for sanitation, utilities, land usage, housing, and transportation. The concentration of development greatly facilitates interaction between people and businesses, benefiting both parties in the process, but it also presents challenges to managing urban growth.
A big city or metropolis usually has associated suburbs and exurbs. Such cities are usually associated with metropolitan areas and urban areas, creating numerous business commuters traveling to urban centers for employment. Once a city expands far enough to reach another city, this region can be deemed a conurbation or megalopolis. In terms of population, the largest city proper is Shanghai, while the fastest-growing is Dubai.
There is not enough evidence to assert what conditions gave rise to the first cities. Some theorists have speculated on what they consider suitable pre-conditions and basic mechanisms that might have been important driving forces.
Kansas i/ˈkænzəs/ is a U.S. state located in the Midwestern United States. It is named after the Kansa Native American tribe, which inhabited the area. The tribe's name (natively kką:ze) is often said to mean "people of the wind" or "people of the south wind", although this was probably not the term's original meaning. Residents of Kansas are called "Kansans". For thousands of years, what is now Kansas was home to numerous and diverse Native American tribes. Tribes in the eastern part of the state generally lived in villages along the river valleys. Tribes in the western part of the state were semi-nomadic and hunted large herds of bison. Kansas was first settled by European Americans in the 1830s, but the pace of settlement accelerated in the 1850s, in the midst of political wars over the slavery issue.
When it was officially opened to settlement by the U.S. government in 1854, abolitionist Free-Staters from New England and pro-slavery settlers from neighboring Missouri rushed to the territory to determine whether Kansas would become a free state or a slave state. Thus, the area was a hotbed of violence and chaos in its early days as these forces collided, and was known as Bleeding Kansas. The abolitionists eventually prevailed, and on January 29, 1861, Kansas entered the Union as a free state. After the Civil War, the population of Kansas grew rapidly when waves of immigrants turned the prairie into farmland. Today, Kansas is one of the most productive agricultural states, producing high yields of wheat, corn, sorghum, and soybeans. Kansas is the 15th most extensive and the 34th most populous of the 50 United States.
Our Divided City
24/7 KCPT PBS Kids Channel | Leslie Rotenberg Interview
A Kansas City Tragedy... Remembered - KCPT 3/5/1997
KC Veterans Embark on 'Tiny' Mission | Veterans Coming Home | KCPT
KCPT's Public Works - Water Rates and Rivers
KCPT: Check Please: Night on the Town
KCPT...Building a Great Network for Knowledge
Big 5: Progress Report on Making KC America's Most Entrepreneurial City
KCPT: The Local Show - October 4, 2012
KCPT (2016)
KCPT, Kansas City, Public Television 19, Inc. With the number of homicides in Kansas City for 2015 having leapt back up, this provocative film examines violent crime in the segregated black community east of Troost Avenue in Kansas City and asks whether enough is being done to make its neighborhoods safe. Original air date: January 29, 2016
Kansas City PBS - KCPT, Kansas City
A look at the chain of events leading up to and immediately following the November 29, 1988, blast that killed six KCMO firefighters and changed the way fire departments around the country conduct training. KC Star's Tom Jackman, WDAF reporter Charles Grey, U.S. Attorney Stephen Hill, and defense attorney John O'Connor talk with KCPT's Cynthia Smith for "A Kansas City Tragedy... Remembered." The program originally aired on March 5, 1997. KCPT, Kansas City, Public Television 19, Inc.
A group of Kansas City veterans are combating homelessness among fellow veterans with tiny houses. The Veterans Community Project plans to place 45 to 50 tiny houses on several acres in south Kansas City. Kansas City PBS - KCPT, Kansas City
Water Rates & Rivers delves into the reasons behind the steep climb in water rates, especially for those living in Kansas City, Missouri, and asks was this inevitable and is it fair? The hike in prices is largely explained by a federal mandate requiring KCMO to upgrade its sewage system and to stop so much pollution from spilling into the Blue River watershed. But as an urban stream, is the Blue River destined to always be brown anyway? With the watershed split by the state line, to what extent is Kansas upstream causing problems for Missouri downstream? Kansas City PBS - KCPT, Kansas City
Check, Please! Kansas City is KCPT's restaurant review show where host Doug Fost sits down with regular viewers like you dine and dish on their favorite local eateries. Each episode features three guests; each recommends his or her favorite restaurant. The other two guests then go and experience it for themselves. After the guests have experienced each other's recommendations they meet at KCPT's studio to discuss their experiences. The reviewers are not affiliated with any restaurant, nor are they food experts. They come from all walks of life—attorneys, scrub techs, self-proclaimed media darlings—and the list goes on. They live all over the metropolitan area, including one intrepid soul who trucks in to work every day from Baldwin City, Kansas. The one thing the guests do share is their ...
President Lyndon B. Johnson gave a passionate and forward thinking speech after signing the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967. It still rings true today as the motivation for KCPT and all public media.
What began in the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Board room in July 2011 with 100 business, civic and elected leaders and 182 ideas for creating a greater Kansas City has become five initiatives which seek to to bring better health, improved education, more jobs, increased investment and a better quality of life to everyone in the region. The Local Show gathered key decision makers from each of the Big 5 initiatives to find out how much progress has been made. Our Think Tank of Experts: Jim Heeter, President & Chief Executive Officer, Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Russ Welsh, Current KC Chamber Chair; Chairman & CEO, Polsinelli Shughart Greg Graves, Past (2011) KC Chamber Chair; Chairman of the Board & CEO, Burns & McDonnell Big 5 Representatives: Peter deSilva: Cha...
This week - a conversation at the Kauffman Foundation with regional healthcare leaders to get a status report on how the Affordable Care Act is affecting Kansas and Missouri.