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Dotteville/Dottetropolis mission is to provide a robust platform that informs, engages, and assists citizens and subscribers in developing strategic, equitable outcomes contributing to growth in Kansas City and Wyandotte County Kansas in particular.💡 Dotteville/Dottetropolis's mission is to create a dynamic platform that informs, engages, and guides citizens and subscribers toward equitable outcom

es in the growth of Kansas City, with a special focus on Wyandotte County, Kansas. So past the word and grow this channel because it is the creation of people and talent emerging from Dotteville, Dottetropolis, Kansas City!!!!

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyrone Garner not seeking 2nd term, opening contest for 2025.Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyron...
11/27/2024

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyrone Garner not seeking 2nd term, opening contest for 2025.

Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyrone Garner does not intend to seek a second term, clearing the way for an open contest to the top elected spot in city and county government next year. Elected three years ago on a promise to deliver shakeups in the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, the mayor has hinted for months that four years in office may be all he’d serve. His chief of staff informed The Star on Tuesday that

Garner would indeed leave office when his term expires in 2025. Garner’s planned exit was first reported in an exclusive by The Community Voice, a Wichita-based Black community news publication.

Read more at:

The mayor’s decision comes roughly seven months before the filing deadline to run for local office.

"AS SEEN ON TV"KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - When you pass by the “Willa’s Books and Vinyl” sign along Troost Avenue, you ma...
09/20/2024

"AS SEEN ON TV"

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (KCTV) - When you pass by the “Willa’s Books and Vinyl” sign along Troost Avenue, you may not know that through the door is centuries of black history.
Its history is told in songs, paintings, yearbooks, and thousands of pages of books.
The story of Willa’s Books and Vinyl is also one for the history books, but that story begins with an ending.
“I worked for the postal service for 31 years,” said owner Willa Robinson. “In 1997, there was a tragedy in my family and I had to retire because I couldn’t deal with the grief.”
In her 60s and grieving, Robinson found healing between pages of books.
“I was in a place of grieving so I would go out hunting books,” Robinson said. “In the meantime, I was also collecting books about my people.”
With her collection of books, she decided to open a store.

VISIT:
WILLA'S BOOKS | 5547 Troost, Kansas City, MO 64110 | Open Tuesday thru Saturday 12pm-5pm | Phone: (816) 419-1051 | EMAIL: [email protected]

Longstanding black bookstore is saved from closing

09/04/2024

Not many of my FB friends acknowledge that they keep up with my page, but I look at the admin stats which reveals a lot, but I am curious to know how many of my friends know who and what is BlackRock.?

09/04/2024

In order for this Dotteville page to be effective, we must hear from you. What say you!.?.

Company at center of Missouri ma*****na recall faces $20 million lawsuitA company that made THC concentrate oil for Delt...
08/31/2024

Company at center of Missouri ma*****na recall faces $20 million lawsuit
A company that made THC concentrate oil for Delta Extraction says it is owed millions in the aftermath of last year’s product recall

A company that made THC concentrate oil for Delta Extraction says it's owed millions in the aftermath of last year’s product recall.

Company at center of Missouri ma*****na recall faces $20 million lawsuitA company that made THC concentrate oil for Delt...
08/31/2024

Company at center of Missouri ma*****na recall faces $20 million lawsuit
A company that made THC concentrate oil for Delta Extraction says it is owed millions in the aftermath of last year’s product recall

Delta Extraction, the Robertsville-based ma*****na manufacturer at the center of Missouri’s massive product recall last year, is being sued for nearly $20 million in unpaid invoices and loss of revenue by a former contractor.

SND Equipment Leasing is a Missouri company that created the THC concentrate oil that led to regulators’ decision to pull more than 60,000 ma*****na products off the shelves in August and revoke Delta Extraction’s manufacturing license in December.

SND claims Delta Extraction owes the company more than $13 million for producing about 1,100 liters of THC concentrate oil, or distillate, and other products, according to the company’s lawsuit filed in Franklin County last month.

A liter of 80% concentrated THC can make more than 70,000 individual gummies at 10mg THC a piece, industry experts say. That’s almost 80 million doses — or twice that amount if they’re 5mg THC gummies.

The company is also asking for $5 million in loss of revenue, after the state confiscated its extraction equipment that was inside Delta Extraction’s facility for five months.

SND’s attorney Joy Primoli told The Independent Tuesday that Delta Extraction contracted SND to do a job, and it was Delta’s responsibility as the licensee to make sure the work was in compliance with ma*****na regulations. SND had no authority to communicate directly with regulators, she said.

Primoli likened the situation to a homeowner contracting a business to paint the house green, and then the homeowners’ association saying the color doesn’t meet regulations. The contractor should still get paid for the work, she said.

“It doesn’t matter what the state says or if it was within compliance or not,” Primoli said, “they still contracted with SND to produce a product.”

In March, Delta Extraction argued against the recall and its license revocation before the Administrative Hearing Commission. A decision in the appeal is still pending.

Hundreds of documents were filed in this case, including eight-hours of testimony by SND owner Jason Sparks, who primarily works in Oklahoma’s cannabis market.

However, the lawsuit is the first glimpse at the estimated damages Sparks’ company incurred over his business agreement with Delta Extraction.

A spokesperson for Delta declined comment as the company awaits a decision on its appeal by the Administrative Hearing Commission.

When Sparks first began working with Delta in early 2022, he was making the distillate only for the ma*****na brand Conte, a Oklahoma-based company.

Sparks’ wife, Tania Conte, owns Conte. As an out-of-state company, Conte can only make its products at a Missouri licensed manufacturing facility that can legally obtain ma*****na.

But in the spring of 2023, the supply for ma*****na distillate was low across the state and Delta contracted with Sparks to make large amounts of distillate that Delta sold to about 100 other Missouri manufacturers. Those manufacturers went on to produce gummies and vapes for their brands, which is why the product recall was so widespread.

Despite Delta calling it the “Conte distillate,” Conte wasn’t involved in that business deal or receiving profits from it, the lawsuit states.

At issue is what’s in the distillate.

Sparks extracted a small amount of THC from Missouri-grown ma*****na, which the state heavily regulates. Then he added a large amount THC oil that was extracted from h**p, a product that is completely unregulated.

It’s much less expensive to make distillate from h**p than Missouri-grown ma*****na, but Delta’s consumers still paid ma*****na prices.

The state argues that any kind of THC must be regulated by the Division of Cannabis Regulation, so any products made from Delta’s distillate were pulled off the shelves because they posed a health risk. Still today, 45,000 products are pending the commission’s decision in Delta’s appeal.
READ MORE:

A company that made THC concentrate oil for Delta Extraction says it's owed millions in the aftermath of last year’s product recall.

‘Burden’ or ‘benefit’? KCK Mayor Garner floats selling the BPU to address cost concernsKansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyrone...
08/31/2024

‘Burden’ or ‘benefit’? KCK Mayor Garner floats selling the BPU to address cost concerns
Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor Tyrone Garner is calling on city leaders to join him in taking a critical look at Wyandotte County’s publicly owned utility — suggesting the local government should consider selling its nonprofit electric and water provider.

Citing concerns over the cost of utility bills, the mayor says he’s heard from some Wyandotte County residents who think owning the Board of Public Utilities is “a burden” and “should be more of a benefit” than it is.

“I think it’s time that we take a hard look at that,” the mayor told The Star by phone Friday, “to see what the options are that are out there.”

Reasons for such an evaluation, the mayor said, align with his broader goal of finding ways to cut costs for Wyandotte County residents. The mayor plans to host a more detailed public presentation on the matter in City Hall next week, and is advocating for staff to study what selling the utility could look like.
“There have been cries to me from residents that I’ve heard that want to sell it in whole or in part, or to bring it under the umbrella of the Unified Government,” the mayor said, adding:

“I just want to make sure that we have this conversation so we can deliver on the commitment that I know our commissioners and our staff members and myself have in regards to making sure that we’re providing the best level of service to our residents.”

Other ideas the mayor wants to explore include effectively absorbing the Board of Public Utilities — currently governed by a six-member elected panel — as a department of the Unified Government, or increasing the involvement of county and city officials in BPU policy decisions.

Founded in 1909, the BPU provides electricity to 67,000 and water to 53,000 households. As of this year, the nonprofit — among the top 50 largest publicly owned utilities in the country — had roughly $1.1 billion in assets and carried $829 million in debt, according to figures from BPU.

The public utility is no stranger to complaints over cost. Over the years, tensions between the BPU and Unified Government officials have spilled into public view, especially over fees charged on utility bills, including a Payment in Lieu of Taxes, or PILOT, that funds city and county operations.
Tyrone Garner

READ THE COMPLETE STORY HERE:

08/30/2024

Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, and raised in Kansas City, Kansas
GRAMMY® Award winning contemporary Jazz/R&B superstar Norman Brown has sold over 2 million albums in his extraordinary career and virtually lives at the top of the Billboard Contemporary Jazz charts. Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, and raised in Kansas City, Kansas, Brown first picked up a guitar at the age of eight.

08/30/2024

Kansas city, Kansas own Julian Vaughn “You're Mine" Live

08/29/2024

Welcome!!!!!!

Dotteville, Dottetropolis, Kansas City is the place other Kansas City, Kansas events and venues may post. Developers are creating an autonomous application separate from FB which will allow more in-depth offerings and coverage for the citizens and participants growing in the evolving epilogue of KCKs phenomenal growth and exponential opportunities that lay ahead.

So past the word and grow this channel because it is the creation of people and talent emerging from Dotteville, Dottetropolis, Kansas City!!!!

I must reiterate. Dotteville is going to have its own social media platform, independent of any other social media platform. You ask why? Because of future enhancements FB does not allow in it terms policy, so we won't be held back by anyone.

We will only announce those accoutrements, enhancements and appreciative benefits when we are on our own platform.

Stay tuned, because we are bringing it!!!

James C. Frasure III

Address

Washington D.C., DC

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