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Big 5 Champion: Leo Morton

Nick Haines welcomes Leo Morton, the Champion for the arts campus initiative, to The Local Show to discuss the progress on this Big 5 idea.

Last year the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce released with great fanfare their 5 big ideas for moving the metro forward. They didn’t want to just talk about 5 ideas. They wanted to make 5 things happen that would make a difference in the metro.

After months of task forces and meetings and shrinking down its list from close to 200 big ideas, they decided to roll up their sleeves and propose relocating the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance to Downtown, develop a strategic plan to improve urban neighborhoods, make Kansas City a nationally recognized center for medical research, hold a world symposium on animal health, and transform Kansas City into “America’s Most Entrepreneurial City.”

Lots of groups come up with bold plans and ideas to improve the city, but do those noble visions just end up gathering dust on a shelf? On KCPT, we’re going to to track the Big 5 to see how these ideas progress.

In one area, momentum is already building. Over the holiday, UMKC was announcing plans to expand its concept of a new downtown arts campus. While initial reports were that UMKC was considering moving just its Conservatory of Music and Dance to a new site, possibly to the now vacant Lyric Theater, the university is now hiring firms to conduct a feasibility study into moving other arts programs such as the Kansas City Repertory Theater, KCUR Radio and the UMKC Theater program. This could potentially bring as many as a thousand students and faculty to a new arts campus downtown.

Nick Haines welcomes Leo Morton, the Champion for the arts campus initiative, to The Local Show to discuss the progress on this big idea.

Graphic giving thanks to Big 5 underwriters Burns & McDonnnell, UMB and Swope Community Enterprises

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City of Entrepreneurs: Kansas City

The Kauffman Foundation produced this video about Kansas City's entrepreneurial successes and looks to what the future holds for Kansas City as Google reinvents the internet starting right here in KC.

Hallmark, Marion Labs, H&R Block, Cerner and American Century. These are but a few examples of the entrepreneurial successes that began in Kansas City. Now Google has picked Kansas City as the starting point for revolutionizing how we use the internet and for spawning a new generation of innovation and entrepreneurship.

Recently, the UMKC Bloch School earned the highest ranking as the world’s top academic site for innovation management research.

The Local Show will be exploring how Kansas City will be embracing this new technology and examining the innovators.

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KC Week in Review
September 16, 2011

The Greater KC Chamber rolls out the "Big 5" ideas to move the region forward. Host Nick Haines dissects the picks with "Big 5" leaders. Plus, we take you inside the new Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts. And delve into AMC's decision to ditch downtown for Leawood.

The Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce rolls out the “Big 5″ ideas to move the region forward. On Kansas City Week in Review we dissect their top picks for the metro. Host Nick Haines pushes aside his regular reporter roundtable to bring you “Big 5″ leaders: Greater KC Chamber head Jim Heeter, Burns & McDonnell CEO Greg Graves, Chamber V-P Kristi Wyatt, and Frank Ellis, President of Swope Community Enterprises.

Also, after years of planning, the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts finally opens its doors. We take you inside. Plus, AMC announces its leaving downtown and moving to Leawood. What happened to all that talk of a cross border tax incentive ceasefire?

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