Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2026 12:08:20 PM
To: mcre13@gmail.com <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: POLL: Kansans are Keeping More this Tax Day
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Request received. You will receive a response within three business days. Thank you
From: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, April 11, 2026 1:04 PM
To: City Clerk <cclerk@topeka.org>
Subject: Subject: Kansas Open Records Act Request – Downtown Topeka Parking Data, Meters, Garages, Occupancy, and Studies
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Notice: -----This message was sent by an external sender----- |
Subject: Kansas Open Records Act Request – Downtown Topeka Parking Data, Meters, Garages, Occupancy, and Studies
KORA
Dear Parking Division / City Clerk,
Pursuant to the Kansas Open Records Act (K.S.A. 45-215 et seq.), I am requesting the following public records related to downtown Topeka parking (Central Business District / study area bounded roughly by SW 2nd St., Tyler St., SW 12th St., and Adams St.):
If any responsive records are already publicly available online, please provide the direct links. I prefer electronic copies (PDF or spreadsheet format). I agree to pay reasonable copying fees up to $25 without further notice; please contact me if costs will exceed that.
Thank you for your assistance. Please provide the records or an estimated timeline within the statutory period.
"BREAKING" news. Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) publicly disclosed its plan to relocate its global headquarters from San Jose, California, to Spring, Texas (in the Houston suburbs) in December 2020. The company opened its new campus there in 2022.
HPE's origins trace back to the iconic 1939 Palo Alto garage where Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard started their partnership with $538 in capital—the symbolic "birthplace of Silicon Valley." That garage story remains true and inspirational for American innovation. However, the original Hewlett-Packard company split in 2015: one part became HP Inc. (personal computers and printers, still with significant California presence), while HPE focused on enterprise hardware, servers, storage, and networking. HPE's decision reflected its evolution into a more mature, hardware-centric firm rather than a pure Silicon Valley software/startup culture.
HPE's CEO at the time, Antonio Neri, cited "business needs, opportunities for cost savings, and team members’ preferences about the future of work" (accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic's shift to hybrid/remote models). Texas already had a substantial HPE presence (over 2,600 employees in the Houston area, plus sites in Austin and Plano), making consolidation logical. The move was not a sudden rejection of innovation but a pragmatic corporate choice for a company whose core operations had shifted.
Governor Greg Abbott welcomed it enthusiastically, highlighting Texas's business climate: no state income tax, lower overall costs, regulatory environment, quality of life, and workforce access. Abbott noted Texas was gaining Fortune 500 headquarters and positioned it as competitive for talent recruitment.
California's response (via a surrogate) was indeed the dismissive "companies come and go," reflecting a longstanding attitude among some state officials.
The post's larger point holds water: California has seen a notable outflow of major company headquarters and high-profile relocations in recent years, with Texas as a primary beneficiary. Examples include:
Reports indicate dozens to over 100 companies have relocated to Texas since 2020, with a significant share from California. Texas metros (Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, Houston) have led national HQ gains, while the San Francisco Bay Area has posted net losses.
Key policy differences driving decisions for many firms:
That said, California retains enormous strengths: a massive economy (still among the world's largest if treated as a country), deep talent pools in tech/biotech, venture capital networks, universities, and cultural appeal. Many startups and innovation hubs still thrive there, and not every company flees—some expand or stay for market access. Headquarters moves don't always mean all jobs leave; HPE kept some innovation presence in San Jose.
The symbolism is real: when a company tied to Silicon Valley's founding myth finds better conditions elsewhere, it underscores policy incentives matter. Businesses vote with their feet on taxes, regulations, and livability. Texas has aggressively courted relocations and benefited from net gains in population and economic activity. California faces persistent budget challenges, out-migration of residents and firms, and debates over whether its progressive policies (high services/taxes) justify the trade-offs or deter growth.
This isn't unique to one party or era—economic competition between states is healthy in a federal system—but sustained one-way traffic signals underlying differences in governance priorities. If the goal is retaining the next generation of innovators, addressing cost, tax, and regulatory competitiveness becomes essential, rather than shrugging it off. The garage spirit of Hewlett and Packard thrived on low barriers and practical problem-solving; modern policy environments either nurture or repel that.
Here's the latest available public information on downtown Topeka parking (as of early 2026), plus the executive summary from the key study. I pulled this directly from the City of Topeka’s website, recent official announcements, and the 2017 Comprehensive Parking Plan (the most recent full study). No newer public occupancy/utilization study or real-time dashboard was located—current data would need to be requested from the city.
Recent rate changes (approved June 2025, phased in Sept. 2025 and Jan. 2026) were made to standardize fees, fund garage repairs/infrastructure, and improve accessibility. They were not driven by reported overcrowding.
The city runs 7 public garages + several surface lots. Hourly parking is available in most (except 512 Jackson, Coronado). Monthly lease rates have risen (some still pending structural repairs). Here’s the latest from the city site + announcements:
| Garage/Lot | Capacity | Hourly Parking? | Current Monthly Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 512 Jackson | 443 | No | $74.00 (as of Jan. 2026) | Monthly leases only |
| 9th Street | 760 (100 hourly) | Yes | $51.00 (post-repair) | 6 AM–6 PM |
| Centre City | 261 (65 hourly) | Yes | $74.00 | — |
| Crosby Place | 251 (55 hourly) | Yes | $74.00 | — |
| Park N Shop | 390 (150 hourly) | Yes | $74.00 | 6 AM–6 PM |
| Townsite Plaza | 259 (55 hourly) | Yes | $74.00 | 6 AM–8 PM |
| Coronado | 251 | No | $74.00 (post-repair) | Pending repairs |
| Other lots (5th Jackson, 800 Madison, etc.) | 92–254 each | Varies | $18–$44 | Lower-cost options |
Occupancy data: Not publicly posted in real time or in recent reports. The last detailed counts come from the 2017 study (see below). Some business owners have noted underused spaces in recent news coverage.
This is the most recent comprehensive study (data collected May 2017; some references to 2016). It was conducted to assess supply/demand, operations, enforcement, and future needs amid downtown growth. No full public update or new executive summary has been released since (a structural engineering review of garages by Walter P. Moore in ~2023 focused only on repairs, not utilization).
Executive Summary (key excerpts and findings):
Full PDF (free): https://s3.amazonaws.com/cot-wp-uploads/wp-content/uploads/parking/Topeka+Comprehensive+Parking+Plan.pdf
Here’s a concise, professional open records request you can copy-paste and email to parking@topeka.org (or the City Clerk’s office for formal Kansas Open Records Act processing). It asks specifically for meters, prices, garage stalls, occupancy, and any studies/executive summaries.
Subject: Kansas Open Records Act Request – Downtown Topeka Parking Data, Meters, Garages, Occupancy, and Studies
Dear Parking Division / City Clerk,
Pursuant to the Kansas Open Records Act (K.S.A. 45-215 et seq.), I am requesting the following public records related to downtown Topeka parking (Central Business District / study area bounded roughly by SW 2nd St., Tyler St., SW 12th St., and Adams St.):
If any responsive records are already publicly available online, please provide the direct links. I prefer electronic copies (PDF or spreadsheet format). I agree to pay reasonable copying fees up to $25 without further notice; please contact me if costs will exceed that.
Thank you for your assistance. Please provide the records or an estimated timeline within the statutory period.
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Yes, there are a few documented policy differences between Brett Kell (note: consistently spelled "Kell" in all public records, not "Cale," "Kel," or "Brent") and Spencer Duncan, both during their overlapping time on the Topeka City Council (roughly 2022–early 2026) and now with Duncan as mayor (since January 2026) and Kell continuing as District 5 council member. These appear limited to specific votes and budget emphases rather than broad or personal rifts—no public disparaging comments, personal attacks, or reported "falling out" turned up in exhaustive searches of news archives, council minutes references, or recent coverage (through April 2026). They collaborated on many routine items, served together on boards like the Topeka Development Corporation, and Kell publicly endorsed Duncan for mayor in 2025. Friendly interactions (e.g., Kell helping brush lint off Duncan's suit at the January 2026 swearing-in) are also noted in photos and coverage.
Here's a breakdown of the key separating issues found:
These reflect stylistic differences—Duncan often more fiscally cautious on reserves/taxes, Kell more focused on investment and growth—but they aligned on the overall budget package.
Other council actions and development votes (e.g., Hotel Topeka dealings, rezonings) show them generally aligned or without recorded opposition between them.
Overall assessment after deep review (news, meeting references, 2022–2026 coverage): These are typical council policy disagreements on federal compliance, fiscal strategy, and asset management—not evidence of personal animosity or consistent opposition. Kell's term runs through January 2030 (next election 2029), so more differences could emerge, but as of April 10, 2026, nothing deeper or ongoing is public. Local Topeka sources (Capital-Journal, WIBW, KSNT, city records) treat their relationship as professional and collegial. If private context or unindexed older comments exist, they aren't in verifiable public records. Let me know if you'd like links to specific meeting videos or further checks on any issue!