Monday, April 20, 2026

Trudy - KORA the lease (Thanks)

 The 80,000 sq. ft. MRO hangar at Topeka Regional Airport (Forbes Field) has an estimated total project cost of approximately $25 million. Here's the current breakdown of who's paying based on public statements and records as of early 2026:

Primary Funding Sources

  • State of Kansas: $10 million appropriation (from the State General Fund via Senate Bill 125 in the 2025 legislative session, through the Kansas Department of Commerce). This was originally proposed higher (around $15.5 million in early concepts) but was reduced during budget negotiations. It requires a local match and is described as helping offset a significant portion (roughly 40%) of the cost.
  • Private Developer (Davcon Aviation): The developer is building the hangar under a long-term ground lease with the MTAA. Davcon is "committed to investing at least $25 million" in the overall project (which includes the hangar itself plus related site work on ~300,000 sq. ft. of apron land). They are taking the lead on construction, with confidence they can attract an end-user tenant (MRO operator) even before full completion.
  • MTAA (Local/Public Share): The remaining costs (site preparation, utilities, design elements, and any match beyond the state grant) fall to the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority. Early planning documents estimated the local match could range from ~$4 million to $10+ million depending on final state support and other sources (e.g., unexpended federal grants). MTAA may cover this through:
    • Existing or future unexpended grants.
    • Bond issuance or debt service (MTAA has bonding authority as a taxing entity).
    • Operating revenues or other airport funds.
    • Possible additional local contributions.

Construction is slated to begin in summer 2026, with completion targeted for late 2027.

How MTAA Ultimately Pays (Taxpayer Connection)

As a taxing authority, the MTAA levies property taxes on real estate in its district (primarily Shawnee County). Its 2026 proposed budget includes a mill levy of about 2.176 mills, generating roughly $5.28 million in ad valorem (property) taxes for the year. These taxes help fund operations, debt service, and capital projects. Any shortfall or debt related to the hangar could be covered by future tax levies, airport revenues (fuel sales, leases, fees), or grants. Developers/tenants on MTAA land pay no real estate taxes as an incentive, shifting more burden to general taxpayers in the district.

In short:

  • State taxpayers (via Kansas general fund) → $10 million.
  • Private investor (Davcon) → Majority of construction investment via lease.
  • Local Shawnee County / Topeka area taxpayers (via MTAA) → The balance through taxes, bonds, or airport revenues.

MTAA leadership has framed this as a low-risk deal for taxpayers because the private developer bears much of the construction risk and will repay through lease payments and future economic activity (jobs, fuel sales, etc.). Critics argue it's speculative spending with uncertain returns, especially given the airport's current scale.

For the most precise details (e.g., exact lease terms, bond plans, or cost overruns), I recommend a KORA request to the MTAA, Shawnee County Clerk, or City of Topeka for:

  • The full Davcon lease agreement.
  • Board packets/minutes discussing hangar financing.
  • Updated budget documents showing debt or match allocations.

You can find MTAA's MRO concept paper and budgets on their website (mtaa-topeka.org). If you'd like sample KORA language tailored to the hangar funding, or help contacting the Shawnee County Commissioners (who appoint two MTAA board members, including Michael Munson), let me know!

Trudy -

Fw: KORA

Michael Munson (full name: Michael Robert Munson, often referred to as Mike Munson) is a current Shawnee County appointee to the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority (MTAA) Board of Directors. He serves as a regular Member (not currently an officer) for the board term covering December 2025–November 2026, with his individual term expiring November 30, 2027 (he is eligible for up to three consecutive three-year terms under K.S.A. 27-330). He was first appointed by the Shawnee County Board of Commissioners in late 2019 to fill a vacancy and has been reappointed since (most recently around September 2024). He qualifies as a non-city resident appointee per statute.
Professional Background
Munson is a licensed attorney and banking executive.
  • Current Role: Senior Vice President / Executive Vice President and General Counsel at Central National Bank (a family-owned Kansas bank headquartered in Junction City, with a major Topeka branch at 800 SE Quincy Street). He practices in the banking area and is a member of the Topeka Bar Association (and reportedly the Nebraska Bar).
  • Family Ties to the Bank: Central National Bank has deep roots in Kansas banking since 1915. Munson is part of the owning family—his sister, Sara Girard, is the bank’s President and CEO; their grandfather, Edward J. Rolfs, was a longtime bank president. The family has been actively involved in expanding the bank’s Topeka presence.
  • Contact Details (Publicly Listed):
  • Other Notes: He is described as a licensed pilot in some community contexts, though this is not widely detailed in public records.
MTAA Board Service and Activities
Munson has been an active participant since joining:
  • Leadership Roles: Served as Chairman (e.g., in 2022, when he presided over decisions on new terminal bids at Philip Billard Municipal Airport and called special meetings for due diligence) and as Vice-Chairman in prior rotations.
  • Key Involvement:
    • Advocated for airport modernization and economic development (e.g., 2023 legislative testimony before the Senate Commerce Committee in support of HB 2336, seeking tools/funding for hangars, infrastructure, and MRO/aviation business attraction at Topeka Regional Airport/Forbes Field and Philip Billard).
    • Participated in project updates to Shawnee County and city officials on passenger service restoration efforts, fuel tank replacements, taxiway realignments, and large-hangar development (including partnerships for an 80,000 sq. ft. hangar expected by 2028).
    • Voted on major contracts, budgets, and bond issuances (MTAA is a taxing authority issuing general obligation bonds for capital projects).
  • He remains on the board as of April 2026 and is referenced in official 2025–2026 budget notices and bond documents.
No public records indicate removal, resignation, or major disciplinary actions related to his board service.
Other Community and Civic Involvement
Munson is well-connected in Topeka/Shawnee County civic circles:
  • Library Foundation: Elected to a first three-year term as a Trustee of the Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library Foundation (planning, fundraising, and stewardship role).
  • TARC: Serves on the Board of Directors of TARC (Topeka Association for Retarded Citizens / community organization supporting people with intellectual/developmental disabilities).
  • 20/30 Club: Founding member of the 20/30 Club Foundation; past president of the 20/30 Club of Topeka, Inc. (a young professionals/service organization).
  • Leadership Greater Topeka: Graduate of the 2019 class.
  • Political/Other: Has appeared in Kansas campaign finance reports as a donor (e.g., 2021–2022 cycle). No elected office held.
Personal Details (Publicly Available)
  • Approximate Age: Mid-40s (public people-search data around age 46 as of recent records).
  • Residence: Public records list addresses in Topeka (e.g., 3934 SW Friar Rd. or nearby Shawnee County qualifying addresses such as 3600 SW Canterbury area). He meets the statutory residency requirement for a Shawnee County (non-city) appointee.
  • Family: Married to Lindsey Munson; part of the extended Rolfs/Girard family with longstanding Topeka and Kansas ties (including historical political connections via the bank’s heritage).
Public Records and Accountability Context
As an appointed member of a public taxing authority, Munson’s MTAA-related emails, texts, meeting notes, and communications (including on personal or bank devices/accounts if used for board business) are subject to the Kansas Open Records Act (KORA). Board packets, minutes, agendas, and financial disclosures are routinely posted on the MTAA website (mtaa-topeka.org). He has no major public controversies, lawsuits naming him personally, or ethics complaints in searchable news or records. Any specific correspondence (e.g., regarding appointments or individuals like Tony Emerson) would need to be obtained via targeted KORA requests to the City of Topeka, Shawnee County, or MTAA directly.
Sources for this deep dive include the official MTAA website/board rosters, Topeka Bar Association profile, Library Foundation announcements, Central National Bank-related articles, legislative testimony records, news coverage of board actions (Topeka Capital-Journal, WIBW), and public campaign/financial filings. Information is current as of April 2026.
If you’d like me to pull specific board minutes, draft a more targeted KORA request focused on Munson, check for any additional filings (e.g., via Shawnee County Clerk), or focus on a particular aspect (e.g., voting record, financial disclosures), just let me know!



From: Miller, Kris <Kris.Miller@snco.us>
Sent: Monday, April 20, 2026 12:36 PM
To: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Cc: Brzon, Jonathan <Jonathan.Brzon@snco.us>; Schmitt, Lisa <Lisa.Schmitt@snco.us>
Subject: RE: KORA

Mr. McClure,

 

We have received your Kansas Open Records Request. The data you are requesting is maintained by another department which will be notified immediately. Please consider this your three-day notice of receipt of this KORA. We make every attempt to respond within the allotted time (response due by April 23rd). If there is a problem meeting this deadline you will be notified.

 

Thank you,

 

 

Kristine Miller

Administrative Officer

Shawnee County Clerk’s Office

200 SE 7th Street, Room 107

Topeka, KS 66603

785-251-4216

kris.miller@snco.us

 

 

 

From: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, April 20, 2026 11:36 AM
To: City Clerk <cclerk@topeka.org>; County Clerk <countyclerk@snco.us>; mikem@centralnational.com; MCRE Media <mcre1.9999@blogger.com>; Karen A. Hiller <khiller@topeka.org>; Spencer Duncan <sduncan@topeka.org>; Cook, Kevin <kevin.cook@snco.us>
Subject: KORA

 

Subject: KORA Request – Records Concerning Michael Munson (MTAA Board) and the Tony Emerson Appointments

Dear [City Clerk / County Clerk],

Pursuant to the Kansas Open Records Act (K.S.A. 45-215 et seq.), I request copies of the following public records:

  1. All emails, text messages, letters, memoranda, or other written communications sent or received by Michael Munson (MTAA Board member, County appointee, email: mikem@centralnational.com or any other known address) that mention or relate to Tony Emerson (former Topeka City Councilmember, District 4) in the context of appointments, reappointments, nominations, or discussions regarding the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority (MTAA) Board or any other public board/committee.
  2. All emails, text messages, letters, memoranda, or other communications between or among:
    • City of Topeka officials/staff (including the Mayor’s office, City Council members/staff, or City Clerk’s office), and
    • Shawnee County officials/staff (including County Commissioners or their staff), that discuss or reference the appointment or reappointment of Michael Munson to the MTAA Board and/or any involvement or discussion of Tony Emerson in relation to such appointments.

Time period: From January 1, 2024, to the present date (or the most recent available records).

Please include any responsive records in the possession of the agency or its officers/employees, regardless of whether they were sent from official city/county email accounts or personal email accounts, and regardless of the device used (computer, phone, tablet, etc.), as provided under KORA definitions (K.S.A. 45-217).

I prefer to receive the records electronically (in native format, such as .pst, .eml, or PDF) via email or a secure file-sharing link if the volume is large. If any fees are anticipated, please provide an estimate in advance.

If any portion of the request is denied, please provide a written explanation citing the specific exemption under KORA and notify me of my right to appeal.

Thank you for your prompt attention to this request. I look forward to your acknowledgment within three business days and production of the records as soon as possible.

 

 

MCRE, LLC

3625 SW 29th Street

Topeka KS 66614

785.383.9994

KORA

Subject: KORA Request – Records Concerning Michael Munson (MTAA Board) and the Tony Emerson Appointments
Dear [City Clerk / County Clerk],
Pursuant to the Kansas Open Records Act (K.S.A. 45-215 et seq.), I request copies of the following public records:
  1. All emails, text messages, letters, memoranda, or other written communications sent or received by Michael Munson (MTAA Board member, County appointee, email: mikem@centralnational.com or any other known address) that mention or relate to Tony Emerson (former Topeka City Councilmember, District 4) in the context of appointments, reappointments, nominations, or discussions regarding the Metropolitan Topeka Airport Authority (MTAA) Board or any other public board/committee.
  2. All emails, text messages, letters, memoranda, or other communications between or among:
    • City of Topeka officials/staff (including the Mayor’s office, City Council members/staff, or City Clerk’s office), and
    • Shawnee County officials/staff (including County Commissioners or their staff), that discuss or reference the appointment or reappointment of Michael Munson to the MTAA Board and/or any involvement or discussion of Tony Emerson in relation to such appointments.
Time period: From January 1, 2024, to the present date (or the most recent available records).
Please include any responsive records in the possession of the agency or its officers/employees, regardless of whether they were sent from official city/county email accounts or personal email accounts, and regardless of the device used (computer, phone, tablet, etc.), as provided under KORA definitions (K.S.A. 45-217).
I prefer to receive the records electronically (in native format, such as .pst, .eml, or PDF) via email or a secure file-sharing link if the volume is large. If any fees are anticipated, please provide an estimate in advance.
If any portion of the request is denied, please provide a written explanation citing the specific exemption under KORA and notify me of my right to appeal.
Thank you for your prompt attention to this request. I look forward to your acknowledgment within three business days and production of the records as soon as possible.


MCRE, LLC
3625 SW 29th Street
Topeka KS 66614
785.383.9994

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Kimchi

Dr. Steven Gundry highly recommends kimchi as a top-tier, lectin-free fermented food that supports gut health, improves digestion, and boosts immunity. Although it often contains red pepper flakes, he notes that the fermentation process breaks down the pepper's lectins, making it safe and beneficial, unlike raw peppers. [1, 2, 3, 4]  
Key Details on Kimchi from Dr. Gundry: 

• Lectins Neutralized: While pepper flakes (seeds/peels) usually contain harmful lectins, the fermentation process makes kimchi, and fermented hot sauces, safe and beneficial. 
• Gut Health Champion: It is rich in beneficial postbiotics and bacteria that help repair the gut lining and increase microbiome diversity. 
• Best Types: He advises choosing raw, traditionally fermented, or organic kimchi. 
• Incorporation: He encourages incorporating it into a daily or regular diet but advises starting slow if you are not used to fermented foods or high fiber. 
• "Superfood" Status: Dr. Gundry often ranks fermented cabbage products like kimchi as superior choices to promote gut health and combat inflammation. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]  

AI responses may include mistakes.




Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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Let’s stop extending childhood at the federal level. The next generation deserves a shot at real adulthood, not an endless allowance funded by other people’s futures.

 Mom’s the State, Dad’s the Budget: Why Kids Live in Socialism and the Old Folks Are Begging Them to Grow Up

Let’s talk about the world’s most successful socialist experiment. It’s running in millions of homes across America right now. The participants call it “being a kid.”

In this system, the benevolent central planners—usually named Mom and Dad—control the means of production (the paycheck, the grocery store, the Wi-Fi router). They provide food, shelter, clothing, transportation, entertainment, and emergency cash for forgotten school projects or last-minute prom tickets. The dependents contribute very little labor, and when they do, it’s usually under protest and rewarded with praise or an allowance anyway. Needs and wants are largely the same thing. If the child complains that something isn’t fair, the parents often adjust the distribution to restore household harmony.

This is Childhood Socialism, and it works pretty well for about eighteen years.

The providers (the parents) work, sacrifice, save, and occasionally go without so the little comrades can thrive. They absorb every risk, fix every mistake, and rarely present the bill in real time. The kids grow up believing that resources appear because they are needed, not because someone produced them through effort, risk, and delayed gratification. It’s a soft, nurturing system. It feels loving. And in a family, it mostly is.

Then one day the child turns 22, gets his first real paycheck, and watches a third of it vanish before he can even spend it. Welcome to adulthood. Welcome to the capitalist portion of the program. Suddenly, food isn’t free. Rent isn’t optional. Health insurance isn’t “just handled.” The fridge doesn’t magically restock itself. The car note doesn’t pay itself when you forget. Incentives appear. Consequences arrive. The safety net develops holes.

Most young adults figure it out. They hustle, learn skills, negotiate raises, budget, and slowly build their own version of security. That transition from household socialism to personal capitalism is painful but necessary. It’s how functional adults are made.

Except… a lot of our political culture is trying to extend the childhood phase indefinitely—at the national level.

The federal government has positioned itself as Super-Parent. It promises to provide healthcare, education, housing assistance, food support, retirement income, childcare, and an ever-growing list of “needs” that yesterday’s luxuries have become today’s rights. It funds this through taxes on the working-age producers (the new “parents” in the system). When there isn’t enough money, it borrows from the future or prints more. If people complain, the response is familiar: “It’s not fair!” followed by calls for higher contributions from those who have more.

Sound familiar? It’s the family dinner table, but with 330 million people and trillion-dollar deficits.

Here’s the contrast that actually matters:

In the real capitalist world outside the family, you generally get out what you put in (plus some luck, timing, and good decisions). You bear the downside of your choices and reap the upside of your effort. That system, for all its imperfections, has lifted more people out of poverty and created more prosperity than any alternative in history. It rewards productivity. It punishes waste. It forces people to grow up.

In the expanding government-as-parent model, the connection between effort and reward gets fuzzier every year. Programs that were sold as temporary help become permanent features. Waste, fraud, and abuse aren’t bugs—they’re features of any system where money is taken by force and spent by people who don’t feel the pain of earning it. Bridges to nowhere, studies on shrimp on treadmills, overlapping bureaucracies that no one can kill, and entitlements that grow faster than the economy—all of it gets defended as “compassion” while the actual bill gets mailed to younger workers and future taxpayers.

And the old folks? We’re the ones who’ve been paying the freight for decades. We raised our own kids in the household version of socialism, and we did it willingly because we love them. But we’re exhausted watching the national version turn into an entitlement machine that never says “enough.” We’ve seen programs that should have sunset decades ago become sacred cows. We’ve watched fraud siphon off billions while politicians promise even more. We’re tired of being told that wanting basic fiscal responsibility makes us greedy or heartless.

We’re not asking for cruelty. We’re asking for realism.

If you’re under 40 right now, understand this: the people voting to keep expanding the Super-Parent state are largely the same generation that already collected on the system for years and is now handing you the IOU. Many of us older voters have paid into Social Security and Medicare our entire working lives, only to be told the trust funds are shaky and benefits might need adjusting—while new layers of spending get piled on top. We’ve watched the national debt explode, and we know mathematically that someone eventually has to pay it. That someone is you and your kids.

The kindest thing we can do for the next generation is stop pretending government can play perfect parent forever. Real parents eventually make their kids pay their own phone bill, buy their own groceries, and learn that the world doesn’t owe them a lifestyle. Nations that refuse to do the same version of that lesson end up with stagnant economies, entitled populations, and younger workers crushed under tax burdens that make it nearly impossible to build their own lives.

There’s also the uncomfortable truth about inherited wealth. Some kids never really leave the socialist bubble because Mom, Dad, or Grandpa left them a fat trust fund or a company. They get to keep preaching the virtues of redistribution while living off someone else’s capital. In the same way, a country that keeps borrowing from tomorrow to fund today’s comforts is essentially living off the inherited productivity and restraint of previous generations. Eventually the inheritance runs dry or gets so diluted that everyone feels poorer.

The old folks at the table aren’t trying to ruin your fun. We’re trying to warn you about the hangover. We’ve seen what happens when adults refuse to adult: more debt, more waste, more programs that were “temporary” in 1972 and are still here in 2026 with bigger budgets. We’re tired of paying for stupid stuff that should have been terminated years ago. We want the system to be cost-effective and sustainable precisely so that when you’re the ones working and paying, you’re not crushed by the accumulated stupidity of decades of political Santa Claus economics.

So here’s the plea from the gray-hairs: Listen a little. Question the assumption that every problem requires a new federal program. Demand accountability and sunsets on spending. Understand that compassion without solvency is just kicking the can to your own children. The household works when parents eventually push the kids out of the nest—not because we stop loving them, but because we want them to fly.

It’s time everybody grows up.

The fridge isn’t magic. Someone is always paying the grocery bill. In a family, that’s beautiful for a season. As national policy, it’s unsustainable.

Let’s stop extending childhood at the federal level. The next generation deserves a shot at real adulthood, not an endless allowance funded by other people’s futures.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Cookie

https://share.google/aimode/aSKJoZ0UvlUno6PWB



Henry McClure  
785.383.9994
sent from mobile 📱
time kills deals

Watch "Guy Steals Kaabo Wolf King GT Scooter… Buried in 5KG Two-Tone Fluorescent Explosion! 🌈🛴😱" on YouTube

https://youtube.com/shorts/bYhIMv8Ko4Q?si=68KZZfO_Oul_3fmf



Henry McClure  
785.383.9994
sent from mobile 📱
time kills deals

Watch "Qing" on YouTube

https://youtube.com/shorts/6BHZ8BrDKKM?si=7wkp_xpcqwrTbkWk



Henry McClure  
785.383.9994
sent from mobile 📱
time kills deals

Watch "20 Fermented Foods That Will Heal You Instantly" on YouTube

https://youtu.be/KYObF1-4SMU?si=byozoytheVEbI_Ny



Henry McClure  
785.383.9994
sent from mobile 📱
time kills deals

Fw: UNITY A PRIORITY

Who misses MR. DEI

From: Rhonda Underwood <prettyidangel@yahoo.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 24, 2024 9:26 PM
To: mcre1.media@blogger.com <mcre1.media@blogger.com>
Cc: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>; Jame Mark Estrada <jamemarkestrada@gmail.com>
Subject: UNITY A PRIORITY
 
I'm waiting to see this happen, along with transparency. As I watch and listen over and over about "what" and "when", it just always seems to go on the way side. Most who speak on those "topics" that don't bring joy, have most likely never experienced any of it personally. I believe wholeheartedly many citizen's are losing trust and a serious divide continues to occur daily.



Fw: cousin



From: Riphahn, Bill <Bill.Riphahn@snco.us>
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2024 10:08 AM
To: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: RE: cousin
 

Yes, the one on the right.

 

From: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2024 6:12 PM
To: Riphahn, Bill <Bill.Riphahn@snco.us>
Subject: cousin

 

Is this your cousin? 

 

Susan E. Arnold (born March 8, 1954) is an American business executive who formerly served as the chairman of The Walt Disney Company

 

 

or

 

 

 

 

Donna Roth from www.imdb.com

 

Donna Roth was born on 19 October 1951 in Los Angeles County, California, USA. She is a producer and executive, known for 13 Going on 30 (2004)

 

--

Henry McClure 

Time kills deals

785-383-9994

Fw: $76,000 Consultant Fee



From: Rhonda Underwood <prettyidangel@yahoo.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 19, 2024 10:27 PM
To: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>; mcre1.media@blogger.com <mcre1.media@blogger.com>
Subject: $76,000 Consultant Fee
 
Sure was a large sum of money to pay a consultant to help with homelessness when in 2019 the City of Topeka council was given some direction and guidance from National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty of Washington, DC.

So, what's next...will there continue to be a reach out to see who else might have the "right solution" or "right answer" the council is grasping/looking for? The unsheltered population are human beings too. Where is all the Federal dollars going that's suppose to help and assist the unsheltered? Of those dollars, show the public where the money has gone.

And "Go Topeka" paying people to come here, should be an indicator to not move here. Bribery...goodness sakes.

Ashamed in Kansas

https://www.ksnt.com/news/homeless/will-76000-fix-topekas-homeless-problem/

Fw: Another Choose Topeka Video



From: Rhonda Underwood <prettyidangel@yahoo.com>
Sent: Monday, March 18, 2024 11:52 PM
To: mcre1.media@blogger.com <mcre1.media@blogger.com>
Cc: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: Another Choose Topeka Video
 

Fw: More Nightmare



From: Rhonda Underwood <prettyidangel@yahoo.com>
Sent: Monday, March 18, 2024 8:20 PM
To: Henry McClure <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: More Nightmare
 
Good Evening,

I just saw this on the police scanner page on Facebook. Awhile back, the homeless had started a fire out by Brown's. They were made to move. Apparently, some are back and an owner was given a code compliance to be responsible to clear the mess. Such a vicious cycle and I don't think the ELECTED city council learned much from their high paid consultant.

Very sad...

Fw: Property tax petition - submitting for review



From: McIntosh, Earl <EMCINTOS@amfam.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 29, 2024 9:01 PM
Subject: FW: Property tax petition - submitting for review
 

 

Petition Gathers,

We are officially back!  Please resume obtaining signatures of registered voters.

We are keeping our 1,100 signatures and are moving forward to our goal of 4,000-5,000.
We have 180 days from our first signature, dated 1/31/2024, to turn in our petition. 

We will tentatively plan on submitting signatures around July 29th.

I will be reaching out to each of you personally to answer any questions and to express my appreciation for your assistance.

Next week I hope to advertise our petition on one of the mornings shows.

I will also be working to recruit more gathers.

My goal is to have a hundred or more permanent gathers that can each obtain at least 20 signatures.

Please feel free to contact anytime 785-267-7311.

Enjoy the beautiful weather this weekend.

Sincerely,

Earl McIntosh

 

From: McIntosh, Earl
Sent: Tuesday, February 27, 2024 5:00 PM
Subject: RE: Property tax petition - submitting for review

 

Greeting Petition Gathers,

I have great news our petition was deemed that we have “complied with the relevant requirement of KSA 12-3013” Which means our petition is in good standing!! We don’t have to change anything.

That being said the opinion is three pages long and is being reviewed by a person in our group who is a lawyer.

Even though we can start obtaining signatures again please hold off until you receive the go ahead from me.  We do have a few questions that still needs to be answered.

Thank you for everyone’s patients!

Sincerely,

Earl McIntosh

 

 

From: McIntosh, Earl
Sent: Thursday, February 22, 2024 9:07 AM
Subject: RE: Property tax petition - submitting for review

 

Good morning petition gathers,

Keeping everyone informed on what is happing with the Shawnee county councilor and our petition.

Our petition is officially under review and we are in the third day.  Once I get communication back from the county councilor I’ll immediately message everyone on what the county has to say about our petition.

I’m sorry for the pause but hopefully this is temporary!

Sincerely,

Earl McIntosh

 

From: McIntosh, Earl
Sent: Monday, February 19, 2024 8:55 PM
Subject: Property tax petition - submitting for review

 

Fellow petition gathers,

 

Thank you for all your support so far. I really appreciate all of you!
While reviewing some laws regarding petitions tonight, I determined I need to request a meeting with the county attorney to get clarification on some of the provisions for a petition for a local election.

This will probably entail a review of our petition.

Please hold off on getting further signatures.
When I get additional information, I will pass it along to each of you.

I’ve attached the current law we are following to submit an ordinance.

I will keep everyone informed.

Thanks again for your support.

 

Sincerely,

Earl McIntosh

785-213-1715


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*If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender and delete this e-mail, any attachments and all copies..

Truth

Rotten 

Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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We need this

The greater topeka partnership is the leader of propaganda 

Henry McClure
785.383.9994 

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Thursday, April 16, 2026

Fw: BOXABL Update!



From: BOXABL <invest@boxabl.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2026 2:36 PM
To: mcre13@gmail.com <mcre13@gmail.com>
Subject: BOXABL Update!