700 residents impacted by Aspen Place Condemnation in Gardner, Kansas
The city condemned the 180 units due to what they called, on Tuesday, 'significant safety concerns.'
Downtown Kansas City business owners issuing a warning: 'This isn't a political issue—it's a safety issue'
Cars lined Aspen Street late Wednesday morning as 700 people are supposed to be out of their homes by 6 p.m. Thursday. One resident named Danielle says issues have been going on at the apartments for years, but it got really bad around the holidays.
'Over Christmas Break, there were people without water,' she said on Wednesday.
'I mean, people were trying to have Christmas dinner, and there was no running water, no way to flush toilets, no way to take care of the babies that are here, the kids.'
She says the little kids in the neighborhood can't comprehend what's happening.
'Even my kids, being older, she's a sophomore in high school, and all day when the news came through about it, it's finals week,' Danielle continued.
'There's no way that she was properly studying yesterday, and we were up until two o'clock in the morning, and then she had to go to school again today.'
The KDR Group out of Lenexa owns the property, and while they wouldn't comment on camera, their attorney, Jeff Zimmerman, released a statement.
'We are working to figure out a system to refund the May rent that had already been paid by some of the Tenants and to inspect the units to release security deposits,' he said.
'The condemnation makes that process more difficult as the tenants are dispersing to comply with the city's order to vacate, which may affect the lines of communication. Ownership intends to go forward with the plan that was being put into place to overhaul the water system. That process will take about 90 days from the time the city approves the permits.'
The mother of one of the Aspen Place residents called the KDR Group a slum on Wednesday.
'You really are,' Rhodes continued.
'The city, they've known this has been going on for years, and all they've done is give them citation after citation, and to me it's like a smack on the hand.'
Kansas mom convicted for 2024 crash that killed 1-year-old son
Our emails to the city weren't returned by Wednesday afternoon in time for our deadline.
Golden Rule Relocation Owner and city resident Matt Thrasher was helping people move out on Wednesday. He was thankful for companies like New Haven Moving Equipment, which donated $1,250 in moving materials for people needing to pack.
'The city's known that there was a good chance that anytime that this place was going to go through this,' he said.
A fire truck got stuck on a private access road in the complex Saturday night, and the condemnation notice from the city came out three days later. The road has a large hole in it. Since KDR took over the property three years ago, they've had to fix water line breaks.
'My clients are responsible property owners and bought this property to provide affordable housing,' Zimmerman continued.
'Keeping up with the aging water system became too much, so they decided to completely overhaul the system. The timing of the City's condemnation was unfortunate when the City's firetruck collapsed the water line. This has become a monumental problem and we are working to figure out solutions and will work with the City and Community Groups who are also working on this.'
Grace Baptist Church hosted a meeting at 6 p.m. on Wednesday for Aspen Place residents.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to FOX 4 Kansas City WDAF-TV | News, Weather, Sports.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Miami Herald
A mango pie? This baker takes Miami's favorite fruit and makes it even better
When she was a small child growing up in Cuba, Natalia Martinez-Kalinina remembers what her grandmother did with the bounty of wild mangoes that flourished in her yard. She would gather as much fruit as she could carry in pails. Then she would give them to the neighbors, family and friends who came to the front door. Sometimes, even random strangers got lucky. 'She had one of those problematically large mango trees that was a structural threat,' Martinez-Kalinina recalls. 'Anywhere in the U.S., it'd be taken down, but not in Cuba. So she gave them away. Sometimes I would help her.' Martinez-Kalinina's grandmother, Beatriz Adelaida Brunet Quintaro, passed away in 2016, four years after Martinez-Kalinina moved to Miami. But the memory of the mangoes stuck with Martinez-Kalinina, who eventually decided to replicate her grandmother's generosity as a sort of tribute. Only instead of giving away the fruit, she baked it into pies, sharing slices with people she came across in the course of her job, with friends and neighbors, even handing strangers a slice that they were always happy to take. Eight years later, with so many requests for pies pouring in, Martinez-Kalinina has taken her random acts of kindness a step further, starting an online business selling the pies. She bakes them in the commissary kitchen at her home in a live/work building. 'It wasn't meant to be a thing,' says Martinez-Kalinina, laughing. 'I just wanted to do something nice connected to my grandmother. But it grew to such a point people were texting me every year to get on the list to get pies. The list got longer and longer. I had not imagined it as a business until this year.' Creating a baking business was a new venture for Martinez-Kalinina, who works in the tech world and is cofounder of the Miami venture-backed startup Base, a modern twist on a social club that links people from different backgrounds to shared experiences. But her contacts there helped her. A creative director offered to design a logo for her. Martinez-Kalinina also hosts dinners, concerts and other gatherings at her home for eclectic groups of people and urged them to try the pies, too. And they rave. Ashley Schmidt, who knows Martinez-Kalinina through their shared health tech work and runs a scuba club with her, remembers being skeptical of mango pies before she took her first bite. 'I was questioning how good it would be,' she says. 'Blueberry and blackberry pie, yes. A mango margarita, yes. Manoges and yogurt, a mango smoothie, no doubt. But mango pie?' The flavors changed her mind. 'It was the best pie I've ever had,' she says. 'There's something about this flavor that's like Christmas. So warm and delicious. Sometimes you can eat a mango, and it can be on the sour side, or they're overly sweet. This is right in the middle.' Miranda Brna of Miami Beach calls the pies 'truly amazing.' 'I honestly didn't know pie could taste that good,' she says. 'I am not a pie person. But this pie is so good, that I AM a pie person but just for this pie.' What makes this mango pie so addictive? In addition to Miami's general rabid appetite for the fruit, Martinez-Kalinina believes it's the chili powder she adds. When her family left Cuba and moved to Mexico, they adopted an appetite for a bit of spice, which inspired her recipe. 'It's not spicy,' she says. 'But in Mexico, you add tahine to mango slices. With that contrast, the flavor is enhanced and elevated. I love the spice with the sweet.' Martinez-Kalinina won't be quitting her day job, though. Mango pie is a seasonal treat, and she hasn't had luck making pies with frozen fruit. 'I'm sure more skilled chefs could do this, but for me it doesn't come across the same,' she says. Thus, Sunny Slice's season ends when the mangoes are no longer available, usually sometime in August. This year, unlike 2024, has been a good season for mangoes, and neighbors are still supplying her with fruit, which proves to Martinez-Kalinina that an act that started as a gift is a positive force in the world. 'It brings out the best community version of us,' she says. 'People are so generous with their mangoes. They become givers and engage in neighborliness. We don't always do that here.' How to order a mango pie DM @sunnysliceco on Instagram; no phone calls accepted $8 a slice, $40 for a pie


Buzz Feed
4 days ago
- Buzz Feed
18 Weird Family Rituals That People Thought Were Normal
When I was a kid, I'd never realized just how weird my family was until I started spending more time at my friends' houses (though some of them had pretty weird families too... Maybe families are just inherently weird???) Recently, people on Reddit shared the "normal" thing their family did that they later realized was pretty weird, and the responses had me laughing and nodding my head. Here are some of the top comments: "I thought every family had a puke bowl. Which is not solely designated just for puke." —sunshine_tequila"You're telling me not every family had one? My family certainly did. It was a yellowish-orangey bowl. I'll never forget it."—sketchybritt "I grew up with an autistic brother who makes a lot of humming noises to express emotion, and the whole family eventually ended up doing it too (to a lesser extent). Didn't realize it was weird until someone pointed out we never shut up even though we're not actually saying anything." "I thought every kid only saw their mom half the week. My mom works three 12-hour shifts Sunday-Tuesday, so I hardly saw her those days. It wasn't until I started having a later bedtime that I got to see her when she got off on those days. I remember talking to a friend, and she was talking about doing something with her mom that night, and I went, 'Wow, you get to see your mom on a Monday?'" "When we went on road trips and crossed a border, say from Nebraska to Kansas, someone in the front seat would put their hand in the front of the dashboard and say, 'First one in Kansas,' and someone in the backseat would put their hand in the back window and say, 'Last one in Nebraska.'" —emwcee "I realized fairly early on that I was the odd one out for washing my hands like a medical professional (my mom is a nurse) and that washing my hands and forearms is usually not necessary. I felt really called out five years ago when a friend with benefits who is a doctor gave me a really weird look and then asked me, 'Why the fuck are you washing your hands like you're getting ready for surgery?' after we got done having sexy times. Made me realize I could probably tone it down." "My mother, for some reason, refused to put little trash bins in the two bathrooms that we had. You'd have to carry your used Q-tips or cotton balls to the garbage can in the kitchen." "My family has a version of 'Jingle Bell Rock' that we sing during Christmas. I didn't know it wasn't the original lyrics until grade 5 in music class, where we had to split into groups and sing a Christmas carol in front of the class. Someone in my group suggested this song and asked if we all knew the lyrics, and we all said yes. When it was our turn, we all started out singing the same thing..." "Then suddenly I was singing something different than the others. I was so home and told my dad, and he's like 'Oh, yeah, your sister came up with those lyrics when she was younger, 'cuz she didn't know the correct ones.'"—Wickked1 "My father was a driver's ed instructor. Imagine my surprise when I realized that not every car has two sets of pedals on each side." "We always cut frozen pizzas with scissors. We still do." "In my family, we don't ever say 'I love you,' we'll say 'hey barf-breath' or something. If we don't insult you, that means we don't love you." —1DietCokedUpChick "Calling a bowel movement a 'job.' 'I have to go do a job.' Never heard anyone else ever say that. I often wondered if I should punch a time clock and unionize. Does that come with benefits?" "Tie the hairbrush to the bathroom faucet. My mom had five daughters and was tired of not being able to fix her hair in the morning because the brush had wandered off under the couch or a bush or something." "My mom washed the groceries before putting them in the cupboard. Not just the produce, but boxes of cereal and canned goods and everything else. I'm not sure I thought it was something everyone did, but I didn't realize how odd it was until I was older. I didn't see anything like it until COVID hit and people thought it was living on surfaces." —Cleopatra435 "When we were kids, my mom made us vacuum the dog every Saturday. She was a black lab who didn't shed that much. I thought everyone vacuumed their dogs." "Every person in my family ate a different meal at dinner time. My mom is a vegetarian, my dad is not, and I don't eat beef or pork. So when I was a kid, I'd usually end up eating some combo of what my parents had. Or my mom would make me something totally different. I'd eat while my mom and dad were in the kitchen making their own, different dinners. Then they'd eat dinner together, but not the same food. Even now, as an adult, if I'm with them, they each are eating something different for dinner, and usually I'm eating some combo. I thought this was so normal." "We used to put ketchup on popcorn. I genuinely thought that was a normal thing people did at movie nights. First sleepover at a friend's place, I asked for ketchup and everyone looked at me like I was a criminal." —Familiar-Print7098 "Having a sock basket. I don't know why, but we put all of the clean socks into a basket for everyone to choose from. I didn't think anything of it until I stayed at other people's homes, and they just kept their socks in the sock drawer. I need to ask my mom why the hell we did that." And finally, "I was in college before I realized there were Nazis in The Sound of Music. My mom turned off the TV when Maria married Captain VonTrapp. We went to bed. I was in college, and someone brought up the Nazis. I laughed because of the ultimate disconnect. But then I had to rent the VHS. Imagine my shock, after I load the second VHS, after the wedding?! Wtf. I lost my mind." Can you relate? Share your weird family habit in the comments or the anonymous form below:
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
Help needed as campaign gets underway in York
YORK'S Salvation Army is urging people to donate toys so they can give them to those in need this Christmas. The church and charity is once again looking for donations for their toy appeal this year and if anyone would like to get involved or to give financially they can do so through this just giving page Recommended reading: Police bid to trace good Samaritan after crash in North Yorkshire Well-known North Yorkshire hotelier who entertained the stars dies aged 82 'I spend hours each week in the unit' - Ray's golden gift to York Hospital Major Andrew Vertigan, of York Salvation said: "As many of your readers will know we give away hundreds, indeed thousands of Christmas presents to families which are referred to us via schools, community workers and social workers. "Last year our service was overwhelmed with requests, with close to 600 different families supported in one way or other. "The total number of gifts exceeded 3,000. "This is one of the biggest appeals the Salvation Army runs in the whole of the UK and last year it took us more than three months to co-ordinate and liase with the various agencies. "We are indebted to the many community workers who gave of their time to pick up the gifts and delivered them in time to bring some Christmas cheer and relief to families across the whole city and surrounding villages. "We are equally indebted to the generosity of York Rotary, other churches and individuals who each year kindly help us financially to deliver this much needed service. "This year we are requesting that all donations and new presents are with us for the first week of December." If you would like to help in anyway please do email Andrew on info