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As the Missouri and Kansas legislatures battle to approve financing plans that could tempt the Chiefs and Royals into resettling somewhere new, both states will rely heavily on public funding.
There have been discussions both last week and this week about keeping the Kansas City Chiefs in Kansas City, Missouri.
The Kansas City Chiefs are keeping their options open when it comes to the future of their home stadium. The team has asked Kansas lawmakers for more time to finalize a stadium financing deal ...
A bipartisan council of Kansas lawmakers voted Monday to extend by six months the deadline for the Missouri-based Kansas City ...
Kansas City Chiefs president Mark Donovan said Wednesday the team is planning to share information soon on renovation plans for Arrowhead Stadium.
The Chiefs have requested an extension to the end-of-June ... Mike Kehoe called lawmakers into a special session to approve a stadium financing deal that included disaster relief for the St. Louis ...
Missouri lawmakers failed to finalize a funding deal for Chiefs and Royals stadiums, jeopardizing their future amid political battles over abortion and sick leave.
Kansas City Chiefs President Mark Donovan says the team hopes to get a deal done on its stadium plans with Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, who leaves office in January.
NFL News: Kansas offers a 3 billion dollar stadium deal to the Chiefs. Missouri proposes 1.1 billion dollar Arrowhead upgrades. Key players like Andy Reid, Patr ...
Donovan, who spoke with reporters on Wednesday at the Chiefs annual kickoff luncheon, said he would like to deal with outgoing Missouri Governor Mike Parson on a new stadium deal.
The Chiefs have set a deadline of six months from now to decide on a plan for the future of Arrowhead Stadium.
Royals, Chiefs owners won't fund all stadium costs. Why public money key to deal Story by Ilana Arougheti, Chris Higgins • 13h ...