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A retired executive at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, the 64-year-old Meeker lives in the gated golf community of Lake Quivira, where he is in his second term as mayor. He ambles through the neighborhood on a motorized golf cart, and like most residents keeps a sailboat on the private lake, But Meeker's yard is filled with scrap metal sculptures by an eccentric folk artist, and the self-described conservative boasts about how county residents aren't hesitant to support tax increases when it comes to investing in schools, parks and other public services that promote quality of life. "There's a fundamental sense of conservatism," he said. "But there's a willingness to spend money on the right things." Meeker and Love call the eastern Kansas heartland the ideal location for a national suburban museum. They describe metropolitan Kansas City as "basically a very large suburb," where one of the city's most well-known landmarks is Country Club Plaza, considered one of the first outdoor shopping centers when built in 1922. They hope to align with a higher education partner, perhaps the University of Kansas or Johnson County Community College, and establish a landlocked suburban policy institute to complement the two coastal suburban think tanks. Project leaders are using a pair of grants totaling almost $170,000 to hone their vision.
Robert Lang, a University Nevada-Las Vegas sociology professor who studies suburban life, blames excessive familiarity for the suburbs' second-class status. Since suburbs constitute "the background noise of our lives," they're easier to ignore or dismiss, he said. Doing so is nothing less than rejecting inquiry into the American psyche, he suggested. "The United States is the first suburban nation," he said. "In the end, these are the places ... where we are going to live, not matter what."
[Associated
Press;
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