[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 38 (Wednesday, April 6, 2005)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E555-E556]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTRODUCTION OF LEGISLATION DESIGNATING THE ED EILERT POST OFFICE
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HON. DENNIS MOORE
of kansas
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, April 6, 2005
Mr. MOORE of Kansas. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to introduce
legislation designating the United States Postal Service facility
located at 12433 Antioch Road in Overland Park, Kansas, as the ``Ed
Eilert Post Office Building.'' I am joined in sponsoring this measure
by my colleagues from Kansas: Representatives Todd Tiahrt, Jim Ryun and
Jerry Moran, and I am grateful for their support of this bipartisan
legislation.
Later this month, an era will come to an end in Overland Park. Ed
Eilert will step down as Mayor of Overland Park, an office to which he
was elected six times and held for twenty-four years. Since he was
sworn into office in 1981, Overland Park has grown to become Kansas'
second largest city. Its population has nearly doubled to over 165,000,
the number of people working within the city's limits has more than
tripled, with roughly 120,000 jobs in Overland Park today, and hotel
capacity has increased from about 800 rooms to 5,100 rooms. During his
tenure, 21,897 single family and 19,533 multifamily residences have
been added in Overland Park, along with 23.7 million square feet of
office, retail and industrial space. Over the years, the city has seen
the arrival of the Sprint campus, three new hospitals, the University
of Kansas Edwards campus, the Carlsen Center at Johnson County
Community College, and a city convention center.
Additionally, under Ed Eilert's leadership the city has added the
landmark Clock Tower Plaza and the Farmer's Market in the downtown
area, a neighborhood conservation program, the Arboretum and Botanical
Gardens, the International Trade Center, the W. Jack Sanders Justice
Center, and interchanges at 1-435 at both Nall Avenue and Quivira Road.
Mayor Eilert also supported construction of the Fire Training Center,
used by many other city and county fire departments in the Kansas City
metropolitan area, and he worked with Johnson County Community College
to create a training facility for Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway
employees on the college campus. And during Mayor Eilert's tenure, the
city's land area expanded by 36 percent, to nearly 62 square miles.
Finally, Overland Park enjoys a top rating for a solid
financial condition. It has received numerous awards as an outstanding
city. For years, Overland Park has had the lowest property tax rate of
any first-class city in Kansas.
Ed Eilert was first elected to the Overland Park City Council in 1977
and became Council president in 1980. A former teacher at Shawnee
Mission North High School, he knows firsthand how Overland Park has
benefited significantly from its nationally recognized school systems.
He had made his first visit to the city in 1960 because it was the home
of Jan Bush, who he met while studying at Emporia State University and
would marry two years later. The Eilerts moved to Overland Park in 1965
when he completed graduate school. In 1977, he began his first campaign
for political office and has been a public servant continuously since
then. He also has been a financial consultant with A.G. Edwards & Sons
and serves on the board of directors of Metcalf Bank.
When you consider the daunting array of challenges that Ed Eilert
faced in his twenty four years as mayor of Overland Park, you cannot
help but agree with Bob Sigmund, the opinion page editor of the Johnson
County Sun, who recently wrote that Eilert ``provided the vision and
leadership in shaping Overland Park's success as an ideal place to
live, work and raise a family . . . Eilert's political skills have been
especially useful in easing tensions--and maintaining an acceptable
balance--between the older, established neighborhoods in northern
Overland Park and the rapidly expanding new subdivisions in the
south.''
I am proud to call Ed Eilert my friend. While we are members of
different political parties, I have always been impressed by his sound
judgment, diligence, and dedication to his community and to the public
welfare. When he sought the Republican nomination for the U.S. House in
1996, however, he lost narrowly to then-State Representative Vince
Snowbarger for the nomination to succeed Representative Jan Meyers. I
often tell Third District residents that I would have not sought
election to Congress myself had Ed Eilert been elected two years before
I became a candidate for the office.
Dedication of this Postal Service facility in Overland Park is a
small but fitting tribute to a man who has dedicated most of his adult
life to public service at the community level, working tirelessly to
bring people together while ensuring quality economic development and
competence in the delivery of local services. I commend Mayor Ed Eilert
and again thank my colleagues in the Kansas House delegation for their
support. I hope the House can move quickly to approve this legislation
so we can soon see it signed into law.
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