The board approved a Johnson County contribution of up to $67,000 to participate with the Kansas Department of Transportation, the City of Olathe and the City of Spring Hill in an update of the US‑169/K‑7 corridor study.
Ryan Sims of Public Works explained the study covers an eight‑mile stretch from the Miami/Johnson County line north to I‑435 and will reassess corridor design, safety and capacity in light of recent development. The funding split is $67,000 each from Johnson County, Olathe and Spring Hill, with KDOT contributing up to $450,000 more toward a total project maximum of $651,000. KDOT will administer the consultant contract and any public outreach required during the study.
Commissioners pressed staff on what would happen if the total project cost exceeded $651,000. Sims and staff said KDOT will notify partners and that the county’s current legal exposure is limited to the $67,000 in the county agreement. "The agreement itself does say that we are limited up to 67,000," one staff member clarified.
Commissioner Brewer moved to approve the agreement; Commissioner Fast seconded. With Chairman Kelly recused, the roll call was five in favor and one recusal, and the motion passed.
Staff said KDOT will return to partners before approving any change‑of‑scope that would increase the county’s financial obligation beyond the agreed $67,000.