Mayor Sly James’ vision for Kansas City: Innovation and entrepreneurship

March 29, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

Kansas City Mayor Sly James. Image by The Economist.

In an address to constituents Tuesday, Kansas City Mayor Sly James broadly painted his vision for Kansas City and outlined what success for the area would look like.

And at the cornerstones of his ideas for the next decade? The future of Kansas City hinges upon innovation and entrepreneurship.

[pullquote]“A person with an idea: that’s the economy of the future.”

– Sly James[/pullquote]

“With Google Fiber and the smart, connected city, Kansas City has at its fingertips the economic infrastructure of the 21st century,” James said during Tuesday’s State of the City address. “That type of infrastructure makes Kansas City attractive to all kinds of people with all kinds of ideas. A person with an idea: that’s the economy of the future.”

How do we create James’ economy of the future? The mayor highlighted the following achievements and areas for improvement.

Continue with smart city development

James cited Google Fiber and the spotlight it shined on Kansas City as the impetus for launching the area’s smart city and entrepreneurial future.

“This new notoriety (from Google Fiber) and all the press and tweets that went with it gave us a new way to tell the Kansas City story,” he said. “Tech entrepreneurs discovered that Kansas City was a great place to start up. They moved here just to plug in to Google Fiber and gigabit connectivity.”

Later, the streetcar created a spine for new tech infrastructure — the smart city project — to further spur progress, James said. Such initiatives are now having a snowball effect for Kansas City’s tech future, he added.

“Kansas City’s tech momentum ramped up this month when we turned on our kiosks and wifi downtown,” he said. “Already our smart, connected city ecosystem in partnership with Cisco, Sprint and others is helping make us at finalist city in a $50 million transportation grant competition sponsored by the U.S. Department of Transportation Smart City Grant.”

 

Assist ongoing entrepreneurial support systems

[pullquote]“Residents need to be connected to take full advantage of the tech jobs coming our way.”

– Sly James[/pullquote]

Programs like LaunchKC continue to play an important role in drawing startups from around the world, James said.

“We strongly support programs like LaunchKC,” he said. “Last year, the first ten LaunchKC recipients received a half million dollars — $50,000 dollars each — by winning a business competition that drew applicants from around the world. And we’re not stopping. Applications for 2016 will be accepted beginning this Friday. We look forward to Techweek in September when 10 more grants will be awarded.”

Grow our tech workforce

James acknowledged the dearth of area tech workers, and the role that government — both local and federal — plays in building talent pipelines.

“Our tech companies need more trained help — people who can manage the flow of information and data, write code, fix equipment and implement creative ideas,” he said. “And lots of people in our city need jobs, or better-paying jobs to support their families. The White House Tech Hire program helps people develop their tech jobs skills and then helps them land apprenticeships that blossom into permanent employment.”

Close the digital divide

The mayor has earmarked part of a $30 million federal grant to reduce the digital divide, adding that it stifles progress for some of Kansas City’s most underserved neighborhoods.

“The $30 million Choice Neighborhood Grant is a major boost for the Paseo Gateway Northeast neighborhood,” he said. “It will improve the lives of the residents there in may ways. Housing, education, social services, transportation, infrastructure upgrades, economic development and reducing the digital divide.”

Closing the digital divide will also help build Kansas City’s tech workforce, he said.

“Residents need to be connected to take full advantage of the tech jobs coming our way,” James said. “That’s one benefit of being part of HUD’s initiatives like ConnectHome and ConnectEd that bring high-speed broadband to families and students in public housing. Many partners, public and private, have come together to make sure we sustain the momentum that Google Fiber kick started just five years ago and enables residents to get fully trained and fully employed.”

Educate our children for 21st-century jobs

James named access to a quality, world-class education as a top priority for the city’s future, especially when it comes to the tech and entrepreneurial community. In addition to programs supporting liberal arts education, he also emphasized new initiatives that can transform what learning looks like.

“Earlier this month, Kansas City got more good news that we are now a pilot community for LRNG,” he said. “LRNG connects youth to in-school, out-of-school, employer-based and online learning experiences that align with their interests and passions. For example, our young people may test their ideas out in a maker meetup, learn to code at a local library, hone their creative writing skills at a poetry slam at a nearby coffee shop.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        From the pitch to the Plaza: KC Current flipping the switch on new retail shop in iconic shopping district

        By Tommy Felts | November 25, 2025

        Add team gear to the holiday shopping list this weekend. The Kansas City Current is kicking off a new permanent retail shop on the Country Club Plaza — just in time for the 2025 Plaza Lighting Ceremony. The Current Shop is set to open Wednesday, Nov. 26, in the former Starbucks building at 302 Nichols…

        Kauffman wraps three fast-paced rounds of capacity building: Meet the year’s final grantees

        By Tommy Felts | November 25, 2025

        A revised strategy to help nonprofit organizations strengthen their internal effectiveness and long-term stability — while still aligning with the Kauffman Foundation’s focus areas — next must showcase outcomes, said Allison Greenwood Bajracharya, announcing a final round of capacity building grant winners for 2025. Built with intentional versatility, capacity building grants are meant to meet…

        Five stocking stuffer gift ideas that brew support for women-owned KC businesses

        By Tommy Felts | November 24, 2025

        Editor’s note: The following holiday feature is presented by nbkc bank, where small businesses find big support [divide] Shopping with intention this season is just one way Kansas City gift-givers can squeeze local impact into each nook and cranny of those holiday stockings, said Melissa Eggleston, highlighting a sleigh-ful of women-owned businesses shoppers should bank…

        Their brands survived legal bruises; here’s what still keeps these founders up at night

        By Tommy Felts | November 24, 2025

        A brand worth building is worth safeguarding, said Bo Nelson, joining a chorus of battle-tested entrepreneurs at GEWKC who encouraged emerging business owners to trademark their own peace of mind early by locking down intellectual property — like designs, names and unique processes — from the start. “If you do have something that you genuinely,…