Prospect to prosperity: Blue Hills boosting neighborhood entrepreneurs (Video)

September 11, 2017  |  Tommy Felts

Edgar Palacios

Economic development along Prospect Avenue requires a chain reaction across the community, Edgar Palacios said.

“People need jobs to afford homes, so we need to create those jobs. We need to create some catalysts in this community,” said Palacios, Blue Hills Community Services executive director. “If we can have storefronts along Prospect, that attracts other businesses, that attracts larger capital investment.”

For Blue Hills, it all begins with housing — and the contractors who can build affordable, safe, energy-efficient homes.

The not-for-profit organization is set to graduate the final four companies in its current 10-member, three-year contractor incubator program, Palacios said. Made possible by a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the incubator provides education, support and physical space for the participating businesses.

“The contractors help spur business, and the incubator program offers opportunities for those who are aspiring entrepreneurs to have a safe place to grow their businesses,” he said.

Of the 14,000 square feet of space at Blue Hills’ facility on Prospect, 7,000 square feet has been used for storage bays for those in the incubator program, Palacios said. The site also includes offices available for participants. Because it’s subsidized space, the rental rates are low, further aiding the contractors in establishing themselves.

Blue Hills Community Services

Blue Hills Community Services

“It helps contractors focus on the business, instead of just doing the business,” he said.

The effort has been successful in adding jobs to the neighborhood, Palacios said, noting the 10 contractors in the program have added 26 full-time and 3 part-time positions during the incubator’s run.

“We’re now looking at how we can expand our incubation services in the near future, and how we can create more access for people in this neighborhood to create businesses and hopefully hire from this neighborhood as well,” he said. “We can keep the economic cycle growing.”

Built for freedom

Carol Espinosa went from working in isolation at home to building her small business into one of Blue Hills’ success stories.

When her firm, Freedom Interiors, graduates the incubator this fall, she and her now-four-person team will move to a 7,000-square-foot showroom at 4000 Washington Street — Westport’s original Post Office building, she said.

“The intent since we joined the incubator was to keep growing and develop Freedom into a business that was scalable, so for three years that’s what I’ve worked really hard on,” Espinosa, Freedom principal, said.

While her company is leaving the Prospect corridor, she isn’t leaving her fellow contractors behind, she said. Along with general contractor JE Dunn, Freedom is picking local minority- and woman-owned companies as subcontractors for the buildout.

“And every company who is in the incubator now is working with us on the showroom,” said Espinosa, who also is a graduate of JE Dunn’s 2015 Minority Contractor Business Development Program.

Freedom, a workplace interior design company, benefited most from Blue Hills’ network when establishing a banking connection, she said.

“Getting a good bank and having access to capital was probably the biggest challenge as I was growing Freedom,” Espinosa said. “It was really nice to be able to take advantage of Blue Hills’ resources, connections and network to keep us growing.”

Video by Meghan LeVota

‘Community of choice’

An eighth-cent sales tax initiative approved by voters in April could help Blue Hills continue its mission after the conclusion of the incubator’s federal grant in October, Palacios said.

“It’s no secret that east of Troost, east of Prospect, these areas have been forgotten, in terms of development,” he said. “So we’re excited the eighth-cent sales tax passed recently because that’s going to be a huge catalyst to development in the area.”

The initiative slates tax money to address the commercial and residential development gap along Prospect. With Blue Hills stretching from 47th to 63rd streets and from the Paseo to Prospect, Palacios hopes to see the tax dollars used to encourage more services like grocery and entertainment offerings, as well as to address education-related challenges.

“We want to make sure we have a seat at that table, to make sure our neighbors are well represented when those decisions come to fruition,” he said.

In addition to managing two properties and aiding local school districts with Title II and Title III education contracts, a big part of Blue Hills’ mission is advocating for a stronger Prospect corridor, Palacios said. It’s about redefining the neighborhood as one that can attract families and businesses long term.

“The purpose for Blue Hills Community Services is to build this as a community of choice, a place that people want to move to and invest long term through home ownership,” he said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2017 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Jill Bertelsen, Crib Coaching, pitches in May at the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge; photo courtesy of the University of Missouri-Kansas City's Henry W. Bloch School of Management and the Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation

    Leanlab launches edtech certification with focus on accountability to classrooms

    By Tommy Felts | May 12, 2022

    A new product certification from Leanlab Education means increased transparency for edtech companies — as well as added credibility for their work within schools.  “We want to give teachers and school administrators a quick way to understand if an edtech product reflects the insights of educators, students, and parents — the true end users in education — and…

    David Dastmalchian, "Count Crowley"

    Actor David Dastmalchian fought his own demons; now the KC native is sending ’80s-inspired monsters to you

    By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2022

    Growing up in Kansas City, David Dastmalchian was enamored with his hometown’s most shadowy corners: its fabled haunted houses, the shelves of Clint’s Comics, “Crematia Mortem’s Friday” on local TV, and even his Overland Park neighborhood’s mystical-seeming creeks and forests.  Each of these childhood haunts planted a seed for the Hollywood actor’s latest project —…

    Eliot Arnold, MoodSpark

    MoodSpark buys defunct startup’s IP, minds focused on disrupting elderly veterans’ depression 

    By Tommy Felts | May 11, 2022

    A slew of new patents and tools are now in the hands of a KCK-rooted startup that aims to protect aging military veterans that suffer from loneliness, anxiety and depression.  MoodSpark has acquired assets previously held by California-based Dthera Sciences — an early leader of the digital therapeutics space, known for its innovative quality of life…

    Kisha Bausby, JE Dunn

    Built to last, bought with intention: How JE Dunn set supplier diversity as a cornerstone

    By Tommy Felts | May 10, 2022

    Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity.  Approaching supplier diversity for the long haul means defining the work — without limiting it, said Jason Banks, describing how Kansas City-based construction icon JE…