Tech exec to startups: Give employees late start Tuesday for airport vote

November 3, 2017  |  Luke Norris

Rendering of plans for a new single terminal airport for Kansas City by Edgemoor Real Estate & Infrastructure,

Editor’s note: Luke Norris, head of local government solutions for Kansas City-based PayIt, wrote this opinion piece in response to the Nov. 7 single terminal airport ballot questions facing Kansas City, Missouri voters. The opinions expressed in this commentary are the author’s alone.

November 7.

It will be a day that a lot of us will remember for a long time.

In the coming years, we could continue to pull into Kansas City International Airport, walk into a concrete bunker with scarce bathrooms, few restaurants and limited flight options. Or, we could arrive at something that could look like this (click here for renderings of the proposed new single-terminal airport), offering a front door to Kansas City that’s as amazing as the city itself.

As startup leaders, we’re focussed on building companies, creating products and cultivating the startup community. But what is our role in building a city for the future?

A lot has been said about the rationale for and benefits of a better KCI by such groups as VentureLegal and even Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly. And, over the past several months, the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce and many of their largest employers have rallied behind supporting a new airport. In fact, the Greater KC Chamber voted unanimously to support the KCI single terminal ballot measure. So why don’t we do the same in the startup ecosystem?

You might be thinking that such corporate behemoths as Cerner, HNTB and Sprint — which have employees traveling to client sites across the country — have the most to gain and that they’ll turn out lots of voters. Sure, they’re big, and they have “influence,” but so do we — the small, mighty startups in Kansas City.

The Kansas City area’s startups created 16,325 jobs in 2016, according to KCSourceLink. On average, they create 16,376 new jobs every year. And from 2012 to 2016, the cumulative job-creating impact of Kansas City’s first-time employers resulted in 84,011 jobs, accounting for 65 percent of all new jobs and about 7.7 percent of the total employment in the Kansas City metro area.  

We’ve seen what happens when people mobilize and vote, using their voice to help shape the infrastructure of our city. In the first year of operation, the Kansas City streetcar topped 2 million rides. And earlier this year, Kansas City passed an $800 million GO Bond initiative with nearly 70 percent support.

And unlike both of those initiatives, a new KCI airport won’t increase taxes — but it will undoubtedly spur an economic boon felt beyond just Kansas City, Missouri. Check out the A Better KCI fact sheet here for more info on the proposed project.

As entrepreneurs, we do whatever it takes. Let’s ensure that’s the case on Nov. 7. Let’s do whatever it takes to help ensure we have a better KCI — for our friends, peers, colleagues in Blue Springs, Leawood, Lee’s Summit and the millions of people who we welcome to our amazing city every year.

So, here’s my challenge to you, founders, executives and managers. Next Tuesday our firm, PayIt, will give our more than 25 staff members a late start to the workday, so they can go vote. Join us and send an email right now: Tell your team they can have a late start Tuesday morning, Nov. 7. Ask them to share their reason for voting on Tuesday using #LateStart4ABetterKCI.

If they don’t know where to vote, direct them here.  

Use your voice. Share your entrepreneurial spirit and help create a city of the future that will benefit your firm, your employees and the region, creating increased opportunity for all of us.

Luke Norris is head of local government solutions for PayIt and was recently named a top connector in education and entrepreneurship.

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

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Zach Sliefert, Tyler Beyer, Justin Verbenec, Joe Layne, Brett Karlin, Brent Sliefert, and Brandon Roberts, DashNow

        DashNow pivot from QR tech to text trigger helps keep JoCo startup, hundreds of restaurants serving 

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        In an entrepreneurial landscape chewed up by social distancing, it’s feast or famine for local restaurants — but DashNow has a recipe for recovery, said Brett Karlin.  “The value is being able to work with these local businesses. To help them out, to provide a product that they need to help keep their doors open,” added…

        A.J. Mellott and Heather Decker, Ronawk

        Ronawk cultivates first funding round, fight against COVID-19 from new Olathe lab 

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        As COVID-19 continues to wage war on the world, researchers in an Olathe-based lab are generating trillions of human cells that could be used to cure the ever-lingering virus.  “It eliminates a lot of the work that’s needed,” A.J. Mellott, president and co-founder of Ronawk, said of the health tech startup’s premiere product — Tissue Blocks…

        Kyle Smith, Determination Incorporated; and Sarah Muntean, All American Construction Contractors

        Rise Up, Get Started winners: Building a second chance as job market sputters

        By Tommy Felts | June 25, 2020

        A slowly recovering job market is pushing more people — many of whom previously didn’t imagine ever running their own businesses — into entrepreneurship, said Kyle J. Smith. “The Kauffman Foundation would say they’re starting a business out of necessity rather than choice,” Smith elaborated, describing the importance of programs that provide a second chance…

        OYO Nova Gym by OYO Fitness

        Reluctant gym-goers help push KC’s OYO to $4.4M in pre-sales for latest home fitness device

        By Tommy Felts | June 24, 2020

        A month after breaking records as the most-funded fitness product in Kickstarter history, the KC-created OYO Nova Gym closed its crowdfunding campaign with $4.4 million in pre-sales. “To say that it exceeded our expectations is a total understatement,” said Graham Ripple, COO of OYO Fitness, the Kansas City-based startup behind the handheld home gym product.…