AltCap banks $55M in tax credits to bolster KC’s underserved entrepreneurs

February 15, 2018  |  Bobby Burch

Photo by Tim Samoff

A huge award will enable AltCap to make a broader entrepreneurial impact in low- to moderate-income communities throughout Kansas City.

AltCap — a Kansas City-based community development financial institution that focuses on underserved populations — has received a $55 million new markets tax credit award from the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The award enables AltCap to continue financing high-impact investments and projects in economically challenged parts of Kansas City, said Ruben Alonso, president of AltCap.

“We are thrilled to receive this allocation award and thank the CDFI Fund as well Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt for being such a strong champion and advocate for the NMTC Program,” Alonso said in a release. “This allocation will allow AltCap to not only support more high-impact investments in distressed communities throughout Kansas City but also continue to grow as a uniquely positioned economic development stakeholder that empowers people and communities to thrive.”

Since 2008, AltCap has received $158 million in new market tax credits to finance job-creating businesses, nonprofits and real estate development projects. In Kansas City, the credits have helped finance such projects as manufacturing and distribution facilities, commercial real estate developments, historic redevelopment, and community health and education facilities.  

In November, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation awarded AltCap and three other microfinance lenders $300,000 each.

Through the $1.2 million gift spread between AltCap, Women’s Business Center, KC Hispanic Economic Development Corporation and Justine PETERSEN, the microfinance program offers capitalization opportunities for the nonprofit microlenders and Community Reinvestment Act credit opportunities for local banks.

The KC Microfinance Portfolio loans will be distributed this spring and sold to banks in the summer. Initially, the loans are expected to provide funds to 20 to 30 businesses, the Kauffman Foundation said, but have the potential to help a broader pool of local entrepreneurs.

Underrepresentation of minority groups and women hurts the U.S. economy by reducing the number of businesses and jobs they would otherwise create, according to the foundation. If minorities started and owned companies at the same rate as white entrepreneurs, the U.S. would have more than 1 million more businesses and as many as an extra 9.5 million jobs, according to Kauffman Foundation data.

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

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        M25 drops Midwest Madness bracket for best startup hub: 4-seed KC faces up-hill battle (Here’s how to vote)

        By Tommy Felts | March 13, 2023

        Bracket update: Since this story’s original publication, Kansas City has advanced to the Midwest Madness bracket’s Round of 32. Voting on Kansas City’s next match-up — against 5-seed Lafayette, Indiana — begins Tuesday, March 21. As sports fans fill out March Madness brackets this week, a Chicago-based venture capital firm is encouraging Midwestern founders, investors…

        Startups, investors on ‘red alert’ as Silicon Valley Bank collapse ripples into new tech downturn fears

        By Tommy Felts | March 13, 2023

        Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Missouri Business Alert, a member of the KC Media Collective, which also includes Startland News, KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, Kansas City PBS/Flatland, and The Kansas City Beacon. Click here to read the original story. Silicon Valley Bank collapsed in rapid fashion on Friday to become the second-largest bank…

        Former C2FO manager creates AI data analyst to usher in a new way of making business decisions

        By Tommy Felts | March 10, 2023

        Tyler Amundsen is set on building a future where every professional uses artificial intelligence to make better decisions, faster, he said. “With humans, AI and computers working together, we can achieve truly mind-blowing things, and we’re just at the beginning of it. … We’re at a point in the world where AI can tell whether…

        KC, Wichita, Topeka startups earn share of $100K as K-State accelerator spreads prize money across region

        By Tommy Felts | March 10, 2023

        MANHATTAN — A demo day with $100,000 on the line culminated in a Kansas City startup leaving the stage with the event’s second-highest winnings. Poshed on the Go earned $23,500 in funding Thursday from the Kansas State University Accelerator program, coming in just behind the grand-prize winner, PillReady, Wichita, with $36,000. The Shawnee-based company is…