State of the City: Mayor challenges startup community to be more inclusive in hiring

March 28, 2018  |  Tommy Felts

Mayor Sly James, State of the City

As a growing piece of Kansas City’s business fabric, the startup community should better reflect the diverse creative and tech talent working within the city, Mayor Sly James said Tuesday following his State of the City address.

“There are a lot of entrepreneurs who, for example, make bow ties, who make clothing, who do things that have data involved — all sorts of different things,” said James, in comments to reporters after his prepared remarks. “But we need more entrepreneurs of color and we need more entrepreneurs who are women.”

The sentiment dovetailed with a key component of James’ address: inclusivity.

“Most of my staff are women. And on our team are people of color, different sexual orientations, physical abilities, ages and religions,” he told a packed crowd in the auditorium at Plexpod Westport Commons. “Now take a look at your own organizations — if everyone looks the same, you may not be inclusive.”

Fostering an inclusive work culture doesn’t just mean checking a few boxes, James said; it’s about building a stronger, more innovative workforce for the long-term success of Kansas City.

“We must work to make sure KC is a community where today’s — and tomorrow’s — employment force wants to stay, put down roots, raise their families and help shape this city’s future,” he said.

Retaining the best talent is a responsibility shared by city officials and startup leaders, he said, alluding to recent trends showing more highly-skilled, college-educated workers leaving Kansas City than being recruited to it.

Mayor Sly James noting data-driven efforts to reduce crime in his 2018 State of the City address

“Younger entrepreneurs are bringing talent and expertise, and those are the people who you want hanging around so that they can build the next Hallmark Cards or the next DST or the next Cerner or the next great restaurant or the next great clothing line, whatever the case may be,” James said. “But we want young people coming in, not going out of our city.”

While Kansas City is moving toward success built on inclusion — ”regardless of color, religion, gender identities, sexual orientation, or any other category that has divided us for too long” — not enough progress has been achieved, James said.

“Don’t get me wrong, there is meaningful work being done by skilled, dedicated advocates and leaders in our community,” he said. “Our challenge is to come together and learn from each other, and implement measurable changes, not just within our organizations, but throughout Kansas City in both public and private sectors.”

In his address, James teased the details of a coming Mayor’s Initiative on Race and Inclusion, which is set to begin this spring and is expected to involve stakeholders from the city, as well as nonprofit and private organizations, he said.

James challenged members of the startup community to join the effort and apply their problem-solving skills.

“Nobody has the answer, but collectively we’ll get closer to it, and there’s no shame in not knowing right now. Hell, I don’t know,” he said. “But there is shame in not trying to find out.”

While the group and those who follow it shouldn’t expect to outright fix the community’s race and equity issues, nor eradicate prejudice, they still can make a meaningful impact, James said.

“We will make progress in making Kansas City more inclusive and equitable for everyone growing up, living and working here — whether that’s east of Troost, north of the river, in Brookside or Ruskin,” the mayor said in the closing moments of his address.

Watch the full Mayor’s State of the City address below.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    New collaboration will help OP startup 3D bioprint, scale its next-gen biotech solution

    By Tommy Felts | June 12, 2024

    A Kansas biotech startup’s new manufacturing partner will boost efforts to automate and mass produce Ronawk’s headline-grabbing Bio-Block technology — a platform that has already accelerated medical advancements in tissue therapy. “Collaboration is critical for turning research advances into commercial therapies rapidly. The complexity and diversity of modalities is so big that nobody can do…

    Museums shouldn’t feel like artifacts, KC firm says; Here’s how Multistudio uses analog experiences to build buzz 

    By Tommy Felts | June 11, 2024

    Multistudio doesn’t exclusively design museums, but the Westport-based architecture firm — along with Kansas City itself — certainly is having a museum moment, shared Robert Riccardi. The firm’s local portfolio includes a growing number of new-era museums, including The Rabbit Hole, the Laugh-O-gram animation studio, and the Satchel Paige House. They’re not your traditional museums…

    Back2KC sets return date for its 2024 homecoming effort, scouting familiar faces to build an even stronger KC

    By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2024

    When Back2KC returns this fall, the homegrown talent recruitment initiative will lean on unexpected connections to entice former residents — now out-of-town professionals — to give Kansas City’s recent Golden Age another look, organizers said.  “The biggest win we can have is if these expats and ex-Kansas Citians come back, move their families here, move…

    ‘A piece of something bigger’: Makers help raise fabric of community with Union Station quilt project

    By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2024

    A trio of Kansas City maker businesses wove together their talents this spring in support of a new, local health initiative — culminating in a towering expression of hope and healing at Union Station. Ampersand Design Studio, Tia Curtis Quilts, and Collective EX spent the past three weeks designing, fabricating, and displaying a colorful quilt…