YEP KC teen serves hope through enterprising volleyball benefit for men’s shelter

July 16, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

YEP KC

When 17-year-old Catherine Franano learned the mattresses at Kansas City Rescue Mission were old and too worn for comfortable use, the Pembroke High School senior leapt into action, she said.

“Some of these people … like they’ve just had so many awful things happen to them, but not having anywhere to sleep?” Catherine said. “How are you going to go out and find work if you can’t even get a good night’s sleep?”

With her years of volleyball experience on club teams, as well as giving lessons on the sport, Franano set in motion plans for a sand volleyball tournament to benefit the mission, with proceeds going to support the men in the emergency shelter, she said.

 

A current YEP KC intern — having worked at Zoloz in June and now Fortiviti — and daughter of Metactive founder Dr. Nick Franano, Catherine’s enterprising behavior was just getting started.

Catherine spent summer 2017 handing out flyers, promoting the event — dubbed the Serve Hope Spiketacular — through Kansas City Rescue Mission’s network, and organizing sponsors for the raffle and prizes, she said.

“It’s just walking into stores and saying, ‘Hey, do you have a manager? Can I talk to them? We’re looking for sponsors,’” Catherine said. “I was terrified to do that at first because it’s like who’s this teenager coming in and asking us for money or free things? But I got comfortable pitching it and I think people started to take me seriously and we ended up with a ton of sponsors.”

After months of planning and registering the final teams just under the wire, the Spiketacular doubled its initial goal, netting $10,000, she said. It also pulled in 20 teams, including one from the shelter, Catherine said.

“I definitely didn’t think it was gonna be this big when I started,” she said.

The Spiketacular is expected to return September 9, with registration opening at the end of July.

Catherine also hopes to transition the one-off event into a nonprofit organization, she said.

“It was a really cool process and I think this year I’ll definitely go into it with more confidence,” Catherine said. “Our goal is $20,000 this year, so it’s gonna be a challenge but it’s going to be exciting.”

With her interest in business building, Catherine joined YEP KC, a high school internship program focused on entrepreneurship, to bring together her passions for STEM and volunteer work, she said.

“I’m kind of an interdisciplinary student. And I thought entrepreneurship sounded like what I had been doing with my nonprofit,” she said. “Just being in the YEP KC program I think is really going to help this coming.”

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

    Melissa Roberts, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

    Former ECJC exec Melissa Roberts joins Kauffman Foundation grant making team

    By Tommy Felts | February 26, 2019

    Everyone has potential if given the right resources, said Melissa Roberts. “Everybody has great ideas if given the right education. Everybody has the potential to be an economic contributor in our society if given the right motivation and support,” she continued. These aren’t her words and values alone, Roberts said. They’re the legacy of Ewing…

    Brandon Love, Crumble

    Health scare forced KC’s colorful wax guru to get serious: ‘This is Crumble growing up with me’

    By Tommy Felts | February 26, 2019

    Brandon Love is keeping his iconic, brightly-colored hair, but melting away distractions that could be holding back his already wildly successful, but evolving lifestyle brand, Crumble Co., he said. The first to go: Some of the eye-catching candle and wax product names that first caught customers’ attention because of their tongue-in-cheek innuendos and four-letter words,…

    Pepper cyber security report

    Insecure phones, devices creating largest-ever sensor grid (for China) in US homes, says Pepper cyber security report

    By Tommy Felts | February 25, 2019

    As an industry, the state of cyber security is a “hot mess,” Scott Ford said candidly. “Frankly, its at a point where it ought to be concerning to everybody,” Ford, CEO of Pepper IoT, said in response to a new report that examines the state of the IoT space and released as part of a…

    Missouri Hyperloop

    Missouri Hyperloop talk turns to motion sickness, comfort at high-speeds

    By Tommy Felts | February 23, 2019

    But how will it feel? With the feasibility of a high-speed Missouri Hyperloop route connecting Kansas City to St. Louis in about 30 minutes now established, the conversation has shifted tracks to ergonomics, said Diana Zhou. Curious members of the public want to know more about the safety of the proposed transportation mode’s 600-plus-mph speeds,…