Is KC scaring away disruptive tech? Mayor candidates revive sharing economy debate
October 9, 2018 | Tommy Felts
A wave of technology is coming — and Kansas City should be ready, said Steve Miller, entering the fray between mayoral candidates over regulating the sharing economy.
Techweek Kansas City 2018
Click here for a full event schedule for Techweek KC.
Click here to purchase tickets to Techweek.
Appearing Monday at a KC Mayoral Tech Forum to open Techweek Kansas City, Miller compared navigating the regulatory waters around such emerging services as Airbnb, Uber and Bird to his learning to surf as a child.
“To ride a wave, I needed to turn around and look at the horizon and see where the wave was beginning to build, so I could anticipate it,” the lawyer-turned-MoDOT leader said at the candidate forum. “When the wave came, if I wanted to catch it, I needed to start swimming quickly so I was up to speed by the time the wave came on me. if I didn’t do that, if I turn my back on it, what was going to happen? I’d be slapped up against the back of my head, and I was gonna lose the wave and lose the momentum.”
“That’s a very cautionary tale, I think, for any community, including ours, that fails to embrace technology,” he added. “I’m concerned that sometimes too often we build walls and we try to turn back technology. We have to anticipate. That means being proactive, not reactionary.”
Organized and moderated by Ryan Weber, president of the KC Tech Council, Monday’s forum featured eight candidates for mayor — five sitting council members: Alissia Canady, Quinton Lucas, Jermaine Reed, Scott Taylor and Scott Wagner; and three newcomers: Rita Berry, Phil Glynn and Miller.
A primary is set for April 2, with the top two vote-getters advancing to a general election June 25.
The Techweek forum touched on such issues as the limited tech talent pipeline in Kansas City, as well as diversity and inclusion efforts in tech, but passions flared early when the conversation turned to the sharing economy.
After councilmen Taylor and Reed defended the sentiments behind the compromise regulations passed by the city council in late February to limit short-term rentals in KCMO, Lucas reiterated his belief that council members gave in to fear — sending a clear message to innovators that Kansas City had rolled up the welcome mat to new ideas.
“I think this city got our approach to it wrong. We intended to compromise, but what it really was, I thought, was us placating to certain interests,” Lucas said, referencing characterizations that the short-term rental debate was a public safety issue. “Yes, [opponents of short-term rentals] had neighborhood organizations behind them, but when we have these conversations [in the city’s Zoning, Planning, and Economic Development Committee], we need to think about that there are tens of thousands of Kansas Citians that are not sitting at a neighborhoods meeting this week — but they still matter and they still care, and technology can still make a better world for them.”
Lucas, Reed and councilwoman Katheryn Shields, as well as Mayor Sly James, voted “no” on the regulations in February. Canady, Taylor and Wagner were among those who successfully voted to pass the measure.
“For us to just say that it’s public safety, when really it’s just cries of fear — fears that are largely unfounded … I think we need somebody who’s going to say, ‘Let’s have a responsible conversation, and let’s make sure that what we’re regulating is based on real data, real facts, and not just fears and the perpetuation of them,” Lucas added.
Technology needs to work for cities and the entrepreneurs within them, said Glynn, president of the Crossroads-based consulting firm Travois.
“I look at this through the lens of being a business owner,” he said. “I look at this through the lens of saying, ‘I don’t just want technology to happen to our community.’ We know that these technologies will emerge. Well, what we need to decide before they do, is what we want to get out of them. Technology is a tool set. It’s not an end in itself.”
High-tech, disruptive innovation can be an economic equalizer, if applied in the right ways, both Lucas and Glynn said. Solving transportation challenges that limit Kansas Citians’ potential is a place to start, Glynn specified.
“If you look at the the regional unemployment rate in Kansas City, it’s fairly low. It’s about 3.5 percent. Once you start to dive in, neighborhood by neighborhood, you’ll find neighborhoods in Kansas City where the combined unemployed and not-in-the-labor-force population is over 50 percent. It’s unacceptable,” he said. “Why is it happening? Well, No.1, many of our residents do not have the skills training to get and keep good jobs. … The other reason is that people in this community do not have reliable transportation to get to work.”
Kansas City’s public transportation system currently only reaches 18 percent of the available jobs, Glynn said.
“If we’re going to be a successful city, if we’re really going to set our people up to be successful in their careers, we have to get that number up,” he said. “For those of us who are using these new consumer technologies, most of us are using them to get around. You’re probably using Uber more often than you’re using an Airbnb, right? We know there’s gonna be more capital invested in these technologies that are focused on transportation.”
The problem in Kansas City? As such technologies emerge, the city tends to view them as a problem to be solved, Glynn said.
“We don’t view them as a new partner to collaborate with,” he said. “So as dock-less scooters and ride sharing companies come in to the Kansas City market, our first thought should not be, ‘How do we get these companies to follow the rules of the road?’ Our first thought should be … ‘What’s our No. 1 problem we’re trying to address with respect to helping our workers get and keep good jobs?’”
Check out a photo gallery from the KC Tech Council’s forum below.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Voting open: Hyperloop One gauges interest in semifinalist routes
If MLB All-Star voting is any indication, Kansas Citians are quite adept at voicing their opinions online. Well, that skill should come into play as part of an online poll that could help Kansas City land a Hyperloop One route. The futuristic transportation system would haul people at speeds of about 760 miles per hour,…
Startup Weekend returns to Kansas City in June
People often ruminate for years on a startup idea, calculating risk, analyzing a market and perfecting a pitch. With Startup Weekend, that course of contemplative construction is distilled into 48 hours of ideation, iteration and presentation. And after a year hiatus, the event is returning to Kansas City for wild weekend of founding fury. Startup…
Digital Sandbox taps K-State Olathe for office space
The partnership between Digital Sandbox KC and the City of Olathe, Kan. is now a bit stronger. Companies funded out of the Olathe program will now have access to an office and coworking space via the Kansas State University Olathe campus, located at 22201 W. Innovation Dr., Olathe, Kansas. “We’re constantly working to break down…
A coworking studio for artists, InterUrban ArtHouse to open in Overland Park
A new coworking and community space for artists is coming to the Kansas City area. Scheduled to open June 15 in Overland Park, the nearly 10,000 square-foot InterUrban ArtHouse is revamping a post office to become a shared space for 20 to 40 artists. The nonprofit is piggybacking on a popular trend in the metro…














