Connecting for Good refurbishes The Surplus Exchange with merger championing digital inclusion
May 16, 2019 | John Jared Hawks
Two Kansas City nonprofits are melding their expertise into a spearhead against the digital divide.
“This is just the beginning of what will be a long-term love affair between Connecting For Good, digital inclusion, environmental leadership, and the Greater Kansas City metro and regional area,” said Tom Esselman, CEO of Connecting for Good.
The Kansas City nonprofit — dedicated to fostering digital inclusivity through providing affordable internet, computers, digital skills and partnerships to low income communities — recently announced its consolidation with The Surplus Exchange (TSE), a longtime area nonprofit specializing in electronics recycling and used office furniture resale.
“Changing market conditions have challenged our operations and leadership to adapt to our business model to better support an increasingly robust mission,” said Jessica Merrigan, TSE board co-chair. “We could not be happier with Connecting For Good as the partner we have selected to preserve and grow the legacy that TSE has created with all of our clients and community partners over the past 20-plus years.”
The “marriage,” as Esselman describes it, is advantageous to both organizations and the greater community in a number of ways, he said. Foremost among them is the potential synergistic impact of two established nonprofits running under one roof, he said.
Click here for the history of Connecting for Good in KC.

The Surplus Exchange, West Bottoms
“TSE and CFG are community organizations dedicated to helping low income communities to improve their conditions in a sustainable fashion,” Esselman said. “TSE has long been a environmentally responsible recycler, focusing on both office furniture and equipment, including computers. CFG has been, for a much shorter time, a digital inclusion champion, providing low cost internet access, computers, and digital skills training to help bridge the digital divide.”
“By combining both groups, we have formed an emerging social enterprise with the hopes of elevating both digital inclusion and environmental stewardship to new levels of relevance among the broader community outside the urban core,” he added. “Kansas City has been recognized, and has an opportunity to grow its reputation as a national leader in this combination of digital leadership and environmental responsibility.”
TSE’s operations will also augment the existing funding engine keeping Connecting for Good’s educational resources free: electronics refurbishing.
“We provide digital skills training, financial literacy training, and job skills training, all this to get people on a path toward not only productively using the Internet, but doing in a way that they can see their way as a path out of poverty,” Esselman explained. “Those are services that we provide at no charge. In order to sustain that work targeting low income populations, we view the operations of The Surplus Exchange as providing an opportunity for us to create some financial sustainability for our organization.”
As alluded to by Merrigan, the consolidation also gives TSE an out for dealing with increasingly difficult market conditions.
“About two years ago, the commodities market pricing — particularly for broken down materials like metals and plastics — became a little more challenging,” Esselman said. “Tariffs and other things limited the ability of United States suppliers to sell off these materials — it made the whole aspect of being a recycler a lot more challenging for The Surplus Exchange.”
Work is currently under way to complete the transition and re-opening, and Esselman teased as-of-yet-unannounced activities and events tied to The Surplus Exchange’s West Bottoms warehouse, located at 518 Santa Fe St. For now, the throughline of TSE and Connecting for Good’s story will continue.
“This year we’ve got a theme, and the theme is, ‘Building resilient communities,’” Esselman said. “I like the word ‘resilient’ because communities all over the country face challenges, but the beautiful thing about using digital technology to keep people connected and is it gives people the skills and resources they need to advance to a better situation.
“That’s the common thread that goes through the individuals that make up The Surplus Exchange and Connecting For Good as organizations. We are committed first and foremost to making our community a better place.”
For more on the digital inclusion movement, check out the National Digital Inclusion Alliance.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Just-launched retail hub gets first tenant, battling ‘blight of the heart’ on Troost corner
‘We are each other’s bootstraps’ Transforming a long-vacant building along Troost into a space for neighborhood small businesses is about empowering the entrepreneurs already living and working in the east side community, said Father Justin Mathews. The newly unveiled RS Impact Exchange — built within the renovated, 1920-built Baker Shoe Building at 3108-3116 Troost Ave.…
Hog Island to Parkville: Justus Drugstore owners docking new seafood concept in historic Parkville
The Parker Hollow builds on Chef Jonathan Justus’ mission to put small town Missouri on the menu PARKVILLE, Mo. — A bright yellow, nearly 150-year-old former Italian restaurant could become Kansas City’s go-to seafood destination with help from the world-renowned hometown culinary team behind Justus Drugstore and Black Dirt. Chef Jonathan Justus and his wife…
You can’t plan for this: ‘Mr K’ finalists wary of another ‘wrench into the face’ from Washington
An upended national political and economic climate has rippled down to Main Street, acknowledged leaders of this year’s Top 10 Small Businesses, bringing concerns about racism, DEI backlash, tariffs, and supply chain disruptions to Kansas City’s front door. “We’ve had people come into the shop and harass our employees, our customers,” explained Dulcinea Herrera —…
Hyde Park coffee space reopens with family vibe fitting historic neighborhood’s roots, owners say
A newly opened neighborhood coffee shop in Hyde Park hopes to bring a fresh, family-friendly vibe to Kansas City’s bustling coffee scene, its owners said. “We created 1888 Coffee to be something different — not just another café, but a welcoming hub for our community,” said Christine Kehoe, co-owner and operator of 1888 Coffee with…
