KCMO advancing its smart city action plan with focus on digital equity in urban tech
June 22, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Kansas City is one step closer to being a fully connected hub for urban tech, as local decision makers craft a smart city action plan.
“That document will be what guides all of our future investments in technology,” explained Chris Hernandez, KCMO communications director.
The action plan comes a year after the city issued a request for proposal regarding smart city technology, Hernandez noted, adding citizens have remained curious about the city’s developments in urban tech.
“There’s a group that has been put together to create the action plan and the stakeholder interviews started last week,” he said of city progress. “… We’re hoping to roll that out mid-fall.”
Announced days after the election of Quinton Lucas — who is expected to become the 55th mayor of Kansas City in August — the decision to move forward with the smart city action plan was not dictated by politics, but rather timing, Hernandez emphasized.
“It was really about our RFP committee, which is staff with a council representative — as all RFPs have — it was about really evaluating the proposals … but also thinking really deeply about what we want as a city and what we need to do to move forward,” he said.
As Kansas City ramps up its urban tech efforts, the action plan is what will help the city maintain its status as a leader in the smart city space, noted Hernandez.
“We really think this is an opportunity to show other cities how you can make sure that you are pushing smart city technology and thinking deeper into the organization — to the department level, to the program level, to make sure that it’s being used to be more efficient, to deliver better basic services.”
A key component of the city’s RFP surrounding smart city technology was digital inclusion, Hernandez added.
“If you want to take it back to the mayor elect [Quinton Lucas], he’s made it clear that inclusivity is super important … and beyond the phrase ‘digital inclusion,’ it’s really about ‘digital equity,’” he said. “That’s an important distinction that maybe only people who really study that issue understand, but something that we are highly aware of and we have had many people on staff level digging into that issue already.”
Addressing the digital divide, Hernandez cited free public WiFi in downtown as movement that resulted in the same action on city buses — a step in the right direction for the city’s connectivity efforts, which will soon include the Prospect Max corridor which will focus on inclusion on the east side.
Ensuring smart solutions make life easier for residents and simplify basic services will be in key in the city’s approach to urban tech, Hernandez said.
“If you have good streets, good pipes, good infrastructure, and we are using proper data management to make sure that we’re getting that feedback so that we know how to better use our resources — which is your tax money — in order to run our city and fix the infrastructure … that’s what we’re trying to do with this action plan,” he explained.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Photos: Take a look at Virgin Mobile USA’s startup-like office space
Many in the Kansas City startup community often call upon corporations to better engage with earlier stage entrepreneurs. Virgin Mobile USA wants to flip that script, said Justin Scott, Virgin Mobile director of communications. Despite being a subsidiary of Sprint Corporation and backed by billionaire investor Richard Branson, the firm — which selected Kansas City for…
Olathe mayor touts startup community in pitch for Amazon HQ2
With a workforce rich in entrepreneurial spirit, Amazon would be wise to tap Kansas City for its second headquarters, Michael Copeland said. “The climate has cultivated world-class start-up businesses and nurtured corporate giants, and it’s been a source of support and stability for everything in between,” said Copeland, mayor of Olathe. “It fosters risk-taking and…
Hyperloop to AP: Kansas City-St. Louis route among top 5 as finalists narrowed
Kansas City’s hopes to land a high-speed commuter route to St. Louis continue to shoot forward, a Hyperloop official confirmed Thursday. Two weeks after the State of Missouri entered into a public-private partnership with Hyperloop to study the feasibility of a 23-minute supersonic track between the two cities, the Associated Press reports Missouri is a…
After shootings, ‘It’s most important to keep the public safe,’ Smart City leaders say
Citizens expect public safety from their city government to encompass such basics as sidewalks and water, Bob Bennett said. And for that reason, improving public safety must be a top concern for smart city projects around the nation, the chief innovation officer at the City of Kansas City, Missouri, added. “We have to provide the…

