We Grow KC investment summit aims to harness opportunity zones to empower neighborhood social fabric
June 13, 2019 | Rashi Shrivastava
Investment is a two-way street that can have a positive impact on both investors and community residents, said Dianne Cleaver.
A new gathering — the June 26-27 We Grow KC Opportunity Zones Investor Summit — aims to bridge the potential divide between such neighbors with the back of Cleaver’s Urban Neighborhoods Initiative, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce and other key stakeholders.
“We are trying to attract investors that are not only looking to get a return on their investment but also make a social impact and uplift the community,” she said.
Click here for tickets to We Grow KC.
The summit is expected to draw local, regional and national investors to connect with entrepreneurs, policy makers and community builders and showcase the city’s Opportunity Zones, which are ripe for investment. Summit organizers plan to offer bus tours of the Opportunity Zones to investors to physically experience the community.
Areas of Kansas City were previously divided into 32 geographical clusters called Opportunity Zones, based on recommendations by the Missouri governor. The zones typically encompass low-income neighborhoods that offer a bounty of opportunities for reinvestment of capital gains.
Zones are categorized into five broad categories; Central City, Paseo Gateway/Northwest, Blue River Valley, Swope Park, and Martin City — all areas where economic development has already kick-started, but needs to be carried through with the support of investment, Cleaver said.
The June 26-27 We Grow KC event embodies the spirit of upward economic mobility of residential communities in Opportunity zones, which resonates with her organization’s mission to reduce intergenerational poverty and build healthy urban neighborhoods, Cleaver said.
“We hope to get people interested in seeing the positive possibilities of investing in these areas and possibly give information that they hadn’t looked at before,” Cleaver said.
We Grow KC’s goal is to help investors from across the country get acquainted with the city and realize the community’s needs, said Joe Reardon, president of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce.
“We want to make sure that the investment that is done is investment that empowers the existing neighborhood and the people that live there,” Reardon said.
This story was produced through a a collaboration between Missouri Business Alert and Startland News.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Will CBD get me high? Plus three more burning FAQs about the cannabis cousins
Selling CBD is about more than the bottom line, said Heather Steppe, co-owner of KC Hemp Co. “Ninety-percent of what we do is educate. We have people come in here and ask questions and they go home and think about it,” she said from her business’ Downtown Overland Park storefront, noting that the general public…
Niall luxury watches founder, longtime friend: Time to harvest hemp potential in the heartland
With a traditional business mindset and solid entrepreneurial track record, James DeWitt and Michael Wilson could have done just about anything they wanted in life. Uniquely bold, each in their own regard, the longtime friends didn’t want to stick to the status quo as they looked for new ventures after their former acts burned down,…
Evolving attitudes, laws dissolving risks on mainstream CBD, hemp ventures, experts say
The smoke is lifting on cannabis as a commodity, Heather Steppe said, grateful for the entrepreneurial opportunity a waning stigma has created for her family. “Our farmers are finally getting an opportunity to grow this plant and, by God, we’re going to be some of the people who support them,” Steppe said, looking out…
H&R Block co-founder, legend of KC entrepreneurism Henry Bloch dies at 96
Henry Bloch’s contributions to Kansas City will last generations, business leaders said Tuesday, as word spread of the H&R Block co-founder’s death. “Henry Bloch was an absolute champion of Kansas City in everything he did,” said Joe Reardon, president and CEO of the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. “From business endeavors involving H&R Block,…
