Kauffman Inclusion Open: Six KC grant winners ‘building an inclusive pathway to entrepreneurship’
July 27, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Plans to educate, inspire, and assist entrepreneurs traditionally left out of small business conversations will ramp up for the Porter House KC — thanks to new support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s inaugural Inclusion Open.
“We are so excited to be selected as one of this year’s grant recipients,” said Dan Smith, co-founder of the Porter House, an organization dedicated to building an inner-city, co-working community that provides entrepreneurship access and resources to underserved populations in the metro area.
“[We’re] specifically focusing on retail-based entrepreneurs. We appreciate what the Kauffman Foundation has and is doing with the Inclusion Open and we plan to fully support their vision of an inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystem,” Smith added.
Designed to identify projects that are testing new ideas or scale successful programs which remove geographic, socioeconomic, and demographic barriers for underserved entrepreneurs, the Inclusion Open drew 750 applications from 42 states and two U.S. territories, Kauffman explained in a release.
Nineteen organizations ultimately received Kauffman support, the organization announced late this week, including six grown in Kansas City: Determination, Inc.; Central Avenue Betterment Association; EPEC, The Grooming Project; Hispanic Chamber of Commerce; and the Sewing Labs, in addition the Porter House KC.
“Each project is focused on removing barriers for underserved entrepreneurs in Kansas City,” said Erin Jenkins, Kauffman program officer in entrepreneurship. “By building an inclusive pathway to entrepreneurship, the organizations represented are creating opportunities for residents while also impacting the local economy.”
Click here for a full list of organizations from across the U.S. finding new momentum through the Inclusion Open.
All organizations chosen for the Inclusion Open are working to develop or have developed methods that promote inclusive and equitable entrepreneurial support and intentionally focus on supporting business growth, Kauffman explained.

Kyle Smith and Johnny Waller Jr., Determination, Incorporated; and Marcus Bullock, Flikshop
Johnny Waller Jr., co-founder of Determination, Inc., said the organization is eager to accelerate its mission — to help give formerly incarcerated would-be entrepreneurs access to a second chance in life — and thankful for Kauffman’s support and recognition of its efforts.
“By investing care, time, and resources in second chance entrepreneurs, we can work together to reach the vision of Determination, Incorporated: Prisons and jails will become ‘grad schools’ for the world’s most impactful leaders,” Waller Jr. said of ways the grant funding could change outcomes for formerly incarcerated people.
“Starting viable, hiring businesses, will help to solve the problem of recidivism and ultimately end mass incarceration,” he noted.
Total grant amounts were not disclosed by Kauffman.
“This community of grantees is building field-wide standards around what quality entrepreneurship support looks like, and how to help everyone get there,” said Natalie Self, Kauffman program officer in entrepreneurship. “The organizations that are working on these equitable programs, policies, and practices today will inform the field of entrepreneurship support for years to come.”
At The Sewing Labs, an unconventional entrepreneurial hub for marginalized and at-risk women to develop their sewing businesses, Kauffman funds will boost efforts to develop hands-on training that provides personal attention and active listening for traumatized, recovering, disenfranchised individuals, and culture-shocked immigrants.
The entrepreneurial incubator will be equipped with a variety of industrial and domestic machines, notions, and tools, said Eileen Bobowski, executive director of the The Sewing Labs, which will be based in the urban core, near the Historic Northeast immigrant and refugee communities.
“This grant will allow us to teach entrepreneurial candidates all aspects of running a sewing business, to provide oversight and assistance as these entrepreneurs begin to do work for hire and provide opportunities for income production through contracted short-run manufacturing,” she said.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
What’s in a name? KC filmmakers’ documentary short finds ‘Black joy,’ Sundance premiere in reclaiming a family name
Names hold a person’s legacy and connect them to their past. Names are individualistic while also a representation of family units. Names are the first thing people own in the world, said Kansas City filmmakers Sharon Liese and Catherine Hoffman. The duo came together to tell the complicated, yet joyous, story of the Parker family.…
SnapIT’s founder builds tech company’s mission overseas while growing talent pool in Kansas
Employers across the globe need access to tech talent as demand for skilled IT workers surges, said Neelima Parasker, noting her Overland Park-based firm writes critical coding for the solution. “What we provide is unique in the sense that we are producing tech talent the fastest through microcredentials,” said Parasker, the founder and CEO of…
How this reality TV star is using his platform to help tech students start life-changing careers without heavy debt
Nehemiah Clark stands at the crossroads of reality TV and inclusive tech education. As a former cast member on MTV’s “The Real World: Austin” and a frequent competitor on the Paramount+ “The Challenge” series, Clark leverages his audience to further the mission of SnapIT Solutions, he shared. “On [‘The Challenge’], I’ve talked about what I…
How Charlie Hustle’s wholesale expansion, collegiate licensing is growing its brand beyond the KC Heart
Chase McAnulty is on a mission to build Charlie Hustle into a national brand, he shared, without losing the company’s roots in Kansas City. “We’ve really driven the narrative that not only celebrates culture, but civic pride. It’s a challenge to go to these other markets and give them their version of the KC Heart,…
