Dart pedals more than a prototype: E-bikes as a route to equitable employment access
May 28, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Free bus rides aren’t the only solution to a lack of equity in Kansas City’s transportation options, explained Thomas Murphy.
“Only 18 percent of jobs here in the metro are available via 90-minute commute via public transit,” Murphy, co-founder and CEO of Dart, explained of the startup’s commitment to outfitting under-resourced pockets of the metro with e-bikes.
“There could be kind of a sweet spot in the middle and that’s kind of what we’re trying to hit,” he explained, detailing Dart’s low-cost, green transportation solution — which replaces the back wheel of gently used bikes with a battery-powered, electric motor and recently completed its first prototype.
The service will be available to consumers at either market or income-based rates and was set to launch early this spring — prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which prevented the Dart team from working on its second prototype and conducting the final stages of its market research.
“Once we have that finalized, we are ready to go to market,” said Kyla McAuliffe, co-founder and COO, adding community support for the project — which was born out of the Enactus program at the University of Missouri-Kansas City — will be crucial to its success.
“It may be by appointment, it may be by social distancing, it may be by a lot of cleaning — but we’re looking into how we’re going to be doing that.”
The startup is currently conducting a market survey, which will be crucial in its future plays for funding, McAuliffe and Murphy said.

Dart
So far bootstrapped — save for a $1,000 injection as part of the UMKC Regnier Venture Creation Challenge — Dart accepts bike donations on a case-by-case basis and most frequently can utilize gently used, hybrid models and some mountain bikes, Murphy explained.
The startup has also partnered with 816 Bicycle Collective, added McAuliffe.
“They are doing wonderful things for our community as well, to get people bikes who need them. They have already agreed to help us identify the best bikes that they have, that we may be able to outfit,” she said.
Once the service is up and running, Dart customers will also receive a bus pass — a perk of Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas’ zero-fare transit plan and a community improvement request McAuliffe and Murphy said they’ve long advocated on behalf.
“It’s actually very beneficial because our goal is, obviously, to get people where they need to go so they can get to their jobs and increase their upward mobility,” McAuliffe said, noting the city of KCMO has been especially supportive of the project.
“They’re very excited that we are hitting that target area that they are also trying to — positively — change. We’ll be keeping in close contact with them and hopefully moving forward, some [affordable transportation] initiatives.”
Further incubated in the UMKC E-Scholars program, Dart is a social entrepreneurship endeavor that its team hopes to keep growing in Kansas City long after they’ve left the university.
“We have big scalability plans, we have business to business plans already in place … we’re excited,” McAuliffe said.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Revamped Sprint Accelerator graduates its first cohort of agriculture, digital tech startups
Now in its fourth year, the Sprint Accelerator on Tuesday held a demo day showcasing the seven companies in its 2017 cohort that recently graduated its program. The cohort represents the first graduating class for the corporate partnership-based accelerator program since it parted ways with Techstars, with which it conducted three years of programming. Thanks…
Steve Case to KC entrepreneurs, investors: You can’t sit back now
To nudge more Kansas Citians off of the sidelines and into its budding entrepreneurial ecosystem, former AOL founder Steve Case spoke Friday to a group of local investors at a luncheon. KCRise Fund managing director Darcy Howe hosted a fireside chat with Case for a crowd of investors, potential investors and entrepreneurs. Case told the…
Ginsburg: Fundamental — but routinely botched — elements of a winning pitch
Editor’s note: A five-year mentor at UMKC’s Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Byron Ginsburg has heard and counseled many entrepreneurial pitches as an attendee and a judge. His current UMKC mentees, Emily Moon and Kelsey Carlstedt of By Grace Design, won first place and $20,000 in the 2017 Regnier Venture Creation Challenge. While…
Listen: Leaders analyze KC’s entrepreneurial milestones, assess challenges
To say that Kansas City’s entrepreneurial community has matured in the last 15 years would be an understatement. Many leaders say that if you lived in the metro during the early 2000s and were to return now, you may not even recognize the place. Taking a moment to reflect on how far Kansas City has…


