Safe and sanitized: Cart Kings corral COVID threat with three dads’ protective solution
December 14, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Three Kansas City dads’ community-first mindsets pushed the trio to develop a “first-of-its-kind” technique for making grocery and retail stores across the metro safer amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Their mission: disinfect shopping carts and other well-used items via a sanitization trailer — bypassing the arduous, fallible and potentially dangerous process of cleaning by hand, said William “Billy” VonWolf, co-founder of Cart Kings.
“We set up in a central location and we gather all the carts, wheelchairs, kids carts, and we push them through what’s [set up like] a conveyor belt system — about 120 carts per hour,” he explained of the operation, which pressure washes the shared objects at 160 degrees and douses them with an Environmental Protection Agency-approved biostatic sanitizing solution — protecting them for more than 30 days.
Not only does the service allow local retailers to show customers their health is being taken seriously, it allows them to put their employees back to work, doing what they were hired to do — in a lower-risk environment, VonWolf said.
“Every place we go into, we see the one or two employees they’re having to pull away from their essential duties to clean these carts and use these chemicals — spraying them with a weedkiller machine or a spray bottle and paper towels, wipes,” he said.
“It’s putting them in harm’s way. We don’t know any lasting results of these chemicals they’re putting on there and it’s taking them away from what they need to do.”
Cart Kings also boasts environmentally friendly practices that include use of a self-contained water recycling unit and possesses the ability to offer adenosine triphosphate (ATP) testing to its customers, giving them tremendous insight into what current practices are really doing to protect customers, VonWolf said.
“It’s essentially like a DNA swab kit,” he explained of the process, which measures actively growing microorganisms on a surface.
“We went to a large retailer in Overland Park and they used the same thing — paper towels and wipes, employees spraying them down. The store manager was like, ‘Here’s one of my carts we just cleaned,’ and we did a swab test on that cart and it was still way in the red. Failing because of the level of virus and bacteria.”
Click here to learn more about Cart Kings or to schedule a demonstration.
Such capabilities have customers signing up for Cart Kings’ service in droves, VonWolf said.
“The KC Metro area is big enough to be a big city, but small enough to be a small city. So with that, you’re getting into a lot of family owned stuff. You’re trying to get into a business where there have been relationships with vendors and retailers for decades,” he said of the Cart Kings’ trio — also childhood friends — and their entrepreneurial experience so far.

Justin Ragner, William VonWolf, and Rob Albright, Cart Kings
“I would say we’re right on par with where we’d like to be and where we’d want to go. … We don’t want to say we’re reinventing the wheel, but it’s been a different way to do things and to give retailers a chance to see that there are different options out there — and it’s a great way to get their employees back to work by letting us take care of a service that we saw was much needed here in town.”
Doubling as a local first-responder and father of three small children himself, VonWolf also sees the effort as an extension of his duty to protect and serve all Kansas Citians, he said.
“All three of us have kids. This is about safety for friends and family. Our motto is, ‘Making a difference one cart at a time,’” he continued. “We’re really excited about helping our community out.”
VonWolf hopes to see Cart King expand as the need for sterilization services becomes even more prominent in the COVID-recovery period, with opportunities to use its technology on everything from golf carts to playground equipment, he said.
Click here to find clean carts near you.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Know where your meat comes from? For KC shoppers, it’s in a vending machine outside this popular coffee spot
If a farm-to-table beef vending machine is going to successfully plug into a hungry market, Tim Haer has just the place to meet the challenge, he said. “Kansas City — at one point in time — had the largest stockyard in the nation and we were known as Cowtown USA,” noted the startup worker-turned-Green Grass…
$2M grant expected to fuel workforce training, equity hub led by BioNexus KC, Missouri bioscience partners
The Kansas City region must level up to meet the demand of the expanding life sciences industry and support underserved job seekers, said Dennis Ridenour, announcing a $2 million in federal funds aimed at boosting readiness to fill talent shortages. The funding award will establish the “Bioscience Industry Occupational Training and Equity Collaborative Hub for…
Forged in fire: KC blacksmith hammers red hot career crafting tools after surviving blaze (and blade)
A hand-forged knife introduced Brandon Dearing to blacksmithing; one also nearly cost him his life. The Hand and Hammer owner now makes tools — such as tongs and a variety of hammers — for other blacksmiths, using forging techniques he learned as a youth growing up in the country near Archie, Missouri. “TV shows and…
‘Food is Medicine’ tech platform shows appetite for growth with new $2.1M seed round
A patient-driven digital platform that empowers lower income Americans living with chronic health conditions to order the diet-specific foods and support they need announced Thursday it has closed a $2.1 million seed investment. The funding for Free From Market — one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2023 — allows the company…



