Kauffman Foundation: $1.9T relief plan signed by Biden a ‘significant step,’ but challenges linger beyond bill’s scope
March 11, 2021 | Startland News Staff
Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a financial sponsor of Startland News.
One of the nation’s premier advocates for entrepreneurs and small businesses on Thursday lauded the passage and signing of a massive COVID relief bill — which it said signals a step toward closing gaps in access to a more prosperous life.
But the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation also cautioned that the American Rescue Plan’s investments — while significant — are limited to 2021, requiring bipartisan follow-up to ensure momentum gained by the relief package isn’t lost.
Read the Kauffman Foundation’s full statement below.
H.R. 1319, the “American Rescue Plan Act of 2021,” provides additional relief to address the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy, public health, state and local governments, individuals, and businesses, according to the White House.
The legislation was signed into law Thursday by President Biden, after being passed along party lines in Congress.
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, according to the Kansas City-based organization.
Tune in as President Biden signs the American Rescue Plan. https://t.co/ZfpKjSkA8w
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) March 11, 2021
Democrats hailed the plan as putting “money in people’s pockets, shots in people’s arms, and ensuring that children can go back to school safely.” Republicans largely characterized the bill as a “Blue State Bailout,” criticizing the stimulus as too expensive and unfocused.
Among the chief goals of the American Rescue Plan legislation:
- Send $1,400 direct payments to 85 percent of American households
- Provide funding to reopen schools
- Scale a national vaccination program
- Cut homelessness by helping about 80,000 households get permanent housing
- Give direct payments to families to cover the costs of school meals that 30 million kids are missing
- Create a $10 billion Small Business Opportunity Fund to leverage even more funding, helping small businesses access risk capital
- Make the largest investment in U.S. history in Tribal governments and Native communities
- Include $28 billion in funding to save America’s public transit and protect transit workers from layoff
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s full response to the American Rescue Plan:
“Almost exactly one year after the pandemic-caused shutdown began, the Biden Administration signed a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package passed by Congress — one of the largest government economic rescue efforts in our country’s history.
With its focus on decreasing childhood poverty, alongside measures such as funds for housing assistance and public transit support, the legislation is a significant step toward creating a more equitable economy that will lift millions of families out of impoverished conditions. This more inclusive environment will have wide-ranging effects, lowering the barriers to opportunity that suppress far too many. In the long term, this more-just economy will provide fertile ground for people of color who want to start their own business.
Doing so means creating an economy with robust safety nets that not only catch Americans when they fall but give them the confidence to take entrepreneurial risks. A recent report by the Kauffman Foundation on the motherhood wage gap cited that twenty-seven percent of Black entrepreneur mothers reported being sole providers, compared to 19 percent of Hispanic entrepreneur mothers and 23 percent of white entrepreneur mothers. Couple that with the massive job loss women, especially women of color, experienced during COVID make the caregiving provisions embedded in the plan a step to make access to entrepreneurship equitable.
While the American Rescue Plan is a historic package designed to rebuild the American economy and deliver urgent support for new and small business owners, these investments only last through 2021. The COVID-19 pandemic laid bare the vulnerable position too many Americans were in prior to the virus’s spread and exacerbated the underlying and longstanding inequities of the American economy. Now is our opportunity for Republicans and Democrats alike to rebuild better by transforming our economy into a better, more inclusive one, centered on entrepreneurship’s power to drive growth, innovation, and job creation.”
Click here to read more about the Kauffman Foundation’s recent call for more inclusive growth in its America’s New Business Plan.
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
LaunchKC’s latest: a Social Venture Studio to tackle social, racial, environmental issues
A new Kansas City-based social venture studio is expected to help social entrepreneurs avoid grant starvation — and depending too heavily on financial gifts — in lieu of models that focus on innovative steps toward sustainability, said Father Justin Mathews. “I got very excited about social venturing — this idea of being able to harness…
Healium’s mental fitness wearables earn innovation award from world’s largest tech show
A Columbia-based startup’s patented technology that brings wearable biometric data to life via virtual and augmented reality apps has earned a major industry honor, announcing Healium’s selection for a 2022 Innovation Award from the Consumer Technology Association. The awards program is an annual competition honoring outstanding design and engineering in 27 consumer technology product categories.…
Planner pitches two-mile gondola over West Bottoms, linking KCK, KCMO downtowns
Editor’s note: The following story originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. The idea of using gondolas for mass transit in Kansas City is back, but this time it’s being floated by…
