Startland News earns nine awards with first entry into Kansas journalism contest
May 6, 2021 | Startland News Staff
Startland News celebrated its sixth birthday this week with news of its own — announcing nine awards from the Kansas Press Association for reporting and photography in 2020.
The honors include four first-place wins for Startland News from among a crop of competitors that range from the Kansas City Business Journal, Kansas City Star, Topeka Capital-Journal and Wichita Eagle to the Lawrence Journal-World, Manhattan Mercury, Fort Leavenworth Lamp, and Hutchinson News.
“Our division presents incredibly stiff competition,” said Tommy Felts, news director at Startland News. “For our first year of eligibility as new members of the Kansas Press Association, this is a strong and telling showing from our team.”
Each member of the nonprofit newsroom’s three-person reporting team — rounded out by Austin Barnes, programming director, and Channa Steinmetz, reporter — was represented among the award winners.
Startland News counts May 4, 2015 as its official birthday — the date it began covering Kansas City’s startup and innovation communities.
“You’d be forgiven for assuming that our awards this week are for reporting on tech companies,” said Felts. “They actually honor a pretty wide spectrum of news and feature stories about risk-takers and small businesses outside the traditional ‘startup’ label. And that represents an intentional evolution of our content to be more inclusive of the broader Kansas City entrepreneurial community.”
Keep reading for a breakdown of Startland News’ results.
The first place awards for Startland News included:
- Best Environmental Story and Best Story/Picture Combination — “Back-to-basics innovation: How two former vegetarians revived a 5,000-year-old pig breed in the hills of Platte County” (Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts), a multimedia exploration of Odd Bird Farm’s unconventional rural operation that cultivates sustainability among the second-most genetically diverse herd of Mieshan pigs outside of China. (This feature, written by Barnes, also was awarded third place in the Best Agriculture Story category.)
- Best Local Business Story — “I’m Black and a Plaza business owner — in that order; why a Main Street entrepreneur joined KC’s protests” (Tommy Felts), a feature story on serial entrepreneur Isaac Collins’ reaction to the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer and the subsequent, nationwide Black Lives Matter movement that made its way to Kansas City.
- Best Headline Writing — “Booch! (There it is): Tea-Biotics pours onto 39th Street with its first Missouri kombucha taproom”; “Sew you want a fight? Makers across KC mobilize mask production to slow COVID-19 spread”; “To be blunt: Meowijuana sees record sales as COVID sparks deeper bonds for pets, owners” (Tommy Felts), a collection of Startland News headlines from across the year.
Recognition for the stories about Odd Bird Farm and Collins — perhaps best known for his Yogurtini franchises across the metro — are especially significant because they first resonated with readers, Felts said.

Isaac Collins, Yogurtini; Photo courtesy of Amber Baudler and Jamsine Baudler at Stellar Image Studios
Odd Bird ranked No. 9 on Startland News’ list of most-popular stories in 2020, and the Collins feature was the publication’s most-read story in its six-year history.
“And I’d be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge that Isaac Collins’ commentary specifically struck a nerve with readers because of his willingness to be open and candid about his experience as a Black entrepreneur during a massive moment for our country and Kansas City — not necessarily because of the quality of the reporting,” said Felts, who wrote the June 2020 feature. “I appreciate the trust Isaac extended to make that story possible.”
Much of the year’s Startland News coverage focused on the resilience of entrepreneurs and small business owners amid a global pandemic, though judges in the KPA contest also recognized the publication’s stories that had fewer direct ties to COVID.
Additional awards for Startland News included:
- Second place: Best Agricultural Story — “‘Bray of Sunshine’ during dark times: Zen Donkey Farms juices light from lemons” (Austin Barnes)
- Second place: Best Youth Story — “Start with heart: Sisters’ yard signs offer a ‘stepping stone’ to support Black lives” (Channa Steinmetz)
- Third place: Best Series — A trio of stories over six months diving into plans for Walt Disney’s former Laugh-O-gram Studious on Troost (Austin Barnes)
- Third place: Best Story/Picture Combination — “Peek inside Tesseract HQ: Robotics startup builds future in real time (with humans on the brain)” (Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts)
“Our team is built like many startups and small businesses: with a foundation of collaboration,” said Felts, emphasizing the team win for Startland News’ inaugural awards outing. “But that also means we’re leveraging the individual expertise and talents of each member of our newsroom to reach these collective milestones.”
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Former school principal’s SafeDefend active shooter system installed at Jewish Community Center, target of 2014 Overland Park shootings
Every student, teacher and staff member deserves the greatest opportunity to get home from school safely, said Jeff Green, founder of SafeDefend. Green’s security solution — an active shooter response system that sends alerts throughout a school community, as well as detailed information to law enforcement, within seconds of an incident — recently was installed…
H&R Block must reconnect with startup energy, innovation, CEO Jeff Jones says
Jeff Jones’ journey to Kansas City — winding through hangouts with popstar Justin Timberlake, dinner with Oprah, and a stint driving one of the world’s most dominant sharing economy companies — has been transformative, the H&R Block CEO said. And if the homegrown corporate juggernaut he now leads is to meet its stretch potential, the…
From Cake to Google: Musician-turned-tech leader composes career between keyboards
Well into a music career — but noticing friends who were still trying to find gigs to make ends meet — Ben Morss faced a life-altering pivot. “I got sick of it and I turned to programming full time,” said Morss, a developer advocate at Google. “As a musician, I was trying to call people…
Idle Smart posts Series A round with KCRise Fund, multimillion-dollar investment support
A multi-million dollar investment round has Kansas City-grown Idle Smart revving its engine and accelerating toward rapid growth in 2019, revealed Jeff Lynch, company president. “I think it’s a reflection of what the team has been able to create over the past few years,” Lynch said of Idle Smart’s completion of a milestone Series A…


