Initiative to employ at-risk KC youth provides jobs for 427 teens, raises $600K for stipend fund
July 24, 2021 | Channa Steinmetz
A community’s most impactful investment is in its youth, Mayor Quinton Lucas said Friday during a media event for the Working for Youth anti-violence and youth employment initiative.
In April, the mayor’s office announced a partnership with KC Common Good, Hire KC and Entrepreneurship KC to establish the Working for Youth program that would train and employ teens most at risk of violence in Kansas City. Since then, 427 teens from ages 14 to 18 have been employed through 89 local employers — providing both virtual and in-person paid jobs.
“I want to really thank our young people,” Lucas said, “who have taken on hundreds of opportunities to learn, to grow, to see career paths that are interesting to them and to be professionals who make a difference in the city.”
Click here to read more about the Working for Youth initiative efforts.
Local students Akilah Walker and Tyi’Ronn Hency shared their experiences as part of the Working for Youth initiative and how it helped them discover their likes, dislikes and sources of passion.
“I’ve grown quite an interest for HR,” Walker said in regard to her internship with KC Pet Project. “… One of my favorite things, I would say, is probably helping people through HR — it’s kind of like a workplace therapist.”
KC Pet Project hired 13 summer interns within the Working for Youth program, said Kimberly Washington, who serves as the director of Human Resources for KC Pet Project.
“We instantly knew that we needed to be a part of this program,” Washington said, noting that she sees it as a strong avenue to hiring future employees. “… We have students working under our canine and feline specialists, in our pet support center and in our social media and development departments.”
A handful of the other 88 employers include: American Jazz Museum, Artisan Technology Group, Children’s Mercy, Dental Dental, Do More Good, Launch Code, Greater Missouri Leadership Foundation, Heartland Chamber Music, Nourish KC, and The Sewing Labs.
Working For Youth also partnered with 33 community partners, such as CommunityAmerica Credit Union, which is providing financial literacy training and bank accounts for program participants, and The DeBruce Foundation, which is giving participants access to its Agile Work Profiler solution.
“[It’s] an online survey for individuals to discover their strengths and interests and how those line up with work activities,” said Leigh Anne Taylor Knight, who serves as the executive director and chief operating officer for The Debruce Foundation. “It is a great first step toward career literacy, which can help them set up for long term success.”
Click here to learn more about the Agile Work Profiler from DeBruce.
The Working for Youth program has raised $600,000 in two months, according to a press release. It has been a grassroots effort almost entirely community-funded, with a continuing goal of raising $1 million by next year.
Regardless of one’s background and zip code, all students deserve to be set up for success, said Jennifer Collier, the deputy superintendent of Kansas City Public Schools.
“We hope that this [program] is just the beginning,” Collier said. “Our students need more of these opportunities to have paid work experiences in their own community. Our students need this, and they deserve it.”
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

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC-based Contract Canvas earns finalist slot for WeWork Creator Awards in Nashville
Returning to WeWork’s Creator Awards to pitch Contract Canvas was a defining moment for Chris Brown, as well as the year-old legal startup, he said. “I worked harder on this pitch than perhaps any pitch I’ve ever given,” said Brown, hours after a flight back from meeting with Creator Awards judges in New York City…
LaunchKC nets 32 percent gain in tech startups vying for $500K in prizes; selection under way
LaunchKC is off to the races toward its fourth annual, national grants competition for tech entrepreneurs. The program attracts hundreds of tech entrepreneurs each year – including a 32 percent increase and a near-record 586 applicants this year — to compete for up to $500,000 in grants and an opportunity to build and grow their…
First down for Healthy Hip Hop: Roy Scott teams with Champ for game-changing reboot
If it’s making money, don’t give up on it, said Roy Scott, rapper-turned-founder of Healthy Hip Hop. A new partnership with Champ System — a growing Kansas City sports apparel company with a popular hip hop-inspired mascot — will keep the performance- and tech-based startup in school gymnasiums and beyond as Scott’s company continues a…
SquareOffs public polling pilot with Oregon TV station could be a new niche
Opinions are constant, said Jeff Rohr, CEO of the Kansas City startup SquareOffs. As social media consumers look for new ways to voice a plethora of differing views, Rohr said he and his company have inked a major deal with News-Press and Gazette Co. (NPG), that could overhaul the public polling conducted by local news…





