New focus will offer jobs to formerly incarcerated people on the path to second chance entrepreneurship, says nonprofit

June 23, 2022  |  Matthew Gwin

Jamon Buford and Kyle J. Benson-Smith, Strong Start Make Readies, Determination, Incorporated

Kansas City-based Determination, Incorporated is refocusing its mission with a new social enterprise business that will directly place formerly incarcerated individuals into employment soon after they return home.

Strong Start Make Readies is expected to provide jobs to people exiting incarceration as members of make ready crews at Kansas City area apartment complexes, single-family rental properties, and affordable housing units. A make ready crew is responsible for cleaning, painting, and making minor repairs between the leases of a rental unit.

Determination, Incorporated will continue supporting formerly incarcerated entrepreneurs to create their own small businesses, but has adjusted its mission to also focus on employment, specifically in home building, home improvement, and affordable housing.

“The reality in working with people in re-entry is that it’s important to keep employment and entrepreneurship on the table, and on the table at the same time,” said Kyle J. Benson-Smith, founder and executive director of Determination, Incorporated.

“Because right when you come home from prison, most people are not in a position to jump into their businesses full-time, but they are in a position to start working at a business and doing other things to work toward their entrepreneurial goals,” Benson-Smith added.

Strong Start Make Readies — which begins its pilot program this summer — will serve three purposes for Determination, Incorporated: to hire people quickly after incarceration, to create earned revenue to support the nonprofit’s mission, and to build relationships that benefit second chance entrepreneurs.

“We were getting a lot of people coming to us with service-based businesses in and around residential construction,” Benson-Smith said. “We just saw an opportunity there to better serve our second chance entrepreneur community, and to meet a need out in the community with the lack of qualified contractors that exist.”

WATCH: Determination, Incorporated founder Kyle J. Benson-Smith unveils refocused mission and Strong Start Make Readies

Because of the refocused mission and emphasis on service-based trades, Determination, Incorporated will also move into the Trades CoWork space at 17th and Troost when it opens later this year.

William Hayes, Trades CoWork

William Hayes, Trades CoWork

Founder William Hayes said the new direction made Determination, Incorporated a perfect match for Trades CoWork, which is dedicated exclusively to members of the trades industry.

“Our network of contractors will be able to help them, because we’re trying to develop an ecosystem of small contractors who work together,” Hayes said. “As [formerly incarcerated workers] start to prove themselves, we can start helping them build their own companies.”

Fittingly, second chance entrepreneur Jamon Buford, owner of Good Brothers Construction and Remodeling, agreed to serve as the foreman and field supervisor for Strong Start Make Readies.

Buford has been incarcerated three times, most recently serving seven years for federal drug charges. Upon his release in 2019, Buford’s ex-wife connected him to Determination, Incorporated and the Rise Up, Get Started entrepreneurship matching grant program.

Now that he’s succeeded in starting his own business, Buford wants to provide his time and expertise to the Strong Start Make Readies, and also provide inspiration to others who are trying to follow in his footsteps.

“I don’t have the money, but I have time,” Buford said. “I want to help. I want to be the inspiration to these guys, because we probably have a lot of similarities.”

Buford said that Strong Start Make Readies is an ideal landing spot for formerly incarcerated individuals as they re-enter society, and noted that these skills could travel.

“It’s not just having a job, but it gives them a platform,” Buford said. “They get a chance to see the types of responsibilities that go into having a business, like being accountable.”

READ: Transcript of Jamon Buford’s presentation to the Kansas City Chamber of Commerce Centurions Leadership program on July 13, 2021

The social enterprise business model — which Benson-Smith described as market opportunity meeting a social need — has actually been part of the plan for Determination, Incorporated since its founding in 2018.

“It’s been funny looking back on the plans I was writing in 2017 and 2018, because I would have been right on track if instead of writing, ‘2020: start social enterprise business,’ I had written, ‘2020: international pandemic,’” Benson-Smith said.

Despite the delay, he expressed excitement about finally creating a “for purpose” business.

“If I just wanted to create for myself a fundraising job, I would have worked for another nonprofit,” Benson-Smith said. “There are plenty of nonprofits that need fundraising support, and I could have taken those jobs, but I got into starting Determination, Incorporated with this being one of the things I was most looking forward to, and the experiment I was most interested in doing.”

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

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Adrienne Haynes, SEED Law

    Opening KC to black entrepreneurs begins with teaching startup lingo, tearing down walls

    By Tommy Felts | November 19, 2018

    Most entrepreneurs operate within silos, said Adrienne Haynes, noting that black-run startups face particular — though not insurmountable — challenges becoming embedded in the Kansas City startup scene. Seemingly approachable community events and coworking spaces aren’t always as open as organizers think, added Quest Moffat, founder of Project United Knowledge, joining Haynes and Donald Hawkins,…

    failure

    Facing failure? Think about the bad ideas first

    By Tommy Felts | November 17, 2018

    Entrepreneurs need to stop glamorizing the startup world, and recognize the inevitable burnout or failure involved, said Danielle Lehman. Lehman, founder of Kansas City-based consulting firm Boxer & Mutt, knows about failure, she told a crowd Friday at Global Entrepreneurship Week, noting a list of startups that she was involved in, including MySpace, that didn’t…

    Ann O’Meara, Fantastic 55, seniorpreneurs

    ‘Don’t shut yourself off’: Seniorpreneurs reveal power in age, experience, savings

    By Tommy Felts | November 17, 2018

    Figure out what you love to do and monetize it, Ann O’Meara told a room of entrepreneurs looking for advice on starting their second act after retirement. Seniorpreneurs — entrepreneurs over the age of 50 — are working to turn their lifelong hobbies into cash flow, O’Meara, CEO of Fantastic 55, revealed during a Global…

    Matthew Condon, Bardavon, Clete Brewer, NewRoad Capital Partners, and Paul Morris, Bardavon

    Bardavon bid to revolutionize workers’ compensation just got a $15 million boost

    By Tommy Felts | November 17, 2018

    Timing is everything, said Matt Condon, announcing this week $15 million in new financing to help scale his Overland Park-based company’s reach into markets from coast to coast. “Our national expansion is coming at a time when employers across the country are recognizing that they must play a lead role in the transformation of health…