Cafe finds kinship with KCK entrepreneur, sourcing coffee expertise amid celebration of Black excellence

February 24, 2023  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

TJ Roberts, Kinship Cafe, speaks at BlendWell Community Cafe, during a Black History Month event

The evolution of a 107-year-old eastern Jackson County service organization is still brewing in Independence as BlendWell Community Cafe pours coffee and deeper connections through a celebration of diversity — and partnership with an entrepreneur across the state line who shares its mission, said Doug Cowan.

“In 2015, we bought this building and we started talking to the community — and it wasn’t the elected officials — it was the people who live here. Nobody said please open another food pantry. Nobody said please open a thrift store. They said our neighborhood is a shell of what it used to be. It’s payday loans and buy-here, pay-here car lots. We want nice places to gather,” said Cowan, CEO of Community Services League, which operates the new BlendWell Community Cafe.

Doug Cowan, Community Services League

“And it was then the light bulb went off about the opportunity to engage in something like a coffee shop that would anchor this,” he continued, describing the origins of BlendWell, which opened in 2018.

The BlendWell building at 10725 East US 24 Highway is also home to CSL’s WorkLife Center, which connects community members to career opportunities to help them build financial stability. CSL provides services like rental assistance, job training, and food pantries, and in the past 15 years, the organization has progressed to address the root causes of poverty by moving from transactional to transformational impact in individual’s lives.

BlendWell’s “Cultural Connections” series takes that mission to the people; this month, hoping to draw in more community members with a Black excellence art exhibit and other events, including children’s story time and book signing with Brittany Toney — local author of the toddler series “Big Emotions in a Big World” — on Feb. 25.

The cafe also is planning events for Women’s History Month, Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, Hispanic Heritage Month, and Pride Month.

“I’ve had the good fortune to live in Independence for 40 years, and the strength of our community in the year 2023 — and beyond— is our diversity,” Cowan said. “But I do recognize that diversification of a community can be a challenging thing to work toward. (Cultural Connections is) where we exist to be a platform to share stories with people, share art, bring culture into the community, to share voices that maybe in the past were relegated to the side.”

TJ Roberts, Kinship Cafe, and and Jennifer Manuleleua, vice president of community development fo CSL, speak at BlendWell Community Cafe, during a Black History Month event

As part of the cafe’s Black History Month celebration, KCK’s Kinship Cafe — owned by TJ Roberts — is providing the coffee on tap. A coffee tasting and Q&A session with Roberts, as well as live music, kicked off the month.

Related: Why KCK’s ‘dopest, 7-fingered, adopted, biracial business owner’ is serving kinship, coffee at his new cafe

Cowan, who said the cafe is already partnering with Independence bakery Eclairs De La Lune for the pastries, is hopeful the partnership with Kinship will extend well beyond this one month. The connection with Roberts and Kinship feels natural, he noted.

“TJ is right down the road,” he added. “When you’re a struggling community economically, you’ve got to keep your money local. We have no margin to not. What we have to do is raise people up and keep our money in the neighborhood and lift people up. We can’t just lift people up socially, we have to lift them up economically. … (BlendWell and Kinship are) kind of swimming in the same waters of building communities — that’s what we do.”

Click here to read more about Eclairs De La Lune.

Just like at BlendWell, Roberts said, Kinship — where he is working to create a wholly Black coffee supply chain — is more than just coffee. Kinship also offers events; like hip hop yoga, meditation, and other events for those who are trying to heal from trauma. After doing some research on CSL’s work and seeing the alignment with Kinship, he said, it was an easy yes on his part.

“Because just like us, you have a space and you want to utilize it for the community,” Roberts said. “Continuing to see people grow and develop and help equip them with skills and talents and things that they need to be prosperous communities that they live in, that’s an important factor to us. And it’s really important to (CSL).”

TJ Roberts, Kinship Cafe

Roberts noted he also appreciated the “heart posture” of the CSL leadership when they approached him about a partnership in the fall. They viewed him as the expert who could teach them what they needed to know about coffee — much different than when he worked in the insurance industry and had to constantly provide his credentials to try to convince others to work with him, he said.

“That was something that I actually respected a lot about them when they met with me in November before Thanksgiving and said, ‘We really want your coffee,’” he explained. “And it was me that said why not Black History Month? And they said, ‘That’s great, but we also need a lot of other help that pertains to coffee.’ … They didn’t hold my color or how new we were to the coffee industry (against me), they were like, ‘You’re the pro. You tell us.’ So that was a great start to our working relationship.”

Artist Leonard Le’Doux at BlendWell Community Cafe during a Black History Month event

The Black Excellence art exhibit— for which BlendWell took submissions — will be on display through March 3. Raytown artist Leonard Le’Doux— who has been an artist in Kansas City for more than 50 years and has his paintings on display at several places around town, including the Jones Gallery during February — was approached about addings several of his paintings to the exhibit.

“I think it’s pretty good to have it in a place like this where people can see that art does make sense and that you can make money on art,” Ledoux said. “And stop telling kids that they can’t get a degree in art because they’re not going to make any money.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Biz class to barista: UMKC student’s mobile matcha cart hand-whisks crowds of thirsty fans

    By Tommy Felts | November 10, 2025

    Editor’s note: The following story was published by KCUR, Kansas City’s NPR member station, and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for KCUR’s email newsletter. HerCafe, a matcha business founded by a University of Missouri-Kansas City student and her friend, has found success with its weekend…

    Tim Tebow to entrepreneurs: Embrace the heavy lift if you want to reap life’s real profits

    By Tommy Felts | November 7, 2025

    COLUMBIA, Mo. — Business should be about driving impact, not just scoring another win, said former NFL quarterback Tim Tebow — challenging Midwest entrepreneurs, community builders, and investors to consider outcomes that boost others, not just one’s personal pocketbook. “Probably everybody in this room has been super blessed with skill sets, resources, relationships, opportunities, companies,…

    Here’s how a Prospect renewal project invests in both those who built KC and the city’s future

    By Tommy Felts | November 7, 2025

    Economic development initiatives are measured not just in buildings, but in opportunity, said Melissa Patterson Hazley, lauding the use of the Central City Economic Development (CCED) Sales Tax Program to transform underutilized parcels in Kansas City into modern, energy-efficient housing that support long-term neighborhood vitality. “Projects like Prospect Summit represent the intentional work of making…

    Fusing talent, passion: Serial founder trades his Screamin Cow for offshore talent hiring platform 

    By Tommy Felts | November 6, 2025

    Brad Starnes’ itch to lean into a newly realized pain point at the end of 2024 led to the acquisition of his Screamin Cow Marketing Group and the launch of another passion project, the former UMKC Student Entrepreneur of the Year shared. With the move — which sees Screamin Cow transitioned to Builders of Authority…