If support for LGBT employees doesn’t seem obvious, this new chamber leader would like a word
December 22, 2023 | Tommy Felts
Kansas City’s LGBTQ+ community shouldn’t have to face its battles alone, said Tracey DeMarea, emphasizing the impact of allyship and the growing need for stronger support from the region’s business community — regardless of whether a company considers itself LGBT-owned.
“Equity isn’t just an issue for businesses that know they have LGBT leadership or employees,” said DeMarea, who began work as the new executive director of the Mid-America LGBT Chamber of Commerce on Monday. “Companies need to be showing that they offer a welcoming, safe place for members of the LGBT community to come and work.”
“They should be communicating these values from the top — not just for recruiting; but because they don’t necessarily know how all their employees privately identify themselves,” she continued. “They don’t know how their children, family members and friends identify; they don’t know what challenges people might be facing at home in their family unit — and how their choices as a business can either help or hurt them.”
Click here to learn more about the Mid-America LGBT Chamber of Commerce.
DeMarea — who comes to the LGBT Chamber with a wealth of experience serving non-profit professional organizations — acknowledges her own privilege as a straight, married, white woman, she said. The key is to embrace that perspective with honesty and open eyes to see contrasts with the life experiences of members of the LGBT community, DeMarea added.
“They face concerns that straight white people just don’t think about — that they never even have to think about,” she said, noting that the empathy required of true allyship doesn’t end with understanding, but demands vocal advocacy.
“We must not stand by silently while equity is being challenged,” said DeMarea, who succeeds former Independence mayor Eileen Weir, the chamber’s interim leader after the departure of Suzanne Wheeler earlier this year.
Click here to read more about DeMarea’ non-profit experience, including her role as executive director of the Johnson County Bar Association.
As the LGBT Chamber’s new leader, DeMarea plans to work with its team of volunteers to boost membership from within Kansas City-area businesses whose owners or executives might not consider themselves an obvious fit.
“I’m here to tell them that prioritizing joining the chamber is about prioritizing people,” DeMarea said. “And as much as we want them to understand that standing alongside the LGBT community is brilliant and will bring immense value to their business — whether it’s a small company or corporation — it also brings value to their employees and their families.”
“We have massive room to grow,” she added. “And the more we grow, the greater value we’ll bring to Kansas City.”
During her seven years at the Johnson County Bar Association — a 501(c)(6) organization with more than 1,200 members — DeMarea is credited with helping increase member benefits, as well as networking and social events; developing a business partnership program that generated additional non-dues revenue; leading the creation of a DEI five-year strategic plan; and raising more than $100,000 for a capital campaign to move the bar association’s offices to Overland Park.
DeMarea, who immigrated to the United States in 2007 from England, is married to Andy DeMarea, a trial lawyer and partner at Forsgren Fisher McCalmont DeMarea Tysver LLP, and has two stepchildren: Alex, an industrial engineer with Deloitte, and Mia, an accounting student at the University of Kansas.
Beyond her newly announced work at the LGBT chamber, DeMarea volunteers and cooks for 60 people twice a month for Uplift, a mobile street outreach organization for the homeless in Kansas City. She also is a member of the Central Exchange board of directors, a 501(c)(6) that supports and encourages women in all sectors of business.
She became a U.S. citizen in May 2021, finding inspiration in the Black Lives Matter movement and social justice causes where her vote and voice could help move the needle, she said.
“I had been missing my vote,” DeMarea said. “And I thought, ‘If I come in, and you’re going to give me citizenship, then I’m coming in loud!’ Because these are issues I’m incredibly passionate about.”

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Former C2FO manager creates AI data analyst to usher in a new way of making business decisions
Tyler Amundsen is set on building a future where every professional uses artificial intelligence to make better decisions, faster, he said. “With humans, AI and computers working together, we can achieve truly mind-blowing things, and we’re just at the beginning of it. … We’re at a point in the world where AI can tell whether…
KC, Wichita, Topeka startups earn share of $100K as K-State accelerator spreads prize money across region
MANHATTAN — A demo day with $100,000 on the line culminated in a Kansas City startup leaving the stage with the event’s second-highest winnings. Poshed on the Go earned $23,500 in funding Thursday from the Kansas State University Accelerator program, coming in just behind the grand-prize winner, PillReady, Wichita, with $36,000. The Shawnee-based company is…
Fresh start: Selfie studio goes mobile, reimagining its FOMO factory as a custom experience
Fresh Factory KC is evolving, founder India Wells-Carter shared, embracing change as she re-evaluates where and how her camera-ready venture can help shine the brightest light on Kansas City. After a year and a half in its brick-and-mortar location at the Zona Rosa shopping center, Fresh Factory KC has uprooted and gone mobile, bringing the…




