A Topeka program pays cash to new residents; Now it’s focusing on Latino immigrants

March 7, 2024  |  Dylan Lysen

Choose Topeka officials say interest in the cash incentive to move to the city has spiked among first-generation Latino immigrants. The city's established Spanish-speaking community and resources are a major selling point; photo by Dylan Lysen, KCUR, Kansas News Service

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.

Interest in Choose Topeka’s relocation incentive has spiked among first-generation Latino immigrants; Program officials say the city’s established Spanish-speaking community is a big reason why

TOPEKA — A program that offers cash to people who move to Shawnee County is shifting its efforts to attract Latino immigrants.

The Choose Topeka program that launched in 2019 offers up to $15,000 to each applicant who finds a job and moves to the Topeka area. It’s an economic development effort by Go Topeka, a local public-private partnership.

Bob Ross, a spokesperson for Go Topeka, said program officials realized that Spanish-speaking immigrants appeared to be the most interested in the incentive. Officials then began marketing the program directly to them, including both Spanish-speaking immigrants and Spanish speakers already living in the U.S.

Hispanic and Latino populations are growing rapidly in the state, and Topeka has one of the larger communities. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 16.5 percent of Topeka’s population is Hispanic or Latino, which is roughly 20,000 people.

Ross said that community has been established in Topeka for more than 100 years and is a unique feature for the city.

The city has leaned into that. For instance, the Topeka school district offers dual language education where students learn in both Spanish and English in their classes.

“If you’re a first-generation immigrant and you speak Spanish,” Ross said, “Topeka can be a very welcoming community for you.”

The Latino population in Kansas is expected to continue growing rapidly in the decades to come.

The Kansas Health Institute reports the Hispanic and Latino population is one of the fastest growing groups in the state. The organization also estimates in the next 50 years, the Hispanic and Latino population will quadruple and surpass 1 million residents in Kansas.

The Choose Topeka focus on that population may help Topeka capitalize on that.

Israel Sanchez, director of equity and business development for Go Topeka, works with Spanish-speaking applicants. He said interest spiked among Latinos because of Topeka’s established Spanish-speaking community and resources.

One woman Sanchez worked with said she wanted a Spanish-speaking community where she could discuss business plans in her native language. Sanchez said that is the kind of help Topeka has been focusing on.

“They’re looking for a place that’s friendly, that’s welcoming,” Sanchez said, “but also a place that has resources.”

Anyone who can legally work in the U.S. is eligible for the incentive. It is funded by local employers who pay the upfront relocation costs to new employees. The program then reimburses half of that cost from revenue generated by a county sales tax.

Former Topeka Mayor Michelle De La Isla said the program has been a success. She told KCUR’s “Up To Date” program in 2021 that the community saw an economic boost and applicants were earning an average salary of $87,000.

The cash incentives are awarded to about 60 people per year. But Ross said the marketing of the city’s Spanish-speaking community and resources could lead to a larger influx of Latino residents.

“We’re hoping way more (people) end up coming here without the incentives,” Ross said, “just because they recognize all the values that we offer.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2024 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Nick Carter, Market Wagon

        Can tech save the family farm? E-commerce farmers market plants seeds in Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

        An Indianapolis-based startup is planting seeds of change it hopes can enhance the ways growers and producers get their products into the hands of customers. Kansas Citians are harvesting from it in bushels.  “This is definitely a business of passion for me,” Nick Carter said, recalling his upbringing and days spent on his family’s farm…

        TripleBlind team 2021

        ‘Everybody at TripleBlind is better than me,’ founder says as top startup’s global team firewalls groupthink

        By Tommy Felts | February 8, 2022

        Startup companies are on a continual mission to create, define and own the category in which they operate within, Riddhiman Das noted, and to do so — startup founders must build a proficient team.  “If you’re not the category-defining company, then it’s not as big a win. Categories are typically defined at the global level,…

        Tyler Shane's artisanal chocolate collaboration for Café Corazón

        First bite of Tyler Shane: This spicy new pairing with Westport favorite Café Corazón has cacao lovers going nuts

        By Tommy Felts | February 5, 2022

        ‘I want people to sit down and really have a moment with their chocolate’ When Tyler Shane bites into a piece of chocolate, all of her senses come alive to fully indulge in the experience. “Food, for me, is almost like a religious experience,” she said. After spending seven years at Christopher Elbow Chocolates, the…

        Stephen Hardy, mySidewalk

        mySidewalk CEO: Partnership with National League of Cities will ‘unlock’ hidden data for thousands of communities

        By Tommy Felts | February 4, 2022

        A veteran Kansas City tech startup has partnered with the National League of Cities to help its members “bring actionable data to every community,” mySidewalk’s CEO announced this week. “Together, we will provide data to unlock funding, guide investments, and improve neighborhoods,” said Stephen Hardy, leader of the KC-based govtech company, describing NLC as “the…