Starting a business in KCMO is too expensive, study says; here’s how the city can cut those costs

March 21, 2024  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Nia Richardson, KC BizCare, speaks alongside Jennifer McDonald, Cities Work, during an event celebrating entrepreneurship and revealing Cities Work's study on KCMO; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Entrepreneurs in Kansas City, Missouri, face a higher cost of entry to the world of small business than their peers in St. Louis — or even just across the state line in Kansas City, Kansas, said Jennifer McDonald.

“We look at things like how expensive it is to start a business, how complicated it is, how long the process takes, and what we can do to streamline that process, make it more accessible, more affordable,” said McDonald, project leader for a group called Cities Work that has partnered with the KCMO Small Business Task Force and KC BizCare to help reduce barriers to entrepreneurship.

“So that everybody can realize their dreams of starting a small business,” she explained.

Thalia Cherry, Cherry Co.; Dr. DeAngela Burns-Wallace, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation; Phyllis Hernandez, KCMO Small Business Task Force; Nia Richardson, KC BizCare; and Debra Davis, Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri; pose for a photo together at an event celebrating entrepreneurship and revealing Cities Work’s study on KCMO; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Cities Work — an initiative by the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for Justice and funded by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation — presented its Small Business Insights and Policy Recommendation Report for Kansas City, Missouri, on Wednesday during a public, community event at Rochester Brewing and Roasting Company.

The group partners with cities free of charge to help them identify and then rectify some of the biggest barriers in the regulatory space that entrepreneurs face, according to McDonald, who also serves as assistant director of activism at Institute for Justice. She and other project members researched regulations and interviewed city officials and entrepreneurs to generate their findings.

According to a summary of the report — which was commissioned by the task force — Kansas City is known for its abundance of resources to help small businesses owners, but “this support cannot address a root barrier to entry that nonetheless exists: overly burdensome regulations that make it difficult to start a business.”

“Often, regulatory barriers make the business startup process so expensive and complex that only those with the most resources are able to overcome them — effectively blocking access to entrepreneurship for people from modest backgrounds and difficult  circumstances.”

Click here to read the complete report, which features insights from such entrepreneurs as James Thomas, Brain Freeze Mobile Daiquiri; Lisa Peña, Urban Hikes Kansas City; Gigi Jones,

Gigi’s Vegan & Wellness Cafe; and India Monique, Mattie’s Foods.

Within the report, the Cities Work team detailed eight reform recommendations based on its findings:

  • Reduce compliance costs to entrepreneurs;
  • Eliminate, consolidate, and simplify permits, licenses, and their respective requirements to reduce confusion and resource consumption for both the entrepreneur and the city;
  • Bring clarity and accountability into the inspection process both to prepare applicants and inspectors for the application and to reduce the level of subjectivity in inspections;
  • Remove or address inefficient or confusing department processes and ordinances through a “spring cleaning” efficiency ordinance;
  • Clarify the change of occupancy and change of use processes by publishing a visual chart of the process and engaging with entrepreneurs through an educational outreach campaign;
  • Continue building out the city’s one-stop shop and online tools for entrepreneurs.
  • Increase access to city resources and staff; and
  • Empower city employees to help entrepreneurs and improve communication with entrepreneurs.

“We are making (these recommendations) with the hope that the Small Business Task Force will consider working with the city council to get some of those things implemented to pave the way towards small business ownership for everybody,” McDonald explained.

Jennifer McDonald, Cities Work, presents a report on Kansas City’s affordability and accessibility for entrepreneurs; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

After seeing the recommendations, the task force has already drafted three ordinances to help cut red tape and reduce fees for entrepreneurs in the city, said Wes Rogers, Second District Councilman and chair of the task force.

“This city could be better for entrepreneurs and small businesses and you’re gonna see it,” he told the crowd at Wednesday’s event.

From the archives: Mayor appoints city’s first Small Business Task Force as investment in KC entrepreneurs

The Small Business Task Force — appointed by Mayor Quinton Lucas in October and administered by the KC BizCare office — is made up of members from across the business and civic community, including Rogers; Davin Gordon, program officer for the Hall Family Foundation; Thalia Cherry, CEO and founder of Cherry Co.; Morgan Holecek, assistant to the KCMO city manager; Evan Absher, University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law; Phyllis Hernandez, owner of Sala de Arte; and Christine Lau, operations coordinator for Startland, the parent organization of Startland News.

“We’re really excited that Kansas City is so committed to entrepreneurs,” McDonald noted, “and it has signaled that through the Small Business Task Force.”

Nia Richardson, managing director for the KC BizCare office, said her vision for Kansas City is the “city of entrepreneurs.”

“I want everything here for entrepreneurs,” she explained. “I want you to build here, grow here, work here.”

Check out a photo gallery from Wednesday’s event below.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2024 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Chris Goode, Ruby Jean's Juicery

    Junior Achievement honoring Ruby Jean’s founder with its 2022 KC Innovator Award

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    A group hoping to inspire the next generation of leaders, thinkers and doers has tapped a young entrepreneur with a healthy appetite for expansion as its next KC Innovator Award winner. Chris Goode, founder of Ruby Jean’s Juicery, is set to be honored with the award Nov. 1 during the Junior Achievement of Kansas City’s…

    DJ Stewart, Journey Pro Wrestling

    Put a ring in it: Journey Pro enters the ‘Era of Agnes’ with new location on KC’s East Side

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    Founder combines passion for wrestling, fighting cancer in latest show Every window was broken. A solid foot of trash covered the floor. And there was a strange smell coming from the bathrooms. Yet, DJ Stewart stepped into the abandoned section of the Agnes Arts Center and knew it was going to be the perfect home…

    Norman Kump, Kansas City National Security Campus (KCNSC); Simon Williams; and Venita Thurman, Grandview High School

    Real-world ready: Honeywell partners with local high schools, offering full-time careers to Grandview graduates

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    Simon Williams wasn’t interested in college; he instead saw a professional path after high school that avoided costly and time-wasting diversions. “I just didn’t want to start my career four years later, with almost $100,000 in the hole,” said the recent Grandview graduate and new hire at Honeywell as an assembler adjuster. The U.S. Department…

    Customers line up for an early release of bourbon at Holladay Distillery

    Thirsty fans line up as Weston distillery resurrects pre-Civil War Missouri bourbon

    By Tommy Felts | May 26, 2022

    Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by Flatland, the digital magazine of Kansas City PBS and a fellow member of the KC Media Collective. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly Flatland email newsletter. This is a historic moment for the folks at Holladay Distillery in Weston, Missouri, and also a big deal…