Resource revival: Digital Inclusion Fund relaunches with initial grants focused on devices

May 7, 2024  |  Startland News Staff

Photo courtesy of Surface, unsplash

Kansas Citians can’t upgrade skills or devices they don’t already have, said organizers of a newly relaunched Digital Inclusion Fund — emphasizing a need to attack the metro’s digital divide at the infrastructure level.

The fund is set to award up to $250,000 to 501(c)(3) public charities (including schools and churches) or governmental entities across three grant cycles in 2024, starting with devices grants. Applications open June 3.

“There is an ongoing need for devices, both at an individual level and a shared-use level,” organizers of the fund said in a press release. “Devices are a prerequisite for participating in digital life and are a fixed, hard cost that providers often don’t have the budget to cover.”

Click here for more information on the fund, which is led by KC Digital Drive and administered by the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation, with initial support from the Health Forward Foundation, Kauffman Foundation, Kansas Health Foundation and Google Fiber.

The second cycle of the Digital Inclusion Fund is expected to offer IT support grants (opening Aug. 1), followed by New Courses Grants (Oct. 1).

Each cycle has its own request for applications, application requirements and evaluation criteria. KC Digital Drive will provide applicant support through informational events, office hours and 1:1 assistance leading up to each grant cycle; and will provide tech support, and evaluation and reporting assistance to all grantees. 

Aaron Deacon, KC Digital Drive, sits on stage during a 2022 event celebrating KC Digital Drive’s 10th anniversary; Photo by Channa Steinmetz, Startland News

“The digital divide continues to be a persistent barrier to participation in society in all its forms — from workforce and the economy to social and cultural life, from democracy and political decision-making, to education and healthcare,” said Aaron Deacon, managing director of KC Digital Drive.

“Digital inclusion is a compounding challenge bound up with many other barriers to participation in society — and technology and access alone will not resolve these issues,” he continued. “The fund aims to advance a more systemic strategy toward addressing the digital divide by filling specific programmatic gaps and signaling strong ongoing community commitment to the issue; and to attract new local money to this cause beyond existing funders, further strengthening the region’s competitiveness for state and federal dollars.”

Originally established in 2013 to address digital literacy and technology access, the Digital Inclusion Fund previously provided just under $1 million to 33 grantees over five cycles with funding from Google Fiber (or GFiber), the Sprint Foundation, The Illig Family Foundation, Polsinelli, Global Prairie and JE Dunn.

ICYMI: 10 years later: Google Fiber boosted city’s ‘capacity for collaboration,’ former mayor says

Now, based on findings from a recent funding landscape analysis white paper, KC Digital Drive is picking up where the former fund left off.

The relaunched fund aims to support 501(c)(3) public charities, educational or governmental entities that focus on digital inclusion access, affordability and adoption to increase participation in digital society for Kansas City’s most underserved and/or disconnected residents.

In addition to leadership from KC Digital Drive and the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation, the fund boasts an advisory council that includes Dred Scott, president of the Civic Council of Greater Kansas City; CiCi Rojas, president of Tico Productions; Adriana Pecina, impact strategist at Health Forward Foundation; and Rachel Merlo, head of government and community affairs (Central + OC, CA), GFiber. 

“This is all about digital infrastructure in communities, and I’m most excited to see how this will impact grass-roots community organizations and help them to demonstrate the social impact of digital inclusion, and prove and improve year over year,” said Pecina.

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

        Pitch contest winners salute PHKC as fourth cohort wraps; $15K in prizes awarded to small businesses

        By Tommy Felts | June 22, 2023

        A winning night at The Porter House KC’s pitch event this week expands opportunity for more than just the company taking home the biggest check, said Taylor Burris. AI Hub — led by Burris and her husband, James Spikes — earned first place and $8,000 in the competition, which also marked the completion of PHKC’s…

        KCRise Fund closes $34M Fund III with ‘hyper-local’ focus; Here are its first four investments

        By Tommy Felts | June 22, 2023

        A third venture capital fund — expected to invest $34 million in 20 more tech startups across the Kansas City region — builds on KCRise Fund’s thesis that high-growth local companies are the key to investor success, said Ed Frindt. It’s a competitive advantage that swells with each wave of funding, he added, announcing the…

        These makers and vendors aren’t buying the scarcity mindset: ‘There’s a way for us all to eat’

        By Tommy Felts | June 21, 2023

        A new vendor fair aims to unite people from all corners of the city and promote collaboration among the local vendor community, said entrepreneur and event organizer Dontavious Young. “I see a lot of events in Kansas City that are geared toward a specific type of crowd, or a specific type of culture, or a…

        $16M round for health tech startup growing AI agents to perform administrative tasks

        By Tommy Felts | June 21, 2023

        A Seattle company with a talent hub in Kansas City announced Wednesday a $16 million seed round that includes investment from KCRise Fund and a promise to leverage conversational artificial intelligence alongside human talent to boost workplace productivity. Outbound AI emerged from stealth mode in 2022 to a market hungry for solutions, said Stead Burwell,…