Catalyst Fund tops $2M invested in nonprofits boosting people of color; meet the latest grantees
July 10, 2024 | Startland News Staff
The latest batch of Catalyst Fund grants — a combined $500,000 across nearly two dozen organizations — seeks to elevate the work of small nonprofits that are led by or primarily serve Black, Latino, and other people of color across the region, said Dr. DeAngela Burns-Wallace.
“Looking across the list of organizations in this third round of funding, we see front-line operators with everyday commitments to serving individuals, breaking through persistent barriers, and reshaping the landscape of Kansas City,” said Burns-Wallace, president and CEO of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which coordinates the fund with the United Way of Greater Kansas City.
ICYMI: How Kauffman Foundation’s reset aligns Mr. K’s intent with KC’s needs of the moment
Established in February 2023, the fund now has boosted 88 organizations, which received grants ranging from $5,000 to $50,000 each, totaling $2.1 million. Recipients are 501(c)(3) public charities in the local United Way’s six-county service area that support education, human services, entrepreneurship, workforce skill building, economic mobility and community development.
Click here to read about one new Catalyst Fund grantee who recently was featured on “The Kelly Clarkson Show.”
“The investments made possible through the Nonprofit Catalyst Fund are truly life-changing and provide a major impact to these organizations,” said Essence Yancey, director of community impact for the United Way of Greater Kansas City. “A connection to United Way is a powerful megaphone to amplify their work, and these additional financial resources allow them to add staff, create new and sustain existing programming, and to build resiliency that makes a tangible difference in the lives of our fellow Kansas Citians.”
Nonprofit organizations — particularly smaller organizations with strong ties to the communities they serve — are significant contributors to an equitable and inclusive economic development system, not only as employers and community conveners, but also in the delivery of critical programs and services that promote inclusive prosperity, the leader said.
Newly announced Catalyst Fund grantees include:
- Art as Mentorship, Kansas City, Missouri (youth development, entrepreneurship)
- Bluford Healthcare Leadership Institute, Kansas City, Missouri (workforce development, healthcare advocacy)
- Center of Grace, Olathe, Kansas (financial security, life skills training)
- Communities Creating Opportunity, Kansas City, Missouri (financial security, community development)
- Decarcerate KC, Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- Fathers Assisting Mothers Inc., Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- Full Throttle Foundation KC, Kansas City, Kansas (human services)
- Green Acres Farm & Research Project, Kansas City, Missouri (human services, community development)
- Kansas City Dream Center, Kansas City, Kansas (human services)
- Kansas City Women in Technology, Kansas City, Missouri (education, workforce development)
- Korean American Society of Greater KC, Overland Park, Kansas (human services)
- Next Paige Foundation, Kansas City, Missouri (youth development)
- Poetry for Personal Power, Kansas City, Kansas (human services)
- Reaching Out from Within, Kansas City, Kansas (human services)
- Redemptorist Social Services Center, Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- River of Refuge, Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- Ryogoku Soccer Academy, Kansas City, Missouri (youth development)
- Santa Fe Area Council, Kansas City, Missouri (community development)
- Seeing Yourself in Science dba RW2 Career & Technical Education, Lee’s Summit, Missouri (workforce development, tech education)
- Soul of Santa Do Good Foundation, Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- The Kansas City Defender, Kansas City, Missouri (human services)
- Urban Technology Empowered Communities Urban TEC, Kansas City, Missouri (education, workforce development)
- Youth Ambassadors, Kansas City, Missouri (education, workforce development)
Click here to read about the first round of Catalyst Fund winners and here for the second round.
Featured Business

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Thai Orchid opens Northland location with homey street food set to wow its new neighbors
Even though the new Thai Orchid restaurant in Kansas City’s Northland proudly pays homage to the Rojjanasrirat family’s culinary legacy in Mission, its second-generation owner wants to shock the taste buds of diners who are unfamiliar with the business’ story. “I want the reaction of the people who try our food to be, ‘Wow! That’s…
C2FO accesses $30M investment with World Bank-backed IFC to expand KC firm’s working capital platform
A just-announced capital infusion for Leawood-built C2FO reflects a shared commitment with global partners to boosting jobs and strengthening economic opportunities — notably for micro, small and medium enterprises in emerging markets worldwide. The $30 million funding round features investment from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, and existing…
Park capping I-670 gets an official name: South Loop project to honor longtime Republican bridge-builder
Kansas City’s high-profile South Loop Project — a proposed sustainable urban park capping a portion of I-670 — now has a name that pays homage to a leader who played a key role in launching the project: Roy Blunt Luminary Park. “As a working title, the South Loop Project has served us well,” said Jeff…
Not just a pet project: Why this KC e-commerce team adopted a dog supplement brand as its own
The Morgans — the family behind Marknology, a bootstrapped digital marketing firm specializing in Amazon sales — are taking a dog supplement brand that they built as a client to the next level now as owners, they shared. Waggedy — veterinarian-formulated supplements to keep dogs healthy and active, launched by Ben Bellinson in 2015 in…
