KC Biohub leader bullish on Tech Hubs funding after region missing from latest grants list
January 14, 2025 | Startland News Staff
Kansas City is still in the running for a chunk of the remaining $280 million in expected funding for federal Tech Hubs implementation grants, said Melissa Roberts Chapman, emphasizing the region remains primed and competitive in the process despite the KC BioHub not being among the latest awardees announced by the program.
Six other projects — including $29 million for a critical mineral processing effort led by the University of Missouri System — were awarded shares of $210 million Tuesday through the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Administration (EDA)’s Tech Hubs initiative — a flagship program of the Biden-Harris Administration aimed at advancing U.S. leadership in technologies and industries critical to national security.
“While this is a disappointing development for the KC BioHub, it does not change our belief that our work will be in the top tier of competitiveness when we are given an opportunity to revise it,” said Roberts Chapman, president and regional innovation officer for KC BioHub, in a message to supporters of the regional biotech campaign.
KC BioHub aims to strengthen the domestic production of critical vaccines and preventative technologies while nurturing collaboration across various sectors. This effort will position the Kansas City region as a leader in biologics and biomanufacturing, ensuring the U.S. plays a vital role in global health security, according to the initiative.
“[Tuesday’s announcement] does not change our knowledge that this work is worthy of many different kinds of support, including Tech Hubs funding,” Roberts Chapman added.
The EDA designated the KC BioHub — a coalition led by the BioNexus KC — as a Tech Hub in October 2023. Groups backing the initiative joined forces this spring to submit a $75 million funding proposal via the Tech Hubs program. While the plan failed to gain traction in Washington, D.C., the KC BioHub in July was awarded $500,000 in federal dollars to keep the effort moving forward.
A revised KC BioHub proposal was submitted to the EDA in late 2024, but the latest round of funding announced Tuesday was based on submissions from applications nearly a year ago, said Roberts Chapman, meaning KC BioHub is still in consideration for future awards.

Melissa Roberts Chapman, president and regional innovation officer for KC BioHub, center, discusses Kansas City economic opportunities during a September 2024 Back2KC event; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
Because regional leaders incorporated the EDA’s feedback into the KC BioHub’s late 2024 proposal, she continued, Roberts Chapman is confident their previous concerns have been addressed, positioning the application for success.
“The EDA will run another call for proposals later this year — open to designees that have not yet received implementation funding — to deploy the remaining $280 million in expected funding,” she said. “We are working extremely hard to be among the awardees announced at that time.”
The KC BioHub also is moving aggressively to ensure that its work is funded more broadly than by the Tech Hubs competition alone, Roberts Chapman added.
“While it’s OK to be disappointed by this setback, we are all in control of what happens next,” she continued. “We can choose to stay focused, keep working hard, and stay optimistic about the future, as I truly am. Our region and our country need our efforts to succeed, and we have a lot more work to do.”

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Mother stresses lack of parental consent for school devices amid privacy, development worries
[Editor’s note: The following is part of a limited Startland series, exploring parent advocates’ objections to 1:1 technology initiatives, which typically put a tablet device in the hands of each student and are popularly used as classroom innovation models across Kansas City and the nation.] Digital dangers are lurking in Shawnee Mission classrooms, as schools…
Questioning 1:1 initiatives: Tech devices don’t equal innovation, disillusioned parents argue
[Editor’s note: The following is part of a limited Startland series, exploring parent advocates’ objections to 1:1 technology initiatives, which typically put a tablet device in the hands of each student and are popularly used as classroom innovation models across Kansas City and the nation.] A $20 million investment in tech-forward learning environments for the…
New Recruit self-service event staffing platform puts KC’s PopBookings in the big game
While the Kansas City Chiefs might have narrowly missed their shot at the 2019 Super Bowl, the city was well represented as a source for event staffing at the game, revealed Erika Klotz, noting the power of Recruit, a new product from KC-based PopBookings. A client used the self-service platform to book 288 shifts for…
KCultivator Q&A: Nia Richardson an architect of startup support ‘born, made and raised on Prospect’
Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. Experience the world, engage with community, and execute ideas to get ahead — not only in life, but in building a legacy that stands the test of time, said Nia Richardson. A product of Kansas City Public…

