Give Black aims for $500K in Juneteenth donations; organizers say public urgency to support Black businesses dropping

June 13, 2022  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Black-led and Black-serving organizations are expected to get a boost this week in the runup to Juneteenth as the Give Black campaign returns in its third year.

Organized byKansas City GIFT (Generating Income For Tomorrow) and BeGreat Together, the campaign runs June 13-18 with a goal to raise $500,000. New this year: Give Black also is working in partnership with the United Way.

“We do this every year because the problems facing Kansas City — specifically Kansas City’s east side — are multifaceted,” said Brandon Calloway, co-founder and CEO of GIFT. “The people that are closest to the problem are often closest to the solution. And Black-led nonprofits, even though we’re often close to the problem and closer to the solution, we are historically underfunded.”

With his work in nonprofits and fundraising, Calloway has seen first-hand the lack of investment in these organizations, he said.

“Black-led nonprofits do not get funded to the same level that non-Black-led nonprofits get funded to,” he added. “These organizations are often the ones that are doing direct impact work (and) that are making the change. So their ability to do good is limited by their ability to bring in funds.”

This year’s fundraising campaign will benefit five Black-led organizations: The Future of Us, MOS (Mastery of Self), SWAGG INC (Serve Witness And Give Guidance, Inspiration Never Ceases), GIFT, and BeGreat Together. Each serves the Black community, either in areas of education, mental health, crime reduction, income, or employment.

“By bringing together all of these organizations that do many different things to uplift the Black community and specifically the area of the city that needs it most, we’re trying to make a big collective dent and provide a flourishing East Side,” Calloway explained.

Leaders of the organizations planned to promote the campaign this week through the news and social media. A donor banquet is set for June 16 at the Shield Club event space at Children’s Mercy Park to shine a spotlight on the organizations and the work they are doing.

“It’s an opportunity to really have a collective of voices around a breadth of issues that Black communities face day to day,” said Avrell Stokes, executive director of BeGreat Together.

Click here to donate to the Give Black campaign or text “giveblackkc” to 44-321.

“We want to take the power into our own hands and make an appeal to the people in Kansas City who want to see actual, tangible change happen,” Calloway said.

In the first year of the campaign, Give Black raised $15,000 in one day. In 2021, organizers expanded it to a full week and raised $125,000. They are hoping to top $500,000 this year.

“The last couple of years have been pretty successful and we hope to repeat that success,” Calloway added.

Click here to read more about Kansas City startup C2FO’s 2021 Juneteenth donation and how it impacted Kansas City GIFT. 

In the wake of social unrest in 2020, a push to support organizations benefiting or run from within the Black community went mainstream, Calloway said, but the urgency is now gone.

“When George Floyd happened and the whole country was talking about racial equity, there was a large uptick in support of Black businesses, a large uptick and support in Black-led nonprofits, specifically among individuals,” he explained. “That level has not been sustained [among individual donors], but it is higher than it was before.”

Conversations with grant-making foundations continue, Calloway said, but action is slow and minimal.

And corporations, they’ve completely moved on, he continued. 

“I feel like the best approach, and honestly, the most efficient and most powerful approach is individuals,” Calloway said. “Individually, there’s over a half a million people in the city. And so, if everybody in the city came together to support most of the causes, we would really be able to make a lot of impact and do a lot of good for the city.”

Five Black-led and Black-supporting nonprofits in Kansas City are in the spotlight for this year's Give Black Campaign. From left are SWAGG INC Founder and CEO Na’im Al-Amin, MOS Co-Founder and Vice President Torey Crawford, GIFT Co-Founder and CEO Brandon Calloway, Future of Us Co-Founder and CEO Brenan Latimer, and BeGreat Together Executive Director Avrell Stokes.

Five Black-led and Black-supporting nonprofits in Kansas City are in the spotlight for this year’s Give Black Campaign. From left: Na’im Al-Amin, SWAGG INC; Torey Crawford, MOS; Brandon Calloway, GIFT KC; Brenan Latimer, Future of Us; and Avrell Stokes, BeGreat Together.

Organizations benefiting from Give Black KC

Grants fromKansas City GIFT to businesses on the East Side are intended to grow the ventures and bring jobs to the urban core, Calloway said.

“So that we can bring the jobs to the people that need them the most and expand Black businesses to also make a dent in the racial wealth gap,” he added.

To aid with the success of these business owners, GIFT also opened a state-of-the-art business center that provides co-working space, a photography studio, and financial, legal, and marketing advice.

Click here to learn more about GIFT’s business center, which opened in March on Prospect Avenue. 

BeGreat Together, according to Stokes, focuses on education, environment, economics, and exposure for student programs at K-12 public schools with 80 percent minority enrollment. 

Black- and Latino-led organizations, he said, often lack the networking and promotion they need to grow.

“We want to see grassroots leaders grow their support, grow in who they know, and we want youth to be what they can see,” he added.

After his own experience with incarceration, Na’im Al-Amin, founder and CEO of SWAGG INC, saw the need for a nonprofit with a new business model, he said. SWAGG INC has two approaches: never go in and never go back. For the first, it partners with Kansas City Public Schools to develop programs that create barriers to incarceration for young people.

For the second part, he said, it’s all about entrepreneurship.

“We promote ownership for people impacted by mass incarceration,” he explained. “We do that by developing returning citizens through education, employment, etiquette, and entrepreneurship.”

The Future of Us provides scholarships to high school students in underfunded and underacknowledged areas, largely in the KCMO and KCK public schools, described Brenan Latimer, co-founder and CEO.

“We do that by eliminating discriminatory metrics, such as GPA or standardized test scores,” he said. “The metrics in nature aren’t discriminatory, but they’re often used as such when the playing field isn’t level, so those metrics don’t translate.”

Torey Crawford, co-founder and vice president of MOS, was inspired to start the nonprofit after spending 18 years in the U.S. Army and experiencing the difficulties of transitioning from military to civilian life. 

“So we looked at creating MOS, which is Mastery of Self,” he explained. “But for military, we know it as Military Occupational Specialty. And when you’re in the military, that’s your identity. But once you leave, you lose that identity. So we’re rebranding that identity as Mastery of Self.”

One of the focuses of MOS: employment for veterans.

“Employment is the pathway out of poverty and necessary for social improvement,” he added. “And MOS is determined to provide that.”

[divide]

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

[adinserter block="4"]

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    LISTEN: Ground Truth Ag puts real-time objectivity into grain grading; here’s how it makes your food safer

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    On this episode of our 12-part Plug and Play Topeka podcast series, we speak with Kyle Folk, CEO and founder of Ground Truth Ag — a next-gen ag-tech company using AI, machine vision and near-infrared spectroscopy to deliver real-time grain-quality data across the farm-to-market workflow. Folk shares how his upbringing on a Canadian farm inspired…

    MidxMidwest teases lineup for three-day investor-innovation event (and the startup party of the year)

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    Building on Kansas City’s ambitious spirit, a new blend of music, startups and community is expected to meet at the crossroads of innovation, said Alexa Heying, pulling back the curtain on plans for the region’s flagship Midwest tech conference. “The goal of MidxMidwest is to create the connective tissue between founders, investors, and corporates so…

    Peek inside: Buffalo State Pizza takes another slice of ownership with fresh-baked downtown OP relocation

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    Three decades of pizza at a popular downtown Overland Park corner might have come to a close this week, as the crew at Buffalo State Pizza Co. picked up the last of what they could carry and walked it a half block down the street to the shop’s new home near another local favorite, The…

    One cabin, one chair, one cut: Barber swaps rushed for rustic at his no-distractions shop in the woods

    By Tommy Felts | October 31, 2025

    LONE JACK, Mo. — A short drive to visit this barber — his cabin tucked away in the oaks and hickories about 35 minutes from the heart Kansas City — is about more than just the journey to a great hair cut, Micah Holdaway said; it’s about the experience. After running Barberhouse Men’s Hair Studio in…