Kauffman funds help Holy Rosary pilot new lending model to boost equitable access to capital

February 27, 2023  |  Startland News Staff

When a traditional bank may not be able to justify lending additional funds to an entrepreneur struggling to get their business off the ground, Holy Rosary Credit Union is uniquely positioned to help people achieve that evasive upward mobility — regardless of race, gender, or geography, said Carole Wight.

[pullquote]

Holy Rosary Credit Union

Founded in 1943, Holy Rosary Credit Union was a state-chartered credit union servicing just one Catholic parish. Today the credit union has assets of more than $37 million and has 6,000 members and 20 employees.

[/pullquote]

A $3.3 million grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation in June 2022 is powering the initiative, through which Holy Rosary already has deployed $1.7 million to date to address common hurdles and deliver funds faster to the local small business community, said Wight, CEO of Holy Rosary Credit Union, a local community development financial institution (CDFI).

Editor’s note: The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is a financial supporter of Startland News.

“The traditional lending system has failed too many entrepreneurs,” Wight added. “There are specific systemic barriers that have kept access to capital out of reach for too many, and with this grant we’re deploying new methods for overcoming those barriers that, based on the early results we’re seeing, can be a model for equitable access to capital.”

Click here to learn more about Holy Rosary Credit Union.

The Kauffman grant funding supports Holy Rosary Credit Union’s new approach to credit scoring that could potentially become a model for other lenders to use to evaluate risk and distribute capital in more equitable ways. This model provides access to microloans for new and small businesses, particularly those just starting out and in historically marginalized communities by using different criteria than traditional banking institutions.  

“We are becoming more of a business lender rather than a consumer lender, and it is foundationally changing the way we do work,” said Wight.

Holy Rosary Credit Union and Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation officials, at right: Patricia Case, Holy Rosary; Shakia Web, Kauffman Foundation; and Carole Wight, Holy Rosary

In collaboration with such key financial institutions as Holy Rosary Credit Union, the Kauffman Foundation is working to understand and address the challenges entrepreneurs face when accessing capital. That includes identifying innovative capital models and deploying supportive grants that help create more equitable access to capital for underrepresented entrepreneurs. 

The $3.3 million grant seeds a revolving loan fund of $3 million to provide alternative financing options to qualifying businesses in Kansas City. These options will assist small business owners in overcoming the obstacles and hurdles many entrepreneurs face when seeking traditional asset-based financing.

Holy Rosary Credit Union estimates that 7.5 percent of small businesses in Kansas City meet the requirements for a microloan of $50,000 or less; however, this only accounts for a fraction of the approximately 178,000 small Main Street enterprises that require access to finance.   

Shakia Webb, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

Shakia Webb, Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation

“In Kansas City, there is an estimated market need of $134 million in small business funding, and yet, there are very real scenarios that traditional lending models don’t account for and as a result, entrepreneurs are seeing unequal access to capital,” said Shakia Webb, program officer, Kauffman Foundation.  

The remaining $300,000 grant funding strengthens the organizational capacity of Holy Rosary and ensures solid internal controls, efficient underwriting, and appropriate technology infrastructure. 

To date, the grant funds have enabled Holy Rosary Credit Union to provide 21 small businesses with financing ranging from $1,500 to $650,000 with little to no down payment. Funds also supported the creation of the Dream Builder program.  

The Dream Builder program employs a holistic training approach to entrepreneurship financing by connecting new borrowers to the resources they need, ultimately allowing for more opportunities for them to qualify. Dream Builder borrowers have access to training seminars, individualized solutions to credit challenges, and a mentorship program to make invaluable peer connections in Kansas City. Similar to the Small Business Administration model, this program provides a one-time, three-month deferment option. 

Dream Builder also uses a new approach to credit scoring, allowing Holy Rosary to process the loans more quickly and with a broader lens. The model improves the credit union’s ability to increase the volume of loans they process, dropping the average underwriting time from 16 hours to 30 minutes. This model centers on a borrower’s unique story and needs, and identifies indicators for success that are specific to that business in order to determine if it meets loan requirements.

[adinserter block="4"]

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    KCultivator Q&A: Jessica Powell gets candid about ‘KC Nice’ (and how she’d spend $1M)

    By Tommy Felts | October 13, 2025

    Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. [divide] Let’s get real, Jessica Powell said with a wry smirk, explaining her vision for a Kansas City that works together — and stops cannibalizing its own.   “I’m a startup junkie,” the community champion and founder of…

    Pure Pitch Rally reveals competitors for its 10th crowd-funded, spot-cash pitch contest

    By Tommy Felts | October 13, 2025

    Eight emerging startups set to take the Pure Pitch Rally stage next month will become part of the Kansas City tech community’s evolving story, said Karen Fenaroli, touting a decade of impact that has seen millions in follow-on capital raised and thousands of jobs created across the region. “It is no longer just an event,”…

    Sisters brew backyard-style beers from a historic firehouse in Budweiser territory

    By Tommy Felts | October 11, 2025

    Editor’s note: The following story was produced through a paid partnership with MOSourceLink, which boasts a mission to help entrepreneurs and small businesses across the state of Missouri grow and succeed by providing free, easy access to the help they need — when they need it. [divide] SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — A midlife career crisis took…

    LISTEN: Meet the partners behind Plug and Play Topeka’s growth (and impact)

    By Tommy Felts | October 10, 2025

    On a special episode of Startland News’ 12-part podcast series diving deeper into Plug and Play, we explore how the Topeka-based program and its partners work to turn bold ideas into Kansas success stories. Guests includes Bret Lanz from Kansas State University’s Technology Development Institute; John G. Brown of StenCo; and Cole Ahlvers from NQV8…