KC Tech Council celebrates tax fix in Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ that boosts growing businesses

July 23, 2025  |  Tommy Felts

A tax fix included in the recently signed “One Big Beautiful Bill” — sprawling legislation meant to overhaul taxes in the United States — marks a major win for Kansas City’s tech and innovation economy, said Kara Lowe.

At issue: a long-awaited change to Section 174 research and development expensing that now allows businesses to fully and permanently expense such investments, explained Lowe, CEO of KC Tech Council, which championed the fix alongside TECNA (Technology Councils of North America).

Additionally, companies with less than $31 million in receipts can retroactively claim refunds on past expenses as part of the fix, she noted.

“Hopefully, we’ll see any reticence around research and development evaporate, increasing innovation and allowing for more growth in our small and midmarket tech sector,” Lowe told Startland News.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act became law July 4 with President Donald Trump’s signature.

KC Tech Council has supported reforming the expensing rule for years, once the long-term impact of previous tax alterations became clear to tech advocacy organizations, Lowe said.

“In 2017, a legislative change to the tax code allowed for companies to immediately deduct R&D expenses in the same year they were incurred,” she explained. “That change expired a couple years back, meaning that companies had to wait for R&D expenses to be deducted by amortizing over a period of years.”

“This makes it very difficult for companies to access the savings created under the previous structure, creating cash flow problems and disincentivizing R&D expenses, stifling innovation,” Lowe continued. “Together with our federal advocacy partners, we’ve been working to reinstate full deduction of R&D expenses since the expiration.”

KC Tech Council members were among those feeling the pain of the deduction allowance expiration, which created significant cash flow challenges when paying taxes, she said.

“For some companies, that meant a slower hiring period because cash flow was tight. For others, it meant that R&D was stalled since expenses related to it could no longer be tax deductible in that same year,” Lowe said. “This was especially profound at early-stage and SMB tech companies.”

Jennifer Young, CEO of TECNA, welcomes the U.S.-Canadian delegation to Montreal earlier in July at the TECNA (Technology Councils of North America) summer conference in Quebec; courtesy photo

Coordinating with larger groups like TECNA on policy goals allows the KC Tech Council to advocate for Kansas City businesses while also reflecting a unique and unified voice on behalf of the tech industry, she emphasized. Lowe was appointed to the TECNA board of directors in January 2024, and now serves as treasurer of the organization.

“The 60+ member councils (within TECNA) serve their individual states and regions, and know them well. Our collective membership base numbers tens of thousands of companies, most of which are SMB, midmarket, growing tech employers,” Lowe said. “This is where the vast majority of tech talent works, and is responsible for a significant part of our GDP. Our collective voice runs both wide and deep into our communities, making for a powerful legislative partner and advocate.”

And that policy work continues well after any one piece of legislation is passed or defeated, she added.

“In a federally unregulated AI landscape, we’ll advocate for risk-based, consumer- and innovation-friendly AI regulation that mitigates the possible future of a busy patchwork of state statutes,” Lowe said. “TECNA, as a North American organization, also represents a unified effort between U.S.-based and Canadian-based organizations, allowing for open dialogue and collaboration between our countries’ tech organizations during a complicated period geopolitically.”

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2025 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Check out the entrepreneur winners of this library pitch competition (and beyond-the-shelf resources)

        By Tommy Felts | September 27, 2025

        Overwhelmed and excited to make a bigger impact, Rasheedah Villarreal expressed joy and gratitude Thursday after her name was announced as the top winner among a wide-ranging catalog of entrepreneurs pitching for cash prizes, community support, and serious momentum. Her business, Social Emotional Yoga with Mrs. V, also earned “Crowd Favorite” honors, sending the founder…

        Controlled Burn: BoysGrow sets the table for fire-infused meal sparked by farm’s teen entrepreneurs, KC chefs

        By Tommy Felts | September 26, 2025

        A live fire culinary event at the BoysGrow farm in south Kansas City is a dream come true for John Gordon, he shared, detailing plans for a fundraiser that harvests an immersive and unforgettable dining experience from the teen-focused ag entrepreneurship program. The one-night-only “Controlled Burn” heats up Oct. 5 at the 10-acre farm where…

        BeVel’s edge on Troost: Scaling culture alongside barbershop’s executive clean up

        By Tommy Felts | September 26, 2025

        A young Casie Murff jumped from cutting lawns to shaping lines, but it wasn’t until decades later — after embracing support from groups like The Porter House KC, Kansas City G.I.F.T. and a resurgent Troost business community — that the entrepreneur’s vision truly started buzzing. “Sometimes as entrepreneurs, you need that reassurance,” Murff, founder of…

        Photos: Founders plug into vibrant Startup Crawl energy as Startland celebrates decade of storytelling

        By Tommy Felts | September 24, 2025

        Startland News’ one-night, rolling innovation showcase Friday served as a launch for select founders — capitalizing on a crowd of 500-plus Startup Crawl participants to bring their emerging companies into the Kansas City spotlight, one conversation at a time. “I love that we got to share Portrayals XR with Kansas City first,” said Tricia Keightley,…