Missouri House advances pro-entrepreneur bill that would lower taxes on self-starters
May 4, 2021 | Startland News Staff
A vision to make Missouri more entrepreneur-friendly moved closer to reality Monday as state legislators passed a first-in-the-nation Right To Start Act, advancing the bill to the Senate on an 85-69 vote.
“We made progress today to make Missouri a state that welcomes risk takers, the crazy ones, who want to build the next generation of inspiring businesses,” said state Rep. Travis Fitzwater, R-Holts Summit, who introduced and sponsored the legislation.
[pullquote]
Who is Travis Fitzwater?
Travis Fitzwater — who founded Fitz Media Productions in 2008 — serves as vice-chairman of the House workforce development committee, as well as sitting on economic development, legislative oversight and special innovation and technology committees.
A four-term state lawmaker, he previously championed popular STEM and computer science legislation that ultimately was vetoed, reworked and later signed into law by Gov. Mike Parson. (That advocacy helped make Fitzwater a finalist for the KC Tech Council’s 2019 Tech Champion of the Year award.)
[/pullquote]
The bill has been reported to the Senate and is awaiting action.
The Jefferson City-area lawmaker celebrated the passage of HB1202 on Twitter and offered a shout-out to entrepreneur advocate Victor Hwang and the Right To Start campaign, which helped champion the bill.
Hwang called the legislation “the most comprehensive pro-entrepreneur state legislation proposed in memory … maybe ever.”
“The Right To Start Act boosts thousands of new businesses starting in garages, basements, and kitchens statewide: Corner stores. Urban food truck owners. Rural farmers. Main Street shops. Garage startups,” Hwang said in a series of his own Twitter posts. “New businesses are job makers. They produce almost all job growth and GDP. They fight inequality and poverty. They lift incomes for entire communities. They make vital goods and services.”
Among the bill’s most significant pieces, according to highlights from Hwang:
- Dedicates 5 percent of government contracts to small new businesses, so they can get their foot in the door to grow and create jobs.
- Bans non-compete restrictions for most people, so they are free to leave potentially dead-end jobs and pursue their dreams. In other states this change has raised wages by as much as 6 percent.
- Lowers taxes for new businesses, putting cash in the pockets of self-starters creating jobs and wealth for their communities.
- Creates an official Office of Entrepreneurship, to assist and coordinate future statewide policies that support entrepreneurs and new businesses.
Click here to explore the text of the Right To Start Act.
The Show-Me State bill – which Hwang called a model for other states — is expected to be just the first Right To Start legislation introduced and advanced as the Right To Start organization continues a nationwide push.
“Missouri has shifted support for starters showing that legislatures can ecosystem build to foster robust environments not just for select segments and sectors,” said Cecilia Wessinger, a Tulsa-based entrepreneurial ecosystem activator, founder of Mass Collaboration and board member of the Startup Champions Network.
Click here to read Right To Start’s “Field Guide for Policymakers.”
Featured Business
2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Emerging KC space tech startup relocating to Colorado to build autonomous factory
A space tech startup that shot into orbit from its West Bottoms headquarters in Kansas City has announced plans to build its first smart factory in Colorado — relocating operations to Broomfield to join the Centennial State’s “robust aerospace and defense ecosystem.” “Colorado is home to some of the best aerospace, defense, and manufacturing talent…
H&R Block CEO files retirement plans; company sets ‘smooth transition’ to new chief executive
Announcing his plan to retire at the end of 2025, the CEO for one of Kansas City’s most iconic businesses called his work at H&R Block the past eight years “the honor of a lifetime.” “We have elevated Block’s relevance, built an extraordinary culture, made bold bets to drive growth, rebuilt about every piece of…
LISTEN: Startup bites into early cancer detection for dogs
On this episode of Startland News’ new Plug and Play Topeka founder podcast series, we meet Preston Williams — founder of ProPetDx — whose company is giving veterinarians a powerful new way to detect disease in pets before symptoms appear. From the spark of an idea to building high-definition diagnostics, our guest shares how science, data,…
Advocates push Latino entrepreneurs to urgent action in the face of ‘innovation churn,’ civil rights challenges
Latino entrepreneurs are a powerful force in America’s economy, leaders emphasized Thursday from the UnidosUS stage, but systemic barriers continue to keep many from achieving financial freedom, they lamented. “Our superpower is an entrepreneurial spirit,” said Ruby Azurdia-Lee, president and CEO of Comunidades Latinas Unidas en Servicio (CLUES), speaking during the UnidosUS Annual Conference’s closing…
