He said the city has already temporarily paused some of its programs while it waits to see if the federal government will disburse grant funding.Clearing poisonous lead out of the soil. Reconnecting neighborhoods that highways broke apart. Growing the city’s clean energy infrastructure. These Kansas City projects in the works depend on federal money — […]
He said the city has already temporarily paused some of its programs while it waits to see if the federal government will disburse grant funding.Clearing poisonous lead out of the soil. Reconnecting neighborhoods that highways broke apart. Growing the city’s clean energy infrastructure. These Kansas City projects in the works depend on federal money — which new orders from the White House may have put at risk.The agency later rescinded its call for a freeze. The Trump administration added to the confusion, saying that only the original memo calling for the pause had been rescinded — not its effort to review federal spending.
Parrish says she’s relying on the city and Congress to take a stand against Trump’s orders as she continues to work as head of one of the leading Black-owned small businesses in Kansas City.She got emotional thinking of businesses like hers that may lose customers or contracts because of all of the confusion over Trump’s orders.“Everything can change, particularly if there is an abolition of affirmative action, minority representation and women representation goals in all contracts,” Lucas said. “That will render a very substantial change on how we do things. And if we even get the money.”Mayor Quinton Lucas said he has a “very serious concern” that the city’s longtime infrastructure projects and efforts to create equity in development could be pushed aside.
He says the city will stay a welcoming place for everyone and will fight efforts to change that.
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Parrish says she hopes people realize that it’s “not a level playing field,” and that the city’s programs were an effort to help companies like hers compete.