KC expected to takes another big hit as Oracle announces layoffs. Prior to acquisition Cerner employed more than 13,000 in the region. In 2024, Oracle reported that number was down to 6,000. There were further cuts in September 2025. KC is probably down to 3500-4000 Oracle employees after today.
And here is a perfect example of how different KC media outlets have reported this news....
Not much.
KCBJ. Crickets. Not one report yet.
all TV outlets... made a short report early in day and then you have to dig to find the report now on their websites (some not even found). KC STAR.. Crickets.
In fact almost 24 hours later... you can not find anthing on the front page of headlines on KMBC, KTVI, WDAF
Zilch. The only way you find anything is google Oracle and Kansas City
If this was an STL company... headlines of the loss and dispair
matguy70 wrote:And here is a perfect example of how different KC media outlets have reported this news....
Not much.
KCBJ. Crickets. Not one report yet.
all TV outlets... made a short report early in day and then you have to dig to find the report now on their websites (some not even found). KC STAR.. Crickets.
In fact almost 24 hours later... you can not find anthing on the front page of headlines on KMBC, KTVI, WDAF
Zilch. The only way you find anything is google Oracle and Kansas City
If this was an STL company... headlines of the loss and dispair
Ridiculously sad
Vested interest in the failure of STL vs no vested interest in the failure of KC
St.Louis is very reactive when it comes to bad news on top of that the news has to keep feeding its own residents that we’re a failure no matter if things are looking up. Any bit of good news gets smothered immediately though I do like of the recent good stories kmov has put out
1) Louisville: basically losing their whole large business base/sector, very sad.
2) KC: enough said above
3) Minneapolis: um, that’s all I have to type.
STL has an opportunity here. Our business base/sector is in pretty good shape as we enter the AI phase of the ever-changing economy. I was told by a friend fairly high up at Boeing Defense that STL metro’s middle class is guaranteed for at least the next 30-40 years.
Anyway, if we could fix our current city/county BS and think more regionally we have a chance to boom. I just don’t know if we can do that.
I just saw The Royals will announce plans to build their new stadium in the crossroads district….I’m not sure how much merit that it has but we’ll find out sooner than later……
I just saw The Royals will announce plans to build their new stadium in the crossroads district….I’m not sure how much merit that it has but we’ll find out sooner than later……
PlatinumBlues wrote:I just saw The Royals will announce plans to build their new stadium in the crossroads district….I’m not sure how much merit that it has but we’ll find out sooner than later……
PlatinumBlues wrote:I just saw The Royals will announce plans to build their new stadium in the crossroads district….I’m not sure how much merit that it has but we’ll find out sooner than later……
And here is a perfect example of how different KC media outlets have reported this news....
Not much.
KCBJ. Crickets. Not one report yet.
all TV outlets... made a short report early in day and then you have to dig to find the report now on their websites (some not even found). KC STAR.. Crickets.
In fact almost 24 hours later... you can not find anthing on the front page of headlines on KMBC, KTVI, WDAF
Zilch. The only way you find anything is google Oracle and Kansas City
If this was an STL company... headlines of the loss and dispair
Ridiculously sad
this is so so true. I LOLed reading it. Again, I'd love to blame local news outlets, but its our own people who click on these stories. News outlets chase clicks, as we all know
Smaller story here. Look at number of jobs they have posted in the region. They’re not hiding it anymore. Cerner/Oracle is dead in KC. Rough estimate from the WARN Act information, this one layoff is $90M in annual salary/benefits in the KC region.
I used to work for Cerner (mid-2000s) and lived in KC. That company was poorly ran before the Oracle takeover. Even after Oracle that company is dead. No hospital in the STL area (except St. Luke's) uses Cerner. BJC is deactivating Cerner lab application as we speak too. That company was the pride and joy of KC (I don't know why, everyone was miserable and would quit after ~2 years of working for that sweatshop). Are there any large companies in KC left?
NJB1981 wrote:I used to work for Cerner (mid-2000s) and lived in KC. That company was poorly ran before the Oracle takeover. Even after Oracle that company is dead. No hospital in the STL area (except St. Luke's) uses Cerner. BJC is deactivating Cerner lab application as we speak too. That company was the pride and joy of KC (I don't know why, everyone was miserable and would quit after ~2 years of working for that sweatshop). Are there any large companies in KC left?
Creative Planning is the new big local success story (700bn in AUM mostly all acquired in the last 6 years). Their largest competitor, Mariner, has also quickly expanded and sits at about 650bn in AUM.
Yes. I have to say this sucks for KC. My friend left Cerner right before the Oracle take over. He said Cerner was horribly organized.
The worst part of this is that these are upper pay and educated jobs being loss. Over 500 is a huge chunk, not to mention the billions in tax revenues.
Grok says that prior to Cerner’s acquisition, they had about 15,000 jobs in KC. Now it’s apparently around 6000. If be shocked if it’s that high. The North KC campus is empty, the campus out near 70 and 435 went empty and is now home to an insurance company. The flagship campus near 435 and Bannister looks pretty empty whenever I pass by during a work day.
This latest news is just a continuation of the bad news streak the city’s been on recently. Chiefs leaving for Kansas. Lockton leaving the Plaza for a new development in Leawood. Transit funding can’t keep being found, so service cuts are constantly threatened. $100 Million budget deficit being faced. Now you have the Oracle downsizing. Crime isn’t on the best track either. Even when I lived in St. Louis, I don’t recall such a rapid pace of bad news for the city proper.
I salute KC's Fountain Day tradition. This year, they will turn on all fountains on April 15th. St. Louis should hold a fountain day. Our last freeze date is earlier than KC, and surprisingly even earlier than Nashville. (Who would think St. Louis transitions out of winter sooner than Nashville.)