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14 June 2007

Thoughts on Corporate Accountablity Conference

I am writing to express my appreciation and my disappointment with Ralph Nader’s Conference on Corporate Accountability (http://www.tamethecorporation.org/index.html). While I am pleased that the cooperative movement in this country gains the recognition it deserves at this conference (as a viable alternative to the Corporation), I am disappointed that someone who is not a member of that movement was chosen to speak for it.

Alisa Gravitz, the Executive Director of Co-op America, who spoke on the topic of “Co-ops and Credit Unions: People’s Businesses†may very likely be a member of a cooperative food market or a credit union, but so are millions of other Americans. Co-op America is a non-profit membership organization whose mission is  “to harness economic power . . . to create a socially just and environmentally sustainable society.†Despite the somewhat misleading name, it is not a member of the larger cooperative movement in the United States.

A member of the South Bronx, Cooperative Home Care Associates (CHCA) would have been a much better choice to speak to the topic of creating an alternative to the sociopathic practices of the corporate world. CHCA is a worker-owned home health care agency that currently employs more than 550 African-American and Latina women—75% of whom had previously been dependent on public assistance.

Or a member from Greenworker Cooperatives, also in the Bronx, would have been able to speak about their project to create a worker cooperative recycle/reuse center. This effort has received over a half-million dollars in start-up grant money to realize their vision of good, “green-collar†jobs, that sustain their communities not decimate them like the corporations.

My disappointment that a representative of the growing worker cooperative movement (now organized nationally as the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives (http://www.usworker.coop/about) was not invited to speak, in no way should be interpreted as a rebuke of the work that Ms. Gravitz does with Co-op America to educate small business owners about social justice issues.

Inkworks Press, the collectively managed print shop I am a member of in Berkeley,CA, has been an active supporter of Co-op America for ten years. And we have encouraged other worker-managed enterprises to join and to participate in the Green Festivals that they, in partnership with Global Exchange, stage in three major metropolitan areas across the country.

One of the best-kept secrets in this country is the self-managed economy of democratic workplaces, whether organized as cooperatives, democratic ESOPs or loosely legalized as collectives. This diverse economic arena, together with the new movement of staff controlled non-profits and the expanding practice of community-controlled enterprises opens a vista to “economic citizenship.â€

The Solidarity Economy evolving in the countries of the South reflects a similar positive practice (not simply against, but beyond, the transnationals) in the current “exploiting fields†of global trade.

What better alternative can we imagine to the corrupting power of transnational corporations than an international network of people practicing in their daily work lives a perspective that puts people before profit?

Bernard Marszalek
(written as a reflection on his own dime, not intended as a statement endorsed by Inkworks Press)

--
Bernard Marszalek
Inkworks Press
510 845 7111 x110
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2827 Seventh Street
Berkeley, CA 94710
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INKWORKS PRESS
• WORKER MANAGED
• UNION SHOP
• CERTIFIED GREEN BUSINESS
"Ahead of the curve since 1974"

Presenters Needed At US Social Forum

Several conversations about the US Social Forum have crystallized into a couple of concrete workshops. And we need worker cooperators to present in them. If you're going to the USSF (www.ussf2007.org - in Atlanta, late June) or if you want to go, please consider helping present in the following:

1. Democracy at Work: Hows and Whys

A basic introduction to worker-ownership and democratic workplaces, focused on the practical aspects of creating or converting to a worker-owned business. What's the basic structure of a worker-owned business? How does a democratic workplace work on an everyday level? What's the difference between an ESOP and a co-op? How can you convert an existing business? Start a new one? And we'll talk a little about the benefits and challenges of worker-ownership, while keeping the discussion grounded in our experience and advice for prospective worker cooperators.

2. Organizing Economic Democracy Up, Down and Across
This workshop will look at some models for growing and organizing the worker co-op movement, using interdependent autonomous clusters, spinoffs, what corporatespeak sometimes calls "vertical integration" or the "supply chain," and other means of growing while staying small. We'll look at the Emilia Romagna region of Italy.

(or the "Third Italy"), local networks in the US, and worker cooperatives that have successfully encouraged or supported the growth of other worker-owned businesses in their industry or geographic region. What can we take from the the Third Italy, and how do these models work in practice in the US?

We are particularly seeking presenters who have some experience developing these networks, models, and practices in the United States.

Please contact Melissa Hoover at info@usworker.coop or (415) 379-9201 if you're interested in presenting or helping plan these workshops.

Thanks!
Melissa

United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives
PO Box 170701
San Francisco, CA  94117
www.usworker.coop
info@usworker.coop
415-379-9201

01 June 2007

Senator Sanders Preparing Bill to Establish Bank for Employee Ownership

U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders [I-VT]  is completing a bill he plans to introduce to the U.S. Senate to establish the U.S. Employee Ownership Bank.

Sanders, long an advocate of worker cooperatives and Employee Stock Ownership Plans, expects to hold public hearings on his legislation soon. As mayor of Burlington, VT, Sanders established the nation’s first department in a city government to provide broad assistance to the formation of worker cooperatives. 

Later, as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, his proposed to establish the Vermont Center for Employee Ownership with funding for three years.  This center was a trial to determine the impact a statewide technical assistance program could have on keeping or adding jobs in Vermont, and has been refunded.

Organizers of the 4th Biennial Conference of the Eastern Conference of the U.S. Federation in Asheville, NC, July 20-22 have invited one of the senator’s staff members to explain the bill’s details during the Conference. A summary of the legislation to be proposed is summarized section by section below. - Frank T. Adams

Download us_emp. Own. Bank Act.doc

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    About SACCO



    • The Southern Appalacian Center for Cooperative Ownership offers this weblog to encourage sharing of information and active discussion among worker-owned enterprises.

    Helpful Books and More

    • Peter Barnes: Capitalism 3.0: A Guide to Reclaiming the Commons (BK Currents)

      Peter Barnes: Capitalism 3.0: A Guide to Reclaiming the Commons (BK Currents)

    • Jim Collins: Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies (Harper Business Essentials)

      Jim Collins: Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies (Harper Business Essentials)

    • Jim Collins: Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

      Jim Collins: Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap... and Others Don't

    • Frances Moore Lappe: Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life

      Frances Moore Lappe: Democracy's Edge: Choosing to Save Our Country by Bringing Democracy to Life

    • Tom Cobb: A Real Ownership Society

      Tom Cobb: A Real Ownership Society

    • David Ellerman: Helping People Help Themselves : From the World Bank to an Alternative Philosophy of Development Assistance (Evolving Values for a Capitalist World)

      David Ellerman: Helping People Help Themselves : From the World Bank to an Alternative Philosophy of Development Assistance (Evolving Values for a Capitalist World)

    • George W. Loveland: Under the Workers' Caps : From Blue Ridge to Champion Paper

      George W. Loveland: Under the Workers' Caps : From Blue Ridge to Champion Paper

    • Gar Alperovitz: America Beyond Capitalism : Reclaiming our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our Democracy

      Gar Alperovitz: America Beyond Capitalism : Reclaiming our Wealth, Our Liberty, and Our Democracy

    • John Abrams: The Company We Keep: Reinventing Small Business for People, Community, and Place

      John Abrams: The Company We Keep: Reinventing Small Business for People, Community, and Place

    • Steven Leikin: The Practical Utopians: American Workers and the Cooperative Movement in the Gilded Age

      Steven Leikin: The Practical Utopians: American Workers and the Cooperative Movement in the Gilded Age

    Links


    • Here are some links to other worker-owned enterprises. We have also included links to support groups and others associated with the worker-ownership movement. Because of space limitations we will add new links from time to time, retiring those that have been longest on the list.

    Co-op Links

    • Working Today - Online advice for working people
    • Three Stone Hearth Community Supported Kitchen
    • Cooperative Home Care Associates
    • Colors Restaurant
    • Magpie Messenger Collective
    • Retailers of the Outdoor Industry
    • Rene Pujol Restaurant
    • Inkworks Press
    • DESIGN ACTION COLLECTIVE :: HOME
    • Equal Exchange
    • BT Timberworks Home
    • Jubilee House Community

    Support Groups

    • The LEAF Fund
    • ROC-NY
    • VEOC - Vermont Employee Ownership Center
    • WAGES - Women's Action to Gain Economic Security
    • National Cooperative Business Association
    • The Democracy Collaborative
    • University of Wisconsin Center for Cooperatives
    • Ohio Employee Ownership Center
    • Grassroots Economic Organizing (GEO)
    • Cooperative Life

    International Co-op Movement

    • The Mondragon University
    • CICOPA
    • COPAC
    • MONDRAGÓN CORPORACIÓN COOPERATIVA

    Regional Associations

    • Minnesota Worker Cooperatives
    • Eastern Conference for Workplace Democracy
    • U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives
    • Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives

    Other Links of Interest

    • Community Wealth

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