AORTA is hiring!

We are very excited to share that we are hiring new worker-owner candidates.

See below for the information.

Information about AORTA.

AORTA is a worker-owned cooperative devoted to strengthening movements for social justice and a solidarity economy. We work as consultants and facilitators to expand the capacity of cooperative, collective, and community based projects through education, training, and planning.

Our work ranges from one-time trainings and workshops to long-term consulting processes focused on supporting our clients with everything from policy development to strategic planning to anti-oppressive organizational transformation.

AORTA is currently made up of 5 worker-owners, all of whom are also founders, and one part-time administrative employee. This is the first time we are hiring new worker-owners. We are young organization, founded 5 years ago and legally incorporated as a cooperative less than a year ago.

As members of a cooperative, we are not just workers or co-workers, but are committed to supporting each other and other cooperatives. AORTA is more than a job; it is a project that we are passionate about, a support system, and a space to enact and build our politics and our vision for the world and the movements we want to see.

We are hiring new worker owners.

We are looking to hire up to three part-time or full-time worker-owners, ranging from 20-40 hours a week. We are only looking to hire people interested in being a worker-owner. We are looking for potential worker owners who are excited about committing to the cooperative for at least 5 years. We are strongly invested in our points of unity (which can be found on our website) as an organization, and would expect a new worker-owner to share those values.

While we prefer the person or persons we hire to be located in the San Francisco Bay Area, Austin area, or the Northeast, we are willing to consider applicants from anywhere in the US. Due to the nature of our work, all members must have the ability and flexibility to work occasional odd hours, long hours, and weekend days.

Because we are a small business, we all share the work involved in running our business. However, we envision hiring people who would primarily be plugging into our client work. You would join us in working with other cooperatives (worker, housing, and food), student groups, community organizations, and social and economic justice nonprofits as facilitators of workshops, meetings, retreats, and conflict resolution processes and consultants on organizational capacity, transformation, and development.

We are looking to build up an internship/leadership development pipeline in our organization, as well as our capacity to coordinate volunteers and are interested in hiring people who can support that development.

This is who we are looking for.

We are looking for people who have an unwavering commitment to social justice. We want people who are excited about the prospect of working with organizations to help them transform and grow, who feel passionately about building leader-full movements, and who feel energized and confident facilitating large groups of people in meetings, workshops, and retreats. We want people who have a solid foundational understanding of cooperatives and solidarity economics, and energy to build up this area of expertise.

We all currently are engaged in political work outside of our business that helps to inform, grow, and challenge AORTA as an organization. We want to bring on people who are similarly engaged in their communities and movements.

Please see our general candidate criteria for more information about what we are looking for.

Priority Skills and Experience

  • A high level of competency facilitating workshops, trainings, meetings, retreats, and other collective processes. Must be able to discuss race, class, gender, and other issues of power and identity with ease and comfort.
  • Experience working in or with worker (or other) cooperatives
  • Experience doing popular education/radical pedagogy
  • Experience developing and designing innovative and engaging curriculum
  • Organization skills, in particular time management and project management
  • Experience and competency working with communities of color
  • Experience with volunteer and intern management/coordination

Desired Skills and Experience

  • Experience working remotely and/or with a distributed team
  • Fluency in one or more languages other than English (especially Spanish)
  • Community organizing experience
  • Strong communication skills, including:
    • written communication skills (ability to communicate complex points concisely and clearly; ability to create thorough and engaging reports and resources; ability to respond fully, clearly, and reliably to email), and
    • verbal communication skills (ability to speak confidently and clearly with clients about our work, ability to communicate respectfully and directly with co-workers and clients, ability to navigate tense or challenging interpersonal dynamics in a way that aims for resolution and de-escalation)
  • Democratic decision-making experience
  • Experience working with poor and working-class communities
  • Creative problem-solving skills
  • Capacity for travel
  • Business management skills (finance, marketing, etc)
  • Digital communications and social media skills
  • Networking and relationship building skills
  • Consulting experience
  • Attention to detail, complemented by the ability to see the big picture

All about the benefits, logistics, and compensation.

There is a one year candidacy period, during which you will be an “employee.” After passing the one year candidacy period, you become a worker-owner. Owners are required to contribute a $2000 buy-in, which can be paid in installments or deducted from your paycheck over a chosen period of time. We prioritize longevity over ability to work full time; we are looking for potential worker-owners who are excited about committing to the cooperative for at least 5 years.

Worker-owners become eligible for profit sharing after they have passed their one-year candidacy period. We offer about four weeks of paid time off a year, and have policies in place for short paid sabbaticals every other year as well as a longer paid sabbaticals every 5 years. We are not currently able to offer health benefits. We are a young organization, and are budgeting and planning to be able to do so in the near future.

We pay ourselves based on a needs-based model of payment. The starting wage is $15/hour. It may be adjusted upwards from there based on cost of living in your city, number of dependents, and disability/health care needs. Wage adjustments are decided upon at the beginning of the fiscal year.

Our worker-owners are distributed across the country. Most of us work from home; we do not currently budget to compensate workers for office rental, cell phone service, or internet service.

Here is how you apply.

To apply, please send a resume and cover letter to hiring by June 30th, 2015.

People of Color, trans and gender nonconforming people, people from poor and working class backgrounds, and women are encouraged to apply.

Worker Coop Law Passes CA Assembly

Through the support of NoBAWC members this bill was able to move forward! Thanks everyone!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Worker Cooperative Law Passes in the California Assembly

SACRAMENTO, CA—On May 22, the California State Assembly passed AB816, a major step toward making California the twelfth state to establish a legal form specifically for worker cooperatives. This campaign is building on the momentum of worker cooperative policy initiatives happening throughout the country—including a $1.2 million dollar funding initiative in New York City last summer—as the cooperative business form gains recognition as a powerful tool for economic revitalization.

AB 816 Passes out of Assembly!

Click here to download the press release!

Assembly Member Bonta, who represents communities in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, introduced AB816 and was the principal author. “The worker cooperative model has great potential to have a deep and lasting impact on California’s economy, making it more sustainable, fairer, and more accessible to all California residents.”

The bill has two key parts. First, by passing AB816, the California legislature officially acknowledges the benefits of the model, finding that “worker cooperatives have the purpose of creating and maintaining sustainable jobs and generating wealth in order to improve the quality of life of its worker-members, dignify human work, allow workers’ democratic self-management, and promote community and local development in this state.”

Second, it allows companies to incorporate as a worker cooperative using an election under the Consumer Cooperative Corporation Law (which will be renamed the Cooperative Corporation Law). The worker cooperative election triggers a number of provisions in the existing law that recognize the unique characteristics of worker-owned businesses.

The California Center for Cooperative Development, the Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives, the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives, the Sustainable Economies Law Center, the East Bay Community Law Center, the Green Collar Communities Clinic, and the Democracy at Work Institute!

The bill will:

  • Provide a definition of a worker cooperative as a corporation whose members are workers;
  • Create a model capital structure for use by worker cooperatives to represent the assets and value created by each of the worker members, based on their labor contributions; a decreased meeting notice requirement, recognizing that many worker cooperatives are smaller and in closer communication than consumer cooperatives;
  • Create a requirement that a majority of employees are member-owners of the cooperative or on track to be owners, in line with worker cooperative principles;
  • Increase the existing securities law exemption for cooperative memberships from $300 to $1000; and
  • Allow worker cooperatives to create “indivisible reserve accounts” to provide long-term investment capital to support the growth and longevity of the worker coop sector across generations.

Existing worker cooperatives that are currently incorporated under the Consumer Cooperative Corporation Law can qualify as a worker cooperative by amending their articles of incorporation and electing worker cooperative status. According to data from the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives (USFWC), California currently has over 60 worker cooperatives, most of which are currently incorporated under the existing Consumer Cooperative Corporation Law.

Amy Johnson, Co-Executive Director of the USFWC commented, “Our members in California are excited about having the worker cooperative business model recognized as its own corporate form. Being a worker cooperative is part of their identity, and they should have a way to bake it into their corporate DNA as well.”

The bill was drafted by the California Worker Cooperative Policy Coalition, a group of worker coop- erative businesses, developers, and technical assistance providers who collectively represent a few hundred worker-owners and at least 25 California businesses, including the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives, the Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives, the Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives, the Democracy at Work Institute, the Sustainable Economies Law Center and the East Bay Community Law Center’s Green Collar Community Clinic (GC3).

The bill must still pass through the California Senate and be signed by the Governor before becoming law.

To help the passage of AB816, please contact Amy Johnson, Co-Executive Director at the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives at amy, or Christina Oatfield, Policy Director at the Sustainable Economies Law Center at christina, or visit http://theselc.org/AB816 to learn more.

California_Worker_Cooperative_Policy_Coalition_SELC_GC3_DAWI_USFWC_Arizmendi.jpg

Cheers,
Ricardo S. Nuñez
http://www.theselc.org/

-=-=- Sustainable Economies Law Center · Oakland, CA 94612, United States
You can also keep up with Ricardo S. Nuñez on Twitter.-=-=-

Ricardo Samir Nuñez

Legal Services Director
Cooperatives Program Director
Sustainable Economies Law Center | theselc.org
2323 Broadway, Oakland, CA 94612
SELC: 510.398.6219 | Direct (Google Voice): 510.457.1809
Legal education, research, advice, and advocacy for just and resilient local economies.

Interview with Denver CWA chief about taxi coops

Cabby-owned Taxi Cooperatives on the Rise

By Kyle Harris, Shareable.net, January 5, 2015

http://www.shareable.net/blog/cabby-owned-taxi-cooperatives-on-the-rise

Top image: Union Cab workers in Portland, Oregon. Photo credit: NW Labor Press.

While the struggle between taxi companies and ridesharing startups like Uber grab all the headlines, a pioneering group of cabbies are combining the best of traditional taxi service and new ridesharing systems, but with an important twist. These cabbies are creating cabby-owned taxi cooperatives, sometimes with the help of unions, and offering smartphone taxi hailing on top of a traditional service. This new setup gives drivers more job security, better pay, ownership of and a say in their company as well as the ability to offer more convenient smartphone hailing taxi service to customers. This is part of a surge of experimentation in democratizing ownership in enterprises, including, appropriately, in the sharing economy.

In 2007, Denver taxi drivers joined Communications Workers of America Local 7777. In 2009, they launched the city’s first taxi driver-owned worker’s cooperative: Union Taxi. Five years down the road, a new bunch taxi drivers, tired of the high cab leasing fees and poor working conditions at traditional cab companies, started clamoring to organize another cooperative in Denver. They joined CWA Local 7777 and are in the process of launching a new worker-led company.

These are just two examples of new taxi cooperatives, part a larger trend toward community ownership of all kinds of enterprises. In addition, taxi cooperatives represents an important, yet little-known option for cabbies and ridesharing drivers who face deteriorating pay and working conditions. In fact, Lyft and Uber are arguably partly responsible for creating the market conditions that lead to the formation of taxi cooperatives.

To learn more about the trend toward driver-run cooperatives, Shareable spoke with Lisa Bolton, president of CWA Local 7777, who is helping to organize the second cabby-owned taxi cooperative in Denver, Colorado.

Shareable: What’s your role in the union?

Lisa Bolton: I am the president of CWA Local 7777 [in Denver, Colorado], which stands for Communications Workers of America. That’s what’s called an amalgamated local. We have all different bargaining units and all different kinds of members in our local.

Traditionally, the CWA was mostly phone company workers. As time’s gone on, we’ve organized all different areas. So we have all different types of people. In my local, we have telephone workers. We have the public sector — Denver Public School Custodians. We have some caterers. We have 11 different industries. We have approximately 3,000 members right now.

What’s the history of Local 7777’s work with taxi drivers?

Back in 2007, I wasn’t president. I was the executive vice-president. We did an affiliation agreement with a nonprofit called ProTaxi. That was a group of taxi drivers that were looking to organize to deal with some of their issues on the job: discrimination, being treated poorly, etc.

The CWA 7777 president, in 2007, signed an affiliation agreement with the drivers and they became CWA members. After that, the taxi drivers wanted to start their own company, which would be a co-op. And so we supported them by helping them lobby at the state capitol, going to hearings at the PUC (the Public Utilities Commission), coalition-building, things like that. It took until 2009, when they [the drivers] finally got granted permission or granted authority from the PUC to start their own company.

In May of 2009, Union Taxi opened its doors for business. There were 262 taxi drivers that were part of a worker owned cooperative, and they were also CWA members. They have been up and running since May of 2009.

Recently, we had heard that other drivers wanted to organize because of their working conditions. They also wanted to start another cooperative. On September 20, we held a meeting here at the union hall. We asked any interested drivers that wanted to join CWA to come meet with us to talk. We had a few people show up. I think we signed up with 49 people that day. And then the word started getting out that Quad-7 — that is what we’re known as, because of 7777, four sevens — was having a membership drive. People started coming in droves. Drivers just started coming like crazy. Right now there’s about 1020 new members.

Wow.

Yeah. In a very short time. We knew that the drivers were also interested in starting their own co-op. We held a meeting at South High School [in South Denver], because we knew we had to accommodate a lot of people, and we didn’t have the facility here at the Union Hall. So, we held the meeting at South High School and about 350 people came, all drivers, and they elected a temporary board of directors so they could start working on their co-op. They also decided that they would give people 30 days to come up with $500 as their first commitment to see who was serious about starting the co-op.

One really big thing I need to make sure is clear in the article is that CWA has nothing to do with the actual business of the co-op. We’re completely separate from the co-op. We aren’t in business to do business. We are a representative of people. So, we’re just helping guide them in reinventing what we supported for Union Taxi.

They will have to make all their own business decisions, hire their own attorneys to go to the PUC and stuff like that. We will help them lobby. We’ll help them fight for their cause. We’ll help with support as needed.

At this point, there are about 490 people as of yesterday [November 17] that have pledged their first $500 to get the business started. That will be managed by three people, out of seven, on their board of directors. They [the company] will be bonded and insured. They’ll start looking for a regulatory attorney. They’ll start drafting bylaws. The temporary board of directors is for 90 days. We will probably assist them, if they want us to, in the election process to elect their first permanent board of directors. They’ll be able to do it however they want. We’re basically support for them.

What is the relationship between taxi drivers and the traditional taxi companies? Do the drivers have representation through the union?

See, taxi drivers are independent contractors. They can’t formally vote in the union for me to go bargain with, let’s say, Yellow Cab, one of the cab companies here. Yellow Cab wouldn’t have to recognize us legally, because they [the drivers] are independent contractors. However, if our Union Taxi members are having an issue at the airport, like ground transportation is doing something that they [the drivers] have a problem with, we will step in and make calls and set meetings and bring it to the Mayor’s attention and go to city council. We are really kind of a liaison without a formal bargaining agreement.

With this new co-op, I am really going to push that they have a collective bargaining agreement, because then we’re the legal representative, and we could go on their behalf and say, “Look these are our members. We have a collective bargaining agreement with them, and these are the issues that we’re facing.” So, the collective bargaining agreement also helps the co-op with internal problems. It protects the one worker in the process of the company.

Talk about some of the issues taxi drivers have been facing and the need for the union?

Last year, Uber and Lyft, known as Transportation Network Companies or TNCs, came in and wanted to break into the Denver market, so they ran some legislation that could have really hurt our taxi driver members as well as any taxi drivers. So we were concerned about the people issues: the background checks, the treating everybody fairly, being available for disabled customers and low-income customers. There is a lot of controversy over how the insurance works.

If you’re an Uber driver, there is what’s called a gap between when you don’t have a customer in your car and you’re going to get a customer; or you’re dropping a customer off and you’re still working but you don’t have a client in your car. There is this gap in coverage where your personal insurance won’t cover you, and possibly your Uber insurance won’t cover you.

What happened last year is that we had a really interesting coalition at the [state] Capitol. We had the banking industry, the insurance industry, the PUC and all the existing taxi companies all opposed to this TNC legislation, all for different reasons, but nonetheless, we were all opposed. So we formed a coalition together and we tried to get in amendments that we wanted to see to make it more of a fair playing field. And we were successful in getting some of the amendments in. But the big thing was that most of the rule making did get put onto the PUC’s hands. The PUC understands the industry and public safety and things like that. That was one of the biggest things that’s happening right now is this Uber and Lyft thing.

Also, for example, the airport is one of the highest revenue fares for drivers, because our airport is pretty far away. We were instrumental in trying to get a system together that would be more fair for all the companies and our members from Union Taxi. We talked to Denver City Council, Airport Authority, the Mayor’s Office, and they formed a taxi-limo commission for taxis and limousine companies to deal with the issues that they’re having. I believe we were instrumental in getting that done. Then they don’t have to go through all of the red tape with the PUC. They meet monthly, I believe, and they can discuss the issues that they’re having with ground transportation, the airport, the city, excise and license, parking meters, you name it. They have a venue to discuss their issues.

It’s such an interesting industry. People that don’t work for Union Taxi, they work for the other companies. Some of these folks, their leasing fee to the other taxi companies is like $125-$150 a day. We can’t even imagine that. It’s like waking up and having to make 125 or more dollars before you even start making money. We can’t fathom it. So they have to work really, really hard and really long hours. It’s a really unfair system.

When Union Taxi came into play and got their company running, their fees are basically one-third the amount of fees that the other people pay. That gives them more time with their families. It gives a safer service to the public. It gives more quality of work-life for the job. And they get a piece of the American Dream.

Most of these people are immigrants, definitely, mostly African immigrants, but not all. Some are from Romania and European, but most of them are African immigrants. We see that they can be easily taken advantage of because of cultural and language barriers. They just want to feed their families and have a decent life here.

It’s [worker cooperatives] kind of spreading throughout the country. CWA has the taxi group in Portland with 50 drivers that started their own company. We also have one in San Jose, California, and now New Jersey is starting up something. There is a really large group that just got affiliated with the AFL-CIO in New York and around some other cities. They have like 18,000 taxi drivers who are part of the Taxi Workers Alliance, the TWA. They’re helping them [drivers] with legal assistance and really trying to fight Uber and Lyft and Sidecar and all the other transportation companies that are coming in, you know, just fighting for people to have a better way of life and better living conditions.

Talk about how a recruitment drive works? How do you get folks to the meetings and get folks to sign up for the union?

I have an organizer here named Abdi Buni. He was a taxi driver and worked as the ProTaxi president years ago. He is also an organizer for us, and he knows a lot of people. He was telling me that there is a lot of interest in starting another co-op, and he thought we should do a membership drive. We put out some flyers to some key people and spread the word that CWA is opening its doors to anybody who would like to come join. They started coming in droves.

It was unbelievably perfect timing. They were trying to organize themselves to start another co-op. There were different groups out there. But they knew that if they came to CWA, that we had already been successful in helping Union Taxi, so they see us as a huge asset into the political arena, legislative allies, community allies. We have resources, and they [the drivers] definitely need some rights on the job.

London cabbies on strike against Uber. Photo credit: David Holt London / Foter / CC BY-SA.

Do Uber and Lyft set their own rates? What are the tensions that come up between traditional drivers and Uber and Lyft drivers?

One of the biggest problems that I personally have with Uber and Lyft, one of the problems — and this is what they’re getting a lot of grief about in the newspaper as well as the Better Business Bureau — they have what’s called surge pricing. Taxicabs are regulated under the PUC, and their rates are set. You can’t charge more, but I don’t think you can charge less. Your rates are set by the PUC.

So, Uber and Lyft, you download an app to your phone. That was one of the first problems. It’s like, okay that’s going to discriminate right away against people who don’t have a smart-phone: poor people, disabled people, older people, whatever. Anyway, you download an app and then you have to put in your credit card information and personal information when you sign up, because no money changes hands between the driver and the customer. So, if you’re downtown or wherever and you want a ride, you pull up an app and you request a ride. You can see if there is an Uber or Lyft driver in the area. Then, they would accept your ride and come pick you up. You can get an estimate on how much your ride will cost, but it’s just an estimate, and you’ve already agreed to pay whatever they say you’re going to pay.

So, here are the problems that have been happening around here. Let’s say it’s Halloween night. Someone might pay $100 to get downtown, but when you’re trying to get home, it could be $400. You don’t get to say, “No, I’m not going to pay this," because your credit card is charged as soon as you accept. So, it’s the surge pricing, which I call price gouging. It’s nothing more than price gouging, which should be illegal. Price gouging is illegal. But that’s their model. They call it surge pricing.

That’s a huge problem for the public, I think. The other one is safety. I know there’s been articles lately, I don’t think in Denver, but articles around the country where women have been sexually assaulted. Someone just drives up in a black SUV and says, either, do you want a ride, or I’m your driver. Someone gets in the car, and they’re supposed to have a picture posted and all of that. But if you’ve been out partying, you’ve not been paying attention to what’s going on, and a black SUV drives up and says, "I’m your ride," you’re going to get in. The safety issue is huge. They have to do background checks, but you can have somebody that’s not really even a driver acting like they’re an Uber driver.

What are the benefits of a driver-owned cooperative?

In a co-op, for one, everybody has a vote: one worker, one vote. You get a say-so in the business. You get a say-so in who your boss is by electing them. You get a say-so in the day-to-day business operations, if it’s in your bylaws as things you have to have a vote on. Also, there are times you’re obviously going to let the board of directors take care of a lot of the business operations, but there are things that they have to pass votes on. By far, the biggest advantage was the lease rate. It was cut by two-thirds almost, at least. So they were working less hours, which gives them more time at home. They were taking home a lot more of their money that they were making, and everybody was contributing the same amount to the business.

How do you think that impacts consumers?

Well, personally, I think that it helps consumers because: 1) The drivers are going to be very safe because they’re working less hours; 2) They’re going to be invested in customer service because they know it’s not just “I’m working for another company. It doesn’t matter. It’s that every customer that I lose is going to effect my business, because I’m part owner.” And there is the pride of having your own piece of a company.

This seems like an ideal outcome: the worker-controlled business versus the boss controlled business. Do you see this as a step beyond collective bargaining? How does it relate to the union’s other work?

What I see is that it certainly levels the playing field between this huge gap between CEOs or the top executives and the average worker. Right now, the average CEO makes 342 times what the average worker makes. That doesn’t happen in a co-op.

I just see that it spreads the wealth much more equitably than a normal employer-employee based system. You have a say-so. Instead of just being told, “We’re going to do it this way today no matter what you think,” you actually have a vested interest in the business decisions. Your opinion counts.

Does the new company have a name?

I can’t really say, because they only have a temporary name, and the group hasn’t voted at all. They just assigned a temporary name so they could start to get bonded and insured, and they could get their bank account open. I can’t really say. They do, but I don’t know if the group will agree, so I’ll say “no name” at this point. [Laughs].

Like I said, we’ve had our first meeting, and then once the 30 days is over on November 25, we’ll have to have another meeting with the board of directors. We’ll see how many people have joined up with their $500. They’ll be able to start looking for a regulatory attorney and someone to draft some bylaws. They’ll get a bank account. We’re getting the paperwork together for them to be bonded and insured so that people’s money will be safe.

It is such an exciting project.

It really is. I’m so excited about it now. I don’t know if you’ve heard about Mondragon. If you go on their website, 1worker1vote.org, it’s all about worker co-ops. There is a place where they teamed up with the Steelworkers Union on union co-ops.

Quad – 7, we’re kind of lucky because we were ahead of the game. We did this in 2009, and it’s starting to get popular right now. I hope to see a lot more of them. I think it could be a new wave of organized labor, if people made their own co-ops, having a say and having a collective bargaining agreement at the same time that deals with benefits, wages, working conditions, that type of thing. It could change our whole economic system.

With this shift toward more contract labor, these taxi-drivers are setting an amazing precedent in the U.S.

Right? What I’ve heard proponents of this union-worker co-op say is that you find a product that people need and you get a business plan and figure out how to get the capital and things like that, because you have a vested interest in it. They’re making very successful companies out of this kind of stuff. A lot of things are happening around this in food, grocery stores, farms, stuff like that. Green energy is another big thing where worker-union co-ops or just worker co-ops are cropping up.

There is a Cincinnati Union Co-Op Initiative. I think there is one in Pittsburgh. I’m just trying to get my feet wet on some of the other things going on outside our own little world. And now people are starting to contact us, which is really exciting. We’re sharing information about what we’re doing. I believe workers’ rights are human rights, and union co-ops are perfectly aligned with that belief.

Announcing: The Next System Project

Systemic crisis requires systemic solutions

 

 

 

Announcing: The Next System Project

For the past two years, The Democracy Collaborative has been developing and incubating a new initiative that complements our community wealth building work. We call this The Next System Project, and today we launch it nationwide under the leadership of co-chairs political-economist and Democracy Collaborative co-founder Gar Alperovitz and Democracy Collaborative Senior Fellow and prominent environmentalist Gus Speth.

The Next System Project is designed to catalyze a wide-ranging discussion about the deep systemic challenges – economic, political, and social – we face as individuals, communities, and as a nation. Prominent among these: growing wealth inequality, escalating climate change, persistent racial inequities, and continued erosion of our democracy at all levels.

Our goal is, first, to put “the system question” on the map for serious and ongoing national debate, dialogue, and ultimately action. We hope to do this in a way that moves beyond rhetoric into substantive system-changing institutional and policy approaches and strategies.

Today we are issuing a statement signed by more than 350 prominent scholars, community activists, business leaders, labor organizers and policy makers calling for a serious national conversation about the systemic crisis we face and the systemic solutions we need. We encourage you to read this statement, share it with your colleagues, and consider adding your name as a signatory:

Read Statement Now: http://thenextsystem.org/

We are also releasing today a short video meant to bring these critical issues to a national audience. The video features climate activist Bill McKibben, actor Danny Glover, economic and social equity advocate Angela Glover Blackwell, whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, and many others who believe it’s now time to start asking and answering the hard questions. I hope you will watch the video, and share it with your networks:

Watch and share video now: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d6z4yDu3gco

Finally, today’s launch initiates a multi-year commitment by The Democracy Collaborative to foster this essential national debate through research, communications, convenings, policy proposals, and other strategic activities. If you would like to support us in this work, please consider making a donation via the link below:

Support the Next System project; http://community-wealth.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=e51d2c7d40bc9992285e71110&id=4c1f4a1e94&e=ea9b07c4fc

Throughout 2015 and beyond, we will continue to keep you informed and included as momentum builds.

Sincerely,
Ted Howard
Executive Director
The Democracy Collaborative

Looking for Community Wealth Partners? Click here: http://community-wealth.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=e51d2c7d40bc9992285e71110&id=f9c48b410f&e=ea9b07c4fc

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Workers of the World – Buy your Own Company!

By Kelly Candaele

Somerset Waters has the passion of a convert. You can hear it in his voice when he outlines why he set up the only worker owned Co-Op business in Los Angeles. “It’s really exciting pushing the boundaries of how a small business can operate here,” he says, standing in front of a bank of solar panels outside a residence in Calabasas. “People want a sense of ownership at work, a feeling of justice, a real stake in their working lives.”

Last year Waters set up a worker owned co-op out of a desire to see if a different kind of business model could thrive in Los Angeles. The four-person electrical firm, which has plans for expansion to 100 owner-members, installs solar and other electrical systems for residential and business customers throughout Los Angeles County.

According to the United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives, there are only 30 or so worker owned businesses in California. While the number is small, other states cities are embracing the trend. There are are good reasons why Los Angeles city officials should encourage the worker owned movement here as well.

Despite it socialistic sounding discourse, the worker ownership movement is not directed by employees determined to “expropriate the expropriators.” Rather, they are enthusiastic about taking on the advantages and burdens of ownership themselves.

In Waters’ and his colleagues electrical firm, workers gain a stake in the business after a trial period of work. They also provide a small amount of equity capital as part of their buy-in and as a demonstration of commitment. Once they are member-owners they receive regular hourly wages and benefits plus a yearly share of the profits. Most importantly, decisions about how the company is run are taken collectively through regular governance meetings of the worker-owners.

Worker cooperatives have a long and dignified history in the United States. In the 19th century, thousands of farmers formed business cooperatives throughout the South and Midwest in response to the economic pressures of banks, railroads and the booms and busts of industrial capitalism.

In the 1950s and 60s, according to Professor Jessica Gordon Nembhard, whose book Collective Courage focuses on cooperative movements in the African American community, organizations like A. Phillip Randolph’s Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and the Freedom Quilting Bee in Alabama were just two of the hundreds of “alternative economies” and mutual aid societies formed throughout the United States to gain access to credit and income while facing bank discrimination or landlord evictions.

Aside from the economic benefits to the worker-owners, there are more profound reasons for encouraging the growth of cooperatives that have implications for our political system. Thomas Jefferson famously connected the conditions under which people worked with the character of our democracy. His “radical moral theory,” historian Joyce Appleby points out, outlined how self-reliant farmers would be free of economic and political dependency, thereby becoming superior citizens.

Los Angeles is behind the curve in supporting the worker-owned model. New York City recently made a $1.2 million allocation to provide educational, legal and governance assistance to worker cooperatives with the goal of helping 30 new start-ups. The City Council and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio are making sure that many of the new businesses will be located in minority communities.

In Stonington, Maine, 45 worker-owners have just finished a year running three grocery stores that they purchased from a family. Alan White, President of the cooperative’s board of directors recently said that the new worker-owners would never have had the opportunity to own part of a business without the use of this model. “It’s the American dream where all of us have a say in what’s going on,” he said.

Vernon Seile, who describes himself as a “conservative republican” and who owned the stores for 40 years, sold to his employees after receiving offers from other storeowners nearby. “It seemed that the business strategy of the other people who wanted to buy my stores was to cut the employees wages or lay them off,” he said. “That’s no way to treat loyal employees so I rejected their offers.”

The way Seile sees it, the idea of worker ownership is not “socialistic” but a way of broadening employees understanding of what it means to run a small business. “I think that when I owned the stores that most of my employees were Democrats,” he said. “But it’s surprising how thinking changes when it’s their own money they are investing.”

There is current legislation in the California Assembly that would make it easier for worker-owned businesses to meet legal requirements in California. Assembly Bill 816, sponsored by Assemblyman Rob Bonta who represents Oakland and Alameda, would also require the Secretary of State to provide information to small business owners who are selling that one viable alternative is to convert their companies into worker-owned enterprises.

The City of Los Angeles can also help by following New York’s lead with financial and technical assistance. Educational programs on democratic and cooperative business governance could also be established at our local community colleges or integrated into business courses and economic development efforts. The city should also consider establishing parity for procurement contracts for worker-owned cooperatives similar to advantages that women and minority owned businesses receive.

Waters has what you might call a Jeffersonian take on what he is doing. “We talk a lot about democracy in the United States but generally democracy stops at the door of the workplace,” he says. He believes that the worker-owner model is deeply democratic, more equal and encourages responsibility in his own and his partner’s personal and political lives.

Pioneers, if they remain singular, are often regarded as mere cranks. A thousand pioneers, on the other hand, is the beginning of a community and a new common sense. Mayor Garcetti and the other city officials can help make a worker-owned cooperative community thrive.

Kelly Candaele is currently directing a film on the workers who are building the Wilshire Grand Hotel. He worked for years at the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor.

WORCS: Worker Ownership Resources and Cooperative Services

WORCS: Worker cooperative Resources and Cooperative Services is an initiative to start worker cooperative incubators and worker cooperatives in the Southwest.
US Federation of Worker Cooperatives http://www.USWorker.coop
National Cooperative Business Association http://www.ncba.coop
California Center for Cooperative Development http://www.cccd.coop
Arizmendi Association of Bakeries http://arizmendi.coop
Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives http://www.nobawc.org
Mondragon http://www.mondragon-corporation.com/ENG.aspx
For more information, resources and reading materials, check these web sites: American.coop is all about Worker Cooperatives in the USA
Evergreen Project in Cleveland video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gt_ZHUDhKjs
THE TAKE – The story of Argentina’s occupied and recovered workplaces http://thetake.org/
THIS WAY OUT : A Step by Step Guide to Setting Up a Worker Cooperative: a Video from Mighty Small Films http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0g4Z8hhqDg&feature=youtu.be

http://www.WORCS.us which stands for Worker Ownership Resources and Cooperative Services is my web site which has links to this and many other resources.
Find us on Facebook and Meetup.com http://workercooperatives.org

http://www.worcs.us http://laworcs.us https://www.facebook.com/groups/LAWORCS http://www.meetup.com/LAWORCS http://lvworcs.ushttps://www.facebook.com/groups/LVWORCS http://www.meetup.com/LVWORCS http://www.occupyjobs.org https://workcoop.wordpress.comhttp://www.linkedin.com/groups/LVWORCS-Las-Vegas-Worker-Ownership-5114997