Annual Cooperatives Conference in DC

Annual Cooperatives Conference, November 12-14, 2013, Loews Madison Hotel

Experience the only conference for cooperatives of all sectors! NCBA CLUSA‘s Annual Cooperatives Conference draws hundreds of cross-sector cooperative leaders passionate about learning the latest best practices and trends for creating powerful change in their organizations. Join us in Washington, DC for two exciting days of advocacy, collaboration and education. At the 2013 NCBA CLUSA Annual Cooperatives Conference, the possibilities are endless! Engage with thought-provoking cooperative leaders, learn important trends and best practices, connect with your co-op peers, and join our unified voice for cooperatives on Capitol Hill.

 

October is National Coop Month!

October is National Coop Month!

Greenbelt, MD is known far and wide for its Cooperatives. The Greenbelt Cooperative Alliance is offering two opportunities to learn about how cooperatives create local jobs and services

FREE admission for both events.

Saturday, October 12 10:30 am – 12:00 Noon

 “Worker-Owned Cooperatives Create Jobs”

 Old Greenbelt P&G Theater

129 Centerway, Greenbelt, MD

Two videos will be shown:

– Democracy in the Workplace;

– How the Worker-owners of Union Cab Govern Themselves

Followed by a discussion led by worker-owners from local worker cooperatives

 RSVP on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/events/683069955037939/

 Contact for more information: 

Jim Johnson

jim.johnson@dawn.coop

240-621-0921

Thursday, October 10 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

“Cooperative Child Care Options in Franklin Park”

Beltway Plaza Academy 8 Theaters,

6198 Greenbelt Rd., Greenbelt, MD

Two videos will be shown:

– The ABCs of Cooperative Childcare

– Democracy in the Workplace

Followed by a discussion led by a panel of local cooperative leaders

RSVP on Facebook 

https://www.facebook.com/events/551051394968599

 Contact for more information: 

Carolyn Lambright-Davis   clambrightdavis@yahoo.com

  240-705-6438

 Lois Browne  

lmbrowne66@msn.com

    301-442-0080

Creating Good (Cooperative and ESOP) Jobs discussion

Creating Good Jobs: Lessons Learned from Worker Cooperatives, ESOPs and B Corporations

Featuring
Steven Dawson
Founder and Strategic Advisor, PHI

Albert Fuller
CEO and Chairman, Integrated Packaging Corporation

Camille Kerr
Research Director, The National Center for Employee Ownership

Jamie Raskin
Maryland State Senator and Professor at American University’s Washington College of Law

Moderated by
Lydia DePillis
Reporter for Wonkblog, The Washington Post

Thursday, October 10, 2013
12:00 PM – 1:30 PM

At the Aspen Institute
One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 700
Washington, DC 20036

Register to attend this event.

A special thanks to the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the Surdna Foundation for their support of this discussion series.

For further information contact: Matt Helmer, Economic Opportunities Program
Tel: 202-341-4992; e-mail: matt.helmer@aspeninst.org

About the Event

The U.S. economy continues to add jobs at a modest, yet steady pace.  While job creation is a positive sign that the economy is beginning to heal, job reports in the last few months show that low-wage sectors are the industries where people are predominantly finding work.  Notably, these include home health care, retail, restaurant, and temporary staffing industries.  In addition to low pay, other job quality issues, such as few benefits, part-time hours, and limited training and advancement opportunities, are becoming more common in many sectors as some companies seek to maximize shareholder returns at the expense of investing in their workforce.  A number of businesses, however, are trying to buck these trends and show that businesses can create quality jobs for their workers and still succeed in the marketplace.   Worker-owned cooperatives, B Corps companies, and businesses with employee stock ownership programs may offer ideas about ways to improve the returns to work.   Wages above industry standards, investments in employees’ skills development, profit sharing, democratic workplaces, and the use of metrics that evaluate how a business is treating their workforce compared to their peers are just a few of the practices some of these businesses use to improve job quality.  When successfully implemented, these businesses benefit from a skilled, productive and loyal workforce that helps drive innovation and healthy returns.  These models, however, are not without their challenges.  Many worker-owned cooperatives have failed and some ESOPs have ended up hurting the workers they were designed to benefit.  In this event, panelists will have an honest discussion about these different approaches, including what it takes for these types of business models to succeed, the impacts of these models on profits and worker success, and what we can learn from these models that can apply to creating better jobs in our economy overall.
Speakers and Moderator

Steven Dawson, Founder and Strategic Advisor, PHI    
As its founding president, Steven Dawson guided PHI for 20 years. Under his leadership, PHI grew into a $7 million organization with a staff of 35, working to secure quality care through quality jobs for our nation’s direct-care workforce.  During his years as president, Steven served on the board of Cooperative Home Care Associates (CHCA), PHI’s affiliated $60 million home care agency, which now employs 2,300 home care aides in New York City — the largest worker cooperative in the country. He was also the founding chair of Independence Care System (ICS), New York’s first Medicaid-funded chronic care demonstration program for adults living in their homes with disabilities, which now coordinates care for 5,000 elders and people with disabilities, providing more than $250 million in annual services. Steven was also the founding co-convener of the Eldercare Workforce Alliance which, with 28 national members, is the nation’s only coalition organized to strengthen the caregiving workforce serving older adults. Steven has co-authored with the Aspen Institute several landmark publications on low-wage and health care employment issues. Previously, he founded the Industrial Cooperative Association (now The ICA Group). In May of 2013, Steven was inducted into the National Cooperative Hall of Fame for his decades of leadership in developing low-income worker cooperatives. In his current role as Strategic Advisor, Steven assists the president of PHI, Jodi Sturgeon, and PHI’s leadership team on matters of resource development, business development, and public policy.

Albert Fuller, CEO and Chairman, Integrated Packaging Corporation       
Albert D. Fuller is Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Integrated Packaging Corporation LLC (IPC), a corrugated box and packaging manufacturer headquartered in Detroit Michigan. Mr. Fuller established IPC in 1992 and IPC has grown into one of the nation’s leading minority owned manufacturing companies. IPC has manufacturing plants in urban areas in Michigan and Louisiana. IPC in 2010 had sales revenue exceeding $100 million. IPC’s past awards include Procter and Gamble’s Minority Business Enterprise “Company of the Year,” “Top 100 Industrial Company” by Black Enterprise Magazine, as well as a Harvard Business Review Case study.  Mr. Fuller is a Presidential appointee, currently serving as a member of the Secretary of Commerce’s Manufacturing Council and as a Board Member of the Hitachi Foundation, which focuses its efforts on business’s role in poverty amelioration.

Camille Kerr, Research Director, The National Center for Employee Ownership    
As the Research Director at the National Center for Employee Ownership (NCEO), Camille conducts research on legal developments and trends in employee ownership, including surveys on executive compensation at ESOP companies, corporate governance practices, equity compensation practices at private companies, and more. She is a frequent speaker on employee ownership and has contributed to a number of NCEO publications. Camille also works on projects to increase awareness and understanding of employee ownership at the state, national, and global level.  Camille is also a Director and Treasurer for WAGES (Women’s Action to Gain Economic Security), a nonprofit dedicated to promoting the economic and social wellbeing of low-income women through cooperative business ownership.  She earned a J.D. from the University of Cincinnati, College of Law, where she graduated cum laude.

Jamie Raskin, MD State Senator and Professor at American University’s Washington College of Law
Jamie Raskin is a professor of constitutional law at American University, a Democratic State Senator in Maryland, and a Senior Fellow at People for the American Way.  A progressive State Senator who came to office in 2006 in a landslide upset victory against a 32-year incumbent, Senator Raskin has twice been elected with more than 99% of the general election vote.  He is the Majority Whip of the Senate and Chairman of the Montgomery County Senate delegation.  In the last two years, Raskin led the successful floor fights in the Senate for marriage equality and for repeal of the death penalty.  He has seen more than 60 of his bills become law, including historic legislation, such as America’s first Benefit Corporation law defining a new kind of corporation committed to creating public benefits as well as profits and numerous laws advancing civil rights, civil liberties, and consumer rights.  A prolific author, Raskin’s books include Overruling Democracy: The Supreme Court versus the American People, a bestselling analysis of Bush v. Gore and conservative judicial activism, and We the Students, which examines cases affecting America’s students and has been called “the bible of the new movement for constitutional literacy.”  Raskin founded the Marshall-Brennan Constitutional Literacy Project, which has sent more than a thousand law students at 20 law schools into public high schools across the country to teach a course in “constitutional literacy.”The Huffington Post has called Raskin “one of the country’s most talented state legislators,” the Washington Post has described him as Maryland’s “authority on constitutional issues,” the Silver Spring Voice called him the “whiz kid” of the General Assembly, PolitickerMD.com named him “Maryland’s Smartest Legislator,” and the Takoma Voice named him Montgomery County’s  “Most Responsive Elected Official.”  Senator Raskin is a magna cum laude graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, where he was an Editor of the Harvard Law Review.

Lydia DePillis, Reporter for Wonkblog, The Washington Post
Lydia DePillis is a reporter for Wonkblog at the Washington Post, where she covers business policy, trade, housing and urban affairs.  Ms. DePillis’ recent coverage has examined the proposed living wage legislation in Washington D.C. and Wal-Mart’s fight against the proposal, income inequality, executive pay, and the bankruptcy in Detroit.  Previously, she was a staff writer covering technology at the New Republic and a reporter at the Washington City Paper covering land use. Ms. DePillis is a graduate of Columbia College and is originally from Seattle.

Cooperative Housing Thrives in DC

By Elizabeth Falcon, CNHED

Residents of Kenyon Yes We Can Co-op

Residents of Kenyon Yes We Can Co-op

DC has a rich history of housing cooperatives, in which each resident owns a share of the entire property, not just their unit. While relatively unknown, there are at least 120 co-ops in DC, many of which are a great source of stable, affordable housing.

In a cooperative, each resident owns a share in the corporation that owns their property, entitling them to reside in a specific unit. The corporation has a board of directors and a management company, which maintains the property, screens new residents, and determines monthly fees or carrying charges.

Nationally, cooperative housing began in the late 1800′s, but contemporary co-ops first appeared here in 1920. Banks would not finance the purchase of co-op units and condominiums did not yet exist, so early co-ops were a way for wealthy urban dwellers to own their homes and have control of their buildings. DC’s earliest cooperatives were built along Connecticut Avenue, and the most famous example may be Watergate East, built in the 1960s.

Today, the creation of a co-op in DC usually takes a different path. Empowered by theTenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, many residents of low and moderate incomes consider cooperative ownership when their apartment building goes up for sale.

The DC government supports some tenants who choose this route by committing public funds for the purchase and rehabilitation of these buildings to make them affordable to the current tenants. Previously, federal Community Development Block Grants were a major source of funding for co-op development; now, the most likely source is DC’s locally-funded Housing Production Trust Fund.

The cooperatives created with public funds are limited equity co-ops, meaning that there are restrictions on the price and resale value of a membership share. This ensures that cooperative units remain affordable in the long term.

Public investment in co-ops makes ownership available to low-income residents and helped maintain a much more diverse group of co-op residents. Today, there are co-ops in every ward of the city, with 3,000 residents living in 86 limited equity cooperative buildings.

Co-ops are tucked into neighborhoods around the city: garden apartments like Brightwood Gardens in Ward 7, an eight-story building in Logan Circle, a cluster of apartments in Columbia Heights named after civil rights worker Ella Jo Baker. These housing co-ops were created to preserve affordable housing and provide opportunity for residents of low and moderate income around the city.

Although many are skeptical that these tenants can own and maintain their own properties,61% of DC’s limited equity co-ops have been around since before 2000. This proves that co-op residents can own, maintain, and revitalize homes and communities.

On Saturday, organizations that support DC’s co-ops will hold a DC Co-op Clinic to help strengthen the internal functions of DC’s housing co-ops. Workshops will focus on how to be strong stewards of a collective property for this unique form of home ownership. For more information, check out this flyer.

Many DC renters can’t access the tax benefits, stability and capital that a limited equity co-op provides, and traditional homeownership may not be possible either. Cooperative housing started as an option only for the wealthy, but today it’s a gateway to homeownership and financial stability for those who need it most.

Post’s Article about DC Intentional Communities

Today, the Washington Post had a very interesting article about intentional communities in DC. The article has some great photos too.  The intentional communities highlighted are:

In the comments section of the article, someone asked, “There must be more such communities in the Washington Metro area. Any for active seniors?” and another person wrote, “I’d like to know that also.” Check out the Coop DC directory section on housing. Do you know other cooperatives that should be listed?

Update on Food Coop in DC

For people interested in getting involved in helping to get a food coop started in DC, we will be meeting this Sunday, July 14th.

Food Coop Next Steps Meeting
Sunday, July 14th at 6pm
Jessica Richard’s house
5324 4th St NW

We will be discussing the next steps we need to take to apply for the Food Coop Initiative grant due August 1st. This seed grant provides up to $10,000 to organizations to do a feasibility study and receive mentorship/ resources from Food Coop Initiative staff. For more information about the grant, please see here: http://www.foodcoopinitiative.coop/content/seed-grant-applications-now-available

If people who are interested in getting involved with starting the food coop could fill out the short survey below, that would be very helpful in guiding the discussion on Sunday.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1GoxcqdRQXN7Q6czrNfOTviNExguBfHbYroavbZxU_No/viewform

Many thanks!
Josephine

Upcoming Worker Cooperative Conference in Philadelphia

The Eastern Conference for Workplace Democracy, “Growing our Cooperatives, Growing our Communities,” will take place July 26-28, 2013.  GEO, ECWD and Mariposa Food Co-op are sponsoring the one-day pre-conference “Advancing the Development of Worker Cooperatives” (ADWC) 2013 on July 26, 2013. Registration is closing on Friday July 12th, if you miss that date then you have to register on site.

July 26, 2013
University of the Sciences
Rosenberger Hall Room 102
600 S. 43rd Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

From 8 AM (light breakfast) to 5:30 PM (lunch included), and then meets up with opening dinner and community showcase for ECWD at 6 PM on Friday July 26th.

Here is a basic summary of the conference:

Grassroots Economic Organizing (GEO), the Eastern Conference for Workplace Democracy and Mariposa Food Co-op are pleased to announce the Advancing the Development of Worker Cooperatives (ADWC) 2013 pre-conference, which will focus on successful inter-cooperative approaches to self-financing and financing within the co-op movement.

The purpose is to focus on positive efforts, explore how can we bring these strategies to scale, increase awareness of these successes, and facilitate adoption and employment of them by other cooperatives. We will examine what the movement is doing to promote worker cooperatives and help worker co-ops thrive financially. The preconference will include presentations of a variety of strategies followed by break-out discussions and report backs. We especially encourage participants who are worker-owners and those engaged in worker co-op financing and development.

Register at http://www.east.usworker.coop/content/registration-payment. $50 if attending the ECWD, and $85 for the pre-conference only (includes meals).

Jessica Gordon Nembhard will also be speaking at the conference:
“African American Cooperatives and the Struggle for Economic Independence”
University of the Sciences
Rosenberger Hall Room 102
600 S. 43rd Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
July 25, 2013, from 7-9 PM.

Interested in starting a food coop? Join us!

Some people who are interested in starting a food coop in DC will gather this Sunday, June 30th at 6:30pm.  You are welcome to join us.

Yvonne, a DC Ecovillage member, has graciously agreed to host the meeting at her house.
Sunday, June 30th 6:30pm
Yvonne’s house
5025 4th St NW

If you are interested, but can’t make it, just email Josephine, who can keep you in the loop (josephinechu8@gmail.com).

World Bank claims to be a cooperative

Yes, it may sound amazing, but the World Bank and the IMF do claim this. The World Bank states that it functions as a kind of cooperative working for its members: “The World Bank is like a cooperative, made up of 188 member countries.” The World Bank is owned by its members and does serve its members, as other cooperatives do. However, each member-country does not participate equally in democratic governance. Each country-member does not have an equal vote (“one member – one vote”), rather votes depend on the amount the member-country has contributed to the World Bank (“weighted system of voting“).

As a result, member-countries with more wealth have more power in the World Bank and other international financial institutions like the IMF: “Five Executive Directors are appointed by the members with the five largest numbers of shares (currently the United States, Japan, Germany, France and the United Kingdom). China, the Russian Federation, and Saudi Arabia each elects its own Executive Director. The other Executive Directors are elected by the other members.” From the World Bank voting table, the US has nearly 15% of the total voting shares and the next most powerful country, Germany has 4.41% of the total voting shares, while Malawi has 0.09% and Angola has 0.17%. Therefore, given the fact that they do not have “one member – one vote,” the World Bank and the other international financial institutions are not cooperatives.

Are there other reasons why they are not cooperatives? Or should they be considered cooperatives and added to our DC cooperative directory?