Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Coming Soon...

...to a neighborhood park near you: Tacoma Food Co-Op's summertime extravaganza! Yes, we've been talking about this event for over a year. And yes we've had tentative dates scheduled in the past. But, YES!, this time it's for real.

July 19th
People's Park
Bands, speakers, farmers, food, friends, etc.

More details are forthcoming. All you need to do now is put it on your calendar! And start telling everyone you know about it because it's going to be awesome.

And if you need more incentive to come down and show your support for our own locally owned, member controlled co-op, here are a couple of success stories from other co-ops around the country (reprinted from the Daily Market Cooperative's website (Walla Walla, WA); http://www.dailymarket.coop/casestudies.html):

Caring for the Community

Co-opportunity Consumers Cooperative, Santa Monica, California. Every Tuesday, the co-op donates food to nearby St. Joseph Early Learning Center, which provides childcare for pre-school kids of low-income and homeless families. Members and employees also donate toys to St. Joseph’s during the holidays.

Food Front Cooperative Grocery, Portland, Oregon. With its annual Sustainable Community Awards, Food Front Co-op recognizes organizations that have helped the community through sustainability. The awards reflect a commitment to healthy neighborhoods and agricultural systems.

Community Investment Funds

Many food co-ops have community or social investment funds that funnel donations from members to non-profits in the community. Among them:

Ashland Food Cooperative in Ashland, Ore., which generated nearly $25,000 this past year for 25 non-profit organizations. Grantees included the Oregon Children’s Foundation, the Ashland Emergency Food Bank, and Ashland High School, for a scholarship for a graduating senior pursuing culinary studies.

Williamson Street Grocery Cooperative in Madison, Wis., which gave $7,000 to seven groups, including a coalition for the disabled and a day care center that connected kids to sustainable agriculture. Williamson Street co-op also provides food and fundraising incentives to more than 45 other groups.

Briar Patch Community Co-op in Grass Valley, Calif., which in four years has given $3,000 to 20 groups including a food bank and a childcare co-op.

Sacramento Natural Foods Cooperative, which collects contributions at cash registers and distributes them each month to four charities. The co-op also contributes food for special events and gift baskets and sells salsa and pasta sauce that is grown, prepared and marketed by students from a local high school.

Ukiah Natural Foods Co-op, in Ukiah, Calif., which this year provided eight grants totaling $15,000 to food and housing groups.

Wheatsville Co-op, Austin, Texas. The board, management and members pick 10 organizations annually to be the co-op’s community action groups for one month each. On Wednesdays during their month, the groups receive one percent of co-op sales. In the past year, an average of more than $600 per group was donated. In November and December, the co-op collects canned foods for a food bank and clothing for a Coats for Kids program.

Moscow Food Co-op, Moscow, Idaho. The co-op gives grants to non-profits by donating two percent of all Tuesday sales to them for a month. The board selects the recipients, which receive an average donation of $700. The co-op also holds an Empty Bowls fundraiser in which ceramic bowls filled with soup are sold to raise money to fight hunger. In addition, it takes vanloads of shoppers on organic farm tours and hosts an annual Taste Fair featuring local farmers.

Silver City Food Co-op, Silver City, New Mexico. Penny Park is a vibrant community park in Silver City, built with penny donations and maintained with community support. Silver City Food Co-op offers week-long discounts to those who help with repairs. The co-op also has participated in a variety of park events, including a children’s festival, where it ran a concession stand benefiting the park.

Caring for the Environment

Food Conspiracy Co-op, Tucson, Arizona. The co-op was an early supporter of recycling. Recognizing that one business would have a limited impact, it formed Downtown Don’t Waste It, which now has about 100 participating businesses. The program was cited as the state’s Best Recycling Program.

Sevananda Food Cooperative, Atlanta, Georgia. The co-op is a big supporter of green power. For $5 each month, members of the community can to purchase 10-kilowatt shares of power generated from the store’s solar panels. The program was launched with help from the local Sierra Club chapter and the Georgia Center for Law in the Public Interest.

Community Food Co-op, Bellingham, Washington. Community Food Co-op participated in an unusual effort that fights hunger while it boosts organic farming. Four new farms were paired with well-established mentor farmers, and together they contracted with the co-op to provide 17 weeks of organic produce to a food bank. With donations from members, the co-op purchased the produce, which was delivered directly to the food bank.

People’s Food Co-op, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Recycling is important to People’s Food Co-op. It has an award-winning program that generates three mountains of recycled materials each week. It is also a charter member of a county program that encourages business to adopt sustainable practices. The co-op also offers free classes on nutrition to anyone in the community and last year partnered with the schools to co-host cooking classes for adults. Finally, the co-op makes donations of groceries, prepared food, gift certificates and gift baskets to local non-profits.

Committed to Children

Many food co-ops are active in nearby schools. Among them:

Ukiah Natural Foods Co-op, Ukiah, Calif., which adopted a third grade class for the coming school year. The co-op will educate the class about natural foods during monthly visits and also sponsor field trips to local farms. The co-op is also initiating a scholarship for a local student of sustainable agriculture.

First Alternative Co-op, Corvallis, Ore., which has a Chefs in the Classroom program that allows children to learn about healthy eating and sustainable agriculture while they explore differences in food choices across cultures. The effort highlights different flat breads from around the world. Kids try their hands at dicing, slicing, cleaning, serving, and cooking organic foods. The co-op does about 80 presentations a year.

Ocean Beach People’s Organic Food Co-op, San Diego, Calif., which began offering organic farm field trips to fifth graders at Dana Middle School in 1999. To date, taken more than 2,250 children have participated. Field trips include hands-on work in the fields. For most children, they are their first experience with food outside of a supermarket.

Brattleboro Food Cooperative, Brattleboro, Vt., which offers free food and farming lessons to school-aged children. Co-op staff visits classrooms and offers lessons on nutrition and sustainable agriculture. Free tasting is included. The co-op also sponsors a health fair in a senior center where alternative health care providers set up information tables. Samples of nutritious food are provided.

Weaver’s Way Cooperative, Philadelphia, which sponsors Marketplace, an education program teaching middle school students about business and nutrition. The students buy products from the co-op at wholesale and sell them at their school, located across the street. They learn about healthy products, cooperative principals, and how to manage a business. Each year, the students donate their Marketplace earnings to causes in the community and around the world.

5 comments:

Amanda said...

Why on God's green earth are you planning an extravaganza for an idea? Your feasibility study, and your research on other coops has already told you the idea is good. Why are we not looking forward to the grand opening of Tacoma's food coop instead?
I am sure this is an interesting academic exercise in business theory, but I actually believe this food coop could help Tacoma build a progressive and active community, and I can't believe this is taking so long. None of the things on your list involve food or a building to put food in.
Every day you continue to draft mission statements and run feasibility studies instead of finding a space and signing up members, you are losing momentum and enthusiasm.

Anonymous said...

Amanda's got a point. Enthusiasm is great, but communication has been so little and so long coming, that it's hard to think that this extravaganza is going to amount to anything. Is it a fundraiser?

What's the co-op's plan? What's the timeline? What did the feasibility study show you? Without knowing any of this, it's hard to get behind the mere idea of a co-op.

Corrinne said...

Thanks for your thoughts, you two! I can totally appreciate where you’re coming from. I’m on the steering committee, and we are all anxious to get this thing off the ground as well. Maybe even more than you since we’ve been buried in this stuff for quite awhile now – some of us for a year and a half! :)

So, let me take a stab at addressing your questions and concerns:

• Totally agree that the majority of our communication has been spotty and anything but timely. We have a very small group of folks working on this effort, and we don’t have anyone solely dedicated to communications. We’re doing the best we can, and we’re currently recruiting help – help with the business plan, help on the steering committee and other committees - you name it. Please let us know if we can plug you in somewhere! This will all get done sooner if we have some more qualified hands.

• Yes, it’s taking a long time. I’m frustrated at times as well, but anything like this takes time to do right. We’re basing our plan and work on what’s been suggested by the Food Co-Op 500 org and their development stages. We are currently in Stage 2: Feasibility & Planning. As you can see from the link, we’ve done the first 2 bullets and the first sub-bullet of the third. We’re now on the business plan for financing and ops, and building commitment and capacity. The event on July 19th is aimed at building commitment and capacity. So yes, an objective of the event is fundraising. Another objective is education because we think that if we can effectively educate people about the co-op effort and the Tacoma Food Co-op in particular, we will gain their support. We can’t secure a bank loan and/or a building until we raise funds from members. And lastly, you’ll see the final step in Stage 2 is securing a site (i.e. a building for operation). Stage 3 is what it sounds like you’re most interested in, Amanda. That’s where we actually get to begin construction, prepare for opening, etc. I can’t wait to be there! Yes, we’ve done a lot of research, but we now need to plan and we're in the thick of it. We’re not ready to jump to Stage 3 yet. The advice we've gotten from groups that have successfully opened food co-ops has been that we need to take these steps seriously and in the right order, and we’re trying to not reinvent the wheel.

So, I hope that helps. Let me know!

Anonymous said...

really hoping that the big event reveals what kind of coop you are planning. a lot of snobby coops out there. what DID the research tell you? prices? types of things you'll offer? what members get that other people don't? how much members have to pay? it seems really secret, all this planning and not much updates.

Terry's Berries LLC, Organic Farm said...

(In response to the comment, "snobby coop")

Yes, no doubt there are many different models of food cooperatives out there! I am on the membership committee, and part of our research has been taking a broad look at the prices, membership styles, benefits of co-ops throughout Washington. As part of our mission, we are prioritizing supporting local farmers and providing affordable food for the Tacoma Community. The July 19th event will be a great way to see what we have been up do in more depth, but also a great opportunity to discuss as a community how we would like to build this co-op. Sorry the communication has not been as consistent and transparent as you (and others out there)would like. 100% of all the efforts of the Tacoma Food Co-op are volunteer-run. We still need more help and support from the community. If interested, please attend the event planning meetings, Tuesdays at Trinity Church (there is one tomorrow night) or email tacomafoodcoop@gmail.com

Thanks for your comment and staying engaged! Looking forward to the event and hearing more about what the co-op will look like.....

peacefully yours,
Samantha