30 Days of Social Enterprise
Transition North PDF Print E-mail

I went to the Transitions North Conference today in Slaithwaite today sponsored by the Co-operative. When I arrived I met some young people from a new project called Young Ethical Enterprise from Huddersfield selling Oromo Coffee, Oromo is a social enterprise which undertakes direct community to community trading with small holder Kenyan coffee farmers. The business model reminds me of the initiative setup by Stan Thekaekara who hosted our group when I visited India with UnLtd in 2007 and setup a direct trading social enterprise called Just Change , direct trading is something just taking off and something I recommend retail social enterprises to look into.


The conference itself was excellent and truly thought provoking, transition is about the transition to a post fossil fuel based economy and the challenge of reaching peak oil. Highlights for me included Rob Hopkins, the co-founder of the Transition Town network, talking about the need to build resilience rather than sustainability in communities. By this he meant that if an event like the blockade of oil refineries happened and we couldn’t buy petrol that communities would be resilient to carry on using their own resources and ingenuity.  There are lessons here about resilience for Social Enterprises both internally and how they underpin communities. Christine Tacon, Managing Director of Co-operative Farms, told us that the farms business was the UKs largest farms business farming 50,000 acres and growing. We were also told that co-operatives internationally employ 10% more people than all the multi-national companies put together, which I found totally mind-blowing.


Yesterday Paul Bridges from the DTA told me about the Green Valley Grocer and Handmade Bakery who have been supported by the DTAs Cultivating Enterprise program for community owned social enterprises. I got some great bread baked fresh at the bakery and some English grown shallots, the work of both organizations underpins and supports the works of the local transition network.

 

 
And then it was Waitrose PDF Print E-mail

On Tuesday after posting my last post I went the University of Leeds for a meeting and afterwards I went to the student union to visit its shop for a snack, I was pleasantly surprised the shop stocks mainly co-operative group products as well as high st brands and the union’s own food which is branded with a great tagline ‘not for profit – just for students’ not only acknowledging its status as a social enterprise but proudly extolling their mission in just 6 words, go on see if you can do it for your social enterprise – I must admit I am struggling a bit.

I had meetings in Sheffield this morning and afterwards I used the opportunity to visit the region’s only Waitrose Petrol Station in Sheffield City Centre and as Waitrose is part of the John Lewis Partnership which is a workers co-operative , I popped into Waitrose to do some shopping and must admit I haven’t been to Waitrose for about 10 years. It is a much higher end supermarket than I am used too and although they had a great range of fair-trade products, I did linger in the chocolate aisle a bit too long, and niche artisanal type products made by small local producers there were not many actual products made by social enterprises apart from Waitrose own products and some Traidcraft goods. Where were the ONE products or SUMA goods  inter-trading and growing the social enterprise supply chain is one of the main ways of growing the sector and something the 30 days challenge wants to focus on more closely. This was especially apt on the day I visited Waitrose as I had just met with the other stakeholders of Footsey – the social economy trade fair about how we get more large scale buyers whether public, private or social enterprise to Footsey.

 
On the Road PDF Print E-mail

Well, I cycled in today for the first time, just avoiding 2 major rain showers and a hailstorm. The ride was much more pleasant than anticipated, however I need to try and get to Edinburgh Bicycle Co-operative before 6pm when it closes to buy a pair of cycling gloves.


I am looking at a number of Social Enterprise share opportunities for tomorrow. I am thinking about Go Co-op shares as this challenge has already heightened my awareness of the need for more transport.  Go Co-op aims to provide their own public transport services, although their shares cost £500 each!

Another option is Shared Interest who provide micro-finance for fair-trade enterprises in the developing world and shares go for £100 each.

Chapeltown Development Trust is my local development trust which has just started and I already have a members share for £10 but anybody can buy an investors share for £100 and the investment will help fund our first project a community broadband system for the local area, I am not totally impartial as I am a director of the Trust.


Thanks to fledglings who have acknowledge receipt of my order for a jungle snoozy.

 

 
The challenge has started PDF Print E-mail

Well its day two of the challenge and so far so good. Yesterday I took a slow and steady start to the challenge by buying an Observer from the Co-op Store on Harrogate Rd in Moortown and then read it while my son took a nap in the back of the car. The Observer is published by a Social Enterprise as the Guardian Media Group is itself a wholly owned subsidiary of the Scott Trust and the only newspaper group in the UK without a proprietor, the Scott Trust  also has a charitable foundation funded by the Guardian’s trading activity.

I then had to nip down to our allotments, the Gledhow Valley Allotment Association and pay our subs for the year and bought some Japanese Onions from the allotment shop to plant for harvesting in spring.

Later in the afternoon I went and collected my bike from its service at Edinburgh Bicycle Co-operative and I had a set of lights and mudguards installed on it. Tomorrow I am cycling to work which does worry me slightly as the last time I rode a bike not for purely leisure reasons on a short journey was when I was 15 years old and still held some vestige of hope I might one day ride in the Tour de France – well tomorrow will be the Tour de Leeds rush hour traffic.


Today I have ordered a Jungle Snoozy for my son – suffice to say it is an aid to toilet training. I have ordered it from Fledglings in Saffron Walden which is a social enterprise supporting children with specific development and learning needs and sell products and offer advice to their families. I know Ruth Lingard who is director of Fledglings and an inspirational social entrepreneur who received the MBE for services to disabled young people. We spent two weeks together on a learning  journey to India visiting Bangalore, Mysore and Mumbai where we saw some great social enterprises doing great work around social environmental systems and opened my eyes to the possibilities that exist within the sector .


Tomorrow I hope to start on my reading list and give some early reflections on the challenge.


Fledglings website can be found here - http://www.fledglings.org.uk/
Details of our learning journey from 2007 can still be found here - http://unltdlearningjourney2007.blogspot.com/
If you are interested in going on a learning journey they are recruiting now- http://www.journeysforchange.org/upcoming-journeys

 
The countdown to 30 days of Social Enterprise PDF Print E-mail

Well the votes are in and I start my challenge on Sunday 1st November. For 30 days I will be exclusively purchasing from social enterprises. I have spent most of my time worrying about transport and how to get everywhere without being able to turn up at the bus stop or at the train station and buy a ticket, as well as the possibility of running out of petrol nowhere near a co-op or Waitrose Petrol Station. So I have taken a couple of steps to hopefully avoid being stranded. I am having my bike serviced on Saturday at the Edinburgh Bicycle Co-operative which has a local branch in Chapel Allerton and so I will be going to most meetings in Leeds on my bike, maybe further afield once I get my bike legs!


I have printed a list of co-op petrol stations in Yorkshire which is surprisingly large and may need testing as I am not confident they all exist. Energy supply is another difficult area and I am transferring to EBICO who from what I can tell is the only social enterprise energy supplier and I have found it very easy to transfer so far.


I have had a few e-mails from people offering me services or goods to buy; so if I do buy something from you then you will be feature in this online diary of my 30 day adventure and maybe comment a little about your organisation or the product, although I am not sure I will list every single item on my grocery shop at the co-op unless you really want me too!


I am not taking a ground zero approach, so things I have already bought and own will be used. All new purchases will be from social enterprises and I will be trying to buy from as wide a range of enterprises as possible, including getting all my Christmas presents from Social Enterprises in November. I will also write about any challenges, difficulties or great experiences I have.


This challenge is partly about social enterprises and partly about consumerism, but also what we buy and the power of the individual consumer in our economy. I am going to be reading some books to help me think about what I am doing, these will be:

- Tescopoly by Andrew Simms
- All Consuming by Neal Lawson
- The first Robert Owen biography that I receive from whichever one of those generous people who keep offering to lend me Robert Owen biographies

 
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