Thursday, December 18, 2008

A Vision of Sustainable Community

Communities of the past gathered and organized themselves around the primary essentials: food, water, and the materials for shelter. When these essentials were adequately provided for, the division of labor allowed for a proliferation of vocations dedicated to enriching our cultural lives and satisfying our wants. In time, the vast majority of our lives became fundamentally disconnected from the basic necessities that make our lives possible. This has been touted as a consequence of the advance of civilization. To a certain extent, this may be true. To not need to be concerned with the day to day task of food production or the production of life’s other essentials can be considered as liberating to society. To not be able, however, to control or safeguard these essentials seems irresponsible at best, a recipe for disaster at worst.

At a time in the not so distant past, most of life’s essentials were provided for by our immediate community. Gradually, we came to look to outside sources for these essentials. The economies of scale made it possible to purchase these essentials for far less than what could be obtained from the community. Whole professions became unprofitable and faded into non-existence. The close and subtle bonds that held the community together were no longer necessary. One needed no longer to rely upon one’s neighbor for support; that support could be bought at the marketplace for the lowest possible price. It seems, however, that we may have been swindled by this lure of price. Our livelihoods are no longer dependent upon those near and dear to us, but rather upon globalized markets that we have little contact with or control over. Through the simple practice of satisfying our wants and needs from sources outside our community or region, we ourselves continue to create and support this system. If we so choose, we can change our habits and once again lend our support to those near and dear to us.

We live in a town that serves as a gateway to a natural place of pilgrimage. Here people from all over the world come to reconnect their souls with the harmonious rhythms of nature. We therefore have in our hands a unique opportunity to become a model town that lives in harmony with nature. This opportunity is ours for the taking, and will bring with it an irresistible appeal to ever more visitors. We can advertise till we are blue in the face and out of money, and to no avail. To paraphrase:
If we don’t build it, they won’t come!

So what is it that needs to be built? We need to build a sustainable economy; one that is rooted in care for our townsfolk, but with arms open wide for visitors. We need to build a community that we ever increasingly love to live in. This means really living in our community, and its center: our downtown. Our downtown is the heart of our community; it is our commons. If we make a point of going there and supporting our locally owned independent businesses, our downtown will gradually begin to be able to fully support our needs. When we make our downtown a place that we are well satisfied with, a place wherein we love to spend our time, our visitors will be equally pleased with it, and automatically drawn to it. And as our downtown becomes a place where we and our visitors often dwell, our infrastructure will expand to make it a place wherein to dwell comfortably. We are in a sense a global village, a town with roots all across the country and even the world. We have numerous part-time resident families that have been coming here for several generations. We have here also, the opportunity to be a beacon to the world, an inspiration to many.

So our first step toward creating a sustainable economy is to commit to our community, and to our neighbors, by supporting our local economy. This will begin to cultivate a resiliency in the economy, a strength which is inherent in natural systems and natural communities. This strength can be employed to aid other communities in time of need. A recent example is a Mennonite community that had the internal strength to send a crew of relief workers to New Orleans for six months after hurricane Katrina!

In addition to supporting our neighbor, having a sustainable economy and living in harmony with nature requires us to become ever increasingly more environmentally sensitive. Environmental sensitivity is born of the ethic of always leaving our world in a better condition than we found it in. We have to honestly ask ourselves in every act we do, “Am I improving or degrading our common environment.” Should we choose to do so, we could easily follow the path toward energy self-sufficiency, food security, and a rich cultural life. We could be a town that lives in harmony with nature. Again, this role is uniquely ours for the taking. We need not wait for anyone else to make this happen for us. We simply have to begin to live this Vision. Having done so, everything else will fall into its rightful place. Let us begin.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

More than a Grocery - Part 1

We all aspire to find a life that is more in harmony with our values and with the spirit of nature. We get inspired by the words and actions of others. But how do we begin to bring this inspiration into our everyday patterns of living?


It is for this purpose that Local Roots Co-op is coming into being. But how can a mere grocery store help bring about this change in our way of life? Local Roots Co-op is structured like an ecosystem: with multiple functions being performed by each of its elements, and multiple elements performing each function. This structure begins with a necessity we all must have, food. This is a necessity that interpenetrates and transcends all economic models. As such, it is a most appropriate means for bridging the gap between the current unsustainable economic system and the sustainable economic systems of the future.


Facilitating this transition toward a sustainable way of life is the Co-op’s reason for being. Providing a health-promoting and sustainable food supply is the Co-op’s condition for being. The Co-op’s mission is to serve our World by serving our Neighbor. In practical terms, a great portion of its mission is realized in giving preference to local goods and services rather than those of a more remote origin. This preference, of course, is to be given with respect to a sustainable ethical context.


To a certain extent this ethic has been realized in the rise of Community Supported Agriculture and Farmers’ Markets. Yet in both of these entities, there seems to be something lacking. In Community Supported Agriculture, we are indeed giving much needed support to a local farm, but are we supporting our community as well? Is the farm meeting all of our needs? The Farmers’ Markets may be better at meeting more of our needs. But do they do so at all times? And can we be sure that we are supporting sustainable farming practices? And are we sure that the goods at the Farmers’ Markets are local? These models were a great leap forward from the past. Neither, however, is fully conducive to the task of building a sustainable way of life for our society.


Small organic farms need fairly direct access to the communities that support them. Communities need a supply of a variety of sustainably produced farm goods. It is to satisfy both of these needs that a farm-to-market model is proposed. This model is designed to satisfy needs, build connections, and build community in the process. Building community is an integral component toward achieving a sustainable way of life.


We have been expected to believe in a myth of rugged individualism: that the good of the whole is contained in the good of the individual. We have been told that ‘looking out for number one’ and asking ‘what is in it for me’ are high acts of altruism, conducive to the greatest benefit of all. Quite to the contrary, great souls down through the centuries have always asked us to love our neighbors as ourselves. Those who have made it a point to practice this have found that the good of the individual is inextricably linked with the good of the neighbor, the good of the community, the good of the whole.


So how does the Co-op intend to build community? Like any ecosystem, the means are manifold. The Co-op is member and community owned; it is engaged with the community and responsive to it. The Co-op has a large member and community volunteer staff. This brings the people of the community into a greater proximity with each other. We cannot serve our neighbor without knowing our neighbor. And we will not know our neighbor if we do not meet our neighbor.


When we commit to using our community resources: businesses that are the life-bread of our neighbors, we contribute to the well-being of our community. What has been called the multiplier effect comes into play. Significantly more money stays in the community when it is spent at a locally owned independent business. Locally owned independent businesses are invested in their community, and spend a larger portion of their revenue on supporting local non-profits. Despite all of these facts, it is difficult for people to break the habit of merely looking for the seemingly best deal, and to commit to supporting the community that supports them. The Co-op will serve as a kind of support group wherein the ethic of supporting our neighbors first is cultivated.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

On the Importance of Being Local

What kind of world do we want to live in? Our choices today are what will determine what that world will be. We can look to our neighbor, or to some outside entity to satisfy our needs. Whatever choice we make will empower the recipient. All too often we have empowered entities that have no interest in our true well being. At the same time we have reduced the capacity of our neighbors, who are most likely interested in our well being, to help meet our needs. Supporting local businesses, local farmers, and local organizations helps us to regain the power to choose the way we would like the world to be.

Who is more likely to listen to us? A non-local entity or your neighbor. What about the money that we save when we shop at chain stores or on the internet? That saved money has its costs:

  • First, it sends our hard earned money out of the town that we live in. It is not available to continue circulating through, and thereby enriching, our town. This is the well known multiplier effect in which a dollar spent at a local business creates at least three times its value in the local economy.
  • Second, that savings is the means by which our local businesses are eliminated, and the taxes by which they support our local government services, as well as the many local charities that they support. Saving money puts our local shops out of business.
  • Third, that savings is also the means by which we lose the sense of place in our town as well as our sense of community. We cannot talk of community when we lack a venue with which to interact with the people of the community. Our patterns of development are not conducive to neighborliness. Neighborliness requires a commons. Our commons is our downtown. All too often in this community, we think of our downtown as a tourist destination. We need to claim it as our own! This is where we encounter our neighbor. And if our commons is a place not exactly suited to our needs, let us endeavor to make it so! Only as such, will it be an appealing place for locals and visitors alike.

The Meaning of Local

It is the mission of Local Roots Co-op to encourage us all to serve our world by serving our neighbor. A means by which we attempt to do so is by giving preference to local goods and services rather than those of a more remote origin. The question inevitably arises: what is local? Does this mean being sentenced to a purely seasonal diet? Does it mean giving up bananas, oranges and coffee?

The principle of giving preference to local goods and services must always be understood with respect to our duty to our neighbor. As such, being local is both a matter of relationship and of distance. Whether we like it or not, we are our brothers’ keepers. When we purchase a good or service from someone who is in our community, we give the gift of livelihood. If we do no more than look to our neighbor for the satisfaction of our needs and desires, and we will have done a world of good to the people of our community. If we neglect this duty, we inflict harm on our neighbor, our community and the world of which it is a part.

What happens if the good or service is not available in our own community, but is supplied by someone in the neighboring community? The person in the neighboring community, being the person nearest to us who is able to fulfill our need, is in that respect and by that relationship local, our neighbor, one to whom we have a duty to support. If all or even some of us practiced this principle, it could envelop the Earth. We will have served the world by serving our neighbor. If, on the other hand, we strive to serve some part of the remote world scene while we neglect our neighbor, we may in our zeal do harm in both places. Wherever we may be, we will find ourselves uniquely placed in proximity to people with whom we have an opportunity to gain an intimate knowledge of; a knowledge of their hopes, of their aspirations, and of their needs. These are the people who we are uniquely called upon to serve.

Now take the instance of a farmer that serves our needs 9 months out of the year. In the other three months, there is no disservice to that farmer in our seeking out produce from a farm farther away, because the goods we are looking for are not available from that farmer. This same principle applies to items that we commonly have need of that are not produced locally, like bananas, oranges or coffee. There may be a relatively local distributor of these items that we could support, and following this principle it would be our duty to do so.

It must be kept in mind that this principle implies no disservice or dislike of those people or companies who are non-local. On the contrary, we are simply practicing the most effective means that we have available to render service to them through our whole hearted service to our neighbor. And so if we find a visitor in our midst, as we so often do in our town, he or she is recognized as our guest. The guest is God, it is said. As such, let us treat our visitors with the utmost courtesy.

Price: The Hidden Cost of Saving Money

Some people may have noticed that our prices are 15-20% more than Vitamin Cottage. For diapers, their Price is about our Cost! I discussed this with the Ft. Collins Co-op. They deal with the same problem. Although, when we can buy in larger quantities, we will realize a 10% discount. So our List prices will indeed be higher than Vitamin Cottage, Whole Foods, or any other Community-wrecking mega-corporation. However, for a non-working member, the price would be comparable (our 10% volume discount + 10% member discount). For a working member, there would be an appreciable savings. (An additional 15%)!

The point, however, must be made that we can no longer be motivated solely or even at all by price. We need to reorient ourselves to do what is best for US, rather than what seems best for ME. We will realize in this practice that what is best for me is contained in what is best for us. There is a hidden and insidious cost to saving money. If I spend more, ironically I will find that I Have more. Because when my money supports my neighbor, my neighbor is then empowered to both meet his/her own needs, AND support me. This principle NEEDS to be carried to the extreme. It is a question of what Life we want to support, our neighbor or an essentially lifeless corporation. When I support my neighbor, I build my community, the only thing proof against natural disasters, terrorism, global market fluctuations, etc. So like I said, this must be practiced even to the point of where I buy my gas; buy it here! It costs 15-20% more than it does in Lyons, but you feed a family here, and build your community. Same with computer cartridges, books and anything else. If there is a separate moral issue with the business in question, that is different. This is where we practice economic democracy: we don't support the neighbor with whom we have ethical qualms. We wish him well, gently ask him to reform, and if he refuses we withdraw our support and cooperation.

This is a difficult pattern and paradigm to break; but once we do, we will realize the power that we have foolishly lavished on those unworthy of it.

The End and the Beginning

Our time at the Farmers' Market has come to an end. The task at hand now is to finish the first phase of the project and get the doors open.
We will be having another Clean-Up morning tomorrow morning at the usual time: 9:30-12:30. Only a few tasks remain:
  • Sand the stockroom wall and second coat of mud
  • Power wash 3 more items
  • Finish painting Flower Cart
  • Continue scrubbing down Produce Cooler
  • Strap the shelving together
  • Sweep/Mop galore
It is looking like we will not have our freezer operational by the 27th. We should have the Walk-in and the Produce cooler, however.
Our Day to Build the New Economy is going to be a celebration; but it will also be the beginning of a Membership drive: we would like to double our Membership in the following month. It should prove easy, as the grocery portion of the Co-op will be open, and some of the benefit of the Co-op Membership will be immediately evident. There will also be glimpses of what is to come.

Thank you all for your support. We look forward to serving you. We will be giving birth to the beginnings of a whole new economy, a whole new world.

Monday, August 18, 2008

First phase of Local Roots Co-op nearing completion

In a few weeks, the first phase of Local Roots Co-op will be complete, and we will be ready to open the Grocery portion of the Co-op. We will be opening the Co-op in weak economic times and severely undercapitalized. Our success, however, depends upon another kind of capital: the goodwill of our community. We began this project because we believe in you, our neighbors, our community.

We are calling on you to lend us your support from our very first day. We are asking nothing more than live by this principle: If there is anything that you need, look to the Co-op first to satisfy that need. If you cannot find what you need at the Co-op, and it is not in our scope or power to get it for you, then try another Locally Owned Independent business. In practicing this principle, we will strengthen and empower our community.

The Co-op is designed to succeed if its members and well-wishers commit to using it. Please let us know what you would like to see stocked on our shelves. Use the Wish List page of our website or simply email me with your request (if the Wish List procedure proves difficult).

In the next few weeks we hope to finish the following:

  • Minor upgrades to the Restrooms
  • A few drywall patches
  • New front doors
  • Moving the front door to the back
  • Electrical upgrades
  • Installation of Walk-in, Produce Cooler, and Freezer
  • Installation of POS System

When these tasks are nearing completion, we would like to have a cleaning party. When the shelves, wall, and floor are clean, we will be ready to receive our opening order. The power will then be in your hands to bring this Co-op to life. It is an instrument designed to serve us all. Let us commit to giving it the power to do so.

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Building Permit in Hand

The excruciating 8-10 week wait is over: we have our Building Permit!

Work will begin on the stock room wall Thursday afternoon (after the Farmers’ Market). We hope to get much of our shelves, equipment and new doors on Sunday. The work will continue the following week.

We aim to open on August 15th. The Co-op will be opened in two phases: first the Grocery, then the Food Service. The phasing will allow for variations in time necessary to install the Grease Trap and other kitchen equipment.

Thank you all for your support. We still need help, financially and manually. We are reaching the point where much of the work will need to be done by professionals. There will always be room, however, for the rest of us to lend them whatever support we can.

The start-up effort has entered its final phase. We can finally look forward to being open, and to beginning to fulfill our mission: to serve our neighbor, and thereby to begin to serve our world.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Building Permit Permit Around the Corner

At long last, it appears that our building permit is about to be issued. Our first priority after that is to get the floors finished. Once they are, we can begin to receive our equipment and install the the stockroom wall. There are still some items that we could use some financial help with. There are several ways to help:
  1. If one is not in immediate need of the Economic Stimulus Check, one could put that into a Community Support Loan. (Details are found on our website).
  2. If one has not taken out a membership, or bought any shares, now would be an opportune time to do so.
  3. Once the bulk of the equipment arrives (At lease 1 refrigerator), we will resume our Market Day Fund-Raiser. This time we will be able to get Produce!
  4. We will be selling Eden Valley Produce at the Farmers' Market on Thursdays. Come by, come buy, come help. It helps our relationship with Eden Valley Farm grow. We begin to support them and fulfill our ideals. It helps us to begin to have a presence in our community. We earn a little as well.
Participation in any or all of these ways will expedite the completion of the Co-op's necessary leasehold improvements, and we will finally be able to open. Below is a breakdown of our wish list and the associated cost estimate:

Building Permit

$ 8,150

Floors

$ 1,500

Electrical

$ 5,000

Grease Trap

$ 10,000

Point of Sale

$ 7,200

Total

$ 31,850



This is the Total that we would prefer to raise within our community. Stacia and I have assumed the burden of trying to arrange personal business loans to cover the rest. I hope that we, as a community, can rise bit by bit toward this challenge of helping to support a Community-owned Co-op whose sole purpose is to support us all. We would like to be open sooner, rather than later. Together we can make this happen.

Best Wishes to All. Enjoy the bounties of Summer!

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Plans Submitted

The plans have been submitted and we are awaiting our building permit. We should be hearing about our SBA Loan this week as well. Afterwards, we will finally be able to swing into action.

  • An abobe-stained concrete floor overlay will be completed.
  • Once the floor is finished, we can begin moving equipment in.
  • The partition wall, plumbing, electrical and grease trap can proceed.
  • We are still looking for a suitable front door. Any leads would be well appreciated.
On another note, our meeting with the Town's community development committee went well. We have to finish the draft design and then bring it to the Town Board for final approval. We have received great input from several Estes Park Museums. Great thanks to the Estes Park Museum for their help and guidance.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The Home Stretch

The task of getting the Co-op open is entering its final stages.
  1. We have had our first Stakeholder Meeting, and there voted unanimously to sign the lease and proceed.
  2. We expect a tentative approval by the Health Department tomorrow.
  3. We are finding a location for the Grease Trap.
  4. With the last two items taken care of, we hope to submit for our building permit this week.
  5. We expect to hear on our business loan this week as well.
  6. We have our large equipment coming from a Vitamin Cottage in Colorado Springs.
  7. Other equipment will be coming from the Boulder Cooperative Market.
  8. Our floor is now to be an epoxy-sealed concrete with a beautiful adobe stain.
Keep us in your thoughts: from the power of your prayerful good wishes, we will indeed be able to open June 21st as planned.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Equipment, Permits, and a Mural

It looks as though we will be getting the equipment from an entire Vitamin Cottage that is going out of business in Colorado Springs! The timing is perfect, the equipment cannot be moved until June 1st, so it won't be in our way. On the downside, it looks like we need a full set of signed and sealed plans just to build our stockroom wall. We had hoped to accomplish that under a Miscellaneous Building Permit, and work in stages. We hope that this will not take too much time and expense.

We are making arrangements with a world class mural artist to place a mural on the entire backside of the building. We are thinking of depicting a march through Estes Park history, from the past to the present, with all the key figures: Joel Estes, Lord Dunraven, Enos Mills, F.O. Stanley, Charles Eagle Plume, Isabella Bird and Rocky Mountain Jim... 150 years in 150 feet. We would like to have the
descendants of Estes Park's historical figures make their mark on the wall, and involve all of the local museums.

One can view some of Ella's previous murals at: www.yatesmural.org (click the picture to enter the site). The Town is walking a fine line to help us allow this to happen. The key point is that it cannot in any way be construed to be advertising for us or anyone else: it has to be seen as history and art, as a beautiful compliment to Performance Park.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

The Market Day Fund-Raiser

At last the Market Day Fund-Raiser for Local Roots Co-op is about ready to begin. We can begin now to place items on order for pick-up on Market Day (Monday). Here are the highlights:
  • We hope that our first Market Day will be April 7th. Orders should be received by the preceding Saturday.
  • We need to procure a commercial refrigerator before then to satisfy the health department.
  • One can place an order online, by email, or by dropping it off with us. Online ordering can be accessed by going to www.localroots.info and selecting Fund-Raiser. There one can view our catalog, or download it as a PDF or as an Excel file. Pressing the Order button will take one to a Login page. Members and Shareholders will have their Username and Password sent in a separate email.
  • For those who have not yet done so, become a Member so that you can participate: $20 is enough. One can make manifest one's support with a membership this way; and can later switch to a non-working membership, if that is desired, after the Co-op opens.
  • This will allow people to support us without spending any more than they already would to obtain their necessities.
It cannot be stressed enough how important it is to participate in this Fund-Raiser. Take stock of what you already have to buy at the grocery store, and place your order with the Co-op. This way you can GREATLY enhance the Co-op's financial capital necessary to meet our start-up costs without any additional expenditure. Simply meet your needs through the Co-op, and you will have given it a vital means of support. It will thereby blossom from a dream into a living reality.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Moving Ahead: As A Co-op, We Need Help

Janice Mason has written another wonderful article in the Trail Gazette. You can read an electronic version here: http://www.eptrail.com/pages/01wednesday_p/wed06_comm.html. To see Walt Hester's action shots of the demolition, you will have to see the actual newspaper. Thank you to Janice and Walt!

There are three important messages that we hoped to convey in this article:
  1. If one would like to have a Co-op in this Town, NOW is the time to make that desire a reality by buying a Membership. $20 is enough. One can make manifest one's support with a membership this way; and can later switch to a non-working membership, if that is desired, after the Co-op opens.
  2. After having manifested one's support with a Membership, or by owning Shares, one can participate in our Market Day Fund-Raiser: placing weekly orders with us for pick-up on Market Day (I think that this will be Monday, but am still not yet sure). One can place an order online, by email, or by dropping it off with us.
  3. We are seeking help in finding good rates from contractors, materials suppliers, and on equipment. Below, you can find a list of our needs, and the price to beat if at all possible.
We are striving to bring this Co-op into being. But being a cooperative, we need help. Tell all. Let us rise to this occasion! Let us make this town everything we would have it be! More than a step in the right direction, this Co-op will serve as the very foundation of our effort to do so. We see this Co-op as a gift to our community. It but requires that we - the community - simply lift our arms to receive it.


Walk Ins $ 5,600.00 2 $ 11,200.00
3 Compartment Sink $ 4,000.00 1 $ 4,000.00
Carts $ 100.00 10 $ 1,000.00
Salad Bar $ 6,800.00 1 $ 6,800.00
Oven $ 2,900.00 1 $ 2,900.00
hand sinks $ 115.00 3 $ 345.00
Prep Tables $ 321.00 2 $ 642.00
Bakery Display Case $ 500.00 2 $ 1,000.00
Juicer $ 2,590.00 1 $ 2,590.00
hoods $ 1,000.00 1 $ 1,000.00
counter freezer $ 1,500.00 1 $ 1,500.00
counter refrigerator $ 1,500.00 1 $ 1,500.00
tables $ 150.00 8 $ 1,200.00
chairs $ 50.00 32 $ 1,600.00
bar stools $ 75.00 4 $ 300.00
2x6 checkout counter $ 200.00 2 $ 400.00
6' Magazine Rack $ 100.00 1 $ 100.00
12' double Shelves $ 100.00 5 $ 500.00
24' of Produce tables $ 2,400.00 1 $ 2,400.00
Office desk and chair $ 100.00 2 $ 200.00
Kitchen Shelving $ 84.00 3 $ 252.00
Counter Top Mixer $ 1,000.00 2 $ 2,000.00
grease trap $ 10,000.00 1 $ 10,000.00
floors $ 5,000.00 1 $ 5,000.00








Thursday, March 6, 2008

We are Moving In: Time to Clean Up the Space

March has come, and Local Roots Co-op now has access to our future location. We are in the process of establishing accounts with several distributors who will service our Market Day Fund-Raiser. We have been working to make online ordering simple and easy when we begin. We will also accept orders by email and hand-written orders. The plan review is under way with the Health Department, in order to be able to engage in this kind of limited grocery activity.

Much remains to be accomplished:

  • The carpet and tile need to be removed
  • The drop ceiling needs to be taken down
  • The whole space needs to be painted [We need paint!!!]
  • Attractive lighting needs to be found and installed

There is plenty more work to be done after this initial work. We are still hoping to accelerate the growth of people who own Memberships or Shares. We have begun to apply for several grants. There is a $10,000 grant from Food Co-op 500, which we qualify for currently. We hope to raise another $25,000 from Memberships, Community Support Loans, and Shares. We will then qualify for a matching $25,000 from Food Co-op 500. As was mentioned before, this Co-op is designed to succeed and flourish, once open. The critical task is to meet the financial requirements to open. Helping the Co-op financially, no matter how small the contribution, will make manifest your support of your Co-op, and help transform it from a dream into a reality. Real support means a real Co-op: this May. Future support means a Co-op that will come at some future time. What kind of Town do we want? It is in our hands to create that Town now.

We have not yet selected the date, but the time is nearing when we will be calling upon our supporters to come and help us transform the space. If anyone has some free time during the week, please let me know. If anyone has tools that we could borrow, please let me know. If anyone has some extra space in a dumpster that we could utilize, please let me know.

Good will to all. Together I know that we can bring our Co-op, an essential component of our Commons, to Estes Park. And that is just the beginning…

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Buying Club Fund-Raiser to Begin in March

As many of you already know, we are planning on leasing the space previously occupied by Such A Deal, the flea market that used to be in West Park Center. The owners of the space have requested a $1,500 deposit, to be paid by March 1, 2008. That deposit will secure the space for us until May 1, 2008, at which time we would move forward and obtain our long-term lease. As we have been for the past few weeks, we are continuing to raise funds for all aspects of opening Local Roots Co-op.

Today, we need your help in a different way. We are planning on using the space in a unique and different way. What we propose is that we set up a temporary "buying club" operation in the West Park space. Orders would be taken once per week. We would receive delivery of all types of natural foods, and other merchandise, from United Natural Foods in Denver. We would use the space as a distribution area and sell everything to you at regular retail pricing. This would be the food and other items that you are already buying, from wherever you buy it now.

The operation would be staffed and run by volunteers (All of Us!), and all profit would be used to further our fund-raising goals. Note: as this is a fund-raising activity, the discount that members would expect to receive once we open will not yet go into effect. Also, although buying from United Natural Foods is convenient for the purpose of this fund-raiser, it does not in many ways fulfill the goals of Local Roots Co-op. There is no direct relationship with the food producer, and the producers who utilize this large distributor may not satisfy our criteria for giving preference to local producers. This fund-raiser is not meant to reflect or define the character of the future Local Roots Co-op.

Thanks very much for your continued interest and support. We are working hard to bring your local, Estes Park co-op to you as soon as possible!

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Register Your Support

Many people have spoken or written to us saying how excited they are about having Local Roots Co-op in our community. While we greatly appreciate these sentiments, we now need people to make tangible their support, in order to carry forward this community endeavor. We need the people of our community to Register their support. There are many ways to make manifest that support.

  • Shares are available for $250 each
  • Working Memberships can be bought for $20 NOW, and will remain in effect until a year after we open our doors.
  • Non- Working Memberships can also be bought for $70 NOW, and remain in effect until a year after we open our doors.
  • Finally, whatever you have: $5, $20, $50 can be put into a Community Support Loan.

Selecting any of these options, no matter how small, will make manifest your support of your Co-op, and help transform it from a dream into a reality. Real support means a real Co-op: this May. Future support means a Co-op that will come at some future time. What kind of Town do we want? It is in our hands to create that Town now.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Quick Community Action Needed

Janice Mason and has done us a great service by printing a long and detailed article in the Community section of this Friday’s Trail Gazette (Feb 1, 2008). It has already begun to reach many who, like ourselves, have long dreamed of having a storefront Co-op in our community. We appreciate also that she mentioned that quick community action is needed. Jim and LeeAnn Wehr have proposed a very generous lease for the space at West Park Center, which they own. The current retail rent for the space is $2500/month. They have proposed to start us out at $1500/month. Again, this is a very generous arrangement. They cannot, however, wait indefinitely for us to raise the funds necessary for us to cover our start-up costs. They have therefore asked for a $1500 non-refundable deposit by March 1st in order to hold the space open for us. Then, after placing the utilities in the name of Local Roots Co-op, we will gain access to the space to begin getting it ready. The lease is then scheduled to go into effect by May 1st.

Because the funds from Memberships and Shares are not to be used until we have met our start-up costs, a third method of funding is required in order to be able to put down this deposit. This third method is called a Community Support Loan. A Community Support Loan is a type of loan that is often employed by Co-ops. The loan is to be paid back to the dollar with no interest. Until the loan is repaid, the lender receives a return on investment in the form of an enhanced discount as follows:

  • Non-Member: 10% at the Co-op / 5% at Cooperative Partners
  • Non-Working Member: 15% at the Co-op / 10% at Cooperative Partners
  • Working Members: 30% at the Co-op / 20% at Cooperative Partners

Loans received before the Co-op is opened will have an extension on the discount period. These loans may be utilized to fulfill immediate needs.

The timeline has begun. We need to raise the funds for the deposit, as well as the Memberships and Shares required for us to be able to even think of opening in May. This is a dream that Estes Park has long been ready for. Let us take the steps to make this dream a reality.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Our Public Launch at Earth Fest

We are deeply grateful for the coverage given to the first public appearance of Local Roots Co-op at the Earth Fest by the Trail Gazette. The caption on the photo was slightly misleading, however. It stated that Stacia and Dan Valley were opening the Co-op, whereas in truth the nature of a Co-op is such that the community is opening it. It is our intention to open the Co-op at West Park Center, in the former location of Such-a-Deal flea market.