Our Annual Event & Fundraiser is Around the Corner!

We Also Have Other Exciting News!

Our annual event and fundraiser is almost here!

We are celebrating from 6-8 pm on Thu Nov 17 at a new venue, the beautiful Karrikin Spirits event space (located at 3717 Jonlen Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45227)

We invite you to have dinner, connect with us, and support our work to build an economy that works for all!

$35 tickets include delicious tapas. Drinks and spirits will be available for additional purchase.

At the celebration, you'll hear about our network's recent accomplishments, meet our co-op members, and get a glimpse of how we plan to achieve our long-term goal: 80,000 worker-owned businesses in Greater Cincinnati by 2072! 

Don't wait. Get tickets now!


Other Co-op Cincy News

Deadline for Companies to Apply to 2022 Business Legacy Fund is Nov 15

The Nov 15 deadline for businesses to apply to the Business Legacy Fund is coming up fast.

The Fund helps businesses become employee-owned, expanding ownership and building community wealth. There are 2 main ways the Fund does this:It helps retiring business owners sell their companies to their employees, saving jobs while securing their retirement.It enables business owners to broaden ownership to their employees while continuing to work with their business.Financing is accompanied by technical assistance to ensure the company flourishes.

Know a business owner who might be interested? Let them know about the Fund.

This year's expansion of the Fund was recently covered in the Business Courier.

The Business Legacy Fund is an innovative way for retiring business owners to sell their businesses for fair-market value and preserve local jobs, but more importantly, the Fund will help create a more resilient and stable economy for our city’s future.
— Aftab Pureval, Mayor of the City of Cincinnati

Co-op Cincy is Hiring an Office & Project Manager!

We are looking for a full-time Office & Project Manager to help our growing network thrive.

See the full job description here.

Salary: $45,000 with 20 paid vacation days and 11 paid holidays. 

Timeline: We plan to begin reviewing applications by late November.

Apply by sending a cover letter outlining your qualifications, a resume, and 3 references to kristen@coopcincy.org.


Can You Help Us Meet Our Fall Donation Drive Goal?

We’ve raised 80% of our $10,000 goal for our 6-week donation drive! We are fundraising to support another 4-5 worker-owned businesses in the coming year.

We’re so grateful for the generosity of our supporters, who power our work. Through their gifts, we can provide business ownership opportunities to historically marginalized groups, including people of color, low-wage workers, and women.

Please consider donating at coopcincy.org/give or sharing our donation request to help us reach our $10,000 goal. We cannot do this without you!

If you become a new monthly donor during our donation drive, or increase your monthly donation by $10, we'll give you a Co-op Cincy t-shirt as a thank-you!

The t-shirts are available in white (pictured) and with a purple background and white logo/lettering.


2 Co-op Courses Making Progress 

We are currently working with 11 teams in 2 different courses designed to support them as they develop and launch co-op businesses!

One of those courses, Power in Numbers, is designed specifically to support Black-led teams.

The other, a version of our Co-op U, helps teams develop a worker-owned business in a construction-related field.

Here's a picture of our construction-related Co-op U:


High School Students Graduate from Agriculture & Co-op Business Course

At the end of September, we celebrated the end of a 9-month course designed to help refugee youth learn how to apply the co-op business and agricultural models here in Greater Cincinnati!

Thanks to our partners Our Harvest, Refugee Connect, Catholic Charities of Southwestern Ohio, and Aiken High School!

After receiving a new 3-year grant from the federal government, we are gearing up to offer additional agricultural and co-op business training to refugees in Cincinnati, helping them improve their livelihoods.


Ohio Network Meets on Nov 12 in Dayton

We’re excited for the Nov 12 meeting of the Ohio Worker Ownership Network at Gem City Market in Dayton! The event is FREE, with lunch available for purchase. Worker co-ops and co-op developers in Ohio will have a chance to connect and build skills.

Learn more and register here.


Blog Post: Save Local Jobs & Build Community Wealth Through Worker-Ownership

For National Co-op Month, Ellen Vera, our director of development and co-op organizing, wrote about why business and government leaders should embrace worker-ownership.

"Worker-ownership is a proven economic strategy, with a long history," Vera writes. "In the Basque region of Spain, which has a population size similar to Greater Cincinnati, the Mondragon network of worker-owned businesses has produced long-term growth and stability."

Read her blog post.


Mona Jenkins Wins Bob Maxwell Peace Builder Award

Congrats to Mona Jenkins, the recipient of the Intercommunity Justice and Peace Center's 2022 Bob Maxwell Peace Builder Award!

As our Cooperative Food Justice Coordinator, Mona works with residents to address food insecurity. Mona is also the Co-Founder of Queen Mother’s Market.


Updates From Our Co-op Network

Shine Nurture Center Buys Building! 

Congrats to Shine Nurture Center, which closed on purchasing their own building in October! Pictured are Bethany Heeg, one of Shine’s worker-owners, and Ellen Vera, our director of development and co-op organizing, at the title company!

Shine was able to purchase their building, located in the Mount Airy neighborhood, with the support of our loan fund and our partner Seed Commons!

Shine is part of our growing network of cooperatives. They transitioned to the worker-owned model at the beginning of the year after the owner sold the business to 5 female employees. We supported them through and after that transition as part of our Business Legacy Fund (described above).


Sustainergy Wins 2022 CLIMB Award!

 
 

Congrats to Sustainergy, one of the winners of the 2022 CLIMB (Cincinnati Lifts Inclusion and Minority Business) Awards from the Cincinnati Business Courier and Cincinnati Regional Chamber!

CLIMB, now in its fifth year, “honors individuals and organizations in Greater Cincinnati that have helped our region achieve greater heights of success through building a diverse workforce, championing equitable practices and developing inclusive cultures.”

Here’s what the Chamber had to say of Sustainergy: “The organization focuses on practicing inclusive capitalism and building a more equitable local economy.”

Read more about Sustainergy and the other honorees here.


Our Harvest Holds 10-Year Celebration

Our Harvest had a memorable 10-year celebration in October, raising more than $4,000!

Our Harvest was the first co-op in our network. They provide access to healthy, local food in a way that honors land and labor.


Queen City Commons Partners with City of Covington

Queen City Commons continues to grow and has partnered with the City of Covington to collect compost!

"Ultimately, Covington wants to do a better job of reducing its collective impact on the water, air, and the earth," said Sheila Fields, the City’s Solid Waste & Recycling manager.


Heritage Hill Seeking New Space

Heritage Hill is looking for a new warehouse space to rent that has the following characteristics:

  • Approx. 1,500-3,000 sq. ft.

  • Access to a loading dock

  • Located within the City of Cincinnati

  • Temperature control

  • Office space Have a space?

Contact Brandon Hoff at brandonz@heritagehill.co or 513.237.0240.


2 Co-op Members Named National Fellows

Congrats to Bethany Heeg of Shine Nurture Center and Victoria Russell of A Touch of TLC Home Care for being named in the 2022-2023 cohort of the Worker Ownership State Advocacy Fellowship by the U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives! The Fellows are advocating to increase worker ownership in their home states. Learn more here.


Co-op Cincy in the News


Movement News

  • Cincinnati was ranked #4 in the country for the top 25 cities for employee ownership! According to the Cincinnati entry in the article by Certified EO: “Cincinnati is home to 32 employee-owned companies, including Al. Neyer, Intrust IT, Ohio Valley Electrical Services, Parallel Technologies and The Motz Corporation.”

  • The California Employee Ownership Act is now law! The act will work to “increase awareness and understanding of employee ownership among stakeholders, assist business owners and employees in navigating available resources, and streamline and reduce barriers to employee ownership.” Read more.


Events


Save Local Jobs & Build Community Wealth Through Worker-Ownership

By Ellen Vera

To build an equitable economy in Greater Cincinnati and save jobs from an upcoming wave of business-owner retirements, business and government leaders should embrace worker-ownership, a proven economic strategy.

Shine Nurture Center, a local childcare center, officially became worker-owned in 2022.

As in the rest of the country, Greater Cincinnati faces an unprecedented wave of retirements by baby-boomer business owners, a shift known as the “silver tsunami.” More than 40% of the country’s 30.7 million small business owners are 55 and older. These owners are in search of ways to ensure their retirement and legacy. Their businesses provide important products, services, and–importantly–jobs. To let them close would have a devastating and unnecessary economic impact.

In addition to these retirements, our local economy faces severe inequality, according to Building Legacies, a report from the Ohio Employee Ownership Center. Since 1973, top earners in Ohio have accounted for nearly 86% of all income gains. In contrast, the bottom 90% have seen negative income growth. 

The Covid-19 pandemic and recession have only exacerbated these challenges. To save local jobs and make our economy fairer and stronger, we should turn to worker-ownership. And to do that, we should help retiring business owners sell to their employees. 

Worker-ownership is a proven economic strategy, with a long history.

Why worker-ownership? Worker-ownership is a proven economic strategy, with a long history. In the Basque region of Spain, which has a population size similar to Greater Cincinnati, the Mondragon network of worker-owned businesses has produced long-term growth and stability. In the U.S., worker-ownership is already a significant part of the economy. About 12% of the U.S. workforce is employed at worker-owned enterprises, according to the Harvard Business Review. The worker-owned model is flexible and has variations, from employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) to worker cooperatives.

Research shows that worker-ownership offers worker, company, and community benefits, including higher wages, greater business stability, and even better productivity. All of this makes logical sense. If you give a worker a stake in the company, they will do a better job.

Co-op Cincy is working to address the challenge of business-owner retirements and economic inequality by helping local businesses become worker-owned. Our multimillion-dollar Business Legacy Fund enables retiring or departing business owners to sell their companies to their employees, preserving jobs while securing fair-market value for their business. Having a diverse set of business models can build resilience and stability in our local economy. Having worker-owned businesses offers that stability. Our Fund, now in its 3rd year, is searching for new businesses to transition to worker-ownership. Applications are due by November 15.

There are more than 65 worker-owned businesses in Greater Cincinnati, and that number is growing.

There are more than 65 worker-owned businesses in Greater Cincinnati, and that number is growing. This year, our Business Legacy Fund helped two local businesses adopt the worker-owned model, and we are in discussions with more firms. The recent transitions show how this model can broaden ownership to individuals from historically marginalized groups. 

Heritage Hill, an apparel company that celebrates Black culture, officially became worker-owned in 2022.

One of the businesses we transitioned, Shine Nurture Center, is a nature-oriented childcare center. Five female employees purchased the business from the departing owner, helping preserve this important resource for the community. The other, Heritage Hill, sells apparel that celebrates Black culture. The founder broadened ownership to a team of three worker-owners, all of whom are Black.

The new worker-owners have a stake in the business, which has opened the door to wealth-building for their families. “If I plan on being here for 10 years, why not be an owner?” said Mary Wilder, a worker-owner at Shine Nurture Center. Brandon Hoff, the founder of Heritage Hill, said he transitioned the business because he was looking for a way to "participate in capitalism without being predatory." He added, “I really want people who work in the company to have an opportunity to benefit from the company.”

Brandon Hoff, the founder of Heritage Hill, said he transitioned the business because he was looking for a way to ‘participate in capitalism without being predatory.’

Worker-ownership can bring big economic rewards to Greater Cincinnati. By embracing this viable economic model, business and government leaders will help build wealth for local families, preserve jobs in the face of business-owner retirements, and anchor businesses in the community. 

 Ellen Vera has organized people from diverse backgrounds to improve their workplaces for more than a decade. She co-founded Co-op Cincy to develop a more sustainable model of wealth-building with marginalized communities.

Can you help us support another 4-5 worker-owned businesses?

The power of community

Donations from our supporters power our work. Through these gifts, we can offer ownership opportunities to historically marginalized groups, including people of color, low-wage workers, and women.

This October, to mark National Co-op Month, we're launching a 6-week donation campaign with the goal of raising enough to support another 4-5 worker-owned businesses.

Each business will offer family-sustaining jobs and create a more equitable local economy here in Greater Cincinnati.

Will you make a donation to help us achieve our goal?

*Check 'Make it Monthly' to become a sustaining partner


How do we support the worker-owned businesses in our network?

We provide training, technical assistance, and access to loans. In this 2-minute video, you can listen to worker-owners talk about our support:

Here are some examples of what your donation will finance:

  • $30 provides 2 workers with printed Worker-Owner Workbooks to help build their co-op business culture, knowledge, and skills.

  • $50 provides 1 session of financial literacy training to a worker co-op team.

  • $100 provides 2 weeks of co-op business training to a worker co-op team.

  • $250 provides an informal valuation as part of transitioning a traditional business to worker-ownership.

*Check 'Make it Monthly' to become a sustaining partner


Scaling our impact

Since our founding in 2011, our network has expanded to 14 worker-owned businesses ranging from a residential energy efficiency firm to an urban farm.

Our network employs more than 100 people, of which 75% are people of color and 66% are women.

Since 2018, in partnership with other organizations, we have provided access to more than $1 million in loans to the worker-owned businesses in our network.

Please donate today and enable us to support another 4-5 worker-owned businesses!

*Check 'Make it Monthly' to become a sustaining partner

With your gift, you will help us build an economy that works for all!

2022 Business Legacy Fund Launches on Sep 15

The multi-million dollar Fund enables business owners to secure their retirement while saving jobs and broadening ownership

On Sep 15, we launched the 2022 Business Legacy Fund, which helps broaden business ownership in 2 different situations.

First, the Fund can help retiring business owners sell their company to their employees, saving jobs while securing their retirement.

Second, it can enable business owners to broaden ownership to their employees while continuing to work with their business.

Benefits to business owners include selling for fair-market value while gaining tax advantages. Community benefits include broadening ownership and creating long-term business stability.

Businesses can apply to participate in the Fund by Nov 15 at becomeworkerowned.org.

The Business Legacy Fund is an innovative way for retiring business owners to sell their businesses for fair-market value and preserve local jobs, but more importantly, the Fund will help create a more resilient and stable economy for our city’s future.
— Aftab Pureval, Mayor of the City of Cincinnati

A growing wave

This year, our Fund helped 2 local companies become worker-owned: Shine Nurture Center, a nature-oriented childcare center; and Heritage Hill, an apparel company that celebrates Black culture.

They're not alone. Businesses around the country are becoming worker-owned.

Testimonial

“We were concerned about what would happen when we eventually retire.… This is a structure that allows the company to continue forward into the future.”

— Tom Ewing and Tim James, founders of Ewing Controls in Greenfield, MA, which became worker owned in 2017


Our Harvest celebrates 10th anniversary with local food and music festival

Join Our Harvest in celebrating their 10-year anniversary!

Our Harvest has spent the last decade creating access to healthy, local food in a way that honors land and labor, all while training the next generation of farmers!

Support them by registering for their 10th anniversary celebration, which includes local, fresh, nutrient-dense food straight from their farm and partners, as well as locally sourced drinks, a farm tour, and music!

The celebration will be 5-8 pm on Saturday, October 1 at Bahr Farm in Finneytown.


Making new connections at Worker Co-op Conference

Staff traveled with members of our co-op network to the Worker Co-op Conference, held in Philadelphia on Sep 9 and 10.

The conference inspired new co-op strategies and collaborations, influenced our approaches as co-op developers and members, and connected us with workers from co-ops around the country!

Here's a photo of some of us at the conference with our friends from Co-op Dayton!


Co-op tours continue

We've got more free co-op tours coming up! Dates:

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm


Movement news

Mondragon in The New Yorker

In case you missed it, The New Yorker put a spotlight on the Mondragon network of co-ops, the largest in the world! Check out the article.

Mondragon’s network of co-ops, which was provided long-term growth and stability in the Basque region of Spain, is an inspiration for our own co-op network.

From our History page: “Mondragon’s durable business model is the foundation for our efforts to create competitive enterprises, foster social and economic justice, and empower worker dignity by creating jobs accountable to workers and communities.”

Also, the Basque region of Spain has a similar population size to Greater Cincinnati…


Business for Democracy Launches

The American Sustainable Business Network has launched Business for Democracy, a national campaign to raise the trusted voice of small business on the need to strengthen and protect American democracy.

Learn more at businessfordemocracy.us.


Upcoming events

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • Fri Sep 23-Sun Sep 25: Massage for the People has their first workshop for massage therapists. Called Discovering Integrative Craniosacral Therapy, it will be at SHI Integrative Massage School and will be led by Matthew Howe, an NCBTMB-approved provider. Learn more and register.

  • Sun Oct 1 from 5-8 pm: Our Harvest 10th anniversary celebration & music festival. Learn more and register.

  • Mon Oct 10 from 6-7:30 pm at McKie Recreation Center: Meeting 2 of the Green Cincinnati Plan’s Buildings and Energy Subcommittee. At the meeting, the public can provide recommendations to guide goals, strategies, and actions for our City in the coming years. Flequer Vera from Sustainergy Cooperative is part of the steering committee.

  • Thu Oct 13 & Fri Oct 14: 3rd Biennial Cooperative Law Conference, which features Kristen Barker, executive director of Co-op Cincy, as a speaker.

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

2022 Co-op Appreciation Fest

We had such a great time at our Annual Co-op Appreciation Fest on Saturday, August 27! A big thanks to everyone who attended and to our co-ops for participating! It was an inspiring event, and we couldn’t have organized it without such an amazing community of people. 🤩🤩🤩

The annual Fest was an opportunity for people to meet our 14 co-op teams, learn about their products, & connect with other Co-op Cincy supporters. There was music and food.

Want to learn more about our network of co-op businesses? See coopcincy.org/co-ops-overview


Co-op Cincy in the media

New academic study

We’re grateful to be the subject of a new academic study, “Breaking New Ground: Social Movement Theory and the Cincinnati Union Co-ops,” in the Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal.

Big thanks to the author, Ariana R. Levinson! We hope the article helps grow the union co-op movement!

The study is currently behind a paywall, but you can read the abstract here.


Article on city funding published in Nonprofit Quarterly

We were beyond thrilled to receive $100,000 from the City of Cincinnati earlier this yearthe very first time we've received funding from the City. The money will directly help us build community wealth and preserve family-sustaining jobs in Cincinnati.

In Nonprofit Quarterly, 3 of our staff members wrote about our multi-year effort to secure funding from the City, which was aided by testimonials from board members, co-op members, staff, and our network of supporters, as well as by support from our friends on the City Council.

We hope the article can help other co-op incubators and nonprofits secure government funding! Read the article.


Program news

Co-op tours continue

We've got more free co-op tours coming up! Dates:

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm


2022 launch for Business Legacy Fund 

Get ready we're initiating our 3rd Business Legacy Fund cohort on Sep 15! Register now for our online launch.

The multimillion-dollar Fund helps retiring or departing business owners transition their business to worker-ownership, saving jobs and maintaining legacies while securing fair-market value for their company.

Through the Fund, we finished transitioning 2 businesses to worker-ownership earlier this year, and we're in ongoing discussions with others.

Business Legacy Fund testimonial:

“Co-op Cincy has been very helpful…. They came with a ready-made template.”

— Brandon Z. Hoff, founder of Heritage Hill, which became worker owned in 2022


Other updates

Goodbye to Shontelle

Thanks to Shontelle Johnson for an amazing summer! She interned with us through the Xavier University Summer Service Internship Program.

During her time with us, she gathered testimonials from worker-owners and completed other important work.

Here she is with Kristen Barker, our Executive Director, and Cynthia Pinchback-Hines, our Racial Justice Educator & Co-op Developer, at a final ceremony.

Best of luck, Shontelle, on whatever's next!


Co-op updates

Hopes Fulfilled now has a food truck

Hopes Fulfilled now has a food truck! Check out the website of their subsidiary, Jamerican Eats, which serves traditional Jamaican food.

Hopes Fulfilled will be providing food for our Co-op Appreciation Festival this Saturday.


Massage for the People organizes workshop for massage therapists

Massage for the People has organized their first workshop for massage therapists.

Called Discovering Integrative Craniosacral Therapy, it's scheduled for Friday Sep 23 to Sunday Sep 25 at SHI Integrative Massage School and will be led by Matthew Howe, an NCBTMB-approved provider.

15 spaces are available, and there is a $245 early-bird special through the end of August.


Movement news

  • The worker co-op model is growing in Spokane, Washington! Spokane Workers Cooperative, a holding company owned by workers that belong to the cooperative, currently has 5 companies under its umbrella. See the article in the Spokane Journal of Business.

  • $2 million is being invested to support the development of co-op businesses in British Columbia, according to a government press release! “Co-operatives are value-driven organizations that play an important role in our communities, supporting pressing social priorities such as employment, child care and housing,” said Selina Robinson, Minister of Finance. “This investment will help expand their impact.”

  • In The Nonprofit Quarterly, Geoff Gusoff wrote about how worker-ownership could transform low-wage healthcare: “This model centers frontline workers rather than outside investors and has important benefits in addressing health, economic, and racial inequities.”


Upcoming events

  • Aug 27 from 4-6 pm: our annual Co-op Appreciation Festival at Our Harvest's urban farm in College Hill (969 W North Bend Rd.), located on the beautiful, historic Bahr Farm. With music and food. Register now.

  • Sep 9 & 10: Worker Co-op Conference. To learn more, see the conference website.

  • Sep 15: Business Legacy Fund 2022 online launch. Register now.

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.


July 2022 Update: Summer greetings! 🌞

Registration now open for co-op festival

A reminder: Our annual co-op appreciation festival is planned for Saturday, Aug. 27. We'd love to see you there!

The festival is free and will be from 4-6 pm at Our Harvest's urban farm in College Hill (969 W North Bend Rd.), on the scenic Bahr Farm.

Meet our 14 co-op teams, learn about their products, & connect with other Co-op Cincy supporters. There will be music & food!


Co-op Cincy & Mondragon business model featured in Bloomberg

Bloomberg News published an article and podcast on Mondragon’s cooperative model and how it's gaining attention in the US and elsewhere!

The article and podcast included interviews with Co-op Cincy and our co-op Shine Nurture Center!

Check out the article and podcast.

You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

A few quote highlights:

  • “The objective of the cooperative is not to produce rich people, it’s to produce rich societies.” - Igor Herrarte, engineer at Mondragon Assembly

  • "Interest in worker co-ops tends to increase in times of crisis." - Mike Palmieri, researcher at the Ohio Employee Ownership Center

  • “Mondragon is our North Star.” - Kristen Barker, Executive Director of Co-op Cincy


Worker Co-op Conference in September

This year, the Worker Co-op Conference is being held from Sep. 9-10 in Philadelphia.

The conference is a national event where worker-owners from across the United States gather to learn and build power together. We're excited to attend!

Learn more at conference.coop.


Program news

New co-op tour dates

We’ve added new summer and fall dates for our free co-op tours! Come learn about the co-ops in our network! Upcoming dates:

  • Fri Aug 12 from 1-3 pm

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm


2022 launch for Business Legacy Fund 

We're getting ready for our 3rd Business Legacy Fund cohort!

The multimillion-dollar Fund helps retiring or departing business owners transition their business to worker-ownership, saving jobs and maintaining legacies while securing fair-market value for their company. Financing from the Fund is accompanied by technical assistance to ensure a successful transition.

Through the fund, we finished transitioning 2 businesses to worker-ownership earlier this year, and we're in ongoing discussions with more businesses interested in becoming worker-owned.

Business Legacy Fund testimonial:

“Co-op Cincy and Ellen Vera in particular really walked this business through all the stages that were required to make this transition a success…. That support system was there. We could not have figured out how to do this without the help of Co-op Cincy.”

— Katie McGoron, founder of Shine Nurture Center, which became worker owned in early 2022


Construction co-op training program nears 🛠️

Our Construction Co-op U starts in September. The online training and support program helps teams develop a worker-owned business in a construction-related field.


Other updates

Enock named Global Fellow

Enock Sadiki, who participated in our co-op agriculture and business training course for refugee youth, has been named the World Affairs Council summer Global Fellow with the Camp Covington Program!

A refugee from Uganda, Enock is currently a senior at Aiken High School. Congrats Enock!


Shontelle attends gun legislation event at White House

Our amazing intern, Shontelle Johnson, visited the White House with other activists this month to celebrate the passage of the Safer Communities Act, the biggest gun violence prevention legislation enacted in decades.

The bill enhances background checks for potential gun buyers, in addition to other measures. Cincinnati Mayor Aftab Pureval was among the attendees.

Shontelle said: "For me, this legislation is a step in the right direction. As President Biden said, it does not do everything I want, but it pushes America further. This law represents all the families and friends that have lost loved ones to gun violence who say, 'Not one more'. It is not the end all be all, but it helps me have faith that things will get better."


Worker-ownership explained

People have been coming to us with questions about worker-ownership and the co-op business model, and so we decided to write a quick explainer!

Check it out: coopcincy.org/workerownership


Co-op updates

Heritage Hill receives grant

Heritage Hill was 1 of 36 minority-owned businesses to receive grants from the Lincoln and Gilbert Initiative. Heritage Hill received the maximum amount of $15,000.

See the coverage in WKRC-TV Channel 12.


A Touch of TLC approved for Ohio program

A Touch of TLC Home Care officially was approved for Ohio's PASSPORT Medicaid waiver program, which helps Medicaid-eligible older Ohioans get the long-term services and support they need.


Queen City Commons continues growing

Queen City Commons has been busy! Recently they have:

  • implemented their 6th community drop-off bin, opening one at Redden Fine Meats and Seafood in Madeira

  • welcomed Brown Bear Bakery, Ditsch pretzel manufacturers, and the Schoolhouse Lofts as composters

  • begun piloting a composting program with a 200-unit condo building in Oakley

Visit Queen City Commons at the Northside and Madeira farmers markets the first week of every month!


Movement News

  • "Worker-Owned Apps are Redefining the Sharing Economy" in Wired

  • "NC’s Industrial Commons Creates Thriving New Communities from the Ashes of Old Industries" in Shareable


Upcoming events

  • Fri Aug 12 from 1-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • Aug 27 from 4-6 pm: our annual co-op appreciation festival at Our Harvest's urban farm in College Hill (969 W North Bend Rd.), located on the beautiful, historic Bahr Farm. With music and food. Register now.

  • Fri Sep 16 from 9-11 am: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • Fri Oct 14 from 1-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.


June 2022 Update: Annual co-op festival! And more news!

Our annual co-op appreciation festival is Aug 27! 

We're planning our annual co-op appreciation festival for Saturday, Aug. 27. We'd love to see you there!

The festival will be held from 4-6 pm at Our Harvest's urban farm in College Hill (969 W North Bend Rd.), located on the beautiful, historic Bahr Farm.

Come meet the teams behind our 14 co-ops, learn more about their products, & connect with other Co-op Cincy supporters. There will be music & free food!

Register now so we can get a head count:

Photos of our last annual festival


City approves $100K for Co-op Cincy

The new budget from the City Council of Cincinnati includes $100,000 in funding for Co-op Cincy! This is the first time we've received direct financial support from the City!

Half of that money will go to our loan fund, enabling us to help new and existing worker-owned businesses access financing. The other half will fund our technical assistance program, enabling worker-owned businesses to develop a solid foundation and grow. This money will directly help us build community wealth and preserve family-sustaining jobs in Cincinnati.

In addition to awarding Co-op Cincy $100,000 in funding, the City Council designated Queen Mother's Market (QMM) as a priority for surplus spending. QMM is working to start a Black- and women-led co-op grocery store in Walnut Hills, a food desert. You can donate to support their grocery store here.

Big thanks to all the City Council members for their support, and special thanks to Council Member Greg Landsman and Vice-Mayor Jan-Michele Kearney for advocating for us.

We'd also like to thank all the people who spoke at the city's budget input forums in June.

Interested in donating to our loan fund and technical assistance program? You can do so here.

Ellen Vera, our Director of Development and Co-op Organizing, speaking with her daughter at the last city budget input forum


Documentary begins shooting 

This month, award-winning filmmakers Mark Dworkin and Melissa Young of Moving Images began shooting a documentary exploring Co-op Cincy's work and our efforts to build an economy that works for all. Dworkin and Young spoke to staff, co-op members, partners, and community representatives.

We're grateful for their work and very excited to see the results. One of their many previous documentaries, Shift Change, told the story of co-ops and worker-ownership in the United States and Spain.


Other updates

Deadlines near for Power in Numbers & Construction Co-op U

Power in Numbers applications due July 8


Beginning in September, we’re offering another Power in Numbers, our co-op business boot camp for Black-led teams!

The free, 14-week course helps Black-led teams of entrepreneurs work through the process of launching a co-op business and build wealth for the long term.

As a co-op business incubator, we support participants in the process and offer ongoing technical assistance after they launch their co-op business.

Applications are due by July 8 – apply today! Know someone who might be interested? Share this message!

Construction Co-op U now starts in September


Our Construction Co-op U is an online training and support program that helps teams develop a worker-owned business in a construction-related field.

Originally planned for the summer, the course's start date has been pushed back to September.

Participants will:

  • Adapt a proven, replicable business model and develop a successful business plan of their own

  • Benefit from weekly trainings, 1-on-1 mentorship, and technical assistance, as well as hands-on training by professionals

  • Receive assistance incorporating and structuring your business

  • Have an opportunity to access financing


New board members

We recently welcomed two new members to our wonderful Board of Directors!

Big thanks to Clement Tsao and Adrienne Wiley for helping support worker-ownership and create an economy that works for all! A bit about them:

Clement is a labor and employment attorney at Branstetter, Stranch & Jennings, where he represents labor unions in all aspects of labor relations and provides counsel on matters involving contract negotiations, grievance arbitrations, and organizing.

Fun fact about him: He still watches Grey's Anatomy.

Adrienne is the Executive Director of the Healing Center, a non-profit organization aimed at helping individuals and families gain and maintain economic, social, emotional, and spiritual well-being.

Fun fact about her: There is currently artwork inspired by Adrienne hanging in the Cincinnati Art Museum.

For our full board, see https://coopcincy.org/staff-and-board


Shontelle starts summer internship

We’re thrilled to have Shontelle Johnson interning with us this summer!

Shontelle is a rising sophomore at Xavier University majoring in Political Science and minoring in Economics, and she’s the chair of the Student Rights and Identity Committee of the Student Government Association. This summer she’s helping us get testimonials from co-op members and program participants.

Fun facts about her: She really likes Beyoncé and she cannot dance. She’s originally from metro Atlanta.


Co-op updates

Farm stand at Our Harvest

Our Harvest now has a farm stand at Bahr farm (969 West North Bend Rd.) in College Hill from 4-6 pm on Thursdays. Come meet the farmers, pick up a harvest box, and browse their weekly selection of locally grown vegetables! EBT payment available!

Also, Fox19 talked to Farm Lead Alex Otto for a short segment at the farm! We are still tracking down a link.


Queen Mother's Market receives $200K grant

Queen Mother's Market was awarded a Healthy Food Funding Initiative Grant of $200,000!

With 294 applications, we are beyond grateful to HFFI for believing in QMM's plan to launch a Black- and women-owned co-op grocery store in the Walnut Hills neighborhood.

QMM is still raising money with the goal of opening a brick-and-mortar store by 2024. Want to support them? You can donate here.

This month, QMM also presented during the Midwest Regional Sustainability Summit as part of the Food Secure Community panel.


Heritage Hill celebrates Juneteenth

Heritage Hill hosted a Juneteenth celebration at their Arlington Heights warehouse with music, Black food vendors, and special Juneteenth clothing.

The event, mentioned in the Cincinnati Enquirer and Cincinnati Magazine, was "about celebrating the resilience of a people to overcome," said Brandon Z. Hoff, Founder and CEO.

"We recognize that the bondage and brutality of slavery in this country destroyed lives and families. Juneteenth celebrates those last enslaved people in Gavelston, Texas, who were finally told that slavery had been abolished.”


Queen City Commons presents at conference

Queen City Commons presented during the Midwest Regional Sustainability Summit as part of the Resilient Composting panel.


Co-op Cincy mentions

  • Common Future examined some of the issues with childcare in this country and how to work toward solutions. Their article discussed organizations who have tried combining the cooperative model and childcare and featured our recent transition of Shine Nurture Center to worker-ownership.


Movement news

  • Apple workers at Maryland store voted to unionize, a first in the U.S.

  • In “The Radical Root of CSAs,” Jared Spears explains why the “CSA model of funding and sustaining locally-rooted agriculture has grown exponentially around the globe over the past four decades.” Our Harvest, which uses the CSA model, is part of this wave.


Solidarity

Ellen Vera, our director of development and co-op organizing, spoke at the Labor Notes conference in Chicago with Flequer Vera, CEO of Sustainergy.


Upcoming events

  • July 8 from 12-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-op tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • Aug 27 from 4-6 pm: our annual co-op appreciation festival at Our Harvest's urban farm in College Hill (969 W North Bend Rd), located on the beautiful, historic Bahr Farm. With music and food. Register now.

May 2022 Update: Free Workbook & More


Electronic Worker-Owner Workbook Now Free! 📘

Good news – we’ve made the e-book version of our Worker-Owner Workbook freely available on our website!

The book is the end product of 5 years of development. It's designed to help teams develop co-op businesses and worker-ownership culture. It also explores the power of union co-ops and deeply integrated co-op networks.

Access the e-book at https://coopcincy.org/resources

If you’d prefer hardcopies, print versions are available for purchase.

The Workbook teaches the nuts and bolts of running a co-op business, from business financials to conflict management to team building.

It also contains essential information about the co-op movement, labor movement, and the Mondragon cooperative network of Spain.


Co-op Network Builds Connections

In April, we had our 1st co-op network meeting of the year!

Many of the members in our network of co-op businesses came. They had great conversations and made powerful connections. Big thanks to everyone who joined!

For more on our co-op network, see https://coopcincy.org/co-ops-overview.


Sustainergy CEO Chats with U.S. Labor Secretary

Sustainergy CEO Flequer Vera (in orange, below) discussed the advantages of the worker co-op model with US Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh (on the far left, below) on May 13 while speaking on a panel for the Good Jobs Initiative.

The panel explored how private sector employers can recruit, retain, and strengthen their workforce through improved job quality.

Panelists included American Sustainable Business Network President David Levine and small business leaders.

Watch the recording on YouTube.

And here’s coverage in CNN.


Other Updates

Refugee Youth Visit Our Harvest

We had a great time visiting Our Harvest urban farm with students from Aiken High School at the start of May – this was their first day learning about farming on site!

We are teaching a 12-week course designed to help refugee youth learn how to apply the co-op business and agricultural models here in Greater Cincinnati. 🌼

Thanks to our partners Our Harvest (our oldest co-op), Refugee Connect, Catholic Charities of Southwest Ohio, and Aiken High School!


Deadline for Power in Numbers Nears

Beginning in September, we’re offering another Power in Numbers, our co-op business boot camp for Black-led teams!

The free, 14-week course helps Black-led teams of entrepreneurs work through the process of launching a co-op business and build wealth for the long term.

As a co-op business incubator, we support participants in the process and offer ongoing technical assistance after they launch their co-op business.

Applications are due by July 8 – apply today! Know someone who might be interested? Share this message!


Co-op Tours Continue

We offered our second co-op tour on May 13. Attendees included

  • Trina Jackson, Director of the Hamilton County Office of Re-entry

  • Cincinnati Council Member Greg Landsman

  • Barbara Bell, Chief of Staff to Greg Landsman

  • Daniella Mostow, participant in our Cooperative Management Certificate course

The tours are part of our efforts to spread awareness about the co-op business model and how it’s taking off in Cincinnati.

Want to attend one? To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire. Upcoming co-op tour dates:

  • Jun 10 from 12-3 pm

  • Jul 8 from 9 am-12 pm


Gem City Market Celebrates 1 Year!

Gem City Market in Dayton recently celebrated their 1-year anniversary with a block party and sale! Woohoo!

As a co-op, Gem City Market is owned by the community. Learn how to support the market on their website.


Co-op Updates

Massage for the People Celebrates 1 Year!

Massage for the People, which offers high-quality, affordable massage, celebrated their 1-year anniversary!

Their team of trained therapists provides step-by-step, holistic, hands-on assessments.


Queen City Commons Receives Grant and Will Present at Conference 

Queen City Commons, which provides composting and food scrap collection services, recently received a grant from Hamilton County Recycling and Solid Waste to purchase a new vehicle. This means more capacity!

Queen City Commons will also be presenting during the Midwest Regional Sustainability Summit as part of the Resilient Composting panel on June 16. Learn more here.


Sustainergy Launches Solar Division 🌞

After spending the past several years improving homeowners' comfort and efficiency, Sustainergy is excited to officially launch their residential solar division!

Go to www.sustainergy.coop/solar-energy or call (513) 244-2700 for a FREE estimate to see if solar is right for you!


Heritage Hill To Celebrate Juneteenth

Heritage Hill is having a Juneteenth celebration next month!

Follow us on social media for updates.


Our Harvest Launches Cultivator Program

Our Harvest's new membership program, Our Harvest Cultivator, allows you to select 1 of 4 levels to access exclusive content and events.

As an Our Harvest Cultivator, you can participate in educational events and support a community creating access to healthy, local food in a way that honors land and labor.


Our Co-ops in the Media

  • Soapbox ran an article on Heritage Hill, which recently transitioned to worker-ownership

  • Queen City Commons was profiled in CityBeat


Movement News

  • Worker co-ops stayed resilient during the Covid-19 pandemic and recession, according to the recent state of worker co-ops report by the U.S. Federation of Worker Co-ops. During 2021, 73% of worker co-ops offered discounts or resources to meet community needs, 60% offered discounts or resources to another cooperative, and 61% worked with local or regional mutual aid networks to meet a community need. Read the report.

  • People of color and women are behind much of the recent growth in the cooperative economy, according to "What We Learn From Black- and Women-Led Cooperative Practice” in Next City


Upcoming Events

  • May 21 from 12-3 pm: Cookout with Cardinal Land Conservancy and Our Harvest at Bahr Farm. Come see the farm in its grand beauty, meet the farm team, learn about Cardinal Land Conservancy (which protects the land from development through a trust), and meet other folks interested in care for land and local food.

  • June 10 from 12-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-ops tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

  • June 16: Resilient Composting: A Story of Collaboration in Cincinnati, a panel at the Midwest Regional Sustainability Summit featuring Queen City Commons. Learn more.

  • June 16: A Food Secure Community: Resilience Through Relationships, Trust and Local Solutions, a panel at the Midwest Regional Sustainability Summit featuring Mona M. Jenkins, our cooperative food justice coordinator. Learn more.

  • June 17-19: Labor Notes Conference in Chicago. Ellen Vera, our director of development and co-op organizing, will be speaking at the conference. Learn more.

  • July 8 from 12-3 pm: Co-op Cincy co-ops tour. To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire.

Happy Earth Day!

On April 22, we celebrated the environmental movement and the crucial efforts to achieve ecological sustainability.

As part of our celebration, we want to highlight some of the co-ops in our network that contribute to a more sustainable world.

We also have other exciting updates.

Our Harvest Marks 10 Years in Business!

Our Harvest, a local farm and the 1st co-op in our network, celebrated 10 years this month!

Our Harvest grows food responsibly on 12 acres, partners with other local growers, and develops innovative solutions to make healthy food widely available. They believe all people should have easy access to healthy food grown by fairly-compensated workers. And their regenerative agricultural model builds healthy soils and sequesters carbon.

Steve Dienger, Farm Manager and Worker Owner, reflected on Our Harvest's journey in a recent newsletter from Our Harvest.

"My, how time flies when you're having fun! Well, it wasn't all fun, but I will say that it has been the most meaningful endeavor I have ever taken part in," Steve wrote. "Thank you to all of you for supporting us during the hard times and the good times. We owe you a great debt of gratitude!"

Zeke Coleman, Senior Sales and Distribution Staff Member and Worker Owner, said in a phone interview that, if he had to explain what Our Harvest means to him in one word, it would be fairness. "We are treating the earth fairly and we are treating the people that work for and support the whole organization fairly."


Sustainergy Grows 50% in 2021

Sustainergy is the 2nd-oldest co-op in our network. Since 2014, they have been improving residential energy efficiencies and reducing carbon emissions in Greater Cincinnati. In 2021, their sales grew more than 50%, and they began their search for a New Market Director to expand into Dayton!


Queen City Commons Hits 125+ Home Drop-off Members

Queen City Commons provides food scrap collection and composting services, reducing landfilled waste and returning energy from food scraps to local food production. They recently reached 125+ residential drop-off members, received a grant to purchase a new vehicle, and were featured on Cincy Lifestyle and in CityBeat!


Course Alert: Apply Now for Next Power in Numbers

Co-op Business Boot Camp Helps Black-Led Teams

Beginning in September, we’re offering another Power in Numbers, our co-op business boot camp for Black-led teams!

The free, 14-week course helps Black-led teams of entrepreneurs work through the process of launching a co-op business and build wealth for the long term.

As a co-op business incubator, we support participants in the process and offer ongoing technical assistance after they launch their co-op business.

Applications are due by July 8 – apply today!


Other Updates

Co-op Cincy Requests Funding from City of Cincinnati

On April 4 a few of our staff members, co-op network members, and supporters made a request to the City of Cincinnati's Budget Committee.

We asked for financial support for our revolving loan fund, which aids and helps launch small cooperative businesses in Cincinnati, with a special focus on providing business ownership opportunities to people from underserved and historically marginalized groups.

Thanks to those who came out and to the Budget Committee members who listened to our request!

If you would like to support our request, please submit comments to the Budget Committee here! Select 'Budget and Finance' under 'Committee of Interest' and enter your comments in the 'Comments Box'. You can encourage the city to support co-op business development by financing our loan fund.


Cooperative Management Certificate Course Starts

This month we began our 2nd Cooperative Management Certificate course, which explores ways to align incentives and structure businesses in ways that make them profoundly accountable to workers, environments, and communities.

The 12-week course is offered in partnership with Xavier University Leadership Center.


Co-op Tours

Curious about our co-ops? We’re offering more free tours this year! To learn more and sign up, see this questionnaire. Upcoming co-op tour dates:

  • May 13 from 9 am-noon

  • Jun 10 from noon-3 pm

  • Jul 8 from 9 am-noon


Home Care for Those in Need

Want to provide home care for people with limited resources?

Donate now, and your gift will provide home care from A Touch of TLC Home Care. To make a donation, go to our Donate page, select an amount, and choose Donate. On the next page, select "Write a note," and enter "Home care." Then complete your donation.


Co-op Cincy in the News


More News

  • Check out this inspiring video from BBC News on how cooperative networks help forests thrive:

    • "By plugging into the fungal network, trees can share resources with each other. The system has been nicknamed the World Wide Web."

  • From Cincinnati CityBeat: The Vine Street Starbucks in Cincinnati became the first in the city to seek unionization.

  • Edible Ohio Valley ran an article on Guided by Mushrooms, a family-owned and operated mushroom farm in Dayton. In partnership with Co-op Dayton and with the help of Miami Valley SBDC, we’re excited to support Guided by Mushrooms as they transition to worker-ownership.

  • Via The City: Amazon workers successfully organized on Staten Island.

  • From Truthout: "We Need an Economy Without Bosses and Managers. Participatory Economics Is How."

  • Via Axios: Low pay and no advancement opportunities were top reasons people quit in 2021.


Resources

  • Ellen Vera, our director of development and co-op organizing, presented "A Union Co-op Model - Co-op Cincy 10 Years On" through CooperationWorks! Watch the webinar via YouTube.

  • Ellen also appeared on the Owners at Work Podcast with Jonathan Welle of Cleveland Owns. They talked about efforts to expand worker-ownership in Ohio! Listen here.


Upcoming Events

Happy Women’s History Month! 

Here at Co-op Cincy, 75% of our staff members are women, and 71% of the individuals employed in our co-op network are women. As an organization, we strive to build an economy that’s equitable and inclusive – an economy that works for all. 

Julia Marchese (left) and Marie Hopkins of Queen City Commons

Women’s History Month provides an opportunity to honor the women who have played a vital role in our lives and the lives of those before us. And so we’d like to highlight a few of the amazing women in our co-op network!

Julia Marchese is one of two women behind Queen City Commons, a co-op business that provides clean and timely food scrap collection in Greater Cincinnati. For Julia, Women’s History Month offers an opportunity for women in business to “be recognized and appreciated and just seen as legitimate actors in the field.”

Julia and fellow worker-owner Marie Hopkins faced skepticism when launching their co-op business because they were women. “We met with hesitance from certain mentors,” Julia said. “They would call us a project or minimize what we were trying to do. And I do think that comes from generally viewing women as inferior.”

The Queen City Commons team takes inspiration from the composting community. “What inspires Marie and I is just figuring out a way to be a part of the composing infrastructure in Cincinnati and taking it as something not that we do by ourselves, but that we do collaboratively with other urban agriculture folks.”

Mona M. Jenkins speaks at the launch event and fundraiser for Queen Mother’s Market

Mona M. Jenkins is one of three female worker-owners behind Queen Mother’s Market, which is working to start a Black- and women-led co-op grocery store in the Walnut Hills neighborhood, a food desert. A Kroger store closed there in 2017.

Mona said it was important to acknowledge the contributions of women. “We’ve always lived in a patriarchal system,” she explained. “We’ve always highlighted that men were bread winners and never acknowledged that women contributed just as much if not more to the success of businesses and the wellness of family.” 

In launching Queen Mother’s Market, Mona was influenced by the need for community. “As Black women, we’re raised as caregivers, so I think that our approach is trying to take care of each other.”

She said that while the concept of a co-op is foreign to some, many women have used the model in the past. She cited the example of Fannie Lou Hamer. “I’ve seen it in action through previous women in history who came before me,” Mona said, “and had the same aspirations of building community and providing the needs for the community and trying to find justice for Blacks, people of color, and folks who were low-income.”

Hope Gordon of Hopes Fulfilled Farm 2 Table

Hope Gordon started Hopes Fulfilled Farm 2 Table with her husband. Their goal is to open a food truck that provides access to fresh, healthy food. 

During Black History Month, Hope learned about the concept of counter-storytelling, which “reveals the stories of people whose experiences are not often told or who in many cases have been purposely silenced.” This category includes women, who were historically relegated to background roles, Hope explained. “So a lot of times it may have been women who create things and men get the accolades.”

Hope wants to see women compensated like men. “Equal work for equal pay,” she said.

She is inspired by food. “Food is power. And I like to see people in power through food and agribusiness.” 

March 2022 Update: Apparel Company Becomes a Co-op!

💜 Our 2nd Transition 💜

We recently finished transitioning Heritage Hill to worker-ownership. Located in Greater Cincinnati, Heritage Hill is an apparel company focused on Black culture.

This is our 2nd transition, and we're working on more. Hooray the co-op model is gaining momentum!

From left, the worker-owners behind Heritage Hill: Janeine Williams, Brandon Z. Hoff, & Marcus Bethay

Heritage Hill's Story

Brandon Z. Hoff started Heritage Hill in 2019 after noticing a lack of diversity in the world of collegiate merchandise. He planned to supply apparel to historically Black colleges while also enabling students to make products for their schools.

"The goal was to unify the Black entrepreneurial community with the Black consumer," Brandon said.

Brandon learned about Co-op Cincy from a friend and took part in our Business Legacy Fund program in 2021. He was looking for a way to "participate in capitalism without being predatory."

The co-op model appealed to him because it centers fairness. "I really want people who work in the company to have an opportunity to benefit from the company."

Heritage Hill sells t-shirts, hoodies, and sweatshirts that celebrate Black culture. Originally operating out of a basement, they moved into an 8,000 square foot facility in Arlington Heights this year.

As Brandon pointed out, the cooperative model has a long history in the Black community. "This has been very important for Black Americans, since there has been a history of disenfranchisement and discrimination. Black people have had to work together."

Heritage Hill finished transitioning to the co-op business structure in February. Currently the co-op has 3 worker-owners, with 2 people interested in joining.

The transition was seamless. "Co-op Cincy has been very helpful," Brandon said. "They came with a ready-made template."

In addition to expanding, Heritage Hill's goal is to develop some form of business academy or educational opportunities. "We want people to be familiar with business ownership and what that looks like."

Heritage Hill can support companies, organizations, and teams with whatever their apparel needs might be. Contact hello@heritagehill.co with requests or for more information.


Co-op Cincy is working to help more businesses like Heritage Hill become worker co-ops through our Business Legacy Fund. We support transitions via technical and financial assistance. Want to help us build an economy that works for all? Donate now!


Queen Mother's Market Holds Launch Party 🎉

Thanks to everyone who came out on March 1 to support Queen Mother's Market Cooperative at their launch party and fundraiser!

QMM had an inspiring roster of speakers for their launch event, which was held at Esoteric Brewing Company and received coverage in WCPO 9:

QMM is working to start a Black, women-led grocery cooperative store in Walnut Hills, a food desert. A Kroger store closed in the neighborhood in 2017. The full-service grocery store will be focused on affordable, healthy foods.

QMM is one of the emerging co-ops in our network and is partnering with the Walnut Hills Redevelopment Foundation. As a cooperative, or co-op, QMM will be owned by the Walnut Hills community and its employees.

Want to support QMM? Donate to their gofundme:


QMM emerged from our first Power in Numbers, a co-op business boot camp for Black-led teams. We'll be offering another Power in Numbers in the fall. Learn more on our site.


Women’s History Month

Happy Women's History Month! This month on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn, we'll be highlighting some of the women behind our co-ops. Our list of women-led co-ops ranges from Shine Nurture Center, a childcare center that transitioned to worker-ownership in January, to Cincy Cleaning Co-op, an immigrant- and women-led residential cleaning co-op business.

Actually, 71% of the individuals employed in our co-op network are women, and 75% of Co-op Cincy's staff are women. We'll continue to celebrate the contributions of women while striving to build a world that's diverse, equitable, and inclusive.


Other Updates

Co-op Tour with City Officials

At the beginning of the month, we gave Vice Mayor Jan-Michele Lemon Kearney (middle left) and Council Member Meeka Owens (right) a tour of our co-op businesses. Here they are with Tia Coleman of Our Harvest (left) and our Executive Director, Kristen Barker (middle right). Thank you, Vice Mayor Kearney and Council Member Owens, for spending time with us!

We have additional co-op tours coming up. Interested? See this questionnaire. Co-op tour dates:

  • Apr 8 from 12-3 pm

  • May 13 from 9 am-noon

  • Jun 10 from noon-3 pm

  • Jul 8 from 9 am-noon


New Symposium Recordings

We've shared the last recordings from our 2021 Union Co-op Symposium, which drew more than 200 people from around the world.

We recently posted the following sessions to our YouTube channel:

Thanks to everyone who made the 2-day, hybrid event possible! It was an inspiring gathering of social entrepreneurs, labor organizers, co-op workers, community development practitioners, and others with a vested interest in equitable economic development.


Deadline Nears for Cooperative Management Certificate Course

Applications are due March 20 for our Cooperative Management Certificate, which explores ways to align incentives and structure businesses in ways that make them profoundly accountable to workers, environments, and communities. Apply now! See coopcincy.org/certificate.

The 12-week course starts in April and is offered in partnership with Xavier University Leadership Center.

Subjects covered include:

  • Basics of co-op businesses

  • Intro to democratic workplaces

  • Case studies of co-op businesses

  • Organizational development

  • Participatory management practices

  • Open book management and Great Game of Business

  • Business and financial models

  • Team development


In the News


Upcoming Events

2021 Annual Report

 
 

2021 in Review

Staff members Ellen Vera (left) and Cynthia Pinchback-Hines during our annual co-op appreciation tour.

When the Covid-19 pandemic struck in 2020, we viewed it as a turning point. Then the pandemic kept going.

In 2021, as we learned to live with the virus, we saw the results of misinformation, widening inequality, and broken systems: attacks on our democracy, soaring inflation, a shuddering global economy, and a spate of extreme weather events. But 2021 also offered reasons for hope: mass resignations in response to paltry worker protections and benefits, increases in worker pay, the formation of new labor unions, and accelerating movements for racial, social, and climate justice.

Across the United States and the world, the pandemic brought a sustained focus on systemic transformation. And, again and again, communities rejected unsustainable patterns of economic development for innovative alternatives, including our own preferred model: the union co-op. This model joins the best tenets of the labor movement with opportunities for sustainable wealth-building and self-determination. As a result, it fosters prosperity in historically marginalized communities.

Ten years ago, Co-op Cincy began promoting the union co-op model through outreach, education, and technical assistance. Since forming our loan fund with Seed Commons in 2018, we have loaned $366,000 to co-op businesses. And in the last few years, we have provided worker-ownership training to more than 1,300 people annually. Currently, our co-op network includes 12 co-ops employing 89 individuals, of which roughly 71% are women and 67% people of color.

As we celebrate our 10-year anniversary, we’re excited by many of the ongoing shifts around us, and we would love to hear from you about how we can strengthen our co-op network, increase our impact, and grow our community. We look forward to continuing to build an economy that works for all!


Co-op Story

Massage for the People

Jason Minturn (left) and Davi Roundtree (middle) of Massage for the People stand with Alex Otto from Our Harvest.

Three years ago, Jason Minturn was working for a corporate massage chain. Underpaid and dissatisfied with the employer-employee relationship, he began researching better ways to run a massage business.

When he learned about worker co-ops, he felt an immediate connection to the concept. “Even though I just learned this term in the last few years, I feel like I’ve been looking for it my entire life,” he said. “I want everyone to be fairly compensated and I want decisions that are also fair.”

Jason and fellow massage therapist Megan Doerman connected with Co-op Cincy in 2019 and launched Massage for the People in 2021. Massage therapist Davi Roundtree joined soon afterward.

Massage for the People specializes in Swedish massage, muscle energy techniques for pelvic stabilization, and craniosacral massage, with the goal of helping people thrive. They are hoping to add a fourth massage therapist in 2022.

Jason believes the worker co-op model has appeal across political lines. “There are a lot of people out in the world who would support this because of their basic human need for fairness.”


Business Legacy Fund

Shine Nurture Center, a childcare business founded in 2015, initiated the process of transitioning to worker-ownership through our Business Legacy Fund.

We recruited 5 entrepreneurs to transition businesses to worker-ownership through our Business Legacy Fund, which helps retiring business owners sell to their workers, thereby saving jobs and maintaining legacies. We also conducted outreach about worker-ownership, educating 6 businesses about this option. And we began the process of transitioning Shine Nurture Center, a childcare business with 12 workers and $350,000 in revenue, to worker-ownership.


Statewide Network

OWN members from around the state met at Gem City Market in Dayton.

Our statewide Ohio Worker Ownership Network (OWN) released the Building Legacies report on Ohio’s business succession crisis and why worker-ownership is the solution. The report garnered coverage in WCPO 9, 91.7 WVXU, and elsewhere. Formed in 2021 with Co-op Cincy as the lead organizer, OWN strives to expand worker-ownership by raising awareness, providing technical assistance, and connecting business owners with resources. During 2021, OWN grew from 3 to 10 member organizations.


Power in Numbers

The team behind Queen Mother’s Market participated in our 1st Power in Numbers.

We held our very 1st Power in Numbers, our co-op business boot camp for Black-led teams. Five groups participated in the course, which was designed to help them build successful co-op business plans through intensive education on co-op history, business models, and cooperative management, with the training contextualized from a Black perspective. Three co-op businesses emerged: Queen Mother’s Market, Body by Bodji, and Hopes Fulfilled Farm 2 Table.


Union Co-op Symposium

More than 200 people from around the world participated in our 5th Union Co-op Symposium. During the 2-day hybrid event, we discussed practical tools on how to start and run union worker co-ops. Here’s what one participant said: “So much profound exploration of ideas and sharing of experiences!”

 

Speakers discuss values-aligned financing during Financing Transformation, one of the virtual sessions from the Symposium.

 

Our Work

 
 

What We’ve Done

  • Co-op U: Provided 3 co-op business training courses: 1 for Black-led teams, 1 for refugees, and 1 focused on childcare co-op businesses.

  • Cooperative Management Certificate: Offered our 1st course on the power and possibilities of cooperative management mindsets, partnering with Xavier University’s Xavier Leadership Center.

  • Business Legacy Fund: Held our 1st program to transition businesses to worker-ownership, with 6 companies pariticipating and 5 transition managers receiving training.

Where We’re Going

  • Co-op U: Provide 3 co-op business training courses: 1 for Black-led teams, 1 for refugees, and 1 focused on construction co-op businesses with participants from around the country. The construction co-op business course will be our 1st utilizing the “train-the-trainer” strategy and will be aimed at replicating Sustainergy’s successful co-op business model.

  • Cooperative Management Certificate: Offer our 2nd course, partnering with Xavier University’s Xavier Leadership Center.

  • Business Legacy Fund: Focus on transitioning larger, more established businesses to worker-ownership in our 2nd program.

 
 

What We’ve Done

  • Co-op start-ups: Helped launch 5 new co-op businesses, with 4 in Cincinnati and 1 out-of-state.

  • Loans: Loaned $95,000 to 3 co-op businesses in our network in 2021 through the Seed Commons financial co-op, including a $68,000 loan enabling Sustainergy to expand into solar panel installation.

  • Network: Formalized our co-op network and policies.

Where We’re Going

  • Co-op start-ups: Help launch 3-10 co-op business, with 3-7 of them based in Greater Cincinnati.

  • Loans: Loan $1 million to co-op businesses in our network through the Seed Commons financial co-op, helping our growing network of co-op businesses evolve and thrive.

  • Network: Strengthen our co-op nework infrastructure and continue to deepen ties among co-ops.

 
 

What We’ve Done

  • Ohio Worker Ownership Network (OWN): Held 1st in-person meeting of OWN and expanded membership from 3 to 10 organizations, laying foundation for continued growth of the worker-ownership model.

  • Networking: Organized 5th Union Co-op Symposium, drawing more than 200 participants from around the world for a 2-day, hybrid conference on how to start and run union worker co-ops.

  • Education: Began creating training videos about cooperative principles and the co-op business model.

Where We’re Going

  • Ohio Worker Ownership Network (OWN): Build capacity within OWN and member organizations, accelerate development of co-op businesses across the state, and impact statewide policy.

  • Networking: Maintain and strengthen connections created with local, national, and international partners during the 5th Union Co-op Symposium, as well as those made in other collaborations.

  • Education: Finish and disseminate educational videos and Co-op U Manual & Facilitator Guide to increase awareness of worker-ownership and advance co-op business training.


Finances

 
 
 
 

Staff

  • Kristen Barker, Executive Director

  • Ellen Vera, Director of Development & Co-op Organizing

  • Mary Steele, Bookkeeper

  • Paloma Correa, Co-op Culture & Business Developer

  • Cynthia Pinchback-Hines, Racial Justice Educator & Co-op Developer

  • Clancy McGilligan, Communications & Development Program Manager

  • Christopher Bennett, Business Legacy Fund Acquisition Program Manager

  • Mona M. Jenkins, Cooperative Food Justice Coordinator


Board

  • Katy Heins, President

    Senior Field Organizer, Center for Community Change

  • Flequer Vera, Vice President

    CEO, Sustainergy Cooperative

  • Ty Fields, Treasurer

    Founder & President, STARS Youth Enrichment Program, Inc

  • Kristen Barker, Secretary

    Executive Director, Co-op Cincy

  • Phil Amadon

    Founding Member & Labor Leader

  • Zahki Davis

    Business and Finance Associate, Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP

  • Brian Griffin

    Executive Secretary-Treasurer, Cincinnati AFL-CIO Labor Council

  • Jamie Love

    Director of Programs, Climate Innovation at Movement Strategy Center

  • David McLean

    Subdistrict 5 Director, USW

  • Ellen Vera

    Director of Development & Co-op Organizing, Co-op Cincy


Sustaining Donors

Co-op Cincy deeply appreciates the support of our Sustaining Donors!

Transformative Funders

  • Capital Impact Partners

  • Carol Ann & Ralph V. Haile, Jr Foundation

  • Common Future Reimagine Fund

  • Greater Cincinnati Foundation

  • Ira Block Foundation

  • Open Society Foundations

  • Seed Commons

  • U.S. Office of Refugee Resettlement

  • The Workers Lab

Solidarity Sponsors

  • Cincinnati AFL-CIO

  • Cincinnati Development Fund

  • Co-op Dayton

  • Episcopal Society of Christ Church

  • Eric Britton

  • First Financial Bank

  • IBEW Local 212

  • ICA Group

  • Meshewa Farm Foundation

  • National Cooperative Bank

  • Ohio Employee Ownership Center

  • PNC

  • Shared Capital Cooperative

  • Steve Sleigh

  • Sustainergy

  • United Food and Commercial Workers Local 75

  • United Steelworkers District 1 Subdistrict 5

  • Xavier University’s Brueggeman Center for Dialogue

1worker1vote is building a national network of shared ownership, regional, and municipal ecosystems starting with unionized worker-owned co-ops, with the goal of overcoming structural inequalities of opportunity, mobility, and income, and building pathways out of poverty and toward prosperity.

Feb 2022 update: Childcare Center Becomes Worker-Owned


'If I plan on being here for 10 years, why not be an owner?'

This month, we officially finished transitioning an existing business to worker-ownership!

Shine Nurture Center, a childcare center in the Mt. Airy neighborhood, joined a growing wave of businesses that are helping improve quality of life for workers and communities.

This is our 1st completed transition, and we're so thrilled! The process began when Shine’s team started our Business Legacy Fund program last year.

“For the workers, this transition has opened the door to building wealth for their families in a way that would never have been possible,” said Ellen Vera, our Director of Development and Co-op Organizing.

“And for the community, this succession has anchored an important child care center in the neighborhood long term.”

Shine's worker-owners celebrate with Ellen Vera, our Director of Development and Co-op Organizing, after the childcare center officially became worker-owned.

The Founder’s Story

Katie McGoron founded Shine in 2015 with the goal of creating a childcare center where children could play outside and eat healthy food.

Now that the business has a solid foundation, with a waiting list that typically includes 75 to 100 children, she decided to pursue a graduate degree. This month she finished the process of selling the business to 5 of her former employees.

McGoron wanted to give the employees an opportunity to make the business their own.

“It’s just such a great group,” she said of the current team. “I really wanted to take myself out of it, let them take Shine in the direction they see fit. I honestly think it will get better and better.”

“The responsibility of a business like that on one person’s shoulders is a lot," McGoron said. "When you can spread it over 5 shoulders, there’s more opportunity for growth.”

Mary Wilder, one of Shine's five worker-owners.

Beth Heeg (left) and Trisha Hay during a worker-owner meeting this month.

Shine’s Worker-Owners

Shine’s 5 worker-owners will now run and operate the childcare center by themselves. This business model, known as worker-ownership, has proven to be an effective way to create resilient jobs, generate wealth, and boost the local economy.

“I’ve definitely been celebrating all month and telling my kids, ‘Your Momma owns a business!’” said Mary Wilder, one of the new worker-owners, who has been employed by Shine for 2 years and has been in childcare for 12.

Before now, paperwork discouraged Mary from owning a childcare center. She changed her mind because Shine was “such a wonderful place to work.”

“If I plan on being here for 10 years, why not be an owner?” she said.

Other worker-owners at Shine cited the benefits of the worker-ownership model and the strength of the childcare center’s team.

Beth Heeg, who has been with Shine for 1 year, was attracted to the worker-ownership model because of the emphasis on “wealth redistribution."

Trisha Hay, who has worked at Shine for 3 years, said she decided to become a worker-owner because she felt she was never going to find another place like Shine.

“I was all-in immediately,” she said. “I feel like we all communicate and work really well together.”

Worker-Ownership Benefits

Why embrace the worker-owned business model? Worker-owned businesses are democratically run, giving workers a say. In addition, according to research, they have clear worker, company, and community benefits compared to traditional companies:

  1. Employee advantage: Employees at worker-owned businesses have better wages and benefits. 

  2. Company advantage: Worker-owned companies are more profitable and productive.

  3. Community advantage: Worker-owned businesses are less likely to close, relocate, or lay off workers during downturns.

“We are really excited that Shine has decided to transition to a worker-owned co-op,” said Vera of Co-op Cincy. “Selling to the workers was such a good option for the owner because she wanted to preserve her legacy and keep the business in the hands of the people who had helped her build it.” 

“It also allowed the owner to get a fair market price for the value she had built up in her business over the years, which is especially important in an industry such as childcare that is not known for having a lot of outside buyers that are typically interested in taking over.” 

Co-op Cincy Supports Transitions

To create a fairer and more resilient economy, Co-op Cincy’s Business Legacy Fund helps exiting or retiring business owners sell their companies to workers. The Fund, which supported Shine’s transition, helps save jobs and maintain legacies. Financing is accompanied by technical assistance.

McGoron said Co-op Cincy offered an essential “support system” for Shine’s transition. “We could not have figured out how to do this without the help of Co-op Cincy.”

Co-op Cincy has recruited transition managers in Cincinnati and is actively conducting outreach to local businesses. In addition, Co-op Cincy partners with organizations across the state and country to promote worker-ownership.


other Co-op Cincy Happenings

Applications Now Open for Cooperative Management Course

At a time when our world confronts climate crisis, rising inequality, and withering institutions, we have to rethink the way we do business, including how we organize companies. In our Cooperative Management Certificate course, we explore structures and practices that can help us meet the moment. Participants receive a certificate from the Xavier Leadership Center.

The upcoming course runs April through June, meeting once weekly for 12 weeks. The cost is $750, and applications are due March 20. To apply, please complete a short application form.

Questionnaire for 2022 Events

This year, we're planning a number of co-op tours and educational events. Interested? Pease complete this short questionnaire to indicate your preferences.

Planned co-op tours:

  • Wed, Mar 2 from 9 am-noon

  • Fri, Apr 8 from 12-3 pm

  • Fri, May 13 from 9 am-noon

  • Fri, Jun 10 from 12-3 pm

  • Fri, July 8 from 9 am-noon

  • Sat, Aug 13 from 4-6 pm

Planned educational events:

  • Tue, Mar 1 from 6-8 pm: Queen Mother's Market launch

  • Thu, Nov 10 from 530-730 pm: Co-op Cincy Annual Event

Board Retreat

At the end of January, we had an energizing virtual retreat with our Board of Directors! During the retreat, we discussed how to refine our goals and strengthen our impact in the coming years.

New Symposium Recordings

Via social media, we've been sharing recordings of sessions from our 2021 Union Co-op Symposium, which drew more than 200 people from around the world.

We recently posted the following sessions to our YouTube channel:

We'll be sharing more recordings during the coming weeks. The 2-day hybrid event was inspiring and brought together social entrepreneurs, labor organizers, co-op workers, community development practitioners, and others with a vested interest in equitable economic development.

Speakers discuss combining financing and meaningful co-op development during Financing Transformation, a session from the virtual day of our Symposium.


Co-op Updates

Sustainergy, which is expanding into the solar panel installation market, visited employee-owned Technicians For Sustainability in Tucson, Arizona, to receive training on best practices. Flequer Vera and Lewis Connell shadowed workers during their visit.

Sustainergy's Flequer Vera poses with employee-owners of Technicians for Sustainability in Tucson, Arizona.

Sustainergy is currently hiring for 2 new positions:

Queen Mother's Market, one of our newest co-ops, is having a launch event at Esoteric Brewing from 6-8 pm on March 1! See the Facebook event for more info. Queen Mother’s Market has created a regional buyer's club and is working toward starting a co-op grocery store in the Walnut Hills neighborhood of Cincinnati.

Queen City Commons presented at the Emergent Composter Competition of the U.S. Composting Council COMPOST 2022 Conference in Austin, Texas. They also partnered with the city of Cincinnati and other organizations for the Cincinnati Community Composting Collaborative, which aims to increase neighborhood-level composting infrastructure and community drop-off sites.

Our Harvest received a grant from the City of Cincinnati's Urban Agriculture Program in support of agriculture efforts within the city limits.


In the News

Congrats to Ashlee Young on being honored as one of 7 Black leaders making a difference in Cincinnati! We are grateful to have had Ashlee as one of the judges for our recent Power in Numbers pitch competition.


Upcoming Events

The Co-op Community: Providing Attractive Options for Black Businesses

A Note in Celebration of Black History Month

By Cynthia Pinchback-Hines
Racial Justice Educator and Co-op Developer


Today’s awesome Black entrepreneurs face their own challenges, which is why I believe the co-op business model is gaining popularity among Black business owners.

“The demographics of who creates co-ops has shifted," according to "Where Are New Co-ops Emerging? The Changing Map of Co-op Development".

"Increasingly, co-ops are being used by...Black communities as tools for community wealth building and economic development."

Before 2010, most co-ops were credit unions and only 1 percent were worker-owned cooperatives. Today, 47 percent of new cooperatives are worker-owned.

The founders of 3 Black, worker-owned co-ops in Co-op Cincy's network talked with me about how being a part of a cooperative community offers them creative options for addressing the problems typically faced by Black business owners.

Body by Bodji


Kavotus Britten of Body by Bodji is impressed by the amount and depth of educational support that she gets from Co-op Cincy.

She says that not only does she have a better understanding of her financials because of the training she received in Power in Numbers: Black Co-op U, she can see how putting people before profit benefits everyone.

Another plus for Kavotus is the coaching that Co-op Cincy offers after the business has launched.

“It feels good being able to be a part of a community that has my back.”

Hopes Fulfilled Farm 2 Table


Hope Johnson Gordon of Hopes Fulfilled knows firsthand what it takes to run a traditional business because she and her husband Alphanso have owned several.

Hope says, “Everybody is an owner, and everybody gets paid,” is a socially responsible approach to business.

Her insight brings a unique perspective to the community of co-ops. In addition to owning businesses, Hope teaches entrepreneurship to high school students who are learning principles of the cooperative business model—a model that students can use to build community.

Queen Mother's Market


Mona Jenkins of Queen Mother’s Market says that financial obstacles would have prevented her from opening a grocery store. The structure of a cooperative community has given her access to funding and to people from different industries within the co-op community.

She has found that human capital (labor, mentorship, technical support, etc.) is as essential to her business as are finances.

“When approaching funders and seeking partnerships, it’s good to have someone else in the room.”

The cooperative community offers Black businesses access to funding, education, and ongoing support—an attractive alternative to the traditional business model.

pitch night & More

January 2022 Newsletter

Happy New Year! We hope you got some rest during the holiday season. We're thrilled to start 2022 with Pitch Night for Power in Numbers, our business co-op training course for Black-led teams. We also have other exciting news.


power in numbers

We encourage you to join us virtually at 6 PM on Tuesday January 18 to hear the Power in Numbers groups pitch their co-op business plans!

Vernon Oakes, host of the Everything Co-op radio show, will speak during the event, and a panel of judges will offer feedback to help strengthen the co-op businesses. Here are our judges:

  • John Holdsclaw IV, Executive Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at the National Cooperative Bank

  • Alison Powers, Manager of Cooperatives and Communities at Capital Impact Partners

  • Ashlee Young, Vice President of Policy and Strategic Initiatives at Urban League of Greater SW Ohio

To attend via Zoom, go to this link at 6 pm on Tuesday January 18:

Meeting ID: 852 5000 7651
Passcode: 974465


Thank You for Your Donations!

A huge, huge thanks to our donors!

In December, we raised $8,531! We’re so grateful for your support and commitment to building an economy that works for all. And we’re very excited for what 2022 will bring! 💗💗💗


Co-op Cincy Happenings

6 Certificate Graduates

In December, 6 individuals graduated from our Co-op Management Certificate course, which we offer in partnership with the Xavier Leadership Center. The 3-month course explores the power and possibilities of cooperatives.

The next course starts in April, with applications due March 1. More details to follow.


Strategy Session

Also in December, we met for a 2-day strategic planning session to discuss how to increase our impact. We’re looking forward to strengthening our co-op network in 2022!


New Symposium Recordings

Over the upcoming weeks, we'll be posting recordings of the sessions from our 2021 Union Co-op Symposium, which drew 200 people from around the world.

During the 2-day hybrid event, we discussed practical tools on how to start and run union worker cooperatives. Here's what 1 participant said: "So much profound exploration of ideas and sharing of experiences!"⠀

We recently posted the recordings of 2 sessions to our YouTube channel:


Co-op Education in Local School

As part of a new program, we're getting ready to teach local high school students about the co-op model. Here's a photo from December of a student talking about a past co-op education course.

We can’t wait to see the possibilities we can co-create with these students!


Worker Co-op Week Session Online

The Worker Co-op Week virtual conference session with Ellen Vera (our Director of Development and Co-op Organizing) and Flequer Vera (CEO of Sustainergy) is now online.

The session, titled “2 Years of Learning and Tools for Effectively Building Thriving Union Worker Co-ops,” explored ways to strengthen the ties between the worker cooperative and union labor movements. Check out the recording on YouTube.


Co-op Updates

In 2021, we loaned approximately $95,000 to our network of co-ops. We're thrilled to report they continued to grow!!!

A few highlights:

Sustainergy's sales grew more than 50% in 2021, and they began their search for a New Market Director to lead an expansion into Dayton.

Our Harvest continued offering fresh, local food and and celebrated the donation of Bahr Farm to the Cardinal Land Trust.

Hopes Fulfilled, one of our newest co-ops, purchased a used food truck. They are working toward opening their food truck business this year in the neighborhood of Evanston.

Queen Mother's Market, another of our newest co-ops, is having a launch event at Esoteric Brewing on March 1! More details to follow. Queen Mother’s Market has created a regional buyer's club and is working toward starting a co-op grocery store in the Walnut Hills neighborhood of Cincinnati.

Shine Nurture Center started transitioning to worker ownership, joining our network of co-ops. Shine has become a successful business since its founding in 2015, with 12 workers and a waiting list that typically includes more than 70 families.

Queen City Commons collected 112,405 pound of food scraps and served more than 100 residential dro-off members. They also partnered with Morsel and Nosh and Unity Christian Church Food Pantry in Hartwell. Queen City Commons was also accepted to present at the US Composting Council Emerging Composter Competition!

Cincy Cleaning Co-op's team went from working 2 to 5 days a week. In addition, they welcomed a 2nd worker-owner and put a 3rd employee on the path to worker-ownership.


In the News

  • Listen to Co-op Cincy Board Member Jaime Love in "Including Communities of Color in Efforts To Mitigate the Effects of Climate Change" on WVXU

  • Read "How Cooperative Gig Economy Companies Managed To Flourish During the Pandemic" in Fast Company

  • Watch "This New Cooperative Business Model Could Change Everything" on The Laura Flanders Show (via YouTube)

  • Read "COVID Pandemic Has Shown the Value of Employee Ownership" in The Mercury News


Events

  • January 19 from 430-6 PM GMT: Trade Union Education: Its Role in Developing Union-Coops, a free webinar from Union Co-ops UK. Register now.

  • February 23 from 430-6 PM GMT: The Role of a Trade Union in a Union-Coop Structure, a free webinar from Union Co-ops UK. Register now.

  • March 1: Applications for Cooperative Management Certificate course due. Details TBA.

  • March 1: Launch event for Queen Mother's Market, one of the newest co-ops in our network, at Esoteric Brewing. Details TBA.

  • March 30 from 430-6 PM GMT: Workplace/Economic Democracy: What May This Look Like to Union Members and Ordinary Workers, a free webinar from Union Co-ops UK. Register now.


Follow Us

Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn for news about our activities and our friends in the worker co-op movement around the country!


The new world can't wait. Help us build our solidarity economy:

Can You Support Our Work in the Year Ahead?

Creating an Economy that Works for All

In 2021, we celebrated our 10-year anniversary! Despite the Covid-19 pandemic and recession, we continued the important work of building an economy that works for all.

This past year, we nurtured a network of 12 thriving co-ops. We also increased awareness of the worker-ownership model and provided business-ownership opportunities to people from underserved communities.

Here are a few key achievements:

  • We helped Shine Nurture Center, a daycare center in Cincinnati, start transitioning to worker-ownership

  • We recruited 5 entrepreneurs of color to lead more transitions to worker-ownership (see the article about our efforts in WCPO)

  • We hosted a 2-day, hybrid symposium on the union co-op model, with more than 200 attendees from around the world

  • We created and offered our 1st Power in Numbers, a co-op training course for Black-led teams

  • Our new statewide network of co-op developers the Ohio Worker Ownership Network launched the Building Legacies report on Ohio's business succession crisis and why worker-ownership is the solution (see the media coverage in WCPO, 91.7 WVXU, and Soapbox)

Will you donate to help us continue making an impact in 2022?

In these times of economic precarity and soaring inequality, we especially need your help. 

*Check Make it Monthly to become a sustaining partner

Your gift will help us nurture and support worker-owned businesses through training, technical assistance, and direct loans in the coming year. With your gift, you will help us build an economy that works for all!

Sincerely,

Kristen Barker 
Executive Director 
Co-op Cincy 

Keynote from 2021 Union Co-op Symposium Now Online

In November, more than 200 people gathered from around the world to participate in our 5th Union Co-op Symposium. During the 2-day hybrid event, we discussed practical tools on how to start and run union worker cooperatives. The conversations were energizing, enlightening, and inspiring. Here's what one participant said: "So much profound exploration of ideas and sharing of experiences!"

The symposium keynote, "Well-Being, Belonging, & Living Organizations: Unleashing Potential and Creativity for Deep Impact," can now be viewed online.

Keynote description:

How do we create an economy that works for all, an economy that delivers human and ecological well-being? At a time when our world confronts climate crisis, rising inequality, and withering institutions, we have to rethink the way we do business. What organizational structures can help us meet the moment? What mindsets and practices help unleash our fullest potential and support the collective intelligence necessary to respond and adapt to challenges and opportunities in a world experiencing tectonic shifts? What structures set us up for deep impact and effective action?

Moderated by Co-op Cincy Executive Director Kristen Barker, the keynote featured the following speakers:

  • Chandra Irvin, Executive Director of the Center for Peace & Spiritual Renewal at Spalding University

  • Ibon Zugasti, International Project Manager at LKS Cooperative (Management Consulting Division of Mondragon)

  • Norman Wolfe, Author of The Living Organization

Happy holidays! #shopcoop

From all of us at Co-op Cincy, happy holidays!

We are so thankful for your support, and we want to wish you a joyous holiday season, as well as health and happiness in the coming year.

This holiday season, we hope you will consider supporting our co-ops through a holiday purchase. By shopping at our co-ops, you nurture sustainable jobs and generate community wealth.


 

Cincy Cleaning Co-op has gift certificates for $30, $50 and $100 toward a cleaning, valid for 1 year. You can purchase a gift certificate by calling ‪‬(513) 919-5131 or emailing cincinnaticleaningcoop@gmail.com.

Give the gift of good health with a gift certificate from Our Harvest! Our Harvest grows healthy plants to feed healthy people. Gift certificates are available in $25, $50, and $100 amounts. Buy an Our Harvest gift certificate here!

Flourish and feel good with Massage For The People, a worker-owned company of experienced and tuned-in massage therapists who aim to make massage life-changing. Call or text Cary at 610-737-7946 to schedule. Or book online.

Hopes Fulfilled Farm to Table is now doing catering services. You can book at contact@hopesfulfilled.org. See their Facebook page for more info.

 

Speakers announced for 2021 Union Co-op Symposium

We’re excited to share the speakers for our 2021 Union Co-op Symposium, scheduled for Nov. 12 and 13. Below is the full list (in alphabetical order) with bios.

Ana Aguirre is a co-founder and worker owner at TAZEBAEZ S.Coop, cooperative development Lead at TAZEBAEZ S.Coop, Vice President for Europe in the ICA Youth Network and Committee, and Chief Operating Officer of the Platform Cooperatives NOW! Course by The New School and Mondragon Unibertsitatea.

Kenya Baker was born in Detroit, Michigan and moved to Dayton during her childhood. She worked as a teacher in Dayton public schools for fifteen years. Kenya is also a serial entrepreneur and author of several children’s books. In 2017, she was inspired by the Gem City Market project to join the cooperative movement. She believes in the power of community and worker ownership to transform Dayton’s neighborhoods and residents’ lives, and she works to get people involved in Unified Power, a real estate investment cooperative and community land trust by and for West Dayton. Kenya received her Master’s of Education from the University of Dayton and her BS from Wilberforce University.

Kristen Barker is a social entrepreneur, the President and Co-Founder of Co-op Cincy, and a Co-Founder of 1worker1vote. She designs and leads participatory education events with English- and Spanish-speaking co-op workers, and helps worker-owners make their businesses more successful. Kristen also helps Co-op Cincy’s design team determine the feasibility of potential co-op businesses, helps retiring business owners determine whether they can sell their business to their employees, and helps viable co-ops access the capital they need to leverage their ideas. Kristen has done groundbreaking work in adopting the Mondragon model to the US context and hosts delegations from around the country, including the participants in Co-op Cincy’s biennial Union Co-op Symposium. Kristen is a 2016-2018 Business Alliance for Local and Living Economies Fellow. Before becoming Co-op Cincy’s Executive Director, Kristen worked for 12 years fostering partnerships between people of faith, union members, and community members of diverse backgrounds. Kristen is a graduate of Xavier University and a lifelong Cincinnati resident—except for two years in El Salvador! She is a single mother of a resilient daughter with special needs.

Christopher Bennett is an entrepreneur focused on creating transformational wealth and change through business equity and acquisitions. He currently serves as the Business Legacy Fund Acquisition Program Manager for Co-op Cincy and is responsible for the strategic development, management, and execution of the program. Prior to joining Co-op Cincy, Chris created value across numerous for-profit and non-profit roles spanning marketing, sales, business development, curriculum development, corporate strategy, and internal audits. Chris has an undergraduate degree from Morehouse College (a HBCU) as well as Master of Business Administration and Master of Science in Management Information Systems degrees from the University of Alabama.

Alex Birchall is a Founding Member of Union Co-ops UK.

Alex Bird is a freelance co-operative researcher and policy adviser, and a founder member of the consultancy.coop. He is a Member of the Institute of Economic Development and works on their Code of Practice. He started his working life as a nuclear power engineer, and his experience since then is wide-ranging, covering nationalized industry, the public sector, the third sector, and the co-op movement. He is an experienced and committed worker co-operator, having founded three worker co-ops and earned his living through them for almost 30 years, and he has led a practitioner study group to look at credit unions in Ireland. He has been a Board Member of many co-op development agencies, including Wales Cooperative Centre, Cardiff & Vale CDA, Co-operatives UK, Social Firms UK, Social Firms Wales, the UK Cooperative Forum, and the Welsh Government’s Ministerial Advisory Committee on Social Enterprise. He was the founder and Secretariat of the Welsh Assembly’s Cross-Party Group on Cooperatives from 2009 to 2015 and was a founder and subsequently Chair of Cooperatives and Mutuals Wales (the affiliate of Co-operatives UK in Wales). During this time, he twice brought together the Co-operative Cross-Party Groups in the UK’s three devolved Parliaments. He has co-authored a number of research papers, including “Not Alone” and “Working Together,” published by Co-operatives UK and the Co-operative College, and “Organising Precarious Workers” for the TUC. He is also a co-author of the “Manifesto for Decent Work” published by unioncoops:uk. Alex is currently the Chair of Banc Cambria, which is developing a co-operative bank for Wales with the support of the Welsh Government, Community Savings Bank Association, and the RSA; and he sits on the Members Panel of Glas Cymru, the not-for-profit mutual that supplies Welsh Water.

Eric Britton is a Partner at Shumaker, Loop & Kendrick, LLP. Eric has more than 30 years’ experience handling all aspects of employee benefits, executive compensation, Employee Retirement Income Security Act, and tax compliance for both large and small clients.

Christina Clamp is a professor of sociology at Southern New Hampshire University and is the Director of the Center for Cooperatives and Community Economic Development. Dr. Clamp serves as Chair of the Board of the Local Enterprise Assistance Fund, Vice-Chair of the Board of the Food Cooperative Initiative, and Board Member of the ICA Group and Fund for Jobs Worth Owning. She is a member of the CIRIEC International Scientific Commission on Social and Cooperative Economy. Dr. Clamp has served as a consultant to various clients including the National Cooperative Bank, US Department of Agriculture Rural Development, Greater New Orleans Foundation, New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, National Federation of Community Development Credit Unions, North Carolina Association of Community Development Corporations, and Mondragon University in Spain. She has provided training, research and consulting in the areas of (a) community economic development and capacity building and (b) cooperative education and development. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts from Friends World College and her Master of Arts in Sociology and Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology from Boston College, where she studied worker cooperatives and employee ownership, conducting research on the Mondragon Cooperatives in the Basque region of Spain. She is Co-Author of Shared Services Cooperatives: A Qualitative Study: Exploring Applications, Benefits & Potential with Eklou Romaric Amendah and Carol Coren, and Honoring the Circle: Ongoing Learning from American Indians on Politics and Society, Volume III with Stephen M. Sachs, Donna K. Dial, Amy Fatzinger, and Phyllis M. Gagnier.

Pat Conaty is a Founding Member of Union Co-ops UK and a Fellow of New Economics Foundation and has worked with NEF since 1987. He is also a research associate of Co-operatives UK. He specializes in action research, education, and development that focuses on successful methods of social economic innovation. During the 1990s, he led work at NEF to introduce Community Development Finance and other forms of co-operative and mutual banking to the UK. From 2000 to 2010 as a research associate of Community Finance Solutions at the University of Salford, he played a leading role in researching and developing Community Land Trusts nationally. This led to the successful development of the Community Land Trust Fund and the National CLT Network trade body.

Chris Cooper is the Director of the Ohio Employee Ownership Center (OEOC) at Kent State University. In his 20-plus years at the OEOC, he has done almost everything at one point or another, but he now focuses primarily on ownership culture education and coordinating Ohio’s Employee-Owned Network; working with business owners on succession planning and sales to employees; and business development and employee-owned start-ups. He was formerly a contributor on the COSE Mindspring website (an online resource for small businesses in NE Ohio), the Small Business Advocacy Blog of the Small Business Advocacy Council in Chicago, and Slate.com’s BizBox small business blog. In 2010, Chris was designated a Certified Exit Planning Advisor by the Exit Planning Institute. Chris is also active in various training programs on employee ownership, including annual Employee Owner Retreats and the annual Ohio Employee Ownership Conference, and has been a featured speaker at conferences and programs across the US as well as Bermuda, Canada, and Wales. He has conducted numerous in-company training programs, and has been involved in creating and improving OEOC training programs and materials. He oversees the OEOC's efforts in new media and technology, including video, podcasting, social media, and the OEOC website. Prior to joining the Center, he spent over 15 years working in various capacities in small, family-owned, and closely-held businesses in the hospitality and foodservice industries. He was a substitute teacher with the Kent City Schools. He worked at SEIU Local 47 in Cleveland, Ohio. And he is a graduate of Kent State’s Political Science program.

Brian Corbin is Executive Vice President, Member Services at Catholic Charities USA.

Ra Criscitiello, Esq. is Deputy Director of Research at SEIU-United Healthcare Workers West in Oakland, California, a labor union of nearly 100,000 healthcare workers. SEIU-UHW members are frontline caregivers (including respiratory care practitioners and dietary, environmental services, and nursing staff) who aim to improve the healthcare system by providing quality care for all patients; expanding access to excellent, affordable healthcare for all Californians; and improving living standards for all workers. Ra’s work focuses on the intersection of organized labor and worker cooperatives, and she has built several innovative employment models that collectivize the employment status of unionized healthcare workers on scale. Ra’s work developing unionized platform cooperatives for healthcare workers demonstrates the possibility of a post-pandemic economic recovery that centers workers and allows flexibility without compromising traditional union values or worker control.

Joseph Cureton is the Chief Coordinating Officer at the Obran Cooperative (the first worker-owned conglomerate), where his work focuses on bringing new worker directed enterprises to life. He is a serial entrepreneur and founding member of Core Staffing, Bmore Black Techies, and Tribe Works, all projects that fight to overcome the challenges faced by modern workers. He is also a software engineer (Drexel University) and classically trained chef (Johnson and Wales) by trade.

Matthew Currie is a Managing Attorney at Advocates for Basic Legal Equality, a non-profit regional law firm that provides high-quality legal assistance in civil matters to help eligible low-income individuals and groups in western Ohio achieve self-reliance, equal justice and economic opportunity. He oversees the firm’s Housing and Community Economic Development practice. Matthew’s practice has focused on representing tenants and tenant associations in a variety of housing matters, including fair housing, equal access, evictions, subsidy terminations, and conditions issues. More recently, his practice focuses on supporting Dayton neighborhood revitalization and community resilience. He is a co-founder and Board president of Co-op Dayton, which develops worker-owned cooperatives that leverage community assets and contribute to an economy that works for all. Matthew advises neighborhood associations and community organizations on environmental matters, such as source water drinking protections, impacts of industrial contamination, and the EPA's Superfund program. He is also an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Dayton School of Law, where he teaches the Social Justice Law Capstone, a course he developed. Matthew has litigated cases in the U.S District Court for the Southern and Northern Districts of Ohio, and he has argued an appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Matthew is a frequent presenter, including as faculty for the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law Community Lawyering Training.

Gopal Dayaneni is a Board Member of Seed Commons.

Elizabeth Garlow is a Co-Founder of Francesco Collaborative.

Lauren Grattan is Co-Founder and Chief Community Officer of Mission Driven Finance Lauren's background in nonprofit development made her eager to activate more capital for social change, leading her to co-found Mission Driven Finance, an impact investment firm and Certified B Corporation that develops strategies to close financial gaps that will close opportunity gaps. As Chief Community Officer, she leads the design of community-driven strategy, providing a frame for both internal culture & partner relationships. Lauren's blended heritage—Irish, Chinese, and Native Hawaiian—informs her approach to reconnecting capital and community. Prior to building Mission Driven Finance, she spent nearly 10 years fundraising for a wide variety of nonprofits—from large universities to small, volunteer-run initiatives. Lauren proudly serves on the steering committee of the Inclusive Capital Collective and on the board of Business for Good San Diego. She is a 2019 Social Venture Circle Innovation Entrepreneur and an active member of many philanthropic initiatives. Lauren is an alumna of Punahou School in Honolulu and Columbia University in the City of New York.

Katy Heins is a Senior Organizer at Community Change as part of the Housing Justice team, lending organizing expertise to local and state campaigns. Katy’s main role is to organize with state partners to develop statewide power organizations that fight for housing justice. Previously she worked on Community Change’s national health care, immigrant rights, and jobs campaigns, as well as being instrumental in developing the Community Change state partner, the Ohio Organizing Collaborative. Before joining Community Change, Katy was the Executive Director of the Contact Center in Cincinnati, whose mission is to empower low-income people, primarily women, to organize for power in their communities and their lives. Katy also was the lead organizer for Let Justice Roll, which was the faith and volunteer component of the successful effort to raise Ohio’s minimum wage and the national minimum wage. Katy has been organizing for thirty years and is based out of Cincinnati, Ohio.

Rosemarie Rieger is the Co-founder and Co-director of the Southeast Center for Cooperative Development in Nashville, Tennessee. Rosemarie is a community organizer, author, and lecturer. She has been involved with worker rights advocacy as the Community Engagement Coordinator with the Dallas AFL-CIO Central Labor Council and Director of Texas New ERA Center/Jobs with Justice. Before working in nonprofit and cooperative development, Rosemarie worked in biotech research for many years and was a Montessori educator. She holds an M.S. degree from Eberhard Karls University (Germany) and an M.Ed. degree from Loyola University Maryland.

John Holdsclaw IV serves as Executive Vice President of Strategic Initiatives at the National Cooperative Bank (NCB). John is charged with establishing NCB as a thought leader in community development finance and in cooperative expansion that leads to business development and solutions. In addition, John manages the Bank’s philanthropic outreach and government relations program. NCB’s mission is to support and be an advocate for America’s cooperatives and their members, especially in low-income communities, by providing innovative financial and related services. He currently serves on the boards of the Community Development Financial Institution Coalition, Self Help Venture Fund, Climb Fund, Global Communities, Groundswell, Partner for Common Good, American Bankers Association (ABA) Stonier Graduate School of Banking, and ABA’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Advisory Group. He holds a B.A. degree in Political Science from North Carolina A&T State University, a M.S. in Community Economic Development from Southern New Hampshire University, a Diploma from the Stonier Graduate School of Banking, a Wharton Leadership Certificate from the Aresty Institute of Executive Education at The Wharton School, and a Certificate in Diversity and Inclusion from Cornell University. In 2019, John received NCB's Stanley W. Dreyer Spirit of Cooperation Award, bestowed annually to those who live and work with the spirit of the cooperative principles. In addition, John is an active member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Incorporated. 

Tim Huet is a Founder of the Arizmendi Association of Cooperatives, a cooperative composed of nine member businesses: six bakeries, a landscape design-build cooperative, a general contractor, and a technical support collective. As part of the Association’s Development & Support Cooperative, he participates in everything from writing business plans to training workers in the daily details of democratic business management. He also serves as in-house legal counsel. He lives in a housing cooperative in Oakland, California. His father was a member of Iron Workers Local 1. There are mostly Teamsters on his mother's side (his maternal grandmother was a steel worker, following in Rosie's footsteps).

Chandra Irvin is the Executive Director of the Center for Peace and Spiritual Renewal at Spalding University. There, she leads the University and external organizations in developing and applying restorative and spiritual practices that promote racial equity and healing in individual and community relations. As a minister, facilitator, strategist, and master consultant in Polarity Management, she cultivates understanding and respect for shared humanity, deep listening, and collective action towards peace and justice. For over 20 years, Chandra has served as President of Irvin, Goforth & Irvin LLC, helping individuals and organizations across the U.S. and abroad to clarify their purpose, surmount chronic difficulties, resolve conflicts, and build meaningful relations across diverse groups. As a Fielding Lewis Walker Fellow, her life and work frequently draw on the transformative and timeless wisdom of mystic, theologian, prophet and community builder Howard Thurman. She is an ICF-certified life coach who has written and contributed to several books and articles related to peace, human relations, and leveraging polarities for greater good. Chandra is the co-author of Do You See What I See? A Diversity Tale for Retaining People of Color. She is the author of Finding PEACE in Life, Work and Love: Listening to the Voice Within and a chapter in Lessons in Leadership called, “Do Something! Committing to Wholeness in Human Relations.” Her most recent publication (2021) is a chapter in And: Making a Difference by Leveraging Polarity, Paradox or Dilemma, Volume 2 called, “Contributing to a Just and Equitable World: Why is it So Hard?”

Babbie Jacobs is Community Capital Working Group Chair of Social Venture Circle.

Mona M. Jenkins is an educator and organizer who graduated from the University of Cincinnati, where she studied Educational Foundations for Social Change. She actively works with community members to address neighborhood-specific issues related to health, gender, housing, and education. In collaborating with leaders and individuals in their neighborhoods, Mona seeks to build engagement, empowerment, and sustainable community solutions. As the Cooperative Food Justice Coordinator for Co-op Cincy, Mona works with residents to address food insecurity in their neighborhoods through equitable, community-centered approaches. Mona is also the Co-Founder of Queen Mother’s Market Cooperative, a worker and community-owned grocery store that will be opening in the Cincinnati neighborhood of Walnut Hills. Mona enjoys gardening, traveling, and experimenting with new recipes in the kitchen.

Robert Killins is Director of Special Initiatives at Greater Cincinnati Foundation (GCF), where he attracts and stewards donors. He also supports GCF’s Private Foundations work. Robert manages GCF’s Impact Investment program, which has invested more than $25 million locally in nonprofits in the last decade. He currently leads GCF’s Affordable Housing initiatives and the Foundation’s efforts to attract more Black donors. He has 23 years of foundation experience including corporate, private, and community foundation work. He joined GCF in January 2010 after a 24-year career at The Procter & Gamble Company. Robert has significant non-profit experience as a volunteer, founder, board member, and board chair of several Cincinnati-based nonprofit organizations. He has an Economic Development Finance Professional Certification from the National Development Council and Chartered Advisor in Philanthropy designation from The American College of Financial Services. He is a graduate of Leadership Cincinnati (Class XXIII in 2000) and of Grambling State University (Louisiana) with a B.A. in French. While at Grambling, Robert twice studied in France. Robert will graduate with an MBA from Xavier University. He is married and has three adult children. He resides in the West End community in Cincinnati.

Lela Klein is Co-Executive Director at Co-op Dayton. A native Daytonian, Lela’s career has been dedicated to fighting for economic justice for working people. Prior to co-founding Co-op Dayton, she served as General Counsel to the IUE-CWA, a 45,000-member manufacturing union, where she led major strategic projects, advocated on behalf of workers, and created a mentorship program to foster leadership among young manufacturing employees. Lela was also an organizer, and later an atorney, with the Service Employees International Union. After witnessing the devastating impacts of the global recession on blue collar communities like her own, Lela returned to Dayton in 2012 to use her legal and organizing training to support community economic development and worker empowerment in her hometown. Lela received her JD from Harvard Law School and her BA from Cornell University.

Joe Logan is President of Ohio Farmers Union.

Rebecca Lurie is currently on faculty with the Urban Studies Department and the founder of the Community and Worker Ownership Project at the City University of NY School for Labor and Urban Studies. She was a founding member of the worker-owned cooperative, New Deal Home Improvement Company and City Roots Contractors Guild. She began her working career as a union carpenter and transitioned into worker education through the union’s apprenticeship program and the construction industry. Using a sector approach for understanding industries and businesses and their employment needs, she has remained dedicated to inclusive community economic development. Rebecca has collaborated on numerous initiatives in NYC, including pre-apprenticeship programs, a Bronx green jobs network, a kitchen business incubator and the design of Best for NYC. She serves on the Boards of the Bronx Cooperative Development Initiative and Democracy at Work Institute and the Executive Committee of the Union Coop Council/US Federation of Worker Coops. She is Trustee Emerita with the Brooklyn Society for Ethical Culture. She holds a Master’s in Organizational Change Management from The New School and a certificate in Adult Occupational Education from CUNY, and is certified in Permaculture Urban Design. She is a native New Yorker raised with the spirit and passion of dedication to social justice.

Dr. Anita Mangan is Senior Lecturer in Organization Studies in the School of Management, University of Bristol, UK. An interest in social justice and mutual self-help drives her research, which focuses on co-operatives, credit unions, and union co-ops. One of her key concerns is the invisibility of co-operatives – in the media, in business education and in policy debates. To this end, she has recently developed a new postgraduate module for business students called Alternative Work and Organizations that focuses on co-operative development. She is a member of the University and College Union and a founder member of Union-Coops UK, as well as being an active member of her local credit union and several co-operatives.

Julian Manley is a researcher at the University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK. He has many years of contact with the co-operatives in Mondragon in the Basque Country, where he has carried out research and offered consultancy and training. In Preston, he is a founder member of the Preston Cooperative Development Network and a founder member and Director of the Preston Cooperative Education Centre, the UK’s first union-coop. He has presented talks and seminars on the Preston Model nationally and internationally, and has published widely, including co-editing, with Phil Whyman, the first academic book publication on the Preston Model: The Preston Model and Community Wealth Building. Creating a Socio-Economic Democracy for the Future (Routledge 2021).

Dave McLean is Sub District Director of United Steelworkers and a Board Member of Co-op Cincy.

Rebecca Moix is the VP of Finance at Intrust IT, a leading information technology support & security company in Cincinnati that is partially owned by their ESOP. In addition to accounting, finance and human resource functions, she is also the ESOP administrator and leads the ongoing Financial Literacy program to continually educate all employees on how the business and financials work. She led the implementation of the Great Game of Business open-book management methodology in 2016, resulting in significant improvement in profitability and employee engagement. In 2019, the company established the Intrust IT ESOP and began the employee ownership journey. The company is currently 30% ESOP-owned, with plans for 100% in the future.

Oscar Muguerza is Head of Business Banking at Laboral Kutxa, a co-operative bank based in Northern Spain that is part of Mondragon Group, one of the largest industrial groups in Spain. He has worked at Laboral Kutxa for 20 years, in various positions. In his current position, he is responsible for product development, marketing, pricing, commercial policy, and international development for business clients, including entrepreneurship and microfinance. He is also responsible for intermediary programs of the European Investment Found, such as Employment and Social Innovation (EaSI) and InnovFin. In addition, he is Vice President and Coordinator of Gaztenpresa Foundation, created 25 years ago to foster the creation and consolidation of jobs through business creation.

South Central resident Niglmoro (Niki) Okuk founded Rco Tires in 2012. Rco has since recycled more than 300 million pounds of rubber, diverting 70 million gallons of oil from landfills with 16 employees, making it one of southern California's largest sustainability plants. Rco creates alternative uses for trash tires, turning them into new products. Because of Okuk's progressive hiring and management practices, Rco provides stable jobs for local Black and Latino residents who struggle to find employment because of past criminal convictions or legal status. Okuk grew up in Los Angeles and majored in economics at Columbia University. After working in development with the office of Joseph Stiglitz and in finance in Korea and Singapore, Okuk completed her MBA with Nanyang University in Singapore and a sustainability certificate at Sloan School of Business at MIT.

Michaela Oldfield is Director of Greater Cincinnati Regional Food Policy Council. Michaela coordinates a cross-sector coalition of stakeholders advocating for policies and systems changes to ensure that all residents of the Greater Cincinnati Region have access to food that is healthy, fair, affordable and green. Michaela has a JD from the University of Michigan Law School and a PhD from Michigan State University in Community, Agriculture, Recreation and Resource Studies. Her studies and past work have focused on environmental justice advocacy, the politics of public and private food systems regulation, and understanding how policies shape the healthfulness, economics, and sustainability of food systems.

R. Dennis Olson is a Senior Research Associate & Policy Analyst for the United Food & Commercial Workers International Union. He advises the director of the meatpacking division on food, agriculture and trade policies and provides strategic analysis for organizing programs, collective bargaining activities, legislative initiatives, and strategic alliances. Olson supported efforts by UFCW Local 75 in Cincinnati to launch the Our Harvest Co-op farm and food hub, a worker-owned cooperative with a union contract. He currently represents UFCW on the Union Committee of the US Federation of Worker-Owned Co-ops. Dennis represents UFCW on the National Campaign Committee for the Center for Good Food Purchasing and supports local coalitions working to convince public institutions to implement the Good Food Purchasing Program. He also represents UFCW in the National Poultry Workers Coalition, which successfully opposed a USDA proposal to increase slaughter line speeds in poultry plants and continues to challenge poultry companies to respect workers’ rights.

Benny Overton is Co-Executive Director at Southeast Center for Cooperative Development. Benny is the former president of United Auto Workers Local 737 in Nashville, Tennessee. His other roles have included Vice President of Nashville Organizing for Action and Hope,President of the Dickson County Branch NAACP, Vice President of the Tennessee AFL-CIO, Executive Board Member of the Nashville Area-Middle Tennessee Central Labor Council, and Adjunct Professor at the Tennessee State University College of Business. Benny holds an M.B.A. from Tennessee State University. Benny has experience planning and leading experimental worker committees in the manufacturing industry. In these committees, workers made decisions democratically on all things related to production.

Michael Alden Peck is Executive Director & Cofounder of 1worker1vote; Co-Founder & Managing Director of The Virtuous Cycle Collaboratory (tvc2) – a for-profit, MBE worker cooperative & social enterprise whose mission is to “flatten the curves with virtuous cycles”; Board Secretary for the American Sustainable Business Council, which includes the Social Venture Circle; Blue Green Alliance Corporate Advisory Board Member; Worx Printing Union Coop Volunteer Board Chair; Coop Cincy Volunteer Staff Member; and former International Delegate (1999–2019) representing USA & Canada for MONDRAGON.

With a professional career spanning 4 decades, Cynthia Pinchback-Hines is a community activist, organizer, educator, organizational development consultant, diversity leader, entrepreneur, and board member of several non-profits. She recently transitioned from Board Member of Co-op Cincy to Racial Justice Educator & Co-op Developer, with her primary roles being administrator and facilitator for Power in Numbers: Black Co-op U. Cynthia holds a Ph.D. in Educational Leadership for Higher Education. She has taught at Virginia State University and Delaware State University and served as Associate Dean of African American Affairs & Ethnic Services at Northern Kentucky University, where she provided academic, cultural, and social support to African American students. In addition, she has presented at numerous professional conferences and conducted countless workshops. The Cincinnati Enquirer named her one of the ten most influential educators in Cincinnati and presented her with a Diversity Leadership Award for her achievements at Cognis Corporation. Cynthia resides in West Chester, Ohio, with her husband, Gary.

Jacqueline Radebaugh is an associate attorney with Jason Wiener P.C., a public benefit corporation and a Colorado-based law firm supporting social entrepreneurs and cooperatives, and bringing deep design thinking to business ownership. She assists mission-based, values-forward entrepreneurs and businesses in identifying and addressing their legal needs, from the start-up phase through financing rounds, to conversion and exit strategies. Committed to advancing racial equity through social entrepreneurship, the sharing economy, and community & economic development strategies that promote local sustainability, she aims to bring about social and economic change. To achieve that, she collaborates with co-op incubators and community-based organizations, and instigates conversations about community land trusts and other shared equity models. She focuses on democratic governance and worker-ownership models, and has gotten into DAOs and their overlap with cooperative principles and practices. Before making her way to Ohio, Jacque studied and practiced law in a variety of places, and advised dozens of Fortune 500 companies in Brazil and nonprofits in France, with detours through Geneva, New York City, and Texas. In addition to her Brazilian law degree, Jacque earned master’s degrees in Sociology of Religions & Society and Public Law & Political Sciences from the University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne, and an LLM in American Law with emphasis in business law from the University of Texas at Austin.

Melissa Scanlan is the Lynde B. Uihlein Endowed Chair in Water Policy and the Director of the Center for Water Policy at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Freshwater Sciences. She is a Professor in the School of Freshwater Sciences and affiliated faculty at UW-Madison Law School. She is the author of Prosperity and the Fossil Free Economy (Yale University Press, 2021).

amaha sellassie is Co-Executive Director at Co-op Dayton. amaha is a peace builder, social healer, freedom fighter, network weaver, and lover of humanity. amaha is a practitioner scholar dedicated to building bridges of trust, healing historical wounds, and harnessing the unique gifts and talents of every human being as we press towards a just and equitable society. A lifelong community organizer, amaha currently serves as president of the Gem City Market board and as a founder and leader of many other community initiatives. amaha is also the Director of the Center for Applied Social Issues and a professor of sociology at Sinclair Community College.

Carol Smith is a Co-Founder of Renting Partnerships.

Jonny Sopotiuk is a visual artist, curator, and community organizer living and working on the Unceded Indigenous territories belonging to the Musqueam, Skxwú7mesh-ulh Úxwumixw (Squamish) and Tsleil-Watututh peoples in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Jonny is the President of the Arts and Cultural Workers Union, IATSE Local B778 and is a founding member of two worker cooperatives: the Vancouver Artists Labour Union Cooperative (VALU CO-OP) and Stitcher's Cooperative. Jonny recently launched the new Union Cooperative Initiative with Kevin Millsip to help expand the union cooperative organizing model throughout other industries and sectors across Canada.

Margery Spinney is a Co-Founder of Renting Partnerships.

Simon Taylor is a Founding Member of Union Co-ops UK.

Ellen Vera is Director of Development and Co-op Organizing at Co-op Cincy. Ellen has organized people from diverse backgrounds to improve their workplaces for more than a decade, and became a Co-Founder of Co-op Cincy and of 1worker1vote in 2011 to develop a more sustainable model of organizing, economic democracy, and wealth-building in marginalized communities. Ellen oversees new co-op organizing projects, the launch of Co-op Cincy’s education arm, Co-op U, and makes sure Co-op Cincy has the resources to be successful. Ellen’s experience as part of a family with mixed immigration status deepens her perspective and her passion for organizing with immigrant worker-owners and worker-owners of color. Prior to accepting a position with Co-op Cincy, she helped people organize and strengthen their labor unions as the National Organizing Coordinator for the manufacturing arm of the Communication Workers of America and for United Food and Commercial Workers Local 75. Ellen earned a Masters in Business Administration from Northern Kentucky University, which she uses to oversee our design team’s work, producing feasibility studies, business plans, capitalization campaigns, and initial management plans for cooperative enterprises.

Troy Walcott, born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, is President and Founder of People's Choice Communications. People’s Choice Communications is an employee-owned multi-stakeholder cooperative formed to provide communication services throughout New York City. People’s Choice Communications provides internet access to underserved areas of the city using fixed-point wireless technology and by including the public in ownership of that system. The company’s goal is to reinvest profits into the community while bringing an end to a multi-year worker strike Troy and his coworkers are part of. Troy operated as shop steward to 1800 IBEW Local Union #3 employees for 13 of his 20 years of service. He was a service technician before moving over to the survey and design department and helped build NYC's communications infrastructure. In 2018, he was presented with an award by Chris Erickson, business agent of IBEW Local Union #3, for his tireless efforts to support the men and women he represents. A strong believer in perseverance and personal responsibility, Troy tirelessly fights for a better future for his coworkers and his community.

Jeanette Webster is Chief Investment Officer at The Fund for Employee Ownership. Housed at Evergreen Cooperative Corporation in Cleveland, Ohio, the Fund for Employee Ownership provides mission-driven capital to create quality jobs via employee ownership. The Fund acquires businesses from retiring baby boomers, converts those businesses to worker ownership, and supports them as part of the Evergreen Cooperatives network of employee-owned businesses.

Jonathan Welle is Co-founder and Executive Director of Cleveland Owns, a nonprofit incubator of cooperative enterprises building community power through collective ownership. As a cooperative developer, Jonathan supports groups of workers with business and organizing strategy, financial planning, facilitation, and business operations. His passion for cooperative enterprise as a way to resist racial capitalism began in the Dominican Republic, where he supported the creation of a woman-owned cheese cooperative during his time as a small business development advisor in the Peace Corps. At Cleveland Owns, Jonathan has supported the launch of three cooperatives, including PowerUp Purchasing Cooperative, which builds economic power and helps mission-driven orgs align how they spend money with their values. He has a master’s in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School. Jonathan grew up in Mayfield, Ohio, and boomeranged back to the City of Cleveland in 2015.

Casey Whitten-Amadon is a Staff Attorney at IUE-CWA, the industrial division for the Communication Workers of America (CWA). Casey has always supported and deeply believed in worker democracy in all forms, whether through worker cooperatives, unions, or democratic governments. Casey became involved in the union coop movement in Cincinnati during its infancy, during the creation of the first coop and debates over the structures of the union cooperatives. Later, Casey was involved in the creation of Coop Dayton, the Dayton cooperative incubator based on the Cincinnati Model. Casey was also a Member of the Coop Dayton Board during the genesis of Gem City Market, a worker-owned grocery store in Dayton.

Felipe Witchger co-directs the Francesco Collaborative, building capacity at the intersection of Catholic impact investors and the cooperative movement. He previously spent 10 years leading the Community Purchasing Alliance, organizing religious and educational institutions to shift more than $13 million to local BIPOC-owned businesses in Washington, DC.

Norman Wolfe is founder of Quantum Leaders, Inc. and has spent over 35 years working in a variety of organizations from Fortune 500 to technology startups. He is viewed as an expert in the area of strategy, change adoption, and process and organizational redesign and is the author of The Living Organization.

Sarah Wooley is General Secretary of the Bakers Food and Allied Workers Union, which represents members throughout the food industry. They have a long-standing branch at Suma Wholefoods (a workers cooperative in Elland, West Yorkshire) and more recently a branch at London’s first cooperative pub, The Ivy House. As a union, they have always recognized the need for workers to be fully engaged by their business and that cooperatives offer this opportunity, with workers firmly in the driving seat and receiving a fair share of the profits.

Ibon Zugasti is the International Project Manager at LKS Cooperative (the Management Consulting Division of Mondragon).

It's our 10-year anniversary!

Will you help us continue our work?

Last month, Co-op Cincy celebrated its 10-year anniversary! We can’t believe how much time has passed.

During the last decade, we have accomplished a lot. We have promoted worker-ownership, nurtured a co-op network, and ensured individuals had the chance to build wealth while pursuing their dreams.

We began by meeting Sunday nights at my house. Since then, we have:

  • helped launch & support 14 co-ops

  • developed co-op training courses & materials

  • taught thousands of people about worker-ownership

  • hosted 4 union co-op symposiums with hundreds of participants

  • started a loan fund with Seed Commons to finance worker-ownership transitions & support existing co-ops

Will you make a donation to help us continue expanding worker-ownership?

Co-op Cincy Executive Director Kristen Barker, Sustainergy Worker-Owner Flequer Vera, & Co-op Cincy Founding Member Phil Amadon.

Co-op Cincy Executive Director Kristen Barker, Sustainergy Worker-Owner Flequer Vera, & Co-op Cincy Founding Member Phil Amadon.

The last year

The last year has been a trying one. Despite the Covid-19 pandemic and recession, we have continued our important work of supporting family-sustaining jobs. Through our Business Legacy Fund, we have helped Shine Nurture Center, a child care center in Cincinnati, begin transitioning to worker-ownership.

Shine has grown into a successful child care center since its founding in 2015, with 12 workers and a waiting list that typically includes 70 families. Now that Shine has a strong foundation, the owner, Katie McGoron, wants to return to school to complete her PhD. Katie is excited to sell Shine to her workers so the child care center can continue offering its services in the community. 

Will you make a donation to help more businesses like Shine adopt the worker-ownership model?

Shine Nurture Center is transitioning to worker-ownership through our Business Legacy Fund.

Shine Nurture Center is transitioning to worker-ownership through our Business Legacy Fund.

A worker-owner story

Nayeli Roblero was unaware of the worker-ownership option when she immigrated to Cincinnati from Guatemala at age 16. In the years that followed, Nayeli had five children and separated from her husband. While working long hours as a cleaner, she learned of the Cincy Cleaning Co-op, one of the worker-owned businesses in our network. In 2020, Nayeli joined the co-op and became a worker-owner. 

“I feel supported,” said Nayeli. “I’ve always had a dream of owning a business and bettering myself.” 

Will you make a donation to help more workers like Nayeli become worker-owners? 

Nayeli Roblero is a worker-owner of Cincy Cleaning Co-op.

Nayeli Roblero is a worker-owner of Cincy Cleaning Co-op.

In these times of economic precarity and soaring inequality, we especially need your help.

Please consider making a tax-deductible donation to help us continue our work:

*Check 'Make it Monthly' to become a sustaining partner

Your gift will help us nurture and support worker-owned businesses through training, technical assistance, and direct loans. With your gift, you will help us build an economy that works for all!

Sincerely,


Kristen Barker 
Executive Director 
Co-op Cincy