Create!
Along with direct action and other forms of resistance, a transformational movement must also have a constructive program that builds new institutions based on the values that the movement aspires to achieve. These may eventually replace the old systems. From small, worker-owned cooperatives to national advocacy groups, hundreds of thousands of people around the country are working to create democratic and sustainable systems that meet the basic needs of all people.
South Texas is facing a water crisis decades in the making.
Much of the region’s growing population relies on the Rio Grande as its sole source of drinking water. Yet in recent years, as climate change has gripped Texas and caused hotter, drier summers, the river’s flow has diminished to a trickle in some areas.
This year, months before summer has officially set in, major reservoirs on the Rio Grande are nearly empty after reaching historic lows last year. Falcon Reservoir is less than 15% full as of mid-April, and Amistad Reservoir hovers below one-third full. Last month, Hidalgo County issued a disaster declaration as a binational agreement with the Mexican government fails to deliver water from the Rio Grande, as it is obligated to do under the terms of a 1944 treaty. Farmers fear losing their crops.
Philadelphia’s Reforestation Hub Isn’t Just Diverting Tree Waste
June 2, 2024
Cinnamon Janzer, Next City.
Create!
Carbon sequestration, Circular Economy, Jobs, Philadelphia, Reforestation
Each year, U.S. cities lose an estimated 36 million trees to development, disease and old age, many of which ultimately end up in landfills. Losing these urban trees – known to help cool their neighborhoods, lower carbon emissions and improve mental health, among other benefits – costs an estimated $96 million annually.
In Philadelphia, a partnership is giving the City of Brotherly Love’s fallen trees new life. Philadelphia Parks & Rec joined forces with Cambium Carbon, a Washington, D.C.-based startup that repurposes waste wood, and PowerCorpsPHL, a local nonprofit that creates job opportunities for unemployed and under-employed 18- to 30-year-olds, to launch the Reforestation Hub in late May.
Camila Vergara’s Bold Vision For A Plebeian Constitutionalism
Systemic corruption is not about a few venal politicians who take bribes or bureaucrats who collude with wealthy corporations. It's about the systemic oligarchization of power within a general respect for the rule of law. Elites come to dominate the state political apparatus and warp the law to suit their interests and desires, betraying the promise of democracy. That's why plebeians must have explicit constitutional powers, says Vergara.
In Systemic Corruption, Vergara opens up a new kind of conversation that I have never heard before in political circles or the news media. She proposes new types of constitutional power for plebeian institutions so that the interests of ordinary people will be baked into modern constitutional systems.
Power Plants To Parklands
June 1, 2024
Cristen Hemingway Jaynes, EcoWatch.
Create!
Coal, Community, Michigan, Parks, Power Plants
There are currently more than 200 coal-fired power plants in operation in the United States, but the country has been scaling back since reaching its coal generation peak in 2011. By the end of 2026, the U.S. is projected to have retired half of its coal capacity.
Coal plants emit toxic pollutants into the air, water and soil, leaving a legacy of contamination that must be cleaned up after their decommission.
But what happens to coal plants after they shut down?
Michigan’s Environmental Law & Policy Center (ELPC) sees retiring coal plants — once viewed as industrial scars on the landscape — as “canvases for the creation of new greenways, parklands, wildlife habitat, and clean energy development,” a press release from ELPC said.
Nepal’s Self-Managing Forests And The Duck That Dares To Love
Nepal’s unique approach to community-based conservation means the country’s 118 different ecosystem variants are very much alive. The country boasts more than 950 species of birds, 13,067 species of plants, and 17,097 species of animals, including one-horned rhinos, Bengal tigers, Asiatic elephants, gaurs, and red pandas.
Thanks in part to 22,500 forest community user groups, forest cover in Nepal has risen from 25% to 45% since the 1990s, making it one of the few developing countries to expand its forest cover. Nearly 40% of Nepali households are involved in some way. This is supported by the fact that now more than 23% of Nepal’s land is protected by the government.
A Historic Ruling: NCAA Ordered To Pay Student Athletes
May 29, 2024
Otis Grotewohl, Workers' World.
Create!
Athletes, Higher Education, NCAA, Sports, Victory, Worker Rights
A historic working-class victory was achieved on May 23, when the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) bosses agreed to settle three federal antitrust cases that were filed by three student athletes. The agreement will allow schools to directly pay student players for the first time in history.
In what is known as the “amateurism model,” college athletes have traditionally been excluded from receiving any compensation for their athletic talent, name recognition and labor. The recent settlement is expected to change that super-exploitative practice.
The NCAA Board of Governors, as well as the parasitic leaders of its five “power conferences” — the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Big Ten, Big 12, Southeastern Conference (SEC) and Pac-12 — agreed to pay more than $2.8 billion in back pay and damages over the next 10 years to both past and current athletes.
How Working For Place-Based Solutions Can Change The World
In a world of onrushing crises, where the level of change required to meet them boggles the mind, even as too many trends are moving in the wrong direction, questions of “What will be enough?” and “Can it come soon enough?” surge to the foreground.
There must be a place to begin grappling with the complex questions of societal transformation. A place to grab hold and gain enough leverage to begin making fundamental changes. That place is the communities and bioregions where we live. We must begin to build the future in place.
Clearly we are over the line ecologically, as the planetary boundaries study I recently covered underscores.
The Benefits Of Indivisible Reserves And Their Connection To Communities
May 28, 2024
Bruce J. Reynolds, Grassroots Economic Organizing.
Create!
Capital, Communities, Cooperative Principles, Cooperatives
The International Cooperative Alliance (ICA) issued a restatement of cooperative principles in 1995 that included the idea of indivisible reserves in its third principle as a discretionary option for cooperatives. When cooperatives build financial reserves, they may specify a certain share or all of it as indivisible, in other words, not transferrable to members. For cooperatives with indivisible reserves, closures of these businesses or acquisitions by private investors, would result in transfers of these designated capital funds to other cooperatives or to organizations supporting their communities.
The ICA’s inclusion of indivisible reserves has an implicit connection to its seventh principle, Concern for Community.
Lessons From A Downtown District That’s Bucking National Trends
May 27, 2024
Rory Thomas, Next City.
Create!
Community Wealth, Housing, Memphis, Tennessee, Urban Design
While many urban downtowns around the country are continuing to be plagued by office and retail vacancies, a 2.6-square-mile area in Memphis’s downtown is bucking the trend.
In Memphis’s medical district, eleven new businesses opened last year — 10 of them owned by women and people of color, and supported by almost $150,000 in targeted grants.
More and more district residents are now supporting these businesses, thanks to over 400 new housing units coming online. With dozens of events activating the district’s many public spaces, these new neighbors are welcoming tens of thousands of visitors: The Juneteenth Festival in Health Sciences Park welcomed about 12,000 guests alone.
Colombian Government And National Liberation Army Sign First Point Of The Peace Agreement Agenda
May 26, 2024
Orinoco Tribune.
Create!
Colombia, National Liberation Army (ELN), Peace Negotiations, Venezuela
The government of Colombia and the armed guerrilla movement National Liberation Army (ELN) signed the first point of the peace agreement agenda, as announced in a joint press conference at the end of the peace talks held in Caracas, Venezuela.
“Signing of the first point of the peace agreements: the participation of society in the construction of peace,” the Colombian government representation announced after the latest round of the peace talks with the ELN ended on Saturday, May 25, as scheduled.
The delegations of the Colombian government and the ELN, headed respectively by Vera Grabe and Pablo Beltrán, presented the signed agreement at the post-negotiation press conference.
The US Worker Cooperative Movement Turns 20
May 25, 2024
Grassroots Economic Organizing.
Create!
Cooperatives, Economic Democracy, History, Labor Movement, Worker Rights and Jobs
These are examples of worker co-ops in the United States in the late 20th century. While doing great work, and with a wealth of cooperative experience between them, before 2000 these somewhat isolated islands of democratic work and community care stood alone on the U.S. economic landscape, operating separately, and independent of each other. Maybe they didn’t even know that each other existed, or what they were doing to solve similar problems – especially those on opposite coasts. And most people in the U.S. knew little to nothing about worker co-ops. Regional worker co-op conferences started to help bring co-ops like these together, not just locally but regionally - with the goal to form a national network.
NYC’s Independent Recyclers Emerged From Pandemic Stronger Than Ever
May 25, 2024
Oscar Perry Abello, Next City.
Create!
New York City (NYC), Pandemic, Recycling, Worker Rights
New York’s canners and lateros have acquired property, created a redemption facility and community hub – and begun to organize.
Josefa Marin and her partner Pedro Galicia arrive at 6:30 a.m. most mornings outside the Sure We Can Redemption Center in Brooklyn’s trendy Bushwick neighborhood. The facility itself won’t open for another hour, but in the meantime they get a head start on sorting through the cans and bottles they’ve collected the previous night from apartment buildings, restaurants, bars, clubs or events where organizers have tabbed the couple to help out with recycling.
China’s ‘12345’ Government Service Hotline; Serving The People
Public service cuts are sweeping across Britain. Essential services are being cut to the bone and, in many areas, have disappeared altogether.
A number of councils, including the largest, Birmingham, have even had to declare bankruptcy.
In Britain, if there is no budget to meet the people’s needs then the services have to go.
Meanwhile, in China, responding to the needs of the people rather than the needs of the budget is the priority.
Some people will read what I have just said and shout: “That it’s just Chinese propaganda!” Not so.
A Unique Community Land Trust Making Homeownership Affordable
May 23, 2024
Barry Greene, Jr, Next City.
Create!
Community, community land trusts, Housing, land banks, Richmond, Virginia
When Michael Haggins’ credit score disqualified him for a mortgage preapproval in 2021, he was crushed.
A single father who grew up in Richmond, Haggins dreamed of owning a house in his hometown where his two sons could play freely. A shortage of just five credit score points — plus systemic inequities and a national housing crisis — left them all living with his mother.
But today, Haggins is the proud owner of a home in Church Hill, thanks to Richmond’s Maggie Walker Community Land Trust (MWCLT) and its pioneering model for creating permanently affordable housing.
“I don’t think I could’ve done it without their help, honestly,” says Haggins.
The Role Of The Labor Movement In Solidarity Economy
May 21, 2024
CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies, Grassroots Economic Organizing.
Create!
Labor Movement, Solidarity Economy, Unions, Worker Rights and Jobs
Enjoy this panel discussion on the role of the labor movement in solidarity economy hosted by the Solidarity Economy Club at CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies from Friday, May 10 , 2024.
Solidarity Economy is an internationalist framework that seeks to unify diverse community-based initiatives toward a values-centered alternative to capitalism. Some of these initiatives include cooperatives, community gardens, land trusts, tenant’s unions, care networks & more.
There has been increasing attention on the role of the labor movement in solidarity economy as union leaders seek new ways to fight back against the increasing precarity caused by neoliberalism, automation and AI.