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Work

Co-operative Supermarket

Location

Holborn in London, United Kingdom

Key Message

We can volunteer in locally in affordable fresh food and inv

Background

Large supermarkets extract a lot of money from local communities and are only interested in maximising profits for their shareholders which costs suppliers who may get less and less for their products and consumers who can often end up with over-packaged, mediocre products that have been trucked from central warehouses where they can sit for a long time. 

What is the idea?

The People’s Supermarket is run on a more sustainable economic and environmental model as a co-operative and has a close relationship with producers that are geographically nearby so it can offer fresh, local produce at an affordable price. It also functions as a local community hub where many people know each other and enjoy connection and events.

How could it work in our Wards?

We could use a portion of the Ward budget to renovate a suitable site as a community supermarket which supports local food gardens in the community growing fruit and vegetables. Everyone in the community who wants to shop can volunteer to work a few hours every month and with the reduced labour costs you would be able to access cheaper fresh fruit and vegetables. In time the supermarket could use its purchasing power to buy dry goods in bulk and offer it to the community at cost. The money spent in the community stays in the community and blesses others rather than being extracted by supermarket for their shareholders.

Or we could set up a covered market for local informal traders who could manage the facility as a co-operative. Everyone who wants to trade donates a small fee which goes towards maintenance or takes turns to keep the market clean and safe.

How are women at the centre?

Women often carry the burden of having to work and ensure there is food on the table for the elderly and children. Being able to access fresh fruit and vegetables at an affordable price in a safe and women run environment that serves as a centre for building relationships and networks would be a social asset and help some women to feel less isolated. Women growing fruit and vegetables in community gardens would be able to find a local market for their produce and earn a small income. 

What about a just and equitable economy and environment?

Shopping locally and sharing the wealth within the community is as just and sustainable as it gets!

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The People’s Supermarket

Photo credit: Flickr

Community Night Schools

Location

Recoleta Municipality in Santiago, Chile

Key Message

We can use public infrastructure more deeply

Background

Santiago, the capital of Chile, is not governed centrally. It is divided into 37 highly-unequal different municipalities, with some having as few as 1000 residents and others as many as 800,000 residents. The municipality of Recoleta is one the municipalities that make up Greater Santiago, and has traditionally been largely informal, working-class, and multicultural. Unable to raise sufficient taxes from the poorer population, the municipality has often struggled to secure funding to put in place the kinds of social services that the community needs.

What is the idea?

In 2012, Recoleta elected Daniel Jadue as Mayor, a member of the Communist Party, on a campaign to respond to the needs of the residents. Soon after he was approached by a group of youths, who wanted to work together to get themselves off the street so that they could avoid some of the crime, alcohol, and drug abuse problems that were affecting the youth. They asked if he could build a youth centre. With little funds, this was not a possibility but Jadue recognised that the community already had sufficient public infrastructure – it just wasn’t being used efficiently. He approached a few local schools and asked if the municipality could use the facilities after the school day and pioneered a community run Open Schools programme where youth could access the fields and gyms for sports clubs and the classrooms where volunteers offered to teach skills for free. 

How could it work in our Wards?

Every ward in Cape Town has underused public land and buildings that could be used by community groups to offer clubs, workshops and skills teaching programmes. We could use community halls for art classes and dance programmes, local depots for apprenticeship in car mechanics and parks for outdoor gym classes. We could work with public land to turn them into soccer fields. The possibilities are endless.

How are women at the centre?

Too often sports infrastructure is dominated by men’s sports. Wherever facilities are made available dedicated time should be put aside for women to play sport in a safe and supportive environment. Where skills programmes are established we should ensure that young women are encouraged to access programmes where women are underrepresented like computer programming and mechanical skills. At the same time, women should be allowed to run programmes for the needs of women in the community – from food gardening to support for new moms.

What about a just and equitable economy and environment?

Youth who come from families without incomes struggle to access training because education has become a commodity fetching a market price. There are too few opportunities for unemployed people to access skills training – but at the same time there are many skilled people in our communities who are retired and willing to teach. Broadening access to skills helps more people enter the local economy. 

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An interview with Daniel Jadue

Photo credit: Municipalidad de Recoleta