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California: Worker-owned co-ops growing

Fire Your BossLAURA MAYORGA of Oakland was about to leave the United States for a trip abroad, but she managed to squeeze in one last visit Thursday to Arizmendi Bakery in Oakland, grabbing a slice of mozzarella, roasted yellow onion and red cabbage pizza.

Arizmendi is worthy of a special trip, Mayorga said. EVERYONE CAN BE AN OWNER

Worker-owned co-ops growing

By Janis Mara, BUSINESS WRITER
Inside Bay Area
1/2/2007

LAURA MAYORGA of Oakland was about to leave the United States for a
trip
abroad, but she managed to squeeze in one last visit Thursday to
Arizmendi Bakery in Oakland, grabbing a slice of mozzarella, roasted
yellow onion and red cabbage pizza.

Arizmendi is worthy of a special trip, Mayorga said.

"The food is so fresh," she said.

But the bakery, known for its exceptional cheese bread, scones and
pizzas, is special for another reason. It belongs to its employees,
known as "owner-workers." There are no bosses -- or, more accurately,
everyone who works there is the boss.

The bakery, along with Berkeley's Cheese Board Collective, the Berkeley
Free Clinic and San Francisco's Rainbow Grocery Cooperative, is an
example of the 30-year tradition of worker-owned cooperatives in the
Bay Area, which has the largest concentration of such companies in the
United States.

And insiders say the sector is growing, with numerous co-ops opening in
the Bay Area over the last five years. Still more are in the planning
stages, with cities including Walnut Creek and Concord seen as "great
opportunities," according to a spokesman for the Cheese Board, a
Berkeley pizzeria and bakery.

Nationally, worker cooperatives are a $400 million business, according
to the National Cooperative Business Association. Bay Area worker-owned
co-ops generate more than half that amount, said Melissa Hoover,
executive director of the San Francisco-based U.S. Federation of Worker
Cooperatives.

In the Bay Area, there are two main types of cooperatives: consumer,
such as outdoor outfitter REI, and worker-owned.

"With a consumer co-op like REI, membership can be extended to anyone
who buys its goods and services," Hoover said. Worker-owned cooperative
membership is determined by working at the business.

Co-op members say the work isn't bad.

"I like the variety of working at a co-op," said Darren Korn, who has
been a worker-owner at the Oakland Arizmendi location for seven years.

Five days a week, Korn rounds dough, spins pizza into pizza shells and
builds and bakes pizzas.

"While I'm doing that, I'm discussing policy issues with the other
members," he said.

"You get to know your co-workers very well. It becomes like family,
which is good, but if you're not careful, it can become a dysfunctional
family," said Korn, who is starting a family of his own, with a baby
due
this spring.

His co-op has 23 workers and generated $2 million in revenue this year,
Korn said. (The bakery has three locations -- the two others are in
Emeryville and San Francisco -- and each operates independently.)

Worker-owners don't have to worry about what management is thinking,
since they are management. But this has its drawbacks, too, Korn said.

"You can't just say, 'Screw it, I'll let the boss take care of it,'" he
said. "You are the boss."

Wages can be another concern.

Steve Manning, a worker-owner at the Cheese Board, took home around
$38,000 last year -- though he also pocketed a $12,000 bonus because
the
business made a profit. With worker cooperatives, profits are shared
among the employees and also put back into the business.

Still, Manning and Korn said worker-owned cooperatives are good places
to work. At Arizmendi, employee turnover is very low -- an anomaly in
the food industry, Korn said.

Indeed, the 30-year-old Rainbow Grocery, which now boasts 250 workers
and $40 million yearly revenue, has employees with 10, 15 and even 25
years' tenure.

Arizmendi is also an example of how the co-op sector has been picking
up
steam in the Bay Area over the last few years.

"Two Bay Area organizations are primarily responsible for the growth in
new co-ops. One is the Association of Arizmendi Cooperatives," said
Dave
Karoly, a staffer at the Network of Bay Area Worker Cooperatives, or
NOBAWC, pronounced "no boss."

The association formed the first Arizmendi Bakery nine years ago.
Members of the 40-year-old, phenomenally successful Cheese Board
Collective -- one of the country's best-known worker-owned co-ops --
helped organize the bakery cooperative.

The Cheese Board lent its recipe -- literally and figuratively -- to
Arizmendi, sharing culinary and business secrets, said Steve Manning, a
worker-owner at the Cheese Board. The association plans to open a
fourth
Arizmendi Bakery in the next year or two and is scoping out locations
now.

The other association responsible for establishing a number of new
worker-owned co-ops in the Bay Area is Women's Action to Gain Economic
Security, or WAGES, which opened three co-ops between 1999 and 2003 in
Redwood City, Morgan Hill and Oakland, and plans to open another one in
the next year. The association works with low-income Latina women to
establish worker-owned housecleaning businesses using environmentally
friendly products.

Other worker cooperatives are forming independently.

Inkworks Press, a 32-year-old worker-owned union print shop that is
also
an Alameda County certified green business, spawned an offshoot called
Design Action Collective about three years ago.

Manning, who was laid off from a corporate job in 2001, said
cooperatives are becoming attractive to a growing segment of workers.

"The standard corporate model is no longer providing pension plans and
other forms of security," he said. "People are realizing they have to
take more responsibility themselves, and one of the ways they can do
that is by becoming an owner-worker and having a vote."

Contact Janis Mara at mailto:jmara@angnewspapers.com or (510) 208-6468.
Check out her Energy Blog at
http://www.ibabuzz.com/energy

http://origin.insidebayarea.com/business/ci_4935436

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California: Worker-owned co-ops growing
Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, January 11 2007 @ 08:45 PM UTC
This is exactly the sort of thing anarchists ought to be doing.

What could be more subversive than succeeding in *non-capitalist* business? Of course, one should probably wait until said enterprise starts to find its feet before adopting an explicitly anarchist "image." It would be rather embarassing otherwise.
California: Worker-owned co-ops growing
Authored by: Admin on Thursday, January 11 2007 @ 10:48 PM UTC
I'm totally convinced at this point that anarchists should be starting up more cooperative businesses. Briefly, cooperatives give anarchists practical experience in running small organizations. The anarchist movement is long on preaching the ideas of cooperative organizations, but we are short on experience. I think that if more anarchists had experience with running cooperatives, it would mature our movement and would help us focus on the bigger picture, like revolution or class war.

Cooperatives are also important counter-institutions which are vital to any form of movement. You can't have a movement, never a revolution, without some kind of base and infrastructure.

After many years, I've concluded that cooperatives are also important to the anarchist movement in that they provide jobs and income for our people. We aren't going to get anywhere if most, or all, of us have to spend all of our time working for asshole capitalist businesses. Being able to work for anarchist-friendly cooperatives would free more of us for activism, volunteer work, and more importantly, time for ourselves and our families.

Chuck