Food Cooperative

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Food Cooperatives

Food cooperatives are an easy way for neighbors to connect around a common need without sacrificing a lot of convenience.

Historically food cooperatives have been a central point of interaction in communities. Even with the advent of large stores and wholesale prices cooperatives maintain their popularity by allowing people to hold ownership of the distribution of the food and to insure that no one profits from the endeavor more than necessary.

There are a great deal of resources available outlining the basic steps needed for a food cooperative to function, but these steps are always predicated on finding a number of people in your area who share enough similar tastes to warrant the collective action needed to bring a cooperative into being. During the startup phase, while the group is going and new folks are coming in, it's important to continue to survey for interests and to find the small conveniences that appeal to each person so that the cooperative can be a success.

Wholesale Purchasing

Food cooperatives can be used as a means for a group of people to engage in collective bargaining with producers and other intermediaries. Some of the work of managing a cooperative s to discover opportunities where your cooperative can dis-intermediate producer and consumer, lower costs and sometimes resource consumption like fuel costs for transportation.

Sometimes the opportunity to band together to cover the price of a wholesale purchasing license is enough incentive to form a cooperative. In many jurisdictions a wholesale license is required in order to purchase directly from bulk distributors, farmers, or other suppliers.

Local Food Coops

The idea of local food is a growing concern. Many different movements exist for the purpose of drawing attention to or facilitating the purchase of or access to local food. While the definition of what, exactly, local food is is a subject for another article, local food is a distinguishing offer that a cooperative can facilitate.

It is possible for the group to arrange relatively low prices with a farmer by cutting out all the intermediaries. In many cases intermediaries are taking the lion's share of the price collected at the checkout counter of your grocery store. Your coop might be able to serve as the sole intermediary, eliminating some of the costs, for sure the profit, and also establishing a connection to your local farm. a partnership of people who like locally-sourced, high quality food:

Checkpoints and Ideas

With their emphasis on local food with efficient local distribution Food Cooperatives are healthy and environmentally sound. Their use of quality ratings and reviews to maintain quality and a local currency (the Time Bank) to reward volunteering blurs the distinction between producer and consumer, paid and voluntary work. Thus Open Food Co-ops will create a new social form that is a long step towards a community-oriented, trust-based, sustainable local economy."

Internal Links

External Links

Examples

http://FoodCo-Op.net We are a volunteer-powered, nonprofit food buying network, bringing people together for food, community and savings of up to 50% on high-quality fresh foods.

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