COMMUNITIES
Choose Local: March: Choose Indie Sustainable
Resources – 2025
Some quick details:
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- Choose Indie Sustainable Month is March.
- Find a downloadable logo here.
- View and download our press release template.
- View social media examples.
- Add these hashtags to your posts: #chooseindiesustainable #chooseindielocal.
- Anyone anywhere can get involved.
Making Ripples
From March 1 to March 31, our Choose Indie Sustainable Month campaign celebrates B Corps, cooperatives, and other triple-bottom-line enterprises. Together, we urge our communities to take positive action and boost the ripple effects our neighborhoods, towns, and cities receive when we support our locally owned businesses.
Amplifying Our Work
We strive to amplify all local, statewide, national, and international networks’ efforts to promote Choose Indie Sustainable Month during March.
Sharing Inspiration
Choose Indie Sustainable
- Create directories, passports, and other activities that drive shoppers to sustainable Indie Locals in their communities
- Amplify all types of sustainable independent businesses in partner communities (Co-ops, B Corps, and more)
- Partner’s Campaign Landing Pages
- Businesses for Social Responsibility
- Sustainable/Green Business Directories/Certifications
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- https://www.greenamerica.org/gbn
- Purchasing with Purpose
- People and Planet First
- https://www.goodmarket.global/
- Sustainable Business Leader — SBN Sustainable Business Network
- Green Business Boot Camp — Local First Arizona
- How We Measure Good | People First Economy (MI)
- SBN’s Food Saver Challenge – Sustainable Business Network of Greater Philadelphia
- Impact Reporting
- B Corps
- Cooperatives
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- What is a cooperative? | ICA
- What Is A Co-op? | Defining Co-Ops, Types And How They Work
- Cooperatives Program page from the Sustainable Economies Law Center. Building just and resilient economies through local ownership.
- What’s a Co-op? Cooperative Ownership Can Mean Big Possibilities for Workers and Communities
- Co-op Month (October)
- Find a Worker Co-op
- National Co-op Directory
- Triple Bottom Line/Fourth Sector Economy
- Inclusion and Diversity
- Other Resources
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- Cities CAN B
- Fifty by Fifty
- World Water Day
- Sustainability Month 2023 – UB Sustainability (April)
- The Buzzy Edible Insect Trend is Gaining Traction in the West – Modern Farmer
- Beginner’s Guide to Sustainable Business – SBN (PA)
- SBN Announces Finalists for the 2024 Triple Bottom Champion Award – Sustainable Business Network of Greater Philadelphia
- Connecticut Sustainable Business Council
- Other Certifications
- More Directories
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- ASBN Leadership Business Members
- Directory & Map — SBN Sustainable Business Network (MA)
- B Corps (MI)
- Member Directory – VBSR (VT)
- https://nhbsr.org/our-members (NH)
- https://sbngreaterphilly.app.neoncrm.com/np/clients/sbngreaterphilly/publicaccess/membershipDirectory.do?md=1& (PA)
- https://utahclimateactionnetwork.com/members-directory/ (UT)
Celebrate Sustainability
- Highlight how communities are coming together to support sustainability efforts
- Organizations
- Events
Invest Indie Sustainable
- Highlight efforts to grow new and stronger sustainable independents
- Boost efforts to invest in sustainable independents and entrepreneurs
- Local Investing
Cultivate Indie Sustainable
- Drive advocacy and policy efforts that strengthen small business ecosystems for sustainable independents
- Identify pollinator enterprises and other place-based efforts to support sustainable independents
- Advocacy
COMMUNITIES
Governance Without Gridlock
Sociocracy, consent-based decisions, and open-source governance—explained (and de-mythified)
The Big Picture
Most groups stall not from lack of passion, but from unclear power and slow decisions.
Sociocracy + consent-based decision-making offer a simple upgrade: roles, feedback loops, and “good-enough for now, safe-enough to try” decisions—so teams learn fast without power plays.
⚠️ What People Get Wrong
- “Consent = unanimous agreement.”
Nope. Consent means no reasoned objection—not perfect love. - “Circles are endless meetings.”
Circles are role-based teams with clear aims, meeting agendas, and metrics. - “Open-source governance is chaos.”
It’s transparent rules + documented processes; contribution ≠ control. - “We’ll lose leadership.”
Leadership shifts from bossing to stewarding: set context, enable roles, remove blockers.
How It Works (in 90 seconds)
- Circles: Semi-autonomous teams with a defined aim, domain, and metrics.
- Double-linking: Each circle links up/down via two roles (Lead + Delegate) to keep information flowing.
- Consent decisions: Proposals move unless someone raises a specific, reasoned objection tied to the circle’s aim/safety.
- Driver → Proposal → Integrate: Start from a need, craft a small, testable proposal, integrate feedback, review by date.
- Transparent backlog: Issues, roles, policies, and metrics are visible-by-default (open-source principle).
Facilitator Cheatsheet
Use this script to keep momentum and psychological safety.
- Frame the driver: “The need we’re addressing is… (1 sentence).”
- Offer a tiny proposal: “Good-enough, safe-enough to try for 30 days.”
- Round for clarifying questions (no debates).
- Quick reactions (1 line each).
- Amend & restate proposal.
- Consent round: “Any reasoned objection?” If yes → integrate; if no → adopt and set review date.
- Document the policy/role in the public repo or handbook.
Timebox: 15–25 minutes.
Minimal Roles That Unlock Flow
- Lead Link (Steward): Clarifies priorities, invites proposals, protects scope.
- Facilitator: Runs rounds, surfaces objections, guards time.
- Secretary: Publishes roles/policies; tracks metrics & review dates.
- Rep Link (Delegate): Carries tensions upward; ensures voice of the circle is heard.
What to Track (Simple Metrics)
- Decision cycle time (proposal → adopted).
- % proposals timeboxed with review dates.
- # reasoned objections integrated (learning rate).
- Policy clarity score (team pulse: 1–5).
- Contributor onboarding time (open-source health).
Myths → Facts
- Myth: “Consensus = consent.” → Fact: Consent ≠ everyone loves it; it’s no harm, learn fast.
- Myth: “Flattening kills speed.” → Fact: Clear domains + tiny tests accelerate.
- Myth: “Open = vulnerable.” → Fact: Documented rules reduce shadow power and single points of failure.
30-Day Starter Plan (Bridge to the Future)
Week 1: Pick one team → define aim, domain, metrics. Publish in a shared doc/repo.
Week 2: Train a facilitator + secretary. Pilot consent rounds on small decisions only.
Week 3: Write two policies (e.g., “Publishing Checklist,” “PR Review”). Timebox each to 60–90 days.
Week 4: Add double-link to adjacent team; run a retrospective; prune/renew roles.
Always: Document in the open; prefer tiny reversible bets over big arguments.
Open-Source Governance Essentials
- Visible backlog + issues (anyone can raise, few can merge).
- CODEOWNERS / reviewers by domain.
- Decision log with dates, rationale, and sunset/renewal.
- Contributor ladder: clear steps from newcomer → maintainer.
Facilitation Prompts (steal these)
- “What’s the smallest test that would teach us the most?”
- “Is this a reasoned objection or a preference?”
- “What review date makes this safe enough to try?”
- “Where should this policy live so it’s obvious next time?”
Takeaway
- Sociocracy + consent + open-source governance aren’t ideology—they’re operating systems for trust and speed.
- Ship small, learn quickly, write it down, and let structure carry the load, not personalities.
COMMUNITIES
Community Wealth-Building 101
Community Wealth-Building 101
A bridge from extraction → shared prosperity
The Big Picture
Our current economy concentrates wealth and risk. Community wealth-building (CWB) flips the script: keep value rooted locally, owned by the people who create it.
Core Building Blocks
1) Cooperatives (Co-ops)
Member-owned businesses that share control and surplus.
- Worker co-ops: employees own & govern.
- Consumer/producer co-ops: buyers or makers own the enterprise.
- Why it works: aligns incentives with community, not distant shareholders.
2) Mutual Credit Systems
Communities issue credit to each other, interest-light or interest-free.
- How it helps: smooths cashflow for small businesses; keeps commerce circulating locally.
- Think: LETS, time banks, business-to-business (B2B) mutual credit networks.
3) Doughnut-Aligned Economies
Meet everyone’s needs within planetary boundaries.
- Inner ring: housing, health, education, income, voice.
- Outer ring: climate, biodiversity, water, clean air.
- Target: thrive between the two — not overshoot nature, not undershoot human dignity.
Why It Matters (Fast Benefits)
- Local resilience: More anchors, fewer fragilities.
- Good jobs: Profits recirculate; quality work replaces churn.
- Lower leakage: Spending stays in town; multipliers rise.
- Inclusive ownership: Wealth built by the many, not the few.
- Climate alignment: Circular design and regenerative practices by default.
️ How Communities Start (6 Steps)
- Map the leaks: Identify where money exits (energy, food, procurement, rent).
- Pick a wedge: Start with one high-leak category (e.g., school meals, transit, retrofits).
- Stand up a co-op: Form a worker/consumer co-op to fill the gap; bake in open books & democratic bylaws.
- Add mutual credit: Launch a small B2B credit circle (e.g., 20–50 local firms) to keep purchases in-network.
- Align to the Doughnut: Set simple social & ecological guardrails for each project.
- Anchor demand: Partner with “eds & meds,” city agencies, and large buyers via local-first procurement.
What to Measure (Simple Dashboard)
- Local multiplier (LM3): $1 spent → $X re-spent locally.
- Ownership share: % of workers/households with equity or patronage rights.
- Leakage ↓: % decline in out-of-town purchasing.
- Living-wage jobs: net new positions meeting local living-wage benchmarks.
- Planet metrics: energy saved, emissions avoided, waste diverted, biodiversity gains.
Myths vs. Facts
- Myth: Co-ops can’t scale.
Fact: They scale via federations, shared services, and anchor contracts. - Myth: Mutual credit is “funny money.”
Fact: It’s a clearing mechanism for real goods/services; reduces cash strain. - Myth: Doughnut economics is anti-growth.
Fact: It favors qualitative growth (health, learning, biodiversity) over resource overshoot.
Quick-Start Use Cases
- Community energy co-op: Finance rooftop solar + heat pumps; repay from bill savings.
- Local food hub co-op: Aggregate farm produce for schools/hospitals; pay via mutual credit netting.
- Retrofit brigade: Worker co-op for building upgrades; city fronts demand via green procurement.
- Care co-op: Member-run home-care with living wages; surplus funds training & benefits.
Governance Cheatsheet
- 1 member = 1 vote (not 1 share = 1 vote).
- Transparent books (monthly dashboards).
- Patronage dividends tied to use/work, not capital alone.
- Conflict of interest rules + community ombudsperson.
- Mission lock: charter guards against extractive buyouts.
Risk & Guardrails
- Capital gaps: Blend community shares, municipal guarantees, CDFIs, mission investors.
- Capability gaps: Shared back-office co-ops (HR, finance, IT) + training academies.
- Capture risks: Term limits, recall votes, participatory budgeting, open meetings.
- Greenwashing: Independent audits against Doughnut indicators.
Glossary (30-second)
- CWB: Strategy to localize wealth and decision-making.
- Co-op: Member-owned enterprise with democratic control.
- Mutual Credit: Reciprocal credit lines within a network; balances settle over time.
- Doughnut: Framework balancing human needs and ecological limits.
- Anchor Institutions: Large, place-based buyers (eds/meds/city) that commit to local procurement.
✳️ Call to Action
- Join/launch a co-op working group (workers, small biz, anchors, city).
- Pilot a 90-day mutual credit circle among 25 local suppliers.
- Adopt a Doughnut scorecard for the next city procurement.
- Publish a Local Wealth Dashboard and report quarterly.
MobilizedNews.com — telling the stories that turn community wealth into common practice.








