2017 Was a Good Year for Worker Cooperatives

The model is gaining traction stateside. 

The Working World received a grant from the Worker Cooperative Business Development Initiative in its first funding cycle. (Credit: The Working World)

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Promising as the worker cooperative model is, on-the-ground businesses tend to have a difficult time growing, as Next City has covered. In 2014, the city of New York announced a $1.2 million Worker Cooperative Business Development Initiative (WCBDI) to cultivate the model.

“We are talking about creating an economy in New York City that protects and preserves jobs and a democratic economy that sees making sure people have jobs as one of its goals,” Chris Michael, founding director of the NYC Network of Worker Cooperatives said at the time. “[Workers’ cooperatives] provide the members with dignity, better working conditions, more flexible working hours, and higher wages.”

In 2017, funds for the successful initiative increased to an annual sum of $2.2 million — and now, a newly released report shows the results of that funding boost, including 36 new worker cooperatives created and 185 total hires. Those numbers may sound small, but they’re a resounding success for a city that boasted just 23 worker cooperatives, total, in January of 2014. And as Next City has covered, the model is still rare in the U.S. The U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives estimated several years ago that there were only around 350 in the nation.

Many of New York’s worker cooperatives are owned by marginalized groups, like Damayan Cleaning Cooperative, launched by a group of Filipina women who escaped human trafficking. The 2017 funding cycle helped finance groups like Woke Foods, a “cooperative that that taps into the healing traditions of plant-based Dominican food to create recipes, host cooking classes, offer meal planning, and cater events,” according to the report. Another business that launched last year was Black Women Artists LLC, a cooperative “comprised of artists who create and present artwork that speak out against racial and gender-based discrimination.”

The document also measures some less concrete numbers, like one-on-one services provided, including business plan development, market research, government regulations guidance and legal assistance. Those services went to companies like BKLN Clean, a woman-run cleaning products manufacturing and distribution worker cooperative, and the Beyond Care Childcare Cooperative.

(Courtesy of the Worker Cooperative Business Development Initiative)

The full report, which includes a detailed list of all the worker cooperatives assisted by WCBDI in 2017, is available here.

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Rachel Dovey is an award-winning freelance writer and former USC Annenberg fellow living at the northern tip of California’s Bay Area. She writes about infrastructure, water and climate change and has been published by Bust, Wired, Paste, SF Weekly, the East Bay Express and the North Bay Bohemian

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Tags: jobssmall businessworker cooperatives

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