A fascinating talk about Gandhi’s early life in South Africa, & Philip Glass’s Opera Satyagraha – Monday, November 5 at 6:00pm at LA Eco-Village

As a volunteer Community Educator with LA Opera, Ray Busmann travels all over Los Angeles County sharing his passion for the art form. His professional background includes classical music radio announcing, German-language voice-over work and teaching at various schools for the healing arts. Ray loves to meditate and is a co-host of Los Angeles Compassionate Heart Sangha. He shares his Buddhist leanings with composer Philip Glass, whose 1980 opera Satyagraha, about Gandhi’s early life in South Africa, is currently being performed at LA Opera. Ray’s informative and engaging talk will introduce us to the origins of Gandhi’s radical approach to non-violent resistance and the inspiring (and timely) messages contained in this mesmerizing production.

DATE & TIME:
Monday, November 5, 2018 from 6pm to 7:15pm
Los Angeles Eco-Village
117 Bimini Pl
Community Room #201
Los Angeles 90004

FEE:
Free

RSVP:
crsp@igc.org or 213/738-1254
or
just come and take a break from election madness and/or get last minute recommendations (bring your sample ballots).

SNACKS:
Feel free to bring snacks (veggie or vegan please)

 

Request for Proposals for Small Green Co-op Oriented Businesses at Songs in the Los Angeles Eco-Village

Submission deadline is extended to January 2, 2019. This Request for Proposal (RFP) is being issued by CRSP Institute for Urban Ecovillages at Los Angeles Eco-Village.

Contact info for questions and clarifications:
Lois Arkin
117 Bimini Pl #221
Los Angeles CA 90004
crsp@igc.org
213/738-1254
www.laecovillage.org

INTRODUCTION
Based on CRSP’s knowledge of your previous work experience or that of your organization, you have been selected to receive this RFP. If you have a continuing interest in renting space at Songs, please submit a proposal. Please take the time to carefully read and become familiar with the proposal requirements. All proposals submitted for consideration must be received by the “submission deadline.”

Bidders should note that any and all work intended to be subcontracted as part of the bid submittal must be accompanied by background materials and references for proposed subcontractor(s). No exceptions.

PROJECT AND LOCATION
Songs is located at 3554 West First Street and its associated café at 3560 West First Street, Los Angeles 90004 on the northern boundary of the Los Angeles Eco-Village two block neighborhood.

PROJECT VISION AND GOALS
The Songs project is intended to further the manifestation of the Los Angeles Eco-Village vision to reinvent how we live in the City by demonstrating higher quality living patterns at lower environmental impacts. A variety of small ecologically sensitive, cooperatively oriented businesses, aligned with our core values (see below), are invited to submit proposals. Those selected must provide affordable products and services primarily to the LAEV and adjacent working class neighborhoods. Place-based entrepreneurial and employment opportunities for residents within easy walking, biking or public transit distance are mandatory requirements for selection. The Project will be promoted as car-free with surcharges for those who drive to Songs. Businesses that have cross connections with one another, closing waste to resource loops, will be given preference.

CORE VALUES FOR LOS ANGELES ECO-VILLAGE AND ASSOCIATED ORGANIZATIONS
–  Celebrate & include joy in all our endeavors.
–  Take responsibility for each other & the planet through local environmental & social action.
–  Learn from nature and live ecologically.
–  Build a dynamic community throughdiversity & cooperation.
–  Inspire compassionate, nurturing, & respectful relationships.
–  Create balanced opportunities for individual participation & collective stewardship.
–  Engage our neighbors and broader communities in mutual dialogue to learn, teach, and act.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES
The ultimate objectives for Songs are:

– to house up to six small ecologically sensitive, co-op oriented, car-free businesses

– to provide needed and/or desired products and services to the neighborhoods within approximately one-half mile walking distance of Songs.

– to provide entrepreneurial and livelihood opportunities for persons who live on Bimini and White House Place and/or within one-half mile of Songs.

– for these businesses to provide complimentary services to one another, e.g., if one business is a café/coffee/tea shop, its food scraps could go to a worm or compost business which could provide new earth to a plant/tree seedling business.

– for these businesses to be up and running within six months of selection.

– that these businesses are capable of collectively producing $8 to 10,000 in monthly rents or leases for CRSP within six months of their start-ups. And that these rent levels can provide a reasonable return to the business owners.

BRIEF HISTORY OF LOS ANGELES ECO-VILLAGE (LAEV) DEMONSTRATION PROJECT
Los Angeles Eco-Village (LAEV) is a self-selected place name, designated by CRSP, for the two block neighborhood of Bimini and White House Place. Established in 1993, LAEV has been the primary project of CRSP since that time. These two streets are singularly unique in that they are only one block long in the whole city with visual access of both blocks at their intersection. The neighborhood was created in the early 1900s as a pedestrian and transit neighborhood to bring people to the Bimini Baths. It was the end of the line for the H Streetcar, and those streetcar tracks are still visible; some say the only publicly visible streetcar tracks left in Los Angeles.

CRSP is a nonprofit 501.c.3 corporation whose primary purpose is to be a training, education and development center for all kinds of small ecological cooperatively oriented businesses and neighborhoods. Although its primary focus continues to be the development of LAEV, it provides on-going support and resources to urban neighborhoods and intentional communities working on becoming more sustainable environmentally, economically and socially.

As the initial developer of LAEV, CRSP facilitated the development of the nonprofit Beverly-Vermont Community Land Trust (BVCLT) and the nonprofit Urban Soil-Tierra Urbana (USTU) limited equity housing cooperative, along with the White House Place Learning Garden. BVCLT and USTU now own 50 units of permanently affordable environmentally sensitive housing and land in the two block neighborhood, most of whose residents are members of the LAEV Intentional Community.

The CRSP Ecological Revolving Loan Fund (ELF) provides low interest loans for further development of LAEV. The LAEV Food Lobby, operating under the fiscal umbrella of CRSP, is a food buying co-op started by LAEV residents. Most USTU members belong to the Koreatown TimeBank, one of a dozen local currencies serving the Los Angeles area, and which functioned under the fiscal umbrella of CRSP before receiving its own 501.c.3 tax exempt status. Other small green businesses are helping to re-localize the economy in LAEV. LAEV neighbors and USTU members have been instrumental in the start-up and development of the Bicycle Kitchen, the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition, CicLAvia, Pacific Electric Workers Co-op, the K-Town Popular Assembly, the LA. Tenants Union, AntenaLA, the small coffee chain known as Cafecito Organico, LA Family Care Service and other nonprofit social justice and environmental organizations.

An intentional community of 40 residents has participated in the development of these and other activities and projects in the two block neighborhood and the City at large. CRSP provides regularly scheduled public and special tours of the neighborhood.

The Songs project is in keeping with the multi-year phasing of the LAEV development goals.   A copy of that plan is available upon request.

SONGS PROPERTY DESCRIPTION
The 10,979 square feet property contains two buildings that have housed an auto repair shop, now referred to as the Hall (approximately 2,600 square feet) from the mid 1960s, and a small café (approximately 600 square) since the 1920s until October 6, 2016 when CRSP closed escrow with the owner.

The property is zoned C2, is in the specific plan area known as Vermont/Western Transit Oriented District Station Neighborhood Area Plan or SNAP (see development standards and design guidelines here). Maximum allowable height is 50 feet, and maximum allowable floor area ratio is 2.0/1. The SNAP sunsets in 2020. The property is also within the Promise Zone Opportunity Funds and is a “disadvantaged community” for the State’s Strategic Growth Council’s Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities Cap and Trade funds.

Within walking distance of two subway stops, 20 buslines, more than a dozen public, charter and private schools, five supermarkets, more than 50 cafes and restaurants, a dozen churches, a variety of shops, and the Koreatown/Wilshire Center business corridor, the location has a walk score of 90, a transit score of 76, and a bike score of 68. The rapidly gentrifying area has a broad socio-economic, generational and ethnic mix of residents and business owners.

An important goal of CRSP is to keep the value we create in the neighborhood, thereby benefitting our existing neighbors, and preventing that value from leaking outside the neighborhood to business or property speculators.

 The Songs Property is a Brownfield. The site is a brownfield as was determined in the Phase I Environmental Site Assessment done by EFIGlobal in 2016 and the Phase II Targeted Brownfield Assessment performed by Weston Solutions under contract to the US-EPA completed in September 2017 (reports available upon request to CRSP). Heavy metal and hydrocarbon contamination can be rendered harmless using phytotechnology methods with various plant materials, fungi, water, air and sound. These technologies will be more cost effective and environmentally sensitive than relocating the contaminated dirt to a hazardous waste site. It is also the policy of CRSP to, as much as feasible, refrain from sending contaminated earth away, as ultimately “there is no more ‘away,” and we have to clean up where we are, whether or not we made the mess. Info on some of these plant processes can be seen here.

CRSP is working on a plan to remediate portions of or the whole site in what is anticipated as a year long process, at a minimum. This schedule for remediation has not been finalized and could be disruptive to businesses that may be established on the property.   It is possible that CRSP will maintain the approximately one foot deep of contaminated earth encapsulated underneath the existing asphalt and concrete surrounding the buildings

Some interior remediation has been completed, i.e., lead remediation in the Hall, asbestos remediation in the café, and PCBs in both buildings.

SITEMAP, WALK, BIKE AND TRANSIT SCORES
Go here for sitemap
Go here to see these walk, bike and transit friendly scores:
– Walkers Paradise 92
– Excellent transit 72
– Very bikeable 78

Note that the L.A. Eco-Village neighborhood is in Koreatown, the densest urban area in the country, denser than New York city (as a whole).

YOUR NEEDS

  • Technical requirements: wattage, outlets, telecom, internet, etc.
  • Space needs: approximate square footage
  • Staffing needs

CRITERIA FOR SELECTION

Applicant proposals will be evaluated on the basis of the criteria listed under this section.   All criteria must be met to some extent in order to be considered for selection. Criteria will be evaluated based on whole systems importance of the proposal as it relates to the core values of the Los Angeles Eco-Village and its associated organizations outlined above, and how well it interfaces with other applicant proposals. Applicants are encouraged to collaborate with one another.  If you are interested in submitting a proposal, please contact us for a list of other interested proposers: crsp@igc.org

Criteria
– Live within walking distance or a short bicycle commute or short public transit commute to Songs
– Your business can be promoted as car-free
– You are willing to charge your customers 20% more than your retail price if they have driven an auto, truck or motorcycle to your business. This information would be part of your individual or collective marketing materials, such that there would be no surprises to potential customers.
-You are enthusiastic about collaborating with other Songs businesses on promotion and marketing within one-quarter mile of Songs.
-Your business can be up and running and producing revenues within 60 to 90 days.
-You are able to install your business on tall shelves on wheels with pull-down lockable doors or some other comparable equipment that can be rolled to the periphery of the building, e.g., attractive kiosks.
-You are willing to collaborate wholeheartedly with CRSP to occasionally transform the Hall into an event venue by rolling your business to the periphery of the Hall and/or a designated location outside the Hall.
-You have a product or service which is affordable to working class people and of interest to the general public.
-Your rental or lease agreement can be cancelled either way with 60 days notice.
-You agree to be trained in nonviolent communications and dispute resolution.
-You agree to an open books philosophy with respect to the accounting for your business
-You personally are aligned with the LAEV core values, and agree to ensure that your employees or co-owners and/or investors are so aligned as well.
-You agree to maintain an un-gentrified approach to the growth of your business, i.e., that your services and/or products will be and remain affordable to the population of the local neighborhoods it serves.
-If your business involves food, the food must be vegan or vegetarian, primarily organic and without throw-away eating ware. No animal flesh products.
-You agree to hire workers from the immediate or adjacent neighborhoods, always within walking distance of Songs.
-You can imagine your business becoming a worker owned co-op someday
-You have a current city business license or plan to have one by the time your business opens
-You have a current re-sale license, if applicable
-You agree to be accessible to the media and commit to becoming thoroughly familiar with the L.A. Eco-Village
-You have been on a tour of the L.A. Eco-Village

WHAT WE WANT TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR BUSINESS
-Who are you and who are your partners, if any? Names, positions, contact info, current residence, website, blog, financial reports.

-Is your business established or a start up?

-If established, how long, and where is it currently located?

-If established, is this a relocation or an expansion?

-If established, year your business was formed and current legal structure?

-What product or services does or will your business provide?

-Do you have a current written business plan? If so, please include a copy.

-Does your business have a specialty market?

-What technical requirements does your business have?

SELECTION PROCESS
Your proposal will be evaluated by a committee made up of CRSP Board members, and advisors to CRSP on small businesses, sustainability criteria, permaculture, We will also be looking at -how good a fit it will be with other applicant businesses.

RENTS AT SONGS FOR YOUR BUSINESS
CRSP target is to generate $10,000 per month in total income, including rents from several small business plus venue rentals.

Note of Interest Regarding small businesses
Among the most serious issues in a gentrifying area, besides the displacement of affordable housing, is the displacement of small businesses, often in favor of global franchises that drain money out of the neighborhood, and displace independently owned non-franchised small businesses. The Eco-Village solution to this problem is to ensure the business remains in the neighborhood, secured by appropriate covenants. Worker or employee owned co-ops and/other democratically oriented businesses with place-based values and commitments can also be part of the solution. Even when business founders move on to other endeavors, the jobs and business ownership can remain in the neighborhood.

QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS?
Contact Lois at 213-738-1254 or crsp@igc.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Unleashing the Collective Genius: Transition Network On-Line Summit: Sat 10/27/18 all day

This month, Transition US invites you and your local resilience-building community for our first-ever national online summit, bringing together Transition US organizers from across the country for a day of education, inspiration, and celebration!

Registration is now open for both individuals and groups. Read on and follow the links below to learn more and get your tickets today!

More Info
Tickets

Program Overview

We will commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Transition Movement in the US with an inspiring full-day program, including:

– Keynote sessions featuring international Transition Movement founder Rob Hopkins and world-renowned author, educator, and activist Margaret J. Wheatley.

– Engaging panel discussions focused on sharing some of the greatest success stories from our national network and deepening connections with the wider movement for community resilience.

– A live, interactive session with a talk by Transition US staff about the state of our movement and the presentation of several awards nominated by you, the community.

Please visit our event website for full schedule and further program details, along with additional information on how to participate! Tickets available here.

Learn More

How to Register

Registration is now available here, with flexible pricing options available for groups and individuals. Tickets are sliding-scale and none will be turned away for lack of funds. There is room for everyone at this table!

We encourage Transition groups to use this event as the basis for hosting local gatherings. Click here to download a PDF guide for how to host a local watch party for your Transition or other community resilience-building group!

Please read through our all new event website, register, tell your friends, and email info@transitionus.org for more information (and to have your local event listed on the website).

Here’s to another decade of building thriving, resilient community for all!

Tickets
Event Website

Please Help Us Spread the Word! 

This movement is fully organic and 100% people-powered. Please help us make it irresistible by sharing this excellent opportunity with your local and extended network of change-makers and resilience-builders.

Please RSVP and Share our FB event page here.

Thanks!

~The Transition US Team

RSVP & Share 
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Global Ecovillage Network No. America (GENNA) Alliance CoLab at Arcosanti AZ – Oct. 8-12, 2018

Join leaders in the regenerative communities movement for a unique 3-day retreat at the stunning Arcosanti urban laboratory in Arizona. Following the Arcosanti Convergence, this gathering is designed for organizations working at the intersection of sustainability and community. A series of Open Space sessions will guide us into project-focused working groups. Individuals, communities, and organizations wishing to become partners in GENNA Alliance are encouraged to attend. Together we can synergize our efforts for a thriving network!

“We envision a world of interdependent cooperative communities stewarding the conditions of regeneration, justice, peace and abundance, in order to realize the full potential of flourishing for all life, for all generations to come.”

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BikeBike, an international gathering: Sept. 27-30, 2018 in Los Angeles

And an all day event at Los Angeles Eco-Village Saturday, September 29, 2018

Main venue will be the State Historic Park north of Downtown Los Angeles.

Some details here:  https://en.bikebike.org/

Currently, we plan to re-paint the intersection of Bimini and White House Place.

We’re seeking all kinds of volunteers to help on Saturday, September 29 all day and on into the night.  Let us know if you’re in: 213-738-1254 or crsp@igc.org

Stay tuned for more info.

 

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Worker Co-op Conference Sept. 14-16, 2018 at Los Angeles Trade Tech College

 

 

This three day conference in Los Angeles will make space for connection, education, skill-building, and sharing, for worker-owners and our partners working to create better jobs and a fairer economy.

This moment in U.S. history is pivotal — we are taking this opportunity to catalyze workers across the country, joining with larger cooperative and economic justice movements to create the change we want to see.

See conference sessions here:
https://conference.coop/2018-conference/conference-sessions/

 

Worker cooperatives are…
values-driven businesses that are owned and controlled by the people who work in them. They put worker and community benefit at the core of their purpose.

The United States Federation of Worker Cooperatives is the national grassroots membership organization for worker cooperatives whose mission is to build a thriving cooperative movement of stable, empowering jobs through worker ownership

Registration information here:
https://conference.coop/register/

See Sponsor list here:
https://conference.coop/2018-conference/home/

Continue reading “Worker Co-op Conference Sept. 14-16, 2018 at Los Angeles Trade Tech College”

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Northeast Cohousing Summit: Sept. 21-23, 2018 in Amherst MA

 

This regional cohousing conference is for :

People that want to learn about cohousing,
how to create it, how to live it

Those that are forming a cohousing community,
whether you’re just starting or already building

Residents who currently live in a cohousing community

Architects, developers, planners or other professionals
interested in creating communities

See speaker and participant bios here:
https://www.cohousing.org/ne2018/bios

For more information on the NE Summit such as session
descriptions,pre-conference intensive and tours?
Click here for conference info.

Click here to register!

 

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West Coast Communities Conference – Sept 14-16, 2018 in Sahale WA

This year’s theme: Cultivating Collective Liberation

Intentional communities as living laboratories for social transformation

Addressing privilege and oppression within intentional communities and the movement, and intentional communities as vehicles for cultivating collective liberation in larger society

http://www.westcoastcommunitiesconference.org

Something is emerging. What has been learned from Communities in the past and what will the Communities of the Future look like?

Join us for an intergenerational inquiry at the Fourth annual West Coast Communities Conference. A blend of workshops and interactive social activities, we will go deep into the topics that matter most to our communities while also making time for joyous connections, ceremony, music, and celebration.

Inspired by the Communities Conference that takes place at Twin Oaks in Virginia each year, and organized with sponsorship from the Fellowship for Intentional Communities (FIC) and Federation of Egalitarian Communities (FEC), this event promises to be a brilliant convergence of those who see the vital role community has to play in the trying times we live in. Anyone with interest or experience in worker cooperatives, rural communes, artist collectives, or any other kind of communitarian enterprise is invited to participate.

We Will Explore Topics Around:

•Intentional Communities as Living Laboratories for Social Transformation.

• Conversation and Innovation around Privilege, Access, and Inclusion within Intentional Living Movements

• Envisioning communities as vehicles for cultivating collective liberation in larger society.

• Important Social, Cultural, Spiritual, and Deep Ecological “Technologies” for communities of the now and years ahead

*Sliding Scale Registration Options and Scholarships available

More info About, Venue, Sponsors, Workshops:
http://www.westcoastcommunitiesconference.org/workshops

Registration from $94 to $192
Includes camping or bed space, meals and all events and workshops
Go here to registerhttps://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/3443000

 

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Center for Communal Studies: Talk with Communal Studies Archivist Jennifer Greene – Sat., May 12, 2018 at 5:30pm

About the Center for Communal Studies

The Center for Communal Studies was established in 1972 to collect, preserve and continue the scholarship of historical communal organizations. In the course of discovering the identities and lives of early historical groups, Dr. Pitzer, founder of the Center, began to meet and work with contemporary groups. Although his focus was more historical, he began to build relationships with modern groups from the Hutterites to The Farm, to Alpha Farm. As he traveled, he also began to collect materials and communities sent newsletters, minutes, photographs, and other materials. The University Archives and Special Collection agreed to keep, organize, and continue to develop materials about communal and intentional communities around the world.

Today, both organizations are focusing on contemporary societies from the 20th and 21st Centuries. The mission is to collect and serve as not just a repository, but a resource center for individuals or groups interested in learning from others about building communities. I am hoping to meet with many groups in California. I am hoping to open a dialogue about what the Center can do for communities, and what communities can do for the archives.

EVENT DETAILS
Date & Time:         
Saturday, May 12, 2018 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm
Location:                   Los Angeles Eco-Village, 117 Bimini Pl., LA 90004
Fee:                               Open and free event.
Reservations Recommended:  crsp@igc.org or 213/738-1254

Feel free to bring snacks to share.

        Jennifer A. Greene

 

About Jennifer Greene
Jennifer Greene is the University Archivist at the David L. Rice Library, University of Southern Indiana. She has been with the University for 11 years as a full time archives librarian and worked for two years at the Center for Communal Studies. She received a MLS from Indiana University in 2008 as well as completing a MLAS from the University of Southern Indiana in 2009. She is currently working on expanding online access to collections through digital galleries and finding aids. She is an adjunct in the History Department at USI. She teaches archives, Indiana History, and communal studies courses.

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