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The NEW Framework Is Live!
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Startup co-op leaders discuss the new Framework at the Up & Coming Conference |
Together, We’ll Grow It
After 14 months of intensive work, FCI launched the new Food Co-op Development Framework to the startup community last month at the 2024 Up & Coming Conference in Kalamazoo, MI.
The Framework has been created to capture the universal best practices that speak to the needs of any startup food co-op aiming for success, while explicitly identifying that how those best practices and milestones are met can take multiple ways. There is no one cookie-cutter way to meet them. The Framework has been built to reflect this truth, as well as to evolve with the startup food co-op movement through an ongoing process of wisdom-gathering and reflection with everyone who is a part of the movement that chooses to be a part of its evolution.
“It’s focused on being inclusive and you can feel that. It doesn’t tell us there’s a ‘wrong way’, just to have all the resources and meet the goals of all the stages the way that works for your community. It feels like we’re included.” - startup organizer at Up & Coming 2024.
READ MORE...
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Resource Spotlight
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Community Organizing Learning and Growth Tool
To thrive as a co-op, we must be deeply rooted in our communities with a strong foundation of trust, which will lead to the momentum needed to build our grocery stores and be sustainable after opening. A co-op must be a manifestation of a need the community needs met, as well as its own vision for meeting that need - without this, we can possibly open grocery stores, but they are very unlikely to succeed. The community is the co-op.
The FCI Community Organizing Learning and Growth Tool is a conversation starter, a "home base" for your co-op's leadership team to assess where your co-op organizing work is bearing fruit, and where it might be needful to course correct.
And to further dive into this tool, we are offering a webinar next Wednesday, 10/30 at 2p eastern/1p central/12p mountain/11a pacific. Register HERE.
Co-creators of the tool, food co-op specialist Bonnie Hudspeth of the Firebrand Cooperative and JQ Hannah of Food Co-op Initiative, will lead this webinar exploring the four focus areas of the tool, share examples of how startups have wrestled with these topics, and lead a conversation with startup food co-op organizers about how to effectively utilize the tool.
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See All our Resources at FCI.coop >>
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Startup UPDATES & Celebrations
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The Up & Coming Conference bestows three awards annually: the Startup Innovator Award, the Co-op Citizen Award, and, new this year, the Cooperative Force Award. Please join us in celebrating these innovative and inspiring startups!
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Third Ward People's Food Co-op organizers with JQ Hannah (FCI) at Up & Coming Conference |
The 2024 Startup Innovator: Third Ward People’s Food Co-op
This award celebrates a startup for blazing a new way forward to solve the challenges faced by startup food co-ops, or developing a new and innovative way to address the needs of the co-op’s community through the development of their food cooperative. Awardees have shown exceptional creativity in meeting the needs of their developing co-op and have created a new practice others can follow.
Third Ward residents in Houston, Texas, are leading the charge to improve food access and build food sovereignty in their neighborhood. This innovative, community-driven effort emerged from resident participation in planning to redevelop Cuney Homes, Houston's historic public housing community. The Cuney Homes Resident Council joined forces with organizations like We Are The Ones Solidarity Cooperative, Community Care Cooperative, University of Houston College of Medicine, Emancipation Economic Development Council, and the Houston Housing Authority. Their collaborative approach prioritizes education and participatory democracy at every step, ensuring residents have a deep investment in the project's success. As a new start-up, they are charting a path to transform a former corner store and resident-operated food pantry into Houston’s first black-led food cooperative.
Also nominated: Food Shed Co-op and the CITRINE FCI Peer Learning Group
The 2024 Co-op Citizen: Detroit People’s Food Co-op
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Detroit People's Food Co-op organizers at Up & Coming Conference |
This award recognizes a startup for exceptional embodiment of cooperative principle six, “cooperation among cooperatives”, within the startup food co-op community. Awardees have gone far above and beyond to share their knowledge, experience, and solutions with peer startups, contributing significantly to the growth of the overall food co-op startup community.
Detroit People’s Food Co-op has always been a leader in sharing their experience and knowledge with their fellow cooperatives, and in 2024 they took that cooperative spirit even further – presenting for Peer Groups, answering just about every call from every startup food co-op with a generous offering of their time and expertise – even as they were preparing for their opening! They invited the entire Black-led food co-op movement to join them for their opening and grand opening to celebrate and learn at their side. P6ing has become such a core part of the DPFC culture that it is no surprise that their first GM, Akil Talley, carries this spirit forward now that the store is open, answering startup questions and giving tours.
Also nominated: SunCoast Market Co-op and Prairie Food Co-op
The 2024 Cooperative Force: Grand Rapids Food Co-op
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Grand Rapids Co-op Organizers at Up & Coming Conference |
Established in 2024, this award celebrates a startup that has built cooperative momentum over the past 12 months and has shown exceptional ability to utilize their vision to gain (or regain) community support and galvanize that support into the community power needed to get their cooperatively owned food co-op opened.
The Grand Rapids Food Co-op has clearly found new momentum this year. Not only is the co-op communicating more consistently and dynamically with their owners and the public, but the results of this new level of communication (and the deep work the co-op has done over the years to build its roots in the community) speak for themselves: GRFC had 542 owners after 8.5 years of organizing; in the first 10 months of 2024 alone they had 191 new owners join your co-op, a nearly 259% increase in ownership growth speed!
Also nominated: Market 166 Grocery & Kitchen Co-Op and One Community Grocery Co-op
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Upcoming Events & WORKSHOPS
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Co-op Organizing Learning & Growth Tool webinar
Wed, 10/30 at 2p eastern, register HERE.
Co-creators of the tool, food co-op specialist Bonnie Hudspeth of the Firebrand Cooperative and JQ Hannah of Food Co-op Initiative, will lead this webinar exploring the four focus areas of this new FCI tool, share examples of how startups have wrestled with these topics, and lead a conversation about how to effectively utilize the tool.
An Introduction to the Food Co-op Development Framework webinar - offered at two different times for your convenience:
- Wednesday, 11/13 at 7p eastern, register HERE
- Thursday, 11/14 at 1p eastern, register HERE
FCI Live 2025 - Mark your calendars! Monday, 3/24/25 - Thursday, 4/3/25 will be the dates for our wildly popular, annual, virtual conference focused on the learning needs of startup food co-ops! We’ll be creating the lineup of topics for this event by reaching out to speakers in November, if you have a topic you’d like to present as an expert or peer startup organizer, send your interest and ideas to jq@fci.coop
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SUPPORT SUCCESSFUL STARTUPS
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John Tashiro, City Market (Onion River Co-op) General Manager, and Darnell Adams, FCI Board President, at City Market’s 2024 Annual Meeting
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Owners of City Market / Onion River Co-op in Burlington, VT love co-ops so much, they are supporting new co-ops nationwide by donating to FCI! We were honored to speak at the food co-op’s Annual Meeting, and inspired to have so many cooperators step up to help startups get the support they need to open their very own food co-op in their community. Do you love your co-op, too? You can help others experience the benefits of owning their own community grocery store by donating today!
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We want to hear from you!! Cooperative Principle 5 emphasizes the importance of education, training, and information sharing. Each month we will share up to five items that are of interest to the co-op community. This month we are sharing three inspiring articles. If you would like to submit your P5 to our corner, please use this form for consideration. You can also access the form on our website.
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FCI Board members (L to R: Gerardo Espinoza, Valeria Roach, Chris Clamp (former board member and Hall of Fame Inductee), amaha sellassie, and Rich Larochelle at the Cooperative Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony
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Earlier this month, the Cooperative Development Foundation inducted five people into the Cooperative Hall of Fame: Nannie Helen Burroughs, Tony Bedard, Dr. Christina (Chris) Clamp, Vernon Oakes, and Clifford Rosenthal. All have made a lasting impact on the cooperative movement, and Chris and Vernon have had a special impact on the development of startup food co-ops. Amidst all she has contributed to the cooperative sector, Chris was a longtime and visionary Board member of FCI, ending her tenure in 2022. And Vernon, through his must-listen radio show and podcast, Everything Co-op, has shined countless spotlights on startup food co-ops and shared their stories to inspire other co-op organizers. Congratulations, Chris and Vernon!
We also are deeply grateful for the leadership of this year’s unsung hero inductee, Nannie Helen Burroughs, a Black cooperative leader in Washington DC in the early 1900s. We encourage you to learn about each of their contributions to cooperatives and share their stories to encourage your Co-op's member-owners.
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