Community Wealth - Beloved
for its charming landscapes and fresh lobster, the rural community of
Deer Isle, Maine is now gaining attention in the cooperative world. When
Verne and Sandra Seile, proprietors of Burnt Cove Market, V&S
Variety and Pharmacy, and The Galley, decided to retire last year, they
sold their businesses to their employees. With 62 new worker-owners,
Island Employee Cooperative, Inc. is now the twelfth largest worker
cooperative in the nation.
In a small community of just more than
2,500, with a workforce of 1,300, the loss of 62 jobs would have been
felt intimately. Where family-owned businesses are significant,
communities face additional challenges. Only 30 percent of family-owned
businesses, like the Seile’s, survive to the next generation. When these
businesses are closed or sold to outside investors, communities lose
wealth. For example, an Institute for Local Self Reliance study
analyzing the local multiplier effect in Maine, found that for every
$100 spent at a big box retailer, $14 in local spending is generated
compared to $45 when the money is spent at a locally-owned business.
Additionally, communities sacrifice social benefits fostered by
ownership of local business, such as good health and a politically
engaged community. Hoping to keep wealth rooted in their home of over 40
years, the Seiles began working with the Maine- based Cooperative
Development Institute and the Independent Retailers Shared Services
Cooperative to convert their businesses to a worker-owned cooperative.
As
baby boomers reach retirement age and look to sell their businesses,
the opportunities for cooperative conversions increase. Melissa Hoover,
Executive Director of the US Federation of Worker Cooperatives, notes,
“It’s generally just a lot easier and less risky to finance the sale of
an existing business than to start something from scratch. These are
going concerns, with a track record, customers, suppliers,
relationships, employees... The barriers can be a lot lower than for a
startup.” Despite these benefits, much work remains to be done. Most
small business owners looking to retire in the next five years don’t
have succession plans. Cooperative developers interested in co-op
conversions, must first start by educating local business owners and
their employees on the process of conversion. In doing so, they open up
the possibility of creating two to four million new worker-owned
businesses nationwide.
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