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Student-led Cooperative Organizing

Student-led Cooperative Organizing. Ruby Levine and Eric Recchia CoFED. Values of student food coops. Meeting real needs Many student coops are meeting un-met needs in the campus community for food aligned with students’ values and wallets in a convenient location Autonomy

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Student-led Cooperative Organizing

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  1. Student-led Cooperative Organizing Ruby Levine and Eric Recchia CoFED

  2. Values of student food coops • Meeting real needs • Many student coops are meeting un-met needs in the campus community for food aligned with students’ values and wallets in a convenient location • Autonomy • Students are often carving out a space for them to control, using cooperative principles, within their campus and the food system • Affordable prices • Most student coops are committed to making their food affordable, allowing customers to shop their values • Sustainable, just, and delicious food • Most coops have commitments to local, organic, justly-produced, and/or “real” food. Taste is almost universally a top concern.

  3. CoFED’s Role • Support student cooperatives with direct coaching, resources, and technical support • Organize student cooperatives across campuses in a regional and national solidarity network • Cultivate and create resources for students from mentors to business models to in-person trainings

  4. CoFED’s Game Plan

  5. Case studies of student coops

  6. Buying Clubs

  7. Grinnell Local Foods Co-op

  8. UCLA Student Food Collective

  9. Nonprofit or University Affiliated Collectives

  10. Mixed Nuts, Hampshire College

  11. Berkeley Student Food Collective

  12. Pomme De Terre Foods, University of Minnesota Morris

  13. Formal Cooperatives

  14. The Second Kitchen, Boulder CO

  15. Food Coalition, University of Minnesota Twin Cities

  16. And so many more!

  17. How can non-student coops be accessible to students? • make sure prices are affordable • offer an installment plan for membership • direct outreach to colleges • environmental clubs • food-centered organizations • campus life/orientation planning • financial aid department (buying in bulk saves money!) • make leadership opportunities for students in your co-op

  18. How can non-students support student coops? • Join the CoFED mentors network • Encourage students you know to get involved in the student coop movement • Shop at your local student food coop • Donate to CoFED or your local student food coop

  19. Questions?

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