Posts Tagged Business

CSR Means True Partnerships

“This month I sat down withJohn Perkins, the author of the New York Times bestseller, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, and many other titles, and former chief economist at a major international consulting firm.

Scott: Tell me about your work with business students around the US, particularly as it relates to Corporate Social Responsibility.

John: We talk about what’s really important for any business leader to understand today. We have moved into a new era where people understand we’ve created a failed system.  When less than 5 percent of the world’s population live in the United States and consume more than 25 percent of the world’s resources, while roughly half the world is either starving or on the verge of starvation — the only way you can define that system is as a failure.”

CSR Means True Partnerships via Scott James – Forbes CSR Blog

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New agricultural entrepreneurs deserve your support

“Ah, summer! Time for trips to the pool, the park, and don’t forget your local farmers’ market. If you care about small businesses as I do there’s an easy, fun, and healthy way to support one of the most important American small businesses the small, local, sustainable farmer. Many of these farmers are not just growing great fruits and vegetables, they’re growing innovative, entrepreneurial businesses.
“There’s new entrepreneurship in the agriculture movement,” said Paul Muller, one of the four co-owners of Full Belly Farm, a 300 acre farm in Guinda, California. Full Belly has been selling at farmer’s markets for almost 30 years, helping it survive and innovate sustainable, profitable farming methods.”

New agricultural entrepreneurs deserve your support via Rhonda Abrams – USA Today

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Ford’s Safety Technology Tells a Sustainability Story

“Reporting from Dearborn, MI, I was pleasantly surprised by Ford’s “safety technology” demonstration – a ride in a kitted out Ford Explorer to demonstrate various ways new cars will avoid collisions.  After the demonstration, which turned out to be fascinating, it struck me that public safety is an obvious aspect of sustainability – not to mention common-sense business.  Keeping people safe matters.

Let’s start with the basics:

Ford has had something called “adaptive cruise control” for a couple years now (PDF here).  It’s a simple radar on the front of your car which determines whether a distant vehicle in front of you is travelling a slower rate of speed.  As you get close to it, your car automatically adjusts its cruise control to a slower rate to avoid a rear end collision.  It will automatically increase your speed if the other car moves out of the way or speeds up.

More exciting, however was a system called the “Blind Spot Information System” and a host of ways cars will “talk” to each other to communicate their positions and speed – avoiding more complex collisions hundreds of yards in advance.  Take a look at this:”

Ford’s Safety Technology Tells a Sustainability Story via Nick Aster – Triple Pundit

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2011 Green Festival

“In its 10th year in Seattle the Green Festival celebrated 1 million attendees and all that is good and green. Green Festival is the largest sustainability-focused event in the U.S. and folks learned about everything from GMO’s and organics to solar and urban composting options. People also came out to hear from well-known sustainability experts including Dennis Kucinich, Ed Humes, and Zoe Weil.”

VIEW PHOTOS: 2011 Green Festival via Mohini Patel Glanz – Seattle Weekly

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Behind the Greening of Wal-Mart

“My latest intellectual Bosnia has been the knot of issues that’s come to be known as “sustainability.” In this regard, I suspect I’m not alone, especially among business people, many of whom still tend to associate these ideas with increased cost and government regulation.

The idea that “going green” could actually be profitable, a notion put forth by economists as long as 20 years ago, remains a source of skepticism in some quarters. If you still need convincing, pick up Edward Humes’s excellent new book, “Force of Nature” (Harper Business, 265 pages, $27.99), the story of how the world’s largest retailer, Wal-Mart, came to go green. I’ll wager that you won’t look at sustainability issues quite the same way again. It certainly opened my eyes.”

Behind the Greening of Wal-Mart via Bryan Burrough – NY Times

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Chicago's Green Festival

Chicago’s Green Festival via NBC Chicago

View more videos at: http://www.nbcchicago.com.

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Chicago Declared Nation's Largest Fair Trade Town

Chicago has officially met all of the criteria to be declared a Fair Trade Town and joins the ranks of nearly 1,000 Fair Trade Towns throughout the world, including London, Rome, Barcelona and Boston. The city is now the largest Fair Trade Town in the United States and the second largest in the world.

Oakland, CA  - May 6, 2011 Fair Trade USA™, the leading third-party certifier of Fair Trade products in the United States, today announced that Chicago is the largest Fair Trade Town in the United States and the second largest in the world. Chicago has officially met all of the criteria to be declared a Fair Trade Town and joins the ranks of nearly 1,000 Fair Trade Towns throughout the world, including London, Rome, Barcelona and Boston. A celebration and global marketplace takes place today from 9am-6pm in Daley Plaza to commemorate Chicago’s newest claim to fame.

“We applaud the work that Chicago Fair Trade has done to build a network of citizens and businesses committed to social justice, environmental sustainability and the empowerment of farmers in the developing world,” said William Linstead Goldsmith, National Coordinator of Fair Trade Towns USA.“Meeting the criteria to become a Fair Trade Town was not an easy feat for such a big city, but Chicago has proven that it’s possible, and the city has set an example for other large metropolitan areas to follow.”

The campaign to make Chicago a Fair Trade town has been underway for more than two years, an effort let by Nancy Jones, director of Chicago Fair Trade. Jones added, “As strategies for global stability are being re-assessed, we think the city’s commitment to Fair Trade sends a significant message to our global trade partners that we are concerned about their development as well as our own.” Chicago Fair Trade is a nonprofit organization made up of individuals, businesses, students and NGO’s that are committed to raising awareness and support for Fair Trade within their community in order to make a larger impact on farming communities abroad.

The celebration in Chicago’s Daley Plaza will feature a global marketplacewith 20 fair trade vendors selling products that protect the environment and pay producers a living wage, as well as interactive activities and West African drum music. Department of Environment Commissioner Suzanne Malec-McKenna and Roxanna Salvador, leader of a fair trade cocoa cooperative in Ecuador will provide brief remarks. Jerome McDonnell, host of WBEZ’s World View program will emcee.

Fair Trade is a multi-stakeholder effort to alleviate poverty in the developing world. It empowers consumers to vote with their dollars for fair prices, better working conditions, environmental stewardship, and brighter futures for the people who make the high-quality products that we buy every day.

The specific criteria to be officially recognized as a Fair Trade Town include showcasing Fair Trade products available in local stores, developing an active citizen support network, collaborating with community institutions, engaging media, and formalizing support from the local government. These criteria are designed to empower citizens to develop a permanent platform in their communities for continued outreach and advocacy.

Fair Trade Towns USA unites a diverse group of inspired Fair Trade activists including project collaborators the Fair Trade Federation, a North American trade association of organizations fully committed to Fair Trade, and the Fair Trade Resource Network, which gathers, develops, and disseminates educational resources to people and organizations interested in the movement. The goal of the campaign is to raise consumer awareness, increase the availability of Fair Trade products, and drive sales in order to help lift millions of farming families out of poverty. Fair Trade Towns USA is funded in part by a generous grant of $50,000 from Green Mountain Coffee®, and a three-year commitment of $925,000 from the Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Foundation.

There are now 21 Fair Trade Towns in the United States, including Boston, San Francisco, Madison, Burlington and Milwaukee. On June 4, 2011 the global Fair Trade community will celebrate the naming of the 1,000th Fair Trade Town. There are currently 40 active campaigns to create additional Fair Trade Towns in the United States, including campaigns in Austin, Oakland, Los Angeles and Seattle.

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About Fair Trade USA
Fair Trade USA (previously TransFair USA), a nonprofit organization, is the leading third-party certifier of Fair Trade products in the United States. Fair Trade USA audits and certifies transactions between U.S. companies and their international suppliers to guarantee that the farmers and workers producing Fair Trade Certified goods were paid fair prices and wages, work in safe conditions, protect the environment, and receive community development funds to empower and uplift their communities. Fair Trade USA educates consumers, brings new manufacturers and retailers into the Fair Trade system, and provides farming communities with tools, training and resources to thrive as international businesspeople. Visit www.FairTradeUSA.org for more information.

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DISPOSABLE CUPS HAVE GOT TO GO

New 3-week community-wide campaign to kick the disposable cup habit

SEATTLE, WA – May 5, 2011 A unique three-week effort to prompt a simultaneous shift in one of our country’s biggest waste problems begins May 21.

Led by New World Habits and supported by coffee shops, non-profits and others, the idea for sudden change is prompted by the theory that any habit can be changed with a concerted three week effort.  This theory will be put to the test in Seattle.

The good news is that you don’t have to give up your coffee.  You simply need to bring your own cup, just as most of us have learned to bring our own bag to the grocery store.

The habit change is relatively painless yet important as Americans throw away almost half a million cups every 15 seconds.  Last year, paper cup usage created close to 400 million pounds of solid waste, and that represents almost a third more than just 4 years earlier!  Our thoughtless disposal of single-use items is getting out of control.  This trend must be reversed.

Via the website, New World Habits will provide the two essential ingredients to facilitate change:  support and a  deadline, not to mention the added incentive of a magnified collective impact that is practically instantaneous.  The website will track the growing numbers.

Participants will join the effort online and then they can watch a change in personal habits become part of a much larger wave of change.  The actual 3-week shift will launch at Green Fest, who is partnering in the initiative along with Sustainable Seattle, Zero Waste Seattle and other organizations.   Equally important is the collaboration of coffeehouses, including Caffe Ladro, who will promote the effort by offering discounts.  Individuals are encouraged to approach their neighborhood coffeehouses (or office, cafeteria, or community organization) to get them involved:  the website offers a flier, including a list of incentives for businesses.  Everything is designed to make it easy for the movement to spread at the grassroots level.

“It’s not as difficult as we make it out to be,” says founder and executive director Karin de Weille.  “We need to show ourselves that we have the power, that we are the adaptable organisms that today’s fast-changing world requires.”  And she believes Seattle is the perfect place to test this point.  Seattle City Council President Richard Conlin concurs, “This initiative is another example of Seattle’s environmental leadership.  Let’s show that we can do this, and our success will be duplicated in other cities.”

The campaign addresses the powerlessness we often feel as individuals.  According to de Weille, “We often feel overwhelmed and so we retreat into denial and a sense of powerlessness.  We find reasons to maintain habits whose value we’ve come to doubt.  Deciding to carry a reusable cup can become a powerful way to align ourselves with what we know to be true and necessary.  And when we make this single move together, we feel that much more empowered as a community to steer our way into the future.  Really, the goals of the campaign are quite broad.  A campaign targeting disposable cups is one way in.  And an especially good way here in Seattle, where we drink a lot of coffee!”

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ABOUT NEW WORLD HABITS

Founded in Seattle in 2010 and aimed at empowering individuals and groups to shift personal behavior and through collaboration move towards a future they believe in.

CONTACT:

Karin de Weille

New World Habits

tel. 808-443-8373

Karin@NewWorldHabits.org

www.NewWorldHabits.org

facebook page:  Reusable Cup Campaign

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Solar Goose partners with Handi-Crafters organization to increase production, cut packaging costs and support local employment

Tom Chorman (back left) with his wife Eileen (back center) and daughter Megan (back right) of Solar LED have embraced their partnership with Handi-Crafters, which includes promotion on their product packaging.

THORNDALE, PA – April 21, 2011 Solar LED Innovations, LLC uses the energy of the sun to produce highly efficient, reliable and utility-conscious flashlights and other lighting accessories.

This past year Handi-Crafters has partnered with Solar LED to help cut packaging costs and ramp up mass production of their products as the business has grown. “I would not have been able to grow rapidly without the support of Handi-Crafters,” remarks Tom Chorman, CEO of Solar LED.

“As an entrepreneur, you offer an incredible advantage to start up companies. In this new economy, having full access to a world class manufacturing and packaging facility puts your customers on equal footing with much larger companies. As a small business I can enter the marketplace without having to hire, train, and supervise a workforce.”

With 300 pairs of hands to package products. Handi-Crafters has produced 9 different products for Solar LED, including flashlights, book lights, laptop lights and cap clip lights.

“Every new manufacturing business should consider the value available via utilizing Handi-Crafters to jump start the business. ”

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About Solar Goose
Solar Goose breaks the boundaries of renewable energy innovation, providing an array of portable, solar powered rechargeable LED lights, batteries and even I-Phone and I-Pad chargers! www.solargoose.com

About Handi-Crafters
Handi-Crafters started as a very small, make-shift operation. A group of parents felt their adult disabled children should have something meaningful to do during the day. With only six “clients” and a church basement, Handi-Crafters was in business.

Their first contract was rolling newspapers used as stuffing for a
furniture company. Today we serve over 400 individuals with an expanded array of employment services. We have two buildings on our campus with
fourteen shops running from 8am to 3pm, five days a week. Our 40-
plus customer list includes Fortune 500 companies and numerous entrepreneurs. We are no longer simply a sheltered workshop striving to provide meaningful activities to a handful of adults with disabilities; we are part of several vital supply chains for large companies and we are the affordable solution for several start-up enterprises. We are an offsite temporary labor force ready at a moments notice, allowing companies to respond quickly as their business ebbs and flows. Most importantly, we are a real place of work where our workers come each day ready to “get the job done.” They are proud of their paychecks. For many, they have come to depend on the money they earn to help them live more independently. www.handi-crafters.org

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Win Tickets: 2011 Green Festival | SoMa

“This festival dedicated to sustainable progress has been going strong for a decade now, backed by a shifting American mindset, especially in progressive SF. This year’s Green Festival features presentations by over 125 authors, inventors, politicians, innovators and visionaries.”

Win Tickets: 2011 Green Festival | SoMa via Fun Cheap SF

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