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July 2, 2003
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Billmon, Philadelphia bartender and
the newest (and well-deserved) A-lister in the blogosphere, reports in his
Whisky Bar
blog that he's a would-be
Canadian
. In response, a commenter posted the Canadian Government's
Skilled Worker Self-Assessment test
, that calculates whether you'd qualify for immigration to Canada under the
skilled worker clause.
I thought some of you might want to bookmark the test, just in case next
year's election turns out badly.
My countryman Mark Woods over at
Wood's Lot
has posted some information on other ways of
immigrating to Canada
, in case you fail the skilled worker test. Sorry to admit, money counts.
My family has a long tradition of helping Americans relocate in Canada.
As a United Empire Loyalist my great4-grandfather
fled the US himself in 1792, founded the first school and the first tavern
in Peel County, Ontario, helped many of the area's first settlers (many from
the US) get established, and defended against the attempted American invasion
in 1812. His son provided assistance to Americans arriving on the Underground
Railroad in the 1830s-1860s. We supported conscientious objectors during the
Vietnam War. If things get bad, we're here to help.
In our usual modest, non-smug, unassuming way, of course.
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11:37:46 AM
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How to Save the World has been
developing the concept of
New Collaborative Enterprises
, businesses that are totally egalitarian, self-organized, self-managed
and founded on principles of members' happiness and well-being, not growth
and shareholders' profit. Several readers have asked if such enterprises
exist, and my answer is 'to my knowledge, not yet'. This article profiles
three companies that come close. Next week I'll put on my consultant hat
and describe how a true NCE might evolve.
Ricardo Semler received brief fame for his book Maverick, about
how he transformed his father's family business in Sao Paulo, Semco S.A.
into a totally egalitarian, decentralized, worker-operated company. Now,
ten years later he has just finished a sequel, The Seven Day Weekend
, that shows he has lost none of his idealism. Key to success is an obsession
with employee freedom, and total disregard for growth. Here's what he's
up to per a recent report in the
Guardian:
He refuses to make long-term projections.
"If someone asks me, 'where will you be in 10 years' time?', I haven't got
the slightest idea. I don't find it perturbing either if we said, 'look,
in 10 years' time Semco could have 500 people instead of [the current employment
of] 3,000 people'; that sounds just as interesting as 21,000 people. I'd
hate to see Semco not exist in 10, 20, 50 years' time, but what form it exists
in, what business it's in and what size it is are not particularly relevant."
Semco's staff work in small, autonomous units of
about a dozen (the size, says Semler, of a close family group). They make
the decisions, choose their leaders, set objectives and decide who they
need and what they should be paid: someone who wants too much pay for what
they are doing might be frozen out by the group. "From a distance it can
sound like a workers' paradise," says Semler, "but the system is pretty
unforgiving, because if you put your salary too high, and people don't put
you on the list as someone they need for the next six months, you're in
more trouble than you would be at General Motors."
Sounds a bit like an NCE, doesn't it?
His next project is to develop a school in Sao
Paulo based on the principles of freedom and flexibility. "The schooling
system seems very stupid, much as the business world is," he says. "As with
cars and airlines it needs someone from outside the business to rethink it
from scratch.
The Canadian La Siembra Co-op tells their story better than I can:
La Siembra Co-op is a leading North American
fair trade organization offering consumers high-quality, certified
fair trade organic products that improve the livelihoods of family
farmers and the well being of communities at home and abroad. Incorporated
in 1999, La Siembra is the first organization to import, manufacture
and distribute fair trade certified organic cocoa products in North
America. La Siembra's Cocoa Camino
product line
is sold throughout Canada and is expanding
distribution in the USA. La Siembra's
Fair Trade
certification guarantees consumers
that farmers receive higher than world market prices. This includes
the payment of organic and social premiums that
are used for development programs,
decided on by the producer co-op members. La Siembra's
Organic
cocoa and sugar cane certification
means better health for farmers, the environment, and the consumer. La
Siembra's cocoa
is produced using traditional
Shade Grown
techniques that preserve the environment
and maintain bio-diversity while providing a much-needed habitat for
migratory birds. We source our cocoa from
co-operatives of family farms
who grow organically under a shade canopy in
the rainforests of the Dominican Republic.
The company's small group of shareholders are intimately familiar with
the business of the company and devoted to its cause. Arms'-length financing
is from financial co-ops and credit unions.
Seven minutes from our home on the Oak Ridges Moraine is a manufacturing
company with a difference. Husky Injection Molding Systems of Caledon, Ontario
is located on a large industrial space completely landscaped with native
plant species -- no herbicides or pesticides used. President Bob Schad resigned
from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce over that group's opposition to the
Kyoto accord, and was an active and effective lobbyist getting Canada to
ratify the accord.
Schad's company cafeteria is run by licensed nutritionists and offers only
wholesome, healthy foods, and its in-house health club is free to all employees
and open 24/7. The company always appears near the top of every listing
of Canadian ethical investments, and its emissions are remarkably small
for a huge manufacturer, and the largest employer in the area. The company
is obsessed with employee safety and health. They have developed their own
technologies to reduce materials used in production of containers, and to
maximize the use of recycled materials in containers. High-efficiency manufacturing
processes and building design minimize waste, noise and energy use. Employees
are empowered to identify and create ways to further reduce, reuse and recycle,
and minimize the environmental footprint and enhance worker health and safety
in this remarkable company.
On top of this, Husky has a written
Commitment to Society
:
Charitable giving and support of non-profit organizations
play an important role in the implementation of our core values at Husky.
Each year Husky donates 5% of its pre-tax profits to charitable organizations.
The Schad Foundation is responsible for directing 20% of Husky's charitable
budget primarily in support of environmental projects. The remaining 80%
of the budget is divided among Husky locations worldwide in support of local
community and educational initiatives.
One of these initiatives is Environmental Week, a program in our area fully
sponsored and funded by Husky where every grade six student spends a week
learning about and participating in stream rehabilitation, wetland enhancement
and tree planting in and around local school grounds.
In a world ravaged by corporate greed, selfishness, dishonesty, worker exploitation
and social and environmental neglect, it's good to know there are companies
like these to show the way forward. If you know of others, let me know and
I'll do a sequel.
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8:54:42 AM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:48:20 PM. |
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