Open Thread - April 6, 2015 - Transition Movement

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Back in early 2012, Occupy Tallahassee hosted speakers who introduced us to the Transition Movement, sometimes called Transition Towns. It was my first introduction to this movement which originated in Great Britain. Since then, this movement has intrigued me as it has many varied facets to it, all of which are intended to make communities more resilient as we experience the negative effects of peak oil, climate change, and economic instability.

Resilience - in Transition terms goes beyond the accepted idea of resilience as being about ability to adapt to shocks, instead seeing it is a desired state; the rebuilding of which could be hugely economically advantageous to our local communities.

In practice, Transition works by inviting people to take ownership of the process; by not claiming to have all the answers but encouraging creativity, and by building networks with other organisations.

As a retired land use planner, one of the things that most attracted me to the idea of Transition Towns is how the techniques employed by these towns build a greater sense of community and sharing among the inhabitants.

The Transition Movement began in Kinsale, Ireland. Recognizing that the world was near peak energy and that climate change was real, permaculturist, Rob Hopkins challenged his students at Kinsale College of Further Education to apply permaculture principles for future resilience to the great changes our world was facing.

This looked at across-the-board creative adaptations in the realms of energy production, health, education, economy and agriculture as a "road map" to a sustainable future for the town. Two of his students, Louise Rooney and Catherine Dunne, developed the Transition towns concept. They then presented their ideas to Kinsale Town Council. The councilors decided to adopt the plan and work towards energy independence.

Soon after, Rob Hopkins moved back his hometown of Totnes, England where he and a co-collaborator, Naresh Giangrande began to implement the transition concepts which led to Totnes becoming the first transition town.

In reality Transition is about a lot more than that. It is about people taking a greater interest in their present and future needs; being more aware of the world in which they live; thinking about the way they really want to live, about who is impacted by the current system and how, and about getting stuck in to make those positive changes happen, from the bottom upwards.

They soon began the Transition network with the aim of teaching others around the world the concepts of the Transition Movement.

The Transition network was founded in 2005, as a response to the twin threats of climate change and peak oil. Unlike other campaign groups, the Transition network never set out to frighten people, but seemed resolutely upbeat, determined to find opportunity in what most regard with dismay.

One of the movement's most fundamental ideas was to ask what the world might look like in the future "if we get it right" – then work out backwards how to get there. Generally speaking, the Transition vision is of a move towards self-sufficiency at the local level, in food, energy and much else, but the specifics of what "getting it right" might look like were never handed down from above.

Below is an early video in which participants speak about the Transition Movement.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuYSDUflfts]

I recently checked the site for Transition Tallahassee and have not seen any new posts since early 2013. I am not sure of its status although it does have a Facebook page. However, another city in Florida has a very active Transition program, Transition Sarasota. They have many activities and ongoing programs. Please check out their website linked above.

If anyone here is aware of or participating in a local transition program, I would love to hear about your experiences with it. As always, this is an Open Thread, so feel free to post whatever is on your mind.

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alexa100's picture

Are they in NY State ?

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Go Bernie !!
Smile Smile Smile Smile Smile Smile

gulfgal98's picture

Transition USA has a link to towns that have begun to "Transition." Many are in their infancy but others have made great progress. If you click on the link to Sarasota, you will see how one town is making great progress. The Transition Movement is a ground up undertaking and can involve many various initiatives. It appears that one of the earliest initiatives that most communities adopt involves focusing on locally grown food. But some communities even use a local currency and various exchanges such as tool libraries and clothing exchanges.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I've been looking forward to this discussion... Transition Towns have so much potential and as you pointed out, this is adaptation to the coming changes at the grass roots, not from the top down...which I think as we are seeing from events around the world, is less and less acceptable to people in general.

Everyplace on the map below, has some movement towards transition. It does seem the interest ebb and flow with the interest of the volunteers.

Transition Town Map

Ontario has various towns trying different things related to TT, but Peterborough seems to be the best organized and the most enduring.

Welcome to Transition Town Peterborough

Transition Town Peterborough (TTP) is an all volunteer, non-profit organization using economic localization to reduce our community-wide dependence on fossil fuels while increasing local community resilience and self-sufficiency in food, water, energy, culture and wellness. With a focus on community building, TTP is made possible by ordinary citizens working toward positive change. It is shaped and guided by all who are able to participate, in whatever capacity they can.

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gulfgal98's picture

I would think that a smaller geographic locale might find it easier to get the citizens involved in the transition process. Perhaps this is one reason why in my home state of Florida Transition Tallahassee seems to have stalled. But Sarasota is not a small town and they seem to have made great progress.

One thing I have noticed from my reading is that as a community begins to make progress in its transition, it appears to have a snowball effect.

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“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

here in Hamilton. I live near a small community called Dundas. They are actually a part of Hamilton, but used to be a town in their own right. But they retain their identity. They have a transition initiative in place and it is starting to effect the larger city of Hamilton proper. Small steps but noticeable.

For instance, Hamilton has Car Share and Bike Share stations all over the city. They have recently started a Tool Lending Library

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gulfgal98's picture

Martha, this is exactly what the Transition Movement is all about. Fantastic! You should be writing this entry. Biggrin

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“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I am so scattered...my interests so wide that I sometimes find it really hard to focus on one topic at a time and I tend to wander....

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LeChienHarry's picture

AB asked for a sortable table. We created two: one in Numbers and one in Excel. They are on my own computer.

How do I get them, sortable or active to a comment here?

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gulfgal98's picture

Perhaps you might want to contact AB. I am pretty much a technical dunce myself. Wink

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

If you said an email to contact us, it will go to JtC.

I wanted to post a diagram in word. The only thing I could figure out was to save/print it to a jpeg. Then I could upload it as an image. Is that a help?

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Alison Wunderland's picture

If all fails seeing as we're not getting traction in my essay, and LeChienHarry (Who's done ALL the work)

email me the .jpg and I'll run it through my photo prog, (not photoshop,) and reduce the size of the file then insert into the essay.

send to

gulfnhotsand at yahoo dot com.

Thank you so much.
AB

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enhydra lutris's picture

some sort of Drupal embed. I know no Drupal and no webstuff.

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That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --

OLinda's picture

for another interesting Open Thread. Seems like I should have heard of transition towns before but I don't think I have. Searched and it looks like there is a little activity in the Denver area involving community gardens.

P.S. Good Morning, Everybody! Nice night last night. Smile

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gulfgal98's picture

I think as we recognize the effects of peak oil and climate change, more communities and groups will implement transition techniques. At least, I hope so.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Lady Libertine's picture

have a lot of thoughts running through me brain this morning, have to do the whole Morning Routine here so Ill keep 'composing' in my head while I make breakfast, heh.

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gulfgal98's picture

We have six of hubby's friends coming here on Friday to do the Assault on the Carolinas bike ride on Saturday. Five of them are supposed to stay camp with us so I am busy this morning making food for Friday night dinner for ten people and getting the house cleaned for the onslaught. Shok Lasagna, one for meat eaters, one for vegetarians, and a small one for someone who is gluten free. Sigh.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

NCTim's picture

She would clean before people came. I asserted that the cleaning is after they go.

I'll have to look for a Transitions group in the Triangle Area.

I have converted to all organic gardening and could use some contacts that know where to get stuff like vermicompost.

Thanks for the OT, you made the front page. Smile Friday's OT will stimulate movin' and grovin'.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

gulfgal98's picture

There is a group in the Carrboro area, I believe. Hope you are doing well, Tim.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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pfiore8's picture

must steal this one

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“There are moments which are not calculable, and cannot be assessed in words; they live on in the solution of memory… ”
― Lawrence Durrell, "Justine"

Lady Libertine's picture

I love me some Jack Sparrow, but I give a lot of credit (I know, DISNEY! blegh) to the writers, (especially the first) Pirates movie. Tons of great one liners from that one!

I do tend to think in movie quotes a lot, also. Blum 3

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detroitmechworks's picture

Is SOOO much of that movie was stolen from the "Monkey Island" video game series. Except Disneyfied, of course.
(In the original, Will Turner was the hero, and much more clueless/wannabee pirate. And Elizabeth , yes the SAME NAME, was the Governor, NOT the Governor's Daughter, which made a lot of it rather hilarious.)

If you haven't played any of them, and like Pirates of the Caribbean, I highly recommend you pick it up.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64VID7IoXrI]

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Alison Wunderland's picture

I've trying to produce some vegetables. Does that count? The backyard transitioned from concrete slab to...garden20090630.jpg

The list linked in my essay needs to be sorted by State, Person, Group, Candidate.

If you can help, that would be great.

Thanks,
AB

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gulfgal98's picture

I think a big part of the transition movement is to keep as much as possible of what we use and need locally sourced. It looks like you are doing your part.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

pfiore8's picture

well done AB

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“There are moments which are not calculable, and cannot be assessed in words; they live on in the solution of memory… ”
― Lawrence Durrell, "Justine"

Alison Wunderland's picture

I don't have a lot of room so I grow up.

we compost all organic matter that passes across our table. Leads to about 50 gallons of high-quality compost a year. It's vermiculture compost, not the slow-acting bacterial compost, though bacteria does its job too.

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Bisbonian's picture

But we understand the concept. Maybe we need to become a part of this movement. Bisbee is in southeast Arizona, a hundred miles from Tucson...the nearest major city. 200 miles from Phoenix. We are way out in the desert, in the Mule Mountains, one of the 'sky islands' in the land of the Apaches. When things get serious, we are going to need to grow our own food, produce our own power...and take care of our limited water! It's a pretty progressive town, outwardly, but we do have a lot of people insistent on holding us back...so it's a struggle. But, we have an entire office complex (1904 vintage! OMG it's so beautiful, inside and out) completely solar powered. My partner tends to be a lot more involved, since I have an outside job...she pushed for the start of a community garden, which is limping along, so far. She fought against the city going back on it's pesticide ban, and won...no roundup to control weeds, etc, by the city, anyway. She helped scare away a fracking operation in the next valley over (where most of our local produce comes from), by exposing it to the public. And, she started her own vegetable garden in the front yard (across from the major park, where the Farmer's Market is held every Saturday), both to feed us, and to show others how it's done. She did a blog on it's creation, which I think is pretty cool, here: http://thedirtioccupy.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2012-01-16T10:36:0... It's a blog, where the older stuff is on the last page...it reads best in order, so I think I put the link to the last page. Lot's of cool pictures. We're also working on water capture, worms, and anything else to make our life sustainable here way out in the desert. Local politicians want to go in the other direction, though, lately. Maybe we can find some new inspiration from this movement.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Gerrit's picture

your town needs to take it to the next level of local resilience and sustainability. Peruse the Totnes website, I've strewn links all over the OT. Lots of cool stuff. BTW, I enjoyed your outdoors banjo break yesterday!

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

gulfgal98's picture

your partner and her efforts in your community are very much in line with the Transition movement. Excellent! Good

I just went to your partner's blog and it is wonderful. I hope to read it in full next week after my company leaves. Right now I am trying to get ready for them.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

NCTim's picture

I am just looking into getting a worm bin operational. I currently do a bokashi with a little lime and enzymes the turn around is pretty quick. Plus lime restores the Calcium.

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

Gerrit's picture

winter...I took a sadly plastic old bin from the garden shed,mcgyvered it into a worm box for inside and it works. I'm gonna check this bokashi thing out now :=) Cheers mate,

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
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Miep's picture

Saved it all, it comes in handy. A few pieces near a plant, holds in some moisture and deters digging by dogs.

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Stay on track. Stay in lane. Don't throw rocks.

LeChienHarry's picture

Both in Numbers and Excel.

I could send them to you via email as an attachment in your preferred format. Or we are still looking for a place to park the files and be able to get them to the site via a comment.

Open to ideas!

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Alison Wunderland's picture

Can you convert to .txt?

Sort by
State, Person, Group, Candidate.

If .txt, send to:

gulfnhotsand at yahoo dot com.

Merci, Chien.
AB

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Alison Wunderland's picture

we don't seem to be communicating my essay.

AB

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gulfgal98's picture

So it is sort of hard to high jack an Open Thread. Biggrin

Whatever works for y'all is fine with me. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

LeChienHarry's picture

Thank you for your patience.

Back to your regular programing about Transition Communities. Which are a great idea.

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gulfgal98's picture

Any conversation on any topic is allowed. No need to apologize. Smile

I just posted something to help start a conversation if needed.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

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CS in AZ's picture

I have seen the guidance here several times to "use the open threads" for small talk and chit chat and to share news or whatever is on our minds... and so I am starting to read them now -- which is a new habit since I didn't really pay much attention to them at that other place.

I find I enjoy reading them quite a lot. But as far as "open threading" on them... it does feel weird. The essays are so great, in-depth, sobering and thought-provoking... it feels somehow just *rude* to not respect the effort and work of the author by focusing on the topic, and keeping to the tone, of the essay. I understand that you all are used to that here and it's cool, but just interesting how these old habits are ingrained and have to be broken, my brain retrained. This is no doubt a good thing. Smile Thank you, all of c99p, for this great space.

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gulfgal98's picture

Speaking for myself, you should not worry about intruding on what I have written. I volunteered to do an Open Thread once a week as a way to make myself write something. I think of it as something to start a conversation, but it should not be the entire conversation. Please feel free to post whatever is on your mind. This is first and foremost an Open Thread. Smile

And thank you for your consideration, but do not let it stifle whatever you may want to say.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

NCTim's picture

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The individual has always had to struggle to keep from being overwhelmed by the tribe. If you try it, you will be lonely often, and sometimes frightened. But no price is too high to pay for the privilege of owning yourself. - Friedrich Nietzsche -

LeChienHarry's picture

It's a link to a comma separated file:

which you copy and paste

Instructions:

- Select All
- Paste into a text only document
- give the extension .csv
- Go to your application Excel or Numbers, open
- Go to File Menu, open in Excel or Numbers.

Should be there. No colors though.

It's a spreadsheet three columns wide by 714 (add an extra row or two) long. It's already sorted by state initials for easy finding. Or you can manipulate it any way you would like. The original is sorted alpha by last name of the delegate.

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You may choose to look the other way, but you can never say again you did not know. ~ William Wiberforce

If you can donate, please! POP Money is available for bank-to-bank transfers. Email JtC to make a monthly donation.

Alison Wunderland's picture

I don't want to seem like a ball-buster, but that's what I am. It's still not clear enough.

State, Name, Group, Candidate (If you can.)

State first because they are all two letters. That makes up for the lack of Tab formatting.

Names are important, but they fall into place once State is the priority.

You see what I'm driving at?

I can't build this myself, but I know how it's supposed to look. (without a lot of heavy-duty concentrating.)

Name,State,Group,Candidate
AK,Kim Metcalfe,DN [4,Clinto [138
AK,Larry Murakami,DN [142,Sander [143
AK,Ian Olson,DN [4,Uncommitted
AK,Casey Steinau,DN [142,Uncommitted
AL,Randy Kelley,DN [4,Clinto [112
AL,Unzell Kelley,DN [4,Clinto [112
AL,Janet May,DN [4,Clinto [112
AL,Terri Sewel [3,Rep.,Clinto [3
AL,Darryl Sinkfield,DN [4,Uncommitted
AL,Nancy Worley,DN [4,Uncommitted
AL,AL Vice Chair (Vacant),DN [193,Uncommitted

You see how beautifully that reads... falls into place?

So say you're in AK, you highlight all AK. (Without too much eye strain,) and you get...

AK,Kim Metcalfe,DN [4,Clinto [138
AK,Larry Murakami,DN [142,Sander [143
AK,Ian Olson,DN [4,Uncommitted
AK,Casey Steinau,DN [142,Uncommitted

...just your delegates.

Then we can link to the Google doc so as to not put an immense load on our bandwidth here.

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pfiore8's picture

i believe the real power of the internet, to this point, is found in social media. if we can connect these movements and share what works and, maybe even more importantly, to KNOW they exist, it makes us feel there are ways forward.

people are doing amazing things, getting BIG results with little resource.

when we talk about the transition movement, so much is related, ie anti fracking, anti pipeline, anti bad development et al. how do we convince people to turn their lawns to better use, growing food or wildflowers for bees and butterflies. how do we turn our small patches of green into ecosystems that support the environment and all the creatures in it? How do we revitalize local economies and change the "political realities" from the ground up... because it's always trickle up, isn't it?

here are some of the "practical / pragmatic" orgs i follow:

Strong Towns . . . and you can follow them on FB, where they have great discussions on development, usage et al

Depave . . . a great site that shows us how we can reclaim the dirt and go "from parking lots to paradise" . . . follow on Facebook

Bear with Us... how to live with bears as neighbors, conservation efforts... these sites are among the most important, imo, because we MUST learn to live with the natural world instead of poisoning. You can also follow them on Facebook.

I think this could be an ongoing series, gulfgal. introduce us to sites and strategies being used and how we can use them in our communities. and we can reach out to these places and form a network for sane people. doing sane things.

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“There are moments which are not calculable, and cannot be assessed in words; they live on in the solution of memory… ”
― Lawrence Durrell, "Justine"

gulfgal98's picture

I really wish I had more to share and posted this as a result of a conversation Gerrit and I had last week. I am hoping others like you will share what you know too because that is what this is all about. People sharing with their neighbors and rebuilding a sense of community that will help immunize us to some extent from the huge changes we are now facing with climate change upon us..

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Gerrit's picture

in soon and I hope folks will bring us lots of stories about Transition Towns in their areas.

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

gulfgal98's picture

For bringing up the subject. I hope you are having a good morning too.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

stevej's picture

Here is Rob Hopkins talking about his hometown Totnes in Devon.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3L9n20myqk]

Very interesting topic that could really start to get some serious traction here. Enough people are looking at doing things in better more sustainable ways.

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“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire

gulfgal98's picture

Thank you for posting this link. I almost used it myself but wanted to keep this rather short. Good

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

stevej's picture

and see it as my duty to sneakily promote the county whenever possible Smile
heh, tbh I think Hopkins is an engaging speaker and here he is performing in front of what is basically a hometown audience.

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“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.” -Voltaire

detroitmechworks's picture

Finally getting over the bug.

I would spend an hour up, then crash for 4-6 hours. Rinse, repeat. Crackers, rice, and sports drinks. Actually REALLY hungry right now, but going to wait until things are a bit more stable to eat anything huge.

So thanks again. This is what I love about a good online community, and it means the world to me to be part of one again.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

gulfgal98's picture

Glad to hear you are doing better. The best advice for a stomach virus is 24 hours of clear liquids. Take care of yourself!

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Gerrit's picture

Here's the link. It is a treasure trove of info on what works.

On Martha and gg's point, yes, small is beautiful (more on that this weekend :=). Trying to do a TT in a massive city is an oxymoron.

Enjoy this:
http://www.transitiontowntotnes.org/

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Resilience: practical action to improve things we can control.
3D+: developing language for postmodern spirituality.

mimi's picture

to many too simple, but though it doesn't get rid of the bug, it helps for diarrhea like conditions. Charcoal tablets. (I use them before Immodium - it's also standard as an emergeny medical supply for people who travel into tropical countries and usually are more prone to get "a bug" like that) And other than black tea (without sugar) I wouldn't eat anything other than unsweetened and unsalted cracker-like bread, something like Matzo or so. And to rehydrate a solution of equal parts of sugar, salt and baking soda and lemon juice.

Feel better soon. Heh, Bernie won 56.5 % with 99.8 percent votes counted. That should heal you in minutes. Smile

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Gerrit's picture

Capitalists bribed local governments to accept their franchises (box and retail stores), which promptly destroyed the local economies by ruining family businesses and hoovering up local money and vacuuming it to financial centers. Here's the solution: Local Money.

ttt_logo_web.png

The Totnes Pound was launched as an initiative of the Transition Town Totnes Economics and Livelihoods group in March 2007. By now it has gone electronic and even has it's own website:
http://www.totnespound.org/

The purpose of the local currency is:

Economic localisation is considered to be a key aspect of the transition process, and local currency systems provide the opportunity to strengthen the local economy whilst preventing money from leaking out.

totnes_pounds_group.png
The latest issue of Totnes Pounds has local heroes on the various denominations. Cool, that.

The Totnes Pound's goals are:

* To build resilience in the local economy by keeping money circulating in the community and building new relationships
* To get people thinking and talking about how they spend their money
* To encourage more local trade and thus reduce food and trade miles
* To encourage tourists to use local businesses

Here's how the Totnes Transition site explains it:

Totnes Pounds enter circulation when people choose to exchange their sterling currency into Totnes pounds at one of four places around Totnes. At present the exchange rate is 1TP for £1. Totnes Pounds can then be spent at participating businesses, of which there are currently around 70. Some of these are now offering discounts for certain purchases that are made in Totnes Pound to encourage usage. People can exchange their Sterling into Totnes Pounds at a number of issuing points around Totnes. People can also accept Totnes Pounds in change from participating shops. This does not create new pounds, but does help them to circulate and enables shoppers to show their loyalty to the local economy.

Every Totnes Pound in circulation is therefore 'backed' by one pound of Sterling. This money is put into a bank account. Totnes Pounds then circulate between consumers and businesses. Some businesses spend the Totnes Pounds that they receive with other local businesses. This strengthens the local economic multiplier, which means basically that money stays within the community rather than leaking out. If a business has a excess of Totnes Pounds they are able to exchange the surplus back for Sterling.

The Totnes Pound project team has been working with Co-ops UK to set up an Industrial and Provident society which will be the long term vehicle for managing the currency. Here's the real key to future sustainability. They plan to diversify the asset which backs the currency:

In future it might be possible to back it with land, energy or labour. At this point the currency will be able to play an even more significant role in building economic resilience.

That's the ticket. When they're able to back the currency with something else than just the pound sterling, they'll be able to increase it's use and influence in the community. And Totnes will have one more instrument for the future when everything truly becomes local. What do you think?

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

how long it will be before the state or federal government will make these notes illegal.

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Gerrit's picture

Runaway climate change is here. I think federal and provincial authorities are gonna be awfully busy really really soon.

Think of it in this way: I'd rather build something that helps local community survival and risk having to fight like mad to keep it. Than say it is too risky.

Thanks and good morning and I'm looking forward to watching your video.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

Nothing ventured, nothing gained... I just know that TPTB have a habit of "regulating" really good things out of existence if they can...

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Gerrit's picture

I posted here in pieces into one four-part essay. I'm going to publish it on the weekend and hopefully we'll get some more input from interested folks then.

Oh and for Saturday, I'm working on a open thread on a link harvest - resiliency resource links. I hope folks could add their favourite websites, magazines, local links so we could build a weekend link resource.

Whaddayathink?

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

BRILLIANT! I will start a link list to share...

Smile

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riverlover's picture

for several decades, although I am not in Ithaca proper and have never used them. There are several links online about it.

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

gulfgal98's picture

a new digital currency was launched to replace the Ithaca Hours which was a paper currency that was being used less and less. The new digital currency allows people still holding Hours currency to convert it to the digital currency.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Corruption’ as a Propaganda Weapon

We are now seeing what looks like a new preparatory phase for the next round of “regime changes” with corruption allegations aimed at former Brazilian President Luiz Ignacio Lula da Silva and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The new anti-Putin allegations – ballyhooed by the UK Guardian and other outlets – are particularly noteworthy because the so-called “Panama Papers” that supposedly implicate him in offshore financial dealings never mention his name.

Or as the Guardian writes: “Though the president’s name does not appear in any of the records, the data reveals a pattern – his friends have earned millions from deals that seemingly could not have been secured without his patronage. The documents suggest Putin’s family has benefited from this money – his friends’ fortunes appear his to spend.”

Note, if you will, the lack of specificity and the reliance on speculation: “a pattern”; “seemingly”; “suggest”; “appear.” Indeed, if Putin were not already a demonized figure in the Western media, such phrasing would never pass an editor’s computer screen. Indeed, the only point made in declarative phrasing is that “the president’s name does not appear in any of the records.”

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Lookout's picture

Was a movement that effected me in my youth. I'm a soil scientist by training, and was a teacher/reformer by profession (now retired). We're here in our little valley - largely self sufficient. Still on the grid, but heating our house with the sun and collecting rainwater for the garden. After 30 years in the valley, I'm still moving toward a better lifestyle in harmony with nature. I'm not trying to blow my horn...just trying to say that persistence wins the game. Stay true to your goals and dreams.

That's the way we have to do with Bernie too! Let's keep our shoulder to the boulder and keep pushing uphill.

PS DMW (and others) have you tried using whole cloves to make a tea for settling stomach pains? I've used it with good success. Mint also helps, but not to the effect of the cloves.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

detroitmechworks's picture

My usual cure-all for indigestion/throat issues is ginger and Lemon with pure honey. However, it doesn't work so well with the stomach flu due to the acid not doing well on an EMPTY stomach.

Should try that next time.

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I do not pretend I know what I do not know.

Lookout's picture

When you can't hold things down, food or liquid, the clove tea will give you some relief. Dehydration is the big issue when you're in that kind of fix. Take care and stay well!

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Alison Wunderland's picture

and I'm not sure anyone mentioned yogurt. That'll get your gut bugs working again.

Get well soon, dammit! We need you back on the job, Man.

AB called in sick one time, but the boss didn't believe me. He asked, "How sick are you?"

So AB told him, "I'm in bed with my sister."

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

just do without the lemon...the ginger and honey should do the trick.

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gulfgal98's picture

I hope one day you will write about what you are doing. This is amazing.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Gerrit's picture

get to where you are at. Congrats and amen to perseverance!

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

and there is A LOT of "stuff" I have gathered and gleaned from all over the Web and through books... This is just a start....I will post more as I find it all...

In five minutes, Claude Lewenz covers the core elements of a VillageTown and invites the viewer to become involved. Claude Lewenz is author of "LIfe Liberty Happiness" and "How to Build a VillageTown (second edition, slightly renamed). A VillageTown is a 10,000 population town made up of 20 villages. Within there are no cars, it has its own local economy, and its purpose is to enable its citizens to enjoy a good life, understood as the social pursuits of conviviality, citizenship, artistic, intellectual & spiritual growth.

To learn more go to the VillageForum.com web site.

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Gerrit's picture

The book is called Local Money by Peter North for the Transition Network's publishing arm. It is a valuable resource for saving your local community form disaster capitalism and climate change
(Please don't buy it new and don't use gargle to search for it :=)

Here is its table of contents:
Local Money Peter North book contents page.jpg

Here is Rob Hopkins' review from 2010:

“I’ve really enjoyed the last three books to come out of the Transition Books stable, so I was pleased to see the latest instalment was out: Local Money – how to make it happen in your community. It’s another big square book, following Local Food, and it’s got the same practical, inspiring, can-do approach. This time, it’s all about creating local money networks.

The Transition Towns movement is all about resilience – preparing towns for the challenges of climate change and peak oil. What’s money got to do with it, you may well ask, but money is a valuable tool in relocalisation. Our current money system doesn’t serve us very well. It is beyond our control, in the hands of bankers and politicians and people we might hesitate to trust. It flows in vast quantities to people who don’t seem to do very much to earn it, while others work hard for very little. It is endlessly available for some tasks, and in short supply for other very necessary things. Most of all, it has an unpleasant habit of vanishing out of the places where we live and ending up in London and New York. Local money is a way of re-imagining money as the tool it should be, rather than the master it often becomes.

Since money is just an agreed mechanism of exchange, there are many different kinds of money, and endless possibilities for re-creating it. Local Money begins with an introduction to money and a history of alternative currencies, and then dedicates a chapter each one to a series of experiments with money. Time banking is one, a currency based on hours of work, and a great way to value all labour equally. Local Exchange Trading Schemes are an less formal way for people to trade skills that were successful in the past. North then explains the four Transition currencies so far, and ends with some tantalizing glimpses of the future of money, including feed-in tariff based bonds, mobile phone money, and tradeable energy quotas.

Among the more interesting systems that the book explores are Germany’s regional currencies, which operate alongside the Euro. Reading at a time when the Euro is in considerable danger, I bet Germany is glad it put the regional alternatives in place. “Monoculture of money,” says Peter North, “just like a monoculture of crops, is not resilient.” I’m not sure why I hadn’t heard about it before, but Germany has “a rich ecosystem of currencies”, as North puts it. Each one serves a different purpose, and this is perhaps the closest to the healthy and resilient model that the Transition Towns are after.

Totnes, Lewes, Stroud and Brixton are the three Transition currencies. They each have a slightly different philosophy, Stroud being the most radical – it is democratic money, owned by a co-op. The main aim of these currencies is to build the local economy and encourage more local supply chains. It’s a little early to tell whether it’s working or not, and North hints that they are “perhaps mere glimpses of what could be” in future. This is the really practical bit if you’re ready to have a go at creating your own money – lots of advice about getting buy-in from businesses, how much to print, why you should think long and hard about the name of your currency, tax implications, and so on.

There are some real strengths to Local Money. Peter North knows that everything in the book is an experiment, and that there’s no one formula. It’s an iterative process, and the book is great at breaking down historical examples to see what worked and what didn’t. It’s honest too, acknowledging the failures and limitations of what has been tried so far as well as the successes. If you’re ready to embark on the rather exciting journey of local money in your town, this is the most helpful book I’ve come across so far.

However, if you’re not that far along, the book is less useful. The previous Transition book, Local Food, had all kinds of different projects of varying levels of complexity. Whatever stage your town was at, there were inspiring ideas to get started. Local Money starts further along the road, with actual currency, when there are lots of smaller ways to build resilience in the local economy. I’d have loved to have read about local loyalty cards, such as the Wedge Card in London, or the 3/50 Project that invites people to pledge to spend money in three favourite local businesses. Both of these are a whole lot simpler, quicker, and less risky than launching a fully fledged alternative currency. But perhaps that’s for another book, a Local Economies title perhaps.

There’s also a lot more that could have been included. Local currencies aren’t the only way to generate local money, and it would have been great to hear more about zero interest banks (see Jak), peer to peer lending, shared equity mortgages, local banking and credit unions, local bonds, microfinance, or the ‘moneyless’ credit clearance schemes that Thomas Greco champions. Some of these get a passing mention, but they could all be considered valid options for making local economies more resilient and deserve more attention.

In other words, Local Money is great on currencies, but could have been much broader in scope. The Transition currencies are wonderful experiments and this book will get you well on your way to launching your own, but there is so much more to try.

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Martha Pearce-Smith's picture

I have some more books to add to my collection!

Found this one here... http://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?an=Peter+North&sortby=96&s...

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Miep's picture

So if that bothers you, try bookfinder.com, a search engine that searches lots of book sites, including indie ones, for specific titles.

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Stay on track. Stay in lane. Don't throw rocks.

Gerrit's picture

how us human beans are always done in, not by what we know, but by what we just know ain't so." I was one of abebooks' first customers back in Victoria, BC. Here I thought they've been on the side of the angels, and whaddayaknow, they ain't :=) Live and learn, eh! I hope your day is going great, my friend,

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Miep's picture

I recommend biblio.com. Indie.

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Stay on track. Stay in lane. Don't throw rocks.

Lookout's picture

http://www.alternet.org/activism/she-still-considers-her-friend?

Did any of you see the Democracy Now discussion with Dolores and Cornell West?
http://www.democracynow.org/2016/3/9/bernie_or_hillary_cornel_west_dolores

She let the cat out of the bag that her son is running for office and they didn't have the money needed to do so until Clinton helped out. Sounds like quid pro quo, and explains why a labor group like the farm workers would support a corrupt corporate political machine like the Clintons.

We all know she will not do more for working people...just like we knew that invading Iraq was insane.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Bisbonian's picture

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

Zeitgeistus's picture

This one takes on the deceptive one that being pushed by Vox and was used in a lot of anti-Bernie attacks. I suspect we will see more of that particular attack given the Wisc. result and the news that "Clinton has had Enough of Bernie Sanders"

Link to the Nation here:
Vox’s Tax Calculator Is Wildly Misleading—So We Made a Better One
You can't count taxing without counting spending.

Share widely!

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Injustice is relatively easy to bear; what stings is justice. -H. L. Mencken
A country without a memory is a country of madmen.-George Santayana
An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailments of all republics. --Plutarch

gulfgal98's picture

I hope you are doing well today. Smile

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Zeitgeistus's picture

After yesterday's primary, I am walking on sunshine....even though it has been snowy and super-cold here in Northern NH Wink

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Injustice is relatively easy to bear; what stings is justice. -H. L. Mencken
A country without a memory is a country of madmen.-George Santayana
An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal ailments of all republics. --Plutarch

Gerrit's picture

ttt_logo_web.png
The skillshare workshops is how Totnes builds resiliency skills with local residents:

skillshare workshop totnes transition town.jpg

http://www.transitiontowntotnes.org/groups/skillshares/

What is the Skillshare Project?

The Skillshare Project was inspired by Rob Hopkins “Great Reskilling” idea and is listed as Number 8 in the “12 Steps to Transition”. The goals of the project (as from The Transition Handbook) are:

To bring people together, relaxing and learning new skills
To build networks and move our community towards self-reliance and resilience
To create a fundamental sense of ‘can do’ and feelings of positivity, creativity and empowerment
To establish and nurture links between old and young as skills are passed on
To organise practical and useful events
To work with existing groups in order to share and draw on local skills.

The Project encourages anyone of us to offer guidance on a topic likely to help increase our community's resilience, as a one-off gift (or more!). Contributions of all kinds are welcome! We can pass on valuable skills as well as experiment, stretch ourselves, practice generosity, form connections, inspire each other and have fun!

Check this out:
skillshare rammed earth tire walls.png

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mhagle's picture

I have been watching an Irish TV series, now posted on YouTube which addresses many of the Transition Town type issues. Everything I have seen so far is so informative, interesting, and encouraging.

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Marilyn

"Make dirt, not war." eyo

Gerrit's picture

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gulfgal98's picture

for sharing this link. We are starting to develop a library of sorts in this one thread. Good

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Gerrit's picture

ttt_logo_web.png

The residents of Transition Town Totnes work real hard at reorganizing their local economic framework away from how the capitalists organized the economy to make towns dependent, helpless, and feeders of local money to the financial centers. (You don't happen to think that your town got so fucked at random, do you?)

Totnes pushes for the town to become economically self-sufficient in the following two crucial areas: relocalization and resilience.

Here's how Rob Hoskins explains it.

Relocalisation - actively promotes the idea of going beyond the concept of ‘localism’. That is the devolving of political power to the local level; for example, as expressed in the coalition government’s ‘Big Society’ agenda. We work towards 'localization’; seeing the meeting of our core needs locally (food, building materials, energy...) as offering huge potential to our local economies, while also reducing oil vulnerability and carbon emissions.

Resilience - in Transition terms goes beyond the accepted idea of resilience as being about ability to adapt to shocks, instead seeing it is a desired state; the rebuilding of which could be hugely economically advantageous to our local communities.

In practice, Transition works by inviting people to take ownership of the process; by not claiming to have all the answers but encouraging creativity, and by building networks with other organisations. It is based on the model of ‘project support’, that is that the role of Transition is to catalyse and support, rather than to hold and manage a wide range of projects. An essential part of the Transition method is visioning. We believe in a positive vision of the future and work to make it real.

Totnes calls this work "REconomy." Very cool, that. One of the key planks in Reconomizing their local economy is their Local Economic Blueprint.

http://reconomycentre.org/home/economic-blueprint/

As an essential part of evidence gathering for this REconomy work, we have been working for some time on the Local Economic Blueprint project for Totnes and District.

Based on public data, we have estimated the potential value of four key sectors of our localised economy, and built a coalition of partners to turn these opportunities into reality. Together we agreed a vision for what our local economy should be and have identified some activities and projects that will take this work forward.

Here are a few findings, profiling the potential of the four key sectors we have worked on so far – food, retrofit, renewable energy and care and health.

Here are the slide show images that summarizes the four key sectors of the Totnes local economy.
Totnes Local Economic Blueprint.jpg

Totnes RE Food & Drink.jpg

Totnes RE Energy Efficiency.jpg

Totnes RE Renew Energy.jpg

Totnes Re Care and Health.jpg

Whaddayathink? :=)

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OLinda's picture

Greenwald compiled this nicely for us:

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Gerrit's picture

ttt_logo_web.png

I'd like to show you the Totnes Food-Link Programme. It keeps money local and grows the local economy through creating links between town residents and the food producers in a 30 km radius. They way things used to be before the capitalists destroyed local economies.

But before that, here is a screenshot of the Totnes Food Group. The Food-link programme is only ONE of the Food Group's projects!
Totness Food Group screenshot.jpg

w00t!

OK, the Food-Link Project

Totnes food-link.png
http://www.transitiontowntotnes.org/groups/food-group/food-link-project/

The Totnes Ffood linkood-Link project seeks to strengthen the links between local producers (within a 30 mile radius of the town), and retailers and restaurants within the town, building confidence and loyalty between both parties. We are always looking for new volunteers to get involved with all areas of the project.

The project was previously coordinated by Holly Tiffen, who has now moved on to manage Grown In Totnes. Food-Link is now being managed by Myrtle Cooper who will build on the strong networks developed over the past few years, to bring together local farmers, food processors and retailers to strengthen local food business connections, creating a stronger enabling environment for local food to be traded in our community.

£30 million is spent annually on food and drink, of which just one third is spent in the 60+ vibrant independent food shops in and around Totnes. By encouraging people to shift juts 10% of their weekly food spent to independent food shops we could bring £2 million to boost our local economy.

So moving forwards the Food-Link will be running a campaign in partnership with Grown in Totnes to encourage people in and around Totnes to shift a small proportion of their weekly food spend to local independent food shops and product. We'll be running a creative, visual and engaging series of events and activities locally.

Food businesses in and around Totnes have also told us they want to see a distinctive brand to increase the visibility of local food products so we’ll be developing one in 2016.

If you are interested in getting involved in any part of the Food-Link projects please get in touch with Myrtle – 01803 867358 or email myrtle@transitiontowntotnes.org

Whaddayathink? :=)

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pfiore8's picture

12963588_1348248545202246_9202658450206024209_n.jpg

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“There are moments which are not calculable, and cannot be assessed in words; they live on in the solution of memory… ”
― Lawrence Durrell, "Justine"

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