Gavin Raders

At the USSF2010 Mandela Marketplace‘s Quinton Sankofa and James Berk of Mandela Foods Cooperative presented to a workshop hosted by Permaculture.coop called Pathways to Sustainable Self-Governance. Other presenters included Gavin Raders of Planting Justice and Mike Leung of Worker Cooperative Credit Union.

Organised and facilitated by Kirstie Stramler, filmed by Patrick O’Conner for permaculture.coop


History of West Oakland and background for Mandela Marketplace & Mandela Foods Coop
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Quinton Sankofa explains the history of West Oakland and the context for the Mandela Marketplace.

West Oakland Today and the context of Mandela Marketplace
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James Berk and Quinton Sankofa describe West Oakland today and the context for the Mandela Foods Cooperative and Mandela Marketplace.

Challenges for Mandela Marketplace & Mandela Foods Coop
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James Berk and Quinton Sankofa describe CHALLENGES of the Mandela Foods Cooperative and Mandela Marketplace.

Community-led and controlled development
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Quinton Sankofa explains the Mandela Marketplace alternative for community-led or community controlled development

Successes
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James Berk and Quinton Sankofa describe SUCCESSES of the Mandela Foods Cooperative and Mandela Marketplace.

Financing Worker Cooperatives
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Quiton Sankofa describes some of the realities of financing worker cooperatives, Mike Leung of the pre-start Worker Cooperative Credit Union also describes the national situation and the exception Arizmendi Association of Coops

The upcoming Los Angeles Arboretum Permaculture Design Course will be the first ever taught there.  Flyer Credit:  Caitlin Bergman

Course dates are 8 Saturdays, Oct 2 – Nov20, and & 1 Sunday, Nov 21.   The first 8 days of the course will be held in the facilities and on the grounds of the Los Angeles Arboretum, and the final day of the course will be held at the Los Angeles Eco-Village.

Because the traditional PDC format does not optimally serve student availability and future needs, we have modified the PDC format in numerous ways, among them:

  • we scheduled it for weekend days only, so working Americans don’t have to devote their entire annual vacation to it;
  • we infuse community-building throughout the course, rather than the usual nod it gets on the final day;
  • we incorporate daily hands-on exercises to reinforce the intellectual experience with the skills students require;
  • we follow Dave Jacke’s cyclical structure, in acknowledgement that circadian rhythms delimit learning dynamics;
  • we introduce topics with scientific rigor (including references to the scientific literature);
  • we utilize a guest-teacher/speaker-series format to augment our expertise on numerous topics.

Organizing Team:  Botanist Caitlin Bergman (lead), Atmospheric Scientist Kirstie Stramler, and Fluvial Geomorphology student Owen Hablutzel.

Course Website: http://saypermaculture.com/pdc-permaculture-design-course/

Guest Teachers:

*         Warren Brush (Quail Springs, True Nature Design)
*         Howard Yana-Shapiro, Phd. (Mars Inc., World Agroforestry Center)
*         Lois Arkin (Los Angeles Eco-Village, Global Village Institute)
*         Wes Roe and Margie Bushman (Santa Barbara Permaculture Network)
*         Owen Hablutzel (Permaculture Research Institute USA)
*         Kirstie Stamler (Permaculture.TV)
*         Lindsay Dailey (Villa Sobrante, Earth Repair)
*         Gavin Raders (Planting Justice)
*         Neil Bertrando (Radiant Tortoise Permaculture, Great Basin Institute)
*         Dave Fortson (LOA Tree)
*         Caitlin Bergman (Say Permaculture)

There are some amazing folks signed up for our course; we’re excited and honored to be able to empower the next generation of the Los Angeles Permaculture scene!   The course is nearly at capacity, because we’ve capped enrollment to keep the student/instructor ratio low, so if you want to join our crew, call or email today!        Jill.Berry@Arboretum.org    626.821.4624


New videos uploaded from Pathways to Sustainable Self Governance, the Detroit USSF2010 workshop organized by Permaculture TV.   Excerpt from workshop description:

This workshop outlines a vision for a democratic, worker-owned, advanced industrial ecology society. We seek pathways to provide the burgeoning food education/justice movement with the tools to become economically sustainable, and to link the emerging green industrial worker cooperatives with them into sovereign networks. Once active, such networks can become the basis for sustainable, socially just communities that revitalize locales via open source sustainable agriculture and manufacturing methods. Our panel — with academic, commercial, and school of hard knocks experience — will frame the demonstrated solutions, numerous pieces of the puzzle that we as a society need to put together.

Gavin Raders explains how, where, and to what effect Planting Justice implements their ecologically sound and socially just philosophy.   Videos below include a 30-second excerpt on the utility of city waste streams, followed by 6 sequential videos that comprise Gavin’s presentation at our USSF 2010 workshop.  Great stuff!

Espousing and embodying the Permaculture meme, “the problem is the solution”. Gavin Raders on the utility of city waste streams: http://www.vimeo.com/13797340  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Introduction. Planting Justice (guiding principles) combines grassroots organizing with Permaculture to simultaneously address the food, economic, ecological, knowledge, and non-profit crises: http://www.vimeo.com/13797422  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Permaculture, “just a word until it is put into practice”. In 1.5 years, Planting Justice has installed 60 permaculture gardens in homes, schools, affordable housing complexes, community centers, and at San Quentin Correctional Facility. Gavin encourages us to just get started, and advocates using their open-source resources, e.g. those available at http://plantingjustice.org/resources/sample-designs : http://www.vimeo.com/13797559  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Implementing the Permaculture meme, “stacking functions” in an economic sense. Gavin describes how Planting Justice (programs) enacts a Permaculture Business Model: http://www.vimeo.com/13797656  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Projects. Optimal locales for installations with maximum benefit are institutions such as churches and community centers, which have the dual advantages of already being social meeting places and of owning land.  Gavin describes how the learning process is often mutual, as Planting Justice (projects) facilitates installations at a local middle school, at San Quentin Prison, and at affordable housing complexes: http://www.vimeo.com/13797759  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Why City Permaculture?  Planting Justice embodies the Permaculture philosophy “the problem is the solution“.  Gavin Raders quotes Grace Lee Boggs “crises are opportunities“, and explains how advantageous cities waste streams can be when pollution is simply treated as mis-placed nutrients: http://www.vimeo.com/13797848  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

Conclusion. Gavin Raders of Planting Justice encourages us to replicate their efforts, and to build sustainable and regenerative businesses off of the waste streams of cities.  Check their website for free educational workshops upcoming at their Oakland space: http://www.vimeo.com/13797924  Video Credit:  Patrick O’Connor of Oakland Sol

** Up next in this series: USSF 2010 videos of Quinton Sankofa and James Berk of Mandela Marketplace and Mandela Foods **

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