The
Sustainable Economies Law Center Wants to Help You
Share
Janelle
Orsi's Sustainable Economies Law Center seeks to promote a more humane
economy.
By Bernice Yeung
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/ebx/the-sustainable-economies-law-center-wants-to-help-you-share/Content?oid=1878987
Berkeley
attorney
Janelle Orsi is
the co-founder of the Sustainable Economies Law Center (SELC), which aims to help
social enterprises, worker-owned co-ops, and other mission-oriented
enterprises sort through legal red tape. The co-author of The Sharing
Solution, published by Nolo in 2009, Orsi also has a private
legal practice focused on mediation and helping people share housing,
cars, land, and other commodities. We talked to Orsi about the legal
gray areas that social entrepreneurs can find themselves in, and what
SELC is doing about them.
What is
sustainable economies law? Why did you create a center on this
topic?
Jenny
Kassan and I
founded SELC so we could start to enable a different kind of economy.
[Editor's Note: Jenny Kassan is a contributor to this publication.]
The economy that we envisioned is not so much based on traditional
buying and selling and the owning of things, but more on new kinds of
transactions like sharing and barter, exchange, cooperative ownership,
systems of borrowing, and lending of goods. These are things that -
because people are not used to doing them and they're not a part of
our normal livelihoods - the legal system is not set up for them,
and there are a realm of unanswered questions.
What is
SELC currently working on?
We now have four law-student interns with us all summer and we are
doing a few different things. We're creating a library of resources
for urban agriculture, and answering common legal questions for people
doing urban ag - for example, how to get land, how to overcome
zoning barriers, how to deal with liability issues and insurance,
whether there can be property tax incentives for growing in urban
areas, how you can sell food you grow in your yard, how a for-profit
urban farm can use volunteer labor because they often do but it often
violates labor law. We've taken on a few clients, and a handful of
organizations that do urban farming have come in for
consultations.
What
other issues does SELC work on?
We have five programs. Another program involves helping set up
worker-owned cooperatives. We also have a program called
Community-Supported Entrepreneurship that deals with questions like,
"How can a small, local business finance themselves using local
resources rather than venture capitalism or angel investors?" We
are creating a FAQ about how to raise money creatively for a small
business, and we are looking into ways that businesses can raise money
using gift certificates, or through a subscription to a farmer's
season of harvest, to use an urban ag example.
One thing that
Jenny and the interns did is write a letter to the Securities and Exchange
Commission
requesting an exemption from securities laws for investments under
$100. So say I wanted to start a coffee shop and I need $20,000 to get
it going, I could put the word out on the Internet or through friends
to get 200 people to invest $100. If the SEC responds positively to
our letter and allows small businesses to get small investments, it
could revolutionize how businesses raise money. And the people who
provide the funding would become investors and own a piece of the
business; they would have some equity in it. Right now, there are very
few exceptions that allow people to raise money in that way and in
order to do it, you have to go through a huge compliance hurdle that
involves lots of disclosures, and which costs a lot of
money.
The fourth program
deals with local currencies and barter. We're creating a how-to guide
to bartering because there are two legal issues. One is tax issues,
and knowing when you are and are not obligated to pay taxes on a
barter transaction. We're trying to develop guidelines for that. The
other legal issue is employment laws. If, for example, you work in
exchange for food, then under typical labor and employment laws, you
are technically considered an employee, even if you do it voluntarily.
The farm owner could be on the hook for not following employment
laws.
We are also
dealing with a gigantic question around local currencies and how to
regulate them. We have a client, Davis Dollars, where they've printed local currency for
the city of Davis, and they've gotten businesses on board with
accepting it. This gives people an incentive to spend locally and they
make the local currency cheaper than cash, so $10 Davis Dollars costs
$9.50. They are putting more money in circulation in a small way.
There are different legal issues - whether the administrators
qualify for tax exemption because they would like to be a nonprofit,
and whether this organization is technically a bank and should be
regulated like a bank. We are doing a survey of how currencies around
the world are structured and how they comply with regulations. We
haven't really found a good model yet for a local currency system.
This is a huge area that needs a lot of attention.
Our fifth program relates to housing. We call it the Shared,
Sustainable, and Slow Housing program, and we want to create more
resources to help develop affordable housing and create shared housing
arrangements. Hopefully, we can create a resource library on shared
housing.
What should
businesses doing this kind of work know that they might
not?
Most social
entrepreneurs are going to run up against interesting legal questions
because they are engaged in an activity that puts them in a legal gray
area, such as the gray area between who is the employer and who is the
employee when you're running a worker-owned co-op. There are a whole
list of gray areas for social enterprises because it falls into this
area of being a nonprofit and a for-profit. In many cases, people will
be okay because everyone is happy, and no one tries to bring a
lawsuit. But we do want people to do it legally and to be comfortable
doing it, and to not run into problems later on.
Is there a
reason you are doing this work now?
It feels like there's an explosion of people who are interested in
doing these things, partially because of the economy and because
people are realizing how much we are destroying the planet, and those
things are coming together, causing people to look at alternatives.
Urban ag is booming - you see it in the news constantly - and then
it feels like the local currencies and barter is starting to grow. And
there's the whole movement around social enterprise, and new, creative
business types have been created to deal with the big barrier related
to financing.
What is
your ultimate goal?
We want to create tools that will enable a more sustainable and just
and sharing alternative economy, and to get those resources out there
so that anybody and anyone can tap into these resources and get their
questions answered quickly. We'd also like to be more of a voice in
the policy-making realm, and identify how policy could be more
friendly to things like urban ag and shared housing.
What makes
you personally interested in looking at these issues?
It occurred to me that sharing is such a powerful thing because we
have this wealth of resources of housing, skills, cars, food,
household goods. It's just that the way resources are distributed and
used is very inefficient. So sharing makes sense. I formed my law
practice to enable people to share, and lot of what I do is help
people decide what kind of organization to form, if they want to
create one, to do that. I also help them formalize agreements to, for
example, share ownership of a house, and do it without violating the
law.
Originally, I
wanted to work with youth and become a juvenile defender, and I
thought I would fight for youth one at a time and keep them out of the
system. And then I realized that working in the community to provide
stable housing, work opportunities, learning opportunities, creating
organizations and alternative economic options is what is actually
going to keep them out of juvenile hall.
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July 01, 2010
Profits
with a Purpose
by Bernice Yeung
Last year, an
alternative-energy advocate approached Oakland lawyer Jenny Kassan
with an interesting predicament. The client had sought out Kassan
because her legal specialty is what she calls "sustainable
economies," an approach that helps social entrepreneurs and
mission-oriented community groups wade through transactional and
regulatory laws that were not designed with them in mind.
This particular client wanted
to equip a local school with solar panels that would eventually be
donated to the institution. But the solar enthusiast could neither
afford to install the panels himself nor solicit investments from the
public without running afoul of securities laws.
To get around this hitch,
Kassan, who works in the Katovich Law Group, devised a solution that
lets donors join a club that supports solar power for the school,
instead of having to invest in a company. "It's a different model
of how to bring money into a project up front," Kassan says. In
return for their contributions, the members receive benefits such as
discount coupons from local green businesses.
This kind of creative
approach to the law is the idea behind the Oaklandñbased Sustainable Economies Law Center
(SELC), which Kassan co-founded in December with Berkeley sole
practitioner Janelle Orsi.
Last month, the SELC brought
in its first class of law student interns to research and help
businesses address the legal barriers associated with altruistic
collaborative enterprises. Examples of such efforts include land
sharing for community gardens; business cooperatives; and
community-owned assets like solar panels. These kinds of enterprises
appear to be increasing, trade groups say, because sharing resources
is both economical and environmentally sound.
The SELC could see its niche
grow in relevance with the passage of two bills before the California
Legislature. This spring, legislation was introduced (AB 1871) that
would amend insurance laws to make it easier for people to lend their
vehicles to car-sharing pools.
Another bill (SB 1463) would
create "flexible-purpose corporations," which would allow
businesses to codify their intent to pursue social or environmental
good while also turning a profit.
For example, existing
California corporations could adopt the new model to formalize their
social mission and emphasize purpose over profits. "A corporate
board has a fiduciary duty to shareholders, and generally, what is
seen as in the best interest of the company is maximizing profits,"
explains Susan MacCormac, a partner with Morrison & Foerster who
helped create the model. "This would allow what is in the best
interest of a corporation to be broadly defined. It would give
companies broader discretion." And if a socially conscious
business is sold, its charitable way of doing business can be
preserved.
Organizations that may have
been founded as nonprofits could use the new structure to gain access
to capital markets. And nonprofits that happen to be drawing too much
revenue could convert to a flexible-purpose corporation to eliminate
potential tax and legal complications.
The SELC has been following
the legislation, and Kassan expects that the center will help
businesses and nonprofits convert to flexible-purpose entities if the
bill passes (a hearing on the legislation is slated for the
fall).
Until then, co-founder Orsi
says, the organization will continue to look for creative legal
work-arounds when counseling collaboration-oriented
clients.
"There are so many legal
barriers to something as simple as sharing a car," says Orsi, who
is also co-author of The Sharing Solution (Nolo, 2009).
"There are barriers to people sharing yard space in order to grow
food. So I decided to break down those barriers and sort those issues
out."