check out podcast of Woody Tasch's interview on Sustainable World
Radio
www.pdcastsusworldradio.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=440595
Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
presents
A Book-signing Event with
Woody Tasch
author of
Inquiries Into The Nature
of Slow Money
Investing as if Food,
Farms, and Fertility Mattered
7pm, Monday March 9, 2009, $5
Victoria Hall, Santa Barbara
" We've tried Casino Capitalism.....
Maybe it's time to try Nurture
Capitalism"
There is such a
thing as money that is too fast. Money that is too fast is money that
has become so detached from people, place, and the activities that it
is financing, that not even the experts understand it fully.
In his newly
published book, Inquiries Into The Nature of Slow Money,
Investing as if Food, Farms, and Fertility Mattered, published
by Chelsea Green www.chelseagreen.com , Woody Tasch examines the
idea of whether the world economy is going through a correction in the
credit markets, triggered by the sub-prime mortgage crisis, or
whether we are teetering on the edge of something much deeper.
He examines our current economy, tied to petro-dollars, derivatives,
hedge funds, futures, arbitrage, and a byzantine hyper-securitized
system of inter-mediation--- that no program trader, no speculator, no
investment bank CEO ---can any longer fully understand or manage.
Woody Tasch proposes we bring money back down
to earth. A long-term venture capitalist and entrepreneur,
Tasch knows Wall Street and is putting that experience to work to
create a different model of venture capital through a newly formed NGO
and movement called Slow Money, which will invest in
companies that build natural and social capital as well as
financial capital.
The Slow Money movement has two parts--- an NGO
(non-government organization) where a series of workshops held around
the country bring together stakeholders to talk about how they would
invest slow money in their region, and a Fund side, coming to market
in 2009, to raise $50-100 million to initiate a series of regional
Slow Money venture funds . Scrutinizing where we are in history,
Tasch believes we have to behave differently if we want to survive, by
nurturing markets that don't require unlimited growth---growth
that goes beyond the limits of natural and social capital. Tasch
suggests we need to move from capital markets based on consumption
and extraction to capital markets based on restoration and
preservation. Slow Money could be the connection back to Main
street that Wall street needs. Slow money, according to Tasch, is
Nurture Capital.
Woody Tasch is
Chairman of Investors' Circle ( www.investorscircle.net) , a
national non-profit network of investors dedicated to "Patient
Capital for a Sustainable Future." Since 1992,
Investors' Circle has facilitated the flow of over $130 million to
over 200 sustainability-minded early-stage companies and venture
funds, including over $25 million to 42 food companies. He is Chairman
and President of the newly formed NGO, Slow Money, an intermediary
dedicated to catalyzing the flow of capital to enterprises that
support soil fertility and local food communities. Woody has worked as
an entrepreneur, venture capitalist, board member and consultant with
many organizations including CERES (the Coalition for Environmentally
Responsible Economies), National Mentor, Greenway, Northwest Area
Foundation, CIMMYT (the International Maize and Wheat Improvement
Center) and The Farmers Diner. He is a frequent speaker at various
socially responsible business and sustainable agriculture venues
If you are questioning
the role of money in building a vibrant healthy Community and local
economy you should attend-
The event takes place on Monday, March 9, 2009, 7pm at
Victoria Hall Theater, 33 West Victoria St, Santa Barbara. Cost $5, no
reservations needed. The event is presented by the Santa Barbara
Permaculture Network NonProfit. For more information, (805) 962-2571,
margie@sbpermaculture.org,
www.sbpermaculture.org.
Co-sponsors:
Permaculture Credit Union www.pcuonline.org
Christie Communications www.christiecomm.com
Johnny Sacko <johnnysacko@mac.com>
Santa Barbara City College Center for Sustainability
http://sustainability.sbcc.edu
Slow Food Santa Barbara
www.slowfoodsantabarbara.org
UCSB Office of Sustainability http://sustainability.ucsb.edu/
Quail Springs Learning Oasis & Permaculture Farm
www.quailsprings.org
Santa Barbara Skills and People Resource Directory ~ and Green and
Local Pages
www.sblocal.org/
Owen E. Dell, landscape architect & contractor
www.owendell.com (author of newly published book
Sustainable
Landscaping for Dummies)
Island Seed& Feed Nursery www.islandseed.com
Hopedance Media www.hopedance.org
Isla Vista Coop www.islavistafood.coop
Surfrider Foundation, Santa Barbara Chapter
www.surfrider.org/santabarbara/
Fund for Santa Barbara
www.fundforsantabarbara.org
Edible Gardens Seed Company
www.ediblegardens.com
Media
Sustainable World Radio www.sustainableworldradio.com
Common Good Media
Barbara Wishingrad Webperson
ChelseaGreenTV Woody Tasch
www.chelseagreen.com/tv/episode/1541700/
Woody Tasch, author of Inquiries into the Nature of Slow
Money, discusses a new approach to Money. Woody Tasch is
the chairman and CEO of Investors' Cirlce--a network of over 200 angel
investors, professional venture capitalists, foundations, family
offices and others who are using private capital to promote the
transition to a sustainable economy.
*Friday, Feb 27, 9-10am Sustainable World Radio on KCSB 91.9
FM PST and streaming live on www.kcsb.org. Also found
on www.sustainableworldradio.com, later in the
month
Interview with Woody Tasch, author of Inquiries into the Nature
of Slow Money, Investing as if Food, Farms, and Fertility Mattered by
Woody Tasch, book forward by Carlo Petrini
(Chelsa Green Book) with Host Jill Cloutier and Wes Roe of the Santa
Barbara Permaculture Network and Board member for 8 years of the
Permaculture Credit Union www.pcuonline.org one of the 10 Top Green
Lending Institutions in USA and the PCU pioneered the Sustainable
Discount Loans Programs in USA
-end -
Santa Barbara Permaculture
Network
an educational
non-profit since 2000
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
www.sbpermaculture.org
"We are like trees,
we must create new leaves, in new directions, in order to grow."
- Anonymous
First Annual Southern
California Permaculture Convergence August 2008
http://socalifornia.permacultureconvergence.org