http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KprenYfqUbc&feature=related
peakmoment |
September 06, 2007
Peak Moment 75:
Michelle Long shows us how a highly successful local independent
business network has transformed Bellingham, WA, while inspiring other
communities. From an initial "Think Local First" program,
they have expanded to business peer mentoring, and support for local
food producers, sustainable buildings, and green energy. An astounding
sixty percent of their community are not only aware of the "Think
Local, Buy Local, Be Local" campaign but have changed buying
habits as well.
www.sustainableconnections.org
Category:
Sustainable
Connections Bellingham Washington
What We Do,
Values & History
http://sustainableconnections.org/news/video
Vision:
We envision a
thriving, collaborative community in which local businesses are
prosperous and contribute to a healthy environment and the well-being
of all citizens.
Mission:
To be the local
forum where businesses come together to transform and model an economy
built on sustainable practices.
We work with local, independently owned businesses that have the
autonomy to make any transformational change in their business that
they can imagineŠ reexamining where we buy goods and services, how
we consume energy, grow and distribute our food, build homes, and
even, how we define success in business. Sustainable Connections
is supporting a community of innovators in green building, sustainable
agriculture, renewable energy, supporting independent businesses in
town centers, and mentoring a new breed of entrepreneurs that have
designed their business with a sustainable vision.
Core
Competencies
As a non-profit
network of local, independently owned Whatcom County businesses and
supporters, we facilitate sustainable economic development by
providing:
?
Education: Facilitating technical assistance for
businesses and government that builds our community's capacity to
participate in the opportunities of a sustainable economy
?
Connections: Connecting businesses to each other, and to
the marketplace
? Market
Development: Engaging in promotion and market development that
opens opportunities for sustainable economy businesses
Guiding
Principles
?
Place-based: We align with the quote - "find your place in
the world, dig in, and take responsibility from there."
? We're all
on a path: We meet businesses where they are, and help them make
progress with specific, measurable solutions.
? We lead
by example: We say what we're for, not what we're against.
? Humility:
We believe in continuous learning and open minds.
? Bias for
action: There is not one solution, there are thousands, hundreds of
thousands, so we do something well, then something else, then
something else....
?
Make it a
better party: People
want to be happy.
? Convene
the right people: We work with decision makers. We also recognize that
relationships are what best motivate people to take action.
? Be
solution oriented: We develop specific, practical solutions that are
useful across multiple businesses.
? Form
powerful partnerships: we recognize that we are one part of the
puzzle, and we honor and support powerful partnerships.
? Cultivate
a can-do attitude: Creative and positive delivery of our solution
messages.
?
Measure results: We frequently ask our members, our
participants, and the community whether we are having our intended
impact and how to be better.
? Create a
ripple effect: Good ideas spread fast. We document what we do so that
others can take advantage of what we are discovering.
History
Whatcom County
has a long, rich history of community and business innovation from a
wide variety of organizations and volunteer initiatives. Building on
this momentum, in early 2002 a small group of local business owners
surveyed other Whatcom business owners; they found demand for the idea
of forming a network of place-based businesses that could support each
other toward a shared vision of a sustainable local economy. In April
2002, Sustainable Connections signed up its first business member with
early programs that focused on connecting values-aligned businesses,
and taking individual steps - "pledges" - to improve the
sustainability of member businesses. The approach was based on the
principle of reciprocity. The goal was to support local business
owners with their stewardship of our place, and in turn, ask our
community to support them.
At almost the same
time, Business
Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE), was forming with a mission to catalyze,
strengthen, and connect local business networks focused on building
local living economies. Leaders from each group brought their ideas
together. During the first two start-up years of both organizations,
BALLE and Sustainable Connections operated independently out of the
same Bellingham office with Michelle and Derek Long as shared
leadership staff to both organizations.
Today, 7.5 years later, Sustainable Connections has grown to 650+
local, independently owned business members, a team of twelve staff,
an Advisory Board of local community and government leaders, a Board
of Directors of business owners and community leaders, and an annual
budget nearing $1m/year. Our members have led Bellingham in becoming
the nation's top EPA-certified green power community (2008), a leader
in green building, in fostering hundreds of new relationships between
farmers and food-buyers, and in shifting the purchasing behavior of 3
in 5 households toward choosing independent retailers and services
whenever possible. In 2009, The National Resources Defense Council
named Bellingham the #1 small City in urban progress toward
sustainability in the nation. BALLE, now headquartered next door to
Sustainable Connections has grown to 75 networks in North America with
no sign of slowing down (Michelle Long is their executive director),
and Sustainable Connections, one of BALLE's largest and most
successful networks, is recognized as a model.
.