Kick some goals for the people

As the former Chair of Supporters Direct, football and fan-ownership is close to my heart. As current president of the global peak body for co-operatives, I welcomed Matthew Engel’s inciteful article (Billionaires toy with the beautiful game, 23 Nov 2012) on the perils of ownership by the few to the detriment of the many. In the last days of the UN’s International Year of Co-operatives it is timely to reflect on the overwhelming commercial and social case for community investment in our treasured football league. Time at last to kick a few goals for the fans not just the billionaires don’t you think?

“Unlike many other development programmes …

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“Unlike many other development programmes, these co-operative associations survive once development aid wanes. That’s a critical nature of the sustainability of our business model” Watch UN IYC Closing event press conference

“We want to see co-ops rise

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“We want to see co-operatives rise to the top of global business as the fastest growing business model by 2020. Our strategy is for the co-operative model to become the acknowledged leader in economic, social and environmental sustainability and therefore the model preferred by people. And as a result of this to become the fastest growing form of enterprise.” http://socialenterprise.guardian.co.uk/social-enterprise-network/2012/oct/31/co-operative-2020-target-dame-pauline-green

 

From the cradle to the co-op

Imola, Bologna, some say, is the cradle of the co-operative movement in Italy. And, how so when it has produced so many outstanding co-op ‘offspring’. On my visit there I was treated to an IYC event and meeting in the lovely town centre of this co-operative hub in northern Italy. It was a really strong turn out with local parliamentarians, lots of co-operators, and a truly co-operative local Mayor who made a cracking speech about the contribution of the co-operative economy to Imola, and how the principles and values that bind the global movement are so in tune with Imola’s strong sense of local community cohesion. This is a community imbued with a long tradition of co-operative industry. The next day I saw some of it, staring with a memorable visit to Ceramica d’Imola, a first for me – a long established ceramics co-op. I saw some beautiful ceramic artwork stretching over decades. I watched the plates, vases and pots being hand painted by fine craftsmen and women, as well as some delightful and imaginative displays of modern ceramic wall and floor coverings – at the leading edge of ceramic technology (are there any other ceramic co-ops out there? I don’t know of any and these are being sold worldwide).

I was reminded of my early co-op career when I toured CLAI, a co-op producing high quality meat products, especially a variety of excellent salamis and hams.

ImageWhy is it that these protective clothes look so much better on men?

I saw the meat from butchery through to the drying and curing rooms. My ‘thumbs up’ testifies to the quality of the product at this stage, and I should know! As a Co-operative sponsored Member of the European Parliament for ten years, I was responsible for steering the food hygiene directive through the European Parliament, and my co-op background with the UK’s largest retail co-op helped me to ask the right questions and amend the legislation to protect European consumers.

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I was lucky to try some of the great CLAI finished products at a great buffet lunch – look out for their products at your local delicatessen.

Then for something completely different: a ground breaking new energy efficient nursery school. It was rest time for the children when I first arrived, but there is a wow factor to this place with everything about it, from materials to energy usage, from lighting to design, designed to maximise ecologically friendly facilities and energy efficiency – loved it and the pride of the nursery staff was infectious. The sleepy, little faces I saw emerging from the rest rooms are lucky indeed if this is the shape of things to come, and a tribute to an innovative municipality as well as a great co-op.

Having thought I had seen the best in co-op practice that this town has to offer, I was just blown away by my visit to SACMI, a co-op started by nine mechanics 90 years ago. It is now Italy’s largest manufacturing worker co-op, and sells its products in more than 85 countries. It grew out of the needs of Imola’s ceramics industry for presses for ceramic products. It now has two main products – giant ceramic presses, custom made at this huge manufacturing site for the ceramic industry around the world; conversely, it also produces the manufacturing plant used to produce some of the smallest plastic parts – the bottle tops that sell by the millions around the world. Just about every bottle cap that you twist off has been manufactured on a SACMI machine. I have never seen a worker co-op of this size and global impact – a €2.4 billion turnover business of exceptional quality and still driven by, and very proud of its co-op heritage. What a stimulating day. Northern Italy gave the world the model for social care co-ops; it has given us a lot more too.