31/01/2011

FEDERAL RESERVE - a total money scam


Watch full video on googlevideos.

Plugging the Leaks - Website

Local Economy development as if people and the planet mattered.

Plugging the Leaks was created to support people in communities to take a different approach to local economic development, one that can have a greater, more sustainable impact on their local economies than traditional regeneration initiatives.

Plugging the Leaks goes further than simply getting more money into the local economy through tourism, inward investment or funding. It re-generates the local economy from within, and takes advantage of the resources that a community already possesses.

LINK 

28/01/2011

Event Planning Meeting - Announcment

To arrange the next meeting please fill in doodle via the link below to give you availability so I can find a date for the next meeting. Please complete by 2pm on Monday 31st January.

http://www.doodle.com/mieaqsxse2tshi35?newDesign=true
(Instructions for filling in a doodle: Click on the link above, fill in your name in the blank space provided on the far column on left, then scroll across the row ticking all the times and dates you are able to attend a meeting, once this is done click 'save' button underneath chart.)

This is an interesting post about transition currency online banking
http://www.transitionnetwork.org/blogs/josh-ryan-collins/2010-11/transition-currency-20-online-banking-system-local-money

This is an interesting article by Chris Martenson about how the bank might change the rules instead of admiting their bad debt.
http://www.chrismartenson.com/blog/dont-worry-theyll-just-change-rules/50568

Meeting Minutes - 27/01/11

Edinburgh Local Currency Working Group Meeting Minutes
Thursday 27th January 2011, Edinburgh Uni Library Cafe

Minutes document

25/01/2011

Local Economy - Council Sponsor

Eva has contacted the Council about this project and they have agreed to sponsor us to run an event in the spring. Jonathan Dawson from Findhorn believes that we should look to develop the local economy and a local currency is a mechanism to support to do this (see the Minutes for more details). So I think Thursday's meeting should focus on how to run this event. Looking past this I think we should think about launching a pilot local currency for 3 months involving only those shops and organisation that support this idea and don't need arm twisting.

Also the link below is to an interesting 9 min video titled the day after the dollar crashes:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hS2HfjR9oPM

13/01/2011

Edinburgh Alternative Currency Models Event

The aim of the event is to run through the different alternative currency models that currently exist in Edinburgh and hear what other options there are. We would ask each speaker to explain how their model works and the pros and cons. The ideal outcome of the event would be the formation of a group to look at taking alternative currency ideas forward.

What alternative currency models exist: (see doc)

Local Economy Day Program

Start with Speaker to explain why alternative currency models are a good idea, ie the benefits of local currencies especially in the current economic environment. Then have speakers from the local LETS and Time Bank schemes to explain their projects. We could also invite Greener Leith to speak on their We love Leith bonus bag http://www.greenerleith.org/a-z/s-is-for/shop-local-shop-smart.html and the potential to extent this projects from 10% discount with the bag in 25 shops in Leith to the rest of the city. Could possibly invite Peter North to bridge from these to local paper currencies. Next we could have speakers from relevant local currency projects (so focus on inviting speakers from Scottish and urban local currencies first):

· Jonathan Dawson or Alex Walker, Findhorn, Eko currency
· Transition Town Brixton, Brixton Pound
· Andy Maybury, Greener/Transition Town Hawick, Hawick Pound
· Lewis Pound, Post-Grad student
Could also invite a speaker from the new economic foundation, ideally someone involved with the Brixton Pound.

Could also invite speakers from local no interest or coop banks/credit unions:
· Capital Credit Union, Wendy Reid, Vice Chair, at wendy@dtascot.org.uk - http://www.capitalcreditunion.com/
· Craigmillar Credit Union, Cllr Maureen Child - http://www.craigmillarcreditunion.co.uk/

What is needed to take this idea forward:
· need to form a group of people to plan the event - done
· find out if there is any potential funding available - ?
· prepare program, invite speakers – need to agree on event program, then invite relevant speakers, it is likely we will need to cover speakers expenses
· book a venue possible options - St George’s West Church, CafĂ© Camino, MECOPP Room Hire, Pollock Halls, Quaker Meeting House (Victoria Terrace) and the Augustine Church (George IV Bridge), other idea?
· publicise the event – big question here on how much work we do in advertising it. Minimum would be out in email newsletters etc, posters and in the press. Maximum would be do this and contact all independent shops in Edinburgh and invite the owners explaining the benefits of a local currency, also invite relevant people from the Council and from the Chamber of Commerce.
· run the event on the day
· hopefully meet regularly after the event to take ideas forward and maybe form a Business and Livelihoods Group

Full paper here

09/01/2011

Meeting Minutes - 08/01/11

Adam explained what had been discussed at the first meeting – the group wanted to organise an event to discuss if and how a local currency could be set up in Edinburgh. That Eva has explained our plans to the Council and they have offered to sponsor the group to run and event in the City Chambers.

Eva described her conversation with Alexis Rowell – it is important not to give the Council the impression that this is going to be a massive success straight away, it is more like a community experiment and have to see where it goes. He thinks that most traders will stick with a local currency for 3 months and then lose interest. So his advice is to start small with committed organisations such as social enterprises that ideally trade with each other.

Jonathan Dawson who set up the Eko local currency at the Findhorn Foundation (FH) spoke to the meeting. Most community currencies do not involve a paper currency but are LETS or TimeBanking schemes. The real question is what are a community’s needs and what is its spare capacity, and how to link them up. There are currently lots of young unemployed that the market system says have no value but there is lots to do – help the old, young, mothers etc. TimeBanking is a mechanism to bring the time rich but financially poor together. Community supported agriculture (CSA) schemes are also good, where the community tell a farmer what they want and commit to buying it then the farmer provides it.

Findhorn had a LETS scheme but there was a lack of practical skills and moved onto the Eko. Money needs no ethical motivation as people can just spend it. On third issue of the Eko and fourth will be out later in 2011. FH have been thinking about delinking from sterling. BerkShares has a plan to delink from the dollar on the day the dollar collapses. There are 18,000 Ekos in circulation. They guessed at the amount to lubricate the local economy and got it about right. The Eko is backed by Sterling, but not in Ithaca in the US, which is on trust. The Sterling in the bank is used to make no interest loans to local businesses. For the tax man, if Jonathan spends 100 Ekos then puts on his tax return that he spent £100.

Benefits of the Eko:

1. Creates a loan fund for community enterprises

2. Businesses now pay each other with the Eko rather than bank transfers so savings of several thousands in bank charges

3. Dividend from leakage (Eko notes falling out of circulation) – are area reissue of the Eko 10% of the notes don’t come back

4. It increases business and community resilience
Even in FH people forget to use the Eko notes. The next issue will have a 5% discount for shoppers to encourage them to use it – based on the Berkshares incentive. FH produces its own electricity so people that live on the park can use Ekos to buy electricity. The Holy Grail is when the local government start receiving and issuing the local currency.

Local currencies are also a real statement to people that have busy lives, they take notice. It is also a flag to rally the troop around and give them pride. Anyone can use a local currency, they don’t need convictions.

This working group is planning on organising a Local Economy Day in the spring and Jonathan was asked for advice on how to run the day. He thinks it is really important that we identify people that share our interests in strengthen the local economy/setting up a local currency, in the different communities we want to work with on this, such as the shop keeping community and also at the Council, and work with them to promote the idea. He suggested a friendly chat with those sympathetic to our ideas in the Council.

FH has a Local Economy Day on February 8th (details here http://www.cifalfindhorn.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=164:revitalising-local-economies&catid=1:training-programmes) and Jonathan invited someone from the group to attend and offered accommodation.

Justin suggested that once we have identified the business we want to bring into the local currency scheme that we have a link person to keep them informed. Will suggested we work with the traders associations and could invite them to have a market place at the beginning of our event so they sell goods on the day and find out about the idea.

Eva clarified that Jonathan was talking about two ideas – one to identify all the needs and spare capacity in Edinburgh and try to link up or try to strengthen the local economy with LETS, TimeBanking or a local currency. She thought that the first idea was a big project and probably needs to be done by local groups in their area.

Another idea was that we have one Edinburgh currency but each area have notes specific to their area with local photos etc.

The group agreed that it would be really useful to map those organisations that might be interested in the local currency idea. Benny explained that the SEED group have made a start on this. Someone thought that Lucus Layman has already done this.

ACTION: Eva/Benny will contact Lucas to find out.

ACTION: the group agreed to think about relevant organisations and either fill in the google map or send ideas to Benny/Adam.

The group discussed other groups that should be involved: rotary clubs; Scottish Community Enterprise; ethnic communities; cafes/coffee shops; housing associations.

The group discussed what kind of event to run with the Council but nothing was agreed.

NEXT MEETING DATE:

Thursday 27th January 1900-2100, Edinburgh Uni Library Cafe