[-] kirk@midwest.social 2 points 2 days ago

Merci beaucoup, this is quite helpful! If we are successful then these will be good problems to tackle down the road. The CDI/CDD thing is something that seems to be quite a bit divide in France (have only lived here 3 years so still getting used to it).

[-] kirk@midwest.social 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I think there are ways you could provide financing/loan money with defined terms and/or interest rates, so the co-op has debt in your name with a defined risk/reward structure. If you're successful and new members join, there is simply debt in your name in the balance sheet still. At a risk/reward level that hopefully everything thinks is appropriate.

I think entrepreneurship and financing mechanisms can be decoupled from capitalism. In addition to your money being put at risk, it is your time and labor after all at the beginning, and it's not compensated at that time. You could record your hours in setting everything up, it's effectively back wages IMO.

Edit: ofc entrepreneurship and financing methods have existed well before modern capitalism, my point remains!

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 3 days ago

Curious more about what you learned from your SCOP experience; I'm actually in the process of setting one up with a colleague and would love to hear any tips you have! In terms of culture, things to avoid or lean in to, etc. Merci en avance :)

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 3 days ago

Yes agreed, ESOP-to-co-op requires a big shift in power away from the top and against the managerial class's interest, which is hard to pull off. More often I've seen the family-owned or conventional corporation get converted to ESOP or worker co-op when the family retires or the company is in financial difficulty. A French glass company just did the latter

[-] kirk@midwest.social 4 points 3 days ago

Yes, big fan of Mondragon here, though I've heard they've taken some criticism for outsourcing some of their processes to non-cooperatives with poorer working conditions (perhaps in Mexico, might be wrong). But that aside I'm a big fan and suggest to anyone not familiar to read up on them!

[-] kirk@midwest.social 26 points 3 days ago

To me it sounds like you might be describing more of (in the US context) a company with an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) rather than say, a worker cooperative? (which can both be considered employee-owned but with very different contexts)

There is a wide range of possible structures/bylaws/statues for employee ownership that depends on the local regulations as well as the discretion of the employees with voting rights. For example, worker co-ops in France (SCOPs) can allow for external investors (capped to a certain % of equity, no voting rights), a voting system where one worker = one vote (independent of ownership %), require a fixed % of profit to be reinvested to the company's reserves before any profit sharing, etc.

I also would prefer to work at an employee-owned enterprise but to me it boils down to the culture of the people working there, independent of the chosen legal form and/or that imposed by the state. The workers can decide to do things in a capitalistic way or not, the legal form and bylaws are there to help prevent major abuse but if people want to act in a rent-seeking way, they're gonna find a way to do it, IMO.

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 1 month ago

+1 for finding a good used option then upgrading if you want to later!

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 1 month ago

I personally didn't like my gravel bike/drop bars for commuting or any mildly chunky off-road (maybe it wasn't a good fit for me, but I didn't like being so far forward - poor visibility and uncomfortable, and I wasn't racing). I second larger tires (and ability to run low pressures with them for comfort).

Check out adventure/all-terrain bikes for some of that mixed terrain practical use. An Italian brand makes one that your local shop may stock? https://www.cinelli-milano.com/collections/adventure/products/hobootleg-microshift

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 1 month ago

I'd suggest playing around with different route profiles for your commute on https://bikerouter.de/ (based on Brouter), like "Safest" or "Minimal Traffic", I've had success with finding calmer routes using this tool. Can make your commute much more relaxing too!

[-] kirk@midwest.social 3 points 2 months ago

Yes, just haven't seen any good used ones near me and not sure which one to buy! I'm a big fan of trailers for hauling stuff in town too.

[-] kirk@midwest.social 6 points 2 months ago

Hey, thank you fellow kirk! 🖖

22
My N=1 SUV (midwest.social)

cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/29115624

Black bicyle leaning on a trail signpost in a forest

Black bicycle leaning on tree by sidewalk with a large metal part strapped to the rear rack

Black bicycle leaning on bicycle rack with a metal mesh basket on back, in front of a car

Been having a blast living car-free with my Jones SWB, embracing the low-tire-pressure lifestyle. Also, hello lemmy / fedi bikers!

68
My N=1 SUV (midwest.social)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by kirk@midwest.social to c/bicycles@lemmy.ca

Black bicyle leaning on a trail signpost in a forest

Black bicycle leaning on tree by sidewalk with a large metal part strapped to the rear rack

Black bicycle leaning on bicycle rack with a metal mesh basket on back, in front of a car

Been having a blast living car-free with my Jones SWB, embracing the low-tire-pressure lifestyle. Also, hello lemmy / fedi bikers!

3
Electric Earth Moving (www.victronenergy.com)

French lad builds electric mini-digger running on solar

4

NPR reports that six news websites in Alabama and Florida have been taking under-the-table payments from electric utilities in exchange for stories attacking alternative energy.

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kirk

joined 2 years ago