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Green Worker Coop Press
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Green Worker Cooperatives celebrates the 3rd Entrepreneur Summit at BMCC |
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April 23rd, 2009 Summit, a “joint collaboration” This semester’s Third Entrepreneurship Summit was a joint collaboration among students and professors from the Business, English, Modern Languages, Early Childhood Education and Speech departments, along with the Writing and Literature Program. “As professors, we worked together with the students for two months in order to conduct the research and to deliver the presentations,” said Business Professor Carmen Martinez-Lopez, who helped coordinate the summit with a team of more than 400 BMCC staffers, professors and students. “The students did a great job with their PowerPoints, poems and essay presentations,” she said. BMCC’s got the “fever”—business fever When the college celebrated its Third Entrepreneur Summit on Tuesday, April 21, in the Richard Harris Terrace, students took the stage with pride—acting as interviewers, moderators and lecturers, proving they are ready to take on the ‘real-world’ of business upon graduation.The general message of the summit was that even in today’s hard economic times, there is indeed opportunity out there for niche businesses to succeed. Titled, Entrepreneurship: Cooperation or Competition? the morning session focused on starting a business in today’s economy, as well as presentations about business relations in countries outside the United States. The afternoon session featured a presentation of student poems and essays in Chinese, English, Italian, and Spanish. BMCC’s Vice President of Student Affairs Dr. Marva Craig, took the stage, asking the audience, composed of mostly BMCC students of various majors, what they did when faced with a ‘door?’ “What do the letters d-o-o-r stand for?” she asked. “Don’t Overlook Opportunities—Reach!” It was the perfect acronym for the theme of the Entrepreneur Summit. Student Interviewers Take Stage Individual students from the Business Management Department lead a one-on-one question and answer session with a professional entrepreneur. The student interviewers were confident and poised while addressing the guest speakers, asking them questions about minorities in the job market, how to market a new company in today’s economy, and how students can make a difference. BMCC student MaryAnn Lorick interviewed Omar Freilla, executive director of Green Worker Cooperatives in the Bronx, an organization dedicated to making the South Bronx ‘greener.’ “The biggest opportunity is really being open to the people around you,” said Freilla. “Seek out any opportunities you have.” Lorick, a business major, thought the interview session she led was ‘fun.’ “I think communication skills are very important; and interviewing [Freilla] helped build my confidence,” she said. |
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DECONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS REUSE EFFORTS IN NEW YORK STATE |
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People who work in building materials reuse got into the field because they just couldn’t take it any more. At some point in their lives they watched as perfectly good, sometimes quite valuable materials were smashed and put in a landfill, and they wanted to do something about it. They are part of a growing infrastructure working to divert these materials to reuse. Worker Owned One of the newest building material reuse stores in New York bucks the business model entirely. ReBuilders Source opened in the South Bronx in March, 2008. The first worker-owned, cooperative building materials reuse center in the nation, it is the fruit of a three year planning and fund-raising effort by Green Worker Cooperatives. GWC is a not-for-profit organization dedicated to incubating worker-owned and environmentally friendly cooperatives in the South Bronx because, as their motto proclaims, “your work shouldn’t kill you, your community or the Earth.” |
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ReBuilders Source Featured on ABC-7 |
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Green Worker Cooperatives By Cindy Yurth |
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When environmentalists approach poor communities of color, often the first impression they make isn’t very promising. “The mainstream environmental movement is full of rich, white people who try to tell people of color what to do,” says Omar Freilla, the founder of Green Worker Cooperatives, a grassroots, green enterprise in the South Bronx. In truth, he adds, the poor have to be the ones in the driver’s seat. The group’s mission statement is straightforward: “Creating green-collar jobs and worker ownership in the South Bronx…because your work shouldn’t kill you, your community or the earth.”
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Green Worker Cooperatives will saturate the South Bronx with coops |
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GWC and ReBuilders Source featured on Now on PBS |
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Green Worker Cooperatives will be featured on PBS on November 14 at 8:30 pm!!! Please read the show notes for our feature on PBS. Believe in our mission, please consider supporting our efforts by donating $1, $5, $25 or whatever you can. Thanks. - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- -- - -- - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -
Green Collar Jobs
[Streaming video of this program will be available online after broadcast]
Can something as common as building materials represent an opportunity to create jobs, help the needy, and save the planet? This week, NOW looks at two "green" projects keeping furniture, paint, cabinets, and other building supplies out of landfills and getting them into the hands of those who need them most. Will they be devastated by the economic meltdown, or do they signal a possible way out?
Based in the Bronx, New York, Greenworker Co-operatives aims to set up worker-owned green businesses. The first of these is Rebuilders Source, a store that sells recycled and donated building materials at affordable prices—items that would otherwise have ended up in a landfill.
"My vision now is a completely green South Bronx," says Bronx-born entrepreneur Omar Freilla, the founder of Greenworker Co-operatives, "with businesses throughout the area that are owned and run by people living in the area together."
On the other side of the country, in Southern California, Materials Matter matches donations of furniture and high quality building materials with individuals, organizations, and homeless shelters that use the materials to literally rebuild lives. But the faltering economy has had an impact.
"We have to decide whether the value of that donation will be worth the cost of transportation," says Materials Matter co-founder Alison Riback on her blog. "[The economic downturn] put a huge dent in our 'always say yes to a donation' philosophy."
This show is part of Enterprising Ideas, NOW's continuing spotlight on social entrepreneurs working to improve the world through self-sustaining innovation. |
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Greening the Bronx, One Castoff at a Time |
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Greening the Bronx, One Castoff at a Time - New York Times - April 21, 2008 - by David Gonzalez
Read the article. |
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Podcasts
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Envisioning A Green Economy With Omar Freilla |
Featured on the Sundance Channel - The Good Fight
Grab the podcast. |
Press Clippings
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NYC store saves home supplies from trash and resells them |
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By CRISTIAN SALAZAR | Associated Press Writer - April 21, 2008
NEW YORK - Brand-new porcelain toilets, some still in their boxes, stood on a pallet in the warehouse. Nearby was a pile of unused ceramic tiles. And stacked against the walls of the building were about 200 doors. |
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With a sustainable vision and a thing for dumpster diving, Bronx son Omar Freilla is leading his city's rebirth.
Read the article at Men’s Vogue. |
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Greening the Bronx, One Castoff at a Time |
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Greening the Bronx, One Castoff at a Time - New York Times - April 21, 2008 - by David Gonzalez
Read the article. |
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Facebook is a social utility that connects people with friends and others who work, play, study and live around them. People use Facebook to keep up with friends, upload an unlimited number of photos, share links and videos, and learn more about the people and organizations in which they interact. Please join our cause through the following link: JOIN GWC Green Worker Cooperatives is powered by people's energy. Currently, we are on Day 31 of a campaign to raise $285. While we do need financial donations to keep running, we also need volunteers and helping hands who can - network a computer - organize an event - paint a wall - present a seminar - operate a phone bank - run a time Bank - and of course what ever skill you can do. Join us by donating your time or money ($1, $5, $25 or what ever you can afford) to support the change that Green Worker is bringing to the South Bronx residents, by firing their bosses and empowering themselves. Donate through FACEBOOK at the following link: Donate thru FACEBOOK |
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