Difference between revisions of "Draft GPUS Platform Amendment Community Economic Involvement"
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'''SECTION SUBTITLE: Strengthening our local economies''' | '''SECTION SUBTITLE: Strengthening our local economies''' | ||
− | '''OUR POSTION: | + | '''OUR POSTION: Greens support reforms that give communities more control over their own local economies.''' |
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'''GREEN SOLUTIONS''' | '''GREEN SOLUTIONS''' |
Revision as of 00:02, 9 April 2010
[NOTE FROM MARNIE: Maybe we combine this section with Community in Democracy.]
SECTION TITLE: COMMUNITY
SECTION SUBTITLE: Strengthening our local economies
OUR POSTION: Greens support reforms that give communities more control over their own local economies.
GREEN SOLUTIONS
1. Locally owned small businesses which are more accessible to community concerns.
2. Local production and consumption where possible.
3. Incentives for cooperative enterprises, such as consumer co-ops, workers' cooperatives, credit unions, incubators, micro-loan funds, local currencies, and other institutions that help communities develop economic projects.
4. Allowing municipalities to approve or disapprove large economic projects case-by-case based on environmental impacts, local ownership, community reinvestment, wage levels, and working conditions.
5. Allowing communities to set environmental, human rights, health and safety standards higher than federal or state minimums.
6. Invest in the commons.
7. Rebuild the infrastructure of communities.
8. Repair and improve mass transportation.
9. A federal capital budget should be put in place and applied in a process that assesses federal spending as capital investment.
10. Apply direct democracy through town meetings on public policy decisions.
11. Strengthen local economies by establishing local currencies such as Time Dollars, Ithaca Hours and BerkShares.
2004 PLATFORM ON COMMUNITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Reforms that allow communities to have influence in their economic future should be implemented. Such reforms include the following:
1. Locally owned small businesses, which are more accessible to community concerns.
2. Local production and consumption where possible.
3. Incentives for cooperative enterprises, such as consumer co-ops, credit unions, incubators, micro-loan funds, local currencies, and other institutions that help communities develop economic projects.
4. Allowing municipalities to approve or disapprove large economic projects case-by-case based on environmental impacts, local ownership, community reinvestment, wage levels, and working conditions.
5. Allowing communities to set environmental, human rights, health and safety standards higher than federal or state minimums.
6. A national program to
invest in the commons;
to rebuild the infrastructure of communities;
repair and improve transportation lines between cities, and;
protect and restore the environment.
A federal capital budget should be put in place and applied in a process that assesses federal spending as capital investment.
7. Applying direct democracy through town meetings, which express a community’s economic wishes directly to local institutions and organizations.