Neighborhood Economics, AVL: Difference between revisions

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How to activate the [[Hidden Economic Engine]] that’s right there in your home town. Sole proprietors with friends & family funding are the lowest cost job creators.  
How to activate the [[Hidden Economic Engine]] that’s right there in your home town. Sole proprietors with friends & family funding are the lowest cost job creators.  


How to use [[giving to invest]] to become a more powerful giver, and how to do it in your trust circle, from Sunday School class to civic club to junior high ecology class.  
How [[faith communities can engage]] in their local economies.


How [[faith communities can engage]] in their local economies.


How to use [[giving to invest]] to become a more powerful giver, and how to do it in your trust circle, from Sunday School class to civic club to junior high ecology class.





Revision as of 11:50, 29 February 2024

Themes under consideration in February

Workforce housing

The #WatershedDividend

Rural Health, Mission Hospital

The Watershed Fund BIPOC farms statewide, medicinal plants in our bioregion

New kinds of trusts land trusts, perpetual trust businesses, employee trusts; rewriting ownership.


Outdoor rec as a rural catalyst

An Herb Festival linked to the Watershed Fund

How to invest in local businesses at lower than crowdfunding risk with greater upside


How to activate the Hidden Economic Engine that’s right there in your home town. Sole proprietors with friends & family funding are the lowest cost job creators.

How faith communities can engage in their local economies.


How to use giving to invest to become a more powerful giver, and how to do it in your trust circle, from Sunday School class to civic club to junior high ecology class.


Domestic textile industry

Outdoor rec as a rural catalyst


Act Local School

Silver tsunami BIPOC buying out boomer businesses

Links to this page