| Re: committees | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
|
From: R Philip Dowds (rpdowds |
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| Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2019 11:00:19 -0700 (PDT) | |
I once did some research on community budgets. One can make a case that the
annual budget is a decent proxy for how a community structures and sees itself,
politically and culturally. The budgets I saw were mostly configured around
three categories:
(1) ZONES OR COMPONENTS of the physical plant, like “barn”, “pool and hot
tub”, or “gardens”;
(2) FUNCTIONS, like “finance”, “insurance”, or “membership”; and
(3) TEAMS OR COMMITTEES, like “steering”, or “board/admin”.
There was considerable overlap between the categories, and among the
committees. For instance, at one community “sustainability and environment”
was both a function and a committee. And there were plenty of special cases,
like the community that had both a “coordinating team” and an “operations
team”. Or the community that had a unique budget category for “zig zag fence”.
The main take-away from my research was that there’s enormous diversity of
organizational thinking on Planet Coho. So my findings are consistent w/
Sharon’s.
I made a diagram of the various budgets I looked at, and if any of you are
interested, write me and I’ll send it along.
Thanks,
Philip Dowds
Cornerstone Village Cohousing
Cambridge, MA
mobile: 617.460.4549
email: rpdowds [at] comcast.net
> On Mar 26, 2019, at 12:49 PM, Sharon Villines via Cohousing-L <cohousing-l
> [at] cohousing.org> wrote:
>
> Basically, you need buildings, grounds, community, and admin/legal. From
> there a group will form around any issue or opportunity that comes up. Beyond
> that I would be here all day making a list.
>
> We have 3 teams set in the Bylaws — facilities, admin, and community. In my
> opinion, facilities is over whelmed and needs to be split between interior
> and exterior. By that I mean the large tasks take so much focus that smaller
> tasks just slide by. Rehabbing all the decks and balconies will take 2-3
> years of research, bids, decisions, installation. In the meantime the fix for
> the potentially dangerous stairs to the basement is pushed farther and
> farther down the to-do list.
>
> More important, I think is the structure that has evolved for task oriented
> groups. We have the 3 major teams and the board that are constant. Then we
> have Pods that are mostly constant — gardening/landscaping, kitchen, safety,
> etc. These form around people with an interest in leading who joins people
> together "to do this.” Pods are attached to teams, sort of. The amount of
> contact is varied. Gardening’s budget is in the facilities budget but
> otherwise has no contact. Other Pods may attend the Team meetings and work
> closely with them.
>
> Then we have task forces and working groups that appear when there is a
> specific task. A working group may take on research into Solar Panels and
> getting them installed. Task forces have been put together with volunteers at
> a community workshop where a more systemic problem has surfaced — firming up
> the consensus process, looking at how other communities handle workshare.
> Some last for years and others few months.
>
> Then we have people who are “stars” on Jerry Koch-Gonzales’s sociocratic
> chart of circles. They hover around circles. The people who just do things
> individually (and fairly autocratically) like sorting the recycling, letting
> everyone know when rules change, and finds new trash companies when
> necessary. When he needs back up, he asks.
>
> We used to have a person who swept the sidewalks every 2 weeks or so. He was
> a star functioning on his own steam at his own pace on his own schedule.
>
> The most important thing is to remember that your human capital will
> determine what clusters of activity you have. If there is a person with the
> drive to do something, great. You might end up with the beer brewing team. If
> there is no one, it won’t be done, so hire it out — buy beer as needed.
>
> However, we also have a decision-making policy that makes the full membership
> the ultimate decider. And a structure of decisions that can be made with
> routine notice all the way to has to go to a meeting. So all these groups can
> form fairly freely but their decisions have to be run by the community and
> they have to work out any objections, conflicts, budget issues, etc.
>
> Don’t spend too much time on it. It will evolve. I asked this question a few
> years ago and intended to summarize the responses. I was particularly
> interested suggesting circles in a sociocratic circle structure. Beyond the 3
> biggies, the variation was huge with unique names.
>
> Sharon
> ----
> Sharon Villines
> Takoma Village Cohousing, Washington DC
> http://www.takomavillage.org
>
>
>
>
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>
>
- Re: committees and their functions, (continued)
- Re: committees and their functions Diane Simpson, July 6 2003
-
Re: committees Alan O'Hashi, March 26 2019
- Re: committees Julie Gallagher, March 26 2019
-
Re: committees Sharon Villines, March 26 2019
- Re: committees R Philip Dowds, March 26 2019
- Re: committees Alan O'Hashi, March 26 2019
- Committees Janet Murphy, March 26 2019
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