Transcript Slide 1

Great Places to Work
Sharing Our Successes
Presentation
Worker-Owned Restaurant Corporation dba Casa Nueva
Leslie Schaller – Business Director/Founder
[email protected]
October 25, 2006
Worker-owned Restaurant Corporation
• Established in 1985
• Operates as a c corporation – By Laws designate
business as worker cooperative
• Started with staff of 20 worker owners now employ staff
of
approximately 60 to 68 since 2004
• All worker-owners from 1985-2000, hired employees as
well 2001 to 2006
"Casa
Nueva is an
innovative worker-owned cooperative
based in Southeast Ohio.
We are dedicated to strengthening
the environmental, economic,
and social well being of our community
by promoting wholesome products,
democratic participation
and responsible practices."
Timeline of operations
• Incorporated June 1985
• Restaurant opened 10/85
• Liquor permit 9/89
• Cantina opened 9/93
• Manufacturing began 1997 (wholesale)
• Commissary sales growth in 2000 – 2001
• Athens Farmers Market member 2001 +
• Major expansion to 4th storefront 2004
• Bodega kitchen & quick casual menu 2004
Core Values
• Participatory democracy
• Access to ownership and equity
• Living wages and benefits
• Environmental stewardship
• Sustainable agriculture
• Keeping $$$ local
• Homegrown, handmade, fair trade
• Incubating community
Participatory democracy
• all employees can become coop members
• coop member = shareholders
• coop members make all decisions
• coop members follow groundrules for
cooperation
Participatory democracy
•coop members participate on
committees, board of directors and
coordinator team
• coop members participate on human
resource teams
• all meetings open
• associates can participate in meetings,
on teams and committees
Access to ownership and equity
• everyone is hired as an employee
• worker-owner track includes 3 to 6 month trail period
• worker owners buy in for 2007 will be $1500, typically paid
through a payroll deduction
• shown a profit every year since 1986
• profit split 60% for ICA’s and 40% corporation
• patronage dividends calculated based on hours worked
Living wages & benefits
• Employee wages start at about $8.50 to $9.00 (average
food
service worker in Athens County is $5.15)
• Worker-owners start at $1.00 over employees
• Wage increases based on hours worked and status
• All tips split amongst all shift workers (both w/o’s and
employees)
• Everyone eligible for health insurance (health, eye and
dental)
• Retirement co-pay available to worker-owners
Environmental stewardship
• Reduce energy use and increase efficiencies
• Winner of Ohio EPA Pollution Prevention Award
• Advocate for commercial curbside recycling in
1988
• Recycle plastic, paper, newsprint, cardboard, aluminum,
steel, clear glass & brown glass
• Recycle green glass to local furniture maker
• Compost all vegetable waste, fruit waste & coffee grounds
• Food scraps recycled to area hog farmers
Environmental stewardship
• purchase goods & services from environmentally friendly biz
• investigating ways to reduce energy costs with solar panels on
roof top
• work with local non-profit to advocate for Class 2 EPA
municipal composting facility
• work with Athens Uptown Business Association on recycling
issues
Sustainable agriculture support
• long history of buying local since 1986
• currently purchase from over 40 local farmers, producers
and distributors, even flowers grown locally
• work with growers to provide capacity analysis and
identify
certain varieties of produce
• special training on use of local ingredients for back & front
of house staff
• regular workshops for staff on local agricultural issues
Sustainable agriculture support
• About 90% of food ingredients are local, sustainable, organic
or international fair trade
• Have provided Casa staff and pay to work on area farms as
teaching tool
• Member of the Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association,
Athens Farmers Market, Slow Food USA, Chef
Collaborative and Community Food Initiatives
• Use local food advocacy in marketing and publicity
• Participate on national web pages: Food Routes, Local
Harvest, etc.
Keeping $$$ local
• Participate on Athens Area Chamber of Commerce and
Athens
Uptown Business Association --- encourage
small biz services and local tourism initiatives
• One of 5 founders of Athens Independent Restaurant
Association – advocate for independents, share
services, lobby officeholders and media, sponsor events
• Work with local service providers, often promote in our
marketing materials
• Participate in both city and county comprehensive plans
Homegrown, handmade and fair trade
• Utilized in house graphic design and local artist for restaurant,
Cantina and
manufactured product line marketing materials
• Utilized local ingredients for wholesale product and Limited harvest
lines
• All processed items on our menu – produced either by our staff or
valueadded producers (jams, pickles, roasted chiles, spreads,
tortillas, breads,
granola,
crackers, maple syrup, honey, etc.)
• Our space is used as gallery and we act as broker for all sales of
artwork
• Invest in other worker coops and fair trade organizations
Incubating community
• Space has become a networking hub for local food
economy
• Assisted with development of ACEnet Food Ventures
Center
• Eighteen worker-owners have started other businesses
• Many worker-owners have become community leaders
• Hold fundraisers for community organizations
• Celebrate customer and producer appreciation weeks
• Regular customers refer to themselves as “eater owners!”
Why and how it all works
• Clear operating procedures (200 page + handbook)
• Groundrules and on-going cooperative education
• Open book accounting practices (sales and tips posted after every
shift,
weekly financial reports, income statement & balance
sheet posted
every month
• Transparent decision-making
• Clear group process (agenda postings, minutes, weekly scheduled
meetings for coordinators and board of directors)
• Annual business plan (about 80 pages with extensive pro-formas)
Coordinator Team 1 to 7 day decisions, up to
$5,000, supervises &
implements HR
Board of Directors
Monthly decisions up to
$10,000,
hire/fires/disciplines HR
Membership
Monthly to annual decisions,
must vote on budget &
expenditures exceeding $10k,
creates & revises HR
procedures
policies &
Creating a culture of cooperation
• Clear application and interview process (how a coop
workplace is different)
• Extensive orientations for incoming staff
• Trial period for incoming worker – owners
• Buddy systems and frequent peer evaluations
• Existing worker-owners mentor and model coop norms
Creating a culture of cooperation
• Minimum coop ed and financial training prior to
acceptance
• Flexible member fee pay-in, family friendly
policies,
sabbaticals,
staff prices, paid
leaves under certain circumstances
• Mediation and conflict resolution as needed
• Annual celebrations, all staff trainings and
conferences
Financial Management Evolves
• Policy assistance from national experts
• Understanding bank and accounting assistance
• Invest in training financial managers
• Always upgrading technology, software, POS system
• 1 to 3 year pro-forma development
• Conservative liability to asset ratio
• Utilized large percentage of equity for expansions
Human resources at the core of
success
• Train everyone as if they are owners
• Emphasis rights and responsibility
• Self-management as north star
• Peer learning and peer evaluations
• Deal with conflicts and personality types
• Embrace diversity
Signposts of success
• Still around after 21 years and still worker-owned
• Grown from $200k to $2m in annual sales
• Shown a profit and paid out patronage dividends every
year
• Have helped launch and expand at least 25 other
businesses and farmers doing over $2.5 million in annual
sales (Shade
River Organics, Green Edge Gardens, King
Family Farms, Rich Gardens,
Minerva Cheese, Village Bakery,
O’Betty’s Red Hots, Crumbs Bakery, Marietta
Brewing
Company, Sundown Garage, Media Brite, Eden Marketing, to just name
a few)
What’s next?
• Increase number of worker-owners
• Increase wages, benefits and profits
• Increase number of local customers
• Promote “uniquely Athens” experience to visitors
• Expand distribution of manufactured products
• Continue local advocacy in our community
• Work on national coop awareness
You can support
us by asking for
our products at
your local
grocery shelves!
Visit us at www.casanueva.com
For more information
Leslie Schaller
[email protected]
Nancy Beurkel
[email protected]
Greg Lyle
call the Cantina at 740-594-8691