Resources

A worker-owned co-op is a business owned and controlled by its workers. Worker cooperatives are values-driven businesses that put worker and community benefit at the core of their purpose. In contrast to traditional companies, worker members at worker co-ops participate in the profits, oversight, and often management of the enterprise using democratic practices.

Just some of the reasons that Co-op Cincy, a co-op developer, has identified for bringing unions and cooperatives together:

  1. Helps co-ops scale with their values intact
  2. Collective bargaining leads to clear expectations, clear human resource policies 
  3. Balance out the democratic work environment
  4. Access to improved and affordable benefits 
  5. Direct connection to a movement of workers in the same industry pushing for working conditions industry-wide. 
  6. Connects the co-op to a platform for acting in solidarity with other workers.
  7. Policy advocacy opportunities  

Find resources below to learn more about union, worker-owned cooperatives as a strategy for building worker power. Pair these resources with this six-part series on building community power, published by Nonprofit Quarterly with NEC in 2024.

By Rebecca Lurie and Bernadette King Fitzsimons

BASICS

Checklist for planning to start a union, worker-owned co-op – Co-op Cincy

If the Workers Take a Notion: ‘Works for All’ Showcases Union Coops – Labor Notes

Unions and Worker Co-ops: Why Economic Justice Requires Collaboration – Nonprofit Quarterly

Union Co-op History – union, worker-owned printer Worx

Why Unions & Worker Co-ops Should Ally – Democracy@Work

Why Worker Co-ops Should Matter to Labor Unions – U.S. Federation of Worker Cooperatives

ORGANIZATIONS & MOVEMENT BUILDERS

United States
  • 1Worker1Vote – NEC member organization dedicated to building a national network of unionized worker-owned cooperative businesses to overcome opportunity, mobility, and income inequality. Founders and others authored Humanity @ Work & Life, 2023.
  • Coalition for Worker Ownership and Power (COWOP), launched in 2019, is a growing Massachusetts network bringing together worker co-ops and developers, grassroots organizations and labor unions, funders and investors to resource and coordinate the advancement of a worker ownership movement across the state. COWOP works with its sister network MASEN (Massachusetts Solidarity Economy Network) and is supported by NEC member Center for Economic Democracy. 
  • Co-op Cincy – Founded in 2011, NEC member Co-op Cincy is the first and most mature union co-op incubator in the US and now nurtures a resilient, interconnected network of several union and not-yet-union co-ops in greater Cincinnati with the goal of an economy that works for all.
  • Cooperative Economics Alliance of New York City, an NEC member, with unionized worker-co-op Cooperative Home Care Associates and 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East recently (2024) began piloting a program to grow CHCA’s business and spread the values of cooperative economics. CEANYC and 1199 found that 2,734 of the union’s members live in the largest housing cooperative in the US, Co-op City in the Bronx and will help Co-op residents access the quality and values-aligned homecare many of them need.
  • Co-op Rhody – Co-op Rhody is a worker cooperative business incubator serving Rhode Island. With a special focus on the union co-op model, it uses community-led organizing to build businesses that keep money and power in the people’s hands. Co-op Rhody grew out of the grassroots campaign to legalize adult-use cannabis in Rhode Island, which resulted in the FIRST EVER cannabis retail licenses being reserved exclusively for worker-owned cooperatives.
Canada
  • Union Cooperative Initiative (UCI) – Founded in 2021, the UCI supports the creation, incubation, and operation of unionized cooperatives that provide family sustaining and flexible jobs that are good for people and the planet, that provide business opportunities for underserved communities, and are accountable to the communities we serve. Unions in British Columbia who are part of this venture include the Arts and Cultural Workers Union, Canadian Animation Guild, IATSE Local 891, LiUNA Local 1611, MoveUP and United Steelworkers District 3.

TOOLS & RESOURCES

ARTICLES

About Union, Worker-Owned Co-ops
In Academic Publications

NEWS

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT

a- Technical Assistance Providers
b- Funders
c- Documents

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