Organizing

The Regional Solidarity Economy Ecosystem Organizing Model

Building on BCI’s webinar with Nonprofit Quarterly and New Economy Coalition that looked at the national movement for solidarity economies in February 2024, BCI’s Program Director Bianca Vazquez facilitated an online conversation on March 27th about what it takes to build a regional solidarity economy in the DC area, and what’s possible when we focus locally on the well-being of people rather than profit.

Many of us live and work in places where gentrification, displacement of local businesses and families, and low-wage extractive work are par for the course. Over the past several years Beloved Community Incubator has dreamed and organized to build a different kind of city and region — one that prioritizes community accountability, collective and democratic planning, and equitable production and distribution of everything that people need to live, rather than maximum extraction, endless growth, and unchecked profit.

It can often be difficult for people interested in anticapitalism, cooperatives, or collective models to figure out how to plug into the work happening at the regional level. Our conversation brought together people from different cooperatives, both operational and in incubation, union members, funders, other regional cooperative incubators, and people generally interested in building solidarity economies in their regions.

During the call we shared practical models that we can use to evaluate and map the needs of our solidarity economy ecosystem, and collaboratively mapped our resources and needs in the DC area.We envision this regional conversation and skill-share as the first of many, as we weave together our collective vision for the DC area. We invite you to watch this call and reach out to us with questions, resources, and other needs you’d like to add to our regional solidarity economy ecosystem map!

The BCI License Fund: $125,000 for DC Street Vendors

Today BCI is excited to announce the launch of the BCI License Fund, which covers 90% of the costs associated with applying for a Street Vendor License under DC’s new vending laws! This $125,000 fund, made possible by generous individual donors, will help ensure vendors are able to afford the many costs of applying for licenses.

With this $125,000 fund, we are giving DC’s smallest business owners a fighting chance to fulfill their dreams,” Geoff, BCI’s Legal & Technical Assistance Director, says of the fund. “We are doing our part to support street vendors. Now it is time for the Mayor’s executive agencies to do their part.”

Although the new law was passed in April 2023 and went fully into effect in October, vendors are just now beginning to see city agencies move to create a real pathway to compliance. The Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection (DLCP) is responsible for creating a license application process that works, but vendors often find themselves tangled in red tape, unable to finish the license application process.

Many of DC’s agencies have a long and shameful history of providing services that are inaccessible to poor and working class street vendors due to language, literacy, and technology access issues, along with ineffective communication between agencies. You can read more about this in our new report, A Brief History of DC Street Vending which chronicles the history of street vendors fighting for recognition and legalization in DC, and the equally long history of DC Government’s regulatory repression and lack of support for one of the District’s oldest forms of entrepreneurship.

 
 

Since last summer, BCI has been pushing DLCP to cut through the red tape and create a series of pop-up clinics for DC Street Vendors. Today vendors are showing up to a clinic where financial need and barriers to tech, literacy and language access do not stand in their way. We hope this clinic is the first of many!