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A ParEcon Workplace Is Possible

by Dan Clore <clore@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Nov 2, 2008 at 12:03 PM

News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

http://www.zcommunications.org/znet/viewArticle/19264
The NewStandard: A ParEcon Workplace is Possible
October 30, 2008
By Jessica Azulay
[An excerpt from the book Real Utopia (AK Press, June 2008)]

A parecon workplace is possible. I have experienced one, and now I 
believe we can overcome capitalism.

The hierarchical workplace is an insidious institution. It is a powerful 
mechanism through which capitalism imposes and normalizes some of its 
most vicious values: It thrives on competition. It encourages 
authoritarianism and subservience. It rewards workers for their race, 
gender, education, output, age, conformity, and their ability to "work 
the system." It is dangerous for individual empowerment and democracy, 
yet it is embraced even by most social-change organizations. It must be 
subverted.

The theory of Participatory Economics provides a framework for creating 
a new kind of workplace in present-day market economies. It shows us how 
to organize our work around a different set of values: equity, 
solidarity, democracy, and diversity.

Unlike some facets of the parecon vision, which may seem lofty and 
futuristic, the workplace model can to a great extent be immediately 
implemented. I say this with confidence because I have done it.

For four years, I, along with several co-workers, labored in a 
parecon-based workplace to produce a daily, online news publication 
called The NewStandard. TNS, as we called it, was 100 percent reader 
funded and not-for-profit. It upheld the highest ethical standards in 
the news industry and focused on the perspectives of people most 
affected by current events and government and cor****ate policy.

Our particular project was a less-than-ideal laboratory for parecon. At 
its peak, when there were six of us, we worked from four different 
locations, which made communication challenging. We worked grueling 
hours to meet daily publi****ng deadlines, leaving little time and energy 
for other aspects of our organization. And the funding pressures of the 
news and alternative-media industries kept our publication on the 
financial brink.

Yet we found even this to be a rich environment in which to stave off 
hierarchy. Using the parecon fundamentals---balanced job complexes, 
participatory decision-making, and payment for effort and sacrifice---we 
were able to experiment, invent, and reinvent until we found ways of 
operating that were increasingly efficient and fair.

The workplace structure we created for ourselves was unlike any other 
parecon-based organization we have ever heard of. Parecon's emphasis on 
diversity, self-management and solidarity allowed each of us to 
participate in the development of our organization and to help it work 
for each and all of us. So here is how this exciting economic vision was 
put into practice by Megan Tady, Shreema Mehta, Catherine Komp, Brian 
Dominick, Brendan Coyne, Michelle Chen, Simone Baribeau and myself.

Jill of All Trades

There are many ways to implement balanced job complexes. Some groups 
have rotated tasks, giving everyone a turn at each to-do. I know of at 
least one organization that tried to assign an empowerment ranking to 
each chore. At TNS, we didn't have the time to get very scientific about 
it and we also needed each staffer to work on things she was good at.

We divided our work into four categories: managerial, content, 
administrative, and something we called "conmin." Had we all been 
working in the same physical space, there would have been a janitorial 
category, but since we each worked from home, the messiness of our 
respective workplaces was not a collective concern.

The managerial category covered work related to decision-making. It 
included attending collective meetings, participating in email 
discussions, serving on decision-making committees, and other forms of 
coordination and management that involved policy-related decision-making.

The content category included tasks associated with creating and 
publi****ng: re****ting, editing, website development, etc. Since this 
work became the public face of our organization and required a high 
skill level, we considered it very empowering.

Administrative work included most of the behind-the-scenes tasks: 
bookkeeping, answering email, providing technical sup****t to website 
users, opening the snail mail, answering the phone, cutting and pasting 
website text or computer code, taking meeting notes, etc.

Finally, the conmin category was something we created to encompass tasks 
that were less desirable than most content work, but more empowering 
than most administrative work. This was not one of our original 
categories, but we created it out of necessity to acknowledge that some 
tasks carry empowerment with them, but are nonetheless tedious. This 
category included activities like writing text for our fundraising 
drives, fact checking, and putting together our member newsletter.

When we divided up the work, we tried to make sure that each staffer was 
assigned roughly the same number of hours of each kind of work. It 
didn't always come out equal, but we tried to address inequities by 
rotating tasks when possible and assigning new or tem****ary tasks 
according to who was low on certain types of work. We also audited 
ourselves periodically by keeping track of who spent how much time on
what.

Some aspects of our jobs were very similar. For instance, participation 
in collective meetings and email discussions were part of everyone's 
balanced job complex. We also took turns acting as facilitator and 
note-taker at meetings.

The rest of our workdays were fairly specialized. My own balanced job 
complex during the last year of publication consisted mostly of editing 
work (content) and an occasional writing assignment (content). I was 
also the main fact-checker (conmin), the article coordinator 
(managerial) and the bookkeeper (administrative). And I posted content 
to the website most mornings (administrative).

Brian Dominick's job complex included website development (content), 
copy editing (content) and writing/editing short news bulletins 
(content). He also posted content to the website (administrative), 
answered the mail and phones (administrative), performed website upkeep 
(administrative) and provided technical sup****t (administrative). And he 
coordinated our In Other News section (managerial).

Another co-worker, Megan Tady, spent most of her time writing articles 
(content) as well as doing some editing (content). She was a member of 
the fundraising/promotion and accountability committees (both a mix of 
managerial and conmin). And she managed all member email 
(administrative). Most of the other "managing re****ters" like Megan had 
similar job complexes.

Organized Anarchy

At TNS it wasn't that no one was in charge; everyone was in charge. But 
we did not make decisions in isolation, which would have lead to chaos. 
Instead, we developed a sophisticated structure to facilitate quick 
group decisions, self-management and accountability. This was based on a 
formal policy we called the Participatory Decision-Making Process.

The goal of the decision-making process was to engage all participants 
in order to account for diverse views and opinions and arrive at the 
most widely agreeable or acceptable outcomes. The greater the impact a 
decision would have on the organization, the more agreement it needed.

We arrived at decisions using a variety of democratic methods, including 
consensus and voting. When a decision had a large impact on our 
organization, we required consensus, which to us meant that everyone 
actively accepted the decision. We also limited the cir***stances in 
which members could block consensus to those in which a member felt a 
decision constituted a radical departure from the mission or core values 
of the organization or the decision would pose a moral dilemma 
unacceptable to the blocker.

When impact on the organization was smaller and removed from the realm 
of morality and core values, we employed a voting method. Sometimes we 
used simple majority (four out of six votes, for instance), and 
sometimes we required a super majority (five out of six votes).

Regardless of which method was used, a formal discussion process always 
preceded a decision so that staffers could weigh in, ask questions, 
modify proposals, or express dissent. Dissent was always recorded in our 
meeting notes, even when dissenters eventually accepted an outcome.

To better comply with the principles of parecon, we also sometimes used 
other, more-unorthodox methods, in conjunction with consensus or voting.

One such method was called "pro****tional input." We used this to account 
for the disparate impact a decision might have on one or more staff 
members. When using a voting method, like simple or super majority, 
individual staffers were assigned additional votes based on how much the 
decision would impact them.

When using pro****tional input with consensus, a person who stood to be 
dispro****tionately affected by a decision could block consensus, even if 
the decision posed no departure from the organizational mission and 
presented no moral dilemma.

Another unorthodox method we used was called "pro****tional outcome." 
This method was designed to increase the diversity of our 
decision-making outcomes. For instance, we used pro****tional outcome to 
decide which of several possible new features to implement on our 
website. We each ranked the possibilities from favorite to least 
favorite, added up the scores assigned to each item and then used the 
items with the top three scores.

Pro****tional-output voting was invaluable in cases where we were seeking 
the "best" solutions, rather than trying to determine right and wrong 
ways of moving forward. We often used this method when deciding how much 
to buy or how much to spend on something. Instead of trying to gain 
majority sup****t for a specific number, we would each propose a number, 
average the proposals and use that average as our final decision.

This Participatory Decision-Making Process probably sounds complicated, 
but over time it became pretty intuitive. For most day-to-day decisions 
we reached unanimity very easily, even when a voting procedure could 
have been used. Most of us found it easy to reach compromises and stay 
relatively unattached to our own preferences because no one wanted to 
sit in meetings longer than necessary. Staffers had to agree to the 
decision-making process before joining, and experienced staffers helped 
newer collective members navigate the process until they were 
comfortable with it.

Speaking of meetings, we did have a lot of them. We held short morning 
meetings (about 20 minutes) most weekdays to decide which stories TNS 
would pursue. These meetings took place at the same time every morning 
and were conducted over a free conference-calling system. Other 
day-to-day decisions were made over email, instant message, or an 
occasional emergency conference call.

Decisions that could not be made with these methods or that needed 
longer discussion were saved for our weekly meetings, which were also 
held by conference call. These lasted about one to two hours. 
Facilitation for these meetings rotated among all staff members. The 
facilitator was also in charge of putting an agenda together and sending 
it out to all collective members ahead of time. Note taking for these 
meetings also rotated.

We also held board meetings a few times a year. For these, everyone 
traveled to one location for a "retreat," which involved a series of 
meetings over two or three days. Whenever possible, we saved major 
organizational decisions for these face-to-face discussions. The task of 
creating the agenda for these retreats rotated among staff as well.

Before you think the TNS workplace was utopian, let me assure you that 
we did have problems. Sometimes people habitually missed their 
deadlines. Sometimes staffers violated our policies. Sometimes they 
abused power. Eventually, we realized that we needed a way to hold each 
other accountable for such transgressions.

The main goals of our accountability process, developed over several 
months, were (1) to provide a fair and quick way to address problematic 
behavior, (2) to focus on restitution instead of punishment, (3) to 
provide staff members with sup****t or resources they needed to change 
their behavior, (4) to allow transgressing staff members to own up to 
their mistakes and self-manage their remedies.

Any staff member could ask for an accountability meeting about another 
staffer. At the meeting, the problematic behavior would be described in 
detail and the negative impacts on individuals or the organization would 
be listed. Staffers would then decide if the violation was mild, medium 
or severe. Severity of violations would determine which remedies 
staffers would have at their disposal.

For mild violations, staffers could ask the violator to write an "owning 
up letter" to the rest of the collective in which she would describe her 
own problematic behavior and apologize for it. For medium violations, 
there were several options, including asking the transgressor to come up 
with her own plan for restitution, prescribing a course of restitution 
(like extra work to make up for the extra work she caused someone else), 
corrective instruction (like re-reading the journalist handbook or read 
a tutorial about the specific area she messed up with).

For situations in which decision-making power or other forms of 
empowerment were abused, the collective might tem****arily ****ft the 
transgressor's balanced job complex to include more rote work and less 
content or management work.

For the most severe violations, the collective could decide to take away 
decision-making power specific to the offense. The collective could also 
decide to downgrade a staffer's status from full collective member back 
to trial collective member. This was a severe step that would strip the 
transgressor of blocking power for six months at the end of which all 
other collective members would have to reach consensus to restore full 
member****p.

Payment for Effort and Sacrifice

All full-time staff members at The NewStandard were paid the same 
salary, regardless of seniority. Though we started off having receive 
pay in the form of promised "sweat equity," by the end, we were paying 
$21,600 per year, a living wage in most of the cities from which we 
worked. We also provided health insurance and eleven days paid vacation.

Our sick-day policy was a little less traditional. We wanted to 
recognize that some people get sick more often or have more family 
emergencies than others through no fault of their own. So we gave each 
collective member three personal days that they could use in the event 
of sickness or personal emergency. And then we created a collective 
"pot" in which we put four days for each staffer. (For instance, when 
there were six of us, there were 24 days in the pot at the beginning of 
each year.) Anyone could use days in the pot if they ran out of personal 
days. But if the pot had ever run out of days (which it never did), 
anyone who used more than four from the pot, might have to start paying 
days back. This just meant that some of the days they took would revert 
from paid to unpaid days.

The result of this policy was that people had a disincentive to take 
more days than they needed because they knew that leaving days in the 
pot would help other collective members. Staffers also knew that if they 
took more than seven days, they might have to pay some of them back if 
the pot ran out. This policy helped foster solidarity among the staff, 
as well as accommodate a diversity of needs.

Aside from employing a full-time staff, TNS also paid several dozen 
freelance journalists over the years. We knew that coming up with a 
system for paying re****ters based on their effort and sacrifice would be 
difficult, but we tried anyway. I think we got pretty close.

We made a list of the different kinds of work entailed in writing news 
articles and then we assigned a dollar value to each. For instance, 
conducting a full interview with a source was worth $20, while reading a 
do***ent (like a court transcript or a scientific study) was valued at 
$10. Calling a source for comment chalked up $5. There was a base fee 
for all articles on top of which fees for these specific types of work 
were added.

We set up an online system so that after publication of an article, a 
journalist could log on through our website and fill out an invoice. She 
would list all the interviews conducted, calls for comment made, 
do***ents read, etc. She could also note any extra effort that went into 
the article. For instance, sometimes journalists had to read do***ents 
that were hundreds of pages long or sometimes sources were particularly 
difficult to interview. When she was done, her editor would review the 
invoice and adjust amounts accordingly. The editor could also add 
bonuses for clean copy (which saved others labor time), a quick 
turnaround (which implied sacrifice) or other extra efforts.

The Capitalist Intersection

Many people think that our nonprofit, reader-driven funding model killed 
TNS. I think it would be more accurate to say that capitalism killed 
TNS. Our funding strategy, which was to ask readers to donate a small 
amount each month, proved successful in many ways. Per reader, we raised 
an extraordinary amount of money, much more than we could have if we had 
tried selling our readers' eyeballs to advertisers.

Our main funding problem was that we never gained enough readers. I 
believe that is because our news-making model incor****ated gobs of hard 
work and ethics, and we were competing in a greed-driven marketplace 
that generally rewards exactly the opposite.

Aside from funding, the toughest challenge our collective faced was 
hiring. The U.S. education system and capitalist economy do not prepare 
people for working in a parecon workplace. We needed people who were 
skilled journalists, but willing to work for low pay while putting in 
the extra effort our high standards required. We also needed people who 
were ready and able to take on the challenges involved in managing a 
struggling nonprofit organization, but who were willing to share that 
power collectively.

We found that many skilled journalists did not always have the desire to 
manage an organization or enthusiasm for collective decision-making. And 
people with enthusiasm for our workplace values often lacked the 
re****ting or editing skills we required. On top of that, almost everyone 
qualified for the job could find better pay elsewhere.

For those of us who did end up working at TNS, it was life-changing. 
Those who had never even heard of parecon before joining our collective 
quickly adapted to it and became devotees. The very things that made 
hiring hard, made working on TNS rewarding. Each of us was able to learn 
and grow in many different directions at once and develop diverse 
aspects of our professional lives. Although our adventure did not last 
forever, the four-year experience that we created for ourselves and the 
example that we provided to those who came into contact with us still 
reverberates.

We discovered the parecon workplace to be an inspirational institution. 
I believe it could be a powerful mechanism through which a movement for 
radical economic change could facilitate and normalize its most vital 
values: equity, solidarity, self-management and diversity. It encourages 
individual empowerment and democracy, yet it is rejected by most 
social-change institutions. They see it not as a threat to capitalism, 
but as a threat to their internal status quo. But, if we must become now 
what we wish to see in a better society, resistance to true workplace 
equity and democracy must give way, and nonhierarchical workplaces must 
be implemented.

-- 
Dan Clore

My collected fiction: _The Unspeakable and Others_
http://tinyurl.com/2gcoqt
Lord We˙rdgliffe & Necronomicon Page:
http://tinyurl.com/292yz9
News & Views for Anarchists & Activists:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smygo

"From the point of view of the defense of our society,
there only exists one danger -- that workers succeed in
speaking to each other about their condition and their
aspirations _without intermediaries_."
--Censor (Gianfranco Sanguinetti), _The Real Re****t on
the Last Chance to Save Capitalism in Italy_
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
A ParEcon Workplace Is Possible
Dan Clore <clore@[EMAI  2008-11-02 12:03:50 

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