There are really only two things that people can contribute to an enterprise through their efforts: value and loyalty. Choosing to spend one's time over the years volunteering rather than... (loyalty), should be rewarded, as should current effort. Also, one should do their best to honor past agreements, but times change. How about crediting the loyalists a year and T-shirt for their past service, acknowledging that next year will be different?

On Mon, Oct 13, 2014 at 7:56 AM, DancesWithCars <danceswithcars@gmail.com> wrote:

Yewah, graduated work study.

Not sure about grandfathering into the new scheme.

If it's a coop, they have a say and a vote, but not sure paid staff/ exec Dir will agree.

I prefer the Linus model to the Gates model. ( WiFi while traveling example , forgot the name, find box, Ia fontella )

Where it gets tricky is that kids go to shop to learn to make money, to get a job, pass school/ honors/ etc.

Volunteers go to give back, get discounts ( wholesale ordering from catalogs help, imo )

But the struggle continues, ask Marx..

Bikes are kinda green, so ag may win 👷 🎅 🙈🙉🙊 🙀 🚲 🎂 🎁 🎄 🎭 🌍 🙌 💰 💸

~~~~~~~~~~~
typing impaired by device, so phlat.
NB: BigBro monitors all, dude[tte]....
BackusNaurForm forgotten. 
Lied to re: Del msgs.  MailHoardersAnon*

On Oct 13, 2014 9:41 AM, "Geoffrey Bercarich" <geoff.bercarich@gmail.com> wrote:

Volunteers should volunteer so many hours to provide for their yearly membership dues.

Times change

On Oct 13, 2014 9:23 AM, "sylvia crum" <yuleoolu@hotmail.com> wrote:
Our bike shop has never paid rent to the church that houses us, in our 12 years of existence. In an attempt to change that, we have just recently changed our membership scheme away from volunteer hours for membership to paid memberships. We're only charging $30/year (and they get a t-shirt). And we're getting lots of new members. But some of the guys who have been around for 3 or  4 years were previously told that they had membership for life due to their many volunteer hours. 

I don't want to discount what they've done for our shop in the past. But I am also attempting to change some of the culture of our shop, a culture that had become a bit of a boys' club where the old guys got to do exciting stuff like fix bikes and new members got to sort small parts. 

Any thoughts these free "members for life"? 

sylvia crum
Revolutions Bicycle CoOp
Memphis, TN

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Kevin Dwyer
The Bicycle Collective
Salt Lake City, Utah

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