We are trying to figure this out too, that being said...

http://www.bikecollectives.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paid_vs._Volunteer

--
Sincerely,

Jonathan Morrison
Executive Director
Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective
2312 S. West Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84115
w: 801-328-2453
c: 801-688-0183
f: 801-466-3856
www.slcbikecollective.org

Get Addicted to Crank!
http://www.slcbikecollective.org/crank/

The mission of the Salt Lake City Bicycle Collective is to promote cycling as an effective and sustainable form of transportation and as a cornerstone of a cleaner, healthier, and safer society. The Bicycle Collective provides refurbished bicycles and educational programs to the community, focusing on children and lower income households.


On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 9:22 AM, Macho Philipovich <macho@resist.ca> wrote:

Hey everyone.  We're trying to sort through a couple of issues at the shop right now, and I'd like to see if any others have experiences with similar situations that they could share.

1.  We like to keep as many open shop hours as our volunteer capacity will allow, which doesn't leave much left for running other programs.  Our shop is located in a poor part of town, and we're finding a lot of schools, community centres, and immigrant organizations are asking us to run workshops for kids.  The said community organizations, though, are often willing to provide honoraria for this work.  In the past we've just had the money donated back to the bike project, but now people who run the programs are starting to keep it for themselves, and we're kind of feeling torn.  On the one hand, partnering with community organizations so that kids can have access to bikes and bike repair tools & skills is amazing, and is basically why we exist, and giving our volunteers, most of whom are low-income, some monetary compensation is great, especially since we are a very financially stable shop.  On the other hand, there is also the concern that if volunteers start to be paid, it will take them away from our open shop hours, and leave other volunteers to do essentially the same work, only without getting paid.  This could seemingly cause resentment, hard feelings, and the general deterioration of our shop.  We're not, at this time, able to or interested in paying all volunteer mechanics all of the time.  So this is something we have to find a way to reasonably resolve.



Has anyone experienced either of these things in their shop?  Any thoughts?  Solutions?

Thanks,
Macho of the Bike Dump
http://bike-dump.ca

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