In recent article in the magazine Grist, Comet's co-owner (with Salfi) Shaffer mentioned that he is the executive director of "Business Alliance for Local Living Economies" (BALLE). Shaffer explained that BALLE - which is interconnected with Comet's entrepreneurship processes - is an alliance of more than 5,400 entrepreneurs in the U.S. And in Canada who are "...dedicated to building "Local Living Economies" (LLE). These economies are committed to "the long-term health of a particular place," Shaffer went on, "whether it is a big city like Philadelphia, medium-sized town like Grand Rapids, Michigan, or a rural area like the Rogue River Valley" in Oregon.
Several of the principles of BALLE include promoting the "decentralized ownership of businesses," "fair wages," promoting news media stories that are "independent of corporate control," and promoting the idea that BALLE members buy from other BALLE members and BALLE entrepreneurs treat customers with dignity and respect, in order to foster good will.
Imagine for a moment a young growing company that is marketing its wares and its brand by helping other young companies; that is another way of describing Comet's outreach. Shaffer and Salfi are creating a "local stock exchange" (LSE) for the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area market that, Shaffer explains, will support "...small, community-based triple-bottom-line companies." Triple bottom line (TBL or 3BL) companies point towards "people, planet, and profit" - pursuing an economic profitability in concert with the environment and what is best for society. The local stock exchange is by way of creating a new model for communities to open the door of opportunities for small, locally owned companies. "Instead of the 20th Century model of throwing tax breaks and subsidies to large corporations,"...
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