Monday, February 26, 2007

Berskhires Bongo Bucks - Anti-Globilization, Hooo!

The Berkshires are a lovely part of rural Massachusetts, found in the Northwest corner of the Commonwealth (we ain't no state). It contains some of the prettiest landscapes scenes in New England. And some of the fruitiest people.

If there is a 'People's Republic of Massachusetts', it's here. Like the crazy lemmings of yesteryear who flocked west to California for the Summer of Love, anti-globilization obsessionists often migrate to the western part of 'Mass.' so they can commune with other 'Mass.holes'. I suppose it makes folks from the North Shore, Greater Boston and South Shore communities much happier, though it may be a burden for those living on the Eastern New York State border.

Anyway, I'm sure some of you may have already read this little story on the NYTIMES web site:

This Land: Would You Like That in Tens, Twenties or Normans?

If the link won't work (it's from the TimeSelect Page), here is the article below.

February 25, 2007

This Land
Would You Like That in Tens, Twenties or Normans?
By DAN BARRY
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass.

The scene could have been lifted from a caper movie:

An old Volvo station wagon zooms through the southern Berkshire Hills. Its nervous driver pulls up in front of a bank. But instead of pulling off some heist, her gang begins hustling boxes of freshly minted currency in, not out.

Once inside, they pause to admire the wads of tens, twenties and fifties. No $100 bills, though; no Benjamins. But there are some Hermans, and even a few Normans.

So began this area’s great socioeconomic experiment, one in which several dozen businesses agreed to include an alternative currency in their daily transactions and give a discount to those who used it.

Now people can pay for groceries, an oil change, even dental work with currency bearing the likenesses of local heroes like Herman Melville and Norman Rockwell.

Be forewarned, though: these bills do not travel well. Try paying a tab in Boston with a Norman and you could wind up in the Charles.

The central purpose behind BerkShares is to strengthen the local economy, perhaps even inoculate it against the whims of globalization, by encouraging people to support local businesses. Amazon does not accept BerkShares, for example, but the Bookloft on Route 7 does.

Five months into the experiment, some people embrace it, some endure it, some ignore it altogether. At the very least, BerkShares have reminded everyone just how complex this thing called community is.

The Volvo’s driver that day was Susan Witt, white-haired and 60, and her bank delivery had been a long time in coming. As the director of the E. F. Schumacher Society, which promotes concepts like regionally based economies, Ms. Witt had spent a dozen years refining the idea of a currency specific to Berkshire County.

She raised the money, gathered a band of like-minded people and secured the support of banks and the Chamber of Commerce for a one-year trial. By late September, a Massachusetts company that specializes in banknotes had printed the bills, complete with serial numbers and anti-counterfeiting features.

Then there they were, 835,000 BerkShares stacked on a bank table.

In addition to Melville on the twenties and Rockwell on the fifties, there was a Mohican on the ones; Robyn Van En, champion of community-supported agriculture projects, on the fives; and W. E. B. DuBois, a founder of the civil rights movement, on the tens.

“I cried,” Ms. Witt recalls.

Now people are walking into banks and exchanging federal currency for a different kind: 11 BerkShares for $10. The idea is that merchants will absorb the 10 percent discount, then use those same BerkShares to pay their own bills.

Theoretically, you would pay Roger the Jester with BerkShares for performing at your child’s birthday party, the jester would use the bills to buy food at Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, Guido’s would pay its vendors, and so on.

Steve Carlotta down at the Snap Shot camera store says BerkShares have strengthened customer loyalty. And Melissa Joyce, manager of the Berkshire Bank branch on Main Street, says they have led to something almost forgotten in this electronic age: lines of bank customers, all waiting to trade Benjamins for Normans.

“Our whole goal is the face-to-face transaction,” Ms. Witt says.
But the Great Barrington area, while simply beautiful to look at — cuddled in the Berkshire Hills, beside the Housatonic River — is a complicated place, with artists and affluent weekenders living beside farmers and blue-collar workers. And BerkShares have come to highlight the tug of war between the ideal and the real.

For example, the Berkshire Co-op Market took in an astounding 160,000 BerkShares in the first three months. But it soon found that many vendors would not accept the currency for large payments, which translated into a $16,000 hit in discounts. The co-op has since cut back on its participation.

Guido’s has become BerkShares central. But Rick O’Neill, the store’s customer service manager, says it absorbs the 10 percent discount by cutting back on advertising, which, in turn, hurts local publications.

That is why John Conlin, the owner of an entertainment-system store called Tune Street, deposits his BerkShares rather than spend them in other stores. Guilt, he says. “I don’t want to impose that 10 percent on another business owner.”

Then there is the unsettling side of BerkShares that goes beyond the suspicion that their popularity is driven more by the discounts than by any sense of community. Simply put: If you’re not with us, you’re dead to us.

Paul Masiero, the owner of Baba Louie’s, a restaurant on Main Street, whose family also owns Guido’s, says he did not immediately join the BerkShares program because of the extra bookkeeping. Then he heard that some were saying baba-phooey to Baba Louie’s.
“We felt they were bad-mouthing us around town,” Mr. Masiero says, half-smiling. “So, eventually, we signed up. And we’ve had a warm, fuzzy feeling ever since.”

He adds that his employees were already nudging him to embrace BerkShares because the principle is sound. So now he accepts them on his two slowest days, deposits them and takes the 10 percent hit.

Ms. Witt makes no apologies for avoiding places that do not support the program. “It’s an economic choice,” she says.

Sipping tea in the Neighborhood Diner, which accepts BerkShares, she talks of hoping to open a BerkShares ATM and smiles to show the handiwork of a dentist being paid in BerkShares installments.

The total job will cost about $1,000, she says.

That’s a lot of Hermans.

Now, perhaps you might wonder just how these people could spin their wheels so extravagently on activities like these, try and ensure that local businesses will LOSE at least 10% of their gross profits (and profits are pretty lean out there to begin with), and continue to exist without needing to follow the mundane existence of the rest of us; i.e., WORK.

It is the amazing ability of an entire region to subsist strictly from tourism, meager farming, and an eternal and unstoppable tidal wave of grant writing (federal and local). Beyond local academic institutions --- a high number for such a sparcely populated region --- the only other occupations are high end carpentry, plumbing and electrical servitude to the very wealthy. Or working for the Mass. Turnpike.

I have no major objections to those who seek an 'alternative' lifestyle. I am a bit odd myself. But does this not smack of the penultimate navel-gazing of aged hippiedom? How cracked does one have to be before the family breaks out the Elmer's Glue?

I suppose this is some sad reflection of the Tax Revolt here in Massachusetts called
Shay's Rebellion just after the Revolution. We should all remember that the American Revolution was conceived and organized by thorough capitalists. And that they expected everybody to pay the debts created by this new liberty ASAP. Which drove New England into a financial depression, which caused a back lash by farmers who were being taxed out of existence.

Ultimately, all I can say is that I certainly wouldn't choose to live in such a whacka-whacka community. I just feel sorry for the kids who are stuck there with the old hippie parents. And I hope you all understand I am not anti-progressive politically. I just wish these old fuck heads would lay down and stop sucking up our resources for pointless exercises in futility.

I suppose you can all now understand just how Republicans can be cultivated in a Blue State like Massachusetts. Mostly out of sheer bile.

1 comment:

slyboots2 said...

Interesting. I just hope that no one from Bozeman, MT reads this. Because if it's the right person, there will be a similar movement. These are the same folks who protest Walmart, Target, Lowe's, et. al. in favor of the local stores that tend towards the expensive, ill-stocked and non-competitive. Quite elitist in their own special way. Especially since they seem to thrive where the economy is marginal and people don't make enough to buy houses in their communities.

ah. don't even get me started....oh. I guess I did get started...