Principles met
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Co-production
We will develop systems that enable citizens to be equal partners in designing and commissioning public services and in determining the use of public resources.
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Community leadership and a new role for councillors
We will explore ways for councils to act as a platform for helping the community to contribute to local outcomes, and to re-think the role of councillors as community connectors, brokers and leaders.
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Democratic engagement
We will support the active engagement of the full range of residents in decision making and priority setting.
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Innovation
We will embrace innovation in how we work with local communities to drive positive change.
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Learning
We will capture and ‘expand’ the experience and learning from individual projects and approaches in order to encourage broader application of co-operative principles within individual member Councils and across the Network.
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New models of meeting priority needs
In exploring new ways of meeting the priority needs of our communities we will encourage models, such as co-operatives and mutuals, which give greater influence and voice to staff and users. in designing and commissioning public services and in determining the use of public resources.
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Social partnership
We will strengthen the co-operative partnership between citizens, communities, enterprises and Councils, based on a shared sense of responsibility for wellbeing and mutual benefit.
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Walking the talk
As a membership organisation, we will make this statement of our principles operational by:
• Co-operation among members: Our members work together to help each other implement our values, sharing experiences and learning.
• Openness of membership: Full, Associate and Affiliate Membership is open to any qualifying Council, organisation or individual who shares our values and is committed to putting them into action.
• Co-production of the Network’s work: Members help shape the Network’s work programme and the content of events and written products.
• Action-focused: The network is a vehicle for helping councils translate co-operative values and principles into policy and practice.
•Membership-based: The network is majority funded by modest membership subscriptions from its member Councils, Associates and Affiliates.
•Non-party-political: Members share the belief that working co-operatively within and across communities holds the key to tackling today’s challenges.
Community groups, organisations, businesses and residents gathered at Glastonbury Town Hall on Monday evening for the town’s first Co-operative Fair, held as part of Co-operatives Fortnight, promoted by Co-operatives UK. This year’s theme was ‘co-operate and we can change the world’. And the event was launched by a specially commissioned poem by Tony Walsh – ‘This Beautiful Idea’ – a tribute to the Rochdale Pioneers.
The event celebrated Glastonbury’s long tradition of co-operation, mutual support and fair trade whilst exploring how co-operative approaches can help strengthen communities and encourage greater participation in local decision-making.
Opening the event, Mayor Councillor Zoe Price welcomed attendees and reflected on Glastonbury Town Council’s recent decision to join the Co-operative Councils’ Innovation Network (CCIN), becoming the first council in Somerset to do so.
Speaking about the principles behind the network, the Mayor said:
“At its heart, the co-operative movement is built on a simple but powerful belief: that by working together, sharing power, and valuing every voice, we can create stronger, fairer, and more connected communities…That is the spirit of co-operation. Not the absence of difference, but the willingness to work together through it.”
For further information contact:
Melissa Taylor
Climate Emergency & Resilience Officer
Glastonbury Town Council