The Socially Responsible Business Ownership Model -

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What is Community Equity™?
The best way to explain our understanding and use of Community Equity™, is to simply explain
why it is so desperately needed in our society. The closest example of Community Equity™
in use by large corporation is employee stock options, where workers can get equity through their employment overtime, but typically this arrangements have to be contracted and all arranged per worker ahead of time. With Community Equity™ it all happens automatically, if you contribute as a
member of the community surrounding the company, you get equity. Its that simple.
It is also important to note before going on to the why, that each and every company or
corporation that chooses to incorporate Community Equity™ into their equity ownership model can do it totally differently. There is NO one single way to organize and apply Community Equity™ to a
company, each company and its community is different, and therefore its Community Equity™, if
done properly, would reflect each company’s unique community experience.
We are here to help you and your company build Community Equity™ into your structure. For
starters we encourage 20-25% Community Equity for any new startup or new company. Of the
25% we encourage that 5% of that would go towards “Societal Equity”, or equity beyond the
single community of the company itself. Obviously if you are an existing company with existing
equity ownership, it is much more complicated to add in new equity %s, but almost any genuine
socially motivated owners should easily be able to add in 3-5% Community Equity™ into an existing company, with VERY little effect on the bottom line. A single owner, without even agreement from the other owners, could even transfer a portion of their own equity to Community Equity™ to get started. Even a little, just 1% or even less, or just a few shares, can go a long way.
Why is Community Equity™ Necessary?
In the current format for how our capitalistic society works, you can have a person work 25-35+
hours per week for 40 years, make their boss and landlord millions of dollars, and then loose
there job, loose there house, and end up homeless in just months or a year or so. Let me
explain. With the work, the company hires you, probably as a contractor with minimal benefits, and you work for 40 years and make the boss or owners millions of dollars over this time. Then one day
 they fire you, you have no savings, possibly not even much retirement, and you get nothing,
even though your boss/owner leaves with millions of dollars of equity you created.
Then with the house that you rented for 40 years because you had a difficult time getting or
paying a mortgage, you literally paid off the mortgage for your landlord, and took care of the
house for them, and now the house it worth over a million dollars, but you get nothing. The
landlord walks away with a million dollar house, and you can’t pay rent anymore because you
lost your job and end up getting kicked out and homeless within months / a year or so.
I know it sounds terrible, but this truly happens, and much more than you think, as most people
instead of making a single person millions of dollars are shuffled from house to house, and job
to job, help many companies and landlords make millions, and the worker/renter gets nothing
and ends up homeless. In the context of how our society actually works where people bounce
between many jobs and locations, the technical term for the solution would be “Societal Equity”,
but it is the exact same principle as Community Equity™, but not within a single company, but
over many companies within the society. This “take-all” equity model is 100% legal, and is actually the typical and standard practice for how to run a business and real-estate investments. This is how our society runs, and this is also exactly why all the money ends up going to the 1%, because they simply take all of the resources and energy that people put into the society and economy, and give nothing back to the workers, renters and consumers who are the actual people running the economy.
The solution is simple, Community Equity™! Everyone who contributes to a business or asset in
any way shape or form should have stake in that business or asset, even if it is just a little bit
that grows and grows overtime the more you contribute to it. This is not rocket science, this is
simple basic fairness to ensure a balanced and stable economy.
How to you implement Community Equity™ within a Company?
Community Equity™ is pretty simple to set up, but there are typically three
stakeholders involved in the decision making process, the company (the entity
issuing the equity), the Community (the group voting on who benefits from the
equity), and the Place Holder (the organization that administers the decision
making and distribution of the Community Equity™).
The easiest Place Holder would be some type of non-profit charity, that would be in
charge of administering the decision making systems to make sure that the
whole community gets Community Equity™, and is able to actively help decide
and vote on where the money would go. The reason that non-profit charities
work as a place holder for administering the Community Equity™, is that 1) they
are already a community decision making model that distributes benefits on
behalf of its non-profit mission, but 2) it is modeled and set up exactly like any
 other trust, it is imply a trust on behalf of the entire public, as it is a public
charity. Therefore any legal entity that both the community and company can agree will have
the overall communities interest in administering the Community Equity™
can be in the role of the Place Holder. In essence it is a simple process of creating a
trust, and the Place Holder is simply the “trustee”, except in this case since the
beneficiaries are a community, it is important that the trustee is an organization,
as opposed to an individual person, but if it is a small community, maybe
everyone could agree to an individual, but it can be dangerous, as the individual
could easily petition for full rights to all of the equity unless the trust contract is
set up properly. Instead of only having the option of each person and company to figure this out and do it all themselves, we have multiple organizations that can help your company
create and administer Community Equity™ as part of your ownership structure.
In the end it is up to your companies decision making body to decide how and
which organization will become the Place Holder, but you are welcome to set up
a sponsored Place Holder organization within our Non-Profit 501c3 Tax
Deductible Organization that currently holds most of the Community Equity™
we administer, but we also have an umbrella Community Equity™ Trust that is also a
great candidate for helping you establish and administer your companies
Community Equity™. Although any non-profit charity that is willing to take on
the task will meet the basic requirements needed. If you do find a non-profit or
other organization who is willing to take it on, they may have questions for us
that are specific to the Place Holder, as this info sheet is written in the
perspective of the Company and why the company should create Community
Equity™. Simply have them get in touch with us and we can help them get
started as a Place Holder organization.
Conclusion
Community Equity™ is simple, easy, and necessary for your new company, and could
even be implemented on a smaller scale, into an existing company. We can help
you understand the concept and apply the models to specifically fit your unique
situation and community that you are forming around your business operations.
Additionally we can even help you create or find a Place Holder to administer
your Community Equity™, or you are welcome to use our existing Community
Equity™ Place Holders. Thank you for your commitment to making our world
 just and right so that all people can prosper and build wealth, not just the
0.0001%. . .
Contact
CommunityEquity.net
info@CommunityEquity.net
415-323-5833 (Jay)
PO Box 20175
Stanford CA 94309
Community LIFE Network (501c3 non-profit Charity)
CommunityLIFEnetwork.org
cln@CommunityLIFEnetwork.org
Unity Network
www.UnityNet.info
UnityTheory.net
act@UnityNet.info
Sponsorship Options (including Sponsored Trusts)
www.Sponsorship.wc.tc
To learn more about Collaborative Companies click here.