The Bottom-Up Revolution is... Starting a Community Laundry Co-op
Members of the Woodhill Community Co-op at a pop-up event where they offered laundry supplies and heard about their neighbors needs.
You might be familiar with food co-ops or housing co-ops. But how about a laundry co-op? A group of community members in the Woodhill neighborhood of Cleveland are starting just that. Marilyn Burns and Leah Ross are part of a group of residents who, through surveys and outreach, learned that a majority of their neighbors do not have access to a nearby washer or dryer. This may seem like a small thing, but itās such a fundamental and basic component of human dignity. Being able to show up at school or a job with clean clothesāespecially during this time of COVID when everyone is more attuned to hygiene concernsāshould be something everyoneās able to do.
Accordingly, Burns and Ross are collaborating with neighbors to get a cooperative laundromat started. In this interview on the Bottom-Up Revolution podcast, hosted by Strong Towns Program Director Rachel Quednau, Burns and Ross get into what itās like to start a neighborhood-based effort like this one. They talk about all the important steps along the way, including gathering people together, doing your research, finding funding, and building support for the effortāalways rooted in a dedication to listening to neighborsā needs rather than dictating an outcome. Itās community engagement in the truest sense, from the bottom-up.
Additional Show Notes
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