Title: Plan voor Transition Town Hollands Kroon
 1Plan voorTransition Town Hollands Kroon
- with 
- Local Exchange Transfer (LETS) system. 
- By 
- Stichting Bakens Verzet (NGO Another Way), 
- Wieringerwerf, Netherlands. 
- (Contact  Tel. 0227-604128 E-mail 
 bakensverzet_at_xs4all.nl
- Skype  temanning 
-  
- This document falls under a Creative Commons 
 Attribution, Non-commercial, Share Alike 3.0
 Un-ported licence.
2Contents
-  
-  01. Where do we want to go? 
-  02. What is a transition town ? 
-  03. What do we need? 
-  04. Operative levels. 
-  05. How do we do it? 
-  06. Interest- and cost-free micro-credits. 
-  07. Relations with local council and 
 authorities.
-  08. What are the risks? 
-  09. The management structure. 
-  10. The local exchange system. 
-  11. Some advantages for members. 
-  12. Costs. 
301. Where do we want to go?
-  We want to create an independent transition 
 town to
-  - reduce our ecological footprint and 
-  - improve the quality of life of our 
 inhabitants,
-  
-  through 
-  
-  - a general mobilisation of the inhabitants 
-  - cooperation (therefore not competition) 
-   
-  - with transaction balances amongst 
 transition
-  towns  0. 
402. What is a Transition Town ?
- In the following 3 slides we cite the homepage of 
 website www.transitiontowns.nl
-  
502. What is a Transition Town ?(Slide 1.)
-  1. A Transition Town is a popular citizens 
 initiative in towns, villages or local areas to
 make their life-style, work and environment less
 dependent on fossil fuels and to improve social
 contacts there.
-  
-  Peak oil and climate change with their 
 connected economic crises are the main reasons
 for taking action.
602. What is a Transition Town ?(Slide 2.)
-  2. Transition Towns seek to create waves of 
 small-scale, social and payable solutions to
 promote a switch to a fully sustainable world.
 Independent popular citizens action can break
 through political and economic barriers.
-  
-  They give people a chance to contribute and 
 take part in the change towards a better,
 healthier and happier world.
702. What is a Transition Town ?(Slide 3.)
-  3. Transition Towns promote a cultural change in 
 which people, biodiversity and flexibility are
 central. So that we can organise a strong,
 healthy, and peaceful reaction in the presence of
 energy, climate and economic crises.
-  We strive for the timely achievement of a 
 practical, attractive world with less energy,
 fewer goods and less money (debt).
803. What do we need?(taken from 
www.platform31.nl) 
- Spirit  motivation to give form to initiatives. 
- Contact  with neighbours, and local 
 organisations and authorities.
- Empathy  leaders who understand the local people 
 and follow up their initiatives properly.
- Establishment  in the community, accepted by the 
 town council and authorities that are willing to
 cooperate cooperation with local businesses
 involvement of young people, especially women.
- Equipment - means, time, capabilities.
904. Operative levels.
- In this section we describe the four cell types 
 needed for Transition Town Hollands Kroon.
- Celtype 1  Neighbourhood. 
- Celtype 2  Clubs, schoolclasses, religious and 
-  culural groups. 
- Celtype 3  Schools. 
- Celtype 4  Commercial units. 
1004. Operative levels.
- Cell type 1  Local neighbourhoods with /- 100 
 homes and /- 250 people.
- Each neighbourhood has a small, preferably young, 
 dynamic leadership group of 3-5, where possible
 with a majority of women.
- The neighboruhood groups cooperate with each 
 other.
- The following example refers to the 
-  Wieringermeer in the Netherlands  
11(No Transcript) 
 12A few possible activities for group type 1 
(slide 1 skip for rapid presentation)
- Animals walk, wash and groom. 
- Baking. 
- Barbecues, summer. 
- Bicycles repair. 
- Bicycle tyres repair. 
- Car share and/or set up green car service. 
- Caravans (lend). 
- Childrens club. 
- Child care, accompany to and from school, 
 babysitting.
- Children, parties, make-up, body-painting, group 
 trips.
- Chicken run (self-made from straw bales (?) 
 maximum one hen per family (100). The chooks
 recycle food waste.
- Clothing repairs, sewing. 
- Clothing swaps, sale and purchase. 
- Computer problems, solve. 
- Cooking and associated services (in case of 
 illness, parties etc.)
- Copies make, scan, projectors, screens.
13A few possible activieties for groups type 1 
(slide 2  skip for rapid presentation)
- Data registration for local transfer system. 
- Documents, drafting, help with tax returns. 
- Dog poo (remove). 
- Dogs, walk, in case of illness or absence of 
 owner.
- Elderly, accompany. 
- Gardens (private, unused) for vegetables, 
 berries, fruit trees, insects etc. lend and use.
- Gardens, individual, maintain. 
- Green  town council areas, maintenance.   
- Green waste, collect and compost (where 
 appropriate dispensation from all or part of
 local rubbish collection taxes).
- Group purchase of goods and services.  
- Gutters, cleaning. 
- Health care (not professional). 
- Household chores. 
- House removals  help. 
14A few possible activities for groups type 1 
(slide 3  skip for rapid presentation)
- Interior design. 
- Ironing. 
- Ladders (lend). 
- Languages. 
- Litter, clean up. 
- Local zone  brighten up. 
- LETS boxes, make and install. 
- LETS boxes, empty. 
- Lessons (extra) for children. 
- Local market booths, manage. 
- Meeting area(s). 
- Painting, wallpapering, carpet laying. 
- Picnics, especially for children. 
- Plant nurseries. 
- Reading aloud (to individuals and groups), 
 elderly, children.
- Repair workshop. 
- Sheds, hire. 
- Shoes, clean 
15A few possible activities for type 1 groups 
(slide 4  skip for rapid presentation)
- Shopping with or for the elderly and the 
 handicapped.
- Social support. 
- Solar gardens. 
- Spaces (some public) for vegetables, berries, 
 fruit trees, insect-attracting bushes etc.,
 availability and use.
- Story-tellling. 
- Support for local businesses. 
- Swapping events contacts with local recyclers. 
- Social security system for group members unable 
 to contribute productively.
- Tools and sheds, share and lend. 
- Trailers (lend) 
- Transport by car. 
- Trees (fruit, nuts) and bushes (berries), plant 
 and maintain.
- Urine  own urine collection. (The urine is paid 
 for !)
- Urine, collection and use for gardens. 
- Washing. 
- Wheelbarrows and carts (lend), where required 
 purchase.
- Windows, cleaning. 
- Work in the form of gifts of earned LETS points. 
1604. Operative structures.
- Type 2 Groups  Social, religious and cultural 
 groups, sports clubs and school classes.
-  Every accepting club (and therefore all its 
 members) may be a member of the local transfer
 system. Clubs and their members may freely make
 general use of the local transfer system.
-  Local unit costs for clubs groups and classes 
 are split amongst their members. Individual
 members may recover their costs using the local
 transfer system outside their clubs, groups and
 classes.
-  
17A few possible activities for type 2 groups 
- Example for volunteers and services within a 
 football club.
-  Cantine management. 
-  Maintenance of buildings (with agreement and 
 contribution of local authorities where
 necessary).
-  Maintenance and cleaning and cantines and 
 shower areas.
-  Maintenance of playing fields. 
-  Preparations for training sessions and 
 matches.
-  Purchases. 
-  Referees. 
-  Training activities. 
-  Transport. 
-  Washing/ironing sports clothes.  
-  All other services required !
1804. Operative structures.
- Cell type 3  Schools. 
- One group for each school. All parents become 
- members of the local transfer system. Including 
- parents from outside the systems geographic 
 area.
- School transaction costs are split and allocated 
 to
- the parents. Individual members earn credits in 
 the
- normal way within system as a whole. They can 
 also
- of course provide goods and services for the 
 school.
- Individual school classes are type 2 cells and 
 viewed
- as social clubs. 
1904. Operative structures?
- Type 4 cells  Commercial units. 
- Businesses and professionals can participate in 
 the local transfer system. Before doing so they
 must reach an agreement with the tax department,
 since, under the current tax system, their
 activities are subject to VAT (GST) tax.
- Group activities amongst employees are organised 
 like social and sports clubs.
2005. How do we do it?(Slide 1.)
- 01. Systems can be gradually built up step by 
 step, cell by cell, beginning with one or more
 neighbourhoods and/or clubs with a few
 activities, eventually in just one centre.
- 02. Cells can be neighbourhoods, clubs, religious 
 and cultural groups, schools or businesses.
- 03. Start the local transfer system up. This 
 might include children over 13 ( or other age
 members may choose) with the consent of their
 parents. This has consequences, but encourages
 the responsible social participation of youth
 from an early age.
21 05.How do we do it?(Slide 2.)
- 04. Find a few preferably young animators (with a 
 female majority where possible) in each
 neighbourhood ( /- 100 homes, 250 people) or
 other cell type to organise integrated activities
 there. All the residents or participants, as
 members of the local transfer system, are free to
 participate in them. While participation is never
 compulsory, it should be made as attractive as
 possible.
-   
- 05. The cooperation of local councils and 
 authorities should be sought. Councils may for
 instance release residents from (green) rubbish
 collection charges, make areas available for
 gardens, provide water sources and accommodation
 for meetings and activities. They might opt to
 accept local transfer units as local taxes.
- 06. For each 50.000 residents, about 200 
 neighbourhood groups would be formed. The groups
 are interactive  they can carry out transactions
 with each other.
2205. How do we do it?(Slide 3.)
- 07. Set agreements up with the numerous local 
 sports social and cultural clubs to help them
 solve their problems in finding volunteers. Their
 members can always form separate cell groups,
 including members coming from outside the
 geographic area of the local transfer system.
- 08. Club members coming from the various centres 
 can be grouped separately and/or the benefits and
 costs of transactions and initiatives distributed
 amongst them.
2305. How do we do it?(Slide 4.)
- 09. All transactions are settled within the local 
 transfer system.
- 10. Centres, neighbourhoods, clubs, schools, 
 churches, businesses etc. are independent cells
 within the local transfer system.
- 11. The independent cells can cooperate with each 
 other in any required combination.
- 12. Cell members living in specific centres can 
 also be separately grouped.
- 13. Social support (social security) is built 
 into every cell, and eventually centre and
 transfer system level.
2405. How do we do it?(Slide 5.)
- 14. A third party insurance policy is needed. An 
 existing council-level policy covering volunteers
 could, where possible, be extended for this
 purpose.
- 15. Eventual surplus production can be disposed 
 of by agreement with food banks and/or with other
 local transfer systems.
-   
- 16. Active local animators (leaders) 
 automatically qualify to set up (new) cells.
 (Self-teaching concept).
2506. Interest- and cost-free micro credits.
- Micro-credit groups can be set up at the 
 neighbourhood, centre, or system levels.
 Micro-credits are available for investment for
 productivity increase only.
-   
- Example  neighbourhood cell with 200 members. 
-   
- Example with a contribution of  5 per person per 
 month. First month -  Euro 1000. This becomes
 bigger each month. The system includes repayment
 guarantee structures. The terms of repayment are
 in principle determined by the borrowers.
- Administration costs are settled under the local 
 transfer system.
- Cooperative buying groups, for instance for 
 energy, can also be organised.
- Formal money (euros, dollars etc) invested in the 
 local area stays and continually circulates
 there. Financial leakage from the transition town
 area is blocked.
- Poor group members may qualify for a social 
 subsidy and could enjoy precedence to receive
 micro-credit loans to increase their
 productivity.
2607. Relationships with council and other 
authorities.
- The council (and other authorities) may be 
 members of the local transfer system.
- Groups or individuals can carry out tasks for the 
 council against payment in local transfer units.
 The council may allow some services and/or part
 of its rates to be paid for in local transfer
 system units. Otherwise the local unit costs can
 be split amongst transfer system members at
 system, centre, neighbourhood, club etc. level.
- Examples  cleaning up litter management of 
 animals in parks help with maintenance of public
 parks, streets, unused areas collection of green
 waste at local level for local composting.
2708. What are the risks ?(Slide 1)
- A few risks  
-   
- Lack of clarity over the initiatives members are 
 free to take.
- Inadequate delegation of responsibility to 
 participants.
- Deliberate or unintentional exclusion of existing 
 groups or interests.
- Lack of support from participants inadequate 
 demand for support by leadership groups.
2808. What are the risks ?(Slide 2)
- Dominant attitudes of leadership groups or their 
 members, in particular those of experts.
- Lack of time for review and evaluation. 
- Too many meetings, not enough action. 
- Not enough fun during meetings and activities. 
-   
29De bestuursstructuur 
 3009. The local transfer (LETS) system (Letskring 
Wier)
- (Slide 1) 
- A separate Powerpoint presentation is available. 
- Participation includes in principle all 
 residents. Residents never have to make use of
 the system.
- Participation is possible at age 13. Children 
 below 18 need their parents reasoned consent.
 For good and for worse youth participants share
 all system costs and responsibilities.
- Transactions can take place amongst individuals, 
 individuals and cells, centres, council and
 authorities and cells, centres, council and
 authorities amongst each other.
- Transactions between local transfer systems and 
 with other Transition Towns are also possible.
3109. The local transfer system (Letskring Wier)
- (Slide 2) 
- Individual members begin with 500 units, or 50 
 hours at an
-  average rate of 10 units an hour, or 1 unit 
 every 6 minutes.
- The total units in circulation in any system is 
 therefore constant. It changes only with
 increases or decreases in the number of
 individual resident members and externally
 resident cell members.
- Non-individual members (neighbourhoods, centres, 
 councils, clubs, religious and cultural groups,
 schools, businesses etc) do not initially receive
 any allotted units, since they do not themselves
 personally provide any time. Their credits and
 debts are distributed amongst their members.
- That distribution is done once a month, in 
 principle on the basis of a plan provided by the
 non-individual members themselves.
- The local transfer system administrators retain 
 the right to redistribute the credits and debts
 of non-individual members more or less frequently
 as circumstances may require.
32Het LETS systeem (Letskring Wier) 
 33Het LETS systeem (Letskring Wier) 
 3410. Some advantages for members.(Slide 1).
- Do what you enjoy doing. 
- With the agreement of the local council where 
 required, halve rubbish collection costs (savings
 about  200 per family per year).
- Use the services offered by other members. 
- Use all types of services and products without 
 the need for formal money (euros, dollars etc).
- Buy vegetables and fruit under the local exchange 
 system with per family savings up to  20 per
 week ( 1000 per year).
- Take advantage of cooperative purchasing groups. 
- Improvement in members quality of life, in 
 particular that of people with minimum incomes,
 the aged, the ill and the handicapped.
- Use unused structures, where necessary against 
 rental payments in local exchange units.
3510. Some advantages for members.(Slide 2).
- With the consent of local authorities, public 
 spaces and accommodation can be used for
 productive and social purposes.
- Interest- and cost-free cooperative loans for 
 productivity increase are made available to all.
- Improvement of members social contacts, 
 especially those of the aged and handicapped.
- Social safety nets are made available to needy 
 members.
- Urine is collected and paid for in local exchange 
 units.
- Volunteers are well paid for their efforts, if 
 they so wish.
- The unemployed can make productive use of their 
 time and earn local exchange units for their
 efforts.
3611. Costs.
- Formal money (euros, dollars) start-up and 
 management costs are minimal.
- A simple data base programme (operating off-line) 
 is used. The same applies to the cooperative
 micro-credit system.
- Second-hand computers are fine. Otherwise, the 
 use of computers can be hired from members.
- One on-line computer is needed to manage contacts 
 with members and third parties.
- An internet subscription with website access. To 
 start with, the www.integrateddevelopment.org
 website could be used.
- Office articles  one or more guillotines for 
 paper, one or more heavy-duty staplers one or
 more printers to make transaction slips.
- Paper for transaction slips and documents. 
- Toner for printers. 
- Staples for transaction slip booklets. 
- Power for computers and lighting. 
- Telephone costs. 
- Transport costs (fuel). These are minimal as most 
 activities are local and can be done by bike.
3712. Contact informationwww.integrateddevelopment
.org
- Stichting Bakens Verzet,  NGO Another Way 
- 1018 AM Amsterdam. 
- Direction  T.E.Manning 
- Schoener 50, 
- 1771 ED Wieringerwerf. 
- Tel. 0227-604128 
- E-mail  bakensverzet_at_xs4all.nl 
- Skype  temanning 
- K.van.K. NL 34235506, Amsterdam 
- BTW nr. NL 8150.17.972.B01 
-  
-  
- This document falls under a Creative Commons 
 Attribution, Non-commercial, Share Alike 3.0
 Un-ported licence.