Originally published in IN CONTEXT #41, Summer 1995, Page 30
Copyright (c)1995, 1997 by Context Institute

Many communities are giving up waiting on large corporations or
government to invest or provide jobs, and are instead building on
their own strengths and resources.

The people of Ithaca have done so by issuing their own paper
currency, called Ithaca HOURS. Residents list the goods or services
they have to offer in a large catalog - and then use the HOURS they
earn to purchase goods and services from others. For some, this
barter system provides a crucial margin of financial support. For
others, it's a great way to meet people and build a sense of
community. All find their spending habits redirected locally.

Here in Ithaca, New York, we've begun to gain control of the social
and environmental effects of commerce by issuing over $50,000 of our
own local paper money, to over 950 participants, since 1991.
Thousands of purchases and many new friendships have been made with
this cash, and about $500,000 of local trade has been added to the
Grassroots National Product.

We printed our own money because we watched Federal dollars come to
town, shake a few hands, then leave to buy rainforest lumber and to
fight wars. Ithaca HOURS, by contrast, stay in our region to help us
hire each other. While dollars make us increasingly dependent on
multinational corporations and bankers, HOURS reinforce community
trade and expand commerce that is more responsive to our concern for
ecology and social justice.

Here's how it works. The Ithaca HOUR is Ithaca's $10 bill, because
$10 per hour is the average of wages/salaries in Tompkins County.
These HOUR notes, in four denominations, buy plumbing, carpentry,
electrical work, roofing, nursing, chiropractic care, child care, car
and bike repair, food, eyeglasses, firewood, gifts, and thousands of
other goods and services. Our credit union accepts them for mortgage
and loan fees. People pay rent with HOURS. The best restaurants in
town take them, as do movie theaters, bowling alleys, health clubs,
two large locally-owned grocery stores, and 30 farmers' market
vendors. Anyone may use HOURS, and hundreds have done so.

Ithaca's new HOURly minimum wage, enforced by general consent, lifts
the lowest pay up without knocking down higher wages. For example,
several of Ithaca's organic farmers are paying the highest farm labor
wages in the Western Hemisphere: $10 of spending power per hour.
These farmers benefit by the HOUR's loyalty to local agriculture. On
the other hand, dentists, massage therapists and lawyers charging
more than the $10 average per hour are permitted to collect several
HOURS hourly, although we hear increasingly of professional services
provided for our equitable wage.

Everyone who agrees to accept HOURS is paid two HOURS (worth $20) for
being listed in our newsletter Ithaca Money. Every eight months they
may apply to be paid an additional two HOURS, as reward for
continuing participation. This is how we gradually and carefully
increase the per capita supply of our money.

Ithaca's printed currency honors local features we respect, like
native flowers, powerful waterfalls, crafts, farms, and our children.
The multi-colored HOURS - some printed on locally-made watermarked
cattail (marsh reed) paper, all with serial numbers - are harder to
counterfeit than US dollars.

We regard Ithaca HOURS as real money, backed by real people, real
time, real skills and tools. Dollars, by contrast, are funny money,
backed no longer by gold or silver but by less than nothing: $4.8
trillion of national debt.

Ithaca Money's 1,200 listings, rivaling the Yellow Pages, are a
portrait of our community's capability, bringing into the marketplace
time and skills not employed by the conventional market. Residents
are proud of income earned by doing work they enjoy.

At the same time Ithaca's locally-owned stores, which help keep
wealth local, make sales and get spending power they otherwise would
not have. And over $4,000 of local currency has been donated to 22
community organizations so far by our wide-open governing body.

As we discover new ways to provide for each other, we replace
dependence on imports. Yet our greater self-reliance, rather than
isolating Ithaca, gives us more potential to reach outward with
ecological export industry. We can provide the capital for new
businesses with loans of our own cash. HOUR loans are made without
interest charges.

We encounter each other as fellow Ithacans, rather than as winners
and losers scrambling for dollars. As we do so, we help relieve the
social desperation which has led to compulsive shopping, wasted
resources, and homelessness and hunger. We're making a community
while making a living.

Paul Glover, who created the HOUR system, is a community economist
and ecological urban designer with a degree in city management. For
contact information, see Toolbox below.

Community-Based Currency

People use Ithaca HOURS for everything from goat cheese to tax
consulting. Here are just a few of their stories.

Thomas found work by calling those who had listed a need for computer
help. And when he read that Ithaca Rape Crisis received an HOUR
grant, he did computer programming for them. His HOURS were spent for
food, credit union membership, and dressmaking for his wife: "Our
goal is to have money with value not tied to the dollar and not
subject to the whims of the global market."

Judy has earned many HOURS selling Jim's hand-painted T-shirts, and
spends them right away: "Ithaca has so much expertise in so many
areas. ... We're like puzzle pieces that need to be put into a
picture."

Elson, who retired in 1972, earns HOURS doing heating and air
conditioning consulting: "This HOUR system takes me back 20 years and
makes me feel constructive again. My wife and I spend HOURS at the
Farmers' Market, where we browse and chat with old friends. I was
very pleased last winter to hire two girls with HOURS to shovel heavy
snow. They used the HOURS for rent."

Bill, works for The Alternatives Federal Credit Union: "Because
Ithaca HOURS can be part of the purchase of a house, they can help
people who do not have enough dollars buy a home."

Marty has earned HOURS from mortgage payments, massage, and hand-
painted silk scarves: ""The first thing I ever bought with HOURS was
goat cheese. Richard at the Farmers' Market had never accepted any,
and I had never spent any. Since the note says an HOUR, he described
an hour of his work. People gathered around as he explained how he
made goat cheese."

Nancy has done tax returns and investment planning for HOURS and
trades: "There's a lot of anger about how work by women is
undervalued. An HOUR being an hour's work is a nice way around that."

Jim has swapped plumbing for drywalling: "With the Ithaca Money list
we can depend on each other as a community, rather than on faceless
corporations beyond our control. Trading creates a tremendous feeling
of good will and self-esteem amongst all involved."

Sara grows organic strawberries and knits angora hats. She's just
received a large loan of HOURS from a carpenter friend who has earned
a lot of them. Needing money before berry sales begin, she'll use
HOURS for child care and to hire farm labor.

Steve sells notecards and T-shirts for HOURS, most spent for meals
and employees: "Local currency makes local self-sufficiency more
possible. It helps protect our local environment and resource base so
that economic activity doesn't damage the ecological base of the
region."

Craig & Stephanie sell water filters, biodegradable soaps, and
unbleached cotton clothing. Their HOURS have gone to restaurant
meals, advertising, and construction of display racks. Craig
says: "When we have a community that is cash poor, like Ithaca,
barter allows people to spend money and live a better quality of
life."

TOOLBOX: Grassroots Economics Resources

Here are some resources to get you started on local currency and
other aspects of community economics.

Hometown Money Starter Kit
Ithaca Money
Box 6578
Ithaca, NY. 14851
([EMAIL PROTECTED])
$25 (or 2.5 HOURS)

Explains step-by-step start up and maintenance of a local currency
barter system. Includes forms, laws, articles, procedures, and
samples of Ithaca's HOURS. They've sent the Kit to over 300
communities in 45 states.

LANDSMAN Community Services
1660 Embleton Cres.
Courtenay, BC V9N 6N8, Canada
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Start-up information for LETS (Local Economic Trading System), a
computer barter system trading Green Dollars, invented by Michael
Linton.

New Money for Healthy Communities, by Tom Greco
Box 42663, Tucson, AZ. 85733 ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
$15.95 plus $2.00 shipping

The first book about the main benefits and types of local currency.

E. F. Schumacher Society
Box 76 R.D. 3,
Great Barrington, MA. 01230
([EMAIL PROTECTED])

Initiated Berkshares and store notes, promotes "small is beautiful"
economics with its newsletter, and maintains a library.




Freedom exists only on the frontier

It is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong. -Voltaire [Fran�ois Marie Arouet] (1694-1778)

An honest man can feel no pleasure in the exercise of power over his
fellow citizens." -- Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)

"As democracy is perfected, the office of president represents, more and
more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great and glorious
day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last
and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron."

...H. L.  Mencken (1880 - 1956)





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