Lessons on Worker Ownership from the Main Street Phoenix Project
September 23, 2024
10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Mountain Time
Free webinar
At the height of the COVID-19 lockdowns, Main Street Phoenix Project was founded as an audacious, worker-owned holding company to buy and protect food-service businesses. It acquired two Denver companies but ran into trouble. After closing the company down, founder Jason Wiener has done a rare thing: made the company's operating documents available to the world.
In this event, Wiener will share lessons from the Main Street Phoenix experience and ideas for how those lessons can be useful for emerging efforts to build mutual enterprises. Fellow co-op entrepreneur Alissa Orlando will share reflections on the current state of investment and strategy for social enterprises.
Jason Wiener is the Principal of a boutique law and business consulting practice whose specialty is in cooperative law, shared ownership models, cooperative finance, regenerative capital and financing strategies, sustainable economies law, teal lawyering, virtual outside general counsel, and worker-ownership. He serves on the state of Colorado's Employee Ownership Commission.
Alissa Orlando leads Camillus Partners, an entrepreneur-led fund dedicated to buying, leading, and growing a mission-driven business. She was previously co-founder of the Drivers Cooperative in New York, which is currently launching in Colorado. Before that, she headed Uber’s operations across East Africa.
Sponsored by the Media Economies Design Lab at CU Boulder, Jason Wiener P.C., and the Exit to Community Collective.