Decision Maker: Council
Decision status: Recommendations Determined
Moved by Councillor Scully, seconded by the
Chair (the Lord Mayor) –
It is resolved that:
(A)
Council
note:
(i)
the importance
of ensuring Council makes every effort to support local businesses in a time of
recession and economic lockdown;
(ii)
one of
the goals identified in the City’s Covid-19 Recovery Plan is to “support a
resilient economy and community wealth building … by encouraging recovery
actions to be developed in partnership between government, business and
communities … supporting local procurement, promoting local businesses and
working together with our communities to catalyse the changes needed to build a
stronger future”;
(iii)
at the
Council meeting of 8 April 2019, Council endorsed a motion requesting the Chief
Executive Officer “to investigate the possibility of developing a local
preference policy for the City of Sydney”;
(iv)
only 12
per cent of small-to-medium enterprises in the City are registered on
Tenderlink, the online tender advertising platform used by the City, and that
increasing this figure would help the City source more of its requirements from
local businesses;
(v)
fifty-five
to 65 per cent of the City’s procurement already runs through businesses
registered in the City of Sydney Local Government Area, and staff are actively
considering actions we can implement to increase this;
(vi)
the
rapid growth of the Community Wealth Building (CWB) movement in North America,
the United Kingdom and Europe, which aims to establish fairer, more inclusive
economic principles using the strengths and skills of local government as
‘anchor institutions’ using their resources, spend and influence to create a
fairer society, serve as employment multipliers, and build more self-sufficient
and thriving local communities;
(vii)
the
success of Community Wealth Building initiatives around the world ‒
including the Preston Model, Spain’s Mondragon Corporation, and the work of the
Democracy Collaborative in Cleveland, Ohio ‒ in supporting local
economies to be more resilient in the face of crises, nurturing diverse models
of enterprises which deliver secure and fair conditions for workers and
partners, and enabling socially, financially and environmentally sustainable
outcomes;
(viii)
the
increasing uptake of Community Wealth Building-related programs across
Australia, from earlier projects such as Renew Newcastle, to the City of Gold
Coast’s ‘buy local’ procurement policy and the GROW program in regional
Victoria;
(ix)
the
challenges experienced by community and creative organisations in particular in
retaining secure and affordable space, exacerbated by the impacts of the
pandemic and lockdown;
(x)
in
2018, the Mayor of London established the Creative Land Trust, which supports
the community and industry in the acquisition or long term lease of creative
workspace in order to provide a network of sustainable, permanent spaces that
will remain affordable for artists and creative producers in perpetuity. The
success of international programs like London’s Creative Land Trust could serve
as a model for ensuring greater resilience for important social and cultural
infrastructure in our City;
(xi)
the
first principle proposed by the City’s Citizens’ Jury in its Sydney 2050 concepts
report was that of participatory governance, consistent with the principles of
Community Wealth Building; and
(xii)
the
Community Recovery Plan endorsed by Council on 29 June 2020 sets out four
Recovery Goals, including support for a “resilient economy and community wealth
building”. The Plan states that “as part of our work to build capacity in
groups and organisations, we will support local procurement, promote local
businesses and work together with our communities to catalyse the changes
needed to build a stronger future”; and
(B) the Chief Executive Officer be requested to:
(i)
investigate
developing a City policy integrating the principles of Community Wealth
Building into City operations to make the City of Sydney an ‘anchor
institution’ for building and retaining wealth in our area, including through
procurement, the use of City land and assets, and increased support for diverse
models of ownership and operation that empower communities and share economic
benefit more broadly;
(ii)
investigate
how the City might develop and enter into Memorandum of Understanding with
major partner organisations ‒ such as universities, hospitals, airports,
and the members of the Camperdown Ultimo Innovation Precinct, and to raise it
with some of our important networks such as the Better Building Partnership and
Sustainable Destination Partnership ‒ to build a network of anchor
institutions which increase local and socially responsible procurement across
the City;
(iii)
investigate
creative land trust models and how they might be applied in our local
context;
(iv)
investigate
embedding the principles of Community Wealth Building into the City’s Sustainable
Sydney 2050 plan, in line with the goals of the City’s Covid-19 Recovery Plan
and the recommendations of the Citizens’ Jury; and
(v)
report
back to Councillors via the CEO Update on the outcomes of these investigations.
The motion,
as varied by consent, was carried unanimously.
S129264
Report author: Erin Cashman
Publication date: 27/07/2020
Date of decision: 27/07/2020
Decided at meeting: 27/07/2020 - Council
Accompanying Documents: