- RepaNet
RepaNet is an environmental and employment creation project based in
Graz ,Austria . It was part of adevelopment partnership within theEQUAL Community Initiative , part of theEuropean Union 'sStructural Funds .It is notable for the way it combines three complementary goals: the ecological goal of cutting
waste by repairing and reusing things instead of throwing them away, the social goal of providing jobs for long-term unemployed people and the local economy goal of supporting small firms and building regional value.The initiative is a triangular
partnership involving small firms as well asNGO s and thepublic sector . The co-ordinartors see this as a 'win-win-win situation': Thelocal authority and the ministry prize the environmental benefits, thechamber of commerce sees benefits for local firms, and the labour market service sees disadvantaged people back in work.RepaNet is not just creating jobs that are sustainable in resource terms, but is also building attitudes and practices that are vital for the long-term development of the local economy. It is a training ground where consumers can learn to reuse waste, businesses can learn to co-operate and politicians can learn to think in terms of balanced growth. It thus contributes to the strategy set out in the European Commission’s "Integrated guidelines for growth and jobs (2005-2008)", COM(2005) 141. [http://europa.eu.int/growthandjobs/pdf/COM2005_141_en.pdf] . Guideline 14 encourages the adoption of environmental technologies, guideline 15 calls for local industrial clusters, and guideline 18 recommends measures to include disadvantaged people in the labour market.
A GREEN WAY OF LIFE
A range of low buildings in a yard near Graz’s railway station is home to Ökoservice [http://www.oekoservice.at] , and the base for several different environmental services. The first is chopping, removing and
compost ing garden waste, for the local authority environment department and for local householders. There is a steady demand. The second service hires out recyclingcatering equipment for events, and operates out of a warehouse full of racks of plastic tumblers, plates and cutlery, all neatly crated and shrink-wrapped. This service was born in 1999 when Graz won the football cup, and the town's stadium was left littered with disposable cups. The city’s environment department put up €140,000 to buy a large-capacitywashing machine which meant reusable plastic tumblers could be used. The service now reuses over a million tumblers a year – and turnover still peaks when Graz wins at football. There are some 200 regular customers, who value guaranteed quality and predictable costs.The third Ökoservice operation is the dismantling and
recycling of electrical equipment, which is done in collaboration with a private company. A fourth ecological service supports the others: a 280 kWcombined heat and power (CHP) station, the result of a university research project, has been installed in a freight container opposite the warehouse, and turns 70 tons a year of used frying oil into electric power, as well as heating the premises. The service collects 200 tons of oil a year from restaurants. What is not used in the co-generation plant is sent to SouthStyria for processing intobiodiesel . Some of it comes back as fuel for Graz's buses, lending them a distinctive smell.The business of integration
The Ökoservice workforce numbers 45. Of these, 10 are ‘key workers’, 27 temporary "Transitarbeiter" – long-term unemployed people employed on subsidised contracts of up to 14 months – and the rest ex-"Transitarbeiter" who have graduated to permanent contracts.
It recruits long-term unemployed people, who find it difficult to get a job for any number of reasons – because they are ex-offenders, migrants,
illiterate , ill, or just women who want to go back to work after raising a family. Most of Ökoservice’s employees have the status of ‘transit worker’ ("Transitarbeiter") under Austrian law, which means that for up to 14 months their employer can claim asubsidy worth 60% of their wages costs from the Labour Market Office ("Arbeitsmarktservice" – AMS). This brings in a little less than half the enterprise’s €1.3 million revenue, the other half being earned from the sale of services.Ökoservice is determinedly a business, not a make-work scheme. Legally, it is a share company with two owners, the environmental NGO ARGE Müllvermeidung [http://www.arge.at] and the repair workshop BAN. It took the form of a profit-making company, because in Austria there is no specific social economy status that a trading firm can adopt. However the tax office recognises it as of being public utility ("gemeinnützig"), and so it levies
VAT at 10%, half the standard rate.Ökoservice is determined to combine social goals with its ecological and economic ones. It has the status of a "Beschäftingungsgesellschaft" (employment company), which is something special to the
Land ofStyria . The advantage of this status is that it brings the incentive to trade profitably like any other company. This is not the case for the so-called "sozialökonomische Betriebe" (social economic enterprises) which are driven by anadministrative logic, not anentrepreneur ial one, so they are unable to invest. There are some 200 'Sozialökonomische Betriebe" all over Austria, and ten "Beschäftigungsgesellschaften", uniquely in Styria.Training that leads to jobs
The staff are flexible, having at least two skills, which brings some variety into their working lives. Business peaks in the summer, so Ökoservice runs its
training course during the winter.Thesyllabus includes job skills – maybehorticulture ,forestry or forklift driving – plusemployability skills such as computing, usinge-mail , form-filling, CV-writing,goal setting ,conflict management ,drug awareness andfirst aid . The training is delivered on the premises, and lasts for nine weeks at 35 hours per week. Apersonal development counsellor is on hand to place people in an appropriate job. In ten years, 297 Ökoservice trainees have found permanent work, which is a 75% success rate.Ökoservice has become a local institution, and is seen to create a range of benefits: an appropriate type of work for the
target group , a variety of different jobs that workers can switch between, and the opportunity to get a qualification. It offers services that would not be offered in the market, and employs people who would not be employable in the openlabour market . It gives these people support andmentoring , and raises public awareness of ecological and labour market issues – Graz is an EU ‘Eco-city’ and Ökoservice was selected as aLocal Agenda 21 good practice. It has opened a branch in St Veit am Vogau, 40 km south of Graz, and an extension toVienna is under consideration.The Ökoservice
business model has worked well for a decade now, but there is a cloud on the horizon. The Arbeitsmarktservice, which has no way to measure the quality of the service it is paying for, wants to reduce the allowance it pays to integrate unemployed people.BAN on waste
Another social enterprise, BAN ("Beratung, Arbeit, Neubeginn" – ‘Advice, Work, New Start’) [http://ban-soeb.at] , is to be found in an old house in the inner-city neighbourhood of Gries. A pair of furniture vans stand in the yard, and the verandah is stacked with cupboards and similar items. BAN’s main activity is collecting, renovating and selling old
furniture and household equipment. Like Ökoservice, BAN, which was founded in 1983, earns about half its revenue from selling goods and services, and makes up the difference with the grants it receives in return for integrating long-term unemployed people. About two-thirds of household equipment that people throw out can be reused. So Graz saves €100,000 a year inlandfill costs. The 50 workers repair about 1,000 items a year. An upstairs room is the meeting point for the "Graz Repair Network", which brings together representatives from a score of local businesses, who energetically debate their collective image and plan promotional events. Many traditional crafts are built on the idea of durability and repair, andjeweller s,watchmaker s,cobbler s,tailor s,plumber s,carpenter s, smiths,electrician s andbicycle shops have all joined the networks. RepaNet members agree aquality standard which commits them to attempt any reasonable repair, to deal with at least five different brands of equipment, and to charge a set amount for a binding quotation.Innovation - Making the wheels go roundA more specialised operation is based on an
industrial estate inLiezen , 120 kilometres northwest of Graz amid the mountains of Northern Styria. This industrial town of 7,000 was once the home of state-owned engineering firm VÖEST Alpine. The works closed down in the 1990s with the loss of over a thousand skilled craft jobs. GBL ("Gemeinnützige Beschäftigungsgesellschaft Liezen") [http://www.gbl.at] has created products that make good use both of these specialist skills and of traditional local materials. The most original line produced iswater wheel s. The workshop helped renovate three oldwatermill s and the idea grew from there. The normal size is one-and-a-halfmetre s across, but they make them as big as three metres. And they are all made from locallarch wood. The company has found aniche market at the intersection oftourism , the environment andscience education , and also fabricates items such asArchimedes screw s, which make popular hands-on exhibits at a local watertheme park .The waterwheels are GBL’s trademark, but its high skills base means that the enterprise can fabricate all sorts of metal or wood
prototype s and is always on the lookout for new product ideas. It has contracts to make high-end wooden office equipment and mountings fordiesel engine s, and is experimenting with ideas such asceramic plaques and woodentoys .Of course it also renovates and repairs household equipment, especially
white goods (washing machine s,dishwasher s,tumble drier s, electricstove s etc.), which it sells with a one-yearguarantee . It also offers a wide range of services both in the open air – cleaning historicalmonument s,landscaping , buildingfootpath s,cycle path s and ski trails, clearingsnow , maintainingplaying field s and otheropen space s – as well as indoors, such as house clearance.GBL’s workshop is open-plan, as it is important for customer confidence that they can see the repairs being done. This means they both have trust in the quality of the renovation, and can identify with the enterprise’s social values. The enterprise works as part of the local Repair Network, along with 25 other local businesses. They pay an annual fee of €100. Working together means they have a more prominent
brand and can refer customers to the best specialist.Cost-benefit :Breakeven for the benefit systemGBL employs 21
handicap ped people, 12 long-term unemployed ‘transit workers’ and 17 key workers, and has a 70% success rate in placing people in permanent jobs. New employees rotate round the different jobs for the first few months so that the enterprise can find out where their strengths and interests lie. Especially for women, GBL runs a taster course where they can try three different professions in a week –carpentry ,metalwork andelectronics – to see what suits them best. It finds that women wantpart-time work andflexible working hours, but the problem is that AMS can normally only find full-time posts. Each job costs an estimated €25,000 to fill – but there is a significant saving as regards the economic and social costs of unemployment.The "Institut für Höhere Studien" in Vienna investigated the issue of costs in a study of RUSZ, a similar workshop in Vienna, which places 55% of its trainees in permanent jobs. It found that if they stay employed and pay tax for 3.5 years, then the state breaks even. Even if they do not find an external job, keeping someone in unemployment benefit for a year costs the state about €43,000, but supporting a job in the social economy costs only half that.
TRIANGULAR PARTNERSHIP
RepaNet is based on the principle that a table needs three legs, or it will fall over. It applies this
analogy to the provision ofsocial services in today’s cash-strapped climate. Thedemand for social services is rising, but the resources to meet it are not. So the social economy has been seen as a substitute for public or private action. But the project does not see itself as a substitute, and believes that triangular partnerships are needed.Based on this principle, RepaNet brings in not just the local authorities, labour market service and environmental activists, but also local
SME s. When it builds up a local Repair Network, it can bring local small businesses on board because they gain market contacts and benefit from sharing know-how, as well as providing jobs for the trainees. Partnership with the companies means that RepaNet is kept abreast of the skills that are in demand, and can recruit trainees with matching aptitudes and desires. The EQUAL project gives each network a kick start by supporting the costs of two key workers – atrainer and astrategist .The development partnership also has a
vertical dimension. It links the regional networks with the key decision makers at national level, including the environment ministry, employers andtrade union s. But the key relationship is with the local town councils, the "Gemeinden". Shared environmental goals mean that a close relationship is relatively easy to establish. A shared history also helps: ARGE Müllvermeidung, which was founded in 1982, has since 1986 run educational courses for 300 waste advisers. Many of these people are now working in local authority environment departments, and are partners in the project via the "Abfallwirtschaftsverein". The ARGE is well known, and the connection between thesocial economy and ecology comes easily to people’s minds. Nevertheless, local businesses sometimes fear that employment companies may constituteunfair competition , so it is an asset to have the ministry andchamber of commerce ("Wirtschaftkammer") behind it.Institutional anchoring is vital to the RepaNet idea. So although its primary ideological drive is to reduce environmental damage through waste minimisation, it sometimes seems reluctant to go out and sell the products it so inventively designs and manufactures. It does not want to forget what sort of a business it is – one that integrates unemployed people back into the workforce.
=TRANSNATIONAL VISION=The project has a vision that builds from the bottom up to European level. Thanks to the support of EQUAL, the RepaNet model has spread from Vienna and Graz to five other regions in Austria. Altogether, the five enterprises employ 90 people and repair 4,000 items of equipment a year. Each repair centre has its own speciality: in Graz it is
audio ,video and computers, in Liezen white goods, inRied im Innkreis bicycles, in Vienna computers – and multifunctionalHohenems tackles white goods, computers and bicycles. Under the aegis of the national federation, two more regional networks are in their formative stages.The national federation Reparaturnetzwerk Österreich is in turn a member of the European network RREUSE (Recycling and Reuse European Social Enterprises) [http://www.rreuse.org] , which was established in 2001. Most environmental legislation is decided at European level now, so having an EU-wide voice is seen as vital. RREUSE holds meetings with the Environment Commissioner andEuropean parliament arians, and seems to have had a real influence on the WEEE (waste electrical and electronic equipment) directive. It has also submitted a joint response to the public consultation on the EUsustainable development strategy.INTO THE MAINSTREAM MARKET
As well as
lobbying forpolicy change, RREUSE helps its members to develop the best delivery mechanisms. Its 1,000 member enterprises employ 16,000 people across ten countries of Europe. In March 2004 RREUSE members came to Graz to take part in the exchange mart the RepaNet DP organised within their transnational partnership SENECA. It allowed them to swap ideas for new environmental businesses in the social economy.To build a new trade sector you need both customers and producers. Customer awareness is built through the visibility of the services offered to the public, such as the BAN repair workshop or the garden waste composting service. On the supply side, the regional RepaNet networks bring in small businesses and enable them to swap skills and knowledge to their mutual advantage.
National and international networking also gives access to
economies of scale inmarketing . A number of RREUSE member firms have established anEEIG (European economic interest group) called Serranet to carry out marketing at European level, using such channels as the internet or a catalogue.RepaNet’s work was taken forward in two new development partnerships in the second round of EQUAL: Econet Austria focused on setting up integration firms in the recycling of electronic waste, while PSPP' (Public Social Private Partnership) aimed to take social enterprise into new fields.
Contact
DP name: RepaNet – Reparaturnetzwerk Österreich
DP ID: AT-3-08/135
National partners: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Müllvermeidung (lead), Abfallwirtschaft Tirol Mitte GmbH, BAN – Beratung Arbeit Neubeginn, Verein zur Beratung und Beschäftigung von Arbeitslosen, Bundesministerium für Land- und Forstwirtschaft, Umwelt und Wasserwirtschaft, Caritas der Diözese Feldkirch, Die Umweltberatung – Verband österreichischer Umweltberatungsstellen, Gemeinnützige Beschäftigungsgesellschaft mbH Liezen, Rieder Initiative für Arbeitslose, Verband Abfallberatung Österreich, Verband Wiener Volksbildung – Projekt RUSZ, Wirtschaftskammer Österreich, Österreichischer Abfallwirtschaftsverein, Österreichischer Gewerkschaftsbund
Transnational partnerships: TCA 237 SENECA – Social economy network for environmental co-operation activities
Contact: Berthold Schleich Address: Dreihackengasse 1, 8020 Graz, Austria Telephone: +43 316 71 23 09 E-mail: schleich@arge.at Website: [http://www.repanet.at]
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