Affording Communities

Codicts Team
  • March 7, 2013
  • Economics & Law

Author: Chris Roth
Published in Communities Magazine Issue #158

It seems appropriate that this issue of Communities is focused on “Affordability and Self-Reliance.” We at the Foundation for Intentional Community have been grappling in recent months with the question of how to “afford” publishing the magazine itself. We believe strongly that keeping the magazine in print is important, but how we go about doing that is still a conundrum. In flush years, the FIC can afford to lose some money with the magazine, as other sources of income compensate. But in years like 2012, when other areas don’t produce surplus, the magazine can present a dangerous drain on meager funds.

We contemplated the option of cutting this issue to 64 pages instead of 80. This would have saved us about $600 to $700. It also would have meant that some of the stories that comprise the “heart” of this new issue, but that are just a little less directly related to the main theme, would not have been able to appear. As you read Ma’ikwe Schaub Ludwig’s account of grappling with Lyme disease in community, or Diana Leafe Christian’s new installment in the “Busting the Myth” consensus series, or the interview with veteran community activist Ira Wallace, think of how much would have been missing from a shortened issue.

Fortunately, we decided to visualize abundance rather than dwelling on scarcity. We chose to print the full 80-page issue, trusting that readers and potential readers, existing and future advertisers, would continue to see this journal’s value and would provide the financial resources that we need to keep going. We know that Communities is a unique resource internationally as well as nationally, a one-of-a-kind publishing effort ever since its inception in 1972, a “niche” periodical with an increasingly broad appeal, a magazine that certainly deserves to exist.

This means that we really do need your subscriptions, and your gifts of subscriptions to new readers. We need your advertising support, if you’d like to reach the Communities audience. We need your word-of-mouth recommendations to others, your Facebook “likes,” your participation as writers and photographers. We need sponsorships for individual issues—such as that from Paul Born and the Tamarack Institute, who will be providing financial support for our Summer 2013 “Community Wisdom for Everyday Life” issue.

And we also need you to support the FIC’s broader efforts, if you appreciate them and benefit from them. Communities cannot thrive apart from its publisher (the FIC), nor can the FIC thrive unless its flagship publication does. The FIC offers abundant resources, from its online directory to its Community Bookshelf offerings to educational events, gatherings, and other public services. Please consider supporting and participating in its activities (see www.ic.org).

This year will see a number of innovations for the magazine, including the availability of digital subscriptions (in addition to the ongoing print edition), and digital back article packets on various themes. We hope these will help improve our bottom line. Whatever our offerings, however, we are depending on you to keep us going. If every Communities reader and Facebook fan diverted the cost of a single tank of gasoline to us rather than to the gas station, our financial worries would be over, at least for now. Please consider doing it!

Our new Advertising Manager, Christopher Kindig, is helping with our movement into the digital age, and bringing new enthusiasm into helping advertisers place ads in print and online. Christopher found us at the 2012 Twin Oaks Communities Conference, where he held a workshop on ways the communities movement can thrive using the power of the internet. He has already been helping turn us toward greater abundance financially. If you’re a potential advertiser with something to share with Communities readers or with FIC website visitors, you will not regret contacting him.

Together (but only together), we can afford Communities. Thanks again for joining us!

Comments

Featured Blogs

Keep the conversation going with these pieces

Codicts Team
Wed Aug 2019
  • Searching for community
Are you seeking a community to join? Well, here’s some good news, we know communities looking for you! 950 intentional communities are open to new members right now. See the full list here. People choose to join intentional community for many reasons – better quality of life, sense of purpos…
Codicts Team
Fri Jun 2017
  • New to community
  • Economics & Law
Mobile home and RV parks present an unequaled opportunity to accelerate the transition to more widespread community living.
Codicts Team
Mon Mar 2010
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
A mother responds to empty-nest syndrome by discovering her new family in community.
Codicts Team
Tue Jan 2008
  • New to community
There is a great article in the real estate section of the Seattle Times on intentional communities in the Seattle area. The article focuses mostly on the 15 cohousing communities in the Seatttle area featuring Jackson Place Cohousing and Songaia Cohousing. But at Jackson Place, the layout of the d…
Codicts Team
Sat Jun 2017
  • New to community
Top 100 Documentaries To Change The World by Kim Kanney, Community Bookstore Manager Recently we came across a link to the “Top 100 Documentaries We Can Use to Change the World” from Films for Action. Of course, we FIC-ers are suckers for such click-bait and in any case are eager to explore…
Codicts Team
Fri Feb 2008
  • New to community
With grass-roots ecovillages pioneering sustainable living, the mainstream wants in on the action. The Guardian reports that the government in the United Kingdom has plans to build 10 carbon neutral ecotowns by 2020. The towns will have up to 5000-20,0000 homes, 10-100 times the size of most ecovill…
Codicts Team
Fri Dec 2014
  • Living in community
  • Relationships
To shake our addiction to modern technology, we must understand its true costs. Stillwaters Sanctuary works to create a culture of greater connection, where it is easier to live without industrial society.
Codicts Team
Fri Jun 2010
  • New to community
The New York Times did a nice feature on cooking co-ops. A cooking co-op, or dinner swap, is simply an agreement by two or more individuals or households to provide prepared meals for each other, according to a schedule. The goal is to reduce the time spent in the kitchen while increasing the qualit…
Codicts Team
Fri Dec 2017
Ma’ikwe Ludwig has played various roles with the FIC over the last 20 years. Full bio below. The FIC celebrated it’s 30th anniversary this year. A lot has happened in the last 30 years. What about the next 30? It is generally way more fun for me to contemplate the future than dwell on the past…
Codicts Team
Thu Nov 2007
  • New to community
  • Sustainability
This article laments the trend in housing where the front door has become a vestigial adornment and the garage doors are the main entrance to the home. Then the author discovers Delaware Street Commons Cohousing and finds a place where its not all about cars. So it was rather startling when a commun…

Insights & Stories from the Communities Movement

Subscribe to our newsletter for fresh stories and community updates delivered to your inbox.

Join the Communiversity Community

Get unlimited access to courses, exclusive member events, and a supportive network of community builders

Unlimited Learning

Access all courses, books, and premium content

Community Network

Member-only workshops and community builders

Exclusive Events

Member-only workshops and gatherings

I am an official member of this community
Disclaimer
I affirm that my information is accurate and I am authorized to manage this listing

Free Plan

Free plan
Free

Advertise in our Directory

  • Subtotal

    {{ currencyFormat( pricing_summary.total_amount ) }}

Become a + Member

  • Send Direct Messages and see contact information
  • Find communities based on your profile tool
  • Post Needs & Offers Listings and Events
  • Access to resources in the Members Library /// like vetted documents uploaded by communites (e.g. bylaws )
  • Member badge on your profile
  • View communities detailed reviews
  • Create Private Groups