OSCA

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OSCA, or the Oberlin Student Cooperative Association, is a 1.78 million dollar non-profit corporation that feeds 630 and houses 175 Oberlin College students. OSCA operates four housing and dining co-ops: Keep, Tank, Old Barrows, and Harkness; and five dining-only co-ops: Fairchild, Pyle Inn, Kosher Halal, Third World, and the Brown Bag Co-op.

OSCA is the third-largest student cooperative in North America and by far the largest for a school of Oberlin's small size. OSCA employs one full-time employee: a Financial Manager; and two part-time employees: the Office Intern and the Food Safety Coordinator. OSCA members fill all other positions within the co-ops; for example: President of OSCA, Publications Coordinator, head cook, and kitchen prep. In addition, every member of OSCA cleans up after one meal a week.

Every spring, OSCA members vote for the corporation's officers for the next year. These officers along with the Operations Managers, the Cleanliness and Maintenance Coordinators and the Theory and History Coordinator make up the General Management Team, or the GMT. The GMT deals with the day-to-day operations of the co-ops. This body along with the Accessibilities Coordinators, two representatives from every member co-op, and any other interested members makes up the Board of Directors. A recent development in OSCA politics is the institution of COPAO, the Committee on Privilege and oppression, which explores racial and socio-economic inequality within the cooperative system.

From OSCA's web site:

The principles which guide modern cooperative organizations including OSCA were formulated in 1844 by a group of textile workers in Rochdale, England who were fed up with the exploitative nature of the market during the British Industrial Revolution. They decided to pool their money and open a small retail store which operated on principles which have become the foundation of modern co-ops.
These principles are:
  • Open membership
  • Democratic control
  • Limited return, if any, on equity capital
  • Distribution of economic savings
  • Education of members
  • Cooperation among cooperatives
  • Political nonpartisanship