credit unions

[Video] Make the Shift: Bank Local Campaign by Go Local Sonoma County

Video interviews with Community First Credit Union's David Williams,  Summit State Bank's Thomas Duryea, Sonoma State's Robert Eyler and many others who explain the virtues of choosing local first, especially local banks and credit unions.

Produced by TV50 with support from Summit State Bank and Community First Credit Union.

 

How To Find a Local Bank: Tips & Tricks

Bank LocalHow To Find a Local Bank: Tips & Tricks

By: Solari

 

A. Identify Local Banks

1. Get the list of the banks and credit unions in your area from your local Yellow Pages. Delete names that you know to be large banks, including names on the Solari US Banking Tapeworm 20 List.

2. Visit your local Chamber of Commerce and ask them for a list of all banks in your area -- ask them to identify which only operate locally and/or regionally and which are owned locally or regionally, or, if credit unions, controlled locally.

A local bank is a bank that operates within your local area and is primarily owned or controlled by people who live within or near your local area.

A regional bank is one that operates in your state and a few other states and is owned and/or controlled by people based in those states.

Radical Banking: You shop locally -- why not bank locally too?

Bank LocalSeptember 04, 2007 | By Novella Carpenter, Special to SF Gate



Jessica grates the just-picked zucchini from her garden. She chops cilantro and minces ginger, sprinkles in chickpea flour. A cast iron pan bubbles with oil, and she gingerly drops a dollop of green into the pan.

Her home in Oakland -- which she rents with a carpenter and a chef -- is airy and open, with exposed beams and floor-length windows that look out over a lush vegetable garden. The house is heated by radiant heat (hot water pipes zigzagging under the concrete floor), and almost all of the building materials were salvaged and recycled.

Jessica (not her real name) lives what some might consider the perfect alternative lifestyle. She makes enough money to pay for rent and food (from the farmer's market) by teaching classes at the Solar Living Institute and selling her self-published zine about alternative fuel. She grows much of her own food and raises chickens and bees in her backyard. As a child, her family life centered around growing food and cooking meals together. Her parents never emphasized money.

She hasn't strayed far from her upbringing. When asked about her views on money, she said: "It's better to be happy than to worry about your credit card bill or working a lot."

One of the key points of being happy, for Jessica, is to bank at Cooperative Center Federal Credit Union. Jessica's made it a point to convert her friends to using credit unions, which are nonprofit banks. While she flipped the zucchini pancakes, she laid out her best argument, "I say to people: So you shop at a farmer's market. You use alternative fuel or bike or take public transportation. But you still bank at Bank of America?" She laughed at the paradox of the small- is-beautiful crowd supporting a global corporation.

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