Coffee: It’s
a worthy reason to get out of bed in the morning, a midday pick-me-up
and a lifesaver during an all-nighter. Without coffee, our work engines
would seize and our creative muscles would atrophy. But before a cup of
joe touches our lips, the coffee beans must be picked, dried, hulled,
polished, sorted, graded, shipped and roasted. From tree to cup, coffee
switches hands along an immense channel of production.
Fifteen
years ago, Eric Resch founded Stone Creek Coffee Roasters based on the
idea that a business has a social obligation to operate in a manner
that honors and promotes its interconnectedness with the world. “Our
vision for this company isn’t just about producing a great-tasting
coffee,” Resch says. “It’s also about our social contract with our
farmers, employees, vendors, customers and our community.”
To
celebrate and preserve Milwaukee’s rich history, Stone Creek
refurbished a 120-year-old factory at the corner of St. Paul Avenue and
5th Street in 1999. A year later, the Community Coffee program was
created to support community nonprofit organizations through
fund-raising and donations of coffee and beverage vouchers. In 2005,
Stone Creek’s sphere of influence expanded when it began a relationship
with Socially Conscious Coffee in Encruzilhada, Brazil.
In
the coffee industry, fair trade practices are extremely important due
to the drastic economic disparities that exist between countries that
produce coffee and those that purchase it. However, within the
industry, there are varying opinions as to what constitutes fair trade.
In order to be part of the official fair trade model created by an
organization like TransFair USA, coffee farms must have certification, pay a certification fee and be part of a co-operative.
“Obviously
the TransFair fair trade model is a good one,” Resch says. “But there
are a lot of coffee harvesters and family farms out there where that
model doesn’t because they’re not part of a co-op.” Socially Conscious
Coffee provides a variety of programs and services to improve the living
conditions, education, health and environmental and economic
sustainability for the most disadvantaged people in the coffee supply
chain: the harvesters.
“The TransFair price dictates price at
the co-op level, it doesn’t dictate price to a sub-co-op, to a family
or a given harvester,” Resch adds. “With our model, we have
transparency all the way to the harvester to make sure money we’re
paying the farm gets to the people that are actually picking the coffee.”
With
the belief that the definition of fair trade should allow for multiple
models of fairness and justice, Stone Creek established its own
certification called Socially Responsible Coffee. Traditional fair
trade coffees fall under that category, but so do other coffees that Stone
Creek deems socially responsible, in that they meet social, economic and
environmental guidelines at the farm level. Stone Creek doesn’t require
farmers to meet every standard they set, but they do require them to meet 75% of
the standards, with a commitment to work toward those they haven’t.
Stone
Creek Coffee roasts approximately 250,000 to 275,000 pounds of coffee a
year for its eight retail stores and its nationwide wholesale
customers. On average, different styles of coffee are available at
Stone Creek; some are single origin, some are blends. There are roasts
and decafs, organic, seasonal and naturally flavored, representing 12 to
14 different origin countries.
What began with one small batch
roaster and a store 15 years ago has grown into an influential and
conscientious company with a very deep and rich connection to its broader
community.
Jan0
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