Radstock Co-operative Society

Radstock Co-operative Society is a small regional consumer co-operative, which was established in Radstock, Somerset in 1868 and today operates nineteen food stores and across Somerset alongside a 1000 acre farm.[3] It is owned and democratically controlled by its customer members, who numbered approximately 7000 in 2014.[1] The society grew from a turnover of £15 million in 2006 to over £35m by 2016, doubling the number of stores over the period.[4] The business has held the Fair Tax Mark since 2016.

Radstock Co-operative Society Limited
Consumer Co-operative
IndustryRetail, Agriculture
Founded1868
Headquarters,
Area served
Somerset, England
Key people
Don Morris CEO[1]
Revenue£37.6 million (2015/16)[2]
£271,406 (2015/16)[2]
£213,729 (2015/16)[2]
Total assets£13.4 million (2015/16)[2]
Members7,000 (2014)[1]
Number of employees
369 (2014)[1]
Websitewww.radstockcoop.co.uk

The society operates a large supermarket in Radstock and eighteen convenience shops in nearby areas.[2] [4][5] The supermarket has non-food departments including a travel agent, post office, furniture, clothing, electrical goods, housewares and garden supplies. The society also owns Manor Farm, an organic dairy and egg farm which supplies a substantial portion of the organic milk sold through UK Co-operative Stores.[6][7] It previously owned a Homemaker Furniture store.

The society participates in the British co-operative movement. As well as supplying cheese for national distribution by the Co-operative Retail Trading Group (CRTG) through a milk processor, it obtains food goods from the CRTG. It is a corporate member and shareholder of The Co-operative Group, a national business that is successor to the Co-operative Wholesale Society. In line with many retail co-operatives across the UK, during the late 2000s the society began converting its stores from the 1993 dark blue Co-op cloverleaf branding, to green “The co-operative food” fascias, alongside acquiring stores in Shepton Mallet and Coleford.[5][8]

Locations

Early delivery wagon of the Radstock Cooperative Society, Taken in Radstock Museum
The store in Coleford
gollark: But you would have to pay for that.
gollark: (The alternative of paying per middle node... fixes some problems and introduces exciting new ones)
gollark: (Although that breaks horribly too, since you're incentivized to run 10000 middle nodes which funnel money to you for your own connection)
gollark: (I'm assuming that you pay a fixed amount per packet or something which is split between all the nodes participating in sending that)
gollark: If I am paid for being a middle node, I would get money for going between A and B with a jammer, so that B can't connect with A directly, and providing a new node.

See also

References

  1. Report and Financial Statements - 52 week period ending 22 February 2014 (PDF) (Report). Radstock Co-operative Society. 2014. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  2. Report and Financial Statements - 52 week period ending 27 February 2016 (PDF) (Report). Radstock Co-operative Society. 2016. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  3. "About us". Radstock Co-operative Society. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  4. 'New Radstock chief gears up for Tesco fight', The Co-operative News, 24 August 2007.
  5. "Stores". Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  6. "News: Chickens!". Radstock Co-operative Society. 2008.
  7. "News: Say cheese!". Radstock Co-operative Society. 2008.
  8. "News: 140th Anniversary". Radstock Co-operative Society. 2008.
  9. "Annual Report 2009/10". Radstock Co-operative Society. p. 3.
  10. "Annual Report 2010/11" (PDF). Radstock Co-operative Society. p. 16.
  11. "Annual Report 2011/12" (PDF). Radstock Co-operative Society. p. 18.
  12. "Farrington Gurney Convenience Store Now Open". Radstock Co-operative Society. 20 November 2013. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
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