Groundswell Coffee is a private business in St. Paul's Hamline-Midway district that nevertheless feels as if it's owned by the community. In some ways, it is.
Neighbors boycotted it a few years ago when they were unhappy with the way it was being run, and then they voted on a new name for it after Seth McCoy and Tim Gilbert took over in 2009.
Now, McCoy and Gilbert are proposing an even more unusual buy-in: They're inviting customers to purchase $1,000 shares in the business.
The dividend? One free glass of wine or beer at Groundswell per day, for the rest of your life. Or for however long Groundswell lasts.
"It gives us the money when we need it and it gives them the benefit once we're open," said McCoy, a Mennonite pastor who also works as an administrative minister at Hamline Church United Methodist.
They're consulting an attorney to iron out the details of the community-based capital concept. Nothing can happen until they get their liquor license. But a few people already have expressed interest in participating, said Gilbert, a regional sales manager in Minneapolis.
"It's a really cool way for them to participate in the expansion that we're doing," he said.
Hoping to sell 50 such shares, McCoy and Gilbert plan to expand Groundswell into the vacant yarn shop next door on the corner of Hamline and Thomas Avenues, where they want to introduce a bakery and food menu and install a new wine bar. Space also would be provided for the sale of local arts and crafts.