Havenlink – Full Organizational Blueprint (Steps 1–7)
STEP 1 — Organizational Structure Map
- Havenlink PMA – sovereign mission arm
- Havenlink Co-op – community-owned operational arm
- Havenlink LLC – revenue engine and app development arm
- Havenlink Land Trust – long-term land & asset protection arm
- Interrelationships defined with flow of authority and division roles
STEP 2 — PMA Governing Documents - Mission statement, membership terms, privacy protections
- Minister/Trustee authorities & member responsibilities
- Dispute resolution clause
- Sovereign legal positioning & jurisdiction statement
STEP 3 — Co-op Bylaws - Membership categories & contribution expectations
- Roles: residents, volunteers, work-trade participants
- Profit reinvestment rules & voting rights
- Community standards & operational procedures
STEP 4 — Havenlink LLC Operating Agreement - Ownership structure tied to PMA & Co-op oversight
- Revenue distribution policies
- App development and management duties
- Transparency & reinvestment clauses
STEP 5 — Organizational Flow Chart - PMA → Oversees mission, receives donations, governs integrity
- LLC → Generates revenue, manages app & tech
- Co-op → Operates villages & services
- Land Trust → Holds property, ensures long-term protection
- Flow sequencing and departmental interactions
STEP 6 — Operational System for Residents - Intake process, assessment, matching services
- Housing assignment & work-trade onboarding
- Skill development & education pathways
- Path to home ownership within eco-villages
- Community contribution schedule & resident support model
STEP 7 — Financial Architecture & Flow - 5-layer funding engine:
- Public Crowdfunding
- LLC Revenue Stream
- Co-op Revenue Stream
- Partner Organizations
- Land Trust Acquisition
- Circular economy reinvestment loop
- Transparency dashboard & phased funding goals
Step 1
HAVENLINK GOVERNANCE MAP & ORGANIZATIONAL FRAMEWORK
Havenlink Hybrid System (PMA + Cooperative + LLC)
A sovereign, mission-driven organizational structure designed to protect the people, the mission, and the integrity of the work.
I. The Three-Body System: Overview
Havenlink consists of three harmonized but separate entities:
- Havenlink PMA (Private Membership Association)
Role: The Heart & The Mission
Domain: Private, spiritual, humanitarian, sovereign
The PMA:
Holds the vision, ethics, and spiritual mission
Sets the core values and purpose
Protects the privacy and sovereignty of members
Oversees internal community standards
Approves mission-aligned partners
Holds intellectual property, philosophy, teachings, and internal processes
It never interacts with government agencies or commercial regulators.
It exists in the private domain only. - Havenlink Member Cooperative
Role: The People
Domain: Community governance & participation
The Cooperative:
Gives members a collective voice
Operates on contribution-based leadership
Implements member committees
Tracks contribution credits
Oversees eco-village resident participation
Administers training, education, work-trade, and internal services
Votes on cooperative decisions (per bylaws)
The Cooperative governs people and community; not money or legal liabilities. - Havenlink Operations LLC
Role: The Engine
Domain: Public-facing operations, finances, compliance, building, business
The LLC:
Handles all revenues, banking, building, payroll, vendors, contracts, property development
Manages fundraising and crowdfunding
Purchases land and builds eco-villages
Administers construction, logistics, transportation, housing deployments
Legally protects the PMA and Co-op
Reinvests profits into humanitarian work
The LLC interfaces with the outside world so the PMA and Cooperative don’t have to.
II. The Hierarchy & Org Chart (Top-Down)
Below is the complete Havenlink Organizational Structure.
You can visualize it as a “triangle of protection”:
PMA (Values) → Co-op (People) → LLC (Action)
A. Havenlink Unified Leadership Council (Top Level)
Purpose: Ensure all three bodies stay aligned and functioning.
Members:
Founder / Vision Holder (Hippie Dave)
David Thurman
PMA Chairperson
Cooperative President
LLC Manager (Executive Steward)
Two rotating member representatives (elected)
Duties:
Maintain alignment between mission, people, and operations
Resolve conflicts between entities
Oversee long-term strategic planning
Approve expansion to new regions
Ensure the organization stays sovereign, humane, and mission-driven
B. PMA Structure (Heart / Mission) - PMA Board of Stewards
Oversees mission, values, ethics
Approves new PMA members
Reviews disputes or violations
Guards the spiritual and philosophical integrity of Havenlink - PMA Ethics & Harmony Committee
Mediates conflicts
Handles member concerns privately
Ensures no coercion, exploitation, or imbalance
Protects the honor and healing intention of the community - PMA Communications & Inspiration Team
Prepares teachings, orientation, spiritual guidance
Maintains emotional and spiritual tone of Havenlink
Oversees ceremonies, healing programs, and gatherings
C. Cooperative Structure (People / Community) - Co-op Board of Directors
Elected by Cooperative members
Oversees internal community operations
Approves member programs & work-trade pathways
Ensures member contributions match community needs - Member Contribution Council
Assigns community jobs
Tracks contribution credits
Manages work-trade and training
Helps residents build pathways to housing ownership - Resident Support & Integration Teams
Peer mentors
Life-skills coaches
Education and trade trainers
Health & wellness coordinators - Eco-Village Local Leadership
Each site will have:
Village Stewards
Work-Trade Coordinators
Agriculture & Land Care Leads
Hospitality & Guest Services Teams
Safety & Community Standards Representatives
D. LLC Structure (Engine / Action) - Executive Steward (LLC Manager)
Oversees operations
Manages contractors
Handles fundraising funds
Leads land acquisition and property development
Ensures financial transparency
Reports to the Unified Leadership Council - Operations Division
Construction oversight
Vendor management
Facilities and fleet management
Scheduling & logistics
Supply chain - Finance & Development Division
Banking
Bookkeeping
Grant writing
Crowdfunding campaigns
Contracts and legal compliance
Profit distribution per mission formula - Technology & App Development Division
Manages Havenlink app (intake system, matching, services)
Oversees security, privacy, and user data protection
Integrates training and service pathways - Growth & Partnerships Division
Coordinates with eco-builders (Domes, tiny homes, etc.)
Manages corporate partnerships
Oversees concerts, events, fundraising drives
Handles media and public outreach
III. Decision Flow: Who Decides What?
Here’s how decisions flow in the hybrid system:
PMA (Ethics, Values, Mission)
Decides:
Mission alignment
Moral and ethical direction
Spiritual and cultural tone
Acceptable partnerships
Internal PMA membership status
Cooperative (Community, People, Participation)
Decides:
Work-trade contributions
Resident participation standards
Community rules and guidelines
Member elections
Training programs & pathways
LLC (Operations, Money, Contracts)
Decides:
App development
Crowdfunding deployment
Land purchases (within limits)
Construction timelines
Vendor agreements
Payroll & employment
Commercial partnerships
Budgets & financial planning
Unified Leadership Council (Top-Level Integration)
Decides:
Major expansions
High-level disputes
Land purchases over $500,000
Admission of large investors
Changes affecting all 3 bodies
IV. Flow of Funding & Responsibility
Flow of Money:
Crowdfunding → LLC →
40% Reinventment (eco-villages & app dev)
20% Direct Homeless Support
20% Operations
20% Member Distributions / Reserves
Flow of People:
Intake (App) →
Care Path →
Training →
Work-Trade →
Housing Ownership Pathway
Flow of Values:
PMA → Cooperative → LLC → Public
V. Why This Structure Works (Sovereign + Functional)
✔ Protects sovereignty
PMA and Co-op stay private.
LLC absorbs legal and commercial exposure.
✔ No government dependency
The public-facing LLC deals with the “system,” keeping the mission independent.
✔ Mission can never be captured
Because the PMA holds the purpose, no outside investor or government body can redirect Havenlink.
✔ Community-driven, not corporate-driven
People contribute.
People govern.
People benefit.
✔ Scalable
This structure can be replicated city to city, state to state, nationwide.
Step 2
HAVENLINK PRIVATE MEMBERSHIP ASSOCIATION (PMA)
Governing Document – Charter, Principles & Bylaws (Draft 1)
(Ready for real-world use once personalized and signed)
I. NAME & FORMATION
This Private Membership Association (hereinafter “HavenLink PMA” or “the Association”) is a private, member-based humanitarian society, formed under the universal rights of private contract, free association, and self-governance.
The Association operates exclusively in the private domain, outside public jurisdiction, commercial control, and governmental authority, as protected by:
The unalienable Right to Associate
The Right to Contract
The Right to Self-Govern
Freedom of Belief and Expression
Natural and Common Law principles
International declarations affirming voluntary human association
II. PURPOSE & MISSION
The mission of HavenLink PMA is to:
- Provide humanitarian assistance, support, and pathways to stability for vulnerable individuals in need.
- Establish and maintain eco-villages, regenerative communities, and work-trade residency programs.
- Implement a real-world model of Contributionism, where members collaborate, contribute, and support one another through shared labor, skills, and resources.
- Create a compassionate, sovereign, private community system that fosters:
Dignity
Healing
Self-sufficiency
Purpose
Ownership pathways
Spiritual and personal growth - Offer a private space for members to give and receive help, resources, housing, work-trade opportunities, and life-supportive services.
The PMA exists solely for the benefit of its members.
III. SCOPE OF OPERATION
The Association shall operate:
Outside the public commercial domain
On private land, in private eco-villages, and within member-only spaces
Through private contracts, agreements, and internal policies
Independently of government agencies, NGOs, or corporate structures
In collaboration with HavenLink Cooperative and HavenLink Technologies LLC, as separate but aligned entities
The PMA does not serve the general public.
Only members and invited persons may participate in PMA activities or receive PMA services.
IV. CORE PRINCIPLES
HavenLink PMA follows the principles of: - Sovereignty
Members are self-governing beings with inherent rights, entering into association voluntarily. - Contributionism
Every member contributes according to their skills and abilities; needs are met through collective effort. - Compassion & Dignity
Every person deserves respect, safety, and the chance to rebuild their life. - Privacy
Association affairs are private and confidential. - Voluntary Participation
Membership is by invitation and consent; all participation is voluntary. - Responsibility
Members honor their agreements, contribute to the community, and treat all others with respect.
V. MEMBERSHIP STRUCTURE - Types of Members
Resident Members — individuals receiving housing or work-trade support
Contributing Members — members offering support, labor, donations, mentoring, or resources
Community Members — volunteers and individuals participating in PMA programs
Leadership Members — coordinators, council members, facilitators - Membership Requirements
Signing the Private Membership Agreement
Agreement to abide by PMA Bylaws
Commitment to contributionism principles
Respect for private status and confidentiality - Membership Rights
Members may:
Live, work, and participate in eco-villages (if accepted)
Receive support through HavenLink programs
Offer contributions, skills, labor, or mentorship
Access private services
Vote in member decisions where applicable
Leave the PMA at any time - Membership Responsibilities
Members agree to:
Uphold confidentiality
Act with respect toward others
Participate in contribution activities
Maintain the health of the community
Support shared goals
Resolve conflicts peacefully
VI. ECO-VILLAGE RESIDENCY & WORK-TRADE PROGRAM
Eco-villages operated by the PMA are:
Private member communities
Sovereign workplaces for contribution-based living
Structures for healing, rebuilding, and earning future ownership
Work-Trade Residency Includes:
Contributing labor to the community (gardening, construction, kitchen, cleaning, maintenance, etc.)
Participating in training programs
Developing job skills and self-reliance
Receiving food, shelter, support, and community integration
Ownership Earn-In
Members may earn ownership stakes, housing rights, or long-term residency based on:
Hours contributed
Participation level
Commitment to the community
Positive impact on the eco-village
Ownership pathways are set internally by PMA rules.
VII. GOVERNANCE - Oversight
The PMA is governed by:
Founder & Director – (Hippie Dave)
David Thurman
Council of Elders or Advisors – selected members providing wisdom and guidance
Operational Coordinators – support eco-villages, member onboarding, training - Decision-Making
The Director oversees overall mission alignment
Council members vote on major internal matters
Members may vote on community decisions depending on the issue
All matters remain private and internal - Conflict Resolution
Conflicts are resolved through: - Private discussion
- Mediation by leadership
- Council review (if needed)
No public courts or agencies hold jurisdiction over internal matters.
VIII. CONFIDENTIALITY & PRIVATE STATUS
All PMA activities are:
Private
Confidential
Protected by member agreement
Not for public consumption
Members agree not to disclose internal matters, records, decisions, or personal information outside the PMA.
IX. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY
All members agree:
They enter the PMA voluntarily
They hold the Association harmless from claims
They assume responsibility for their personal decisions and actions
They waive the right to involve public courts in private association matters
X. AMENDMENTS
The PMA Charter and Bylaws may be modified:
By the Founder & Director, or
By a majority vote of the Council of Elders
Members will be notified of changes.
XI. DISSOLUTION
If the PMA dissolves:
Assets are distributed to members or transferred to aligned humanitarian projects
No assets revert to government or corporate entities
The Association ceases operations in the private domain
XII. ACCEPTANCE OF AGREEMENT
By signing the HavenLink PMA Membership Agreement, the member affirms:
They enter voluntarily
They understand and accept the private nature of the Association
They agree to abide by all PMA principles, bylaws, and decisions
They acknowledge all interactions are private, not public
END OF DOCUMENT
Date _________
Print Name ________________________________
Autograph _________________________________
Step 3
Havenlink Cooperative Bylaws
A Member-Governed Social Impact Cooperative
Article I — Name & Purpose
Section 1. Name
The official name of this organization shall be Havenlink Member Cooperative (“the Cooperative”).
Section 2. Purpose
The Cooperative exists to:
- Empower members to collaboratively support the Havenlink mission of ending homelessness through work-trade, eco-village development, and sustainable community building.
- Provide a legally protected, member-governed structure aligned with sovereignty principles and private association rights.
- Organize member activities, volunteering, contributions, and resources for public benefit initiatives.
- Share the social and financial benefits generated by Havenlink’s ecosystem with its members.
- Support the management and accountability systems needed for transparent, ongoing funding, community creation, and humanitarian housing development.
Article II — Membership
Section 1. Eligibility
Membership is open to individuals who: - Support the mission and values of Havenlink.
- Sign the Havenlink PMA Membership Agreement.
- Contribute skills, resources, labor, or financial support at any level.
- Agree to cooperative principles of respect, contribution, and participation.
Section 2. Member Rights
Members shall have the right to: - Vote on major Cooperative decisions.
- Elect the Cooperative Council.
- Participate in committees and work-trade programs.
- Access Cooperative reports, budgets, and financial statements.
- Receive membership benefits including housing priority, training programs, and rewards/credits.
Section 3. Member Responsibilities
All members agree to: - Uphold Cooperative values of service, contribution, respect, and sovereignty.
- Participate in at least one form of contribution: volunteer hours, labor credits, professional service, or donations.
- Follow community policies, safety protocols, and ethical standards.
- Support Havenlink’s mission of social responsibility.
Article III — Governance & Decision-Making
Section 1. Governance Structure
The Cooperative shall be governed by: - General Membership — final authority.
- Cooperative Council (5–9 members) — elected body handling operations, strategy, committees.
- Executive Steward (appointed) — oversees day-to-day coordination.
- Committees — Membership, Finance, Community Operations, Eco-Village Planning, etc.
Section 2. Decision-Making Model
The Cooperative uses a consensus-priority model, defined as: - Consensus first — 75% agreement whenever possible.
- Fallback vote — if consensus cannot be reached, a simple majority vote may be used except in matters requiring supermajorities.
Section 3. Decisions Requiring Supermajority (2/3) - Changes to bylaws
- Major land acquisitions or sales
- Appointment/removal of Executive Steward
- Approval of large-scale projects or budgets over $250,000
- Dissolution of the Cooperative
Article IV — Contributions, Credits & Benefits
Section 1. Types of Contributions
Members may contribute in one or more of the following forms: - Volunteer or Work-Trade Hours
- Professional Skills or Expertise
- Monetary Contributions
- Material Donations
- Land, equipment, or resources
Section 2. Member Credit System
The Cooperative adopts a Havenlink Contribution Credit System: - Members earn credits for tasks, labor, service, and professional work.
- Credits may be used toward:
Housing priority in Havenlink eco-villages
Training programs
Retreat and event access
Community purchases where applicable - Credits are not currency and not exchangeable for cash.
Section 3. Member Benefits
Members may receive: - Priority placement for work-trade housing programs.
- Eligibility to participate in homestead ownership pathways.
- Involvement in eco-village training academies.
- Access to member-only content and reports.
- Voting rights and project influence.
Article V — Committees
Standing Committees - Membership Committee — onboarding, orientation, conflict resolution.
- Finance Committee — budgets, transparency, credit tracking.
- Land & Housing Committee — eco-village planning, site development, project oversight.
- Operations Committee — policies, workflows, safety, logistics.
- Humanitarian Impact Committee — homeless outreach, partner coordination, beneficiary services.
Each committee shall maintain minutes, submit quarterly reports, and uphold Cooperative transparency standards.
Article VI — Meetings
Section 1. General Membership Meetings
Held monthly (virtual or in-person) to:
Review progress
Vote on issues
Introduce new projects
Discuss community matters
Section 2. Annual Assembly
An annual event for:
Leadership elections
Financial disclosure
Major project approvals
Community celebration
Section 3. Special Meetings
May be called by:
25% of membership
The Cooperative Council
Executive Steward (in emergencies)
Article VII — Finances & Transparency
Section 1. Financial Sources
Revenue and funding may come from: - Crowdfunding (ongoing)
- Donations
- Member contributions
- Partnerships and sponsorships
- Havenlink LLC social enterprise revenue
- Grants or philanthropic support
- Community event income
Section 2. Transparency Requirements
The Cooperative shall maintain - Public quarterly financial reports
- Open budget access for all members
- Strict separation of PMA, Cooperative, and LLC finances
- Third-party accounting oversight as needed
Article VIII — Conflict Resolution
The Cooperative shall utilize: - Internal mediation first
- Council review if unresolved
- PMA arbitration as final authority
All disputes remain in-house, within the private domain, and outside state jurisdiction.
Article IX — Amendments
These bylaws may be amended by:
2/3 vote of the General Membership
Proper notice of at least 30 days
Opportunity for discussion and revisions before a vote
Article X — Dissolution
Should dissolution ever occur: - All Cooperative assets shall be transferred to another humanitarian PMA or non-profit with similar mission.
- No member may personally benefit.
- Records shall remain archived for 7 years.
Step 4
Havenlink Operations LLC
Operating Agreement
A Mission-Driven, Social Enterprise LLC Operating in Partnership with the Havenlink PMA & Cooperative
Article I — Formation
Section 1. Company Name
The name of the company is Havenlink Operations LLC (“the Company”).
Section 2. Formation
This LLC is formed under applicable state law as a mission-driven, for-benefit entity.
It operates in partnership with:
- Havenlink Private Membership Association (PMA)
- Havenlink Member Cooperative
Section 3. Purpose
The Company’s primary purpose is to: - Conduct operational, financial, and administrative activities that support the humanitarian housing mission of Havenlink.
- Manage fundraising, revenue generation, property development, event revenue, and business partnerships.
- Provide services, contracting, construction, management, and logistics for Havenlink projects.
- Ensure that profits and assets serve the humanitarian mission and reinvest into Havenlink eco-village development.
- Operate all public-facing components that must interface with the commercial world while shielding the PMA and Cooperative from regulation.
Article II — Relationship to PMA & Cooperative
Section 1. Sovereign Alignment
The Company acknowledges that:
The PMA governs the private humanitarian mission, values, and internal membership rights.
The Cooperative governs member participation, contribution credits, and internal governance, operating in a private capacity.
The LLC serves as the commercial arm, enabling Havenlink to operate safely in the public domain.
Section 2. Separation of Liability - The LLC shall not govern, regulate, or interfere with PMA internal affairs.
- The PMA and Cooperative shall not assume liability for LLC commercial activities.
- Contracts, land purchases, payroll, and vendor relations flow through the LLC to protect the private bodies.
Article III — Ownership & Capital Structure
Section 1. Ownership
Ownership shall initially be held by the Founder, Hippie Dave / David Thurman, and may include additional members as approved.
Ownership units (“Membership Interests”) may be assigned as:
Class A Members (Voting Owners)
Class B Members (Non-Voting Investors)
Class C Members (Profit-Sharing Stakeholders)
Section 2. Capital Contributions
Capital contributions may include: - Cash
- Land
- Equipment
- Labor equity
- Property management services
- Intellectual property
- Construction or professional services
All contributions shall be documented in the LLC’s Capital Ledger.
Section 3. Member Liability
All members’ liability is limited to their capital contributions.
Article IV — Management
Section 1. Management Structure
The Company shall be manager-managed.
Section 2. Manager
The initial Manager is:
David “Hippie Dave” Thurman (Founder & Executive Steward)
The Manager shall have authority to: - Conduct day-to-day operations
- Enter contracts
- Hire staff or contractors
- Manage funds and bank accounts
- Execute development agreements
- Coordinate with the PMA and Cooperative
- Approve land purchases and construction contracts below $500,000
Section 3. Decisions Requiring Member Vote
The following actions require 67% approval of ownership units: - Land acquisitions or sales exceeding $500,000
- Taking on debt exceeding $250,000
- Amending the Operating Agreements
- Adding new members
- Dissolving the company
Article V — Profits, Losses, & Distributions
Section 1. Revenue Sources
The LLC may generate revenue through:
Fundraising campaigns
Property development
Construction services
Event production
Partnerships with builders
Sales of tiny homes, domes, eco-structures
Management fees
Eco-village operations (restaurants, rentals, RV sites, etc.)
Section 2. Profit Allocation
Profits shall be allocated as follows: - 40% — Reinvestment into Havenlink eco-village development
- 20% — Homeless housing fund (grants, land, shelters, training)
- 20% — Operational and administrative expenses
- 20% — Distributions to members, investors, and reserves
These percentages may be modified by a Supermajority Vote.
Section 3. Timing of Distributions
Distributions, when approved, are made quarterly.
Article VI — Accounting & Records
Section 1. Fiscal Year
The fiscal year ends December 31.
Section 2. Records
The LLC shall maintain:
Capital accounts
Profit/loss statements
Bank records
Contracts and agreements
Contribution records
Minutes of manager+member votes
Section 3. Financial Transparency
Quarterly financial statements will be:
Delivered to all LLC members
Shared with the Havenlink Cooperative
Summarized for PMA leadership (if applicable)
The LLC will maintain transparency while respecting PMA privacy.
Article VII — Indemnification
The Company shall indemnify:
The Manager
Officers
Members
against any claims arising from actions taken in good faith and in service of the Havenlink mission.
Article VIII — Transfer of Membership Interests
Section 1. Restrictions
Membership Interests may not be transferred without:
Approval of 67% of all voting interests
Signing the Havenlink Values & Mission Agreement
Acknowledgment of the PMA-Co-op-LLC hybrid structure
Section 2. Right of First Refusal
The Company reserves the right to purchase any Membership Interests before they are sold to outsiders.
Article IX — Dissolution
In the event of dissolution: - Outstanding debts are paid.
- Remaining assets are distributed according to capital accounts.
- Any surplus land or infrastructure shall be transferred to a qualified nonprofit or PMA serving a similar humanitarian purpose.
No owner or private individual may personally benefit from assets intended for homeless housing.
Article X — Amendments
Amendments require:
30 days notice
67% approval of voting members
Review by PMA counsel if affecting mission alignment
Step 5
HAVENLINK – ORGANIZATIONAL CHART
I. Core Structure Overview
HavenLink operates as a three-part hybrid system, each entity serving a unique function:
- HavenLink PMA (Private Membership Association)
— The sovereign, private, humanitarian core
— Governs members, eco-villages, contributionism, resident support - HavenLink Cooperative (Public-Facing Co-Op)
— Community-owned entity for volunteer programs, public partnerships, and donation-based projects
— Provides transparency for public trust - HavenLink Technologies LLC (App & Business Operations)
— Manages app development, operations, contractors, payroll, and tech services
— Interfaces legally with vendors, developers, and external partnerships
These three entities work together while maintaining legal separation.
II. Entity Purpose Summary
- HAVENLINK PMA (Private Membership Association) — “THE HEART”
Purpose:
Humanitarian mission
Sovereign member governance
Eco-village operations
Work-trade housing system
Member onboarding & privacy
Community-only services and programs
Self-responsibility and self-governance
Key Areas:
Resident support
Private contracts
Contributionism implementation
Internal justice & conflict resolution
Privacy protection
Eco-village residency agreements
Training & workforce-development pathways
- HAVENLINK COOPERATIVE — “THE COMMUNITY FACE”
Purpose:
Public engagement
Partnerships with ethical builders & eco-home companies
Volunteer recruitment
Donation-based programs
Public-facing services (farm stands, cafes, public workshops)
Transparency for donors
Local community involvement around each eco-village
Key Areas:
Financial transparency
Community outreach
Resource distribution
Public events and fundraising
Partnerships with nonprofits, churches, ethical businesses
Concerts, food drives, clothing drives, community projects
- HAVENLINK TECHNOLOGIES LLC — “THE ENGINE ROOM”
Purpose:
Develop and maintain the HavenLink app
Payment processing
Contracting with AI-assisted app builders
Hiring developers, designers, support staff
Manage servers, data security, and tech infrastructure
Handle partnerships with app stores, payment platforms, and service vendors
Key Areas:
App architecture
User onboarding systems
Matching algorithm
Admin dashboard
Safety & verification systems
Data privacy
24/7 support infrastructure
Legal platform compliance
III. How the Entities Interact (Flow Overview)
(A) App Operations Flow
HavenLink Technologies LLC
→ builds/operates the app
→ connects users and services
→ handles all tech, data, and payment processing
→ sends mission-based revenue to PMA & Co-Op per agreements
(B) Humanitarian Mission Flow
HavenLink PMA
→ sets ethical principles, membership rules, contributionism system
→ governs eco-villages
→ oversees resident support programs
→ receives mission-directed funding from LLC & Co-Op
→ distributes support resources
(C) Community & Transparency Flow
HavenLink Cooperative
→ receives public donations and grants
→ partners with builders, farms, groups, volunteers
→ supports eco-village expansion
→ provides public-facing events and services
→ ensures public trust and visibility
IV. Leadership & Governance Structure
- HavenLink PMA
PMA Director (Hippie Dave) David Thurman
Council of Elders / Advisory Board
Membership Relations Team
Resident Support Team
Eco-Village Coordinators
Training & Workforce Development Leads
- HavenLink Cooperative
Co-op Board (5–7 members)
Treasurer / Transparency Officer
Volunteer Coordinator
Partnership & Community Outreach Lead
Events & Fundraising Team
Eco-Builder Partnership Team
- HavenLink Technologies LLC
CEO / Founder David Thurman (Hippie Dave)
CTO (manages developers)
Lead Developer / AI Integration Specialist
UX/UI Designer
Safety & Verification Specialist
Customer Support Team
Data & Compliance Manager
V. Funding Flow Overview
LLC → PMA
Mission-based revenue
Safety net support funds
App profits redistributed to residents
Co-Op → PMA
Public donations
Grants
Community contributions
Physical goods (food, clothes, materials)
PMA → Residents & Eco-Villages
Work-trade credit system
Food, housing, training
Transportation support
Wellness, recovery, life-skills
Onboarding to eco-villages
Job pathways
Ownership earn-in system
VI. Communication Channels
PMA Internal Portal — residents, members, eco-villages
Co-op Public Portal — donors, volunteers, partnerships
App User Interface — seekers, helpers, community
Admin Dashboard — cross-entity coordination
VII. High-Level Summary (Plain English)
The PMA protects sovereignty and governs the humanitarian mission.
The Co-op connects HavenLink to the public and donors.
The LLC builds and operates the app and handles all business functions.
Together, they create a stable, sovereign, scalable system unlike anything that exists today — the world’s first practical model of Contributionism in action.
Step 6
Operational System for Residents
Havenlink Cross-Entity Role Mapping & Job Descriptions
How Humans Fit Into the Havenlink Tri-Body System (PMA + Co-op + LLC)
Below is a full mapping of:
✔ Roles inside the PMA
✔ Roles inside the Cooperative
✔ Roles inside Havenlink Operations LLC
✔ Cross-entity collaboration pathways
✔ Which roles can be volunteer, paid, or work-trade
✔ Which roles are essential for launch vs. later expansion
I. PMA ROLES
(Heart, mission, ethics, internal guidance)
These roles protect the sovereignty, spiritual tone, and ethical foundation of Havenlink.
- PMA Chairperson
Purpose: Guardian of mission and values
Responsibilities:
Uphold spiritual and humanitarian purpose
Convene PMA board meetings
Approve PMA membership
Guide community culture
Ensure ethical alignment in partnerships
Type: Volunteer / Steward
Reports to: Unified Leadership Council
- PMA Board of Stewards (3–7 people)
Purpose: Protect PMA integrity
Responsibilities:
Approve major PMA decisions
Review internal conflicts
Guide mission-centered policies
Host member orientation
Type: Volunteer
Reports to: PMA Chairperson
- Ethics & Harmony Committee
Purpose: Conflict resolution & harmony
Responsibilities:
Mediate disputes inside communities
Oversee restorative justice processes
Maintain safe, compassionate culture
Teach communication and sovereignty
Type: Volunteer / Work-trade
Reports to: PMA Board
- PMA Communications & Inspiration Team
Purpose: Maintain emotional, spiritual, and inspirational tone
Responsibilities:
Write guidance content
Support community ceremonies
Steward morale and cultural unity
Type: Volunteer
Reports to: PMA Chairperson
II. Cooperative Roles
(Public-facing members, contributions, eco-village life, work-trade, training)
The Cooperative is the people’s governance system.
- Co-op President
Purpose: Lead the membership body
Responsibilities:
Chair member meetings
Activate committee work
Support healthy community engagement
Type: Elected volunteer
Reports to: Unified Leadership Council
- Co-op Board of Directors (5–9 people)
Purpose: Community leadership
Responsibilities:
Approve work-trade programs
Support eco-village operations
Help create resident success pathways
Type: Elected volunteer
Reports to: Co-op President
- Member Contribution Council
Purpose: Oversee work-trade
Responsibilities:
Track contribution credits
Assign community roles
Match residents to jobs
Support job training
Type: Volunteer / Work-trade
Reports to: Co-op Board
- Resident Support Team
Purpose: Help individuals heal, rebuild, restart
Responsibilities:
Mentor residents
Identify personalized support needs
Line up training, welfare, wellness
Type: Work-trade / Paid
Reports to: Contribution Council
- Eco-Village Local Stewards
Purpose: Operate on-the-ground communities
Responsibilities:
Oversee daily community life
Manage garden, kitchens, workshops
Support resident teams
Ensure safety and harmony
Type: Work-trade / Paid
Reports to: Co-op Board
III. Havenlink Operations LLC Roles
(Money, construction, tech, logistics, partnerships)
This is the business engine that makes everything physically possible.
These roles start as minimal + scalable.
- Executive Steward (LLC Manager)
Purpose: Run the entire operation
Responsibilities:
Manage finances
Oversee app development
Handle land purchases
Work with builders
Coordinate construction
Ensure financial transparency
Type: Paid
Reports to: Unified Leadership Council
- Operations Division
(The builders, doers, constructors)
Construction Project Manager
Oversees dome/tiny home builds
Coordinates contractors
Orders materials
Paid
Logistics Coordinator
Scheduling deliveries
Organizing transportation
Overseeing equipment use
Work-trade or Paid
Facilities Manager
Maintains eco-village infrastructure
Work-trade or Paid
- Finance & Development Division
Financial Controller
Manages accounts
Allocates funds
Oversees crowdfunding deposits
Paid
Compliance & Documentation Lead
Maintains LLC records
Oversees contracts
Paid or Volunteer (depending on experience)
- Technology & App Development Division
AI-Assisted Software Architect
Directs coding
Works with agents
Oversees user interface
Paid contractor
Security & Privacy Lead
Protects user data
Implements encryption
Paid
App Support & User Care Team
Helps people navigate the platform
Work-trade / Volunteer / Paid hybrid
- Partnerships & Outreach Division
Partnerships Coordinator
Builds relationships with dome builders
Connects with eco-tech providers
Coordinates philanthropic partners
Volunteer or Paid
Events & Fundraising Producer
Organizes concerts
Runs awareness events
Coordinates donation campaigns
Volunteer or Paid
IV. Cross-Entity Collaboration Map
Here’s how roles interact:
PMA → Co-op
Provides values
Guides decision ethics
Supports member harmony
Co-op → LLC
Provides community labor
Assists in operations
Implements programs on the ground
LLC → PMA
Ensures financial decisions align with mission
Brings proposals for approval
Shares major development plans
LLC → Co-op
Provides work-trade roles
Delivers homes, food systems, infrastructure
Supplies training materials
V. Launch-Critical Roles (Minimum Team Needed to Begin)
(This is EXACTLY what you need on Day 1)
PMA
Chairperson David Thurman (Hippie Dave)
2–3 Stewards
Co-op
President
1–2 Contribution Council members
LLC
Executive Steward / Manager
David Thurman (Hippie Dave)
Or appointed by Hippie Dave
Software development partner
Finance Controller (part-time)
That’s it.
With that small group, Havenlink can launch crowdfunding and begin app development.
VI. Future Expansion Roles (Next 12–24 Months)
Full Construction Crew
Regional Coordinators
Multi-site Eco-Village Stewards
Wellness Center Staff
Agriculture Team
Vocational Training Instructors
Transport & Support Teams
National Partnerships Director
Media & Outreach Team
Step 7
HAVENLINK FUNDING ARCHITECTURE & FLOW DOCUMENT
A complete financial engine designed for scalability, transparency, sovereignty, and global humanitarian impact.
7.1 Purpose of the Funding Architecture
The Havenlink Funding Architecture is designed to:
Maintain sovereign independence (no state or federal funding required).
Enable the public to directly support the mission of ending homelessness through Contributionism.
Provide a sustainable revenue cycle that feeds back into building micro-resorts, eco-villages, and transitional homesteads.
Ensure transparent, ethical, circular reinvestment that benefits participants, residents, donors, and local communities.
This architecture is intentionally decentralized and people-driven.
7.2 The 5-Layer Funding Engine
LAYER 1 — Public Crowdfunding Stream (GoFundMe + Ongoing Campaigns)
Purpose: Open, continuous support.
Key Elements:
Always-active GoFundMe campaign.
Monthly giving option.
Corporate sponsorship tiers available.
Funds earmarked primarily for direct aid, construction, and land acquisition.
Money Flow:
- Donors contribute.
- Funds enter the Havenlink PMA account.
- Allocated into:
40% Homeless Services & Direct Assistance
40% Housing Development & Eco-Village Construction
20% Operations & Administration
Why it works:
People feel ownership in a mission they can see and track in real time.
LAYER 2 — Havenlink LLC Revenue Stream
This is the for-profit engine that generates continuous reinvestment.
Revenues Generated From:
App premium features (optional).
Referral fees from partner organizations.
Donations channeled through the “Havenlink Pay It Forward Fund.”
Sale of merchandise, shirts, apparel, and sustainable products.
Events, concerts, retreats, and community gatherings.
Revenue Distribution:
60% returns to Havenlink Crowdfund Pool.
20% into Havenlink Long-Term Land Trust.
20% into operations and development.
Why it works:
A for-profit engine that doesn’t extract value — it returns value to the mission.
LAYER 3 — Havenlink Development Co-op Revenue Stream
This is the community-owned portion, where members support and benefit.
Revenues Generated From:
Work-trade eco-villages operated like micro-resorts.
Restaurant, RV park, farm stand, and visitor services.
Dome rentals / Airbnb units on-site.
Community-supported agriculture (CSA boxes).
Distribution:
50% reinvested to build more villages.
30% pays co-op members for work trade credits or stipends.
20% goes to village operations.
Why it works:
The villages help fund themselves, creating a replicating model.
LAYER 4 — Partner Organizations & Builders
Partnerships with:
Habitat for Humanity
GeoDome Home manufacturers
Earthship / sustainable housing companies
Church groups & volunteer coalitions
Alternative energy companies
Benefits:
Donated materials
Discounted builds
Donated labor teams
Matching contributions
PR benefit for partners
Corporate volunteer opportunities
Flow Structure: Partners donate → Havenlink coordinates → Villages expand faster → More people helped → More partners join.
LAYER 5 — Land Acquisition & Village Development Trust
All land purchases move into the Havenlink Land Trust (held under Havenlink PMA).
Trust Responsibilities:
Acquire land near major metro areas.
Hold land as non-seizable trust property.
Designate parcels for housing, agriculture, education, and micro-resort development.
Lease lots to residents for “Work Trade-to-Ownership.”
Funding Sources:
20% of LLC profits.
40% of crowdfunding allocations.
Special land acquisition campaigns.
Corporate sponsorships.
Why it works:
Land becomes protected, permanent, and dedicated to humanitarian use.
7.3 Full Circular Flow of Money
Here is the exact path each dollar travels:
- Donation → Havenlink PMA
Funds enter sovereign, private domain.
↓
- PMA → Allocated Across Three Divisions
Human services
Housing development
Operations
↓
- PMA Grants Funds to:
Havenlink Co-op
Havenlink LLC
Partner Building Groups
↓
- LLC Generates Revenue
That revenue cycles BACK into:
Crowdfunding pool
Land trust
Operations
↓
- Co-op Generates Revenue
That revenue cycles BACK into:
Village expansion
Work-trade credits
Member support
↓
- Villages Produce Food, Housing, Labor
This supports residents AND attracts visitors.
↓
- Visitor Income (RV, Airbnb, restaurant, events)
Creates community revenue and accelerates reinvestment.
↓
- Revenue Re-enters PMA
Completing the cycle.
This is the circular, regenerative economy of Contributionism.
7.4 Accountability & Transparency Systems
Havenlink will offer:
Public financial dashboard
Live build progress map
Quarterly impact reports
Resident success stories
Transparent spending ledgers
100% audit access for major donors and partners
Transparency builds trust.
Trust builds support.
Support builds villages.
Villages build self-sufficient people.
7.5 Funding Phases
PHASE 1 — Startup (Months 1–6)
Launch GoFundMe
Establish PMA/LLC/Co-op
Build Havenlink App (Phase 1)
Begin partner outreach
Goal: $250,000
PHASE 2 — First Eco-Village Land Purchase
Acquire 5–20 acres near a major city.
Goal: $1.5–3 million
PHASE 3 — Micro-Resort & Homestead Zone
Dome homes
Tiny houses
Farm infrastructure
Bathhouse
Community hub
RV spaces
Goal: $3–7 million
PHASE 4 — Nationwide Replication
Each completed Havenlink community becomes a:
Training center
Demonstration model
Blueprint for new cities
Replicable turnkey package
Goal: Infinite scalability
7.6 The Havenlink “End Game” Vision
Once fully operational:
Homelessness becomes temporary, not permanent.
Cities gain relief from overwhelmed services.
People heal, learn skills, and regain stability.
Communities become self-sustaining.
Everyone contributes according to ability.
Everyone receives according to need.
The world witnesses Contributionism in real form.
Havenlink becomes the largest humanitarian eco-village network in America.
Then worldwide.