Practical ways to foster more inclusive community planing and designCities and towns of all sizes struggle with how to involve the most representative sample of their population in their community design efforts.  My first post in this series highlighted general tips on how to increase public participation in planning and design. This post specifies practical ways to engage groups who are typically underrepresented in community efforts.

Start by understanding your own community. The US is becoming more racially and ethnically diverse every day, though those changes are not occurring evenly across our country. For instance, according to USA Today’s Mapping the Diversity Project, the Hispanic population has grown to 16% of the total US population and is projected to represent over 25% of the population by 2060. While much of this growth traditionally occurred in the south and west, other parts of the country will become increasingly diverse in years to come. 

Our household structure is changing too. Take for instance the rise of breadwinner moms or that both parents work in the majority of two-parent households, or millennials who are delaying starting families.

These demographic shifts are happening in parallel with diminishing participation in conventional types of public participation. We continue to see record low voter turn-out in national elections and local election rates are even lower. Anecdote after anecdote confirms that participation in local planning and design mirrors low voting rates overall.

These trends are especially acute for groups who are often absent from planning efforts.  Common categories of exclusion, as identified by Amanda Sheedy in the Handbook on Citizen Engagement: Beyond Consultation include: those living on the edge or near poverty, ethno-cultural or newly arrived residents, age, particularly the young and, old and those living with disabilities.

The first step to engaging your own community is to develop a deeper understanding of it by exploring questions like:

  • Who lives in your community now and how is the population changing?
  • How would you describe the culture of public engagement in your town? 
  • What’s the level of trust for local decision makers and processes?
  • Who holds the power to make decisions and has that power been used to empower or disenfranchise specific groups in the past? 

Thinking up front about your community’s context will help you set realistic goals and develop better engagement strategies. Community readiness tools, like the Harwood Institute’s Community Rhythms framework, can help you determine what kind of project your city or town is ready for and how to avoid common pitfalls.

A demographic profile is an easy way to understand your community’s diversity. Tools like Headwaters Economic Profile System do the heavy lifting of aggregating key information across federal data sources. 

Be clear about your promise to people. Everyone wants to know that their input will make a difference. This is can be particularly acute for populations where there may be a history of disenfranchisement related to local decision making. So, make sure you are clear up front about how people’s input will be used and what level of impact it will have on the outcome.

Sherry Arnstein’s ladder of participation or the International Association for Public Participation (IAP2)’s Spectrum of Public Participation can help you think through and articulate how you will use resident input in your process.

Seek ways to build trust. Trust will be fundamental to your success in engaging new voices.  There are a few key ways to do this early on in a project.

Seek out community partners who will be seen as trusted organizations or leaders for those populations you are trying to engage.  These partners can play several roles in your project including: helping to design and frame your effort, identifying ways to work with specific populations, and inviting or hosting community conversations.

Often neighborhood associations, service organizations or local faith leaders are good places to start.  These partnerships may be informal (e.g. holding a few meetings, reaching out when there is a specific question or need) or there may be a need for a more formal arrangement. In the case of more formal partnerships, it’s helpful to review best practices in creating and sustaining these kinds of partnerships.

Also, be prepared to address top of mind questions and concerns of those you are engaging.  You may find that what is a priority for them is not directly related to your project. In that case, do what you can to connect folks to more information or provide direction so that they can take action. If you can show progress then folks are more likely to trust what you have to say.

Talk and act inclusively. The way you frame your project will affect whether people take interest in it. First, try to speak in lay terms and avoid jargon as much as possible. (Check out David Stauffer’s article for a take on key “plannerisms” to avoid.) Also, watch out for specific words that may hold contested meanings. For instance, asking for “citizen” input could inadvertently alienate people in communities with immigrant populations even if your desire is to hear from all residents.Community activities in a laundromat

Also, don’t expect people to come to you. Everyone is busy these days particularly those who are working multiple jobs, juggling child care or managing long commutes. The more you can do to interact with people in their everyday routines the better, so consider holding project activities in places like laundromats or at transit stations.  And don’t forget the power of a regular conversation – sometimes it’s better to leave the building blocks and sticky notes at home and just listen to what people have to say.

Make participation possible and positive. Sometimes you have to hold a meeting where people come to you. In these cases, do what you can to make people’s attendance feasible. Actions you can take include: provide amenities like food, transportation, simultaneous translation, and childcare; ensure meetings are held in ADA compliant, or at least more accessible buildings; and offer stipends to help compensate for lost wages.

Getting folks in the room is just the beginning.  Make sure to develop a meeting format that will ensure all feel comfortable participating and that their input is valued. For instance, low tech, high touch activities like small group conversations or methods like storytelling can help people share community experiences in their own words without being intimidated by speaking to a room full of people. High tech tools can play a role too; tools like keypad polling enable people to express their opinion anonymously on issues which can ease their fear of being confronted or judged for their perspective.

Think about the long game. You may find that even after you take all these steps you’ll fall short of achieving greater, more diverse levels of participation. When this happens it is helpful to remember that community engagement is not a one-off thing; it takes years of effort to create a healthy culture of civic engagement (and unfortunately only one bad experience to set that progress back). The more you can do to build a sustainable infrastructure to support public participation the better. Public Participation for 21st Century Democracy and Slow Democracy are two good resources for re-imagining how we can engage people in civic dialogue and decision making.

These processes require patience, flexibility, and resolve.  All are achievable particularly if you work with other community partners.  And remember that when you make participation work for more marginalized populations, you are creating better opportunities for all people to take part in your effort. 

I want to give special thanks to the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation (NCDD)’s network for pointing me to some excellent examples and resources for this article.

Originally published November 30, 2015 on the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design blog


Ariana McBrideAriana McBride is a planner who is passionate about building strong communities and organizations. She is the Director of Strategic Capacity Building for Ninigret Partners (NP), a boutique economic design firm based in Providence, RI. She served as a recent CIRD Resource Team Member in Franklin, NH. With more than a decade of experience in community development, She has learned what matters most – “we need to feel connected to our communities and to each other if we are to do the hard work of change. These connections happen through meaningful interactions that build understanding and ownership for a shared future.”

She focuses on three things in her work:

1. Setting up a process for dialogue and decision making that is inclusive of diverse perspectives
2. Providing relevant information that deepens people’s understanding
3. Staying focused on action so that people’s time together results in changes on the ground.

Arianna has worked on a variety of projects including downtown master plans, community visions, organizational collaborations, and new program development.

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Share your ideas and stories with Beautiful SolutionsThere is an exciting new project called Beautiful Solutions: Toolbox for the Future, and everyone is invited to get involved!

Beautiful Solutions is collecting stories to spotlight the most powerful strategies for creating the world we want. These stories demonstrate that another world is not only possible — it is already happening. The focus is on visionary groups of people from around the globe who are driving the shift to a democratic, just and sustainable future — creating tools so that everyone can build solutions in their own communities.

Right now, you can explore the project in the online Solutions Gallery and Lab, hosted by Naomi Klein’s and Avi Lewis’ This Changes Everything.

Over the next year, Beautiful Solutions is compiling a collection of the best stories into a book (a companion to Beautiful Trouble: Toolbox for Revolution), and asking community leaders and activists from around the globe to share the big questions they’re wrestling with, along with stories they think should be featured in the book. That’s where you come in!

Will you be a contributor? Share your ideas and stories for the Beautiful Solutions book by filling out this form: https://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/2540365/Be-a-Contributor-to-Beautiful-Solutions. Feel free to forward the form to individuals and groups you think should participate. The survey will be open for about a month.

The vision is for Beautiful Solutions to be a set of resources by the movement and for the movement. We’re excited to partner with Beautiful Solutions—and with you—to make that vision a reality.

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Canada-Wide Social Enterprise Sector Survey In 2014 and 2015, the Social Enterprise Sector Survey collected impact data from non-profit social enterprises in all provinces and territories of Canada (except Quebec, where the Comité sectoriel de main d’oeuvre économie sociale et action communautaire conducted a sector survey).

In 2013 and 2014, the 1,350 responding social enterprises across Canada reported at least $1.19 billion in revenues, including over $828 million in sales. They paid at least $442 million in wages and salaries to 29,200 employees, of whom 80% were mission-focused employees. Social enterprises across Canada also trained 116,000 people, provided services to over 5.48 million individuals, and involved 116,000 volunteers.

The full report on these surveys will be released on May 18th at the ECONOUS2016 Conference in Montreal, and at the Association for Nonprofit and Social Economy Research ANSER-ARES 2016 Conference in Calgary (June 1-3).

Source: Social Enterprise Sector Survey

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Canada's ParliamentThe Canadian CED Network’s Policy Council submitted a response to the federal government’s invitation for pre-budget submissions for the 2016 Federal Budget, and Executive Director Michael Toye presented it to the Standing Committee on Finance on February 16th. The submission focuses on how the government can implement the measures it has already committed to undertaking in the election and the Ministerial mandate letters in ways that will maximize their success and value for communities.

Read the full pre-budget submission

Watch Michael Toye’s presentation

If you also submitted a brief we’d love to include it below…
Please send your pre-budget submission to Matthew Thompson at mthompson at ccednet-rcdec.ca.

Our Recommendations for the 2016 Federal Budget:

1. Social Infrastructure
a.  Include a social finance fund and social infrastructure grant program that could leverage private investment and provide matching capital for durable social infrastructure projects
b.  Include a social impact-scoring component on all infrastructure contracts and recipients
c.  Include community benefit agreements, building on Ontario’s Bill 6
2. Community-Based Renewables
a.  New infrastructure investment to include criteria that prioritize funding for clean energy projects for communities vulnerable to climate change
b.  Financing be made available and affordable to communities and project developers through the Canadian Infrastructure Bank, including federal loan guarantees to support private investment
3. Community Enterprise Access to SME Programs
a.  That social enterprises, non-profits, and co-operatives be given access to existing regulatory and tax measures and business development programs that are currently available to small- and medium- enterprises through awareness-raising efforts for government officials to ensure a level playing field for alternative forms of incorporation
4. Partnerships for Implementation
a.  A roundtable bringing together representatives from the CED community and government departments would facilitate the ongoing co-construction and refinement of public policy relevant in support of communities

Read the full pre-budget submission

Pre-Budget Submissions from CCEDNet Members:

The Federal Budget Opportunity: Leveraging Social Value from Existing Spending – David LePage | Accelerating Social Impact CCC Ltd., Social Enterprise Council of Canada
Recommendations:
1.  Implement a Social Purchasing Policy on all Government Spending
2.  Leverage Infrastructure Investments for Social Impact
3.  Support Social Enterprise Capacity Building
 
Priorities for the 2016 Federal Budget – Momentum
Recommendations:
1.  Work collaboratively with the provinces and territories to develop a National Poverty Reduction Strategy that addresses root causes of poverty
2.  Strengthen the promotion of RESPs and the Canada Learning Bond to ensure greater uptake
3.  Take steps to better protect consumers from the high costs of fringe financial services
4.  Amend the existing Canada Job Fund Agreements to allow funds to be allocated to skills training programs instead of the required allocation to the Canada Job Grant
5.  Support the creation of social finance tools
 
Jobs, growth and long-term prosperity through the co-operative model – Co-operatives and Mutuals Canada
Recommendations:
1.  Make an investment of $50 Million, over 5 years, in the Canadian Co-operative Investment Fund (CCIF) to supplement the $25 million already raised by the co-op sector
2.  Support co-operative development by working with co-operatives and mutuals to design and implement a Canadian co-operative development strategy
3.  Consider regulating the residual value of a property and casualty mutual insurer as indivisible and as owned by all policyholders and not allow a single class of ‘mutualist’ policyholders
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the co-operatorsThe Co-operators have announced eight donations totalling $120,000 to organizations across the country that are working to enhance the self-reliance and employability of marginalized youth and people with mental health challenges. The funding is being provided from The Co-operators Community Economic Development Funds.

“There are many young people in communities across Canada who could use a helping hand to overcome barriers and reach their full potential – and that’s exactly what these organizations are doing,” said Kathy Bardswick, president and CEO of The Co-operators. “The services and supports they provide make individuals more self-sufficient and communities more inclusive and equitable.”

The organizations receiving funding are:

Choices for Youth – St. John’s, N.L. – $20,000
Choices for Youth’s Train the Trades program provides construction-based employment and skills training for at-risk and homeless youth to help them prepare for and secure long-term, sustainable employment in the skilled trades.

Open Sky Co-operative – Southeast Region, N.B. – $10,000
Open Sky provides residential support, vocational training and personal skills support to young adults who face barriers due to social or mental health challenges. The grant will support the “Roots of Resilience” project, which helps participants improve their employment skills and obtain experience through work placements.

Destination travail de Sud-Ouest de l’île de Montréal – LaSalle, Que. – $20,000
Destination travail operates L’école du milieu LaSalle, an alternative community class that provides marginalized youth with resources to develop employability skills and entrepreneurship.

Furniture Bank – Etobicoke, Ont. – $20,000 
Furniture Bank transfers gently-used household furniture from donors to various marginalized people and groups. Furniture Link, its social enterprise, is a furniture pick-up and delivery business that provides job and life skills training and/or employment opportunities to at-risk youth. Participants receive on-the-job skills training and paid work placements of six months to a year.

FortWhyte Alive – Winnipeg, Man. – $10,000 
FortWhyte Alive is a year-round facility that operates FortWhyte Farms, a social enterprise dedicated to using sustainable urban agriculture to build skills and increase job readiness for inner-city youth. The four-stage program delivers basic skills programming in agriculture, husbandry and beekeeping, a summer internship employment program, a leadership and mentorship program, and a youth-led co-operative, Harmony Honey.

Ignite Adult Learning Corporation Foundation – Regina, Sask. – $10,000 
Ignite helps at-risk young adults, ages 19 to 30, to transform themselves into self-sufficient, productive citizens by gaining education, experience and skills. The FLAMES program (Fostering Learning and Marketable Employment Skills) includes 32 weeks of in-house work and 11 weeks of apprenticeship with a local employer.

Foothill Special Needs Association for Parents and Siblings – High River, Alta. – $20,000
Foothill SNAP has a focus on marginalized youth with mental health issues. Its H.I.R.E. (Having Inclusive Rewarding Employment) work-readiness program is for people 18 and up who facing barriers to employment. The project’s focus is to create community/employer opportunities, as well as employer education and support.

Take a Hike Youth at Risk Foundation – Vancouver, B.C. – $10,000 
Take a Hike is a full-time alternative education program that engages at-risk youth through a unique combination of adventure-based learning, academics, therapy, and community involvement. It partners with community organizations for equipment, work placements and hands-on training. 

About The Co-operators Community Economic Development Fund:

The Co-operators Community Economic Development Fund was created in 1995 and supports organizations that help marginalized young people and those with mental health challenges to become self-reliant. Through the funds, more than $5.2 million has been disbursed to 128 organizations across Canada. 

About The Co-operators:

The Co-operators Group Limited is a Canadian-owned co-operative with more than $40 billion in assets under administration. Through its group of companies it offers home, auto, life, group, travel, commercial and farm insurance, as well as investment products. The Co-operators is well known for its community involvement and its commitment to sustainability. The Co-operators is listed among the Best Employers in Canada by Aon; Corporate Knights’ Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada; and the Top 50 Socially Responsible Corporations in Canada by Sustainalytics and Maclean’s magazine. For more information visit www.cooperators.ca.

SOURCE: The Co-operators

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More Bang for the Buck: The Impact of CFDC Lending on Ontario's EconomyFunding provided to small- and medium-sized businesses in Ontario’s rural and northern communities through the Community Futures Program has generated significant economic and employment growth, according to a new Conference Board of Canada report released today.

The report, More Bang for the Buck: The Impact of CFDC Lending on Ontario’s Economy, assesses the economic impact of the lending services provided through the Community Futures Program. It finds that, for every dollar of lending through the program,Ontario’s real GDP is lifted by as much as $4.50.

Download More Bang for the Buck

HIGHLIGHTS

Every dollar of lending through the Community Futures Program results in as much as $4.50 added to real GDP.

From 2009-2014, the program provided a cumulative $398 million in loans to small businesses in Ontario.

The Community Futures Program lending service helped offset some of the effects of the recession, boosting employment by roughly 3,300 in 2010 and 2011.

“The fallout from the 2008 recession has revealed just how important access to credit is to the health of the global economy. The findings suggest that the program generated significant economic benefits, helping boost labour income, consumer spending and corporate profits,” said Pedro Antunes, Deputy Chief Economist, The Conference Board of Canada.

From 2009-2014, the Community Futures Program, which is meant to ease credit conditions for small- and medium-sized businesses in Ontario’s rural and northern communities, provided $398 million in direct loans. The impact of lending on overall capital investment is significantly increased through additional funds raised from owners’ equity and third-party lenders. A total of $1.142 billion in new capital investment funds were raised—with over $746 million in spending due to investments from owner’s equity and funds borrowed from third-party lenders. This new investment added an estimated $1.69 billion to Ontario’s economy and created an average of 3,370 jobs. Over the six-year period examined, federal and provincial governments benefited from a cumulative $281 million lift to personal income taxes and indirect taxes.

The report, More Bang for the Buck: The Impact of CFDC Lending on Ontario’s Economy, was funded by the Ontario Association of Community Futures Development Corporations, a member of the Canadian CED Network.

SOURCE: Canada Newswire

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Fragile CommunityCommunity is more than the sum parts of physical infrastructure, much more than the social environment in which people live and fundamentally more than the services which people have come to expect.  Community is the primarily intangible environment where people co-exist, raise families and build memories.  The challenge of building community capacity and subsequently using this capacity to create and maintain a community economy is fraught with perils, some internal and many more which are external.  The process, through which this is accomplished, because of its nebulous nature and long term necessities, evolves consistently, encountering many obstacles which often create vulnerability.  This vulnerability is a reflection and a microcosm of the community and the people who live there and their own vulnerable nature.  

Sudden shocks are very unsettling, the fragility is in the moment, in the short shocks that rattle people, shake their confidence and open the avenues to potential despair.  Some moments last a long time and some are so disruptive that they totally unsettle the foundations of community resulting in long lasting effects with the possibility of eventual dissolution of community and all that it means.  Once the environment of community is shattered, the sense of community is lost and has to be rebuilt in a whole new context; which is what many communities are now addressing.  In many places community will be lost forever leaving its populace adrift.

In true communities people rally, come together and find resolutions to whatever the problems that must be faced.  But in these type communities people have commitment to each other and to the intangible environment that is community.  In times of radical change people have to dig deep within themselves and ask – what next.  

The process of development and evolution, marches slowly forward as people wend their way along the road to community enlightenment, thoughtfulness and activity.  This process will influence the communities social and economic environment, if it is given time.  It will even influence government policy programs and services and how they are delivered to communities, but this usually takes even more time.  For this to happen this community process must be given understanding, appreciation and the support to first help people in communities, especially those experiencing radical change, deal with their anguish and then their required learning.   The focus of this learning has to be about themselves, their communities and the opportunities that might be available to them.  It is through this learning process that vulnerabilities are shared, reality exposed, common support given and true community experienced.


William (Bill) PardyWilliam (Bill) Pardy is a longtime CED practitioner who splits his time between Corner Brook, Newfoundland, and international assignments. Read more of his articles and contact him at www.wwpardy.com

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ccuaThe creation of a new credit union trade association was announced January 27. The Canadian Credit Union Association (CCUA) will support and advocate for a successful, competitive and growing credit union industry in Canada. The CCUA is the first, national credit union governed organization in Canada, distinct in its commitment to co-operative values.

The trade association will build awareness about co-operative difference of credit unions within the financial services market and promote the important role credit unions play in local communities and to the national economy.  CCUA will also provide expert research and value-added services to credit unions and caisses populaires outside of Quebec.

CCUA is owned and directed by its members – 316 credit unions and caisses populaires with more than $185.7 billion in assets. These credit unions and caisses populaires serve over 5.57 million members; from more than 1,817 locations across Canada; are governed by more than 2,800 volunteer directors; and employ more than 28,500 Canadians.

“The creation of the Canadian Credit Union Association and the transfer of the assets of the former Credit Union Central of Canada, comes at an important time: through a shared vision of success, credit unions have never been better positioned to create a more vibrant future for Canadians — one that is built on the strengths and diversity of co-operative finance,” says Martha Durdin, president and CEO, Canadian Credit Union Association.

The CCUA has launched a new website – www.ccua.com – to share credit union initiatives and activities.

View the press release here


Source: Co-operatives and Mutuals Canada

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Strategic Framework 2012-2017: A Renewed Vision of Regional Economic DevelopmentThe Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions (CED) is looking for the opinions and ideas of members of the public and economic stakeholders on the economic strengths, challenges and problems impacting Quebec’s businesses and regions as well as on the potential solutions that might be envisaged.

CED is to promote the long-term economic development of the regions of Quebec by giving special attention to those where slow economic growth is prevalent or opportunities for productive employment are inadequate.

In 2016, CED will be establishing a new Strategic Framework for 2016-2021 to guide its programs and services and enable the Agency to carry out its mission. To learn more, see the current Strategic Framework.

The consultation period will be on until February 29, 2016.

CED’s interest centres on, but is not limited to, the following topics:

  • economic growth, trade and market development
  • innovation and industrial clusters
  • transition to digital and Web technologies
  • clean technologies and the economy within the context of sustainable development
  • community economic engagement
  • urban economic development
  • community economic development and diversification

Why get involved?

The ideas and opinions collected will be analyzed and subsequently used in developing the 2016-2021 Strategic Framework, which will take the needs on the ground into account. This framework will set out CED’s renewed vision for the economic development of Quebec’s regions.

Responding to this call for ideas is also an opportunity to engage in open dialogue with the government and be part of the reflection on its initiatives and programs.

Notice

Please note that all information shall be collected in compliance with the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act. CED is authorized to collect personal information under Section 11(1) d) and Paragraph 12 f) of the Economic Development Agency for the Regions of Quebec Act. All information shall be treated confidentially and used solely for the purposes of this consultation.

Next steps

This dialogue is part of a wider engagement plan aimed at encouraging ongoing discussion with the public and regional economic development experts. The call for ideas is intended to initiate that dialogue and will be followed up with more targeted discussions with economic development stakeholders.

The ideas and opinions submitted will be analyzed and the results will be presented in a report that will be posted on CED’s Website and shared on our social media sites. Keep up with the latest news by following CED on Twitter @CanEconDev and LinkedIn.

How to take part?

Go to the online questionnaire to share your ideas and opinions

For more information

To report a technical problem or request a printed copy of the questionnaire, please contact CED by calling 1-844-641-5883. Once completed, the questionnaire may be faxed to 514-283-8429 or mailed to:

Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions
Policy, Research and Programs Branch
1255 Peel St., Suite 900
Montréal, Quebec   H3B 2T9

SOURCE: Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions

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Haida Gwaii VoicesA place on the Masset Village shoreline that resident Joan Ewson took the lead in getting cleaned up several weeks ago is still litter-free. She’s so energized by this and how it happened that she’s about ready to tackle the rest of the shoreline.

In the meantime, her success is being held up as a small but important win by a grassroots initiative called Haida Gwaii Voices.

Haida Gwaii Voices was created more than a year ago by several community members and Community Futures a community economic development agency (and member of the Canadian CED Network), as a way to spark and support community-led change.

“We really want to see the community shaping the future of Haida Gwaii,” says Allison Smith, a lead volunteer with Haida Gwaii Voices as well as the Community Futures business development officer.

Haida Gwaii is a sprinkling of islands off B.C.’s northern coast. It consists of seven small communities, including Masset Village and has a total population of about 5,000.

Through both kitchen-table discussions and some creative community engagement projects involving Facebook, Haida Gwaii Voices has discovered a resonating chord of dreams among the communities. For example, people want more access to local food, a vibrant network of nature trails and healing opportunities for adults.

Haida Gwaii Voices is now grappling with how to bring the communities together to create the changes they want to see.

Joan’s story offers a few clues. Taking the initiative to clean up a piece of the Masset Village shoreline all started with writing down her commitment to do so, she says.

Joan’s before and after photos from the Masset
Village site she take the lead in getting cleaned up.

“I had been following Haida Gwaii Voices on Facebook and I was downtown at our Harbour Day Festival where they had a booth with these grey cards for you to write down what you would like to see for Haida Gwaii.

“Well, that garbage can – or the lack of – (on the Masset dock) had driven me crazy for a long time,” Joan says. “There was always piles of garbage down there, so I wrote down that I would like to see it cleaned up and a garbage can down there.”

That was essentially all it took, she adds. “It really spurred me to action. I had written it down, so I felt like I had to do it.”

Joan’s next step was to visit the site of contention, snap photos of the garbage and then set about cleaning up the spot, which is otherwise quite pretty. “It has a bench overlooking the village dock,” Joan says. “And I’ve seen orchids there and you can watch the boats and planes come and go.”

She then visited the Masset Village council offices to show them her before and after pictures of the site and to ask about setting up a garbage can.

Joan also posted her photos and a note about her experiences on the Haida Gwaii Voices Facebook page – who went on to tag the Masset Village council offices and add a request that something be done.

Within a few days, a garbage can had been set up.

The invitation for residents to commit to doing something about the change they would like to see is an important piece of fostering community-led change. That’s been a big “a-ha” for Haida Gwaii Voices, Allison says.

The initiative first recognized this through a project last June which invited residents to write on chalkboard both one wish for Haida Gwaii and what they intended to do about it. People were then invited to post a photo of themselves with their chalkboard message to Facebook.

“We didn’t get as many people doing it for that reason, because you’re publicly putting (your commitment) out there, but it also sometimes got more meaningful actions and more meaningful connections were made from it,” Allison says.

“So now in every project that we do going forward there will always be that commitment piece to making things happen.”

Another surprising “a-ha” for the initiative has been the power of social media on the islands. This is essentially the key way to learn of local news and community events, Allison says, adding the initiative has become intentional about tapping into that and encouraging residents to do so as well.

Looking ahead, the ongoing big question for Allison and others involved in the community building work in Haida Gwaii is knowing what how best to support or facilitate community leadership and action, without taking the lead themselves.

Energizing connections between people is definitely another key part of the work, Allison says.

And the journey continues.

To learn more about Haida Gwaii Voices, visit their Facebook page here.

This article was originally posted by Axiom News on October 9, 2015 and appears here with permission.

Michelle Strutzenberger


Michelle Strutzenberger brings more than 10 years of experience in writing, social media, curation and digital distribution. Subject areas of interest include creating abundant or deep communities, social-mission business, education that strengthens kids’ sense of hope and possibility and journalism that helps society create its preferred future. She is currently supporting the development of Axiom News podcasts. Contact Michelle at michelle at axiomnews.com.

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Policy Questions for Candidates and Election Events

With Manitoba’s elections upcoming on April 19, 2016, staff and members of the Canadian CED Network – Manitoba are calling on all registered political parties, the Green Party, Liberal Party, New Democratic Party, Progressive Conservative Party and the Communist Party to share their position on policies that support our collective vision of fairer and stronger local economies, reduced poverty, and more sustainable communities. In particular, members of CCEDNet–MB prioritized the following five policy ideas and questions for candidates.

Please use these resources to ask your own candidate where they stand on the issues that matter to CCEDNet–MB members.

Policy Questions for Candidates

Community Poverty Reduction Strategy      Creating Jobs through
Social Enterprise
     
Building a Green
Economy
Investing in Northern
Food Security
      
Community-based
Organizations

The complete election policy questionnaire can be found here.

Candidates’ Responses!

The Green Party and the New Democratic Party were the only two parties to make it a priority to respond. The links to the full responses as submitted are below. After multiple communication attempts the Progressive Conservatives, the Liberals, and the Communist Party did not submit responses to our policy priorities.

Green Party of Manitoba

New Democratic Party of Manitoba

Election Events

Don’t miss the following member campaigns, and events related to CCEDNet–MB policy areas!

Please note that CCEDNet Manitoba does not endorse all of these campaigns and events, but are sharing those related to our policy areas that may be of interest to members.

Campaigns

Election Events (*CCEDNet member event)

  • April 19, 2016– Election Day!

Media

Election Information

Registered Political Parties

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FCL CEO Scott Banda announces a $5 million commitment supporting Co-operatives First.A five-year, $5 million commitment from the Co-operative Retailing System (CRS) will provide critical start-up funding for Co-operatives First, an organization that will facilitate a new wave of co-operative development in Western Canada.

As a non-profit, the newly formed Co-operatives First will work with small- to mid-size rural communities and municipalities, as well as with aboriginal communities, to identify innovative, community-led solutions to modern challenges and opportunities facing these communities.

“Co-operatives played a vital role in building Western Canada and they remain fixtures in communities across our country,” said Federated Co-operatives Limited (FCL) CEO Scott Banda, who presented the donation on behalf of the CRS, which is comprised of FCL and more than 200 independent retail co-operatives across Western Canada. 

“The co-operative model continues to foster business, economic and social development across Western Canada,” added Banda. “These sustainable solutions and community services often succeed in circumstances that challenge other businesses and organizations. By promoting the co-operative model of shared ownership and shared rewards, Co-operatives First will help people in those communities identify local solutions and leverage local opportunities that empower people and create meaningful change.”

A portion of the $5 million in start-up funding will be used for resources to offset some of the costs associated with starting a co-operative. Those funds will help new organizations attain the legal and professional services required to form a new co-operative, as well as develop communications and business plans and conduct feasibility studies.

Addressing a need

Co-operatives First is one outcome of the Co-operative Innovation Project (CIP), a two-year, FCL-funded pilot project at the University of Saskatchewan’s Centre for the Study of Co-operatives. As part of the project, researchers conducted telephone and web surveys and held meetings to gauge the public’s understanding of co-operatives. In total, the researchers contacted 649 communities, representing 37 per cent of rural and aboriginal communities in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.

The CIP found rural and aboriginal communities are receptive to locally driven solutions, but needed assistance getting started. The project determined more co-operatives would be formed if individuals and groups received greater support.

“Co-operatives First will work with local leaders to identify opportunities where the co-op model could be applied to address unmet needs within their community,” said Murray Fulton, Chair in Co-operative Governance and a professor at the Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Saskatchewan. “By engaging with communities and potential co-ops in early stages, Co-operatives First will inspire the creation of new organizations, complementing the work provincial co-operative associations are already doing.”

Getting to work

Once its executive director and staff are in place later this year, Co-operatives First will begin hosting Community Inspire meetings with community leaders across Western Canada to identify potential opportunities for development and collaboration. The organization is planning to host nine such meetings in 2016. By 2020, the group plans to have held no fewer than 125 Community Inspire events in rural communities and 40 in aboriginal communities.

SOURCE: Federated Co-operatives Limited

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